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                  <text>Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, January 20, 2.006

Ironladies outlast .Gallia Academy, 33-31
~

headed into the fourth quarter.
With momentum finally on
GALLIPOLIS
Talk · the Blue and White's side for
about a bad time for bad tim- the first time Thursday, that's
ing.
when things went painfully
Gallia Academy, which /·ust wrong.
one week ago put a hea th y
The Angel~ made .just 2-ofroster on the floor for the first 12 shot atte mpt s ·over the
time this girls· season, started lin a! eight minutes. allowing
Thursday by learning that it the lronladies to rally bac k
would be without the services with a 9-5 run for a 33-31 triof freshman forward Rachel umph .
Jones because 'of health reaGAHS (ti-7, 2-6) managed
sons.
jus! 12-of-39 fro.m the field
The Blue Angels were also for 31 percent, while Jackson
without head coach Duane ( 10-3, 4-2) was just slightly
Estep;· who was out for per- better in the game with a 13sonal reasons.
.. of-37 effort .for 35 percent.
All
of
thi s.
plus
JHS also made one more
Southeastern Ohio Athletic three-pointer in the contest,
Lea~ue rival Jack son was finish1ng 4-of- 14 (29 percent)
commg to town.
·
from behind the arc. Gallia
Despite the adversity and Academy hit 3-of-4 trifectas
depleted manpower. GAHS tor 75 percent
. battled through a defensive
Neither team scored in the
. struggle to hold a 26-24 lead opening 3:30 of the fourth,
BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

then Jackson 's Brittany
Logan scored from the paint
to tie the game at 26 with
4:21 remaining.
Brittany Elliott answered
for the hosts 12 seconds later
with a layup, giving the hosts
a 28-26 edge. That lead
would be the fin al one for
Gallia Academy.
Victoria Leali nailed a 3pointer at 3:09 to give
Jackson a 29-28 advantage .
That basket also started a 7-0
run over the next three minute s to all but seal the deal on
the road win.
Elliott, who led GAHS and
all scorers with II points,
connected on a trifecta with
two seconds left to conclude
the scoring at 33-31.
Alexis Geiger ·followed
Elliott with six markers,
while Jackie Wamsley and
Lindsey Niday chipped in
five points apiece. Wamsley

led the Angels with seven
rebounds.
Kelly Smith paced Jackson
with I0 points and Leali followed. with eight. Jennilynn
Martin added hve to the victory.
Jackson claimed a 23-21
rebounding edge. but the
hosts held a 9-7 advantage on
the offensive glass. Both
squads had 18 turnovers.
Gallia Academy held three
leads, while Jackson led 'eight
time s in the contest. The
game was ·also tied on seven
occasions.
The lronladies led 8-6 after
eight minutes and 13-11 at
intermission. The guests also
won the previous matchup at
JHS , 50-3 8.
Gallia ·Academy returns to .
action Saturday when it hosts
Bryan Watterllfphoto
Unioto in a non-conference
match up. Game ti i11e is slated Gallia Academy's Kayla Perry, right. (lribbles by Jackson
defender Kelly Smith during Thursday's conest in Gallipolis.
for I p.m.

Fur Peace Ranch:
Rock and roll gold in the Meigs County Hills, Cl ·

from Page Bl
interest in the team in 1984.
The Reds won a Wol'ld Series
in 1990 but Schott 's oftenoffensive remarks overshadowed anything the team did
on the field .
Under pressure from Major
League Baseball, Schott solei
her c0ntrolling shares for $67
million to Lindner's group in
1999.
'
Owners al so heard reports
on the unsettled situation
with
the
Washington
Nationals and the upcoming
World Baseball Classic . .
Sale of the Nationals by
· major league qaseball has
been held up until the Di stri.ct
of
Co lumbia
·Council
approves ·a lease agreement
for a new stadium.
"You know, life doesn' t
always move just as you'd
like it." Selig. said .. ·'Of
course, if I had my druthers.
this would have been over . a
long time ago. But.there _are a
lot of things that have happened , and I wouldn 't do
anything differentl y.
"I know I' ve heard some
criticism of us, particularly in
Washington. which I think is

un a

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio \'alit') Publishing Co.

osu

from PageBl
shoot outside . The Buckeyes
hit 6-of-13 3-pointers to1 help
open thing s up.
." I don' t think I remember a
bad 3-point shot:: Ohio State
coach Jim Foster said. ··we
would like to . run, but they
packed it in and took away
the inside. We did a very
good job on 3-pointers."
Merrill dominated inside in
the final minutes of the fiN
half as Ohio State took a· 2920 lead. At 'one point, she
blocked three consecutive
shots by the Hoosiers.

I

l'omet·o) •

~liddlt•pot1•

$1 .!)0 • Vol.;~&lt;) , Nn . ;;2

(,aJiipulis • .JamJat') 22. 2ooh

Area homelessness·snares diverse population

SPORTS
• High school basketball
action. See Page 81

BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - The staff
at Serenity House never
know _who might come
through their door.
Young, single mothers with
small children , teenagers
with nowhere left logo, older
women who h~ve just gone
th rough a divorces and those
with dru g, alcohol or psychological prot;Jems are common
tenants at the area's only
shelter for abused or homeless women.

The reason s people in Ot!r
area become homeleS&gt; are as
varied as the people them.selves.
"Divorce is a main reason,"
said Hilda Stotts, director of
Serenity House. "We're seeing more and more displaced
homemakers - single. middie-aged women who have
gone through divorce ... and
have very few resources. The
economy is another. There
are just not many unskilled
jobs available here."
Stotts is a member of the
G a l.I i a-Jacks o. n- M 'i g s

Ctmtinuum
of
Care
Committee. which is dedicat. ed to ending homeless ness by
addressing the· cau,es of the
.. problem. .
..
Committee members work
directl y with the homeless.
every day. Although homelessness in a rural area· is not as
obvious a problem as it is in
urban areas, it i-s a serious
problem -that must be
mJclressed, said Mary Jo Frank,
· facili tator of the committee.
The homeless population
goes far beyond, the 'tereotypical . alcoholics and drug

addicts, Frank said . Although
those groups .arc part of the
homele" community, many
other; are average people
who fell on hard times.
" Health Issue s can lead to
homelessne ss;· Frank said.
"There is a big problem wit h
unin ~ ured people and underinsured people:·
Others ha ve allowed people to take advantage of
them , she said.
"Some women let men
move in with them ." she said .
"He'll li ve oil of her and
wipe her out."

Still others are vktims ·of
the area ~c onomy . sai d Jay
Tatum. director of clergical
services at Holter · !\oledical
Center.
"Chronic ui!employ111ent is
a hig problem in thi s area,"
he &gt;&lt;ud
Tatum sa id that when the
coal mines in thi s area closed
years ago, '.Ome of ihose who
lost· their jobs could not find
other work. For many. unempl oyment has become a way
of life . For some. that way of
Please see Homeless, Al

Officials
testimony
supports
new plant

-

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM.

THIS WEE 'S FEATURES·

. OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dorothy J. Milliron
• Janet L Ross

INSIDE
• Missing W.Va. miners .
found dead two days after
fire. See Page A2
• Ariel-Dater Performing
Art Centre dedication
planned. See Page AS
• for the Record.
· See -Page AS
·• CAA receives
supplemental emergency
fundiQg. See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• Hookah bars come
:0 Southeastern Ohio~

sian ,'' he sa id.

"Merrill i; JUSt on~ of those
workhorses she due s
everythin g." Versyp said.
"She\ a role player, but
sometimes that's what you
fear the most. When she got
the ball down low. she beat
us one on one. She did a good
job on defense . She did ·a
heck of a job .. ,
Indiana never got closer
than six points in the second
half.
"We won the game ·because
when it came down to it , we
executed our offense, everybody took good shots and we
had %Jme good (pefensive)
stops.'' said Kim Wi lburn ,
who set an Oh.io State record
wi th her 327th career ste&gt;il ·
early in th e second half.

tme -

··'

unfair but everybody's entitled to their opinion. But
look, if you were buying a
team the first question you 'd
ask is, 'What's the stadium
situation and what 's .my
lease?'''
Selig said he had talked to
eight prospective owners and
has reached . a conclusion
about each.
"When I know we are getting close. I'll make a deci- .
DuPuy said that all
·anno'uncements regarding
spon sorship and other details
of the World Baseball Classic
are on hold while baseball
awaits a deci sion from the ·
Bu sh administration on
whether Cuba will be
al lowed to compete on U.S.
so iL
"We·re stil·l waiting to
hear;· Selig sa id .
One word that dicln 't come
up is "steroids." .Selig 's brief
meeting with the press on
Thursday was in the same
room
that
baseball
announced a toughened antisteroids agreement, a deal
that was revi sed again in
November with even tougher
·
penalties.
"How well I remember,''
Selig said of that packed
news conference a year ago.

House of the Week:
A bungalow beauty, 01

,

Davis suspended five
games for ·entering stands
NEW YORK (AP) - New ers went into the stands ' York Knicks forward Antonio · when Ron Artest and Stephen
Davis was suspended five Jackson started an ugly brawl
games by the NBA on with fans in November 2004.
Thursday for entering the
An embarrassment for the
stands during a game at NBA, the brawl led to criminal
Chicago to confront . a fan he charges · and . lengthy suspenthought was harassing his . sions tor Artest, Jackson and
wife.
.·
Jermaine O'NeaL
While tl:le ruling by NBA
l11e league was not nearly as
vice president of basketball harsh in this instance.
operations Stu Jackson showed
Davis. president of the NBA
the league accepted Davis' player&gt;' associat ion, jumped
ar,~;ument that he believed his o\(er the scorer's table to. get in
wtfe was in trouble during the stands at the United Center.
Wednesday's game , it also
"I witnessed my wife being
made clear that entering the thr:eatened by a man thai I
stands would not be tolerated. learned later to be intoxicated,"
no m;;_ttter the circumstances.
he said in a statement at'ter the
"We have made it plain to . game. "I saw him touch her,
our players and our fans that and I know I should not have
players may not enter the spec- acted the way I .did, but I
tat or stands, no matter the would have felt terrible if I didprovocation , and that viola- n't react There was no time to
lions of this policy will be call security. It happened too
treated with the utmost seri- quickly:·
ousness;· Jackson said in a
But 22-year-old Michael
statement
Axelrod said Kendra Davis
"We have concluded. how- tried to scratch him after he
ever. . that Antonio's actions protested a calL Axelrod said .
were the result of his belief that he never laid a hand on Davis'
his family members required wife and said . he was not
his immediate assistaitce, and drunk.
. ·
have . taken those mitigating
"It's a lie. Whe.n I go to
circumstances into account in games, I cheei as hard as I can
setting the length of the sus- for the Bulls, and I boo as hard
pension." .
as I can for -whoever thev' re
·Davis' suspension will start playing." Axelrod said: ··1
with Thursday night's home don't feel comfortable if -playgame
agams~
Detroit ers are allowed to easily JUmp
Ironically, the Pi kons were the into the crowd whenever they
home team the ast time play- feel like it's necess&lt;tf)'.''

LMNG

\ ~ ( l 11'

L

See

2006 CHEVY
COBALT lS CQIFE

'11,950.

$2f,

·2006 BUICK
LUCERIIE CX

'24,

·'I

$

..',;;. ...·.. ~.IJ,•
,.

'

..,

1

Minority leaderexpects much attention-in House race

'

I 'i

• ToOl, ilgl, ll~ ·hos 111m. Robofe loKiud•h15olo pro of-'""" listed who11
0. opprowd tnrdl. Oo nlod modoo.
··o. appr_, crodi 4ll
lome, t 5,00J milt jt, 3\ 1011, doWI1 pay-1 of 5624.48. St 1.~8 10lllog prio. l'i!y..., cloos not lr&lt;lodo

.,fk.;.lo.

""On oppr.,•hrodl. 48 llllolh lome, 15,00J""' yr., 4.31\ r1llo, dowo paymeol of 570'1.!0. St8,885 soillog prko.
l'oymetrl
1111 loclode IIIlO! aorf Ieos. Ma1 rospontbla for typogmphko19fr0n. Pril! good Joo10ry I'llh lhrough Joouc11y 11rrd.

a

Pag~A6 '

WEATHER

1 ~'

Details on Page AS

Call 372·2844
Toll Free 1•80~·822·041 7
Visit us online at www.tompeden ~com
loll! and loos.

IStruble
named
ESC board
'president

2006 CHEVY SILVERADO
·112 TON ClEW CAB 4WD

I,,

"'"Itl

,
Historical Society publishes new h00I{

• Federal govemment
· pledges.to repay Ohio
over drug benefit glitch.
See PageA6

2006 CHEVY SILVERADO
1/2 TON EXT. CAB 4WD

.~· ·IE\UIIID

.. . . '

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~·

4/5 Suuth Church Stt•eet, Ripley • Monday - Saturday 9 am - S pm • Sunday 1 pm - 1 pm

INDEX ·
4 SEtTIONS - 24 PAW'S

Around Town
Celebrations
· Classitleds
Comics
Editorials ·
Mmies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

____
i..l'

:uJ06 Ohio

. . .-:,._

A3
C4
D Section
inse1t
A4
A3

As
A2
B Section
A6

Va ii•·~· Jlu hllo;hin)(

POMEROY -. The economic development directors
of Meigs and Athens counties testified before a Senate
commi ttee Thursday in support of the state·s efforts to
attract a state -of-the -art
power plant to Ohio.
·
M e i g s
Cou nt y
Ecpnomic
Deyelopment
Director Perry
Varnadoe and
Jennifer
Simon. chief
L-___.-._...J executive offiPerry
cer . of the
Paul Darslfphoto
Varnadoe
Athens County
"Black Marriage Records 1851-1905," is now available frcm the Gallia Co~nty Histoncal and Genealogical Society. FrQm left
Chamber of
are: Barbara Scott, one of the book's contributors, Frank Eraxton, president of the soc iety, and Virgin ia Garnes, another conCommeri
ce.
te
~t ified before
tributor to the book.
.
.
the Senate 's Environment and
Natural Resources Comminee
in support of Senate Bill 235.
which would 'make the
· futureGen project eligible for
"Once I had a copy of it., I realized that
who comes behind us .··
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIB UNE.COM
Please see Plant. Al
The society ·also presented I0 free we didn't have this information here at
,
copies of the book to the John Gee the society," Braxton said.
GALLIPOLIS- As students of loca l Bl ack Hi storieal Center.
He then approached her about incl ud history. Virginia Garnes and Barbara
"Hopefu ll y. this is the first· of many in~ the information in a new hook.
Scott have collected their share of old joint projects that _we can do together;·
c.We decided to publish it. but we had
·
I
documents over the years. Now. some of Braxton said. "I think our two societies nn means to do it." he said .
the historical information they have .col- need to work more closely together. "
So. the society purchased &lt;ome new
lected is part of a new book published
The book· is divided into four parts. equipn1ent that allowed them to puhl"h .
by the Gallia County HistoriCal and Bruxtori said: Marria ae records bv the the book themsel ve.'. Braxton 'aid.
Genealogical Society.
· groom's name. the bride's name'. the _-·It was mo~~ costdfi c i~nt ~nd efkc1
·
"Black · Marriage Record s 1-851- date of marriage and by the person who 11 ve that wav. he satd.
Garnes said she rece i\'ed her' his tori - :
1905." is now available for use at the conducted the marriage .
soc iety:S ofiice. 412 Se&lt;;ond Ave . On
"This could be a great help to people
~~'Jii~~ot~om Seth and Mart ha Huntl ey I
Friday. the society presented the first . doing research." Braxton said.
"I need to £i\e cred it to others be fnre
.
copies of the book to Garnes and Scott.
The book project started when Braxton
--we appreciate yo ~r continued work,'' asked Games · if he could borrow 'ome me:· she -said.
Bv CHARLENE HoEFliCH
1 Society Prc&gt;ident Frank Braxton told historical information she had ahout black
The Hunt ley,- contribu tiunto th~ pro- HOEFL!CH@M\DAILYSE'HINELCOM .
jcct is noted in the forward to th~ 1-&gt;nclk.
them . "It wi ll be useful for everybody marria ge~ in Gallia CnurHy. he ~ai d .
Pmi EROY - S1 rae use
resident l\1 ic· h:~c l Stnibl~ ha,
· b~cn n:pn~ d Gt" crning
i Board prt•,idc·m of the
A.thcns-Me1~' Educational
BY BRIAN J. REED
Sen 1ce Center (A MESCJ .
BR EED@MYDA ILYS E~T IN EL. COM
·He \\'as dccted tO the po,iPOMEROY -·· The nell' mim•rit1 k:1ckr Ill tilln at the hn:~rd·s recent
the Ohio House. J(,yce Bcatty.D-LulumJ-&gt;u, . "r~:~nitat ionalmeeting .
told Meigs County Demt&gt;c:rJts Thursda) the
Struble has been a mem92mJ H&lt;)use DL\tril't race will be &lt;Hie &lt;&gt;f the bcr ·of the board since 2001.
most important to their party tim c· lection :-e:~r. rcpr~,cmi'ng the Sout hern
The di&gt;tricL 1\1aJe up (,f Mei&amp;'- Athens :~nd Lt•caL School District. He
Morgan counti es. am.l a ponil)11 of ' "l'n e... a:-. le ~i~lali\'e liaison
Wa shington Cnunt1 th:1t lth·iude s Little 1 :" '\I ell on tiic f.acilitie' and
Hading- and Be1·erly. i' )he st.tti,tic:~lly - po lic·)
committees . In
stro nges,t Democratic distri.:t nn" represent - , Oc·tuber. he be e~ me . the
ed by a Republican. Be at t\ sa id. It i' seen'" ( 1,11 cr111 ng Board ' reprevi tally important and \WI" inn ahk. espec1al- scnt .ltJ\e ~lll the Head Start
ly if a local Democratic famr1!t' i'" c·.111didate I P_nllc) ( ouncd tor _ the
for governor.
J (oalli J- \1e lgs
Heart ol !he
Beatt y. 55 . .is the fiN .-\fri_-an -.-\mcri can , \o alk' He ad Start program.
\l'm\w n to serve in the inin,&gt;rity lcack r poSJ: "here he OJhl1 sene' on the
ti nn in Ohio hi storv. She :NumeJ the leader- 1·· per,nnnel c· nmnlrt t q~ .
~h ip role last Mt&gt;li'da) Her pretkc·c·w&gt;r "'"
The AM ESC pr6vides eduChris Redfern . who no\\ st·r\ "' "' Ohin .:at llm.Ji 'upport s~n· 1c:cs to
D~mocratic Pam ·c: hairman and &gt;n the Hnusc . \1 cig' ·and .- \then' County
Redfern and s'wte Rep. Jimniy Stc:" art. R- rcs1dcnt' fr\\m birth through
Albanv. recentil ,parred in the pre" tl\er adulthnnd. and c:urrentl y
ft'niarb Stcw;~rt made in an · A then, nc11 spa- em pill\ sa ,taff of nearly 200 .
per about the rac·e . Stewart rc:port~JI: ,aid he
It "''" &lt;llillll·ni,te r' the
expected the Democrallc katlcr,hlp tu thn"' Hc .1d Stan Program 1~ Me1gs
little support ttl hi&gt; Dc lnnn&lt;Jtll· d1: il lcng~·~ andGallia .:nlmtie,, and proBrian J. Reed/ photo
and
'aid Redfern had nmtirmed th:Jt.
' iJrs &lt;&gt;!her 'cr1icc; to chilOhio· House . Minority Leader Joyce Beatty addressed the Meigs County
·spe;JI,ing
to
the
Me1gs
Cuunt)
Dcnwcr.ltll·
dren anJ families includingDemocratic Execut 1ve Cqmmittee Thu rsday _abo ut the importance of the 92nd ·
Excnlliw Committe&lt;' at C.trpcntc-r' ll all. th e· rr•.'gr.lm' of Heir Me
House District race this election year. Ce11tral Committee Cha~rrn an John lhle
Please see Leader. Al
Please see Struble, Al
. and Executtve C'omrnlitee Chairman Sue Maison are also pictured .

Cn. ·

•

--..--------:---------··· -----·-·

.

------~-

-

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�iunba~

BY LAWRENCE MESSINA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

MELVILLE . W.Va.
Rescuers on Sa!Lirtlay found
the bodies of two coal miners
who disappeared after a c·onveyor bell c;lllghl fire deep
inside a coal r11ine.
The bodies were found in an
area of the mine where res..:ue
.teams had been battlin~ the
fire for more than 40 hm~rs.
"We h&lt;lVe found the two
miners we were looking for.""
said Doug Conaway: tlirector
of the state Office of Miners·
Health Training and Safety.
''Unfortunately we don·t
have a positive outcome:·
The miners became separated
Thursday evening as their 12·
member ~rew u·ied Jo escape a
conveyor belt fire at Aracoma
Coal' ~ Alma No. I mine in
. Melville. about 60 miles south·
west of. Charleston. The rest of

Homeless
from PageA1
life has led tD I he lo&gt;s of their
: homes. As a result, many
: come to his doDr with their
: few possession' contained in
shopping bags. he said .
'Area ·advocate' believe that
: a large segment of the home : less population in our area
consists of teenage rs. Laurie
· Wayland.- outreach C&lt;&gt;ordina: tor for the Mei gs County
School Districts. has reported
that. as of Jan. 25. 2005. there
' were 127 homeless children
in Meig s County, and an
additional 173 v. ho were at
risk of becoming homeless.
Many of those children have
been on their owns for years.
Wayland has said.
Li ving in a homeless shelter is tough on teenagers
Stotts said.
.
"Homeless teens who are
still with a parent find it personally embarrassing ," she
said. "They don't like going
to a shelter. h puts .them in a
vulnerable position.- I always
feel bad · for them ... They
tend to find alternative
accommodations."
Often, teens will end up
staying with friends ratber
than livtng in a shelter, she
. said. Smaller chi ldren, however. tend to like Serenity

Plant
from Page A1
construction. operation · or
funding from the Ohio Air
Quality Development Board.
FutureGen is a S l billion .
near-zero emis~ions facilit y
that will use inte·grated
sequestration and hydrogen
product ion in a researchba&gt;ed power plant.
In addition to ir Meigs
County site along ·the Ohio
River. other proposed sites
include ~a four-county arc,_!
·near Canton, and Ll site promoted by Clermont · and
Hamilton countie s.

the crew and nine other miners
work.in~ in a differe111 section of
tl1e mine ~"'1pcd unharmed.
GO\. Joe M;mchin and U.S.
SeJL Jay j{ockcfeller iql(&gt;nned
familie., uf tbe tleaths at a
church prim to making the
announcemcnl. alon g with Don
Blankenship. chairn'ian of the
mine\ nwner. Massey Energy.
It was the second major mining. a~·cidcnt in ~'est Virginia in
less than three weeks.

Earlier thi s m(&gt;nth. an explosion at the Saen Mine. on the
nor1hern side 7&gt;f th~ state. led
to the de&lt;lths of 12 miners. The
sole sur\ ivm. Randal McCloy
Jr.. 26. remained hospi talized
in a Iight coma Saturday.
At the Ar·acoma mine. the
intensity of the heat and
smoke had blocked resc ue
teams from gcttil1g beyond
th e burning conveyor bell.
Conaway said. Heal from the
fire had.al so G!Usep the ro.of

of the mine to deteriorate.
The \·ictims were iden tified
as Don '!. ~ragg, 33 , and
Ellery Hatfreld. 4 7. Both
were fathers with more than a
decade of mining experience
and had worked in the Alma
mine for five years.
The two men had been
equipped, with oxygen canisters that typi cally produce
about an hour's worth of air.
but officials had initiallysaid
there were also pockets of
_good air inside the mine that
they could have. reached.
Rescue efforts inside the
mine were hampered by
heavy smoke that cut visibility to 2 to 3 feet. Teams were
able to get into four tunnels,
each about fo4 r miles long,
but they couldn ' t get beyond
the burning conveyor belt.
Otticials emphasized that
there were key differences
between the Alma mine tire and .

part of the problem ,'" she said.
House. she said.
""Thcv really like the shel·
To be able to afford rent,
ter.'' she said.· '"They like . the plu s utilities and other
stability. th e routine. the expenses. ·those who are
attention that the staff gives homeless first need jobs,
them and that everything is Fran~ said. Next, they need
available to them.""
not mily housing , but also
For many childr.en who affordable housing ; so mestay there. Serenity House is thing that is rare in thi s area.
the safest. most stable envi- Tatum said. And much of the
ronment in which they have affordable housing we do
ever lived. Stotts said.
have is nearl y unlivable.
"A lot liave lived in sub "We have some very promi ·
standard hoosing." she said. nent members of our com mu '"Serenity House "is a palace nity who are slum lords and
to them. '"
are a disgrace," he said.
Members.of the Continuur.n
Qn the other hand, Tatum
of Care Comm ittee do not said, some tenants go for ·
believe that the federa l gov- months without payiqg mnt
ernment's definition
of and end up being evicted.
homelessness applies to rural
Besides housing, homeless
areas. Here. those who are . people often need help with
homeless ·usually stay with finding .transportation tO anti
friends or relatives, or live in from work, said Karen
old barns ,or abandoned Sprauge. Gallia County
bui!d[ngs. Because of this. administrator and committee
the. homeless community is member.
nol as easily seen as it someBecause there is no public .
times is in other areas.
transportahon in our area,
Because there are numerous , that is difficult.
reasons for the problem, a
For those with children,
multifaceted approach .to solv- child care is another need,
. ing it is needed, Tatum said.
Tatum said.
"I don't think thal any one
But the problem often goes
of us are .trained to deal with deeper .than that, Franks said.
all of the prolllems that (the Many are without a good
homeless) face." he said. "ll's · work "e thic .
·
·easy to be overwhelmed."
"We try to gel people lo
And th e needs are many. change from the only way
Simply providing housing is they've ·ever known," Frank
said. "It's learned behavior.
not enough. Stotts said.
"They have a lot of needs We have to convince them
- being homeless is just one that·it's OK,.to want more."
When ope rati onal, the prototype will be the cleanest
fossil fuel fired power plant
in the world. Officials from
'Athens and Meigs comities
joined tQgether a year ago to
promote a Meigs County site.
Officials hope the proximity
of Ohio University to an
Ohio Ri ve r location \viii
;,erv,e to attract the plant here.
Ohio is joined by lllinoi &gt;
and Te xa;, a;, competitors for
th e pro ject. to be funde d in
part through the U.S
Department of Energy.
While Varnadoe and Simon
have work~d closelv · throunh
the tv.o-county task force to .
encourage the se lec ti o n of
Meius Countv as a si te. they
testi!"ied in "s uppo rt oJ ai1

Leader

nomination . in Ma y to bode
we ll lor the party ut the lueal
level. She said'thc party is
acti yely encouraging candifrom Page A1
date., for county olfice. and
· said the '!2nd district expect' Stnckland"s past sueBeatty
"belongs 10 the Democrats.'"
cesses in Meig;, Coumy elccThe di;,trict is · 52 percent tions lo help the party\ ticket.
·T ve said this before. and it
Democratic. Beatty said the
shou
ld be 'aid agai n: Ted
Democrats can expect succe.&gt;S Strickland
has never lost an
in statew ide apd loca l races in
·
·
·
election rn Meigs County,"
November if US Rep . Ted Maison said. ·· Jn I'192. when
Strick land is the party's candi - nohody here knew who he v.as
date for g&lt;)vernor.
- let alone what he stood for
Strickland is a bi·p&lt;rrtisan ~ he swept the primary and
fa vorite in the di .strkt. Beattv hi s fiN election. He's ne 1u
.. said, and .he wil l be acti1·eL) los~ one yc'l in thi;, county, and
including Democratic hou;e we don "t plan to let him i&lt;he
candidates in hi .s gove rnor\ fm this imp&lt;·H1ant oflicc.'" .
office campa ign message.
Strickland ha' carr ied
"'We ·need to remind ou r Meig' Count) in all seven of
voters of the problem' ihrs hi s con~re,,ional races.
state is still experiencing in althDU[!h he was defeated di _,.
the areas of ;choo l funding .·: tri ct-w ide in 19'14 by the lat~
education. and energ y under Frank Crcmcan,. Slrickland
years of Republican ~e ader- won hi; Sixth District ;cat
ship. '" B.eatty said. ··,111d we hack two yea r; later.
,. l .expect.(Stricklandl to do
will remind the Yotcrs thai
Jimmy Stewart carrie s watei" ve ry we'll hcrc. hccau;c he ,
has bi-partisan su§&gt;rt and I
for Boh Taft ...
Democratic
Party hear of that ;uppo ·1i ly." ' '
Chairman Sue :\Jai,on 'aid
Mai so n met 1\ith ca idates
she , ton. ex pen' a Strickland for statewide office dt a meet-

••

Ohio site.
'"The .JOint
testimony
rcllects the true cooptJrat1on
that exists between Mei gs
and Athens counties through
our FutureGen Regional Task
Force,"" said Simon. ''We
know that each of our coun ties have great sites for thi s
project, bu1, together pur pro·,
posal s are solid ."
Varnadoe added, "This leg·
islation highlights the state's
commitment to bringing the
FutureGen project home. We
are so proud of our state ·s
his torv ill innovation and
energy product ion and we
know that those factors v. ill
he factors -in the U.S.
Departme,nt "of Energy\ sit·
lng of this fac ilit y.'"

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Hurricane evacuees want Louisiana rebuilt
with better levees, affordable housing

u
minersfou
dtwodavs

BY MIKE STOBBE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

the Jan 2. Sago mine explosion.
For one. the carbon monoxide
levels. while still higher than
nort)lal in the Alma mine, were
not as severe, Conaway said.
Also, the ventilation system
continued to work at the Alma
mine and no methane was
detected coming out, said
Robert Friend, acting deputy
assistant se~retary for MSHA .
That enabled rescuers to get
into · the mine more quickly.
The gases .at the Sago Mine
and damage to the ventilmion
system had prevented investi·
gators from .entering the rnine
until Saturday. It will likely
be another week before they
can reach the deepest parts of
the mine and begin the physi·
cal investigation iniD what
caused · the explosion, said
International Coal Group
President Ben Hatfield.
The lone su rvivor from
Sago, 26-year-old Randal
McCIDy Jr., remained hospitalized in a light coma Saturday.
Conveyor belt tires c&lt;m occur
when belt rollers get stuck or
out of align ment and rub
against the structure supporting
them. said John Langton,
MSHA's deputy administrator .
for coal mine safety and hcallh.
Another possible cause is the·
accumulation of coal .dust.

AROUND TOWN

PageA2

GIONAL·

ijtfmes -ientinel

rebuilding. and Saturday's
forums are rart of a planning
process in figurin g nut how
' 10 best u.,e that money, state
officials said.
Input from Saturday\
m.ectings is to be incorporated in a long-term regional
plan for rebuilding South

ATLANTA - Hurricane
evacuees (rom Louisiana told
federal and stale offkials at
(arums across the South on
Saturday that what they want
most when their state is
rebuilt arc affordable hous- Louisiana.
.
ing, better schools and
But , so me were not yet
stronger levees.
reatly to talk about the future.
Some evacuees at the
''You're talking about
"Loui siana Speaks" forums rebuilding·&gt;" shrieketl Denise
also worried that officials Herbert , 4 7, momentarily
have no real plan s to restore silencing about 100 people
certain areas, such as New gathered at a forum in
Orlea ns '
impoverished Atlanta.
Lower 9th Ward .
'" I want somebody to tell
'This (fmum) is -cr good me where my mother is .
idea," Tereece Johnson, 40. liow 1" said Herbert, referring
whose mother and aunt lived tD 82-ycar&lt;oid Ethel Anna ,
in the. 9th Ward and wanl to Herbert. who went missing
return there, said at the event more tharr five months ago.
held in Atlanta. "'But is it
Louisiana Gov. Kathleen
going to accomplish some- Babineaux Blanco, who was
. thing? I can 't say."
at the Atlanta forum, talked
Most of the 30 forums to Herbert and other evac~ pon so red by the Federal
uees. who talked about
Emergency
Management : immediate needs li ke rental
Agency. and the Louisiana assistance ancl help with
RecDvery Authority - were mental anguish.
··we have to do a combinaheld in Louisian~. Six were
held in Atlanta. Houston and tion of all or that. We have to
four other cities where tens of take care of the immediate
thousands of Loui si;ma resi- needs ·now and we have to
dents tled.
work for the future. And that
Hurricanes Katrina and has to be done simultaneously.'·
Rita
deva,lated
South
More than 1,300 KatrinaLouisiana; destroying about related deaths have been
2 17,000 homes and I 8.000 reported across tlve states,
businesses and causing $25 with I .OXO Df those from
billiDn in in sured losses. The Louisiana. As Herbert noted,
stale expects roughly $10 bil- more than 3.()()() people 'are ·
lion in federal . fu nding for sti II officially u~accounted for.

Gallia County calendar
Community
·events
Sunday,Jan.22
GALLIPOUS - Gallia
County
Historical
and
Genealogical Society board
meeting, 2 p.m ., followed by
a general meeting, election of
board members and revision
of bylaws, 2:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - · . Jack
Fowler, execu.tive director of
the Point Pleasant River
Museum, will speak to the
Gallia County Historical and
Genealogical Society, 3 p.m.
The general public is invited.
Monday, Jan. 23
GALLIPOLIS - Financial
aid meet ing at Gal!ia
Academy High School auditorium, 7 p.m.
Thesday, Jan. 24
RIO
GRANDE
Southeastern Ohio Safety
Council. noon. Room 216 in
Bob Evans Farms Hall ,
University of Rio Grande.
Lunch will be served. For
reservations, call . Phyllis
Mason at 245-7228 or Paula
McCloud at 245-7 I70.
RIO GRANDE - Open
Gate Garden Club will meel ...
7:30 p.m., at the home of
Nancy Skaggs. Program is
"Growing Roses," while the
works~op is on making a floral arrangement using roses.
Wednesday, Jan. 25
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation
Dislrict Board of Supervisors
monthly meeting. 8 a.m., C.H.
McKenzie. Agricultural Center.

Charlene Hoeftlch/ photO

Michael Struble of Syracuse. new president of the Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center, is
given hrs oath 'of office at the swearing 1n ceremony by Bryan Swann, treasurer.

Struble
from Page A1 ·
Grow. Head Start. Public;
Itinerant and Integr-ated
Preschool.
Addilionally
the
Educat ional Service Centers
pro vides psychologi cal -~ er­
vices. 'peech and language
developm ent. occu pation a I
and physical tberapy ser·
vices, school-aged "special
education. Adult Basic and
iteracy Education (ABLE):
a parent me1itoring progn!m.
and wo rk study and intervention support .

The AMESC Governing
Board is responsible r,;r
appropriation&gt; in excess ol
$1 1 million . and has seen
rapid growth since the merg ·
er of Athens and Meig&gt; counties· school superintendent
offices in I&lt;J'J8.
·
l.ncluded in these appropri ations is an annual paymll in
exce ,; ol $4.2 million .
BeginninQ in the 2002 sc hool
year. a gradual expansion of
serv ices offered to Meig s
Counry
School s
has
occurred.
Other board members and
the schDol districts they represent are Je anette Thomas.
Loca l:
Dana
Meig s
Kessi nger, Eastern Local:

Phy ll is Knowlton. Alex;mder
Local:
Rex.
Robinson.
Federal Hn..:king: and John
Depoy. member-at-large. The
position r.;presentin g Trimble
Local is curren tl y Vacant.
John Costa nw. strperinten·
Jem of the AM ESC said.
Re~ula r: meetings of th e
~O\'C~·ning boartl._ alternate
between At hens and Meigs
u1untie,. Meetings are ctlrrcrlll y schedul ed 'on the sec·
ond and fourth T11Lirstlays of
each month. with the first
meeting being held at
Bradbu~:y Lear~1in g Center. ·
and the second in the
AM ESC AthciJS Office ·Jocat·
ed at 507 Richfand Ave .
Athens.

DEAR ABBY: My husband
and I have always made il a
priority to spend time with
the people in our lives we
care for .. At this stage, our
children are go ne and ou r
large hom~ is ideal for gath·
erings. so we are . frequent
hosts to friends and family.
One of our close friends,
"G loria." has a roommate,
" Ivy," who has taken it upon
herself to . show up at any
event she hears about without
• bein~ invited . This has put
Glona in the uncomfortable
position of being the "informant" In most cases. it
wouldn't prese nt a problem .
However, Ivy has shown up
at sit-down dinners with lim• ited seating. She never offers
to bring anything or calls. to
make sure she's welcome.
Sometimes she shows up earlier than when our guests
have beeri told to arrive. This
has caused some awkward
situations for me. to put it
mildly.
.
Not only lhat, buf Ivy is a
very demanding guest. On a
few occasions she has tried to
boss me around and expects ·
me to wait on her hand, and
foot. How can we tactfully
tell this woman she needs to
call before showing up to
make sure she's welcome? HOSTESS
WITH THE
MOSTEST IN OHIO
DEAR HOSTESS You
have described a boor who
knows no boundaries. Please
do not waste your time trying
to be '"tactfu l," becmise it
won't work. The next time
Ivy shDws up uninvited. tell .
her exactly what you have
written to me and do not
adm it her. Period.

..
ing of the Ohio Democratic emerged in the Democratic
·Chairmen· s· Associati on in primary for the house seat.
Columbus las t week. She said She announced her candidacy .
State Sen. Charlie Wilson. D- in Athens on Wednesday. and
Bridge port.
· the
on ly introduced herse lf to Meigs
· Democmti c candidate fm County. Democrats Thursday
Strickland'' congressional evemng.
Micluie l Struble of Syracuse
scat. will make a two,day visit
to Meigs County nex t mornh .. ~ ...,J:;o spoke and is circulating ·
Only
Dnc
candidate". nominating petitions. He will
.Debbie Phillips. an Athen ~ forma ll y annou nce his plans
Ci ty counc ilwoman, has later, he said .

Card shower

.'r 2001 Saturn .

M on d ay, .Ian. 23
RACINE
Racine
Village Council. recessed
session, 7 p.m.. Racine
Municipal Building.
RACINE
Southern
·
7
B d 0 f Ed
oar
ucatton,
p.m .
regular meeting
1\Jesday, Jan. 24
POMEROY
Open
house of the new admini strative offices of the Meigs
Local Board of Education
from 610 7 p.m. followed by
the regular school board
meeting. Lorri Barnes to be
. honored as tirst .teacher in the
Meigs Local Distri ct to
become National Board
·certified.

Church events
Sunday, "Jan: 22
LETART - Gospel ·music
worship service at 6 p.m.
East
Letart
Methodist
Church.
Wednesday, Jan. 25
MIDDLEPORT
Hobson
·
Christian
Fellowship Church, 6:30
p.m. with ,service featuring
n:rusic by Marty Short.
POMEROY
Community prayer and praise
service, 7 p.m. at the

Pomeroy Church of Christ in County General
Health
L"O njunction
wilh
the Center. Clinical brea&gt;t examEnterprise United Methodi't inations.
pap
smears .
Ch h S
. I
. b
Refreshm
ents.
door
prizes.
urc . pecra mustc y
"'Freed by Christ." Public Appointments required at
invited.
1304) 273-1033 .
Th d
J
26
urs ay, an.
POMEROY
Winter
meeting of the Ohio Valley
Crusade for Christ will be at
7 p.m. at the fe llowship hall ,
First
Southern
Bapti'i
Thesday, Jan. 31
Church.
RACINE RACO to
POMEROY
Ohio meet at 6:30 p:m . at Star Mi ll
Valley Crusade for Christ Park. Potlu ck refreshmelll' .
meeting , 7 . p.m.. Fir;t Potluck · dinner will h~
, Southern Bapllst Church ..
served. New members Wl'i ·
RACINE
Racrne come. Meeting ·cli angeq due
American Le gion Auxrlrary. ·to other mee!ings.
Post 602. 7 p.m.
POMEROY - Alpha Iota
Masters , II :30 a.m. at S1.
Paul Lutheran Church for
Sundav, Jan. 22
pizza party and meeting.
POMEROY. - Alcoholic ' .
Sunday,Jan.29
Anonymous
closed 12 &amp; 12 ·
MIDDLEPORT
&gt;tudy,
7
·p.m.;
Sacred Hea r1
.Evangelist and singer Art
Bush will be in concert at Church.
MIDDLEPORT
9:30 a.m . and preach at the
Narcotics
Anonymous open
10:30 worship hour at the
Bradbury Church of Christ, discussion, 7:30 p.m.. Cruss
Pointe Apartments rec reation
395?8 Bradbury Road.
. mom .

Clubs and
organizations

Support groups

Other events
Saturday, Jan. 29 .
RAVENSWOOD . . W.Va.
- Free women's health cliniC, 9 a.m. to noon. Jack son

MAl

FRt 1120/06 • THURS 1126106
BOX OFFICE OPENS"AT 6o30 PM ,
MOIHHURS, AND AT 12o30 PM
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES

'STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
AVAILABLE
HOODWINKED (PG)

HEALTH AND
LIFE
CALL JERRY
·Auto-Owners Insurance

SPRING VALLEY CINE

446 · 4524 r,tOVIE HOTLINE

1:15 3:l5&amp;7:15
GLORY ROAD (PG)

,,oo 3:1o 7:oo &amp; 9,10
UNDERWORLD EVOLUTION
R 1:30 3:30 7:30 &amp; 9:30 ·
THE LAST HOLIDAY (PG1 3)
• lnllln4 M-tsgffig- M.., '/0411 tludctr
• 10 H\lllllklrwew will WIINndl

1,10 3:207:10&amp;9

SWt,...-

(s.m

lrlsltu?J

992-6677

'lfJlrl~

in Your
·Own Backyard"

!!:':'"'~-

1994 Pontiac

Colby ·Provolone Honey Ham
'4',{) lb.
' 3" lb.
'4' 0 lb. .
Salami
Capicdllo Sand. Pepperoni
1 05
13. 9 lb.
4 lb.
'4" lb.

Flrebird

Foar Seasons Aato Sales

'
·--- - - -··

Freedom From Smokina • Session 3 • "Qyjt pay"
,
Monday, January 30 at 6:00 pm at the HMC Tobacco Preventron Center, located at 2881.
Jackson Pike in gl'!ll.iP,otis ."for· more information abo~t th is seven-session smoking cessation
series developed by the American Lung Association. «Boll (740) 446·5940 .

'
2005 Chevy
Malibu

Swiss
' 3"' lb.

_ _ _ _..,..

Public meetings

DEAR ABBY: I need to
• FME Ttcnnlcll Support
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN 2
Life Home Car Business
know ·if my husband's rela• CUAim
Newt. WlllMr &amp; men!
PG 1:20 &amp;7:20
7k "1k- P~~tu. ~.
tionship with his ex-w ife
&amp;:1
FUN WITH DICK &amp; JANE
should be tolerated. They talk
up 1o 6X
INSURANCE PLUS
PGi3 3:20 &amp; 9:20
to ,each other on the phone
JU&gt;£03 """"
HRONICLES OF NARNIA (PG
AGENCIES, INC.
· Sign Up Onl~l www.loceiNet.com
every month. or so. and send
I :00, 3:40, 7'00 &amp; 9,40
Dear
each other cards on special
114 Court Pomeroy
"This ad sponsored by the
Abby
occasions. Their closeness
Holzer Center lor Cancer Care·
caused a· former girlfriend to
Rol1a b le lnTr&gt;P11..l 1 Access S1ncc 1994
break off their· relationship
before we mel.
He is determined to stay
DEAR ABBY: I have close and sees nothing wrong
struggled with my weight with it. There 'were no chilever since · the death of my dren from lhe maniage, Abby,
child several years ago. This so lhal is not the reason.
Why do people who remain
year for Christmas, a family
this
close get divorced? Am I
member - who despises me
- drew my name. Her gift to wrong to feel hurt and threatme was a glass pie dish con- ened, because I'm ready to
"Healthc~re
taining cookie-making ingre- just walk away from this
dients; plus a pastry cutter warped, co-dependent rela·
ti6nship. Please let me kitow
and two basting brushes.
She know s I always send your .thoughts. - READY .
Diabetes Se!f-Mamlgement Classes (Jackson, Ohio!
thank-you cards. What kind TO QUIT IN ARIZONA
January
23, 24 and 25 (Monday· Wednesday)·from 4:00 pm · 7:00 pm at Holzer Medical
DEAR READY TO QUIT
of .thank-you should I send
Center ·Jackson in the Education Room locateq just inside the Main Entrance of the Hospital.
her? She reads your column. · Your husband 's first marriage
Maybe I can just send her failed for good reason .
For more information . please call (740) 39.5-8500 or (740) 446·5971 .
·
·
·your reply 0 STUMPED However, he and his ex may
IN WEST RICHLAND, :'cling'' because they invested
Freedom From Smoking · Session 2 - "Wanting to Oyit"
so much ·of themselves in the
WASH.
Monday, January 23 at 6:00 pm at the ·HMC Tobacco Prevention Center, located at 2881
DEAR STUMPED: Do relationship that they can't
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis Session Two will cbver coping with urges· a~d making a plan
not tl ip and send the woman complelely detach.
For more information about this seven-session smoking cessation series developed by the
my reply. That would be bad · Before yo u throw in the
·American
Lung Association , call (740) 446-5940 .
manners. Instead, copy it on towel , please consider mar·
stationery in you r own riage counsel ing. Your husJackson SenjOr Screenjngs
handwrtting . Here's what to band may not understand
Tuesday,
January 24 from 10:00 am · 12 Noon at the Jackson Senior Citizens Center at 25
tell her:
how deeply his ongoing rela·
E. Mound Street in Jackson. Ohio . Free cholesterol, glucose and blood pressure screenings
" How kind of you to tion ship with . his · ex hurts
·will be provided by HMC-Jackson. For more rnformation, call (740) 286-2909 .
remember me with the good- you. A neutral third party
ie-fixings. I have always felt might be able to get through
that the thought and planning to him what you cannot.
Oak Hjll Senjor ScreenjngS
.
[)ear 1lbby is wrillen by
that go into selecti ng a gift
Thursday, January 26 from 10:00 am · I 2 Noon ·at·lhe Oak Hill Senior Citizens Center
are what makes it - and .the Abigail Van Buren , also
at 115 Glen Cove Road in Oak Hill , Ohio. Free cholesterol glucose and blood pressure
sender -· so special. Your known as jeanne Plrillips1 . screenings will be provided by HMC-Jackson . For.more informati(ln . call (740) 682-7600.
ge nerosity will ·not soon be and . was founded by her
forgotten 1"
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear . Abby
at ' Commynjty Coffee
I think that wi II express Write
Friday, January 27 from 8:00 am • 9:00 am in the HMC Education and Conference Center.
what you would like to say in www.DearAbby.com or P. 0.
Holzer Medical .Center invites all to an informal and ongoing community c·offee promotrng
a way that will leave you Box 69440, L.cs Angeles, CA
conversation between area leaders in business , community service, education , government
90069.
.
above reproauh.
and private enterprise . Sponsored by the HMC Chaplaincy Services Dep~rtment. For more
information, please call (740) 446-5053 .

2004 Honda
Odyssey

IIM·Tbnt, C1rrv out
Calllhud for Plc•·•a In the DriVe·Tbru

.. -._ .._! _

Anyone interested in being
involved with caring for
homeless cats in this area is
invited.
GALLIPOLIS 0.0.
CHESHIRE - Citizens
Against Pollution (CAP) has Mel ntyre Park Dis.trict Board
its monthly meetings at the of Commissioners meets the
Gallco Workshop building, last Thursday of the month at
north of Cheshire on Ohio 7, noon in the park district
the last Monday of every office at the Gall ia County
month slarting at 7 p.m .. Courthouse.
GALLIPOLIS
The
Anyone with concerns are
Gallia
County
Veterans
encouraged to anend. For
more information, call (740) · Service Commis~ion will
meet at 3 p.m. instead .of 4
367-7492.
p.m.
on the second and fourth
GALLIPOLIS
of each month until'
Tuesdays
Gallipolis TOPS (Take Off
Pounds Sensibly) meets each further· notice.
GALLIPOLIS . - Gallia
Monday at 6 p.m. at the
County
Veterans Association
·Sycamore Branch of Holzer
Clinic with weigh-in starting meets the fourth Monday of
the month at 7 p.m. at
at 5:30p.m ..
GALLIA Greenfield American Legion Post 27.
Township Crime , Walch
meets the fourth Tuesday of
each month at 7 p.m. at lhe
·fire statior1.
PATRIOT - Belva Miller
GALLIPOLIS - The "Old will celebrate her 99th birth:
and· New" quilters meet from . day on Jan. 23. Cards may be
10, a.m. to 3 p.m. the fourth sent to her at 20640 State
Thu_rsday of every month at Route 141, Patriot, Ohio
St . Peter's Episcopal Church. 45658.
For more infDrmat.ion, call
GALLIPOLIS - Evelyn
446-2209 .
Preston will ce lebrate her
GALLIPOLIS
77th birthday on Jim. 22.
Gallipolis Kiwanis Club Cards may be sent to her at .
meets at 6 p.m. on the second 125' I /2
Third
Ave. ,
and fourth Tuesday of each Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 I.
month at the Holiday· Inn.
· E-mail community cqlenGALLIPOLIS
The dar items to kkelly @mydaiPerennial Cat. a shelter for lytribwre.com.
. Fax
homeless and abandoned announcements to · 446·
cats, meets the fourth 30()8. ·Mail items to 825
Monday of each month, 6:30 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
p.m. , at Dr. Faro's Foot 45631. Announcements may
Clinic, Third Avenue and also be dropped off at the
Grape
Street,
upstairs . Tribune office.
·

Friday, January 27 at 5:00 pm at Holzer's Assisted living Community, located at .300
Briarwood Drive in Gallipolis For more rnformation . call (740) 441-9633 .

992-6121

-

Regular
meetings

Eamjly Njght at Holzer's Assjsted Uvjng Facility jn Ga!Upo!is

,·" ..r~Bl'
n-:r'S~ r )
~--..Vl,~ ... .
,/ ., .. 'Party Barn

Sunday,JanuarY22,2006

Meigs County calendar-

Hostess with the mostest has guest who sth? worst

/

PageA3

1627 Eastern Ave . (Next to McDonalds)
441•8585 John Godwin. Owner

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Need not ~
be present ·~
towin ~

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DRAWING TO 8[ HflD FEBRUARY 3RD

QUALITY FU.J~NITURE PLUS
'

�PageA4

OPINION

iunbap t:tmtl·itntind

Sunday, January 22, 2006

-

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

Lerters ro the ediror are welcome. They should be less than
.WO words. All letters are subject to editing and must be
signed and inclttde address and telephone. number. No
unsigned letters will be publi.1hed. Leiters should be in good
rasre, addressing issues, not personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday. Jan. 22, the 22nd day of 2006. There are
343 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in Hi story: On Jan. 22, 1917, President
Wilson pleaded for an end to war in Europe, calling for ''peace
without victory." (By April, however, America also was at war.)
On this date: In 190 I . Britain's Queen Victoria died at age 82.
In 1905, Thousands of demonstrating Russian workers were
fired on by Imperial army troops in St. Petersburg on what
became known as "Red Sunday" or "Bloody Sunday."
In 1922, Pope Benedict XV died; he was succeeded by Pius IX.
In 1938·. Thornton Wilder's play '" Our Town" was performed publicly for the first time, in Princeton, N.J.
In I 944, during World War II, Allied forces began landing
.
.
at Anzio, Ita! y.
In 1957, suspected "Mad Bomber" George P. Metesky was
arrested in Waterbury, Conn. (He was· later found mentally ill
·and committed to a mental hospital until 1973.)
In 1973, the Supreme Court handed down its "Roe v. Wade"
decision, which legalized abortion usi ng a trimester approach.
In 1973, former President Johnson died at age 64.
·
In 1995, Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy died at the Kennedy
compound at Hyannis Port, Mass., at age 104. ·
In 1998, Theodore Kaczynski pleaded guilty in Sacramento,
' Calif. , to being the Unabomber in return 'for a sentence of life
in prison without parole.
·
Ten years ago: The White House announced that first lady
Hillary Rodham Clinton had been subpoenaed by the
Whitewater special prosecutor to testify before a grand jury
. investigating the mysterious discovery of her law firm billing
records in the White House residence. O.J. Simpson testified
for the first time since the killings of his ex-wife Nicole and
her friend , Ronald Goldman, as he gave a videotaped.deposition for a wrongful death lawsuit.
Five years ago: On the anniversary of the Supreme Court
decision legalizing abortion, President Bush signed a memorandum reinstating full abortion restrictions on U.S. overseas
aid. Four of the seven convicts who'd broken out of a Texas
pri son the previous month were captured southwest of
Denver; a fifth inmate killed himself.
··
One year ago: The Iraqi government pledged to do everything in its power to protect voters from insurgent attacks
during upcoming elections, as militants announced they'd
killed IS captive Iraqi National Guardsmen for cooperating
with the America~s. Friends and family bade farewell to I 0
people killed when a rnudslide damaged more than two
dozen homes in La Conchita, Calif. President Nixon's former secretary, Rose Mary Woods, died in Alliance, Ohio, at
age 87. " Besarne Mucho" songwriter Consuelo Velazquez,
died at age 84.
.
Today's Birthdays: Former Sen. Birch Bayh , D-111., is 78.
Actress Piper Laurie is 74. Actor Seymour Cassel is 71.
Author Joseph Wambaugh is 69. Actor John Hurt is 66.
Country singer-musician Teddy Gentry (Alabama) is 54.
Movie director Jim Jarmusch is 53. Hockey Hall'of-Famer
Mike Bossy is 49. Actress Linda Blair is 47. Ac;tress Diane
Lane is 41. Actor-rap DJ Jazzy Jeff is 41. Country singer
Regina Nicks (Regina Regina) is 41. Actress Olivia d'Abo is
39. Rhythm-and-blues singer Marc Gay (Shai) is 37. Actor
Gabriel Macht is 34. Actor Balthazar Getty is 31. Actor
Christopher Ken.nedy Masterson is 26. Pop singer Willa Ford
. is 25. Rhythm-and-blues singer Kelton Kessee (IMX) is 25.
. 'Actress Beverley Mitchell is . 25. Rock singer-11)usician Ben
Moody is 25.
·
Thought for Today: "Would to God th~t we might spend a
single day really well." - Thomas a Kempis, German monk
and author (c. 1380-1471 ).

LETTERS . TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welco'me. They should be less than
300 words. All letrers are subject to editing. must be signed,
and include address and telephoiJe number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing .issues,'not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations ~nd individuals will no( be accepted for publication.

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Reader Services
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories 1s to b.B
~cc urate. If you know of an error in a
: story, please call one of our newsrooms

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would now be serving 25-to- ing child rapists away from
Ralph Page is' a problem .
life
in the penitentiary children? Doesn't a lengthy
The 35-year old Vermollt
because that state has passed prison term accomplish that?
man has twice been conVermont's shameful story,
mandatory minimum senvicted of drunk driving,
is
being played out in other
tences for felony battery on
and now faces charges of
children. But Vermont has places as well. But it is in
theft and assaulting . his
Bill
no such minimums. So Mark this tiny state, the second- :
girlfriend . He 's a typical
O'Reilly
behind
·Hulett, child rapist, is set to .least-populated
· low -level offender who
Wyoming,
that
a
horrendous
walk
free
on
March
4th.
shuffles around causi ng
The philosophy of our violation of human rights is .
trouble and clogging up the .
is "equal justice under taking place.
nation
.
j ustice system. · ·
Yet we have heard nothing .
. On January 17th, · Page old girl. Over a. period of the 'law." Obviously, the
Vermont
ambled into Judge Patricia ' four years, Hulett, a friend abused little girl and her from · former
Governor
Howard
Dean
, or
family
did
not
get
justice
by
Zimmerman's courtroom to of the girl's mother, con·
answer charge s that he fessed to raping the child in any measure . Clear-thinking Senators Leahy and Jeffords .
punched a woman in the . her own home. l.t was a people understand that true ·or social activist Ben Cohen ·
face. Apparently, Page . did methodical and brutal justice requires that the pun- of Ben and Jerry's ice cream,
which is based in the Green:
not like hearing the charges serie s of actions on Hulett's ishment fit the crime.
Mountain
State. ·
.:
Cashman
does·
But
Judge
against him and screamed part , and it has devastated
Also, current Vermont
not understand that. His
out "this is effing bull----." .a n innocent little girl.
Governor
Jim Douglas, a
sympathies
are
with
the
But when it came time to
That
annoyed
Judge
Zimmerman, wpo promptly sentence Hulett, Jud ge rapist, and he did not even Republican, is nowhere to be
found · Page in contempt of Cashman suspended all but attempt to hide that fact. found on the issue, arid the
court and sentenced him to '60 days of a potential life Because of Cashman's out- ACLU is silent as well.
Meantime, an abused litsentence, you
60 days in a Vennont jail. · · p,rison stretch, because rageous
tle
girl will likely live out
would
think
Vermonters
Nothing wrong with that, .Cashman wanted Hulett to
but listen to this: That 60- get "treatment." At sentenc- would be calling for his her life in anguish and ·confusion, · her low-incom~: ,
day sentence is the same ing, the Judge said : "I ·keep gavel and robe.
You would think. But family is devastated, and ,'
amount of jail time another telling prosecutors, and they
the crazy left media. .
you'd
be wrong.
Vermont judge, Edward won't hear me, that punishMost of the state's liberal believes Judge Cashman is :
Cashman , awarded 34- mentis not enough."
So here's justice in the newspapers are supporting the victim of unreasonable :
year-olq Mark Hulett. But
The
far-left ''demagogues."
it is here where th e state of Vermont: Cursing at Cashman.
They say the skiing is •
Vermont justice system a judge merits the san\e Brattleboro ·Reformer editorialized:
"Lengthy
jail
terms
great
this wimer in Vermont. ·
·
collapses.
Incredibly, prison time as repeatedly
without rehabilitation will But I' m not going. There's
Hulett pled guilty to a vari- raping a six-year-old girl.
something in the air there '
If Hulett had committed not accomplish anything."
ety of felony sexual assault
Really? How about keep-· that I cannot abide.
charges against a six-year- the same crime in Florida, he
,,

',

.

•
.~Sunday,

-.
January 22, 2006

CAA receives supplemental emergency funding

"
.'

'.

Dorothy J. Milliron
Dorothy J . Mill i'ron , 77, Gallipolis. died Saturday, J.an. 21.
2006, at St. Mary's Hospital, Huntington, W.Va.
'Friends may call at the Willis Funeral Home from 6 to 8
p'.m. Monday. Services will be I p.m. Tuesday in the funeral
hpme , with burial fo ll owing in Pine Street Cemetery.

CHESHIRE GalliaMeigs Community Action
Agency ·has been cho,en to
receive $4 1,443 ($2 2,533
Gallia, $ 18 ,9 10 Meigs) to
supplement targeted emergency programs in the area.
beginning in spring 2006: ,
The selection was made by
the Natio nal Board, made up
of affiliates of national vo luntary organizations and
chaired by th e Federal
Emergency
Management
Age ncy (FEMA).
United Way of America

'

.,

JanetL Ross
. _Janet L Ross, 62. Sa.ndusky, died Thursday. Jan. 19, 2006,
19 the Stern Hospice Care Cemer.
· .
She was preceded in death .by her husband, Le wis M. Ross.
' Private family serv ices wi ll be held in Gall ipoli s.
N,Tangements are by I he Toft Funeql Home, Columbus.

Local ·Briefs
Ag society
: memberships·
.now available
GALLIPOLIS 2006
memberships for the Gallia
·County Agricultural Society
ate now on sale at the Gallia
County
Cooperati ve
Extension Servi ce in 1he
McKenzie
Agriculture
Center ncar the fa irgrounds.
Memberships are $2 and may
be purchased at the Extension
Qffice during regular business
hours, Monday thru Friday,
from 8 a.m ..to 4 p.m.
..
- Membershtp mto the soc tety entitles the member to
vote at the annual election
held in September. The membership does ·not entitle the
member to admission to the
fair. To be eligible for membership, an individual mu st
purchase hi s/her own membership ticket in 'person, be at
least 18 years of age or older,'
and reside in .Gallia County.

RIO GRANDE - Larry
Hicks from the State Fire
Marshal's office will .be the
, guest speaker ai ,the Jan. 24
meeting of the Southeastern
' Ohio Safety Council.
The
meeting
begin s
promptly at noon in · Room
216 of Bob Evans Farms Hall
on the campus of the
University of Rio Grande.
Luncheon , reservations may
be made by calling Phyllis
Mason at 245-7228 or Paula
McCloud at 245-7170.

one .would, of course, have
This is the second part of a
two-part
series
titled
to sniff, the result being that
"Recreational Winter Sports
we soon were witnessing
That You Can Do . Sitting
what nuclear physicists call
Down." In Part I, I disa Runaway Chain Weewee
cussed snowmobiling , my
Reaction.
Dave
key finding being that you
Ev.entually, Brian and
Barry
, should not go snowmobiling .
Jeremy g'ot all the dogs into
with adolescent boys unless
their harnesses , at which
your recreational goal is carpoint they began to suspect
diac arrest. Today, I' II disthat they might be about to
cuss 'a sport that is more Chapstick expenses.
run somewhere, which
relaxing, as Well as far more
I took. a far more ·modes\ caused them to start barking
fragrant: dog-sledding.
dog-sled ride, up and down a · at the rate of 250 barks per
. A dog sled is-follow me smallish mountain near minute per dog. I would esticarefully here-a sled that is · Hailey, ldaho, on a sled mate that at that moment our
pulled by ddgs. And if you operated by Sun Valley Sled little group was responsible
think that dogs are not Dog Adventures. This is a for two"thirds of the noise,
· strong e.nough to pull a sled, . small .company started by a . and a solid three-quarters of
then you have never been very nice young ·guy mimed the weewee, being produced
walking a dog on a leash Brian Camilli , who plans to in the-western United States.
when a squirrel ran past. win the lditarod someday,
These dogs were rarin ' to
Even a small dog in thi s sit- . and who bought hi s first sled go. We passengers climbed
uation will generate one of dogs five years ago with into the sleds, and Brian and
the most powerftjl forc es what was going to be his col-. Jeremy stood on the runners
known to modern science. In lege tuition ("My parents behind. The sleds were tied
some squirrel-infested areas, still aren't sure how they feel tirmly to the front bumper of
, it is not at all unusual to see about it," he says). He now the truck, but the dogs were
· a frantically barking dog owns 27 dogs, which, as you pulling so hard that l swear l
racing down the street, wear- can imagine, makes it some- felt the truck move; I had
·ing a leash that is attached to what tricky for him to obtain · this vision of us disappeara bouncing, detached arn1.
rental housing.
ing over the top of the mounHistorians belie.ve that the
I was part of a two-s led tain-dogs, followed -by sleds,
·dog sled was invented thou- party, which required 18 'followed by truck, all headsands of. years ago when an dogs. A hi ghli ght .of this ed for the Arctic Circle,
Alaskan Eskimo attached a experience-i n fact, . a . hi gh- never to be heard from
pair of crude runners to a light of my entire life-was agam .
.
frame, hitched this con- watching Brian and his partQuickly, Brian and Jeremy
trivance to a pack of dogs, ner, Jeremy Geba11e r. bring untied the sleds and,
climbed aboard and wound the dogs, one at a time, out whoooaaaa. we were off,
up in Brazil. This taught the of the truck . Because, of whipping up the trail at a
remaining Eskimos ·that . if · co urse, eve ry single dog , very brisk pace, the dogs
they were going to build immediately upon emerging. insanely happy, Brian and
another one of these things, . had ·to make weewee. and Jeremy shouting traditional
it , should definitely have then eve ry dog naturall y had . dog-team commands (my
brakes. Today, dog sleds are to sniff every' other dog 's favorite traditional commainly used in 'r;ices, the ' weewee, wh ich wou ld cause mand, shouted by Brian,
most famous one being th'e the following thought to reg- was: "Be nice!" ).
· ,
Alaskan' lditarod, in which ister in their primitive dog
The se guys know their
competitors
race
fr om brains: "Hey! This is wee- dogs; they watch them careAnchorage to Nome, with weer' And so, tiaturally, this fully and talk to them indithe winner getting, a cash would cause every one of vjdually. Every dog runs a
. prize of $50,000, which just them to have to make more little differently. has a differabout covers the winner's weewee, which every other ent personality. For exam-

--- ---

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and conduct an-annua l audit:
3) · praclice non -tlisnim ir.lation : 4) have denH&gt;n,trated
the capahi li1y 1u ' deliver
· emergency food und/or shelter prog ram" and 5) if they
are :.t private vo lu ntary or~a -;

'

GALLIPOLIS - Auditions
for the Ariel Junior Theatre 's
production of "Aladdin" slated for this spring will be held
at the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Performing Arts Centre on
Sunday from 2 to 4 p.m. and
on Monday from 6 10 8 p.m. ;
Ariel Director Joseph Wright
announced.
..
,
Roles ;u·e .available for children ,Jn grades 2 through 12 .
This non-musical production ·of
"Aladdin" will be performed
the first weekend in April. ·
For info rm ati on, contact
Wright at 446, 2787.

County
board meets
Wednesday
PATRJOT - · Gallia County
Local Board of I;ducation will
meet in special session at 7 p.m.
Wednesday at Southwestern
Elementary School to discuss
attendance lines. ·
•

SWCD Board
changes date

Submttted photo

Ariel-Dater Performing Art Centre dedication planned
GALLIPOLIS - The com- Dater that we finall y own the has been commissioned for
mittee to plan the dedication build ing that we have worked the OVS by resident composfor the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater on Jor so many years and we er Scolt Michal. There will be
Perfom1i ng Arts Centre has set want to have an.event that will an unveiling of the sc ulpture
: April 22 for the program, show it off," said Ariel Artistic that was commi ssioned for
the facility as wel l as the permarking the completion of Director Lora Lynn Snow.
The event will showcase the manent bronze plaque honorwork on the 189~ building that
houses the Morns and Dorothy Ohio Valley Symphony, the · . ing the donor.
only professional orchestra in
Earlier this year. Ariel beneHaskins Arie11heatre.
A variety of events on the ~ou!heast Oh io. Guest artist facto r Ann Carson Dater purweekend of April 22 are Cecile Licad will perform the chased the entire facility and
being planned to celebrate . most requested symphonic gav, it to the organization as a
the facelift and the new name work, Tchai kovsky 's Piano permanent home for the. Ohio
Valley Symphony, the Ariel
Concerto in B flat minor.
the facility will bear.
A special orchestral work Players and Jun ior Theatre, and
"We are grateful to Mrs.

City Police

Cake decorating
course offered

• Janet L. Ha sh. 1269
George Road. Bidwell. who
sa id a 1chick trai ler was
r.;moved frnm a field on her
property .-.&gt;nwtime between
· GALLIPOLIS --'- Ga ll ia Jan. I I and !::&gt;
• Archk :\lan.: um. 750
l'&lt;iumv 'heri iT's dcpul &gt;es arc
ilk Rnacl. Bidwell.'
Rowb1
cllccklng thefl reports l'i led
who sa.id a pi,llll he owns
bv:
tak en frnm hi&gt; fa ther' ,
·, Edna M. Wells. 14SX6
u11 Ohin 554 somereqdence
Hannct n Trace Road .. Crown
Citl·. who said her residence ti me between la'i Sunda) and
wa~
c nter~d
'onietime Wcdne,dal . ·
Placed in the Gallia Count\
bet\\ ccn I 0: 15 p.m. Tuesday·
b)
Jeputics
oi1
and 1:.1(1 a.'m. Wcdncs\ICI\. Jail
Wedncsd
a1
was
Sonia
K.
Repo ned taken ~&gt;ere tlllljcli dn ho~.:s. a hanJ~un, u h\&gt;1 - 0 Harc1. .\:i. ::&gt;'i Smithe rs St ..
,L~i·. and a fir~ bu:-. -..af.: c~n1~ G;rlllr&lt;&gt;l ". fur rlkg al l'llflt.ltnin,g pcr'lltia l d(K'U tll c: nt-. .
'"'-·'~~lth.\.~. oi·J.ru~"·
Alti Ler II. 38, Gallipolis. for
di,orderly by intoxi cati on.

Sheriff's Office

·"'h

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We have it

On Your Side ·

-- ---

·/~
-' , . :\~ Sunday: February 12
\' "'
2. 00 pm
.=.·
(~';t. :f,.&lt;' Bob Evans Farms Hall

ON YOUR SIDE

'

the Ariel Dancers. The faci li ty
includes retail space. a banquei
room. meeting and rehearsal
. rooms and a ballroom.
Construction at the complex
will begin soon af\d include a
. new marquee and energy effl'
cient windows that wi ll hark
back to the·originall ook of the
1895 ltal ianate building.
·
Tickets for the April 22 ·
~:ala are $25 011d are 011 sale
ar the Ariel-Darer Box Office
· at 740-446-ARTS (2787).
.

For the Record

on

D

&lt;N2 -ht) 2Y

·Auditions set
or Ariel show

Clarification

.
~.

have an ac.c ounting ~Y~tcm

niLation. they 1hould have a
1 olun tar) board .
(iallia and Mei g' countie'
ha1·e distributed emergency
fund and 'helter fund s previ ously with C AA and the
Gallia Coun1y Council on
Aging panicipatin~ . The'e
agencies v.ere responsible for
providing numerou s mea ls
and utilit y a"istance . ·
Further info rmation on th,e
program ma) he obtained hy
co ntac tiilg Sandra Edward'.
C'ommun&gt;tv
Sen ice'
Divi,ioil .Jirector'. Gal lia- ·
· M ei!!'-~ Communi!\ Aclinn
Age;JL'). at Jn7 :7.l41 or

Ariel-Dater Hall
dedicatory event
committee mem·
be rs· di scuss.
plans for the April
22 Gala to hOnor
Ann Carson Dater.
Committee mem·
bers are . fro01
row. from left.
Lo ra Lynn Snow,
Amil artist1c di rector. Joyce
Anderson. Ariel
treasure r, and
Joan Unger te1der; ·
and back . Jane
Daniel. Brad
Painter and Anita ·
Strauss. Not pic·.
tured are mem·
bers Lydia Simon,
ll!larianne
Campbell, Joe
Snyder, Jeff
Fowler. Alice
Dachowski. John
Lentes and
Qu int1n Lindsmi\h .

Fire

pie, ·on my sled's team; :
Sprocket was a good, hard '.
worker, a steady puller witli
a real nice gait ; Brian hardly
had to tell him anything. But '
he had to keep talking to.'
Su~y. who was definitely iloi ·
pulling her .share of the load:
She was more waddling than .
trotting . .Brian would shout,
"Suzy! " and she 'd start trotling for a while, but as soon
as she thought he wasn't'
looking she ' d go back to
waddling.· You could just tell
that if Suzy worked for a ·
large corporation, she'd
. spend most of her day mak. ing personal phone c'alls.
But most of the dogs were
off to the race.s. In. fact,' the
hard part is getting them to
stop. Brian told us that one
of the cardinal rules of this
sport is 'that you never, ever
get off and walk behind the
sled.
"They'll . leave
you
behind," he said.
We trotted briskly up to
the top of the mountain, then
. Jeremy and Brian turned' the
sleds around in a maneuver •
that had .all the smooth pre·
cision of a prison riot as the
two te~ms of dogs suddenly
decided thi s would be · a ·
good time -for all 18 of therr,t
to sniff each other's privateregions. But they got
straightened out, and we
roared back down the hill;
even Sui:y was in overdrive.
· The sun was shining , the
valley was spread out below
us, the wind (not to mention
the occasional whiff of dOg
poo) was .whipping past our
faces. It was a wonderful
moment, and I felt as though
I never wanted to get off the
sled, ·eve.n if there had been
·some way ro stop it. I' ll
write when we reach Brazil.

blc Jor recommending agcnl·ic ... tll rcn~in.· the-..c .funJ""
and .1111 aJdi1iunal lu nds
a1 &lt;~iiC~bil: under thi' ph:"e nt
the program.
L'ndcr the tcnm of 1hc
£r:mt from the Nalional
Board. locitl £Overnmcntal or
private vol untary urgani-La tio ns .:hrhcn to recc1ve fund s·
mus1: I ) he non -profit: 2)

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Soil and Water Conservation
GALLIPOLIS - ·· Gallia District Board of Supervisors
ers from Gallipoli s responded
County · Convention and · have
rescheduled , their
.10
n co li to Gallipol is
Visitors Bureau will be hosl- Tuesday. Jan. 24 meeting to
Develupmental Center at
ing a tour guide training sem- Wednesday. Jan. 25 at 8 a.m.
GALLIPOLIS - A possi- 7:3 1 a.m. Thursday for what
illar on Thursday, Feb. 2 from in the C.H. McKenzie ble furnace malfunction is
proved tube a fal se ala rm.
6 to 8 p.m.
believed to have caused a fire
Agricultural Center.
' Volunteer tour guides must
at an 1800 Chestnut St. resinot only posses! a knowledge
dence in Gallipoli s late
of Gallia County, but must also
Wednesda y, the Gallipoli s
liave good communications
GAL LIPOLIS - Cited bv
Voluntee r Fire Department·
skills relating to group tours.
MIDDLEPORT The reported.
. G:fllip l'lis Ci1y Police
The seminar will also fea- French City Barbershop
Two tru cks ' and 18 fire- Fr iday was Tamela J.
· t.ure . a hospitality session Chorus uhder -the direction of .fi ghters responded at I0:58 .Simpson·. . 2.\. I m8 Second
aimed at helping guests fee l . J1m McMtllan w1ll be J:]erfonn- ,p.m. from the firehouse. . A1·e .. Gallipoli'. for &lt;1 stop
weiCome to the conimunity.
mg at the cancer surv1vors whi ch is two hlocks away siL!n violation .
. Moderating and .instructing apprccwuon dmner, on March from the fire .scene·. Melissa
C ited by offic-er&gt; Thumlav
tbe seminar wi ll be Becky 17 at the Famtly L1te Center.
A. Francis is the tenan t and 11 ere Jcnrill'cr R. :\ ort hup. 20,
Nesbitt wi th Ohio State
th e house Is owned by 145 Lm\n Garfield A1c ..
l.jniversity Extension and Bob
Vanessa
Egnor.
Point Gallipoli-.. for po-.~e,~ion of
JJ.ood, director ·or tourism for
d r u~ paraphc·rnalia .md prn-·
Pleasant. W. Vi
Gallia County. During th e
Fi re fi ghlers used aboul bat it Hl Yin lation. and Rc1\1ert
. e'venillg. all in anendance will
1.000 ~allons of wa1er lo R. ~laslers. 22. SX Mil l Crech
receive infonnation that will
MIDDLEPORT - A cl ass exlingutsh the bla7e. wh ich R&lt;iaJ. Ga llirolis .. for possc·s]l.e relayed to bus tours.
in cake decorating is bei ng caused m·odera'e dtH n; tge to ~ion Df dru~" Ltnd l'rimina l
' If interested in attending. offered by the Riverbend Arts the house. Firefiu hler' cle;rrcu t DilL\.
contac t the Convention and Council at its headqu aners in · the scene at l l :5~ p.m.
Cit ed h\· · pt&gt;l1cc
\111 ·
Visitors Bureau at 446-6882 . the Middeport Masoni c
Orie truck ·:llld I 0 fi rcfi ~IH - \VL'dne ... Jit\ wa..., Jnh.n 0 .
All tou r g uide s .will be Temple bui.lding on North
required to have thi s training Second Street.
to effectively cond uct a tour.
Ve1eran ·cake · decor'ators,
'
. Sharon Stewart and Jennife r
Harri so.n. wi ll be the instruclnrs, Clas.se' will be held
~ '
~
from 6:30 · to 8:30 p.m. on.
Tuesduys. Feb. 21 and· 28 anq
. JACKSON Planned March 7. Those intere sred in
Parelllhood of Southeast ta king th e course can ge t
Ohio will exte nd· hours of add itional information fro m .
The
at
operation at its Chillico1he Stewcn1. 992-7 1'96. Deadline
· Med1cal Plaza
·
for reg i\ 1crin g is Jan . 25 \V hen
and Jackson siles.
the
supp
lie.
,
wi
ll
be
ordered
.
A later afternoo n/eve ning
936 State Rt. .160e Gallipolis

f1111'1g1111W«l ....._ ....u Ill

-~

will provide tlw Jdmini,traslal'f and func1inn "'the
fi,_·:il agent. The hoard "'"'
charg~d to dr,lribute funds
appropr iated h)' Congrc" to
help expand ihe capacity of
food and shelter pro£ram'
in high-need around the
C.D~1n 1ry.
·
A lol!al · board .made up of
cit item ' from tlall'ia antl
Meigs countic., wi ll determine how the funds awarded
to the counti es are to he dis trib uted among the emerge ncy food and shelter prngrams ru n hy local service
organization~ !n the area.
The loca l board i&gt; re spoSJSiti v~

clinic will be offered at the
PPSEO Chillicothe Health
Center, 42 W. Second St. , on
Feb. I, March I and March
15 from 2:30 until 6:30p .m.
The agency wi II also resume
its satellite center at the Jackson
County Reaith Department,
200 E. Main St., Jackson. with
. evening clinics on Feb. 7, Feb.
28, March 7 and March 2R
from 4:30 until 7 p.m.
.To schedule an. appoi nt. ment , call (740) 774-2948.

Tour guide
·training slated

·Adventure in ·Sun Valley

STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDA1LYTR18UNE.COM

Speaker set
for meeting

....

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Deaths

•
•

Vermont justice
·825 Third Avenue • Galllpolla, Ohio

.'

c-411*.,

~MI.bt~c:.:.r.:-,

On '1\'u Sbt II 1 .........,. IY-' ~

'F=or 8$51$/&lt;Jnnl
'f'''·'"~

&amp;

'Ofllpl ~/I{Xj
a·'~

r"e t"M"$,1. bnng ali app#caDie 2005

Jn tarPC rncClt;'t'

~oc•,¥ ~ec .. nr•r

.nf,..,..,ar·or -w:r a~

bert&gt;f115 "E"''re~m

lll('Ome

federal /8~

tl'l11d SUDpot1

etc

�PageA6

OHIO

&amp;unbap Ql:imei5 -ientinel ·

Sunday, January

Hookah bars come to Southeastern·Ohio
BY BETH SERGENT

with his parents Mark and
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
HiJiarie in mid-February.
Shishah Cafe is located at
ATHENS - One uf the 33 N. Court St. behind the
latest blips to arrive on the World's Best B&lt;tgels on Coun
pop cu lture radar are hookah Street. Shishah Cafe wi ll be
bars/cafes and now two are joi ned in the hookah cafe/bar
set to open in nearby . trade by another establishAthens, although with to me mcnt Pharao's at 5_Mill St.
co.ntroversv.
At the Shishah Cafe . . the
Originating in Turkey. hookah 'pipes or "hookah
hookahs are centuries old •md heads .. are re nted for a fee.
have popped up in Western The hookahs arc then filled
cul ture in Lewis Carroll's with whatever tlavo r of legal
~' Alice In Wonderland .. where
'hisha (tobal'l'Ol that the cusAiice stumbles upon 'l cater- tamer requests. The tobacco.
pillar ·itting on a mushroom is then smoked. often in a
smoking a hookah .. and in "'-c &lt;~mnnmal atmosphere wit.h
Jefferson Arrplane s . song ~rends ,;hanng the hookahs
~· White Rabbit." the lyrics of
tu be as the tobacco. passes
which mention a "hookah through the urn of water.
For sanitary reasons, each
smoking caterpillar:·
· Hookahs are an Ea.1tern customer can recieve a plassmoking pipe designed with a tic mouthpiece that slides
)ong tube passing t11rough an over the hookah's · hose to
urn of water that cools the smoke the tobacco during a
smoke as it is drawn through. sm&lt;)king ses$iOn wi th a large
The hookahs are filled with group of friends. It is estimatshi sha (pronounced shee- ed that ,the tobacco in one
shuh ). which is the tobacco· hookah rental wi ll last around
th at comes in exotic flavors 45 minu tes to one hour.
Ry land said his busi ness
like mango and apple mint.
Young entrepreneur Ryland will be decorated in aMiddle
Burhans is preparin g to open Eastern theme that is a mi x of
Shishah Cafe in Athens along Hindu and Mu slim culture

with
Moroccan
tables.
Afghan rugs and, of course.
the hookahs.
The Shishah Cafe will also
b~ a cafe with Turkish coffee and Middle Eastern ·
appe(izers a)1d entrees, with
a stage for live music to ereate what Ryland call ed a
"relaxing" and social atmosphere where people can
. gather with friends similar
to a coffee house. .
One interesting note is that
cigarette smoking will not be
permitted at the Shishah .
Cafe. Ryland said he and his
parents are anti-cigaratte.
''Its not like a cigarette.''
Ryland exp lained about
smoking · shisha . from a
hookah pipe. "It 's a ritualistic
son of thrng. You come and
sit down and rel ax. It's a once
in awhile son of thing, like
hav'ing a drink as to opposed
tq drinking all the time."
·
Ryland said he believes the
smoke created by the pipe is
more of a vapor that rs coal
filtered, and that it is a smoke
that doesn 't linger. He added
that p&lt;!trons will not leave the
establi shment smelling like
cigarette smoke .

At a recent meeting of the
Meigs · County
Cancer
Taskforce, r. Southeastern
Ohio American Cancer
Society staff members Julie
Ellenwood
and
Luke
Sulfridge were concerned
that the hookah bar phenome'na would make smoking
appealing to youn g- people •.
particularly with .the tlavored tobacco.
Shishah Cafe is a retail
tobacco establishment and
no one under the age of 18
can rent the hookah pipes.
though .the cafe has no age
restriction.
"We' re not saying its good
for you," Ryland said, making no exc uses about the
health concerns of smoking.
As for the proposed indoor
smoking ban for Ohio,
Ryl and said if that happens
he believes his cafe can· survive - with its exotic cuisine
and coffeehouse, "friendly"
atmosphere. ·
Bes1des the impending
hookah bars in Athens, the
closest hookah bar in Ohio is
located in Columbus with ,.
se veral
throughout the
United States.

Frlday·a gamea
High school boye basketball

22,2006

Soulh Gallia 85, Ohio Valley Chnstian 25
Polnl Pleasant 60. Herben Hoover 49
Gallla Academy 41. Jackson 39
Belpre 93, Meigs 71

Local Weather

Fairfand 66, R1ver Valley 61 OT

Walerlor.d 70, Easlern 61

Sunday... Partly cloudy.
Cooler with highs in the
Lipper 40s. East winds around
5 mph.
night...Mostly
Sunday
kludy with a 50 percent
chance of rain. Not as cool
wi th lows in the mid 30s.
East winds around 5 mph .
Monday... Mostl y cloudy
wi th a 40 perce nt chance ol
rain. Highs in the lower 40s.
Nort h winds around 5 mph.
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
20s.
Tuesday... Mostly sun ny.

Hi ghs in the upper 40s. .
night
and
Tuesday
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the upper 20s. Hi ghs
in the mid 40s.
Wednesday night and
'l'hursday... Mostly
clear.
Lows in tlie lower 30s. Highs
in tile upper 40s.
·
Thursday nigllt...Pa rtly · .
cloudy. Lows in the · upper
20s.
Friday ... Mo sr ly cloudy
with a chance of rai n and
snow &gt;howers. Hi ghs around
40. Chance ·of precipitation
30 percent. .

Federal Hocking 71 , Southem 40
High school girls baaketball
Sc&gt;vth
Galha
49, Oh1o Valley Christian
.
.....,.. 41 ...,.._...._,.

............. ·-

·-

~

-.

Haggerty returns as Gallia · ·
Academy upsets lea-gue leaders
LocAL

Scm:mrt.E

'

Mo0dav's aamea
Girls Baskelball
Gallia AcademY at Pt. Pleasant, 7:30 p.m.
Southern al OVCS , 5:30 p.m.
Park . Catholic at Eastern, 6 p.m.
South Gallia at Sciotoville East, 7:30p.m.
River Valley at Coal Grove, 7:30 p. m.
Girts B,_sketball
. St. Joe at Wahama. 7 p.m.

ACI- 85.93
Ltd.- 22.38
AEP-37.37
NSC -44.27
Akzo- 46.55
Oak Hill Financial Ashland Inc. - 63.53
31.96
BLI ,- · 13.32
OVB- 25.30
BBT- 39.63
Bob Evans - 23.70
Peoples - 28.62
BorgWarner - 55.60
CENX - 29.46 ..
Pepsico· 57.28
Champion - 4.29
Premier - 15.11
Charming Shops - 12.44 Rockwell - 64.52
City Holding - 35.61
Rocky Boots - 19.96
From left, Mike Soles, 2006
Col45.03
·
Sears
-· 120.76
River Recreation Festival
Wai-Mart.- 45
chairman, receives a $1 ,000 DG -17.23
Wendy's - 56.91
sponsorship from Dan Shor( DuPont - 39.52 ·
Federal
Mogul
.35
,Worthington
- 19.3:4
manager of McDonald's of
Gallipolis. McDonald 's is
USB- 29.03
Dally stock reports are
sponsoring the jake Koebel
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
Gannett - · 62.25 .
Annual Split the Pot Drawing
General Electric - 33.37 of the previous day's
again th is year and will have
GKNLY- 5.15
transactions, provided by
a coupon for a1ree medium
Harley Davidson- 53.10 Smith Financial Advisors
fry printed on the baqk of the JPM- 38.05
of Hilliard Lyons In
tickets. Different levels and · Krog~r .- 19.05 ·
Gallipolis.
types of sponsorships are
available at thls point. If anyone is interested in sponsor. ing at any level, contact Lorie
Neal at the Gallia County
·
Chamber of Commerce, 446059\i. The 41st River
Recreation Festival will be
July 1-4.
Subscribe today • 992-2 ].55 or 446-2342

Boys Basketball
Gallia Academy at Pt. Pleasant, 7.30 p.m.
Eastern at Belpre, 7:30 p.m.
Wahama at OVCS, 7:3G p.m.
Symmes Valley at Hannan. 7:30 p.m.
Southern at Wellston , .7:30 p.m .
Girl s Bs.sketball
Roane County at Wahama. 7 p.m
Wrestling
River Valley at Waterlord
College Q;aaketball
Rio Gra'nde at Mount Vernon. 7:30p.m.
Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande at Mount Vernon , 5:30p.m.
Wednes"av's game
Wrestling
'
M~igs at Wellston

Thursday, January 26
Girls Basketball
Si&amp;S01Wille at Point Pleasant. 7:30p.m
Gallia Academy at Warren, 7 p .m.
Meig s at Vinton County. 7:30p.m.·
Eastern at Miller. 7:3Q ·p.m.
South Gallla at Teays Valtey, 6 p.m.
Southern at Trimble. 6 p .m.
Wahama at Hamlin , 7 p.m.

INSIDE

Submmed photo

Federal government pledges to ~epay Ohio over drug benefit glitch
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS - Ohio will
be repaid the cost of temporarily paying pharmacies because
of a mix-up about the eligibi lity of low-income se niors, a
federal official said Friday.
"We wili assure that the plans
reimburse the state of Ohio for
any money they would contrac,

'I

Keeping our eye on

your
health
• Raiders fall to Fairland in
overtime. See Page 82
• Belpre takes down
Maffiuders. See Page 82
• Fed Hock too much for ·
Tornadoes. See Page 82
• Rebels rout Ohio Valley
Christian. See Page B3
• High School Basketball
Scoreboard. See Page B4

Tit

BRIEFS

·'06 Chevrolet Silverado Ext Cab

Lell

4-Wheel Drive Pickup

to Right Phil Long , MD .- Kevin McCann, MD . Dean Siciliano. MD
lnterventional Radiologists at Holzer Medical Center

Slodlt 5466

V8 Engine

Auto Transmission
AM-fM stereo

Smooth Ride

Ait Condition
6COt GVW

Dual Air Bags
:SAl

.

..

.

BUY NOW AT SMITH'S
SUPER BOWl SAlE

rearaxle

•zz,990
Rear Step Bumper

·radullenotindudecj
.
' Factory rtKI81e&amp; included in price

. OVER 100 NEW CHEVROLET CARS i TRUCKS, PONIIA&amp;S AltTJ 8UICKS IN $TOC~

(l't•riphl'fdl \' asn•lar Diseas~) ls caused by the build-up of faHy
aubatancea that collect and adhere to the l.inings of the artenes. in the process
known as · atherosclerosis . You may hear the terms ' plaque'. "blockage".
~ lesion", or "stenosis.". As the plaque build-up continues. the internal lining of
the artery thickens which causes the artery to narrow and limit blood ~ow to
vital tissues and organs. Treatment options include; Artery Bypass Surgery
or Arterial Balloon Angioplasty and Stent Pla.cement Procedures.
.

Symptoms Include:

'

.

• A dull cramping pain in the hips, thighs , buHopk. arms or calf muscles.
• Numbness/tingling in the leg. foot, toes. arms or finger$.
• Changes in skin color.
• Changes in skin temperature of leg, foot or toes.
.i Ul~ratlon or ·gangrene due to sores that have not healed .
• Uncontrolled high blood pressure.
. '
• Kidney· damage.

February Freezer
Hoops Classici.set
McARTHUR - . The anriual February Freezer C!J,sic
youth b&lt;bketball toumament
will he held Feb. I H-19 at the
old Vinton Cou nty Hi gh
School.
The tournament is a round
robin format and is for sixth
grade boys teams. Entry is.
lim ited to the first 10 teams.
Awards will be given io the
firs t, ,econd , third and
fourt h-place teams. A spomman,hip award will also be
presented .
To register or for .more
informatio n. please 'cillltac t.
Terrv Hale at (7-+0l 3526205.

CONTACfS
Phone -

1· 74'0-446-2342 e)(t 33

Fax - 1·740-446·3008
E-mail- sports@ rnydallysentmel.com

As!! VOUC prttrllcy c«re phys/cl«n about Holzer Medical Center's
RadiolOgy department for Angioplasty and Stant Placement Procedures .

740.446 5000
www holzer corn

Sports Stafl

Brad S,herma n. Sports Editor
.(140) 446-2 342. 9111 33
bsherman@ mY,:da1lytnhune com

· Bryan Walters , Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 23
·
bwalters@ myda1tytnbu ne com

Lar~ Crum , Sports Writer
(740) 446; 2342 ext 33
Ierum @m'yd.atlyreql ster co m

-.

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

BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

___

-~-

JACKSON - Don't look now, but here come
tbe Galli a Academy .Blue Devils.
.
Fifteen roints from Jeff Golden an(! the return of
Jayme Haggerty sparked Gallia Academy, which
Golden
, Haggerty
Stout
stunned league- leading Jackson 41-39 in
. Southeastern Ohio Athletic League action 'Friday. six boys basketball games after st'arting the season
The Blue Devils have now won five of their last 1-5. The wi n not
. onl -v evened their overall (6-6)'

and league (3-31 record,. hut ' napped a four-game
losi1ig streak 10 their hitter ri val, ·
And just like a good old-fashioned rivalry
should-be , the outcome wa,n't decided until late in
· the fourth quarter.
.
Haggerty.' who ha; missed much of the season
with health issues. hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with
I: 17 remaining. He 'cored eight points in his
return . and none bigger than his frnal three . which
made it 3~-37.
·
"Jaymes niade the big three down the stretch,"
commented Gallia Academy coac(l Jim Osborne.
'

'

'

Please see Devils, B4 .

Iuu.d.ay'a games

Sunday Times-Sentinel

. The out-of-pocket cost
should not exceed $5 a prescription for those eligible for
both Medicare,, the federal
insurance for those 65 and
older: and Medicaid, the
state-federal plan for the poor
and disabled. About 6.5 mil lion seniors .fit the category
nationwide, including about
150;000 i.n Ohio. Officials do
not know how many of tl]em
are having problems.

Sunday, January 22, 20o6

___

GALLIPOLIS- A. schedule ol upcoming college

Local Stocks

'

Win Coun1y 63, Wahama· 50

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.

tually owe them because of
payments that have been made
on behalf of the plans," U.S.
Health and Human Services
Director Michael Leavitt said
in an appearance with Gov.
· Bob Taft.
Tens of thousands of lowinco'me seniors nationwide
,have reponed not b.eing able to
get their prescriptions or being
charged hundreds of dollars
since the benefit started Jan . I.

(

Hannan 75. Huntington St Joseph 6 1

. and high school varsiJy spar1ing events involving
teams \rom Gal lia. Meigs and Mason counties.

·FESTIVAL SPONSOR

BY CARRIE
. SPENCER GHOSE

Bl

LOCAL SCOREBOARD

Eastern
drops
fourth
·straight
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

· · TUPPERS PLAINS Fur the li rst tin1e since the
J99K-99 hoys season,
Eastern dmpped its founh
consecutive basketball decision after Friday's 70-61
Tri -Valley
Conference
Hocking Division loss to ·
host Waterford.
The Eagles (7-5, 3-3) led
only once
(6-5) at the
f i v e
minute·
mark uf
the first
period.
then the
Wi Id e at·;
(7 -4, 4-2)
went on a
16-5 run to
Cozart
close out
· the quarter
with a 21-1 I advantage. The
. guests never got doser tha'n
seven the rest o~ the way.
The difference in the
~ame came at the free throw
tme. EHS finished the night .
8-of-10 at the stripe. whrle
the hosts capitaliLed un a 2013 foul discrepancy by nailing 20-of-27 chanty tosses
for 7-+ percent. Of those 27
free throws. all but four
came in the secund half.
Eastem connected on 23of-55 shot attempts for 42
pcrcclll. including a 7-of- 19
effon lrum behind the ,u-c.
Conversely. Waterford hit
22-of-5 1 tries for 43 percent.
incl~in g
6-of- 13 frort1
three-point territory.
TI1e Eagles bad six player"i reach the sco rin g column. led by Nathan Cozan's
game-high :U points. Cozart
hit seven trikctas and had
21. of his 33 points in the
second half.
Kyl e Rawson fo llowed
wi th 14 points and a teamhigh eiaht ·rebounds. \Vhile
Mex K,lcGrath. Michael
Owen and Nathan Canoll
contributed four markers
apiece. Mark Guess rounded
out the scori ng . with twu
· pninrs.
Matt Schott paced the
Wildcats with 26 points .and
nine
caroms .
Matt
Townscndfollowed with 17.
Derek 'Hoge added eightc
and the duo of Caleb Snyder
and Craig Simms contributed ' ix apiece tn the triumpil .
The hosts also outrebounded Eastern 27-23.
including an Il -l 0 edge on
the offen,ive ~laS&gt; .'
WHS leu J4-20 at intermissio'n and 50-.17 headed
into the linal eight minutes.
Waterford claimed it s
biggest lead of the night in
· the third qmu1cr with a 4627 advanta~e at the tour
minute mark.
Waterford da imed a
swcup with a 60-24 vict91)'
in the JUnior var&gt;ity tilt.
Daniel Buckley led Eastem
with ci~ht points . The
Wildcah "~ed .12-R at intermi ssion.

The Ea~ l c; qmcludc a
Ji1ur-game ' road stand this
Tuc,da) v. hen the: travel to
Bdprc li1r a non-l'&lt; •nfcre ncc
contc't.

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,
Brad· Sherman/photO'
South Gallia Lady Rebels' Jennife r Sheridan pressures Ohio Va lley Christian's Richelle Blakens hip du ring the second half of
South Gallia's 49-41 victory Friday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande. Sheridan had a big second half and finished w1th· 16
points in leading the Lady Rebels to the ir seventh win of the season.

Lady Rebels.top O.VCS
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

RIO GRANDE - South Gal li a and
Ohio Valley Christian were tied at halftime . and both teams scored 13 point~
in the fou rth quarter. ·
So wha t was the ditlerencc''
Obviouslv - the third quarte'r ... and ·
Jennifer Sheridan.
.
The South Gallia fre shman scored 10
points. including a pair of 3-pointers,
during that span to lift her Lady Rebels
to a 49-41 girls basketball victory over
Ohio Valley Christian Friday at Newt
Oliver Arena.
.
Sheridan. who made four :1-pointers
total and fi nished with 16 poims.
drained two long bombs in the pivotal
third to keep Ohio Valley Chri sti;m at

bay. Her first put South Gallia back up
by five after a Kristi Davis score had
made it a one possession game .
Her second came with :40 seconds to
play In the stanza. and helped · s\\·ing
momentu m back to her team's side after
Obio Valley Christian's Sarah Jenkin's
completed a three-point play on the
other end.
Sheridan's rhree. combined with a ·
Lacey Lester layup at the third period
buzzer gave South Gallia ai1 eight point
lead. which ended up be in~ . the final
margi n of victory. .
Lester. a sopho more backup ce nter.
ga1e the Lady . Rebels a big lift off the
bench by scori ng 12 point s to ,go along
with five rebounds and two block&gt;.
Chelsea Stowers just mi ssed double fig ure' with nine points.
·

But the best game 01·erall belonged to
Davis. who led all score" with 27
points. She also hauled in 12 rebounds
and blocked fi1·e shots in rhe setback. ·
Jenkins added nine poirm and nine
boards.
Only four Lady Defenders scored:
Riche lle Blaker1&gt;hip and . Sarah
Burleson chipped in thrL'C ahd. two
respecti1ely.
·
.
The win was an import ant one torthe
Lady Rebel program: 11lmh 1ollowrn.g
the triumph. matched last season s
school record ol sn ·cn I'Ictone&gt; . South
Galli'r (7-61 ha, six ga me; leftm the
regular ,ea,on to tr) and hrcak 11. The
drawrng lor ,ectlnnal tournaments rs a
week lrom wdu\.
· ·
Please see Rebels. B4

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iunbap QI:ime~ -ientinel

BASKETBAL

·pREP BASKETBALL

PageB2
· Sunday, January 22,

BY ScoTT WoLFE

Jc"e McKnight and Darin
Teaford.
The initial Southern stand
Outscoring was strong. Southern held the
RACINE Southern 42-17 in the middle explosive Federal Hocking·
two quarters, the Federal offense in check much of the
Hocking
Lancers
(9-4) first quarter trailing early at 8tripped
the
Southern 5 and 8-7, then after Dalzell
Tornadoe s ( I c 12 l 7 1-40 and Garrett hit back to back
( 12-7)
Patrick
Friday night during boys' Tri- JUmpers
Valley Hocking Division var- Johnson drilled a three for a
sity basketball action in 12- 10 tally.
Hayman gymnasium.
Federal co me out of the first
Federal Hocking placed quarter huddle with renewed
eleven men in the sqJrin~ co l- c'nthusiasm and blitzed the
umn led by Tyler Chadwe ll, Tornadoes on a series of
who hit 6-of-12 from the field im;ide-outside jtimpers by
fo( 50 percent including 3-of- quick-footed guard Chadwell .
5 3-pointers. Chadwell also Chadwe ll initially go t the
played a great tloor game.
.
.
.
Assisting Chadwe ll was Evan dribble penetration and hit
Garrett with II. Grady two stop-and-pop jumpers,
Dalzell eight. and six each then aired if on the next posfrom Cory McCune. Chad session with a 3-pointer.
d
T
d
Trailing bv 13. Southern
D ·
T;~~~:ca~leam ate . an . called tillte our and chipped
Southern was Jed once the lead down to g at 23- 15.
again by junior guard .Patri~ but three stra ight turnovers
Johnson with 12 points, how' .and a miss pushed the Lancer
ever, none of the other . lead to 16 in a one-minute
Tornadoes e'Cer found their swi ng. Ar the half-Federal led
shooting form. In an effort to 35-22.
In one of the least producsave their legs for Saturday's
game, Southern went to the tive frames of th e year,
bench . early and placed 10 Southern tloundered oiTenmen in the scoring column .
sively in . th'e third quarter.
Brvan Harris added seven, Scoring just . five points.
Brad Crouch six. Weston Southern fell victim to a 19Counts three and two each point offensive assault from
from Kreig Kleski. Josh Pape, the Lancers. who doubled the
Wes Riftle. Corbin Sellers, score and led 54-27 after three

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:
·
:
:
.

:

Hannan Wildcats improve to 6-2
Bv lARRY CRUM
LCRUMOMYDAIL~EGISTER.COM

rounds.
Freshman Bryan Harris led
a re,crve oriented squad
much of the final round, as ·
Fed.;ral kindly followed in
similar fashion. - l-larri s paced ·
Southern with seven fourth
yuarter points; whi lc Cory
McCune added six for the
Lancers. The final ended 714D.
Federal Hocking hit 30-69
overall . hitting 27-55 two's
for fifty percent, and 3-14
three's. while llotching 8- 11
at the free throw line. Federal had 28 rebounds (Evan
Garrett 7. Brant Day 5, Trevor
Castle 5), eight steals (Day 3),
12 turnovers. six assists. and
15 fouls .
Southerri was 15-52 from
the field. 11 -39 on two's, and
4- 13 on three's with 6-8 fro m
the line . Southern had 22
rebou.nds (Sellers 4, Teaford
4). five steals, nine ass ists
(Pape 3), 25 turnovers, and I]
fouls.
Southern lost the reserve
game 49-24. Cory Vales led
Federal with 12, Jared
Gandee had ten, and Justin
Williams nine. For Southern,
Bryan Harris led with 12
points.
Southern . hosted Ohio
Valley Christian Saturday and
Federal Hocking went to
Alexander.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Never give up, it is a phrase
that means allot of things to
different people and means
even more to Hannan .
pown 41-30 at the half, the,
Wtldcats (6-2) put together a
strong second half run behind
tour double-dtgtt scorers as
Hannan slowly closed the
game and .eventually pulled
ahead for a 75~61 vt~tory over
secuonal foe Huntmgton St.
Joe.
Wes Gue paced . the
Wildc~ts on the evemng wah
23 potnts, 19 rebounds and
four' assists on their way to
erasmg the 11-pomt lead.

/~II \ IO'Jrl~l rl JW&gt;

Brad Sherman/photo .

Rebels.rout Defenders
Fairland picks up firstever win at River Valley
STAFF REPORt

In the extra minutes. Fairland managed to
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
slow things down and wi n it at the fo ul 'line,
~i nking 9-of- 10 from the charit y stripe as the
, CHESH-IRE - Whatever it was that kept Dragons gave Rive r Valley its thinl loss in a
Fairland winless at River Vall ey finally wore row and gave Fairl:tnd their tirst win ·in
off Friday night, as the Dragons eked out a 66- Chesh1re .
.
,
. 61 overtime battle in Cheshire.
A'long their way to the victory. Fairland
The Raiders did jump out to :ut early lead in managed to hold the rebounding ed~e at-ll- 33.
the contest, outscoring Fairland 10-7 in the had more assists with a 15-10 marK and man- ·
flfst quarter, but the Di-agons stormed back aged to ·give up less turnovers 1\·ith on ly 21
with an 18•point second quarter to take a one while River Vallev nave up 2R.
point lead into the break.
·
·
Offensively. taFriancJ was led by Josh
Bothteamscameout swinging il)thc sccond Johnson with 15 pointS. Kyle Wise with 14
half. as the Raiders piled on f9 points with point&gt;. Cole Hatfield with 13 points, Michael
Fairland ta,king 20, giving the visiting Drag_on&gt; Lamh with I0 points. Adam Fuller with eight
a slim two po·int lead heading into, the tmal points. Dustin Bumgardner with four points
camos.
~
ami Rich Sta~~s with two marks.
Behind solid 3-point shooting fmm River
River Valle)~ was led by its trio of doubleValley and an offensive perforn1ance which · digit scorers. lullowctl 'hv Ryan Henry with
suw .Jason Jones grab 14 points. Bryan seven poims. Cory Ehman and · Tyler
Morrow score 13 pomts and Michael Cordell Thompson wi th four points and Matt Nihert
w_ith a game hi gh 16 points, the black and gray and Scott Ward wi th tv.o p_oi nt,.
The Raiders will try to snaJ) their losing skid
tned to keep Fmrland wt~less 111 Rmder country but the Dragons breathed enough fire to when they retum to aet itln Saturday against
take the game into overtime. ·
Meigs . .

RIO GRANDE ·- · Fifteen
Rebels found the scoring column as South Gallia thumped
'Ohio Valley Christian '85-25
in non~league boys basketball
action Friday at Newt Oliver
Arena.
Josh · Wright scored 13
points and Bernie Fulks
added II as South Gallia.
improved to i 1-2 on the year
with its fifth win in-a-(OW.
Curt Waugh. who needs only
36 points to reach LOOO for
his career, went for eight.
For the Rebels. it completed
a sweep of · their Gallia
County rival. They are chasing last season's school- .
record of 16 wins, but need to
witi six of their last seven to
do so before sectional tournament play begin s. Included in
that remaining schedule is
Buffalo. perhaps the strongest
club on the Rebels' slate.
Ohio Valley Christian big

Bryan Walters/photo

:Improving Meigs falls to Belpre

to~. the rematch Friday night

. at Larry R. Morri son
Gymnasium. despite losing
S3-71 ·. the
Marauders
s how~d that a lot has
. changed since the second
· game of the season.
MHS ( I- 12. 0-6) trailed
· 43-29 at halftime and was
down by as many as 20 midway through the fourth but
the hosts battled back to
within nine (78-69) with 56
seconds remaining.
That late display of pride
and effort impressed .'vleigs
coach Tra~i' Abbott. and also
·. rea ss~ red him that thi' team
is not g'iving up w1thuut a
fight.
"Without qu~11ion . we
were· much better th;~n the
l~1:~ t time we pla:cJ." hc,sa1d.

· The Marauders then .went
~n a 17-9 r~n over the next
five-plus mmutes, tnmmtng
the def1cn to 78-69 a(ter En.c
VanMeter connected on _a 3pomter ·wnh I: 19 rematnmg .
The hosts never got closer
. than three · po ssessiOns · the
rest of the way.
Meig s fini shed the night
28-of-61 from the t1eld for
46 percent. including a 4-of15 effort from behind the arc
tor 27 percent. T.he hosts also
had 28- rebounds. 15 asmts.
f11'e steals and 19 turnovers .
Four player\ scored for the
Marauder'.
l. ed
by
VanMeter'' ga1ne-h1gh ~7
point ,. Andy Kinnan added
20 roinh and a team-high
ei~ht e&lt;lr"m'. ,,Jtile Da1c
p,;"k 1\J' nc·xt . v.i th lf1

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'05 Chrysler 300 Touring Pkg, leather, factory warranty, 16,000 miles.................. ,......................... $22,500
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'05 Buick LeSabre Dual Power Seats XM radio loaded, factory warranty ...................................... $/5,995
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2005 Cadillac Deville

Many young players saw
copious minutes in the fourth,
a quarter in which the Rebels
outscored the host Defenders
23-11.
Also for South Gallia,
Dustin · McCombs and ·Aaron
Phillips .scored seven point
each. Tyler · Duncan and
Michael Pope had six apiece
whil.e Tyler Porter. Travis
McCart'y and Steven Call all
chipped in four. Dewey
Cantrell hii a 3-pointer and
two points each by · Seth
Williamson, Derrick Beaver
and Josh Skidmore rounded
out the winner's scoring.
Ohio Valle.y Christian 's
Brandon Coughenour scored
all five of his points ~ in the
fourth
quarter.
Michael
Wright added four markers
while Zach Carr hit a 3-point- .
er and Kyle Scouten split a
pair of free throws.
OVCS entertains Wahama
on Tuesday. South Gallia
plays host to Hannan on
Friday.

.

Wahama falls at Wirt Co.,
loses third -straight decision
ELIZABETH w. Va. - · A
recent downhill slide continued to plague the Wahama
White Falcon basketball team
Friday evening as the '·Bend
Area cagers dropped its third
~traight contest after falling to
Wirt County by a 63-50 setback.
. The host Ti g·ers enjoyed an

Me·igs· Andy Kinnan (24) shoots a Jumper over 'Belpre's Bro.c Pittenger (22) during the fou rth
quarter Friday in Rock Springs. Kinnan had 20 points and eight rebo.unds.

man Luke Stinson !tad nearly
half the Defenders' points
with a dozen. OVCS fell to 211 on the year and Friday's
60-point loss was its most
lopsided of the year.
South . Gallia jumped in
front 13-0 before Stinson's
rebound and stick-back netted
the first OVCS . points at the
2:43 mark of the first quarter.
Stinson scored all six
Defender points in the opening ftante and South Gallia
led 17-6 at the first stop.
. More balanced scoring and
tenacious defense from the
Rebels, who came up with 19
steal s and helped forc·e OVCS
into 38 turnovers. helped the
Red and Gold further pad the
cu~hion in the second quarter.
South Gallia led 38-11 . at
halftime.
Fulks scored eight points in
the third period as South
Gallia won the eight-minute
span 24-3 and held a 48-point
edge heading into 'the fourth
quarter.

.

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

.

W/ PlJI?(

11f,~l

CJf VI f liCII

, . South Gallia's Bernie Fulks takes a swipe at the basketball held by Ohio Valley Christian is Drew
Scouten (40) during the first haif Friday at Newt Oliver Arena in Rio Grande. The Runnin' Rebels ·
beat OVCS B5-25.

Bryan Walters/photo

:
.
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Lo+

All PRICES DRASTICAllY REDUCED

River Val ley' s Michael C.ordel/ (32) goes up for a layup in front of a Fairland defende r during
the first half of the Raiders' overtime. loss on Friday.

markers.
Aaron Cordell had teamhighs with se'ven assists and
four stettls, and also ch ipped
in eight point s.
· Belpre (9-}. 4-2). ·which is
now tied for second place in
the TVC Ohio witH Vinton
County, never trailed in the
contest · and had seven players scofe in the triumph.
Jordan Thornhii'I paced the
Blacl&lt; and Orange . with 21
points, Dustin Adams fallowed wi.th 18 and Brad
Layland contributed 17 iri
the victory. Zach Alkire and
Alex Earley finished with I 0
and 'even, respectively, for ·
the guests.
'Belpre claimed a sweep
with a 46-37 victory in the
junior varsity tilt. Jesse
Mullins had a· game-high 12
points in the setback, while
Mic ah Pfalzgraf led Belpre
wit~ II points. Belpre led
21\-1 1 .at intermi ssion,
.
Meigs returns to action
f:'rid~y when it' travel; tu
Wellston for another TVC
Ohio· comcq . Tip-off is slat~d for X pm .

+h~

in the past, as Hannan managed to turn a deficit that at
one point stood at 14 around
tu take a J5-point victory.
Hanna was. led by Gue, followed by Ryan C&lt;Jitturbury
with 17 points, nine reoounds
and eight assists, Blake with
16 points, seven rebounds and
two assists, Edmonds with 15
points and · six rebound s,
Aaron Payne with two points
and four rebounds and Joe
Kinnard with two points.
· St. Joe was led by Brian
Miller with 15 points, Cody
Barlow with 14 points.
Shandon . Cihon with I 0
points. Mike Henderson with
nine points,. De1inis Cole with
seven points and Cody Bragg
with four points.

Our Sales Lots are full- Our storage lots are
full- We've got so many vehicles that
there's Panic on th~ Lot! '

, BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

' .

St. Joe lit up the. first quaner
With 23 pointS while holding
Hannan to 13 and edged the
visiting Wildcats 18- 17 in the
second quaner to take their
11-point lead into the half.
· From there, Haiman made
the right adjustments.
In front of a packed house,
Hannan made some adjustments and adjusted to defen_sively to hold St. Joe to just
nine points in the second
quarter while the Wildcats put
on 19, closing within one
heading into the final cantos.
From there, Brad Edmonds
&lt;U¥1· Kevin Blake made some
key plays and hit some needed shots as th~ team hit a solid
night from the foul -line,
something that has hurt them

Panic on

BY BRAD SHERM4N

BY BRYAN WALTERS
"We hao a re&lt;~) l y good effort
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM
tonight. and We need to' COn,
tinue that kind of effort the
ROCK SPRINGS - The rest of the way if we ,want to
last time Me1gs and Belpre• be succe&gt;sful."
.
got together for a Tn : Valley
Trailing 65-44 en ter ing the
Conference Oh10 DtV IS ion fina l stanza. the Maroon and
basketball game, .~he Golden Gold stormed out of the gates
Eagle s came av.ay wnh a with an 8-4 run to pull within
convtncmg 84-47 home VIC· 17 at the six mi~ute mark .

Sunday, January 22, 2006

2006

Lancers trip up Tornadoes
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

PageB3

overwhelming ll-O edge in
three point shooting which
ultimately provided Wirt
County with more !han
enough offense 10 hand the
White Falcons its third consecutive hardwood defeat.
Wahama allowed 10 treys in 3
loss to Buffalo earlier this
'week and has given up 21
three point goals in its past
· two contests.
"Our defense lacked in tensity in the first half,': assistant
coach Mike Wolfe said fol,
lowing the loss.- "We dug
ourselves a deep hole by giving up way too many three
point shots. They shot the,
basketball extremely well and
lhat was a hu ge factor also."
Wahama reeled off eight
straight wins after su ffe ri ng a
season opening loss to Man to
climb into the Class A basketball poll for what is believed
to be the first' time ever before

experiencin g its curre1it three locals offensively duri.ng the
game skid. The Bend Area comeback with Wasonga and
Falcon s season record dipped Ru ssell shining on the defento 8-4 following the setback . sive end. The Tigers were
. · Jesse Ward and Clint perfect from the free throw
Stanley did most of the dam- line all night long to help turn
age for Win County with back the Mason County teams
Ward collecting six treys on · ·furiou s fourth quarter comethe night with Stanley adding from-behind bid and preserve
four more baskets from the hardwood victory.
beyond the arc . The Tiger
Ward came awa y with game
'sharpshooters . assisted the ·high scoring honors with 24 .
hosts in constructing a 14 points on the night while
point 35-2 1 first half edge Stanley added· 18 and Chase
which Win . County would Mills II for Wirt County.
Iat~r
increase to a 21 point Wahama also placed three ·
bul e
in the third canto . scorers in double figure s with
Wahama · wouldn't quit Clark lead[ng the way with 17
however as the Maso n markers· followed by Roush
· h 10.
County cagers stepped it up wu· h 13 an d Fow 1er wtt
In the preliminary affair
on the defensive end which in
turn ignited the Falconsoffen- Wahama captured its second
sive ly.
consecutive•win with a 47-42
"K-evin
Wasonga ·and de cision over the Tigers.
Brandon Russell came off the
Justin Arnold dropped in 12
benc!t in the third period and points to lead the WHS jayvee ·
gave us a spark defensively." sq uad with Kerry . Gibbs
Wol.fe said. ''They disrupt~d putting forth a strong defen- .
their flow ·and caused some sive etfort in the tina! period
turnovers and we were fortu- for the locals . Turyman
nate enough to turn several of scored a game high 20 points
those into transition baskets." · with Lemon adding 12 for
The White Falcons began Wirt County in a losing cause.
its long journey from 21
Wahama will . attempt to
points behind and closed the bring an end to its latest streak
gap to a mere six points with when the Bend Area team
four litinutes remaining but pays a return visit to Ohio
that would be as close as the Valley Christian at 7:30 p.m.
Falcons would get Brenton Tuesday. There wjll be no
Clark, Clay Roush and junior varsity outing between
Brandon Fowl er paced the the two schools.

18,000 Miles

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•• &lt;?"JEEP UBERTY RENEGADE•12770:19.000ML980f'WAT ACTm.T CRS!PW PlPWfl sUr co SPAT w~AOOf ' S19.995 $295
03 SATURN VUE AWD 113137 AT AC PW PL CD TILT CASE.............................................................................. SI1.260 $294
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$332
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98 OOOGE RAM 1500 4X4 SPORH13126 AT AC TILT CASE PW PL SPAT WHLS .. -.................................,... S12,395 $275
98 DODGE RAM 4X4 QUAD CAB 113003 AT AC QUAD CAB PW PL ~D SPAT WHLS.. _.............:... Sll.995 $2,69
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111.100 $265

05 NISSAN AlTIMA 11309330,000 Ml.S BOFW AT A€l1LT CASE PW PLPWR ~TS SPRT WHLS ......_.... ....... $18,995
"'05 CHEV IMPALA 112977 AT AC TILT CASE f'/11 PL PWR SEAT 27,000MLS
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04 PONnAC GRANO PRIX GT 11:13150 AT AC TILT CASE PW Pt. PWR SEATS SPAT WHLS CO
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04 NlSSAN SENTRA ..,308!9 BOFW AT .I.C ltM'FJNCO TlLT PW PL. ........... - -............................... -·---·---- ........._............ $II ,995
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04 FORD TAURUS t12993AT ACTlLT CRSE PW Pl PWR SEATS ..........--..... -..............._ ......... _ ................................ ~... $9.950

S 119

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03 CHEVCAVAUERLS 113154 4 DRAT ACTILTCRSE PWPL COSPRTWHLS ..................:................... ,... Sl 0.995 $I 59

03CHEV IMPALALS 013141 ATAC TILTCASE.PW PLCO PWA SEATSPRTWHLS .........:............................ 110.900 $I
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02 CHRYSLER PT CRUISER TOURINGI13134 5SPD ~C Pw PlCD SPRTWHLSSUNROOF .-. .................... lll.lOO " $ 168
02 HONDA CIVIC LX •t3132 AT AC TILT CASE CDPW PL ......................................................................... 113.899 $214
02 CHRYSLER 3DOI.h130T1 AT AC TILT CRUISE PW PL P. LEATHER SiAT SPORT WHEEL, ...............:........ SI3. 995 $2 I 9
02 CHEV MONTE CARLO •13068AT ACTllTCRSE f'/1/P\. SPRTWHLS ............,.................................... ,...... 19.995 $145
118.995 $306
01 FORD TAURUS 113186 AT ACTILTCRUISE PWPLLOWMILESSPOIIT WH SSEAT .................................. 18.995 $129
$t29
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"01 NISSAN MAXIMA t12818AT AC 11LT CRSE PW Pl. PWR SEATS SPtrf WHLS ...................................................... S 12.900 $199
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00 OLOS INTRIGUE 113140 AT AC TILT CRSE PW PL PWR SEAT SPAT WHl.S SUNROOF ..................._. .............. SUOO S I 59
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03 FORD TAURUS 113012 AT AC TII.T CASe f'/11 PL .............................:....................................................................... Si.900

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PageB4

PREP ·BASKETBALL

Sunday,January22,2006

••
• Sunday, January 22,

foint Pleasant gets first win

High School Basketball Scoreboard

"

15. Adam Fuller 3 2·2 8, Rich Staggs1 o-o 1 Fairborn 80, Carroll 66
I Tol. Christian 57, Sylvania Northwood 35
2, Ethan Longo o-2 O, Cole Hatfield 3 6-8
Fairfield 79, Cin. Colerain 66
Tol. Emmanuel Baptist 47, Monclova
I , 3, J.B. Smith 0 o-o 0, Zach Pemberton 0 Fairliold Chriotlan 65, mead Christian 38 I Christian 46
GALLIA ACADEMY 41.
JACKSON 39
0-2. o, Michael Lamb 4 2-2 10. Dustin Findlay 55, Sandusky 53
Tot Ottawa H1lls 59, Lakeside Danbury 35
GALUA ACADEMY (H, 3_3 SEOAL)
Bumgardrier 1 2-2 4. Totals- 22 21-28 66
Franklin Furnace Green 46, Portsmouth 1 Tol. Scott 93, To!. Whitmer 38
Travus Stout 3 0.0 6, Shawn Thompson 2 1 RIVER VALLEY (5-8, 2-4 OVC)
Clay 40, OT
Tol. St. Francis 60, Tol. Start 48
o. 1 4 Jeff Golden 5 4. 5 15 Jayme Cory Ehman 2 0.() 4, Jason Jones 2 8-10 Fredericktown 37. Johnstown Northridge Tot St. John's 54, Tol. Libbey 47
3
Hagge'rty 2 3-4 8 , Brad Caudill 'o 0-0 0, 14 · Bryan Morrow 4 5"6 13· Matt Nib&amp;rt 1 ~reiTlont Ross 63 , Marion Hardlf)g 41
G:e~~~~5~, HiiJiard Darby 39
16
6
3
5
2
"
AleJ~ Kyger 1 2-2 5, Shaphen Robinson 1 O.O · Michael Cordell
· Tyler . GallipoliS Gallla 41. Jackson 39
Upper Sandus~ 98, F.ostorla 70
t-2 3 Totals 14-35 t0-14 41
, Thompson 1 2-5 4, Ryan Henry 2 1-2 7.
JAcKsoN (8-5, 5-2 SEOAL)
Scott Ward 0 2-2 2: Marcus Frazier 0 o-o 0.. Garfield Hts. Trinity 73, Elyria Open Door Van Buren 51 , cry-Rawson 44
T 1 18 20-30 61
43
Vermilion 72, Bay Village Bay 66
Seth Landrum 1 o-o 3. Anthony Fowler 0 0ota s·
Gates Mills Hawlo:.en 54, "vYfCkllffe 44
Vienna Mathews 42, Kinsman Badger 3S
7
18
20
8
13
66
0 0, Marcus Boggs 5 2·4 16, Reid Arnold 6 Fairland
·
Geneva 67. Conn.,.a:ut 22 .
AleMndria Twin Valley S. 71. Bradford
5-6 18 Patrie~ Dill 0 0·0 o Andrew Wasch River Valley
tO 14 19 10 8 - 61
Georgetown 65, New Richmond 56
62
D 0-0 'o. Michael Bates 0 0-0 0, George
a-Point Goals- Fairland 1 (Cole Hatfield), Germantown Valley View 69: Preble w. Chester Lakota w. 70, Milford 51
Lowry 0 0'-0 0, Bronson Ostrander 1 0·0 2. RV 5 (Ryan Henry, Jason Jones 2 l·
Shawnee 52 ·
w. MJiton M\ltori·Union 55, Eaton 53
TotalS 13·30 7·10 39
WIRT COUN~ 63 WAHAMA 50
Gibsonburg 61 , Bloomdale Elmwood 56
Wadsworth Reimer Rd. Chr. 55,
G.Acactemy
11 4 11 t5 - 41
' ,. '
Glousler Trimble 73, COming Miller 69
Brecksville Lawrence $chool38
Jlck•on
8 7 11 13- 39 ' WAHAMA (8-4)
Grafto~ Midview 54, Avon 38
·wapakoneta 59, Van Wert 46
3-PointGoals-GA3·7 (Golden, Haggerty, Brenton Clark 8 1-2 17, Clay Roush 5 3·4 Greenfie_
ld McCI~In 72, London 40
warren Champion 60, Girard 52
Kyger), Jax 6-14 (Boggs 4, Landrum, 13, Brandon Fowler 4 2-2 10, Casey Grove C•ty 65, P1Cker1ngton Cent. 53
warren Harding 52, Youngs. Ursuline 50
Arnold). Rebounds-GA 16 (Robinsoo 4) , Harrison 2 2-3 7, Kameron Sayre 2 o-o 4, Grove City Cent. Crossing 56, Marysville warren Howiand 52 Poland Seminary 45
Jax 20 (Landrum 5, Boggs 5). Assists-GA Kevm Wasonga 0 0-0 0, Brandon Russell 0 55
ot
'
'
8 {Golden 3), Jax 10 (Landrum 5) . Steals- o-o o. Totals 21 B-11 50 '
Groveport 57, Newarll 54, OT
warren JFK 67, Lisbon Beaver 48
GA 4, Jax 2. Blocks-GA 3. Jax 2. ) WIRT COUNTY (nil)
Hamler PatriCk _Henry 55, Bryan 22
Warsaw River View 42, Byesville
Turnovers -GA 10, Jax 18.
Jesse Ward 9 o-o .24, Clint Stanley lt ~6·6 Hanoverton UMI!ed 65, ~olumblana 64
Meadowbrook 34
18, Chase Mills 3 4-4 11; Michael Davis 1 Holl~nd Spnng. 68, Wh•tehouse Anthony Waterford 10 Reedsville Eastem 61
BELPRE 83, MEIGS 71
I 4-4 ,6, Charlie Phares
~ o-o 2, Matt ~ayn~ 60 J k
C t
Waynesfield-'Goshen 56, Lima Temple
BELPRE (9-3, 4-2 TVC)
Williams 1 0-0 2 Totals 19 14·14 63.
ous on 60, ac son en er 51
Christian 37
.f
Brad L"oyland 7 3-3 J7. Alex Earley 3 1·1 7,
3-POint Goats-Waham (none), Wirt 11
Huber H15 · Wayne 64 • Clayton Northn:tont Waynesville 64, Carlisle 54
63
Scott Layland 0 o-o o, Zach Alkire 3 2·2 10, {Ward 6, Stanley 4, Mills).
.
Westerville N. 40, Thomas Worthington 37
Jordan Thornh1H 7 6-8 21, Dustin Adams 8
Huron 58 • Castalia Margaretta 48
Westland 42 Dublin toHman 41
·
2-4' t8, Jarred Dan iel 0 0-0 0. Broc
GiBLS .BASKETBA,LL
Independence 62 · Al?hmond Hts. 6 ~· OT
Wheelersburg 71. Minford 57
F1itten~r 3 o-s 6, Micah Pfalzgraf 2 o-o 4.
SOUTH GALLIA 49 ,
~:r;~sl~wn Greenev•ew 50· W. Uberty- ~lila~ 59, She~ 54
M
Totals: 33 14-23 83.
. OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 41
Kettering Alter 67, Hamilton Badin 57
llmm.gton 71, arrow Little 1Bmi32
MEIGS (1·12, 0-6 TVC)
Kidron Cen . Chr. 59 , Cle. Heritage Chr. 44 Wlndh.am 79, Penln~ula Woodridge 61
Aaron Cordell 3 2-6 8, Michael Blaettnar 0 SOUTH GALLIA {7-8) .
Lakewood St Edward 93, Cle. ~ort_hmgton Chnstian 71, Morral
o-o o. Josh Williams oo-o o, Eric VanMeter Kristen Halley 0 o-o 0,_Chelsea Stowe~ 3 Benedictine 50
R•dgedale 45
10 3-3 27, Andy Kinnan 8 4·5 20. Andy 2-4 9, Ashley Clark 2 2·4 6, Jess1ca Lancaster sa, Gahanna 46
w orthlngton Kilbourne 51, WestervllleS.
Garnes 0 0-0 0. Dustin Van lnwagen 0 ()..() I Cantrell 0 D-0 0, Jlllian Swain 0 1-2 1. Latham Western. 86, Portsmouth Notre 4X7 . Ch . .
M'ddl
Ch .
1
O, Brad Ramsburg o 0·0,0, Dav1d Poole 7 1 Chelsea Canaday 2 1-4 5, Jenmfer Dame 49
en1a
ns1IBn 46 . • etown
nstan
2-4 16 Totals: 28·61 11 -18 71
·
Sheridan 6 0·2 16, Lacey Lester 6 0-2 12. Leaviltsburg La Brae 53, Cortland 39
. .
Belpre
20 23 22 18 - 83 :· Totals 19·61 ~·15 49.
·
Lakeview 50
Yellow Springs 53; Day. M1am1 Valley 44
Meigs
14 15 15 27- 71
. OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (4-10)
Lebanon 47, Mianiisburg 36
Youngs. Boardman 48, youngs.
3-poinl goals-B 3 (.Alkire 2, Thornhill), M Julie Hussel 0 0-o 0, Richelle Blakenship 0 Leipsic 67, ,Dola Hardin Northern 52
Aus11ntown_-Fitch 45
.:(-15 (VanMeter 4). Total rebounds-M 28 3-4 3, Sarah Burleson 1 0.0 2, Andrea Lew1s Center Olentangy 75, Chillicothe 74 Youngs. l.Jberty 61, B_rookfield 50
{Kinnan 8). Offensive rebounds-M 10 VanMeter o 0-0 O, Kalee Edmonds 0 o-2 O,
Lexington 60 Mad•son 59
·
Youngs. Raven 76, V1s1on Ouest, Pa. 62
~Kinnan 3) Ass1st~ 15 {Cordell 7) . Sarah Jenkins 4 "1·3 9, Lindsay Carr 0 0·1
Liberty Cent~r 50 Wauseon 49
Youngs. Wilson 83, ·Youngs. Chaney 78
Steals-M s (Cordell 4). Turnovers-M 19. o. Krlsti Davis 12 3~5 27. Totals 17-48 7-15
Liberty Twp. Lakdta E. 52, Hamilton 44
Zanesville .W. Musk1ng_
um e9, Zanesville
"(earn touls-8 18. M 19. JV score---S 46, 41 .
Lima Perry 57, lafayette Alren E. 55
Maysville 68, OT
f&gt;4 37.
S.Gallla
12 6 18 13- -49
Lima ·Shawnee 53, Defiance 41
___;:.. .
OVCS
10 8 10 13- 41
Lisbon David Anderson 62, W"llsville 55
Ohio High School Glrte'Baeketblll
SOUTH GALLIA 85,
3-Point Goals-SG 5·15 (Sher1dan 4, London Madison Plains 57, Washington
Frlday~a Raautta
: OHIO VALLEY CHRISnAN 25
Stowers), OVCS o-t (nona). Fouled Out- CH 54
Ashville Teays Valley 49 , Circleville Logan
,
R b nd -sa ·32 (C ad
8)
Loudonville 62, Utica 61
1 -Elm 39
·
.
SOUTH GALLI A (1 12)
none. e ou 5
an ay ' Loveland 66, Ha~son 53
Bembridge Pa1n1 Valley 55, Williamsport
.
' OVCS 37 (Davis t2). Asslsts-SG to ,
"'
Ty1er Porter~ Q-0 4, Dustin McC~mbs 3 1- (Stowers 5), OVCS 7 (Jenkins 3). Steals- LowellvJIIe 55, Mineral Ridge 52
j Westfall 40
2. 7. Josh Wnghl ~ 0-0 , 3, Berme Ful~ 5 I SG 8 (Sheridan 3), aves ~ (Jenkins 3) . Lucas 59, MI. Blanchard Riverdale 56
Baltimore Liberty Union 63, Summit
1..3 11 , Seth W1U1amson 0 2-2 2, Dernck I Blocks-SG 2 (lester 2), OVCS 4 (Davis
Lucasville Valley e9, Oslo:. Hill49
I Station Licking Hts. .SB
Beaver _, 0-0 2, Robert _cou~ey 0 O..Q 0 , 4) . Turnovers -sa 11. ovcS 16.
Lyndhurst Brush 55, Hudson 44
Bascom Hopew911-Loudon 56, Attica
FWan Geiger 2 2-2 6. Justm Tnplett 0 0-0 0,
Macedonia Nordonia 60, Cuyahoga Falls Seneca E, 30
Curt Waugh 3 2-2 8, Travis McCarty 2 0·1
Ohio High Schoot Boy• Ba•ketball
43
j Canal WinChester 66, Cols . Ham111on Twp
~ Dewey Cantr~l.l 1 0-0 3, Tyler Duncan 3
Frlday'a Reault•
Madison ' Christian 65, Musklngum 52
o-o 6. Aar~ Ph1i11ps 3 1-1 7. Steven Call2 , Akr. Buchtel 76 , Akr Kenmore 63
ChnStian 5
Chillicothe 47, Lewis Cenier Olentangy 35
0'-0 4, Michael Pope 3 0-2 6, Josh
Akr. Centrai-Hower 54 , Akr. Firestone 45
Mansfield 69, Orrville 60 ·
Circleville 51 , Amanda-Ciearcreek 31
::;k1dm0f'e 1 0·0 2. Totals 36 9·15 85
Akr.
E.
sa,
Akr.·EIIet
Mansfield
St.
F&gt;eter's
"63,
Mansfield
Cia. E. Tech 82, Cle . Lincoln-West37
45
1
OHIO VALLEY CHRIST1AN (2-12)
Akr. Hoban SB, Chardon NDCL 44
Christian 51
.
Cle. Rhodes 53, Cle. E. 48
9r~!ldon Coughenour 1 2·2 5. Michael
Akr. Spring. 56 , Ravenna SE 50
Marion Calh. 68, Ridgeway Ridgemont Cle S. 58, Cle CollinWOOd 23.
Williams o 0-Q .0, MICt"!ael Wr1ght 1 2-2 4,
Andover
Pymatuning
Valley
k
V
Cols. Afrlcentrlc -~4 , C:ols . Marion-t:="ranklln
57, 6M1, C?T El . 68 Del
~yle Scouten o 1-2 1, Nalhan B~own o o-o
Southingtqn Ch,llo:.er 56
anon gm , aware 8 uc eye a11 ey 38
a. Za,ch Carr 1 0·0 3, Henry Pat_nck 0 0·2 0, Anna 73, Stdney Fairlawn 56
57
Cols. Bexley 57, Whitehall-Yearling 34
L.t~ke Swiney o 0.1 o, Luke stmson s 2·5 i Arcanum 43, Ansonia 29
Marion Pleasant 48, Galion Northmor 35
Cols. Briggs 40 1 Cots. Walnut Ridge 30
12, Drew Scouten 0 0·0 o. Totals a-31 7-13 Archbold 59, Swanton 40
Mason 50, Andersor:' 35
.
Cols. Brookhaven 58, Cols. Northla,nd 38
25.
Ashland 50 , Bell\fille Clear Fork 32
Maumee 67, Sylvama Northvtew 54
Cols. Centenmal 55, Cols MiHI1n 54
S.Gallla
17 21 24 23 _ 85
Ashtabula Edgewood 55 , Jefferson Area McConnelsville Morgan 91, Crooksville 52
Cols. E. 66, Cols. Whetstone· 36
ovcs
6 5 3 11 _2 5
.
Medina56, N. Royalton45
Cols. Eastmoor81,Cols.S.65
45
3-Poinl Goals-5G 4-11 (Wright 3, 1 Ashtabula Lakeside 59, Painesville Mentor Lalo:.e Cath. 66, Parma Hts. Holy Cols. Independence 92, W. 3.7
Cantrell). OVCS · 2·5 (Coughenour, Carr) . : Harvey 45
Name 45
Cols. Linden 93, Cols. Beechcrofl44
Fouled Out-none Rebounds-SG 27 ~ Ashtabula Sts. John &amp; Paul 37, Midd.leburg Hts. Midpark 53, N. Olmsted 1 Delaware 50, MI. Vernon 32
36 .
(Waugh 4), OVCS 22 {S t1nson 4) Steals- : Cornerstone Chnstlan 35
.
.
.
1 Dublin Coffman 90, Galloway Westland 18
SG 19. (McCombs 3, Wright 3) . OVCS 1, ' Atwater Waterloo 73, S1reetsboro 71
Ml~lef•eld Cardmal 68 · Falrpon Harbor ! Dublin Scioto 61 , Westerville Cent 32
(O.Scouten 3). Blocks-SG 3 (three t1ed w/ 1 Aurora 47, Chagnn Falls Kenston 36
Hardmg 4
Fostoria St. Wendel1n 75. Bettsville 15
1), OVCS 1 (Swiney). Turnovers"-SG 16, Barberton 64, Copley 60, 20T
Middletown 55· C~n Sycamore .42
Fremont St. Joseph 58, Carey 53
OVCS 38.
Beachwood 82, Cuyahoga Hts. 42
Middletown FenwiCk 56. Franklin 46
Gahanna Cols ACademy 58 Hebron
Beaver Eastern 76, Portsmouth Sciotovl11&amp; ~llfor~ Center Fairbanks 721 DeGraff Lakewood 50 .
,
.
A1verside 68, ?O'T
Gilead Christ1an 37 Massillon Chnstlan
43
WATERFORD 70, EASTERN 61
I Bedf rd Ch 179 El · C h 47
M~llbury Lake 68, _
Genoa 67
·
23
EASTERN (7·5, 3-3 TVC)
I
Bellb~ook ~~~Y- Oa~~ak
Minster 52, Versailles 50
,
Grandview 43 Sugar Grove Beme Union
1
Jpsh Collins o o-o O, Nathan Cozart 11 4-4 I Bellefontaine 46 New Carlisle Tecumseh Mogadore Field 62, Kent Roosevelt 58
, '
28.
33. Alex McGrath 2 o-o 4, Daniel Buclo:.ley 0 37
'
Monroe 60, w. Carrollton 58
I Grove City Cent Crossing 66 Me.rysville
().() 0, Michael Owen 2 o-o 4, Marcus Bellevue 67, Norwalk 58
M~~ryatown Whiteoak 87, Leesburg 41
'
Guess 1 o-o 2, Nathan Carroll 1 2-2 4, Kyle BelOit w. Branch 65, Minerva 53
Fairfield 42
.
Grove Cl fy Chnstian 65, Spnng.
F(awson 6 2-4 14, Derek ~oush o 0-0 o. Belpre 83 Pomeroy MeigS 71
Mt. Gilead 71, Can:hngton·Lincoln 51
Emmanuel Christian 38
Totals 23-55 8-10 61 .
Berea se.'Westlake 43
Mt. ?rab Western Brown 65. Williamsburg
Groveport 45 , Newark 30 .
WATERFORD (7-4, 4-2 TVC)
Ber11n Hiland 94, Bowerston Conotton 46
Haviland Wayne Trace ?2 Edgerton 36
Matt Townsend 5 4-5 17, Caleb Snyder 2 Valley 61
MI. V~rnon 58, Del~ware 54
.
Heath 41 Granville 28 ,
2·4 6, Kyle . Kincaid 1 3-4 5, Jason Beverly Ft FNe 70 New Matamoras N. MlddiRe town Spnng . 53 · Berlm Center Hilliard D~rby 65 Upper ArlingtOn 49
Sampson 1 0·0 2, Craig Simms 2 2·4 6, Frontier 32 . . r
'
Western e~erve 38
Lancaster Fairfield Un1on 48 BloomMan Schott
8
g.
10
26
Derek
Hoge
3
o-o
a
fit
Del
h
J
ff
·
Navarre
Fairless
6t
Akr.
Manchester
59,
C
·
81
65
47
.
·
uon.
poseerson
,
j OT
.
.
arro 11 30
~tals. 22-51 20-27 70.
Green 56,_Sylvama Southview 38 New Bremen 61 Delphos St John's 52
Lancaster Fisher Cath 56, Millersport 49
1 Bowling _
!~;,~~Item
11 9 17 24_- 61
BrookSville-BroadVIew HIS. 69, Olm~ted New Concord J~n Glenn 62 Ph "lo 47
Mc,dlson 40, Eastlake N. 38
1
Waterford
21 13 16 20- 70
Falls 68
.
.
'
: Madison Christian 38, Muskingum
56
55
3-point goals- E 7-19 (Cozart 7). W6-13 I Bristolville Bnstol 66, Bloomfield 32
New Knoxville · Coldwater · OT .
Chnstian 27
1
(Townsend 3, Hoge 2. Schott). Total ; Brookl~n 60, LaGr':lnge Keystone 48
s~ew Lebanon Dixie 77 · Day. Northndge MI.. Gilead Chnstian 37, Massillon
rebounds-E 23 (Rawson 8) , W 27 (Schott 1 Brookville 54, Mad1son 34
New LeJ~ington 56 Dresden Tri-Valle 40 Chnstian 23
9J. Offensi,ve rebounds--E 10 (Rawson 3, j Brunswick 43, Parf!la Hts. Valley Forge New london 52 , Ashland Mapleton~~ ·.
New R1egel 49, Ok:l Fort 33
Guess 3), W 11 {Schon 4) . Ass1sts-E 7 ' 38. OT
New Philadelphia 66 Coshocton 64 . OT I .-Newark Gath. 66, Cols. Harvest Prep 28.
(Guess 2, Carroll 2), W 6 (Townsend 3}. Bucyrus 69, CresUine 52
New ~hlladelphia TuScarawas Cent.'cath . Newark Licking Valley 46. New Albany 38
Sleals-E 8 (McGrath 2, Owen 2), W 8 Bucyrus Wy~rd 37, Ontano 36 .
· Pickermgton Cent. SS, .Grove City 40
47, Magnolia Sandy Valley 43
($chon 3 .Townsend 3) . Blocks- E 1 ·Burton Berksh1re 97. Orwell Grand Valley New Washington Buckeye Cent. 65 , N. P1ckenngton N. 74, Oubl1n Jerome 17
(McGrath), W 0 (none) Turnoyers-E 10, 40 .
.
Robinson Col. Crawford 58
Powell Olentangy Uberty 52, Pataskala
Y¥ 11 . Team toufs-E.20, w 13. JV score- Cad•z Hamson Cent. 75, Steubenville ,Newbury 67, Kirtland 51
Watkins Memorial 46
W 60, E 24.
Cath. Cent. 67
. .
Newton Falls 84, Hubbard 78, 40T
Reynoldsburg 52, Hilliard DavidSOn 39
Caldw~ll 63, BeallSVIlle 61
Normandy 80, Elyna 71
·
Sunbury Big Walnut 56, Cols Fran kim
FEDERAL HOCKING 71, .
Cambridge 41. Uhrtchsvill~ Claymont 31
Norwalk St. Paul 78 , MonrOeville 43
Hts. 38
SOUTHERN 40
Can. Cen. Cath. 64, Hartville Lake Center 1 Oak Harbor 58, Clyde 55 .
Sycamore Mohawk 64, N. Baltimore 53
FEDERAL HOCKING (9-4 4-2 TVC)
CChr. 39
.
'
Ober1in Firelands 73, N. Ridgeville 47
Wes1erv111e N 74, Thomas Wonhington 47
.
•
an. GlenOak 51 , Massillon Perry 50
Ottawa-GlandOrf 54 St Marys Memorial Westerville S. 58 Worthington Kilbourne
Cory McCu~e 3 0-Q 6, Jared Gandee 0 o- 1 Can. McKinley 79, Uniontown Lalo:.e 48
,,
' . '
31
.
'
45
o_o. Kory Williams 1 O..Q 2, Cory Vales _a oCanfield 61 , StnJ~hers 39 .
.
OMoville 59, Miller City 36
Willoughby Cornerstone Chr 37, N.
o,O, Tyler Chedwel~ ~ 1-1 16, Chaz Dnggs Carrollton 75, All1ance Mar1mgton 55
Oxford Talawanda 75 Trenton EdgewOOd Ridgeville Lake Ridge 36
3. 0-Q 6, Just1n W1lhams 1 O-o 2. Grady
~darville 94, Spnng. Cath. Cent. 59
53
'
.
Dalzell 4 0.0 8, Adam Tate 1 4-4 6, Evan I Celina 44, Kenton 42
Painesville Riversickt 49 Madison 33
W.Va. prep basketball scores
Garren 5 ~ -2 11 , Brant Day 1 1·2 3, Centerb_
urg 59, Howard E. KnoK 43
Pandora-Gilboa 66, Arc8dla 45
I
Friday's Flesulta
A~ony Shields 2 1-2 5, .Trevor Castle 3 o- -~ CenteMIIe 36, Beav~rcreek 32
·1 Parf(ersburg S. 85. Zanesville 72
Qtrfs
0_6. Totals 30 8·11 71 .
1 Chagrin Falls 42, ~erry 38
,
Pemberville Eastwood. e5 Tontogany 1 Capital 52, Spring Valley 41
~ERN {1·12, 1-5 TVC}
i Chesapeake 6~. S. ~oint 44
.
Otsego 46
'.
East Hardy 50, Westmar, Md . 34
KfeiQ Klesk10 2-2 2, Palrick Johnson 4 3·4 , Chesterland W. Geauga 72, Pepper P1ke . Perrysburg 64, Rossford 36
Elk Valley.Christian 49, Emmanuel Baptist
1 ~· Jacob H~nter 0 o-o 0, Josh Pape 1 0·0 OrangE! 70
Pickerington N. 44, Dublin Jerome 29 .
36
2, Wes R1ffle 1 0-0 2, Weston Roberts~ 0- C~n. Aiken 65, Day Bel~nt ~3
. .
Plymouth 62, Ashland Crestview 47 ·
Fairhaven ChrisM.n 49, Rainelle Chrlslian
0.0, Corbm Sellers 1 o-o 2, Bryan Harns 3 C1n_. Country Days, , C1n. H1lls Chr1st1an · Portsmouth w. 44, NW 27
36
·
·
tro
0.0 7, Brad Crouch 2 ~0 6, Weston Counts Acatlemy 49
.
.
Powell
Olentangy
Uberty
54,
Pataskala
31
• George Washington 46. N1
1
1
1 1·1 3, Jesse McKn1ght 1 0- 1 2, Dann Cln. Deer Park 63, Cm. Indian H1~ 53
watkins Memoria! 44
Hamlin 42 Ouval28
Tealord 1 0-0 2. Totals 15 6-8 40.
c!"· Lockl~nd 83, Cin. Summi161
Ravenna 55, Norton 53
I
Harts 67. Guyan Valley 49
FMI Hock
12 23 19 17- 71
Cln. Madeira 59, N. Bend Taylor 43
Reynoldsburg 74, Hilliard Davidson 66
Huntington eo, St. Albans 23
Sou~m
10 12 5 13 - 40
~n. Moeller 54, Cln. St. XaviBI" 52, OT
Richfield Revere 60, Tallmadge 59·
Humcane 45, Cabell Midland :29
3-Pomt Goals-FH 3 (Chadwell 3) , C!n. N. Collegf! Hlll9~. Cln. Seven Hills 50 Richwood N. Union 50, Sparta Highland Logan 59, Herbert Hoover 37
SOutham 4 ~Crouch 2, Johnson , Harris).
Cln:NW 51 , Kings ~IllS K!ngs_45, OT
Parl&lt;ersburg 36, Ripley 27
C1n. Pnnceton 46 , C1n. Oak H1lls 45
Ridgeville Christian 50, Day. Christian 49
Pocahontas County 60 Tygarts Valley 46
HANNAN 75,
Ccln. TTaft ~· Day. Meadowdaie 57
Rockford Parkway 68. Maria Stein Marion ' ~rinceton 56, Woodro.,; Wilson 52
,
HUNTINGTON ST. JOE 61
" · urptn «&lt;;, Norwood 29 .
.
Local 65, 20T
Scott 56, Poca 29
C1n. Wmton Woods 67, Batav1aAmella 50 Rocky River 64, Faii'V1ew Pari&lt; Fairview 59 Summers County.67 , Oak Hill 42
HANNAN (6--2)
Ccln . WCoyomling 60,9Recadmsg 49
,
Rocky_River LUtheran W. 99, Sheffield I :Teays Valley Christian 4t BuffaJo 38
Ryan Canterbury6 3-4 17. Kev1n Blalo:.e 5
le. 11nwooe1 4 , le . 36
.Brooke.•de 61
~ 16, Brad Edroonds 6 3-4 15, Wes Gue · Cle. Horizon Science 58. Austinburg Rootstown 97 M adore 91
Webster County 48, Richwood 46
.
8.7-9 23, Aaron Payne 1 0-0 2, Joe K•nnard Grand River Acad. 44
I Russia 65, Botku~~56
.
j 2~estslde 45, Grearer Beckley Chnslian
1 Cle JFK 104, Cle. MLK 65
0·2·3 2. Totals- 26 18-24 75.
S Char1eston SE 69 Mechanicsburg 52
W f ld 57 s·
.11
1n 18
H:UtmNGTON ST. JOE (nil) .
Cle. Joh~ Marsh"all59, Cle. Mu Hayes 55
Webster 74, wav&amp;rly 41
· •sso~~y~ 47
CodyBarbow43·814,BnanM1IIer6~-2
Cle Rhdele~Bt , Cie.E 56
Salem65, NIIesMcK1nley49
Bl I' ld 64 M
tV"
OT
15, Shandon C1hon 5 0-0 10, M1lo:.e Cle ~ASJ 56. Cle. Cen. Cath . 42
Salineville Southern 53 Columbiana 1 B ue 1e C · 0 ~~ c"'w 61 •
Henderson 4 o-o 9, Dennis Cole 3 1-2 7, Clermont NE 72, Lees Creelo:. E. Clinton 45 Crestview 48
'
r~ton ounty · alhOun 46
Cody Bragg :2 0·0 4 Totals- 24 ~-12 61 .
Collins Westem Reserve 61 , Greenwich S~ndusky Perkins 68, Port Clinton 63
gndglo:.e~ ~· Le:ls County 43
Kennan ·
·13 17 19 26- 75
S. Cent. 29
Sandusky St. Mary 69, Milan Edison 65.
roo~ · elr 7
St. Joe
23 18 9 11"- 61
Cols. Beechcroft 80, Cols. Linden 62
OT
Buckeye Local . Oh1o 72, Oa~ ~len 60
3-Point Goals- Hannan 5 (Bialo:.e 3) , St. Cols. Briggs 70, Cois. Walnut Ridge 63
·sarahSville Shenandoah 62 . Old CBuaffmae~o~S , TeaHyusndVraedlley Chnstlan 59
58 ,
Joe 4 (Barbow 2).
Cols. Brookhaven 64, Cols. Northland 52 washmgton Buclo:.eye Trail 54
•7·
.
Cols Centennlal85, Cols Mifflin 71
I Seaman N Adams 54 . Sardinia Eastern Charleston Catholic 58, Williamson 33
Cols. OeSa!es 63. Cols. St. Chanes 42
Brown S3
1
Clay County 72, Roane County 59
POINT PLEASANT 60,
Cols. E. 56, Cots Whetstone 47
Sebring McKinley 66 N Lima s Range Clay-Battelle e4, VaHey Wetzel 58 .
HERBERT HOOVER 49
Cols. Eastmoor 78, Cols. s 53
'
·
Doddndg~ Coun~ 13;4, St. Marys 42
55
HERBERT HOOVER (7-4)
Cols . Franklin Hts. 62 , Sunbury Big Shekinah Christian 76 , Gahanna CHristian ! Elk _Valley Chr1st1an 65, Emmanuel ,
Torin ~pies 0 o-o 0. Adam White 0 2·2 Walnut 47
.
· Chnst1an 40
66
2, James Wh1te 1 o-o 2, Austin Harper 3 ,_ Cols Hartley 66. Cols. Watterson 46
Sidney Lehman 60 , Ft . Loramie 41
Elkins 43, Southern Maryland 42 , OT
2 7., Josh Stricker 4 2-2 12, Patrick Allf1 0 o- Co!s Independence 79, Cols. W. 71
Solon 62, Twinsburg Chamberlin 45
G!lbert 6~. Man 44
.
0 0, Thomas Shafer 3 2-2 9, Grant Buckner Cols Marion-Franldln 78, COis Afrieentric
Spencerville 73, Paulding 34
G1lmef County 59, Fay~ttevllle 53
5 2·4 13, TraviS CUnningh."am t Q-0 2, 72
Spring. Kenton Ridge eo, Casstown Greater Beckley Chnst1an 68, Valley
Jason Hamnck 1 0-0 2. Brandon Ari:hur 0 Cols Rea'l:ly 50, Zanesville Rosecrans 48 Miami E." 42
'
'
Fayette 67
Q-() 0 Michael Crumpler 0 0-0 0 TotalsCols. Tree of Life 64, Xenia Nazarene 42
Spnng. N. 44, Spring. s . 41
Harts 72, Guyan Valley 55
18 9-12 49 •
Colu~bus Grove 77, Ad~ 63
Spnng. NE 58, N. lewisburg Triad 56
Independence 60, Mount Hope 47
POINT PLEASANT
Continental 63, Ft Jenn1ngs 49
Spring. NW 65, Enon Greenon 57
Keyser 57, Westmar. Md . 45
Tresawn Bonecuner 3 1-5 7, Will Sk&gt;ne 3 Cortland Maolewood 48, Warren
Spnng. Sh8wnee 51 , Urbana 39
Lincoln 82, Ub~rty Harnson 57
2·4 8, Tad Bonecutter 0 o-o 0. Jay Ellis 1 0- Lordstown 38
Springboro 55 Greenville 38
.
Logan 79, WIMIIeiO 65
2 2, Kenny Durham 0 0-0 O, Nathan Covington 65, New Paris National Tra~ 5()
St. Bernard "46, Hamilton New M1ami 39
Martins Ferry, Ohio 56, Tyler Consolidated
Aimmey 2 o-2 6, Lasse Bartels 0 o-o 0, Crown C•ty S. Gallia 85, Ohio Valley 'SI ClairsVille 63. Bamesv1lle 57
42
Josh Stover 4 11 · ~ 4 22. Steven Perry o 0- Christian 25
St. Henry 63, Ft. Recovery -48
Manlnsburg 58, Hedgesv11!e 53
0 0, Stephen .Browning 0 0-Q 0, ·Bobby , Cuyahoga Fall&amp; CVCA 71 . Massillon ,St' Paris Graham 80, Bellefontaine Matewan 71 , Van 49
1
Errett 5 5-5 15 Totals- 18 19-3:2 60.
' Tuslaw 49
Benjamin Logan e7
Montcalm 67, B1g Creek 57
H. Hoover
e 4 17 22 _ 49
Day Chaminacte-Julienne 63, Cin Purcell
Stewart Federal Hocking 71 Racine Morgantown 6B Falrmonl Senior 48
PL PIHNnt
13 10 13 24- 60
Marian 54
Southern 40
·
Musselman 45. Hampsh1re 43. 30T
3-Polnt Goals- HH 4 (Josh Strick~r 2), Day Dunbar 77, Cm. Hughes 67, OT
Slow-Munroe Fans 70, Mayfield VIllage Notre Dame 72, South Harnson 49
pp 5 (Josh Stover 3) Fouled OU1- HH 1 Day. Jefferson 47, Troy Christian 42
Mayfield 43
Parllersburg South 85, Zanesville, OhiO
(Trav 16 &lt;;:unningham) . pp (none) . Day. Stiver&amp; 76, Cin .. SCPA 55
Strasburg-Fnmklln 44, r;.lewcomerstown 72
Rebounds-HH 31 (Grant Buckner tO). pp Day TrotwOOd-Madiaon 110, Sidney 50
38
Po1n~ Pleasant 60, Herbert Hoover 49
39 (Josh Slover, 'Bobby Er' reH 1o) . Delaware Christian 4• . Nor1hslde
StrOI)g9vilk!I99.Psrma 62
Ravenswood 50. Ripley 32
·Asslsts- HH 5 {Grant Buckner a). pp 6 Chnstlan 37
SugarcreeK Garaway 53. Malvern 42
R1chw0Qd 58, Midland Trail 57
{Josh StOver 3). Steals-HH 8 (Josh
Delta 75. Monpelier 61
Thompson Ledgemont 68, Youngs · ~1ver Valley. Ohio 68. Paden C1ty 25
Stricker 4), pp 10 (Tresawn Bonecutter 51 . Dover 57. Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 35 Chr1stlan 62
, ·
Shady Spnng -73, Liberty Raleigh 62
Blocks-HH 1 p~son Hamrick), pp 1 Ooylestowf1 ChJppewa 66, Jeromesville
Thornville Sheridan 36, Newark Cath. 31
S1ssonville 55. Wayne 37 ·
.
Hillsdale 44
Tiffin Columbian 79 , Galion 63
Sl Mana Go reM•, Md 70 . JeHerson 64
·(Josh Stover). Team Fouls- .HH 22 · pp 10
Dublin Scioto 41 , Westerville Cent. 26
Tipp City Bethel63. Newton 56
Tucker County 56, PocahOntas County 45
E. Palestine 70 , leetonia 64
T1pp City Tippecan oe 72, Lewistown Wheeling Pink 67 . John Marshall 52
FAIRLAND 66, RIVER VALLEY 61 ·
Elida 49, Lima Bath 28
.
Indian Lake 31.
W1r1 County 63, Wahama 50
fAIRLAND(~. ~~ DVC) .
. Elmore Wooctmore 53, Kanus Lakota 33 • Tal. Bowsher 50, Oregon Clay 45
·Woodrow W1lson 87 Greenbr1er East 55
Kyla W~se 4 6-7 14, Jo_Gh Johnson 6 3-3 ' Euclid·IS9, Mentor 62
To!. Cent. Catt'l. 73, Tol. Rogers 54
Wyornmg East 72. Summers Gounty 62

:

&lt;f

.:c'l

~n .

..
Brad Sherm•nlphoto
Ohio Valley Christian's Sarah Burleson (11) shoots a runner,
while South Gallla's Lacey Lester goes' for the block.

1

I.

I

j

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°

I

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I

I

Rebels
from Page Bl
Ohio Valley Christian, on
the other hand, fell to 4-1 0
on the year.
South Gallia 's full court
pressure netted the Red and
Gold a quick 8-0 lead.
Canaday opened the scoring
with
a
bucket
before
Stowers drained a 3-pointer
from the wing, ten stole the
ball and converted a !ay-up
while being fouled.
Davis, though, answered
for Ohio Valley Christian scoring
eight
of
the
Defenders' I 0 points in the
quarter. The score stood 1210 in South Gallia's favor
after one quarter.
Both
clubs
struggled
offensively in the . second
quarter, which saw OVCS
claim an 8-6 scoring edge
on the strengtl} of two buckets each from Davis and
Jenkins.
South Gallia endured a
five-minute scoring drought
during the frame. Sheridan

made a three to start off the ·
quarter, but it wasn't until
Lester scored inside at the'
2:24 mark that the Lad1
Rebels dented the score'" :
board again. ,
·:,
The score was tied at 18 •
at intermission.
, The hot hand of Sheridan '
netted South Gallia and
eight point lead entering thti
final period, but OVCS did- '
n't go quietly_
'
A 6-2 run to start the
fourth quarter pulled the
Lady Defenders to within
four around the six minute •
mark, but Sheridan's final •
trifecta with 5:55 remaining
put the L'ady Rebels back up .
by seven and OVCS never
got closer than five the , •
remainder of the game.
Also for South Galli&lt;~:,
Ashley Clark scored sit~;
points
while
Chelseeo
Canaday sc·ored five an!
grabbed eight rebound~
Jillian Swain made a frel&amp;'
throw.
:::
South
Gallia
is
Sciotoville on
MondaJI:
meanwhile, Ohio Valle:z:
Christian plays host t~
Southern.
•

:U:

•
•

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1'

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144
I
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6

1

(,.g; ,

Devils

ed the night a half game u i
on the two Washingtou.
County teams, but now fip/1:
themselves a half
bact ·
at 5-2.
:
"We had some defensiv41:
"He hasn't played a basket- ·
lapses through the flf!lt ant
ball game m three weeks,
second halves that, in a pos...
but he didn ' t doubt he was
session-by-possession game;
going to make it. He loves
you cannot afford to have,!
that challenge."
said Jackson coach Todt
Following
a
Jackson
May. " We cover all that stutt
turnover the Blue Devils
in our scouting report, I trust·
ran
some
clock,
then
that the kids know what the,it
Golden. who scored eight
are. supposed to do on the it
points in the fourth quarter,
ass1gnments, but we had
hit a pair of clutch free
couple
slip-ups
tonight;
throws with 24 ticks left to
They ended up biting us
put Gallia Academy up 40the end."
37. .
.
Travus Stout added six':
points for Gallia Academ~
. Jackson 's Reid Arnold
and Ale~ Kyger went fot;
and Seth Landrum each had
five in the low-scoring affail:,
a look ill a potentially
Shawn
Thompson
and'
game-tying three, but both
Shaphen Robinson were·
missed. Shaphen Robin son
held to four and threi:
secured the rebound, then
respectively.
:
secured the win for the
Arnold,
who
burned
th~
Devils by splitting a pair of
Blue
Devils
for
28
points
iq;
charity tosse s ••
the first meeting, a 45-3~
The win
kept Gallia
Jackson
victory, paced th~
Academy in the SEOAL
Ironmen
with 18 points
race at 3-3 , where a loss
Marcus
Boggs
nailed four
would have all but eliminatpointers
en
route
· to I d';
ed
it
from
contention.
points.
:;;
Osborne's club still has
)ack1&gt;Qn jumped out to
upcoming home dates with
8-3 lead mtdway through th~.
league co- leaders Warren
opening quarter, but Golde~
and Marietta.
led
Gallia Academy back 38o
More importantly, though,
he scored seven points anll:
Gallia Academy appears to
helped the .Blue and Whi~
have righted the ship and is
score the final eight ·points
playing its best basketball of
the
period and claim an 11-Jt
the , season after a horrible
lead
at the frrst stop. ·
..
start.
Jackson tossed in si x:'
" We're finally . getting
straight points to reclaim the.:
back to where we're playin*
lead 14-11 , but again, Galli£
some
basketball
now, '
Academy
was able to battlt,,
Osborne e~plained . "We
back
and
earn a halftime;
went seven games where we
dr~w with the Ironmen at
didn't really practice, we just
ap1ece:
~
got ready for games ,.. then
.Gallia Academy's defensi:
to lose Jaymes for a period
held
Boggs in check in thO..
oftime.
'
second
half, holding him tit
" But we're beginJ!ing to
four.
The
score was also tiecl"
play like a team. We talk
at the end of three .quarters:
about building a ship, when
26-26. Th~re were no major.
we started the season we
runs,
. as 11 was back-anddidn't even have a canoe.
fourth
the entire second hal £.:
Now it's starting to look
Gallia
Academy also woll.~
more like a lu~ury liner.
the
junior
varsity game, 33;.
Every body has been trying
16.
•
to build their part of the boat
Ga lli a . Academy is at '
am! add a lillie paint to the
Point
Pleasant,
whic~
th i n g."
picked
up
its
lirst
win
of tht:
Jackson', however. fell
season on Friday; at 7:3~
from -the craw's nest of the
p.m.,on Tuesday.
.
SEOAL. The lmnmen start -

fromPageBl

11ame

a:

iJ!

and:
3:

.

Once Hoover broke up the
scoring run , they could sti ll
do nothing offensively as
the visitors could only put
up four points in the ~econd
quarter and Point Pleasant
held the Huskie s to two l'ield
goals in nearly 12 minute s
of basketball.
With a 13 - poiin lead at the
half, Herbert Hoover' rallied
the troops and prepared t o
make ,a char.ge ,

.

Stover\ ni g ht at the free-

RAIDERS WIN TOURNAMENT

throw line trumped the
team 's 59 percent ( 19-of'-32)
'effort and allnwed Point
Pleasant to finally pull aw.uy
and grab the 11 - poi nt v i ctory.
With
1he
win.
Point
Pleasant sn aps a I 0-game
los ing streak w hi c h openeu
the 2005 - 06 basketball se ason for the Big Blacks. It
was
win that was not only
. import ant to the te am. but to
the f ans as well.
'· It wa s a re a lly great
game,' ' said Poi n t Pleasant
c heerleader
H a nnah ,
Workman .
·· on their way to the victt&gt;ry , ~oint Pl easa n t led in
nearly every category with a
39-31 egde on the bo ard s, a
l 0 - 8 edge in st eals ant! an 8 5 advantage in assists. Th e
Big Blac k s also shot a much
better 37 percent ( 18- of-48)
from the tloor compared to
the Huskies 30 percent ( 18of-60) .on the night.

The Bidwell Raider 5-6th
grade g1rls won first p lace
in the 3rd Annual
Midd leport Youth League
Tournament on De c. 28 ,
2005. Pictured in front
from left are Cady

a

Gilmore. Brittany K inney,
Olivia Glassburn and
Shania Beaver. In second
row are Alii Neville,
Merced es Combs, Beth
M artin and Haley Cox. In
back are coaches M 1ke
N eville, Steve McAvena
and Darryl Martin. Not pictured is Te r esa Miller.

Submitted photo

MARCUM BAGS 14...:POINT BUCK

.,

from there Point
did their damage.

Pleasant

··The Big Blacks shut down
, the Huskies offense. go in g
ltn a 15-0 run and taking a
16-6 lead with 4:53 l eft in
ttle second quarter, shutting .

watched Hoover dose the
gap, the Big Blacks stepped
up and showed some of that
needed emotion and began
to open things back up led
by Stover, who hit 9-of-10
from the char ity stripe dur-

out Herbert Hoover for ing the fourth quarter on hi s
nearly eight minutes behind · way to an 'll-of-14 effort on
a:strong defensive effort.
the night.

with

nine

point s,

Austin

Harper with seve n point s
and Adam White. James
White, Travi s Cunningham
and Jason Hamrick with two
points ea&lt;;h.

io

Point Pleasant will look
build off of their · first win
when they travel ta, face
Poca 7:30p.m. tonight

AYLoR New Wheels
TEAM fort~e

New Year!
l YLORDEALERSHIPS.

,
,
Submitted photo
Steven Marcum of Vinton shot a 14-point buck on Friday, Dec. 2, 2005, taking the trophy fol.
. tlie largest buck that Citgo of Vinton gave away. Marcum commented that 11 was 10 years to
the day that he got h is first buck.

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Local.Sports Roundup

="Well it is really big. these
The Hu skie s bit at the
Jdds needed one." sa id Point
white and' black 's lead with
easant head coach Rich
a 17-13 edge on the score ain. "I told them before
board in the third quarter
t e game, they are upset
with a balanced scoring
when we l ose and after the
effort from s i~ different
~me 1s the only time they
Huskies.
were upset, they don ' t play
With th e sco ring edge,
llke they are upset and
Herbert Hoover closed withtlnight they played like they
'in nine headin g into the final
ll:re upset. "
·
c antos and the visitors pm:Maybe the Big Blacks
~ould be upset more often . ceeded to make things very
intere sting .
:Point
Pleasant's
Josh
Stover and RimlJley both
Slover and Bobby Errett
dropped important 3 - pointJl&gt;th grabbed double- dou ers in the earl y minutes of
ltes · in the win as Stover
the quarter to stay ahead by
came down with 22 points
The Big Blacks were led
and I 0 rebounds and Errett I 0, but it was not enough as by Stover and Errett, fol scored 15 points and al so Herbert Hoover stepped up lowed by Slone with eight
came
down
with
I 0 defensively and played a points and eight rebound s,
tc;IUgh full -co urt press which
rebounds in the win.
Bon eculter
with
seven
. With the play of Stover forced Point into a couple of , points , six rebounds and
a'nd Errett, along with a turnovers.
five steals , Nathan Rimmey
Those turnovers allowed
strong defensive perforwith ~ix points and Jay El li s
mance
from
Tre sawn the Huskie s to c l ose the gap with two point s and four
Bonecutter and Will Slone, to five points at one lime, rebound s,
tbe Big Blacks turned a led by Josh Sthcker who
Herbert Hoover was l ed
quick Hoover strike into a had eight of hi s 12 points by Buckner with 13 points.
and Grant Buckner who ha'd I 0
l\ig Point Pleasant l ead.
rebounds
and
three
'; Herbert Hoover grabbed a seven of his 13 points. 'both assists, Stricker with 12
CJ.IIick 6-1 lead in the first in the fourth quarter.
point s, six rebound s and
While
Point
Pleasant four steals , Thomas Shafer
four minutes of play and

i.

I

·

~

•POINT
PLEASANT
· ~.Va. Behind a tea~
effort ,.and an explosive first
lG!l( the Point Pleasant ( 1lZJ) boys caged the Hu skies
Herbert fioover (7-4) 60Friday night in Point
~ea~ant to grab their first
'lin of the basketball sea-

w.

I

BY lARRY CRUM

: LCRUM@M'r'DAILYREGISTER.CO M

Boys BASKETBALL

· $.unllllr&gt; '[;1.mcs -~rntmrl ~ Page Bs

.

~

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galljpolis

2006

Jeep Grand
Cherokee

Sales Hours
Mon .·Thur. 8 .30am-8pm
Fn. 8:30am·6pm
SaL 8 •30am·5pm
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Sat 9EWI1·5pm ·

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lAYLOR
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SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
sec ALL
6·2
10·5
Warren
5·2
10·3
Jackson
5·2
8·8
Marietta
5-3
10-4
Logan
2-6
6·7
Galha Academy
().8
1·14
Athens

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio Division
TVC
5·1
Alexander
4·2
Bel~re
4·2
Yin on Co.
4·2
Nels-York
1· 5
Wellston
0·6
Meigs '
Hocking Oivi9ion
TVC

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio Division
TVC
6·l
Aleliander
5·1
Belrsre
4·3
Nes-York
3·3
V1nlon Co
1-5
Mei?,s
0·6
Walston
Hocking Dlvjslon
TVC
5·1
Tr1mble
5· 1
Waterford
4·3
Fed Hoyk
3·4
Eastern
2·4
Miller
0·6
Southern

ALL
11-3

9-3
7·7
8·5
4-9
1-12

ALL
9·4

. 5·1
4·2
4-2

Fed Hock
Waterford
Eastern
Miller
Southern

-

Cl

2006

GIRLS 8A.SKET8AU.

BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHEASTERN, OHIO ATHLETIC
SEC
ALL
5· 1
12-1
W~men
5-1
8-4
Manetta
8·5
5·2
Jackson
3·3
6-6
Gall1a Academy
H
J.9
Logan
0·6
1·13.
Athens

Trihlble

·-·-- --

Junior High Basketball

S'r \N()lNGS

PREP BASKETBALL

Sunday, January 22,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page 86 • iSlunbap 1ltmtr!i -~mllnd

-·-

'.

10-4

7·4

7-5

3·3 '
'1·5
1·5

6·8
1- 12

ALL
11 -3

8·7
9-5
7-6
4-9
2·1 0
ALL
12·2
10·2
4-10
6·8
6·8
7·6

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
eve ALL
6-0
12 -1
CheSapeake

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
eve ALL
Coal Grove
6-0
11 ·2

Fairland
Rock Hill
South Point
River Valley
Coal Grove

C~esapeake

5-1

9-4

3·3
2-4
2-4
0-6

6·6
6-6
5·9
4-10

South Point
Fa1rland
Rock Hi!l
River Valley

· 5·1
4·2
2-4
1·6
1·6

10·4
6·5
5·8
2- 12
4-9

OTHER/INDEPENDENTS

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS

.

ALL
11·2

South Gallia
Wahama
· Hannan

8-4
6·2

ovcs

2- 12
1-10

Point Pleasant

•

ALL
7-6
6·5
5·7
4·10

South Gallla
Wahama
Po1nt Pleasant

ovcs

1·11

Hannan

Gallia Academy seventh
~aders improve to 11-l

Middle School.
The Marauders were led by Heath
DettwUler, who had II points, followed.
by Austin Sayre with eight and Cameron
Bolin with seven. Bradle~ Young.
Connor Swartz and Ryan Payne al l
scored two. Aaron Maxson and Joelyn
Nutter . chipped in one apiece. Dame I
Stewart grabbed two rebounds.
Meigs renlms to action next Thursday
~gainst Vinton County:

GALLIPOLIS - The seventh grade
boys basketball squad from Gallia
Academy, currently Il-l on the season,
defeated South Point 50- 18 Thursday
night at Washington Elementary School.
Leading the way in scoring was Jarred
Golden with II points followed by Caleb
Warnimont and 'Etl!an Moore with eight
each. Joseph Finnicum, Ben Robinson
and Cody Billings all finished with fou r.
The Blue Devils will travel to
Chesapeake on Monday and then travel
CHESHIRE - The River Valley
to Jackson !hursday to close out the seagrade. boys basketball team defeateighth
son.
ed Oak Hill 55-30 on Thursday.
Cody McAvena scored 23 points for
the victorious Raiders, who improved to
5-4 on the year. Keith Skiomore went for
13 followed by Tyler Smith with nine and
four each by Chad Smith and Harry
ROCK SPR INGS - The Meigs sev- Smathers.
.
enth grade boys basketball team defeated
Tyler Potts led Oak Hill with 12 while
Wellston 34-32 Thursday at Meigs Blake French ai)d Travis Kreals each

River Valley eighth grade
boys beat Oak Hill, 56-30 .

Meigs seventh grade
boys edge Wellston, 34-32

scored six in the setback.
River Valley takes on Southern on
Monday.

Sunday,January22,2006

Meigs eighth graders
win pair of contests
ROCK SPRINGS -· Meigs ' eighth
grade boys basketball team recently woo
a pair of games,\lefeating Alexander 4240 and Wellston by a 57-43 count.
Against Alexander. Caleb Davis led the
way fur Meigs with 1,3 points fo llowed
by II from Jacob Well. Taylor Deem and
Ryan Jeffers each added six while Cody
Laudermilt. Scott Kennedy and Zach
~
Whitlatch all chipped in two.
In the win over the Rockets, Davis again
paced the winners with 18 markers and
Well was right behind with 17. Jeffers contributed seven followed by Deem With six,
Whitlatch with five and two apiece from
Laudennilt and Kennedy. Tyler Brothers,
Josh Fredericks and Brad Hood all played
well defensively in the. win.

AP State Basketball Polls .

in the Meigs County Hills

How the top 10 teams in the boys poll fared
How the top 1eams in the wee~ly Assoc1ated Press slate boys bas·

COLU MBUS (AP) poll fared :

~etball

DIVISION I
1, Cin. Elder {11·0) beat C1n. Purceii-Manen 71-68.
2, Can. McKinley (11-2) b.eat Uniontown La~e 79-48.
3, Mansfield (12·0) beat Orrville 69-60 . plays AShla nd Saturday.
4, Solon (1 0-0) beat Twinsburg Chamberlin 62-45.
5, Tol, St. FranCis {10·0) Mat Tal. Start 60-48.
6, Lancaster ( 10-1 ) beat Gahanna 68-46, plays Logan S~t u rday
7, Cin. Sl. Xavier (9·3} lost to Cirl. Moelle:r 54-52. OT. plays Day. Carroll Saturday
8. W . Chester Lakota W. (12·1) beat Milford 70·51
9, Tot St. John 's (8·1) plays Akr. SVSM Satu rday.
10. Springboro (1 0-2) beat Fraf'1klin 74-60, beat Greenville, 55-38, plays Middletown
Saturday.
•
DIVISION 11
1, Akr SVSM (9~ 1) plays Tot. StJohn's Saturday.
2, Cin. Taft [12•0) beat Day. Meadowdale 64-57.
3, Greenfield McClain (13-0) beat Londo n 72-40, plays Richmond Dale SE Saturday.
4, Willard (12-0) beat Fostoria 87-70. beat Shelby 59-54 .
5, Akr_Buchtel (10-0) beat Akr. N. 97-81 . beat Akr. Kenmore 76·63.
6, Day. Dunbar ( 10-2) beat Cm. Hughes 77-67. OT.
7, Wooster Tnway (10-0) beat Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 55·50, plays Medina Buckeye
Saturday.
8, Day. Chaminade-Julienne ( 10·1) beat Cin . Purcell Marian 63-54.
8, Cin . Wyoming (11·0) beat GoShen 60-36. beat Reading 60-49.
10, Tlpp City Tippecanoe (13·0) beat Lewistown Indian Lake 72·31 .

.

STORY AND PHOTOS BV BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

P

· OIVISION Ill

1, Cin. N. College Hill (13·0) beat Cin . Seven Hills 95-50, plays$ _Laurel (Ky-) Saturday.
2, Johnstown-Monroe (13·0) beat Danville 97-58. plays Centerbu rg Saturday.
3, Bellaire (1t-Q) beat Oak Glen . W.Va : 104-78.
4 , Rocky River Lutheran W. (10-0) beat Brookside 99-61
·
.
5. W, Liberty Salem (13·1·, beat CedaiVille 47-45, lost to Jamestown Greenev1ew 50-'46.
6, Chesapeake (1 1-1 ) beat Winfield (W.Va .) 75·67, beatS. Point 60-44 .·
7, Cle . VASJ t8·2) beat Cle. Cent. Cath . 56-42 .
, ·
8, St. Henry (IQ-1) beat Ft. Recovery 63-48, plays New Paris Nat1onal Trail Satu rday.
9, Collins Western Reserve 112·0) beat Greenw1ch S Cent. 61-29
10 , versallles (10·1) beat Minster 52-50, plays C1n. Made1ra Saturday.

.

.

..

I ' ..,;

-----1/
I

-

DIVISION IV
1, Ottoville (12-0) beat Miller City 59-36 , plays Findlay Liberty· Benton Saturday.
2, Lancaster Fisher Cath. (1 f·O) beat Grandview 57-47. plays Sugar Grove Berne Union
Saturday.
3, Ada (9·1) lost to Columbus Grove 77 -63 , play s Gory-Rawson Saturday.
4, Mineral Ridge (8-1) lost to Lowellville 55-52.
5, Russia (10-0) beat Botkms 65·56. plays Minsler Saturday.
6, Berlin Hiland { 1Q-2) lost to Strasburg-Franklin 68·59, beat Bowerston Conot1on Valley
~-61 .

7, Worthington Christian ~11- 1 } beat Morral Ridgedale 71-45.
B, Cle . Hi s. Lutheran E. {7-3) plays Cle. Rh~des Saturday.
9, Holgate {,1Q-2) beat Sherwood Fairview 49·45.
10, S. Webster (11-1) beat Wheelersburg 55-49, beat W averly 74-41.

How the top 10 ~eams in the girls poll fared
DIVISION I
1, Cin . Princeton (13·0) plays Middletown Saturday.·
2. Sylvania Southview { 10·0) beat Holland Spring . 64:28, plays Bowling Green
Saturday
.
.
3, Stow-Munroe Falls (11· 1) plays Cuyahoga Falls Saturday.
4, Cin . Mt. Notre Dame (12-2) beat Cin. Mercy 65-42 .
5, Avon Lake ( 9~0) plays Amherst Steele Saturday
6, Dublin Sc1oto (13.-1) beat Westerville Cent 61 ·32.
7, Amherst Steele (12-0) beat Sandusky 72-44. plays t,won Lake Saturday
8, Pickerington Cent. (12-2) beat Grove City 65-40.
· 9, N . Can. Hoover (11-2) plays Massjllon Jackson Saturday.
10. Chardon (13-1) beat EastlaKe N. 57-40 , plays Geneva Saturday

DIVISION II
1, Washington C.H . Miami Trace ( 13-t ) beat Clarksville Clinton-Massie 62·35 .
2, Morrow Little Miami ( 13-Q) plays W1lm1ngton Salurday.
3. Louisville (i3·0) beat Can . GlenOak 52·37, plays Can . S. Saturday.
4, Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit ( 12-1) beat Can. S. 77-28.
5. Cots. DeSales (9·2) b.eat Cols. SchoOl !01 Girt:;; 69·65, plays Worthington Christian
Saturday
,
6, Warsaw River View (1.4-1) beat
69-10, plays Coshocton Saturday
7, Utica (12-d) beat FredericktQWn 62·49. plays Centerburg Saturday
8. Shelby (12-1) plays Upper Sandusky Saturday.
9 . Circleville (1 1'-1 ) beat Amanda-Ctearcreek 51 · 3 I .
10. Salem (1 0-2) beat Struthers 49-26 . plays Warren Howland Saturday.

paver

DIVISION Ill

1, S . Euclid Reg ina (15·0) 1s 1dle .
2. Plain City Jonathan Alder (12-1) 1s Idle,
3, Ironton (1 1-0) plays Oak H1ll Saturday.
4. Carey (12-1) lost to Fremont St. Joseph 58· 53
5, Garfield Hts. Trinity ~8 - 3) IS id le
.
.
6, Coldwater (10:3) beat L1ma 82-51 ; lost to New Knoxville 36·35.
·7 , Apple Creek Wayneda!e (13-2 ) beat Jeromesville Hillsdale 51 •29. lost Creston
Norwayne 48-45 .
8 . Middletown Madi son (11-3) lost to Bellbrook 44-35 , beat Brookville 56-41.
.· a . Cle .. Cent. Cath . (8-3) plays Bedford Chanel Saturday.
10 , Sugarcreek Garaway (1 1·2) lost to Berlin Hiland 46-45. plays Bowerston Conotton
valley Saturday.

DIVISION IV

.,

· 1, Cols . Atricentric ( 14·0) beat C.ols . East moor 62·58, Peat Cols. Marion-Franklm 64·38 .
2, Hamler Patrick Henry ( 12-0) beat Bryan 61 ·50.
3. NewarK Cath. (14-0) beat Cols. Harvest Prep 66·28
4 , Be rlin Hiland (9-2) beat Sugarcree.k Garaway 46-45
5, E. Can. (13-0) beat Rootstown 5 1-4 5 plays Streetsboro Salurday
6 , Ottoville (t2-1 ) beat Pandora-Gilboa 67·29. plays Mmste r Saturday
7, New Riegsl (13·1 ) bl!at Old f:or149·33
8, Monroe"Ville ( 10-21 lost to Sandusky Perki n's 54· 40, beat Ashland Crestview 50·34 .
plays Greenwic\l S . Cent. Saturday
.
·
9 , Jackson Center ( 10-3) beat Houston 77-37 plays Russ1a Saturday.
10, New Knox¥1\le {11-1 ) beat Coldwater 36-35 plays New Bremen Saturday.

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•

That was 1990. It was not
unti I . 1995 th at the couple
began clearing the l a~d. In
1997 the first nail was driven
·on what would became the
upscale mu sic in struction
school with the unconventional name.
Vanessa said the ranch's
name came from a friend of
Jonna's in New York, N.Y.,
who upon hearing his friend
had purchased 120 acres of
land in mu th eastern Ohio
said, "That is a fur piece
away from anywhere.··
Vanessa said
. ·it was ttlen
that she had one of th ose bell s
and whistles moments where
the name and the idea for the
gui tar camp came to her.
Although the couple still
travels awund the coulntry
Vanessa and .Jorma Kaukon~rl are the owners of Fur Peace Ranch outside
and the world on Jonna \ ·
of Pomeroy and have made the 1r ho me in Meigs County for the past 15
touts , their home is now in
Harrisonville, while the busi- Just when you think you're lost on County Road years. Vimessa is CEO of all th.lllgs Fur Peace and manages the career of
ness cont inues to thrive on 20. the orange s ign will guide you home to the Fur Jorma. who still tours with his band Hot T\1na. He was a member of the
influent1al band Jefferson Airplane. ·
•~
County Road· 20.
Peace Ranch·.·
' The. business is multifaceted and includes everythin g from the am1ual
Holiday Faire. to Vanessa's
management of talent. to
rentals of the ranch for confere nces. to onl ine guitar
school, to Internet retai l of
music and merc handising for
the ranch, Hot Tuna and
·
Jefferson Airplane.
On merchand ise for the
ranch. Meig s County is lis ted
and placed very prominently
as the !(aukonens ha ve laid
down roots here.
"We c&lt;) ns&lt; der ourselves
Ohi oans," Va nessa co nfirmed. alt hough she admitted Ohio took a lillie gelling
used to. But withi n a year of
moving here, she began to
:.ec the beauty of the place.
'· Every day somcihing
magical would happen, I'd
tinclll short cut home. or talk
to someone who had lived
here for years. God took hi s
1ime with me." ·

.

.

sto

Please see Fur Peace, C5

.

•

·call. 372•2844
Toii ·Ffee 1·800·822·0417
Vi.s it us .online ai www.tompeclen.co~

....

.'

•

I'
I

I

Togs, TR~ r... extro. Robu1e odudod ilso~ ,,.. of - vok~ lislod whero appltn~la . Oa app!O'Iod uadl. Oo .. 1o:~ mh.
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www. mydailytribune.com
I

........

21nd

475 South Church Street, Ripley • Monday - Saturday 9 am - B pm • Sunday 1 pm - 7 pm

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COLUMBUS (AP}- How the top teamS in the weekly Associated Press state girls basketball poll fared :

.

OM EROY -· The hills
of Meigs County · are
famous (or infamous)
for
many . -things ,
includin g rock and ro ll.
. Rock and roll ?
Yes, it's true. Rock and roll
takes many forms, and in
· Meigs County it has taken the
shape of Fur Peace Ranch a
few
miles ou tsi de of
Pomeroy just off of U.S . 33
and County Road 20. ·
· Fur Peace ·Ranch is first
and furemust a mu sic schoo l
.with hi gh profile instructors . ·
but is gai ning a reputation as
a popular live music site a1
the ranch's Fur Peace Stati on
Concert Hall tiM seats 200.
The concert hall is a cross
between the be st fo lk rock
and the Grand Ole Opry.
with state-\)f· the-an sound
,
equ ipment.
The rancb was founded and
is privately ·owned by
Vaq,es~a
and
Jorma
Kaukonen. Jonna is a Rock
and Roll Hall
Fame gui~
tarist who was inducted with
the band Jefferson Airpl ane.
He is also a founding member of the group Hot Tuna
with · Jefferson Airplane
bassist Jack Cassady.
Hot Tuna still regularly
tours the country and is
scheduled to make a stop thi s
year at the Fur Peace Statio11
Concert Hall on April 22 and
Aug. 12 .
.
But how does a Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame guitarist
with no previous ti es t&lt;) Meigs
Count y and hi s. civil engineer
wife from Connecticut end up
sett ing up shop off of US 33')
The Beatles might say it was
a "long and windi ng road."
Vanessa says. ·'It picked us."
According to Vanessa, her
hu sband had a friend in Ohio
that told him about so me
prop~rty ·in Meigs County
. going for up for sale . Jvrma
visited, saw the land. fe ll in
love with it and decided to
buy it.that day.

Ranch Manager John Hu rlbut takes a mor.nent to vis it w1th Fur
Peac.e Ranch's unoff1c1al mascot. M1ss Kitty, who puts the "fur"
in Fur Peace. Miss Kitty spends l1er days well fed and soaking
up the sun on th~ ran ch's man y wooden decks and rockers .

0
o

Mascara and Eyelin~r
Two (2) f.ndt•rmologi~ Tre11 1ment~

�iunbap atimtfl-ienttnel

PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN

Sunday, January 22, 2006

GAHS basketball holds advantage over Warren SMART FAMIUES

last seco nd shot by Joe
Owen. The return match that
The poys' basketball game year at Vincent saw the
on Jan. 27. 2006. between Warriors win 71-50.
Warren and Gallipolis will
In 19~9-90 , Warren won
mark the 41st time the two both games 63-50 at home
schools have met since and 58-39 at Gallipolis. In the
Warren joined the SEOAL first game, Gallipolis had 12
for the 1986-87 season. turnovers in the first quarter.
l)lirty-nine of the games are At Gallipolis, Warren turned
league games, with Gallia a 5-point end of the third
hqlding· a 23-16 advantage. quarter lead into a 19-point
In 2004. the Warriors lost to margin ofvictory.
the Blue Devils in a sectional
The next year, the games
tournament game.
were split, with each team
Warren holds an 11-9 mar- winning at home. Gallipolis
gin in games played - at · shared the league title with
Vincent
while
Gallia Jackson that year. The win by
Academy has won 14 of the the Warriors at Vincent was a
19 games played in Gallipolis . big upset as Warren was 3-11
Warrenwon the first game of coming into the game and
this season at Vincent 52-46 Gallipolis was 10-5. Scott
with a tough defense.
Brackenridge and Ryan
The first five games in the Dennis led Warren to the surseries(l98(')-1988) were won prise win.
· by Gallipolis. The first game
In ·the 1991-92 season,
went to · Gallipolis 65-55 Gallipolis won easily both
despite the fact that the times, 77 -60 and 67-5 I.
Warriors . shot 59 percent Gallia was the league champ
from the floor. Gary Harrison that year behind the strong
had 26 and then 29 versus guard p.lay of Chad Barnes
Warren on h\s way to setting and Nathan Miller. Gallipolis
the Gallia career scoring also won both games the next
record. Except for a 1- point · year in route to sharing the
win on Dec. 2, 1988, the SEOAL title with Athens.
.other.four early games were The JV game at Vincent in
·all double digit wins by the 1993 was a memorable one
:Devils. In that Dec. 2, 1988, as three technical fouls in a
:game Gallipolis trailed ·a.t row were called on the
:home 57,49 with I :48 to go Gallipolis · coach. Warren
·but came back and won on a made· even · straight free
BY JAMES SANDS

throws before . Gallipolis
touched the ball again.
In the 199}94 season, the
game at Gallipolis had to be
postponed twice by freezing
rain and ice. Gallipolis won
both games easily. In the
1994-95 season, Warren won
after six straight losses in the
series 50-44 at Gallipolis .
Warren al so won big . at
Vincent. going into a stall
with 1·1 minutes to go in the
game.
Warren won both games in
the 1995-96 season in two
great games. 51-45 and S 1-50.
Clutch free throw shooting
won the first game at
. Gallipolis and Shawn Taylor's
put back at the .buzzer won the
game at Vincent.
In 1996-97, Warren won
the first game at home with
20 layups pushing their
streak to five straight over the
Blue Devils. Gallipolis won
here as the two teams tied for
the leagl)e title with 11-3
records.
.
The games in 1997-98
were split . Gallipolis won a
grind-'em-out game~7-3 1 at
home , but lost at Wr , n 5847. In the latter gam , Warren
shot 75 percent from the
field. In 1998-99, Gallipolis
won two close ones, 52-49
and 46-44. The 1999-2000
games
both
went
to
Gallipolis by big margins,

even though Warren tinished
the league season I 0-4.
Gallipolis won the league at
13' 1'. Warren won both
games in 2000-0 I enroute to
the league championship.
The Warriors were dominant
on the boards in both games.
In 2001-02, it was Gallipolis
that won · the SEOAL and
both games against Warren
with good defense and scoring by Geiger, McKinniss,
Johnson, Caldwell, Finney,
Moore and Bose.
Gallia also won the league
the next year and both games
against Warren. In the . Feb.
I5, 2003, game Warren was
held to 27 points, its lowest in
the series. In 2003-04,
Warren won the second
game, which was at home, to
snap a 5-game losing streak
to Gallia. Warren was 6-11
entering that game and Gallia
was 13-5 . Gallipolis came
back to win the .sectional
game that year 71-50. Last
year, a great Warren defense
beat Gallia 71-36 and 53-20
on their way to their third
SEOAL title. It was the
fewest points · Galli a had
scored in a game since· 1948.
(James Sands is a special
correspondent for
the
Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
can be contacted by writing
to 1040 Military Road,
Zane~ville, Ohio 43701.)

EAT BREAKFAST

ing habits? Do you eat breakfast every day? If you have a
hard time "getting going" in
Why do children who eat the morning, it could be
breakfast do better in s&lt;;hool? because your body and your
It's because their bodies and brain need energy. Do you
brains need the energy .that start to sag about 10? You ·
breakfast gtves them! They need breakfast' You might
. think better and learn better if have an easier time control- .
they get breakfast. The same ling your weight if you eat
is tn,le for children who are breakfast, too.
·
not in school yet. Your young
So get in the breakfast
child needs breakfast, too. · habit at your house! If could
Breakfast can make a dif- really make a big difference.
Start tomorrow!
ference in:
• How much your child
WHO CAN APPLY .FOR
learns.
WIC? - Women who are
• How well your child plays. pregnant, breastfeeding, ·or
• How good your child feels. just had a baby; infants up to
Breakfast is easy
one year old; and children to
Breakfast can be a quick, ageS are eligible for the WIC
bowl of cereal and milk with 'program.
HOW TO APPLY FOR
a glass of juice. Or it can be a
piece of cheese on toast and a ·WIC? - Applicants must
piece of fruit. It can be just meet income eligibility
about anything. A sandwich guidelines. For example: a
or some of la~ t night's left- family size of 2, monthly
cannot
exceed
overs is tine. The important income
$1 ,978; family size of 4 thing is to make it a habit.
Not having enough time for $2,984; family size S . breilkfast is no excuse. Here $3,486; family size 6 are some ideas.
$3,989.
No time for breakfast?
Please note: A pregnant
• How about getting every- woman counts as more than
thing ready tile might before ? . one. family member. A person
• How about taking turns who currently receives
getting breakfast ready?
Medicaid, food stamps, or
• How about taking .break- Ohio · works ,(irst (OWF)
fast along to eat on the way to automatically meets the
preschool or day-care? Make income eligibility criteria for
a peanut butter and jelly WIC Please call the Gallia.
sandwich . Take milk or juice · County WIC Office at 441in a "to go" cup with a straw. 2977 for further information
Whatever you do. figure or to schedule an appointcomplete it on-site and return out how to get your child to ment. Evening appointments
are available upon request.
to a confidential drop · box eat breakfast!
How about
Resource:
Ohio
before they leave the office.
your breakfast?
Department of Health,
The data is then forwarded to ·
How about your own eat- Help Me Gmw.
AMGA to be included in
their benchmark ·database, .
which includes patient satisfaction · information from
over 120 participants.
The AMGA represents
medical groups, including
some .of the nation's largest,
most prestigious integrated
healthcare delivery systems.
POINT
PLEASANT, with it at your back. Select ·
Its members deliver .health- W.Va. - F\)r those people routes that are sheltered fro'm
care to more than 50 million wanting ·to kick-off the new the wind when possible.
• Prevent slips by finding a
patients 'in 42 states . The year by shedding .a few
AMGA's Patient Satisfaction pounds, the Pleasant Valley path that is clear and does not
Assessment Program began Hospital Wellness Center have standing puddles or
in 1995 and is based on the features an indoor ~alking mud slicks.
• Dress appropriately. Wear
Patient Visit Rating question- track.
If
you
think
you
need
to
fabrics that wjck away sweat
naire, a reliable and valid
instrument with nine items sweat through a strenuous closest to the skin. If necesthat refer to specific features workout to reap the health sary, an . insulating layer 'on
of the 'visit, access to care, benefits of exercise, think top of that can add warmth.
an'd an overall rating of the again. Study after study has When the weather is less than
shown that walking bri skly .ideal, an outer layer can proquality of the visit.
.for . more · information 30 minutes to an hour on tect you from the elements
about the Holzer Center for most days can help prevent or and be removed when you
Cancer Care. call (740) 446- fight many ailments, includ- warm up.
5474 or toll-free at (800) ing heart disease, stroke, dia- . • Wear bright or retlecti ve
betes, cancer, arthritis and · clothing if you walk in the
821-3860. .
osteoporosis.
evening or early morning.
Walking regularlY' for exer• Apply sunscreen with·
cise can al so help improve SPF IS or higher before venyour mental health and help turing outside. Remember,
with weight control and . you can get burned even on
wejght loss.
cloudy days. Hats and long
What's more, walking sleeves can also protect
The idea, bearing comprehensive financial J?lanning in doesn 't require extenstve a'gainst sun exposure.
If you haven ' t been exermind, is to combine and training or expensive equipimplement the appropriate ment. The low-impact nature cising regularly, consult
strategies in the right propor- of walking lessens the risk of your physician before
. tion to insulate your invest- injury, making it an ideal beginning. Start out slowly
ment portfolio from the form of exercise for most and build up your pace and
impact of rising .interest rates. people. All that's required is a distance over several weeks.
Investment .
planning pair of comfortable shoes Setting realistic go&lt;~ls, plan- ·
.strategies . should never be designed for walking. Then ning walks in interesting
· implemented in a knowledge ·you're ready to hit the trail, places, joining a local walking club and tracking your
vacuum, Your financial advi-· solo or with friends.
When
exploring
the
great
progress in an activity joursor can help you (earn how
on
foot,
keep
these
outdoors
.
nal
can help you stick to
to diversify across invesiment strategies by choosing tips in mind to stay comfort- yotJr routine. No matter if
·
you're indoors or out, walkand implementing compie' · able and safe:
identification
with
•
Carry
ing can help improve . your
mentary strategies that balyou,
be
aware
of
your
surhealth .
ance risk and reward within
For more infonnation on
your comprehensive finan- roundings and let someone
know
where
you
are
going
programs
a11d membership
cial plan.
when
you'U
return.
and
rates,
please
comact . the
(Jay Caldwel~ CFP, is a
•
On
breezy
days·
,
start
your
P/easallt
Valley
Wei/ness
. registered p{incipal at
Raymond James Financial walk into the wind and finish C,enter, (304) 675-7222.
Sel1!ices, 441 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631, 44621~5 or 800-487-2129.)
Bf RUTH LOVEDAY, LPN
GALLIA COUNTY WIC

Holzer Center for Cancer Care ranks
high on patient satisfaction survey
GALLIPOLIS
The
:American Medical Group
:Associmion (Ali,1GA) recent:ly announced results from its
:patient satisfaction survey,
·including impressive feed:back on personnel at the
:Holzer , Center for Cancer
:Care, located at 170 Jackson
;Pike in Gallipolis.
· Ranking in the top second
:percentile 'for patient satisfac:tion
was
Dr.
James
· Ungerleider, medical director
of the Holzer Center for
Cancer Care. ·
Ungerleider has been associated with the cancer program at Holzer since 2004,
and previously worked for
the Arthur James Cancer
Hospital In Columbus.
Ranking in the top ninth per~ntile for patient satisfaction
was Dr. Khawaja Hamid, medical oncologist at the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
Hamid is board certified by
the American Board of
Internal Medicine and the
American Board. of Medical
Oncology.

·Wellness Center track
makes walking easier

Dr. James Ungerlelder

Dr. Khawaja H11mld

Also ranking in . top percentiles were the receptionists (fourth) and the hematology and oncology nurses
(14th) ·at the· Holzer Center
for Cancer Care.
"The results from the
AMGA survey proves our
commitment to provide the
highest patient care to our
community," said Ken Moore,
executive director of the

Holzer Center for Cancer
Care. "Our staff is not only
competent in their clinical
skill s, but their compassion
and care for each ,and ·every
one of our patients is by far
one of the features we are most
proud to offer to at the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care."
Surveys are given to
patients after their office
visit, . and they are asked to

What goes down must come up
BY JAY CALDWELL

Managing your investment
· · portfolio is not easy. It
requires a constant awareness
of market conditions such as
the interest tate environment:
It also requires an understanding of .how a change in
interest rates may affect per.formance· of your investment
strategies to be able to determine the possible reactions to
any change in rates. Then,
you have to be able to factor
in any expenses related to
making or failing to take
action. Finally, you must
decide . upon and take the
appropriate action ·- which
. may be inaction if your cur-·
rent tinancial plan is working
for you.
Other people's money
· The Federal Reserve is the
national bank of the United

States. It controls the money strategies. A good idea; but,
SUJlply and thereby · affects don't be too quick to make
the cost and ·availability of changes. Sure, riSing interest
money: interest rates and rates can hurt some strateavailable credit. The U.S . gies. Other strategies, howevbanks borrow moriey from er, can aid you in managing
the Federal Reserve to lend to the risks of rising interest
their customers. The ·interest rate s. including a laddered
rate charged by the Federal bond portfolio. The goal is to
Reserve is called the identify . the appropriate
Di scount Rate. The higher ·strategies for you.
the. Discount Rate, the l'ess
Time lines
.
money banks are willing to . Over time your financial
borrow and push into the goals. the amount of time you
economy. If too little money have to invest and your toleris pushed into the economy, ' . ance for risk will change and
consumers and· business may so will your fi\}ancial plan.
have less money to spend on Today, most investors undergoods and services.
stand this and realize the
Current forecast?
value of diversifying their
. Rising interest rates. What investment assets among
· goes down must come up. stocks, bonds, and cash
Interest rates just tend to equivalents. Not only can
work that way, which has you diversify across asset
many investors Cllrrently classes, you can diversify
reevaluating their investment across investment strategies.

Victory Chimes owners hope to keep historic schooner under U.S. flag
and the ship's future . He and Chesapeake Bay al)d points group that bought the vessel
Paul DeGaeta bought the along the East Coast. In in 1954, purchased the
boat (rom Domino's Pizza in 1954, it was purchased by a Victory Chimes outright in
PORTLAND, Maine 1990 and have kept it sailing Maine . syndicate, brought to 1959 and owned it until 1985,
The owners of the historic as part .of the Maine wind- Penobscot Bay for passenger when he sold it to a Duluth, ·
.three-masted
schooher jammer fleet in Rockland.
•c rui ses and renamed · the Minn .. banker who took it to
·depicted on Maine's com"She's worth saving . she's Victory Chimes.
the Great Lakes.
· · memorative quarter have such a wonderful vessel,"
In the years since, it has·
It was then purchased by
· stepped up efforts to sell the Files said. "Hopefully some- come to symbolize the rugged ' Thomas Monaghan, the
vessel with · hopes that it will one will come along with as Maine coast and its maritime founder of Domino's Pizza,
·remain a fixture along the . much passion about saving tradition - so much so that who renamed . it the Domino
. Maine coast. .
.
U.S. maritime history as Paul the Maine 'state quarter issued Effect and ·offered cruises as
The . 105-year-old Victory and I have ." ·
by the U.S. Mint in 2003 is incentives to Do.mino 's
Chimes, the last schooner of
But it could prove difficult de signed to look like the employees. Monaghan had
its type, is up for sale for $1.5 , to find a buyer for the 132- Vi ctory Chimes sai ling by the ship refitted before bringmillion. So far. most 'interest foot &gt;ehooner, originally Pemaquid Point Light.
ing her back to Maine in 1989.
has come from outside the nam.ed the Edwin and Maud.
The boat has changed
When Monaghan put the
United States.
which was built in Delaware hands several times sin ce boat on the market. one bidKip Files, the 'kipper and in 1900 to carry bulk fertiliz- coming to Maine.
der wanted to take it to Japan,
co-owner. said the time has er, lumber. grain · and other
Ca pta in Frederi ck Cluild, put it in a lake .and turn it into
come to think of his future· producb unde r sai l in who was part of the Maine a restau rant, Fi les said .
BY CLARKE CANFIELD
ASSOCIATED PRESS ,WRITER

/~IJN'Sr, ··

')

.,.~Party
-=--·~·
· ;-~-'
Barn C'"'~-\
llriii=Drl
. 992·&amp;121
Clllllnlltrlln '
Clmlll
.
I'ICII..............
Meatball Monday

Meatball Sand, t oz. chips, I6 .oz. Pepsi $4.50;
Soup of th e day · Wedding Soup
,
Tacolues.
Taco in a bag $2.50; Pepperoni Pizza 55.¢/slice $6 .60 Tray
Soup of th e day· Pasta Fagioli
Weinje " 'ednesday
2 Hoi Dogs w/sauce &amp; slaw $2.00
.Senior Citizen Day IO'ilooff Deli &amp; Bakery • Excl .uding Spec1al
Soup of the dav ·Stuffed Green Pepper Seup ·

Tbjrstv Thursday
I6 ·oz. Pepsi Fountain 55¢ w/a purchase ofa deli sandwich
• Ham &amp; Cheese. I oz. chips &amp; 16 oz . Pepsi $3.50
Soup of tire day ·Chicken No(;clle
Frank Fdday
2 Dogs $2.00 • 401Z. wings Soup of rl1r day · Chili
Saturday SouP &amp; Sub $6,50 .

COMMUNITY

.iunbap lim~ ·itntinel

Rio plans to take WWI film series on the road
RIO GRANDE - The is to create new educational
University of Rio Grande/Rio opportunities in the commuGrande Community College mty. The film series will go
is making a fascinating to several places in the comfilm/discussion series on munity in the . hopes of
World War I available to the attracting large crowds of
community, beginning with area residents.
its first 'presentation in
Dr. Sam Wilson, a history
Gallipolis on Jan. 29.
professor at Rio Grande and a
In 2005, the Jeanette Albiez member of the Friends of the
Davis Library at Rio Grande Davis Library said that World
was named as one of just SO ' War I was an important time
libraries throughout the coun- in Ameri&lt;;an history, and the
lry to receive a film viewing film series . is one that area
and discussion series focus- residents will learn from and
ing on World War I.
enjoy.
·
··World War I Years:
"We are bringing in several
America Becomes a World quality · speakers," Wilson
Power," is a film"'viewing and added.
discussion series presented by
The Friends of the Davis
National Video Resources in Library association is also
a,ssociation with the American teaming l1P with
Library Association and the
community· organizations
National Endowment for the to help sponsor the presentaHumanities. ·
tion~.
. During · the fall ·semester,
The · first presentation,
the Davis Library at Rio which will be held on
Grande presented the film Sunday, Jan. 29 at 2 p.m. at .
series through a series of lun- the Gallia County Historical
&lt;;heons on · campu·s. During Society/Genealogical Society
the luncheons, the films were in Gallipolis, is co-sponsored
shown and expert speakers by the Cadot-Blessing Camp
)¥ere brought in to lead dis- 126 of Sons of the Union
cussions on the topics · Veterans of the Ci vii War and
focused on in the films.
the Friends of the Davis
Now, ihe Friends of the Library.
James Oiler, commander of
Davis Library are taking the
film and discussion series out the Cadot Blessing camp
into the community, particu- (based in Gallia County), saw
larly in Jackson, Vinton, a few of the World War I
· Meigs and Gallia counties. film/discussion sessions durThe Friends of the Davis ing the fall semester ·and
Library received a grant from wanted his organization to
me Ohio Humanities Council help sponsor the series in the
to help fund the community community.
"I thought the films were
presentations.
Amy Wilson, reference excellent and I really enjoyed
outreach speciali st for the the speakers," Oiler said.
Davis Library, explained that
The speakers were very
part of Rio Grande's mission knowledgeable and interest-

PageC3
Sunday,January22,2oo6

LYLE LOVEn' PERFORMING
AT OU THURSDAY

ing, and Oiler is excited
On Sunday, March 26, the
about giving more area resi- presentation , 'The American
ATHENS - Country 'inger
dents the opportunity to see People in War Time" will be
and
songwriter Lyle Lovett
the films and hear from the held at the Bossard Memorial and his
Large Band will perLibrary in Gallipoli s begin- form at Templeton-Blackburn
speakers.
"Any time that w·e study ning at 2 p.m. ·
On Friday, March 31 . Alumni Memorial Auditorium
what transpired in the p~st,
in Athens on Thursday, Jan.
especially very pivotal points (alt.hough this date may 26
at 7:30 ,p.m. The multiin history such as World War change), the presentation gem~ artist mixes elements of .
I, I think it 's worthwhile for "After the War: The Turbulent folk, country, blues and rock
people to take uote," Oiler · Years" will be held at the · to create a signature style .
said. "I learned a lot from the Meigs County District Public
Loven is the recipiellt of four
film series presentations I Library Main Branch in Grammy Awards. including
was ahle to see in the fall."
Pomeroy, beginning at 3 p.m . Best Country Album, Best
The Jan. 29 .presentation is
On Thursday, April 13, the Country Duo/Group with Vocal ,
titled "Modern War" and will presentation "Over There " Best Pop Vocal ·Collaboration
feature rhe film s, " 1914- will ~ held at the Jackson and Best Country Male Vocal .
1918: Shell Shock (from the City . Library in Jackson
In addition to a successful
Century)" and "Men of beginning at 7 p.m.
career in music, he has acted in
Bronze: ihe Black American
On Thursday, May II, the several films, including three
Heroes of World War I."
· presentation "Modern War" directed by Robert Altman The films discuss how will be held at the Jackson "The Player.'' "Cookie ·s
World War I marked · the City Public Library, begin- Fortune'' and ''Pret-it-PQrte"
industrialization of 20th cen- ning at 7 p.m.
~and 'The Opposite of Sex"
tury warfare, introducing
On Thursday, June 8, the starring Christina Ricci : More
. brutal new weapons like the presentation "The American recently, he has acted in "The
tank, machine gun, grenade ' People in War Time" will be New Guy" and "f ear aml
and poison gas. Along with held at the Jackson City .Public Loathing in Las Vegas." He
the new weapons, new war- Library, beginning at 7p:m.
has appeared on 'the tele vision
On Thursday, July 13 , the shows ''Mad About You" and
related traumas were also
"Peace "Dharma &amp; Greg."
introduced. Professor ·Sam presentation
Wilson will lead the discus- Keeping" will be held at the
Even though he has enjoyed
sion at the presentation.
Jackson City Public Library. recording with large bands and
.On Friday, Feb. 17, the pre- beginning at 7 p.m.
sentation ••The American
And on Thursday, Attg. 10,
HAI.. ULE
People in War Time" will be the presentation , "After The
held at 7 p.m . at the John Gee . War: The Turbulent Years,"
ROCKER
Black Historical Center ·in will be held at the Jackson
City
Public
Library
begin-·
Gallipolis. ·
ECLINER
On Thursday, March 9, the ning at'? p.m.
.
.
For f1U!re informatiml 011 the
presentation "The . Road To
War" will be held at the World War I film series. call
Jackson City Public Library i"n Amy Wilson at (800) 282-7201.
For additional infonnation 011
Jackson, beginning at 7 p.m.
On Saturday, March 18, the upcoming events at Rio
presentation
"Peace Grande, in addition to inforKeeping" will be held at the mation on the wide variety of
Herbert Wescoat Memorial academic and professio11al
Library in McArthur begin- programs offered by Rio
Grande, log omo w.ww.rio.edu.
ning at 2 p.m .

orchestra;,, for Lovett the sound
is still about the acoustic guitar.
··1 am not much of an electric player. I enjoy messing
with them but haven't incorporated them into my live
show. I like to get, as natural a'
sound as possible. I like m~
guitar to sound like it does in
my living room ." he says.
Lovett has built a durable
body of work and a fan base
that appreciates his literate,
sly. witty and original songs as
well as his covers of songs
penned by people who influenced his art . His most recent
album, ··My Baby Don't
Tolerate'' (2003), is a nostalgic
gl impse into hi s country roots.
Tickets for this performance
lilay be purchased at the
Templeton-Blackburn Alumf!i
Memoriul Auditorium ticket
ollke, open from noon to 5 p.m. ,
Monday through Friday, and one
hour before the performance.
For tickels or i11{omU1tion, call
(740) 593- 1780. Stuart &gt; Opera
HoL&lt;se and the Ohio U11iversitv
Peifonnillg Ans Series •~'iii­
sponsor this peifomumce.

Summer positions ope·n· at Canter's Cave
'

.

.

staff and naturalist. Anyone www.canterscave4hcamp.co
interested in . working out; m. Applications are due to
doors with youth is encour- Canter's Cave by Feb. 17,
aged to apply for a summer 2006.
GALLIPOLIS - The sum- position . · This is a great
Interviews will be held at
mer 4-H camping season is opportunity for co llege stu- the camp on March 4.
just around the corner. The dents in the fields of environThe Elizabeth L. Evans
Elizabeth L. Evans Outdoor mental studies, educatio11 or Outdoor Education Center at
Education Center at Canter's youth development.
Canter's Cave is located
Cave 4-H Camp in Jackson is
The summer staff will approximately eight miles
looking for talented, ener- · reside at the camp from the north .of Jackson, Ohio on
getic and qualitied individu- first of June .through the sum- U.S. 35. The facility boasts
als to serve as permanent mer . camping , season. · miles of hiking tails, a pond,
summer camp staff.
Applications and informa- swimming pool, high-ropes
Several positions will be tion on Canter's Cave 4-H courses, shooting range, basopen for the 2006 season. Camp may be obtained from ketball couns, miniature golf,·
including: lifeguard. program the camp's Web site at sand volleyball court, nature
BY TRACY WINTERS
EXTENSION EDUCATOR
4·H YOUTH DEVELOPMENT

Training set for obituary tool
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
GALLIPOLIS
On a.m. until noon.
The online obituary index
Monday, the Dr. Samllel L.
Bossard Library reference
Bossard Memorial Library staff, particularly Suzan will invite people with Internet
will offer employee training Chapman, have .entered 40 access to request copies of the
for data entry into a popular years of obituaries into an obituaries from the holding
obituary tool used throughout tndeX' which will be merged libraries throughout Ohio.
Ohio, developed and man- with the RBHayes Obitua~y Bossard Library will copy and
aged by the Ruth6rford B. · tool. The 40 years represent mail one copy of the requested
1966 to 2006 and list only the . obituary for a pre-paid fee of
Hayes Presideniial Library.
Hayes librarian Becky natlfe of the deceased, the $2.50 per obituary.
For more illformatioll, conHill will offer training to date of death, and the vollibrary · . staff at Bossard ume, date and page of the ract Becky Carroll at 446l--ibrary on Monday from I0 obituary which appeared in 7323.

center, year-round accommodations, a meeting lodge and
much more.
For more informatio/1, COiltact Anita Harris, camp manager. at (740) 286-4058.

Excuse me erica,
this is tissue.

TCM puts new .life into its
silent-film library and young careers
BY

MATT HURWITZ

FOR THE ASSoCIATED PRESS

WEST HOLLYWOOD,
Calif.- The image of silentmovie
actress
Eleanor
Boardman flickers on a
screen above a scoring stage
at ·Signet Sound Studios.
She's watching knights in
shining armor colilically fall
from their horses.
·
Sitting in the control room,
28-y'ear-old · film composer
Marcus Sjowall looks .down
from the black and white
. image and listens intently.
An orchestra on the stage is
playing the first musical
notes for cue M 19 of his
score for the 1923 si lent classic "Souls for Sale."
He grins briefly, although
there's not much time to
~njoy the triumph; much
more work needs to be,done.
"It's a nice feeling to hear
music that's only been in my ·
head come out of that ensemble," he says. "But I'm just
trying to stay on top of everything and make sure it gets
done right."
Sjowall is .the sixth winner
of Turner Classic Movies '
· annual
Young
Film
Composers Competition .
The conte st allows composers between the ages of
18 arid 35 a chance to write

.
music scores for silent films method to recognize a comthat originally had only live poser solely on the quality·of
musical accompaniment in their craft."
The network's motivation
the theater.
The wi.nner receive s ;sn't totally selfless, however.
"The idea really came to ~s ·.
$10,000. earns the opportunity to have hi s or her score when we realiZed we had
broadcast on TCM. and, per- hundreds of silent films in
haps most important, gets a our library that we cou ldn't
chance to break i'nto · the air on the network becau se
exclusive world . of film they had no musical score to
·accompany them ," says
sconng.
' Sjowall's score for "Soul s Evans. ''We also .wanted to
for Sale" premieres on a find a way tp reach out to
TCM special Jan. 24 (8 p.lJl. younger audiences, to keep
our library relevant to them .
EST, 5 p.m. PST) .
"The world of professional 'T his program helps draw in
working film composers is a . composers iti that age range ."
The entry period ru·ns from
fairly
clo sed
circle,"
Jan.
I thru March 31 each
explains Katherine Evan s.
senior vice presideQt of mar- year (the 7th contest has
keting for TCM, which has already begun) . Entrants
an exten sive silent-film select one of. four 60-secoml
library. "Film directors tend film clips from a variety of
to go back to their favorite s, genres for whk:h they mu st
so breaking into that busi: · create a brief score, with as
ness is tough . This contest many as 650 composers mak ~
helps grow· up-and-coming ing submissions eac'h year.
composers in a field where · · Grottps of judges, drawn
there aren't many opportuni -· from · I he film-composing
world and from past winners
ties to break through.··
"With film scoring, any- (such a&gt; Maddala). eventualbody with a guitar ~nd a com- ly whittle that group down to
puter can say, .'I'm a .film Ji ve Jinalists. The composers.
composer,"' notes the cum- are brought to Los Angeles in·
'
to senupetition 's. first winner. Vivck Au gust to he treated
Maddala, who has gone on to lfars anJ studio tours. thei r
work on several independent trip culminating iri a gala
films . "To my knowledge, awards dinner where the win thi s contest is the only ·ning composer is announced .
'

In fact, an. unborn baby's heart heF:ins to beat at IS days.
'
·At 40 days
she hil' nwa su rahlt: hram wave&gt;
An unborn baby shoul dn 't be thr,)\'! ll .1wav l1ke a piece of tissue .

�iunbap ~nme~ -ienttnel

CELEBRATION.S

¥

Sunday, January 22, 2oo6··

Submitted photoo •

Pictured presenting Angela Hogan, LPN, with the Mullin&amp; :
Memorial Scholarship check, is Rosie Ward, vice president ot ~
Systems Human Resources for Holzer Health Systems.
'"

ADKINS- TAYLOR
ENGAGEMENT
VINTON - Jenn y Adkins and Jared Taylor are announcing
their engagement and upcoming wedding .
The bride-elei:t is' the daughter of Doug Adkins of Vinton,
and Eula Adkin s of Lucasville . She is a 1997 graduate of
River Valley High School and a 2001 graduate of Shawnee
State University:
She is employed as a MRI tech at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Vaughn and Karen
Taylor of Bidwel l. He is a 200 I graduate of River Valley High
School and is currently a student at the University of Rio
Grande. majorin g in interventional education .
He is employed by Sexton 's Excavating in Jackson.
The wedding has been set for 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, May
27, 2006, at the Gallipoli s Christian Church. ·

" I

Zachary Green and Jessica Griffith

GRIFFITH-GREEN
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS -Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Griffith of Gallipolis
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of .!heir .
daughter, Jessica Griffith .. to Zachary yreen, son of Randy
·
Green and Tammi Angeli-Grcen. .
The bride-to-be is a gradm\te of River Valley High School
and the University of Rio Grande, holding a bachelor of science in Early Childhood Education. ·
The groom to be is a graduate of Gallia Academy High
School , and is employed at David . Campbell's Construction
and Will Power Tumbling. The couple are members of the
First Church of God in Gallipolis .
· The wedding ceremony will ta.ke place on Saturday; Feb. 4,
2006, at the Gallipolis Christian Church. The reception will
follow at the American Legion in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

WOLFE-ROBINSON
ENGAGEMENT
BELPRE - Vonda Wolfe and Roger Robinson of Belpre
announce their engagement and upcoming marriage.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Bobby Joe Wolfe and the
late Tessie Wolfe. She is a graduate of Southern Local High ·
School. class of 2002 , and is employed at Rose's Country
Home Health .
Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. Tom Robinson ·and the
late Mr. and Mrs. Willis Titus, graduated from Parkersburg
South High School in 1&lt;)79 and is employed by the U.S.
Department of Labor.
.
.
The wedding will take place at' I p.in. on. Saturday, March
25, 2006, at the Mount Moriah Church of God.
Matthew Smith and Tlrzah Dodson

DODSON-SMITH .
ENGAGEMENT ..
POMEROY- Tirzah Michelle Dodson and Matthew David
Smith are announcing thei r engagement and upcoming wedding.
The bride-to-be i·s daughter of Susan Zirkle of Pomeroy. and
Daniel Dodson of Point Pleasant, W.Va. She is the granddaughter 'o f Bruce and Jackie Zirkle of Pom~roy, and Gene·
and Agnus Dodson 'of Middleport.
She ' is a 2003 graduate of Meigs High' Schoo l and 'is
employed at Pleasant Vall ey Hospital.
The groom-to-be is the son of Terri Smith ofPomeruy, and
Charles Smith of South Carolina. He is the grandson of Eldon
. •and Wanda ViniM of Rutland. June Smith of Cheshire, and :
Eugene Smith of South Carolina.
··
He is a 2004 graduate of Meigs High School and is .
employed at Home Creek Enterpri ses.
·A fall wedding is planned at the Rutland Church of the
. Nazarene at I p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 7, 2006.
·

Mr. and Mrs, Jack Fox

FOX
ANNIVERSARY

Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer

SPENCER
ANNI ·VERSARY
T UPP ERS Pl,. AINS - Guy anLI Evelyn Spencer of Tuppe" .
Plai n&gt; wi ll be celebrating their (10th weddi ng an niveNtry on
Feb. 2. 2006.
·
'Mr. and Mr&gt; . Spence r have lh rcc children . 'even grandchil dren. and eight great-grandchildren.
An open reception v. iII be held in thei r honor on Su nday
Jun . 29. ~006 from 2 10 -1 p.m :II St. Paul Uni ted Methodiq
Church in Tuppe" Pl ain' . The cilupl e rcque'" that gt1es1' not
br!.ng gilt . ,

CLIFrON , W.Va.- Jack and Betty Fox of Clifton will be
cel ebr~tin g their 50th· wedding anniversary with an open
house on Sunday. Jan. 29. 2006.
· Mrs. Fox is the former Betty Roush. They were married at
the Clifton pa,onage by the ~ e v. Gearhart on Jan. 28, 1956.
The celebration. hosted by their children, will be held from
2 to 4 p.m. at the Hart ford Community Center. The couple is
reques ti ng no gifts. only card' and the presence of family
and fr iends.
Mr. and M" . Fox are the pitrents of two daughters, Sue
I Bobby) Barni tz and Mary (J eiT) Woodall. They have four
grandchildren, Ty (Stephanie ) Woodall. Kim (Herschel )
Jeffrey, Ala n (Beth ) Barnitz and Tony Barnitz:, and one greatgranddaug hter. Taylor Jeffrey.
·

Pictured presentirjg Pam' Dye, RN, with the Clark-Sayre..
Memorial Nursing Scholarship check, is Rosie Ward, vice pres.,
ident of Systems Human Resources for Holzer Health Systems ...
'

.
'

'Bubble' bursts traditional methods:.:
of making and releasing films
B:t CHRISTY LEMIRE
AP MOVIE WRITER

NEW YORK - It's the
fast-food equivalent of being
discovered at Schwab's except unlike · the legend of
Lana Turner, this story is true.
Debbie Doebereiner was
asked to star in Steven
Soderbergh 's new . movie,
"Bubble," after ·a casting
director spotted her in the
dri ve-th~ough window at the
Kentucky Fried Chicken in
Parkersburg , W.Va ., where
Doebereiner had worked for
24 years.
To say that she would seem
an unlikely choice would be
an understatement. The 47year-old mother of two grown
children and grandmother of
two acknowledges, "I've had
a weight problem my whole
life." The day casting director
Carmen Cuba saw her was the
day KFC introduced its 99cent Snacker sandwiches, and
as the restaurant' s general
manager,. Doebereiner guesses she 'd made about 500 of
them .
"I was pretty frazzled, " the
redhead said. "I looked in the
mirror in the restroom - I
had sauce all over me, my hat
was on .sideways, my hair
was sticking out all over."
And then there is the small

fact that Doebereiner · had.
never a&lt;;ted a day in her life:·
That's only fitting, though,
for a project that's unorthQ,",
dox on every level.
... .
"Bubble," about a murder;,
ous love triangle at a small-·
town doll factory, was shoi;'
on high-definition video and ;
runs just 73 minutes. It had·
no script: Doebereiner and
her co-stars, all non-actors ,
from the southern Ohio-West .,
Virginia border where th~ .
movie was set, improvisefi,;
their dialogue based on an
outline by screenwriter :
Coleman Hough. who. also ··
wrote Soderbergh's similarl)l c•
stripped-down
"Full,,
' Frontal'."
,,
But the most · unusual Pru:\ ..
of all hasn't even happenecj,,
yet. ,When "Bubble" come~ ,
out on Jan. 27, it will appear
simultaneously in theaters::
and on cable television, with ..
a DVD release scheduled fo, ..
just a few days later. Amid ..
dwindling box-office numr ,
bers and rampant piracy, it'~ ~
an experimental alternative to
the traditional movie-release:.
method.
"The biggest thing is peo"
pie having acces s to th11-.
movie who might not haven
access to it for a while, ;: , .
Soderbergh
told
Th~"
Associated Press.

Plain - Carved
. Diamond

Sunday, January 22, 2006

MCCOURT TOUCHES READER
AGAIN WITH 'TEACHER MAN'

Scholarship recipients

Jared Taylor and Jenny Adkins

PageCs

ON THE BooKSHELF

PageC4

:At ~ne point in my life, I
W&amp;nted to be an English ,
teacher. Ruth· Thomas at Rio,
a!'id Ruth Gillingham ' and
MJne Bradbury at Gallia
Academy and my mother,
ll(ho read us poetry and Bible
· stories, all led me to love lit. ePOture. Maybe the love of Iiter~ture is the best reason
NbT to become an English
teacher, because they don' t
h~ve much time to read. So,
il)stead, I became a librarian,
~th the excuse that everytiling I read · helped me in
s9me way m my profession .
:I have fallen in love with
.authors since I' was very
young - · Hemingway and
Keats and John Updike and
Reynolds Price, I think T am
in love again . I just finished
Teacher ' Man . by Frank
McCourt. This is the third
~k of his tJ;lemoir&amp;, beginmhg with Angela's Ashes,
about his miserable Irish
Clltholic
childhood
in
L'!;merick. 'Tis, the second
bQok, be~ins when he comes
tQ."the Umted States at age 19,
w_orking all sorts of jobs, on
the
•• docks, as a dishwasher. ..
•Teacher Man tells. of
McCourt's 30 years in - the
public high schools of New
Y.Ork, beginning with an
a§signment
at
McKee
V~cational .and Technical
High School in Staten Island.
l',be students were there to.
bl:come mechanics, beauticians, repairmen, and had .no
iqterest in English grammar
Of.literature. On his first d_ay,
a• student threw a sandwich
across the room. McCourt
picked it from the floor (it
was wrapped) and ate it. He
was nearly fired his first two
days on the job. .
His students frequently
forged their absence excuses,
and this gave ]Jim an idea for

siders himself a fraud . They
beg for stories, and he oblig.es with many from his poor
Irish childhood. He had been
advised not to discuss anything personal, and someBeverly
times he revealed too much
Gettles
of himself.
The last section of the book
deals with his teaching at
Stuyvesant, pride of the New
York school system, a school
for
exceptional studeni s
an assignment. He asked the
strong
in math and science.
students · to write an excuse
from Adam or Eve to God. His students are Korean,
He was an unconventional Ch.inese, · black, Hispanic,
teacher, hating to follow.· the Upper East side white, the
rules
and . curriculum, best of the best in the city.
Teaching about 175 stu·annoyed by the interference
dents
a day made · grading
of principals and supervisors.
compositions
a nightmare. A
It seems to me Frank
meant read350-word,
essay
McCourt wouldn' t last long
This will be the
concert season at the Fur Peace Stat ion Concert Hall that features
in any of Ohio' s public ing some 40,000 words for a national touring acts. The venue seats 200 and has exceptional acoustics and a new sound
schools . today, primarily single assignment. This led
because of the current obses- . to much procrastin'ation on system for concerts that are family friendly. Love rs of blues, rock. folk and hippies are welcome; alcohol, drugs and weapon s are not
sions with test scores. Now, McCourt's pan.
His marriage began to
please understand, I am n\)t
'
crumble;
he went to Trinity
criticizing our teachers or
administrators. The tests are College in Ireland to try to
state-mandated, and this is a get a Ph.D. He fooled around
from Page C1
national trend, touted under reading everything but what
the guise of "accountability." he needed to· get it and
Now Vanessa says the
·I wond~r how we e.ver won ' returned home a failure in his
·beauty of the ranch is one of
World War II and made it to own eyes.
He loved teaching two class- its be st assets for visitors
the moon and discovered
es
of Creative Writing at from literally all over· the
peniCillin and raised our stan- .
dard of living to the highest Stuyvesant. His students were world .
in the world without profi- applying to Ivy League · During the previous eight
ciency tests? Well, we did schools, and their parents had seasons of "guitar camp,"
have an eighth grade test one high expectatio)ls. They nearlv , 550 students have
must pass to enter high crowded his room for teacher · passed through the four-day
school "back in the day" conferences, sometimes both workshops at the ranch , which
called the "Boxwell." But parents from a divorce appear- has its own air conditioned
maybe that is a column best ing to tell of the other's faults. cabins and gourmet chef at the
As with all of McCourt's Beatrice Love kitchen, named
left for another day.
· McCourt struggles wiih his . memoirs, there are moments for Jorrna 's mother.
lack of self-conficlence, of of high humor, .others which
The ninth season for both .
constantly wondering if he is will bring a tear to your eye . classes and concerts begins in The lifestyle at the Fur Peace Ranch is laid back and se lf-con·
tained with 11 employees. In this c1ty in the h1 Hs of Me1gs .
reaching his students. They One critic says, "It should be March and ends Nov. 12.
County, there are air conditio ned cabins. the Beatrice Love .
are sometimes rude, inatten- mandatory reading for every
"A friend of mine said did
tive, rowdy,, noisy; seif- teacher in America. And it you ever think you'd be gourmet kitchen. a library, .gift shop and classroom complete :
absorbed, tired, cranky and wouldn't hurt some politicians lucky enough to be perpetual- with original, very · collectibl Fillmore Auditonum concert :
downright nasty. He says to read it, too. '' Loved it ly at summer camp," said posters from the 1960s .and 1' 70s.
th~y can spot a fraud in a secalmost U!; much as Angela's John Hurlbut, ranch manager.
ond, and many times he con- Ashes, and I \iope you will too. "I feel good about the work Night Live"), David Lindley Wolfe and Muddv Water&gt; .
The ranch is .c·umpletcly a:
(known for his work with
we do out here."
Jack son . Browne) and G
. drug . alcohol and weapons
The work th~ ranch has Clark. whose songs have . free zone. prov iding a famil y .
planned for this year includes been recorded by Johnny friendl y
enviro nment
(but is not limited to) work - Cash and Vince Gill : ampng . accordiri c lO Ya ne ~...,a .
mation volumes are published S9utheast Asia Referenc,e shops . on the mandolin, others . There a~e 15 COilCerts
As for' what l onna wants·
after the death of an individual Librarian Jeff Shane.
dobro, blues piano, banjo, scheduled this season with · people to know about Fur :
to memorialize that person's
Shane. who is a scholar of swing guitar, beginner finger ·these and many other arti sts. Peach Ranch . he sai d. "It's
life and career. Publishers gen- Thai history, and a doctoral · style guitar and a · pick 4nd For a complete concert list- here, and · part of Meigs ·
eraJly print no more than 100 of candidate in the Department · putt weekend tor the motor- ing , ticket prices and ticket County for a l o ~ g time now.:
each of these volumes and they of
History
at
Ohio , cycle rider. As of last week. location s for 2006 go to Come out and P'~Y us a vi sit :" :
can only be acquired at the · University, has followed the nearly 82 percent of the furpeace station .l·om.
So if yo u 'r e dri\·in g clt.l '-\n
temples where funeral services career of David Wyatt and . workshops were booked. A , "There' s mu sic hi"ory County Road ~0 . make a left
are hel.d, so they tend to be rare. was immediately interested complete li sting o( work- happening
right
here ... hand turn onto S1. Clair Road
· the I'1brary col 1ection when shops ~"nd instructo. rs can be Hurlbut said about the one- and just when you·re about 10 .
·
· 1s m
·N ew Iy-acqu11ed
matena
also include Southeast Asian David Wyatt announced ·that found at.the ranch' s Web site, time g i ~ s that occur often al l.o., e faith that '.)ou 're ln' l.
vernacular and Western-Ian- it was available,
furpeaceranch.com. '
the con cert hall going into it!'&gt; you ·u see a . ... ign. more
"The add 1'ti·on· of· these · Vaness",
·guage book.s and ot her docu-·
~ who is the ranch's
fourth' seas\m. citing nights &gt;peci ticall y the oran ge sign
ments on or from Burma, materials changes dramali: CEO, has al so lined up ·a where Jonna performed wi th that will guiJe ~o u into the
Thailand, · Laos, Cambodia, cally, the scale and scope of Saturday night conce11 sea- Rock and Roll Hall of Fame rfh:k and wll gi&gt; ld ru, h in the
Vietnam, Malaysia, Indonesia . our .collection's holdings on son at "the station" with guitar players for Howlin' hi \Is of· M eig' Cnun I 1. ·
and the Philippines, some of mainland Southeast Asia," some high profile names for
which are rare and out-of- · said Shane. "While we have music lovers such as Roger
print titles.
always had one of the best f\:1cGuinn (former lead singer
According to Jeff Ferrier. insular Southeast Asia collec- of The Byrds) who will be
curator of international col- tions in the country, and will sitting in with Jorma on May ·
. lections and head of the no doubt continue in this 20. For fan s of Little Feat, the
Southeast Asian Collection at direction, I think we can now band 's guitarists Paul Barrere
Alden Library, the Wyatt col- justly claim io have one of and Fred Tackett will perform
lection greatly increases the the better Thai collections in on Mav 6.
breadth ·of the Southeast the country as well."
.
Other acts include Cindy
Asian coliection in the Center
The Wyatt collection mate- Cashdollar (known for her
HOUDAY-~
for International Collections rials will be availabl~ not only work with Asleep at the
at Alden Library.
to Ohio University faculty and Wheel , Ryan Adams and Bob
He saw the acquisition of student researchers. but also Dylan), ·G.E-. Smith (from
the collection as a way to through inter-library loan. to Hall and Oates and "Saturday
increase the library's mainland scholars and researchers
Southeast Asian holdings. The around the world. Staff memacquisition of this collection hers in Alden Library's Center
will also help Ohio University for International Collections
· to recruit both students and and Cataloging have already
faculty who focus on mainland started working on processing
Southeast Asia, accor.ding to these new materials.

Fur Peace

•b
·
•
w
•
'
en
l
rary
acqmres
yatt
collection
Aid L

Ohio
ATHENS
University · has · recently
acqu,iredthe frivate library
collection o Dr. David
Wyatt, a retired professor of
Southeast Asiap history from
Cornell University.
An extensive and unique
collection, consisting of
I
approximate 1y I 5,000 voumes on Southeast Asia, the
Wyatt collection is one of the
·
·
co II ect10ns
Iargest pnvate
ever acquired by Ohio
University'sAiden Library.
Wyatt earned a doctorate in
!$.tory from Cornell University
in 1966 and returned to his 'alma
mater to join the faculty in 1969
after teaching at the University
of London and the University
of Michigan.
.
A well-known expert on Thai
hl~tory, Wyatt is the author of
more than 100 books and articjes. He currently serves as
interim curator of the Echols
Collection on Southeast Asia at
Cornell University.
The collection, half of
which is in Thai. includes
general works on Thailand,
virtually all the Thai royal
chronicles, the · diaries of
King Chulalongkom, and a
vast array of very rare· memolrs and cremation volumes.
Unique to Thailand, the ere-

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Page C6 • 6unbap G:tmn-6enttml

Sunday, January 22, 2006

· Middleport • Pomeroy • Gallipolis, OH

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&amp;unbap flttme!S -~entinel
.

)

INSIDE

Down on the Farm, Page 02
Farm • Garden, Page 03 Fashion, Page D6 ·

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HOLZER CUNIC
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Sunda~January22,2006

the

Bringing you the latest Healthcare News
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Overactive Bladder ·
Urgency is probably the most important
symptom in this syndrome. Patients' say that
' January is recognized as National
.improvement in this symptom in terms.of increased
O~eractive Bladder Month. There are some med"warning time" of the need to get to the toilet is the
~1 problems that by their very nature make it difmost noticeable response to therapy. Despite its
ffciiilr for a person to seck help. They may think
importance, this symptom is difficult to define and
their symptoms are "normal" and just live wi th
quantify. Various terms applied to the symptoms of
them or they may· be a source of embarrassment.
the OAB syndrome are:
Overactive bladder (OAB) syndrome can present
Urgency: The complaint of a sudden, compelling
both ways. It is estimated that approximately 34
desire' to pass urine which is difficult to defer.
million have OAB in the United States, with the ·
Urgency incontinerce: The complaint of involunestimated cost of treatment being approximately ·
$1 2.6 billion in year 2000 dollars. The numbers of tary leakage of urine accompanie" or immediately
preceded by urgency
those with OAB ris'es with age; it affects approxiFrequency: The need to void 8 or more times per
mately 30% to 40% of those over the age of 75.
The high frequency of OAB among the elderly may day. Frequency usually accompanies urgency with
or without urge incontinence and is the complaint
have additional problems, as both urinary urgency
and incontinence have
to be associated by the patient who considers that he/she voids too
. . been shown
.
often by day
with an increased incidence.of falls and fractures
Nocturia: The need to void at night. Nocturia usuamong the elderly.
ally accompanies urgency with or without urge
~n addition to its economic burden, OAB
incontinence and is the complaint that the individhas a negative effect on the .social and personal
lives of those. affected. Men and women with OAB' ual has to wake at night I or more times to void.
· One of the methods of treatment is through
frequently experience urgency at inconvenient and
medication. Drugs for OAB have had varying
unpredictal:&gt;le times and consequently often .lose
degrees of success. There is presently no group of
control before reaching the toilet. This incontidrugs that cart be used with consistently successful
nence adversely affects their physical and.psychological state by limiting daily activities and intima- results. . Many drugs have been tried,' but the results
are often
disappointing, due either to poor treatcy, compromising sexual function, and worsening
,
ment results and/or side effects. There have been a
self-esteem .. lt is not surprising then that OAB
results in a significant deterioration in health-relat- great number of evaluations of the available drugs
ed .quality of life. According to one study, patie.nts for treatment ofOAB.
The following information is based on the ·
with OAB experienced significant reductions in
evaluation made by the 3rd International
mental health, health perceptions, and bodily pain
. Consultation on Incontinence, held in Monaco in
scales when compared with community controls.

2004. Acceptable effectiveness has ohly been
·shown for a limited number of the many drugs tried
for the treatment of OAB. The. most commonly
prescribed drugs in the United States to treat OAB
come from one class: tolterodine (Detrol®), oxybutynin (Ditropan®), trospium (Sanctura®, darifenacin (Enablex®), and solifenacin (Vesicare®).
'These were shown to be effective when compared
with placebo (i.e., sugar pill) in at least I trial. It ·
was also determined th11t Detro!® (tolterodine) had
the least number of "bad" side effects overall.
The bottom line is that your Health Care
Provider will help you determine which medication
and/or approach is the best for you. But this won't
happen unless you initiate contact. Don't have a
regular doctor or know where to go? Call Holzer
Clinic at 446-5415 and ask for an evaluation by
one of our highly qualified Urologists or get established with .a Primary Care Provider. Holzer Clinic
is here to serve you.

.,

AP Photoo

lnthis iii.Listration P(Ovided by Home store Plans and Publications Designers.Network. a handsome stone·and·shingle exterior lends rustic charm to th iS bungalow home.

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OPIIITO

IILOW

IIEDAOOM4

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Holzer Clinic Achieves National Accreditation

. (AP) ~
.
A lovely porch introduces the
sidelighted entry of thi s home, plan .as:
2439 by the Homestore Plans and
Publications Designers ' Ne twork.
. The lloor plan covers 2.54 1 square feet o f
Jiving space. '
·
.
The entry opens into a wi ndow-lined liv·
ing room, which is sec luded from the rest
of the home.
At the heart of the home , a styli sh. twostory great room will attract gathenngs of
almost any sort and warms guests with it s ·
central fireplace .
The kit~ hen features a cozy e&lt;lti ng
counter, just a few steps from the great
room, and provides a subtle separation
between the dining roorn and the kitchen.
The master suite oiTe.rs privacy and secl u·
sion, as well as a garden tub. and access to
a rear porch.
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PAno

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· IIIIITM
' B!DROOII

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... 9clg
. Gfii!AT
110011

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UTIIIG

. COUN'IIII

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ltTrCIEJI
9Cig

In . this illustration provided by Home store Plans and
Publ ications Designers Network. in addition ·to the master
suite. the home offers three secondary bedroom~. which lie
on the upper floor for pnvacy.
· ·

LIYitG

ROOM

II x •t
10 erg .

GARAGE
It-t a D-10

Robert E. D&lt;lniel, Holzer Clinic Administrator, T. Wayne Munro, MD, Holzer
Clinic President, and Bertie Saunders, Holzer Clinic Manager of Educational
Services, review the notification of the Clinic's AAAHC (Accreditation
AsSociation for Ambulatory Health Care) Accreditation. Holzer Clinic has been
re-accredited for a full three-year period. This nationai1y recognized quality
achievement is a direct result of the hard work of both the P.hysicians .arid staff
of Holzer Clinic and their ongoing commitment to providing quality services to
the community. ..

.GS-2439 DETAILS:
Bedrooms: 4
. Baths: 2 1/ 2
Upper floor: 1,052 sq. ft.
Main .floor: 1,489 sq. ft.
Total llying area: 2,541 sq. ft.
Garage: 740 sq. ft .
Exterior wall framing: 2x6.
Foundation options: Standard
basement, crawlspace

'

I

Bv JAMES

HOLZER CLINIC .

AND

MORRIS CAREY

FOR AP WCEKLY FEATURES

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Gallipolis
Jackson
Athens
.Meigs

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GS-2439
In thi.s il lustration provided by Homestore Pl ans and Publications Designers
Network, complementing the home 's cozy living areas are inviting outdoor
areas, such as· an inviting front porch and a large rear pa\lo.

Citrus: Great for eating- and cleaning
'

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BBROOIII

Lemon juice

rhewarcr in 11 ith rhc .1mcgar hccausc the
\'inc~ar

won t

on it-. (l\\ 'JL

Not lemon oi l. lemon juice. Ha ve a
l?y the wa). be 'urc to mark the ice tr&lt;rl'
·recipe that requires halt' a lemon and
. w i i\!Cr is when or~lll~es. langer· don't know what to do with rhe rest of &gt;Othat the JlCXI h&lt;IIC:h of (llld Jrinks J,Je;.
rncs and grape fruits are har· the jtiice 1 Lemon juice is hi ghly aciu ic tft ~ nd up wirh &lt;I'urp1·i,,, ll,l\llr. Drop rlw
vested in Nonh.:rn California. and is a great clean ing ag.ent. Pure ·cubes uo1vn Ih1· di'l~ "''rand the icc wi II
The end resu lt becomes glazed oranges. ·lefl?On jui ce is ~ma t for ren_luvlng· L'O~lgUialL' ~ rL'. ISC a11J t1iJ and ...It thL' "&lt;l111L'
dried oranges, orange ji1ice, orange starns on many ol the new soild sur" time will ac·t a' an ahr&lt;bilc. in&lt;t&lt;ulrlv
soda, lemonade. grapefruir JUice &lt;\lld face cou nlertops. Bestnf all it is non - dcanin~ the ~r~a.~c and ~ rime i·n \'\'ilir
nwre. But best l)f all. \l•c end up with a toxic ·- and you can even tlrink ir.
disp&lt;"al We ·;IIWa)' &gt; hlll&lt;~ll' thi' lli,X:C·
whole line of cleani ng and dcouoriting
durc 11 ith atlca,ron h&lt;ilf'of a lemon rincl.
tools as a byproduct of good eah.
(You Gill liSt' ~lllllri.Ul _:!L' ri'nd if ~llll li~ l' .l
Lemon rind (peel)
Not lemon oil and not. lemon juic·c.
Lemon oil
The peel is what were ralking &lt;lhnui here.
. Orange
.
Not lemon juice, l ~mnn oi l. Lemon
Urah a lemon and rub the whole
OrLtn~c orL 1lr; 11l ~ L' llfiL.L' anJ nLtll~t·
oil is ahsol urelv the , very best glaS&gt; piece ll[ fruit lirrnly between )OUr rind-, L' ,~Jl l'lC (1\L'd f;lr til L' ._,L IIll l' purpn~~·
·cleaner we know uf. If vut1have c\dc i· hands. The warmth of your hands and a . . 1\.'mpn-, . H tl\\~\\L h~.· l~ tn:ful \\ he n
urn bui ld-up un yo~r shower then YI' U the pressure you apply to rhe skin will ...,Jli.~[1p11lt! h\r L'lll'lh -t\1:-l'~ l ciL~~lncr'- at
need lemint oil.
,
extract lemon oil from it.&lt;skin and vour the ' lore. Olk n coll)raniL'' \\ Ill &lt;lch .:rSimply u&gt;e a pi~o:c of cxtra·fine hands wi ll sme ll wonderful. Ti1:11's ti'e
their ,·leaner a' .. l.c·mnn Clc;111d.
steel wool dipped in lemon oi'l to dean why ll lemon rind is so absoluicl} p.:r· llf ··or~t
n g,L' Ck.incr" \\he ll 1n LtL· t .tlw
a shower door that you currently cant teet as a dcod~lrizer for )·our gurbage .JL' ti\~ c!C:tll l ll ~ lll!.~.l'l'l h l'll l I'- lltl( L' i\ll l'
see through becau se or the . lime drspilSa l. lh this case it wou ld IWI be a acid at all . bL~I ,:llllL' nlhc•r chcnlic-.J!
aeposits. Once ·the door IS dean.· tlwn Cleaner. but a dcodoril.CI: instead'
. t n s t ~·ad . Thi..., h l mportmll hl'L\ Ill\C L' it ·
wipe the surface down with a fresh
Drop the rind down rhc di&gt;IX&gt;ser and in riL' w..:iJ i..: IHllllo\i c and oltcn ih pk:l'· coal of lemon ni l and future lime no time the fragrance of lcmcm will p.:r·
fra1!r~m~..·c i . . u. . ~.·J 111 ~,.- omhlll;IIIPil
deposits wnnr haw a chance. Ry the me ate the air arounu \'OUr 'i nk. Bcfl &gt;rc ant.
\\ it h ,.~,~. r) d;Hl~l' rnth -~. : h~.· mtt·;II .....
way, we al so , u:-. c d tr \Vax to pr~lild.:t using the lemon rind 'we mix a c·up ul'
glass in the shower when lemon oi l · water and a cup of vinegar lanv· kind) · So. when : 'ou l l uf~.·h; t ~L' .. ;t pmdu ~: l
isn't available.'
into an icc tray and make cubes. We mix
Please see Citrus. Dl
frT'C/e

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A downloadable study plan of thi!· house, including
general information on building costs and financing,
is available at · http://www. ho!ISeoftheweek.com. To
receive th e study plan for this home. 1,1rder by phon~.
online, or by mail.
By pho.n l;: Calf (866) 772-10 13. Reference the plan .
number.
.
Online: Go to http://www.lwuseoft.hell,eek.cam and
type the plan number into tlwfield labeled "Enter Plan
#." The downloadable study plam are ·ar·ai/able for
$10. plus ·state and local sales lax.
By mail: Include a drel'k or money order for $10,
plus stale and local sale~: lax, payable /o Huuse of the .
Week. ,Hail to: House of the Week P. 0 . Box 75488 St.
Paul, MN 55 175-0488.
ONTHEHOUSE itCOM ~

Cleaning up - citrus style
looking to use fewer cleaning product~ in your horT}e. you
can reap t~e benefits of citrus oils powerful by·products.
If.you're

LEMON OIL
I&gt; Best natural
glass cleaner ·
I&gt; Cleans calcium
build up in showers
(use soapless steel
· wool for scrubbing)
LEMON JUICE
.,. Removes stains
on many of tile new
solid surface
countertops lik.e
Corian
LEMON RIND '
.,. Drop lfllo garbage
disposal for a
pleasant deodoriZer

ORANGE OIL
.,. Great for
cleaning glass
.,. Be sure to buy
products with citnc .
actd as an

.

GRAPEFRUJT _
.,. Excellent for
cleaning martlle •
· .,. Cut in half and
dip the exposed
i~gred 1 ent
fruit into·a dish of
salt. But don't
ORANGE RIND
leave tile juice on
.,. To keep your
the,
surface·any
home smelhng
longer than it
fresh all day long ,
you can bake them · takes to remove
ins1de your oven on the slain
low heat.' Feel free .,. Rinse with
ro m1x lemon nnds water aod dry
with towel
in ilS well for even
· m.;re aroma
Ph&lt;l Holm • AP•

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iunba~ otime{ientind

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HAL

"from the grocery store.'' .
Many children do not conFarme~s. what are you
nect the need of fa1ming with
doing to prepare for the forth- the production of food for the
coming planting, growing, local grocery store shelves.
harvesting a11d marketing OSU Extension has a new
season'?
direct marketing specialist,
Soil testing. meeting with Julie Fox, who has been
suppliers, . attending educa- hired to assist in Extension
tional Classes , reading the marketing programming for
farm magazines, attending local farmers.
industry trade show s, reviewThe Meigs County office
ing last year's·. tax returns is looking for farmer input to
with
yo.ur
accountant, assist in meeting your marreviewing insurance, arrang- keting needs. Please give a
ing financing for 2006 are all call to 992-6696 or email at
kneen. I @osu.edu.
part of the preparation.
Success in farming today is
Predetor problems
Are your barnyard animals
not dependent on just hard
work, but also proper man- . being harmed by predators?
agement of farm resources.
Goat and sheep producers
Take time now to plan out are facing common predator
your activities for the corning . problems so the Ohio Sheep
year especially the marketing Improvement Association and
State
Un'ivetsity
of products being ·grown. · Ohio
Many of today's commodity Extension are sponsoring a
· items receive prices similarly program on ,Feb. 9 at 7 p.m. at
to. commodities sold in the the Athens County Extension
1970s and 1980s witll pro- office located next to the
duction COS\s that are eve~ Athens County Fairgrounds.
· increasing. Yields are not
The program, Preda.tor
Management:
Coyotes and
. outpacing expense increases ..
The 2007 U.S. Farm Bill Black Vultures@ will be pre· may not be finalized, however, sented by OSU Extension
. the handwriting is on the wall wildlife specilllist Stan Gehrt.
that fanning i's not a high pri- A discussion will follow
ority in the daily life of most Tegarding tlie procedure to
· representatives. senators and reporting a predator kill as
citizens. ·Ask children where outlined in the Ohio Revised
. food comes and they respond Code. Producers will also
'KNEEN

Sunday, January 22, 2oo6

, 8Y ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLI A COUNTY

hear briefly about ,the
National Animal ID System,
The Tobacco Transition
the Scrapie Program, and how
Payment
Program, most
these programs will affect
often referred to as "the buysheep and goat producers.
The meetiitg is free ·and open out," created more questions
to anyone having an interest in wl\en it was signed into law
livestock production and in 2004, than answers since
that time, and has left tobacco
predator management.
farmers
wondering what to
Equipment show
next.
do
Are you interested in purLong-time South Carolina
chasing or seeing the latest in
agricultural equtpment, con- tobacco specialist DeWitt
struction equipment ail~ out- Gooden says the emphasis on
future crops has to be quality.
door power equipment?
"Farmers who have stayed
Plan on .visiting the annual
with
tobacco in the Umted
Power Show Ohio on Jan. 27States
produce a high quality
29, fro m 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
the Ohio Expo Center' in crop and that separates us
Columbus. Over 300,000 from Brazil and other coun.square feet of exhibit space is tries that have stepped · up
open to the public.
· tobacco production in recent
Educational
seminars. years," he said.
Part of the · increased
· cooking demonstrations and
on quality comes
emphasis
even ktddie ·tractor pulls are
from
the
buyer's
perspective.
available for the family to
enjoy. The center is located Gooden explains that with the
on
the
Ohio
State tobacco program gone, growFairgrounds , use the 17th ers must now be more attentive to what tobacco compaAvenue exit off J-71 north.
Free admission tickets can . nies want io tobacco leaves.
"One thing ·most companies
be obtained from local particwant
is more harvests throughipating equipment dealers and
the.extension office. Details at out the year," Gooden says.
www.omeda.org/powershow. That costs the wower more
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs money, but is crittcal to getting
County Agriculture and contracts, the long-time South
jVatural
Resources Carolina tobacco expert notes.
Ohio · State Tobacco production in the U.S.
Educator,
University Extension.)
was dramatically changed in
2004 with passage of the
America Jobs Creative Act.
Specifically, Title VI of the Act
eliminated the marketing quota

·Contribution to fair

· 11 Indian feder*tn
18 'Gone with 1he

Wind' lila' Clart! 21 Standoffish
22 Seething
.
23 tlleek epic Mitllf
24 Bitter
25 Vaunt

26 Domestic tf11Jioyee
26 Hurt a tilde
29

Cclnc:liJde

30 J.latce Indistinct
31 - and tonic
32 Philately ltem
34Growofd

photo
Pictured above are Gallia County Fair Board President Eugene Elliott, far left. and, from left,
Gallia County Commissi oners Harold Montgomery, Fred Deel and .David Smith. The commissioners presented the fair board with a contribution to pay for road improvements to the new
Gallia County Junior Fair Campgrounds.
·
·
·

Time to think about frost seeding.

8Y ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

.

'

effective where tillage can ere- . This will increase the opporate potential erosion problems tunity for seed-to-soil.contact.
(fields with light soils·or slopes
Use caution when frost seedgreater than 10 percent). Sites ing on top of snow .as rapid
Although winter is here to where maximum seed-to-soil meltdown of snow may result
stay for a while longer. it is . contact can be achieved are in the runoff of seed. Frost
not too soon to think about essential. Thinning grass seeding can be accomplished
improving your pastures. stands have been a preferred with any broadcast type seeder.
· Frost seeding is a good site to usc frost seeding. · ·
Tractor 3-point hitch mount·option to consider.
A bunch-type gra~s . such as ed seeders have been typically
· The practice of frost seed- . orchardgrass, . offers . a more used. In recent years, seeders
ing is used by forage produc- favorable environment for mounted onto four-wheelers
ers to improve pasture yields frost seedings than d&lt;ies a sod- have become a popular choice
or · change forage species . forming species, such as blue· for seeding. The effect of livecomposition. lt is a relatively · grass. Regardless of the cur- stock h.oof action can also
low-cost practice that; when rent grass species present, the ensure seed-soil contact.
·implemented at the correct site should be closely grazed
For more information on
time and managed properl y, · this winter to open the stand frost seedin g, inclttdi1ig all
can yield successful results .
and expose some soil. A chain . the steps required for sue- .
The basic principal behind drag or light disking can also cess, please [i ive me a call at .
frost seeding is the "honey- be used to help open the stand. 446c7007.
combing" action that is creat- ,
'ed by alternating freezing and
thawing cycles in late winter.
This activity incorporates
broadcast seed into the soil
surface. To take advantage of
GALLIPOLIS- U11ited Produceri Inc. market report
these environmental changes,
from
Gallipolis for sales conducted 011 Wednesday, }all. I 8.
frost seeding should occur ·in
Ohio from Feb. I through
about March I (here in southern Ohio).
·
275-415# St. $100-$ 155 Hf. $95-$142 425-525# St.
If your grass · stand is thin.
$100-$
140 Hf. $95-$ 125 550-625# St. '$95-$124 Hf. $90then frost seeding is a good
$1 14 650-725# St.' $95-$ 110 Hf. $90-$100 750-850 St ..
idea, as long as soi l fertil·ity is
$85-$ 100 Hf. $80-$99.
sufficient to allow for
improvement. For optimum .
production, soi l pH should be
above 6.0. Regardless of the
seeding method used, correcWell Muscled/Fleshed $45-$49 Medium/Le~n $42-$46;
tive applications of phosphoThin/Light $1 0-$30; Bulls $50-$60.
rus and pota~s ium should be
.applied prior to seed ing. If you
are frost seeding a legume. do ·
.not apply nitrogen the year of
Cow/Calf Pairs 5570-$1,075 ; Bred Cows $250-$900:
the seeding because of the
Baby Calves $15-$175; Goats. $20-$ 11 9: Hogs, $46:$54.
potential for increased competition from grasses.
Frost seeding should not be
considered as a substitute for
Replacemen t brood c0w sale· Wednesday. Jan . 25 at
poor fertility management. If
12:30 p.m.
.
a poor pasture i&gt; the result of .
For more information. call Brad m (740) 5R4-4R21 or
low fertility, frost seeding wil l
De Wayne at . (740) }39-0241. Vi sit . the Web site at
not remedy t])is situati on.
. . . www.uproducers.com
The practice is particularly ·

abn.,tty

107 Arb!
108 Tub Wll8hlnga
110 McM!away
112-TIIIIIUadlnr
113
114 Detective
' 11 &amp; - Jonet tnwslrlal

-cunA1'1111g8

117 llilcon:l.'"peiW11801milloi11«1o11
118 llin llrlpe
119T121 Erudll8
124 Toud!
125~

'(abbr.)

35 Minus

Submitted

105 Wllhered
'
106 Cllange direction

128 - Llnl&lt;a
130 Flow or air

37 Teml' tn tannts
.38 Do a jig
40 Fll1hy place
41 Sign of assent

42

Arid1or
+1 Sharp, as an odor
-48 On 1he summit of
49 Echo effect
52' Clue
53 Htneon 0&lt; Carrvy
55 Oo VfJfY 1811

Splgo1
Port·of NYSE
Feline crea1Ure
Slides
.
139 In days gone by
131
132
138
jj7

140 Vert&gt;141 Klcllen l1em .

Bowl_,
147 Polnlad

142 Command alsea
1+1

nnpoojec.1ioiO&gt;IttrliMt

DOWN

1 Tower of- ·
2 So1lllry
3 Loll Wid lola
4 ~call tellers '

STOWIIdlhe,..
·of a olllp
6 Auetrlln COI!1JCII«

7 ConcemiiQ

8Tort
·
9 Slblng, b short

10 Rehd

11 From t11ono
12 Filllllllllll
13 Devil&lt;i-e
14 Purple WIOiltalllos

15 M-..i!pMiad

matter

16 Slruggle"" bnlalh
17 Perbm
18 llileclor
-De Paltna
t9~

201nclled
27 Chess piece
30 Silopetess mass
33 Sll&gt;ly ol old
360tlyftsh
38 Desert 1ealur8
39 Tolu! pleaaurv In

59 Wl1ter - lola

149 Song and dlnce

43- '

64 Mystical Clld

8l"llort8IMMinl
150 Udt
151 - blanche
152 Door hardware

+I
45
47
48
49
50
51

80 lrislance
81 Handllome""'"

85 Set of type
ee Arm bone
87 Osclate ·

153

155 Orgonic oompotMid
1565-

88 Malter, in ""'
. 70NocWmalr.oect
71 z.ta·s72 Fa&lt; men only
73 t.oee teau74 l'lec8 o11and
78 Amerlntlan

.n

79~-

80 Exchange premium
82Por1

84 Bortal gangs1ei'
85 One mllllori (prolix)
ee Coffin siMd

87 Serrip&lt;acious slone

ee l1ams In a &lt;Pver
90 lrdgodye
· 91 limetallla abb'.
98 Rosle&lt;

101 Female hog
102 Fine and liberal
104 Do!ad lang.

Mtnlon
Act like • ham
... Salld &lt;hsling

~=glue

97:'"'*

99 Anger
100 HIIIWld - .

103 Clole
105 Used needle and
1lnlld
101! E~ opace
107~

109 Qec)()l (abbr.)
111 MI. rani&lt;

112Warry
113 HolywomtWI.(ablw.)
115 E~ou18&lt;117 tmpoee, as law!
118Cian

120 Some1hlug

. urlmportant
122 Sui1llble lofflm1irlg
123 Fury

124More~

' 125 Woood inortoa
126 "Bolero' COI\'I9(1Ier
127 Borrel slat

129 Laz)tone$

131
133
134
135
·137
138

Aavor

Eicpraa I belief
Kitcllan applliii1CO
Bodypru
Peco
Kind ol palm

140 Componen1
143 Talee legaiiiCIIon
145 Wk:l:ed
148 Helium 0&lt; hydrogen
147 'MIInler, - Wrrfle'
1-48 Spol on a card

80 o.-1
81 Polnlad tool
62 Compulllr Info
oolectlon
63 Ooe811

661=r:
67 F .

termed

(hypll.

69 lAariled one

72 Uke &amp;kl slopes
73 Thlee Wise Men

92 Mild, aslhewealher
95 ·Regret
100 Frost ·

llm!l's "'""
British baby buggy

5
6 P.= game
57 Cle1
5601d
lie

Held sway

96~in

Snooze

!54 w. away graWally

~lower town

... molal

92 Woman on campus
93 Opera by Belllri
1M Molu!s¥1

74 Uyer

75 Cll1dle

78 Sticky sMI
79 Dlsjla1d1
81 Endrded
83 Male sheep
85 Kind o1 mik
88 Bedouins
89 Countriled

LIVESTOCK REPORT
Feeder Cattle-Steady

Cows-Lower

.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

GREAT BARRINGTON
Mass. - The sun stiil hasn•i
risen over the Berkshire hills
when M~chael Miller's pickup pulls 111 front of a building
on the Maple Shade Farm in
Sheffield.
The dense smell · of cow
manure laces the winter air, but
Miller, a former newspaper
pu~h sher turned cheese miJI&lt;er,
lSD I bothered by the stencli or
the cold. He's 63, and curses
after slipping on a patch of ice
as he .enters the building. .
Inside, a cylindrical silver
tank is being filled with the
~ilk of 15 Jersey cows standmg on the other side of the
small. room.
l'yfiller works quickly and
qu1etly; · sterilizing and
adjusting hoses and pumps
until he has a Clean, tight con. nection between the tank and
a srnaller.container secured to
the back of his pickup. ·
, In just a few minutes, he's
~ipboned off 200 ~allons of
raw milk, the key mgredient
he says makes his Berkshire
Blue cheese so remarkable.
"You tas.te the cow in
there," he says. "I want you
AP Photo
to taste the barnyard."
Cheese maker Michael Miller examines chees~ wheels in the aging room at the Berkshire Cheese Makers shop in Great
. Berkshire Blue has. won Barrington, Mass., Monday, Dec. 12, 2005. The cheese, made from raw milk, is aged in the room for 60 days .
medals from the World
Cheese ·Awards and. the Miller to recall 13 wheels of
The wheels arc stored in
When Miller arrives at his curd into chunks the size of
American Cheese Society. It his cheese and discard ·more production facility · in Great candy ·bars. The · remaining another room at a constant 55
has been'featured at feasts that he had in stock.
Barrington a few minutes liquid , called whey, splashes degrees·. For the next 60 days ,
showcasing the culinary .arts.
He says the amount of bac- before 7. a.m., he and his to the floor as it's drained off. they sit on wooden planks
like the International Slow teria was so minute it would- assistant first pump the m'ilk
The mu ~ hy bits of curd are covered with varying degrees
. foods Festival in Italy, the n't do any harm, and believes into three stainless steel vats packed into round forms that· of furry gray mold.
James Beard. Dinner in New he w.as the target of an agency that have been sterilized with . shape the cheese into wbeels.
By the time it find s its way
York City and Boston 's intent on banning all food a cleaning solution.
·1n the following days, the to stores across the country.
, Spipazzola Dinner.
made with . unpasteurized
What happens next is. as hardened wheels are soaked Miller's cheese commands
But those honors are' taint- milk -an assault, he says, on muc)l a watttng game as tt ts in brine and poked · with up to $20 &lt;1 pound.
ed by controversy. In March; Americans' taste buds.
a craft.
dozens of holes. The small · "There are outstandi ng blue
"If this were Pari s,'; he
testers from the federal Food
The milk is heated and cur- tunnels allow veins of mold cheese makers in America ,
and Drug Administration says, "I'd 'have a line of died with the help of two blue to spider through the wheel. and Berkshire Blue is one of
found traces of listeria in French chefs out the door. molds. After three hours . leaving streaks and specks of them," said Jeff Roberts. who
Miller and Boag slice the · blueish-green.
represented the delegation of
• Berkshire Blue, prompting Here, I have the FDA.:'

You don't need a green
thumb for peperomia.
ter. and misting them frequently spring
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
and summer. Ha! Granted, , it is true
. what they also said about peperomia not
, Let us praise Pepe Romia. The real liking "wet feet," so don't overwater.
name is peperomia. but I like to call it
I should mention another nice thing
Pepe Romia, with the accent on the about Pepe. Because the leaves come
"rom." Pepe garners affection by out in a clump rather than along a stem
putting on a consistently good show or vine; it takes a long time for the plant
· even in the face of adversity.
to look overgrown for its pot. This
.You perhaps know Pepe under anoth- quality makes Pepe ideal for growing in
. er nal)le: watet:inelon begonia. Pepe's one of those self-sustaining gardens
leaves, heart-shaped and rippled, with sealed in a large bottle or Wardian case.
gray-green markings at the high 'points
A clump of leaves is actually a comof the Tipples, do indeed resemble those pressed stem or stems. whiCh does
. of a foliage begonia ' colored like a lengthen slowly. When it gets too long,
watermelon fruit . Not all peperoiriias make a new plant by pulling off one of
look like this, though; some have cop- the compressed stems and ·rooting it.
pery, velvety,. or waxy leaves.
Or - even more interesting - Pepe
Despite appearances, this plant is hot could be cloned by leaf cuttings, made
related to begonia; and it's a lot easier by pulling · off a leaf and sticking its
to grow. It. will do tine with little light. stalk into a mix of moist peat moss and
: It tells when it's thirsty with suddenly perlite orvermiculite.
collapsing leaves. Give the plant some . More interesting still : Cut a leaf into
water ood the leaves spring back to life. triangular sections with a little piece of
Cool temperatures suit it just fine.
the leaf stalk at one corner of each triYou would hardly think peperomias angle, then stick that co~;~~er into the
so easy to . grow after reading about peat moss mix.·
them in old gardening books. One old
Stems or leaves that are being rooted
· book' lists peperomias as greenhouse do need coddling of constantly moist
: plants, with detailed instructions for soil and a tent of clear plastic or glass to
gradually increasing \he · temperature maintain humidity. Once rooted,
and shade about them after January, though. Pepe Romi a can tough out bad
watering carefully in autumn and win- . conditions.

Upcoming specials: ·.

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

American cheese makers at
the 200 1 Slow Foods Festi val
in Italy. which . featured
Miller,'s chee,e. "lt '.s really
neamy and very llavorful.
Michael has helped define
American blue cheese."
Miller is banking on th.at
&gt;Ort of prai se as he trie&gt; 10
hoo&gt;t sale' after the li steria
contamin ation w't him about
· S3 1,000, an epi&gt;ode ht: says
wa; blown out of proportion
hy the FDA.
"They bought a bunch of
my cheese. ground it up and
incubated the snot out of it ,"
Mil ler said. "They mixed it
with a growth hormone that
wou ldn 't occur in nature, and
they, fo und li&gt;teria.''
Miller says he traced the
bacteria - which can cause
fever and diarrhea but poses
greater health ri sks to pregnant women and those who
are already sick - to the hay
the cows were eating.
.
. While
pasteurization
woLtld ' ve killed the li steria.
Miller isn't about to sacrifice
the flavor that comes from
raw milk.
Official s from the FDA did
not return repeated calls to
The Associated Press. But
dietary guidelines issued last
year by the federal depart- .
ments of agriculture and
health and human · services
say raw milk prpducts should
· be avoided.
,
"If you're on a far.m, feces
and other things have a risk of
getting into the milk and
causi ng contami nation. " said
Fergus Clydesdale, head · of
the food sciences d~partment
at the
Uni\&lt;ers.ity
of
Massachusetts and a member
of the government's 2005
Dietary Guidelines Advisory
. Committee. "That's why pasteuri zation was invented- to
get rid of harmful bacteria."

Citrus
from Page 01
that says it is an orange or
lemon cleaner. double-check
to make sure what that the
active cleaning ingredient
really is . lr's better to be safe
than sorry,
Tip: Bake orange or lemon
rinds in your Gven on low.
Your home will smell sweet
and fresh all day long .
Sprinkle ori a litt le t'innamon
if you like to step things up a
notch.

Bv LEE REICH

Grapefruit

Grapefruit also is a great
cle aner. Cut one in half. dip
the ex posed fru it in a dish
of salt and you .have the
best marble cleaner mone y
can buy.
Caution here: don't leave
the citric acid on the surface
any longer than it takes to ·
remove a stain . Flood with
fre sh water and towel dry.
immediatelv. And don't use
citric ac id · ro clean marble
"'-----' I when it 1sn't stain . If fresh . ·
AP Photo
clear water will do the trick
In this photo provided . by Lee Reich,. Watermelon begonia. has leaves with then that's all that should be
gray-green markings at t~e high points of the ripples . Not all peperomias used.
And. that·, all there i; to it.
look like this, though; some have coppery, velvety. or waxy leaves .

BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
S.ale!
Berber Carpet $6.95 yard
MOLLOHAN CARPET
.New Location
Gallioolis
76 Vine St.

Moose Members
BRISTOL SPRING RACE.
Tickets March 26th
$140 per person includes
·
Tickets, bus trip · ·
for more rletails call 675-1880

Electronic Tax Filing
Get your refund in as
little. as 2 days.
446'-8727

For Computer, Professional , Individual

ANGELL ACCOUNTING

The Amencan Legion Post 27. is
taking applica1ions for a Social
Room Manager. The applicant
. must
have
management
experience and a clean record .
For more information. cont{;\ct
Steve. Swords, Commander at:
days 645-5998. or evenings at
245-5108

and Bus iness Tax preparation .

ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
736 Second
· 446-8677
Basket-A-Day Give-A-Way
Sponsored by
Racine Youth League
February 1st - 28th
Tickets $20.00
Contact
Jennifer HoBack 949-2169
Allen Tucker 247-2103
or pick up at
Sheer Illusions
&amp; Wild Horse Cafe

Back To The Farm:

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Bv ADAM GORLICK

and price loan program, mak- selling them at significantly
ing the 2005 tobacco crop the reduced prices, the Clemson
specialist explains . .
first "post-buyout" crop.
The key s to post-buyout
Gooden believes that over
success,
Gooden contends, .
the next several years as things
settle from the "buyout" that are to obtain and keep a contobacco production in the U.S. tract, produce tobacco to the
can recapture acreage from . purchaser's specifications,
our competition. Gooden con- reduce costs and take advantends that tol:!acco production tage of government programs.
can still be profitable. .
· . "Tobacco is a low risk crop
"Growers have to grow for production, but high risk
higher yields and higher qual- for costs;" he emphasizes.
ity tobacco and 'to do thilt they "Quality is what set.s us apart
have to be more economical from Brazil and other tobacand efficient," he contends. · co-producing countries.''
To assure tobacco quality, be
Gooden has some specific
suggestions for growing says growers must stick to reccheaper tobacco. First, he ommended nitrogen rates, harsays match fertilizer needs to vest in at least three stalk posisoil test. New grid ·sampling tions or by contract specifica.
techniques, for example, can tions, usc recommended pestishow variability across a field cide applications, irrigate if
and allow a grower to apply needed, harvest mature tobacco and keep proper moisture in
precise amounts of fertilizer.
Second, he says to match bales and reduce tobacco spevarieties to disease problems. . cific nitrosarnines (TSNAs).
Variety selection, he points Quality, he notes, can go all
out, is much cheaper than ·!he way back to greenhouse
pesticides. He points out that production of transplants.
standard treatment for' bacter- Testing greenhouse water, sanial wilt control is $130 per itizing equipment, avoid overacre and the best way to cut fertilizing, waiting until Feb. I
that cost and maintain quality to seed, maintaining recomis to select a variety that has mended temperature and clip. resistance to the disease and ping early - shooting for 6 to
to practice good crop rotation. '8 clippings - all contribute to
Next, match acres planted a quality tobacco crop and
.to pounds that are qnder con· help hold down cost.
tract and leave lower quality
Proper maintenance of the
leaves in the field. Labor and curing · barn also can concuring costs are still the tribute to lower cost and
biggest cost items in tobacco higher quality, he maintains.
'production and leaving lower
Note: Adapted from an
quality in the fields is often article by Roy Roberson of
cheaper than processing and Farm Press, Ja11. 18, 2006.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 L.ldl1welali1 wood
8 Eii - ral toQetl1erl

FARM • GARDEN

iunbap limes -itnthttl

PageD3

In Berkshire hill~, fonner newspaper publisher crafts blue cheese

FIRST POST-BUYOUf TOBACCO
..
CROP LEAVES MANY QUESTIONS

-EXTENSION CORNERBY

FARM

DOWN ON THE

Management key to successful farming

PageD2

Now even you can win ·1he
Super Bowl!
Everytime you roll a game at
Skyline Lanes ·
Enter to Win
1 YEAR FREE BOWLING
DraW111g 5 pm Feb. 5th
SKYLINE LANES
1 037 SR 7N Gallipolis
44'6·3362

Quality Fur.niture &amp;
expert, friendly service at

Tope's
2 great locations
151 Second Ave.
&amp; 856 3rd Ave . Gallipolis

�•
~

Page 04 • &amp;anba!' QI:tmn-&amp;mttnrl

Sunday, January 22, 2006-

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

Sunday, January 22, 2006

I~

'Qtrtbune - Sentinel -

lhuWANMJ

...

It

~eUtte Technklians Need

J.

toM&gt; experience necessary

t:ft hands on experience

a
plus (ConstructiOn cable
sJtelute etc ) or will train
ttle r ght person Ortve own
t~ck wtvehlcle allowance
(tluck must be set up for m

4'lhng ex ladder rack &amp;

lJe Athens Meigs Educa
t•nal Serv ce Center Go-v
~tng Board 1s accepung
letters of nterest and re
sQmes from persons mter
ailed n tilhng a vacancy on
tflp Governing Board A.p
J,Wcants must be a res dent
c(f! the Trimble Local School
r:istnct The letter of mter
eJt shOuld ltst quallftcat ons
Md reasons why the person
~ld like to serve
-. Letters and resumes
sf~Duld be rpa1led to
Mt
aiii.el Struble Board Prest
e t Athe ns Me1gs ESC
!i) Richland Avenue SUite
11!1»11 Athans OH 45701
Afiplication Deadline Janu
24 2006 12 00 Noon

Jn One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egtster
utrtbune
Sentinel
Your Ad,
can Today... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Oeatllfiruword Ads
Disolay Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD
To Help Get Response

r
r ANNOIJNCF.~IEN'lb I

Lob,

AND
FOU!'.D

I

r

oa

r

AucnONAND
FLF.A MARKh'T

Cross
Creek
Auct1on
House Buffalo Fr day 7pm
4 month old mae Dog L111e Blue Grass Country
Mother Aottwe11er Father Band Admtsslon !iS Dane
Traveli ng
Salesman ers Welcome Fn Jan 27th
(304)882 2625
Rex Tho nton s Band from
At 34 Auct on Saturday
6pm
a so used Cons gn
ments
D&amp;N Wholesalers
AKC Reg stared
Female
4 years old from V rg n a large :fra ler
Back; Lab
Free to good home 742 load of Me chand se K tch
742 2442

Two 7 wk black male pa t
Boxer pupp1es (740)992
I t:tuy Junk Cars (304)773
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5004

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4 s For Sale
725
Announcemeni .............................................. 030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auct1on and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
760
Aulo Repatr
Aulos for Sale
710
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sale
750
Butldmg Supplies
550
Busmess and Buildmgs
340
Bus1ness Opportunt1y
210
Business Trammg
140
Campers &amp; Molor Homes
790
Camp1ng Equ1pmenl
780
Cards of Thanks
010
Chtld!Eiderly Care
190
Electncai/Refngeralion
840
Equtpment for Rent
480
Exca vating
830
Farm Equ1pment
610
Farms lor Rent
430
Farms lor Sate
330
For Lease
490
For Sale
585
For Sale or Trade
590
Frutts &amp; Vegetables
580
Furntshed Rooms
450
General Hauhng
850
Gtveaway
040
Happy Ads
050
Hay &amp; Gra1n
640
Help Wanted
110
Home Improvements
810
Homes lor Sale
310
Household Goods
5t 0
Houses for Rent
410
In Memoriam
020

no

lnsuranc~

130

Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment
Livestock
Losland Found
Lots &amp; Acreage
Miscellaneous

660
630
060
350
110

MrscellaneoUs Merchandise

540

Mobtle Home Repetr
Mobile Homes lor Rent
Mobile Homes for Sale
Money to Loan
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
Mustca) Instruments
Personals
Pets lor Sale
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Profea11onal Serv~ces
Radto TV &amp; CB Repatr
Real Estate Wanted
Schools lnslructlon
Seed Plant &amp; Fertlltzer
Soluatlons Wanted
Space lor Renl
Sporttng Goods
SUV s lor Sale
Trucka for Sale
UphQislery
Vans For Sale
Wanted to Buy
Wanted lo Buy Farm Supphes
Wanled To Do
Wanted to Rent
Yard Sale Gallipolis
Yard Sale Pomeroy/Mtddle
Yard Sale Pt Pleasanl

-

.

860
420
320
220
740
570
005
560
820
230
160
360
150
650
120
460
520
720
715
870
730
090
620
ISO
470
072
074
076

For Sundays Paper

HEIJ'

TO BUY

Absolute Top Dol ar U S
lar Found F day 1!f3!06 S1l11er and Gold Cons
Allenton
oH 218 Very fr endly Ca I Proofsets Gold R ngs Pre
James 40 yr Laugh te r s (740)446 75Q.5 j'lnyt me
1935 U S Currency Soli
the Bes Mea c ne Pease
ta re D amonds
M TS
call
Hot
Republ can - - - - - - - - - Co n Shop 151 Second
(304 )593 53 21
Lost chocolate paint sam
A11enue Galllpo IS 740 446
ese Aockspr ngs Ad area
2842
Foster Parents Needed (740)992 32 t 6
Homes needed m Jackson
Me1gs
Wanted To Buy
Vmton
Me gs
Athe ns REWARD Basset Hound
County Store Scr pt Store
Female
spayed
last
seen
Washmgton count es for
Mason
County Tokens and cu rrency from
youths 1 Oas s pro11 des @
1 7/06 Rae ne Pome oy and M d
the Ira n ng You w II rece ve A rporUMcCI nltc
740 992
Please
help
us
t
nd
our I:Heport Banks
daly re mbursement of $33
6040
Daug
h
ter
Clemen!
ne
$48 a day pad resp te and
I\IPI0,\11'1
support for the youth placed Boyd &amp; Robin (304)586
Sllt\I(IS
n ~ou home Tra n ng be I 169
g ns January 28 Alba ny
Call Oas s Foster Care for
HELP WANTED
more nformatJon To I free
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675 t429
near Buttalo WV

Its to qu al fed applicant
Send resume w th co11er et
ter no ale than Febru;;uy 1
2006 to
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Business Days Prior To
PJ.Jbllcatlon
Sunday Display 1 00 p m
Thursday for Sundays P•IP•tr

'Fast paced phys!;: ans off ce
seeks recept on st Qua fed
appt ca n 5 should have abll
ty to mutt task use bas c
computer sk 111s commun
care efltct vely and pleas
antly se nd resume to PO
Box 16 Pt Peasant WV
25550

p;,;;;;;;.,_____.,.
Full time position
1n Meigs County
Must be self start
er, service orient
ed and able to
work well with the
pubhc Must have
valid dnver s license and reliable
transportation
Position offers all
company benefits
Including health
dental visjon and
life Insurance,
401K, paid va ca
tlon and personal
days Please send
resume to
CLA Box 200

papowl"

110
.1

110
H ELP W\1\'fED

Having Trouble
Flmhng a Schedule
that Works for You?

1.

110

HELP WANI'ED

.
1

llELPWAmm

LoCal Home Health Agency
ookmg for FT RN and also
acceptmg appl cations for
our next Cert I ed Home
Health A de Classes wt\tch
w II begin on February 13th
2006 Please ca 1 (740)44 1
1377 or (740)992 0990 tor
more tnformatton

Ohl'o Valley Home Health
Inc h1rmg Full T me AN and
Per Diem MSW Acceptmg
appl cat ons for LPN CNA
Need Fu IT me?
STNA CHHA PCA Com
You gQt tt
petit ve Wages M teage and
benefits ncludmg Health In
Need Part Ttme?
surance Apply at 1480
You got ttl
Jackson Ptke Gall po11s or
Looktng for H VA C Help 2415 Jackson Avenue
Need Daysh ft?
ers No exper ence needed Pomt Pleasant WV or
You got 11
Wti tratn Good pay Call phone toll free 1 866-441
(740)441 12.36 to ptck up an 1393
Call Toll Free
apphcat ern
1·888-IMC·PAYU
Owner Operators
Nurs ng Ass stan! Classes
TAKE THE FIRST STEP
I 1 888 462 7298)
TOWARO A. BeTIER
Beg.nn mg January 30th
ext 2457
FUTURE!
2006 If you enJOY elderly
Lease Purch8ile Plan Ava l!lbl&amp;
people and want to become
Grt~al Pay
APPLY IN PERSON I
a member of our health care
Guaranteed home I me
Office Hours
teem please stop by Rock
No Lease On Costs
Mon Fn B-4
spr ngs Aehabtllation Cen
Spouse Alder Program
Paid Or entation
ter at 36759 Aocksp ngs
Off1ce located m downtown Road
2ysOTRe~~;pt~q
Pomeroy
Oh1o
Gall pol1s just one block
M 1or Transponors Inc
45769 and t II out an apph
ca I W !son Tollett
from the c1ty pa kat
cat on for the classes
Ex
at ou Nitn:f WV locat on
242 Third Avenue
tendtcare Health Se v1ces
6()[).345-671t
Inc IS an equal opportun ty
www m I art com
HOLZER SENIOR CARE
employer that encourages
CENTER
AAID TRAINING
wor.kp ace dtverStry
MfF
lndtvlduals wtlhng t o tram for
you are nte est ed n a
cler cal postttons Must be
part I me pos 1on the re s an
a
omes
AGE 55 OR OVER and
open1ng n
Gallipolis Ohto
meet el gtb1lty requ re
ments Addtllonal trammg
Under New Management
Housekeep1nglle,undry
pos !tons ava fable Cal the
Russ Murdock General
Semor Employment Center
Manager
If you are nterested n a po
(866)734 2301
s fiOn please stop by and I U
Has opemngs lor
out an application at 380
Part ltme Bartender apply
Coloma Dn11e B1dwe I Oh o
a es Assoc ates
n person al Jafi s Carry Out
Top Perlorme s earn a
or gtve Mark Haner or Paul
Pomeroy
Between 8 00
Sword a call at (740)446
~mage $80 000+ Yr
am and 10 00 am Mon
5001
5 day work week 40 hrs day th ru Frtday Must be
Closed on Sundays
able ro work weekend No
Benef Is
nclude
No Phone
phone ca ts
Health BlusCross B u
Calls
UNIOI CA ll e.t'N1U
h eld med1Cal dental
ye 401K
POSTAL JOBS
$t 5 94 $22 56/h now h~r
Fax resume to ~740)446
ng For applicatiOn and free
599
HOLZER SENIOR CARE
governement JOb nfo call
CENTER SEEKING FULL
Amencan Assoc of labor
If you ere fooklng for a
TIME UNIT MANAGER
1 9 13 599 8220
24/hrs
Career Lets Talk
emp sen1
olzer Sen or Care
e
s a 70 bed long term car
Help Wanted
C
.Hs ng fac illy located
Help Wanted
ural Gal a County who
sston focuses on qual t
are fo our res1dents

If

iD"'NiopP.I!!!!!!!'II!!!!!!!"'..

110

.
1

Gallia County Senior Center
A Nationally Accreted Senior Center
Certified PASSPORT Agency

AN exper ence p eferrert
Bensttt s Include
Compel! ve wa ges
•E1Cper ence credit
Heelth/OentaVL te nsur
40t k (afte 1 year)
Un form allowance
VacatiOn
Regular rate 1ncreases

If workmg n a lr endly
eam onented facdttYi ap
eals to you please co
n and see us at 380 Colo
1al 0 ve Bidwell Ohio o
11e Stephan e Tra ner
N BSN DON or Teres
Aemy MHA LNHA BSN

Let us Care for your Loved Ones, by
offenng them Quabty, Dependable
and Compassionate care
Home Care serv1ces mclude
Bathmg, Cookmg. House Cleamng.
Vital S1gn Momtonng. Nurse Vis1tat1Dn,
Med1cal Appointment Transportation,
CPR/First Atd Cert1fied Staff
"
For more mformat1on please contact
us

Gallia County Coundl on Agina
1167 State Route 160
P.O. Box 441
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

AN Syste m Admm strata
or Long Te m Care a cal
I (7 40)448 5001

!;all Judie Raeoe RN c
"' CIInlc•l Manager 11
(740)441 1779 or
1-800-481-6334

••••••••••••

~

Wanted Cook w1th expert
enc:e In menu plann ng lor
treatment faclltty Pay based
OfJ experience Pad lnsur
ance Call between 9am
~m
Monday Friday
(l 4 0)'J7Q 001i'3
Wanted Otnmgraom Wa1t
ress full time A fnendly
sln Ia and Serv ce or entad
wttuld be Ideal for th s pos1
ti'On Apply In person at Holt
day Inn Galltpolls No
""one calls please

Physical Therapist
jReporler
Medl Home Hea th Agency
has an e)(clung opportunity
for a lull ttme part ltme or
per d em Phys1cal Therapist
to JOin our Med care Certt
fted/JCAHO
accred ted
agency m Cabal and Put
nam Count es
We offer a com petit ve S ng
On Bonus I ex btl ty n
scheduling ocallzed or ex
panded serv1ce area op
t1ons mileage re mburse
menl 401 K Program and
fu 1 benefit package

800 939 6865
Call V ck Chadw ck AN for
deta Is

General As!lignment
Reporter to write and

develop featu re~ cover
news events and handle
1ome local government
reponing for daily neWJ
paper m JOutbealteru
Oh1o Expenence preferred, but entry level1s
acceptable
Send resume and clips ~
Kevm Kelly Ma.nagmr
Ed1\or Ohio Valley Pub"ll
lnbmg Co 826 Third
Ave Gallipolis Ohlo
45631 Phone (740)4462342 ext 18.

Golltpolla Career Cottege
tcareers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4387
1 800 214-()452
I
Www gallipoliteareernollege com

•

~ ed ted Membe

Ace ed! ng

CoUncil bf Independent College•
and Scnool11 12748

P1 Pleasant Moose l odge Aespons ble Reliable Ch1tf'

Care needed n my Home
needtng ba rtenders app y
Hours vary Must have A r
m off ce at Lodge only no
erences /Transporta1 on")
phone calls J&gt;'ease
(304)675 6082
Res denttal Treatment Fa
Clhty takmg applications lor
youth worker Pay based on At 35 Adult v deo &amp; Book
expenence Paid Insurance Store need M1dn1ght CIQdl,
Call
be tween
9 OOam Full t me 1304)937 4900
3 OOpm
Monday Fnday
(740)379 9083

Fot sale

PoWer Uft and
Reel ner Cha r Call 740
992 7349

New Dishwasher Baby bed
W/mattress 95 Grand Pr )(
runs and looks great 740
416-41 39 or 740-416-6035

Ch1ldcare available m my
hc;-me 1n ~acne
740.
9-192945
C~nst an mom
ch ldcare m my
5 30pm Have
non smok ng
(740)446-3128

20 Years I ZO Locations
Sull Famll) O"ned' Still Growmg'
Stan your new Career wu h a ~ompan y that knows a
thmg or r.... o nbuut the RENT TO OWN Bus nc'is
Grayson, K\

Logan, OH

Lou1sa. KY
Mavsv1lle, KY

London, OH
Portsmouth, OH

Athens. OH

Waver!) OH

Circleville Oil

West U01on, OH

Gallipolis, OH
Georgetown OH
Hillsboro OH

\\ llm1ngton OH
Washington CH OH
Zanemlle OH
Bambndg• OH -

Lancaster OH

Corporate Office

Great Benefits I Compet1ttvc Pay
Opportumues ror Growth
( It. our urrenc S o ~ Managers
s artcd t ' r ~ar~"Cr $ as l o I:\" 1 n Manage
Cus1omer Sales Reps or Del eJ) Spcc1ah&gt;Sl

Now acceptmg appllcatwm for
Store Managers
Customer Sa les Reps
Co!lec tron Managt.TS

Deli very Scrv1cc Spectalrst

Wt/1 do babysit! ng m my
house or yours CPA Certt
hao Call [740)441 9744 osk
for An ta

Get an appflcut1on toda) at um of our ~ /fires,
or call the 24-hmu RlOCareer Lme
•• 800-526·5606 £&lt;1 1/ 5

Help Wanted

BUSINE'iS
OI'PoRltJNIT\'

HELP WANTED
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Phlebotomist-Per Diem
In the following areas
Par~ersburWRa\ltnswood!JIK'k.'iOn

Pleasant Valley Hosp1tal1s currently
acceptmg applications for a Per-D1em
Phlebotomist Applicants must have a
valid dnver's license Six months
expenence preferred
PoSillon mvohes drawm g blood 1n a
nursmg home settmg and transporting
speCimens. Expenence m dra" mg blood
on the older adult
For more mformauon
Pleusunt Vtlley Hospital
C/0 Human Resources
2520 Vulk y Dn ve
Pt Pleasant 'WV 25550
304 67) 4140
AA/EOE
"ww pvall ey org

Elaine 740 385-()698

~rrow Smart Contac

16x80 homes starting at
$2~995 00 Includes vtnyl
sld ngf shingle roof Call
Russ 740-385-2434

he Ohio Dtvlslon of Fl
rancial Institu tions Of
lee of Consumer Affal~
~EFOAE you refmanc
~ur home or obtain
oan BEWARE of re
puests for any large ad
ance payments of fee
r Insurance Call the Of
Ice of Consumer Affaln
ol! free at 1 866 278
poo3 1o learn 11 the mort
paGe broker or Iande~ . i;
properly hc~nsed (Tht
s a public serv1ce an
~ou ncemen l from th
~h lo Valley Pubttshln

~~~=====·~
rr
~ONAI
SERVICES

I

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
1 688 582 3345

r

1Q

I&lt;I \I I "' I \II

HOMES
FOR SALE

Galha-Me1gs Commumty Actwn 1s :
seekmg a Housmg Developer
Assistant Must possess strong :
background workmg m restdenhal
construction, be self motivated and, '
mm1mal
supervisiOn ,
need
Fam1hanty With bu!ldmg codes,
preferred but not reqmred have
some computer skills, able to relate
wtth people of hmtted mcome and
contractors, wt]hng to attend
educationa l trammg m f1eld and
work flex1ble hours 1f necessary_
Vahd dnver s l~eense and rehabletransportatwn
reqmred
Apphcat1ons w1th resumes wtll b~
accepted unhl 4 00 p m on january.
27 2006 at Calha Metgs CAA 85 •
TI11rd A1 enue, Gall!pohs OH ,
45631
GMCAA ts an Equal
Opportumty Employer

l

•
oNOTICEo
CJHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
{No CO recommend
~at you do busmess wit~
EtOple you know ano
~OT to send mona
~rough the ma I unt I ~ou
ave Investigated the of

ft.nno .
TiRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
q::IMMUnNG?
QAREER DISTURBED?
Qlr st an Owned Company
Offering A Home Managed
~s ness Part ttme or Fu I
11me Fu I Support and
lfainlng Full~ f nanced op
pclrtun ty I qualified
1:800-946 7572 Ptn 00 (l s
,., &amp; Leave Contact Info)

Porch

Carport

and

All Electric

Ref

and Stove mctuded
No
Pets
In town Ractne
References required 740
949
2217
7 00 A M to
1995 Skyline 28x64 3BR
2BA fireplace cathedral 700 ~M
ceiling $35 000 (740)709
3 bedroom mob1le home In
1186
the Shade area Water
2006 16x70 3 Br/2 bth
sewer trash included $325
V nyVShlngte $229/""" Call
a month plus deposit No
(740)385-9948
pets allowed (740)385
91 Skyl ne 16x80 3 Br/2 Bth 4019
$145/mo Call (740)385
3br 2ba Mob1le Home
7671
$440/month $400/depos 1
96 Fleetwood 3 BA/2 Blh 1n New Haven (304)882
$169/mo Includes Dl!ll~very 1107

~ompany)

r

Water and Sewer Garbage

Included

Call (740)385 9948
Good clean u~ed mob le
homes far sale
Day
(740)388 8513
Evenings
(740)388 8017

r

BUSOO$

~ AND BUILDINGS

For Rent 3 BUIIdmgs for
Business Use Located tn
Pomeroy
Also 2 Upsta rs
Unturnlshao Apts In Pomer
oy tor Rent Call 740 589
7122

~r=;;..-~Lors--&amp;=---,

i

tar/Sewer ncluded No Pats
For Lease 2 Floor spa
(304)675 5332
c1ous totally remodeled 2
570 S 2nd Middleport 3-4 bedroom 1 1/2 baths un
bedroom gas furnace/c an furmshe d apartment New
hal a r very clean no pets water heater and appl an
and
HUD
approved ces $600 a month plus utI
$500 00 per month and de hes Downtown Galhpol s
Secur ty and key depos 1 re
pos• 740 843-5264
qu1red No pets References
Attention!
requ red (740)446 6882 M
Local company offenng NNO
F 8 IJ0-5 00
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your GraCIOUS ltvmg 1 and 2
home tnstaad ol renttng
bedroom apartments at VII
1Cip% lmanctng
New 2005 Redman home
lage Manor and RIVerside
Less than perfect cred 1t Apartments tn Middleport
1700 sq ft 3 bedroom 2 5
From $295 $444 Call 740bath Green Townsh iP 6 accepted
Payment cou ld be !tie 992 5064 Equal Houstng
acres (740)446 2188
same as rent
Opportunttles
Mortgage
loca tors
large 1 Bedroom Apa rt
(740)367-IJOOO
ment $450/month Utilities
$lop renting Buy 4 bedroom
included" (304)675 5819
1oreclosure $15 000 For
I stmgs 800 391 5228 ext Middleport 1 and 2 Bed
t709
room lurmshed Apts
No
Pets depos t and prev1ous
rental references 740 992
MOBILE HOIIIDi
0165
Newly remodeled 3 or 4
mRREN'I
bedrooms cen tral a r full
Modern 1 bedroom apt
basement hardwood floors 14X70 tra1ler fo r rent [7 401446 0390
detached garage large cov $400/mo $400 depos I Call
ered pat o fenced back 1740)367 7762 or (740)446 New Haven 1 bedroom un
furn1shed apartment no
yard close to schools Potnt 4060
pets depos 1 &amp; p ev ous
Pleasant
$69 500
(740)709 t382
14X70 wtth 24Ft Expando rental references. (740)992
$400 00 a month 1st &amp; last 0165
S~racuse 3 Br
attached months Rent requ red N ce
Db Garage New root on ya d ReMrd Couple prefer N ce one BA unfurnlshe&lt;l
apartment Range &amp; retrtg
7 acre Block ut ht es bu ld rao (304)675 203t
provided Water &amp; garbage
ng $85' 00 740 949 1082
2 Bedroom al electnc In pad Depos t requ1 ad Call
or 740 416 2786
Middleport $375 00 plus de (740)446-4345 after Gpm
postt
3 Bedroom al alec
wwworvbcom
Inc tn M ddleport $425 00 Tara Townhouse Apart
Home lratlng•
Plus depos t
No nside ments Very Spac ous 2
L st your home by callmg
Bedrooms CIA 1 112 Bath
pets 740 416 1354
(740)448 3620
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool Pa
2 bedroom mob le home n ho Start $395/Mo No Pars
Rae ne $375 mo plus $375 Lease Plus Secur ty Depos t
VIew photos/mto online
depos 1 years ease no Aequ red (740}367 7086
pets no calls after 9pm
New Ha11en wv 4 Bed
(740)992 5039
room 2 Bath 2 Car Ga
Twm R1vers Towe s ac
rage Outbulld ngs Close to 3 be droom doublewlde cept ng appltcat ons tor
town PRICED TO SE~ll
$400 month $400 depos11 wattmg list for Hud sub
Cooe 6505 or call (304)882 No pets 3 ret HUO ap SIZed 1 br apartment ca ll
3368
675 6679 EHO
pro11ect (740)388 001 1

r

THE MAPLES
100 E MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY
740 992 7022
Subsldtzed Aestdentlal
Housmg for so yet~ra of
and older PRIORITY
GIVEN TO APPLICANTS
WITH INCOME AT OR BE
LOW
$10 900 for 1 person or
$12 450 fo 2 persons
Maximum Income eHecftve
02/11/2005 for 1 person
$18 150 or $20 700 lor 2
persons
Must meet HU0/202/8 crlte
na for household compost
!ton
MANAGED BY Stlverheels
Incorporated A Realty
Company
Equal Housmg Opportumty

aa

&amp;anba!' QI:tmtl-&amp;mtinrl •

15

05

'\II(\!« I '
Hmu

IMI'IUJ\ f \1f:N'I1'i
01 Ford Ft50 XLT 4dr au
to 5 4l VB bedcover 6CO
BASE¥ENT
player sunroof good cond•
WATERPROOFING
!ton
77 000
m es
18f21mpg $12 000 Must Uncondll onal I let me guar
antee loca references fur
sell (304)288 3335
ntshed Establ shed 1975
Black lab Pupp es AKC
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
1972 Chev~ PU
LWB
regl$1ered All males Ftrst
2WD 350 Automat c Good 0870 AoQer s Basement
shots and wormed Adora
Waterproof ng
Cond t1on S I 800 OBO for
ble 740 992 3506
more nto (304)675 2799
Bulldog puppies tor sale
$500 each 4 males and 1 1985 Chevy I ton dump
female Vet checked Cal truck new motor cab &amp;
(740)452 8468 0 (740)450 paint Used daly Ask1ng
8755
$3 000 (740)256 1253
Ak:C Lab pups lteld and
waterfowl hunhng blood
I nes calm and family or~
anted excellent pups 9)(
cellent pr ce
j7 40)4 18
8388

CKC Black Labs 4 months
2000 Dodge Ram 1500
old male &amp; female $100 Sport Excellent Cond1t on
Call (740)379 2697
Must see to Appreci ate
Full blooded P.n Bull pup 1304)675 3476
pesforsale$100 Smaes
1 female call 304 593 3423 2001 Dodge Ram truck
Mobtle Home Lot next to
2500 SLT Hea11y Duty
Methodtst Church In Kanau
M USIO\L
spr ngs camper spec1a1 10
SPACE
ga
OH
Pn-vate
Call
WmlUMF.NTS
ply ures $7 500 Call Ed
FOR IbM
(740)446 4762
1740)367 0624
I
Mob1le home spaces n Downtown Ofhce Space 5 Console Organ Gulbransen
SUVs
Country Mobile Home Park room suite $650/mo 1 roorn 11 51kw double manual
fl)R
SALE
Great for home or small
(740)385 401 9
offtce $225/mo 2 room
church $950 (740)256
su1te $250/mo Secunty de
1428 See tx: sales com for 1999 Ford Exp orer e)(c
pos1t requtred You pay Ubi
p ctures
cond loaded 1 1 ~000 miles
t1es AI spaces v~ry n ce
$6500 304 675 7059 or
Elevator Call (740)446 Seve raJ V10l ns lor sale
304 675 5034 from Bam
1 and 2 bedroom apar t 3~ for appo1ntment
Starttng at $100 each Call 5pm
menls lurntshed and unfur
\111~111 \\1111...1
(740)379-2754
mshed secunty deposit re
4x4
qurred no pets 740-992
I \1(\1 . ., 1 1'1'1 II...,
FOR
SALE
22 18
,\ 11\I ... IC)( h.

199s DoubteWide 3br 2ba
wlattached Garage Breeze
ACR&amp;\GE
way &amp; Barn
1 56 acres ~~---111iliiiiiiiliiiioo-,.l - - - - - - - - - Sandhrll
Rd
$72 000
1 Bed Room Apartment
(304)895 3068
22 acres won(:lerful v ew Oh10 St $350 plus Deposit
ridgetop property close 10 Water &amp; sewer pa 1d
20 acre farm wtth custom 2 main highway perfect for 4 (304)675 6668
story home built 1n 1999 1o wheeler tra ils (740)707'
CS1ed between A10 Grande _2_10_9_ _ _ _ _ _ __ 1 BA apt Conven1en1 Joca
tlon references depoSit No
and Jackson 3 miles off Rt
Motga
Co
Just
off
SR33
pets
(740)446 01.39
35 $249 000 740 384
Cook Ad ntce 5 acre lots - - - - - - , - - - 5182
$21 500 co water or Land 1BA nicely turn shed apart
acker Ad 5 acres $16 9001 ment qUtet area suitable
3 bedroom house m Pamer
oy Off main road Rver Danv1lle Red H1ll Ad 26 for 1 adult pnvate dn11eway
NOW
$59 500 wlcarport
new
W/D
view $27 000 1 740 992 acres
AeedsV'tlle 14 acres co (740)446 4782
2593
water NOW $22 500! Tup
20 acres
1ST MON FREE RENT
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w1th pers Platns
WITH PAID DEP: NEW
Fireplace 1n A o Grande $24 900 co water! Chester
17
acres
$25
950
Gottto
ELLM VIEW
area a acres mil 40x60
Co
Kygar
16
acres
TOWNHOUSE/APTS
barn $120 000 (740)709
$t6 5001 A1o Grande 8
NOW LEASING!
1166
acres co water NOW
SPACIOUS
3 br/1 bath 1 5 acre lot 10 $19 950 V nton Dodnll Ad
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
Pomeroy new roof leave 5 acres $11 5001 Call
BOTH FLATS &amp;
message 740 517 5388
(740)441 1492 tor tree
TOWNHOU SES
maps to explore each stte or
AVAILABLE
3-4 bedroom home 1 1/2 vrs t www bruner!and com
"ALL ELECTRIC
bath With famtly room re We finance!
CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
ce ntly remodeled $98 500
*STOV'E REF
Call (740)446 4028
REAL EsTATE
DISHWASHER
- - - - - - - - '---·WiiiiiANTIDiiiiiiioo-,.1 GARBAGE DISPOSAL
7BR 5BA Foreclosure on ....._
WINO BLINDS
ly $18 000 For st ngs call Need to sell your home?
"CEILING FANS
800 391 5228 ext F254
Late on payments dtwrce
"WATER SEWAGE &amp;
Job transfe r or a death? I
TRASH INCLUDED
Attention I
can buy yout home
All
PETS CONDIT ONAL
Local company offer ng MNO cash and quiCk clos ng
(304)882 3017
DOWN PAYMENT" pro 740 416 3130
grams for you to buy your
home nstead ot renting
• 100% f nanc1ng
• Less tha n perfect cred1t
2 bedroom apartment Me1gs
ll~JU'iE';
accepted
County 11ery mce clean
• Paymen1 co uld be the
FOR IbM
$425 per month p us depos
same as rent
t no pets references re
Locators 2 or 3 Bedroom House rn qulrao (740)992 5174
Mortgage
(740)367 0000
Pomeroy No Pets 7402BA apanments Starling at
992 5858
---~----- $375/month Located on SR
2BR house $325/month 160 SA 850 Bob McCor
$ISO!depos1t you pay ail m1ck Ad Call (740)441
ullllles washer/dryer hook 0194 or (740)441 1184
up stove and refngerator
turn shed No ns oe pets 3 Bedroom 2 Bath Mobile
All real aatete •dvertislng
Home 517 Burdette Street
(7 40)446 9061
In this news~ Ia
Depos t and Reference re
1ubject to the! Feder•l
2BR 1 5 bath 3 mtles from qu1r80 No Pets (304)675
Felr Houalng Act af 1968
l"fMC $475/month plus de 5402
which m11ke1 It lllepl to
post References requ red
advertle1 "•ny
Call (740)446 2651
Beauttlul 2 story townhouse
preference limitation or
overlooking
Gallipolis C1ty
di~c:rlmin•tlon tM•ed em
3 Bedroom house for Rent
park
Kttch
en
0A l A
r•c• color religion ...
Close to Power Plant 10
familial ttatul or nation~!
New Haven 740 949 1183 study 3BR 2 baths laundry
origin or anr Intention to
area Refe rences reqwred
3 Bedroom newly emod secur ty deposit no pets
make •nr •uct)
eled House $400 00 Total $900 mo Call (740)446
prtlerence llmttanon or
electnc 1n Pomeroy w th Pn 2325 or (740)446-4425
~iecrlmlnation
vale Parkmg 74D-949 2303
Thl• news.,.per will not
or 740 59, 3920
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
knowingly •cc.pt
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PR~
4 bedroom 1 bath HUD ap
edver11aements ror rul
CES AT JACKSON ES.
house
$550
per
proved
Illite which Ia In
mo Me gs Local School 12 TATES 52 Westwood Onve
viOa.tlon of tM l•w Our
mmutes from Pomeroy fro m $344 to $442 Walk to
reederl ... ~y
shop &amp; moves Call 74Q(7 40)594 3031
Informed thllt 111
446 2568 Equal Housmg
dw.llln~ lldftrtlaed in
4 bedrooms 2 bath home Opportun ty
thla new•paper are
w th porch m Tuppers
evalllble on an equal
Plams ava1lable tor rent on CONVENIENTLY LOCAl
opportunity bll...
a month to month bas s ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
$450 plus deposit raferen Townhouse
apartments
(740)992 and/or smal houses FOR
Country sett1ng 1n Gallla ces requued
RENT Call (740)441 111 t
County! 3 bedrooms 2 3034
baths ft replace $85 ooo 4br
n
Syracuse to r appl cation &amp; tnforma
(740)709 t 166
$600/month &amp; Deposit Wa !ton

J&amp;C Tree ServiCe &amp; Exca
va!lng 25 years eJCp Free
est mates 304-675 2213
---~-~--Fabu ous 4br 3 full baths
Need your laved one cared Completely
Remodeled
for? 1 have room 1n my House for Sale {304)882
home to care for one lady 2391
Call Dodrtll s Prrvate Home - - - - - - - - Care @ (740)388-8193 ask Ho4ses tor sale m New
Haven 4 br on Mayo Or
tor Pr1sc1Ia
$85 000 (remodeled)
4 br on Haven Heights
Now 2 Openmgs Elderly
$7~ 000 (remodeled)
Reasonable $1 200 Meals
3 br on Mtdway Onve
&amp; Snacks leave Message
S130 000 (new canst)
1304)882 3860
304 682 3131/882 2728

Lebanon OH

Help Wanted

hOme ?am
references
Call
Km

House Clean ng General
and In Depth Cleaning
$11 OOp hr with your spls
or $15 OOp hr w1th my spts
Ca ll for Apt 740 508-0763
W/ Ppr and Pntg

Ironton OH
Jackson, OH

w II provtde

Computer Trouble Shoot
and Repa1r Expen Serv~ce
740.992 2395

•

.

fopenmg for a Full T1me
liiN full benet ts package
:ll&gt;cludlng 401K Sign on
• • Bonue $2,500
,.Open1ng tor a Part T1me
• AN Sign on Bonus
:
$1500

llELPWAmm

HeLZER

local bus ness look ng for
Secretary Aeceptto n st
Must have good telep hone
sk lis &amp; good v. th the publ c
know edge n comp ute s &amp;
compute r account ng pro
grams &amp; a I other off ce ma
"lC ~)( EH E"lCE "'E ... EJ:;OARY
ft..L
JE CLASSES
ch nes Hours Bam 5pm
CD tR.o."' "'G
Monday F day B 12 Sa tur
r. ANC N" AVA L"f:j E
c/o Pomeroy D•ily
J00 r ACEM[I T
day
ERO L ~GI'.OW
Sentinel
Send resume to
Local Buslnesc:;
PO Box 7D
PO Box 775
ALLIANCE
Pomeror, OH
Galltpohs OH '5631
T~ACtOA TRAILER
45768
Local Company
TRAINING CENTERS
Gal polls based company s
WYTHEVILLE VA
seek ng ca nd dates fa lull
and part ttme post ons
1 BOO 334 1203 H C S G Inc s now accept
ng applca t ons at Rock We otter competlttve salary
and camp ete benet ts
sp ngs Rehab n Pomeroy
Desk C erk n~eded Please lor 2 oar! 1me post ons n
package
apply a Budge! nr Jack housekeeping Absolutely
Applicants must send
son P ~e Gall pols No no pi'I0'1e c. ails
resume to
phone calls please
Personnel
Home Health Ca e oi SE
:242 Third Avenue
Ohto s currently h r ng
Galllpohs OH 45631
Horne Health A oes Corrr
pet 1ve Nages
Cpll 740 Tuck Dr ver Neeaed 740
662 1222
985 4384
~~-.

lied! Home Health!

POUCIES Ohio Valley Publishing reserve• tha right to edll reject or c.enc:el any .t at any time Error. must be r~ed on lhe first day of
Tribune-Sentinel Aeglater will be rtaponalble for no more than lhe ca.t of the epee. occupied by the MTCH" and only the tlrat lnaert:lon Ws lhall
any lo" or expenu that results from the publication or omlulon of 1n advertisement Correcllon will be made In the first ....ailllbla edition • Box
are always conftdentlal • Current rate card applln • All real aatate advenl!lllmenta •• aub)ect to me Federal Fair Hou1lng Act of 1981 • Tbla non..
accepts
I wanted ada
'EOE atandarda We wHI not knowingly accept any adverllalng In violation ot the law

nee

CAD TE CHN ClAN
Full t me pe manent pos1
1on aya lable n arch tectur
al it m n g ow ng com munt
ty M n mum 3 ~ea s expert
er ce Nth Auto Cad (or
equal software appl ca t on)
plus achtecturallconst uc
ton ex per ence or educat on
reqU red Salary plus bene

Now you can have borders and graphics
oiL-'
added to your classified ads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per od
~
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large

Atl Display 12 Noon 2

1 00 p m

••

: Tired of workmg all
the holidays?
•
:r1red of working lan g 12
•
hour shifts?
~me home and jotn us a1

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be prepatd'

WANTED

Black Lab wear ng blue col

GIV..A\VA\

Friday

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Indude Phone Number And Addres1 When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items

\\\01 \{ 1· \11 \IS

1 00 p m

Monday- Friday for Insertion
:rn Next Day s Paper
Sunday In-Column

10 used homes under 2 Bedroom Trailer $400 per
$3 000 00 Must Go I Call month and $400 dapos t

Full time wlbeneflts In

011ps) or Dnve Company
lbJck Call M F 8am Spm at
~7-682 8324 option 8

Dally In-Column

Ir M~s~ Ir M~~~ lrL.--~~~::..Rf·
M--,.1' r

dJ)stry competitive wages

C L A S S I F I E D·

Offtee !low&lt;-&amp;&gt;

MONEY

TO loAN

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

t

r
r

IR\ \"I'!JRI \II! I\

Appliance
Warehouse

i10
"

A=

1985 C hev~ 3(4 ton
truck $3 000 OBO
1740)388 9567

mRSALE

2000 Jeep Wrangler
speed 4 cy 2 tops nclud
$500
Pol ce
mpounds
ed Call after 5pm (740)446
Cars from $500 For I st ngs
6541
800 39 1 5227 ext 390t

n Henderson WV
Pre
owned Appl canes starling 98 2Dr Black E1Cplore
at $75 &amp; up all under War Sport 4x4 PYJr everyth ng
ranty also have Household rear vent 94k ml $5800
709 1276eve 446 11 13day
Mtsc Items starttng at 99e
1994 Honda Shadow 1994
&amp; up (304)675 7999
lzuzu Rodeo 4x 4 front
L v1ng room su1te couch damage $1 000 1997 Ford
love seat chair oak co ffee Ext Cab 4x4 PS d esel
table end table &amp; 2 1ghted $9500 2001 Hornet camp
corner cabinets 2 yrs old er
bunkhouse (7 40)441
$800 (740)446 7665 alter c1:_
50:_1c___ _ _ _ _ _
6
Mev ng Sale Quality bed
room llvmgroom fu niture

1995 Ford Crown V ctona
LX 135k m1les good cond
lion new t res $2 600 Call

treadm II console organ and
more (740)256 1428 See
be sales com for, p ctures
end mfo

(740)441 9282
1998
Pon ttac
Flrebmj
Coupe T Bar roof 5 speed
manuaf sharp low mileage

New serta Perfect S eeper
Kmg s ze bo~e spr ngs and
mat1ress Purchase prtce
$1085
Askmg
$600
(740) 446 1282

only
$6 890
phone
(304 1675-3275
2000
Dodge
Durango
82 000 m11es red ntce
$7 400 98 Lmca ln Town
Car Pres Ser~es htgh
Tay1orsv11e sofa/loveseat
m11es very n1ce $5 200
great conr:t tton $400 desk
(740)446 6865 or (740)379
$25 baby sw1ng exersauc
2923
er l1ke new $35 each
(740)245 5575
2000 Dodge Neon atr au
toma!lc $2 300 080
Thompsons Appl ance &amp;
2002 Dodge Neon atr au
Repair 675 7388 For sale tomat c
$3 500
OBO
re condiiiOned automat c (740)256 1233
washers &amp; dryers ref ngera
tors gas and electriC rang 2002 Dodge Stratus 86 000
as atr cond1t oners and m11es $5 000 OBO Call
wnnger washers Wtll do e (740)256 6169
patrs on maJor brands In 2002 Girts Atero S tve 4dr
shop or at your home
auto a r CD lui power re
Washer $95 dryer $95 re mote ent ry 81 000 m11es
lngerator $95 electriC ange $4 850 (740)388 0332 or
$95 chest freezer $125 (614)562 0204 cell
new gas drye $200 couch 2003 PT Crwser Power
$150 full s ze waterbed w ndows an d locks CD
$125 hutch w lh 2 end Player Very good cond1t on
stands $t 25 wood burmng $7500 00 (740)388 0140
stove $200
decorated
Chnstmas tree $75 24 2004 Chevy Tra lb azer LS
eectrc range $125 Comf:! automate 4WD w/row pkg
Kelly
Blueboo ks
@
check out our new local on
522
000
t
0
500
m
les
ex
12t6 Eastern Ave Skaggs
Appliances (740)446 7398 ce lent cond 110n garage
kept
$t9 900 (304)675
1408

2001 Ford hped liOn Ed
d e Baue Ed hon fully load
ed
moon oof
runn ng ,....,__,.,....,....,.,..,.....,...,...,.,..,..,..,......,,.,...,.-~...,...,
boards 67 500 m les great
shape red and tan exte or
tan leather ntenor ask ng
$19 500 Cat 441 1417 af
ter 5pm o eave message
--'------Black 1994 Ford F150
5 8l short bed great condt
lion
$3 500
(740)367

i

~7;24;5;:;__~~----.,

Dtslnct
II
Jomt
Volunteer
F•re
Department Ftnanc1al
~~--------,.1 Adv)sor board wtll be
1989 Ford Club Wagon havtng Monthly meet
XLT 1T 99k miles well mg on every fourth
matnta ned $2800 Call (Or last) Thursday of
each
month
at
(740)441 9282
7 OOPM When holl
40 MmoRcvcu'S'
days fall on meelmg
, 4 WHEELERS
. dates a nottce wtll be
placed tn the paper lo
2003 Suzuki 4WD Vt nson mform of new ttme
500 ATV wit h 34 mtles and dale for meetmg
$4900
CARMICHAEL Meetmgs wtll begm
EQUIPMENT
(740)446 on Thursday January
24 t 2
26 2006 al 7 OOPM

I

i

Board members are
asked lo be at meet

Honda 700 Magna 4cyl
Excellent
Cond I on mgs Any who wtsh to
(Bt3)385 1928 or seen at come are welcome
these meetmgs are
3208 LeWi s st P1 Pleasant
open to the publiC
110 A
PAlmi &amp;
Meeling will be held at
the Mercervtlle Ftre
,
ACCE:'lSOW

i

urn

January 20
2006

CAMPERS &amp;
MmoR
Hmu-::s
.__,;,;:
___
_ _;.,..J

22

All types of parts for plumb
ng hot water heater tau
eels washer/ drye• parts
Also Heatmg &amp; Cooling
too ls &amp; parts $1 700 firm
Call (740)441 1236 for ap
polntment to v fffl

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repa~red New &amp; Rebuilt n
Stock Cal Ron Evans I
800 537 9528
Manual Treadmill $15 regu
lar/queen qu 11 ng frames
$20 lades leathe 1acket
fleece hned med1um $35
(740)446 8896

B l~IJIIN(
St~'l'llf~

Block br ck sewe p pes
wtndows I ntets etc Claude
W nters RIO Grande OH
Call740 245 512t

foregomg
ments and

requtre
to

des~re

sell the same to the
Board please contact
Jack
Pay1on
Superintendent
Galhpolls C1ty School
D1stnc t (740)446 3211
on or before January
3 t 2006 You wtll be
requtred to ftll out a
property evaluation
form whrctl form w111

25

request lhe fotlowong

tnformation (a) name
address and phone
number of the owner

Publtc Notice

of the land (b) loca·
land

(c) number of

acres
and
legal
descnptton of the

such other mforma
tlon a!l the Board
determines Is neces
sary
The
Board
reserves the nght to

Amm eiWI\ 011
Jnmwn 8th
, Thwtkllo famth
1 and /t" nd1 fm t/11
11

•

'(/rl/1

&amp;

request such other
mformatlon as 11 rea
sonably determines Is
necessary to evalute

~if/&gt;

the suitability of the
tract
of land far
sch ool purposes
Ellen
M
Marple

Treasurer
January 20
2006

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

Heavy Equipment
Operator
Training For Emplo)ment
Bulldozers Ba&lt;khoes, Loaders, Dump
Trucks, (,raders, Scrapers Excavators

Train in Ohw

Associated Tram1t1g Sen 1U'S
2~21 Performance l'k"'
Columbus. OH 4ll07
www atsn-schools com
OHI lh971

XBo~e 360 used 2 days
20GB HD 2 w reless con
trollers 2 unopened pug +
play ch argers 4 games &amp;
extras
$800
OBO
(7 40)339 21 80

posed tracts of land If
you own a tract of
land wh1ch meets lhe

land, (d) whether or
not uttltttes are on
sote (e) zontng lnfor
matton (I) proposed
prtce tor the land (g)
proxim ity to State
hlghway(s) and (h)

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams P pe Rebar
For Concrete Angle Chan
nel Flat Bar Steel Grat ng
For Dra ns Dnveways &amp;
Walkways l&amp;L Scrap Met
~Is Open Monday Tuesda~
WedneSday &amp; Frtday Sam
4 30pm Closed Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
Sun day
(740)446-7300

Tnm package tor sale
6
panel p ne doors poplar
base and casmg Oak s1a r
system kx $3 tOO (304)67 4
0100

the

reserves the nght to
reJect any or all pro

2000 Dutchman Class C
Motor Home Sleeps 6 8
(304)675 7388

New and Used Furnaces
ava lab e

Steel A ch Bu ld ngs up to
65"a off Factory D reel pr
ces on ALL mod els D s
counted Sh PPIOQ FREE
storage unu1 Sprmg 2006
CALL NOW
800 222
6335 x6000

of

Education

Galhpolls C1ty School
Dtslnct The Board
wdl evaluate all poten
ttal tracts of land and

tton of the tract of

National Ce rt1fica11on
Fmanc1al AsSistance
job Placement Assistance

Ins tallat1on
(740)441 2667

or near the

Vtllage of Rto Grande
BE IT RESOLVED by
the
Board
of

Department

t

2004 Jeep Liberty e)(cel1ent
cond •t on less 1han ~ 5 000
Buy or se ll Aver ne Ant
m1 es
$17 000
Call
ques 1124 East Mam on (740)446 4028
SA 124 E Pomeroy 740
992 2526 Russ Moore 2005 Pontiac Sun! e Red
12 400 m11es
5 Speed
owner
58200 00 Call 304 593
1343

ed m

VANS
FOR SAL~

800-383-7364

Auction ,

Auct1on

AUCTION
Internal Revenue Serv1ce
February 01 2006

NOON

CH Mckenz e B ldg 111 Jackson P1ke
Ga)hpo IS OH 4563 1

A 102 acre farm w th no tmprovements
located at
1914 Wh1le Oak Road Galhpol s O H 45631 .
(Bidwell Porter C ommun1tyl 8 e1ng A ud to
Parcei #0 19 001 009 00 and be1ng the same
property conveyed to Maur ce A &amp; Patnc a J
Toler by Vol ~ 42 Page 1J5 &amp; recorded
Oc1 16 1981 '" the Recorder s ON1ce
Gall a County OH
Inspection Onve by only
Term s 20" , depos1 t reqwed 02 /01 106 w11h
balance on or before 02 28106
Paymenl Cash Cert1l1ed or Casil1e r s Check
(N o personal or company chec ks)
Keith L Thomas PALS 502 572 2284
www ~rssales gov

Auctton

22

23

Auct1 on

THURSDAY AUCTION
February 2, 11:00 a.m.
Millfield, Athens County Oh1o
DIRECTIONS From Columbus Rt 270 to Rt
33 sou theast about 1 5 hour to Athens from Rt
33 northw est of Ath ens turn north on At 13 to
M1lll1eld turn on Co Ad 93 (Ma n Street) at
rail road tracks turn on Co Ad 28 (Mc Dougal
Road} turn ne,;t to H lltop Ceme tery to I armer
N extran Swine Re se arth Center warah tor
s gns Check photos on web s1te
HOG EQUIPMENT &amp; BUILDING ~6 It x 1 6~
ft Lester 4 x 8 tnsulated prmel hog bu ldtng w th
rnetal roof to be removed from p emtses before
M arch 2nd over 500 tt slo tted cement floor
panels 150 .,- steel feeder panels fin sh ng
pens p glet pens nag feeders 18+ larrowmg
crates 150-&gt; nd v1dual sow gestat on pens
All eqUipment mus 1 be
bu ldtng by February 15th

removed from

the

Y~Hit;LE &amp; ~QUIPMENT 1995 Ford F800
Truck w 10 f1 dump bed spreaoe bo'l( snow
pow ( 1466 C mm ns t24 600 m les sold
w reserve ) 2 Gravely 2::JOZ Zero Turn Mowers
(sold w/resetve ) 2 Gravely 12 Protess onal
walk beh1nd Mowers and other m scel aneo s
tems
I~r.IS
Cash or check w pos I ve I D No
Credtt Cards Checks over S 1000 must have
oank authon2a110n ol funds aya lable Food w I
be avaJiable
Not respons ble for loss or
acc1dents

OWNERS Dover Twp Trustees
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER John Patnck Pat Sherodan
Apprenttce Auctioneers Kerry Sheridan
Boyd &amp; Brent Ktng
LICensed &amp; Bonded In Ohio &amp; WV - Member
of Ohto &amp; Nat1onai Aucttoneer s Assoc11tton
Ematl ShamrockAuctlon@aol com WEB

www shamrock aucttons com
PH 740 592-43t0 or 800 419 9122

-~--- ---------------~~--~~--~--~----~--~~--~----~~:-~-----~

�PageD6

FASHIO·N

iunbap li~ ·itntintl

Sunday, January 22, 2oo6

.

'

Bolivia's first Indian
president takes office in
historic ceremony, A2

·Rainbow·ice: Colored diamonds are the rarest of all.
..

BY SAMANTHA CRITCHEU

..

M' FASHION WRITER

NEW YORK - Any diamond is rare and unusual.
The Diamond Information
Center says that all the diamonds in the world engagement ri ngs included
- · would fill only a single
double-decker bus.
That makes colored diamonds the needles in an
already small haystack.
.
The
Mineralogy
Department · at London 's
·Natural History Museum.
currently staging the exhibit
''Diamonds: The World 's
Most Dazzling -Exhibition,"
estimates that one in every
500 to I0,000 gem-quality
diamonds are colored.
As one can imagine, such
rarity inakes &amp;ome colored
diamonds very valuable.
"Colored diamonds are not
for ' regul ar'. pe.ople," says
Sally · Morrison, director of
the DIC, an organization that
promotes the diamond industry. "They tend to be very
expensive. The price depends
on supply. The rarest is red
- I've seen two of those in
AP Photo
my life.''
In this photo provided.by the Diamond Information Center, col. Red diamonds, including ored diamonds are rare; some colors can be traced to a s ingle
. the 5.11-carat Moussaieff Red mine. These gems are part of The Aurora Collection.
on display in London, are.
worth $1 million or more per that I'll remember forever."
interested in brilliance."
carat, according to Morrison .
Anyone who has shopped
All diamonds do ind.eed
For Harvey Lieberman. the · for a diammid has probably · form the same way: as crysrough diamond buyer at jew- . heard about the 4Cs - color. talized carbon. But. accordeler Louis Glick whose job cut, clarity and carat. The ing to John King, laboratory
includes selecting rough dia- same factors should be con- projects officer at the
monds and overseeing cut-. sidered when purchasing a Gemological Institute of
ting, has been blown over by colored diamond, but more America, colored diamonds
. a few pieces of ice.
weight should be given to usually are altered at the
"Over the years, I' ve come color and cut, he says.
atomic level. An impurity in
across an intense blue diaCutting colored diamonds the lattice structure of the
mond that really knocked my .is di fferent frpm clear ones , diamond creates the· color;
socks off. Everyone has their Lieberman ex plains, because for example, if nitrogen is the
own aesthetic. I also like a the ultimate goal is ma ximiz- invader, the diamond tums
gorgeous bubble gum pink ing the color. "It the stone is yellow, and · boron would ·
diamond," he says. ·• Also, cut with the same angles as make a diamond blue .
within the last year I did a white stone, you would end · Hear and pressure in the
beautiful orange stone. I up diminishing the yo lor. You ground can affec-t a diamade a pear shape and I ha ve have to balance color - you mond's color,. and so .could a
done a h~art shape on anoth- want even distribution. too . diamond 's . positi on in the
er., The pear was over 3 - with brilliance. With a earth, King says. A diamond
carats. Those are the p1eces white stone you're most formed next to a natural

We.

s~y we
~

.

adiant rarities

.
'
Ntdural ooknd diamonda DOIIlllln a~ all Colen olltle rmbow. Found throughout the wortd, ~r
prlcet vary widely depal;lding on the puren!IA lind bold..a of ~lor, market demand and ~·

~·

' -

(?.

.

.

.

.

.

·' );

$1CJ0.210

oranueQ
.

U...n.

~700"'--1'

Hruni~, the

;,o &lt;"I ·: NTS • Vol.:;;,, No. II:.!

•

.Blue
Pink · .

·-Cnollltve
. or
'
'on

Helllth,
llrqlh,
wll power

source of radiation would
turn green, he explains.

Some colors can be traced
to individual mines, others to
specific regions, the DIC's
Morrison says. Pinks and
blue's have been found in
Australia and Africa, red diamonds in 6razil and the 195
carats of natural green diamonds Nicole Kidman wore
around her neck to the Oscars
in 2004 came from the
Jwaneng mine in Botswana
and was crafted by Bulgari.

Yellow diamonds, which because of Hollywood and
mostly come from Africa; have · the music industry."
Jennifer . ,
Phelps•
been popularized by rap music
stars.. Jennifer Lopez is amass- Montgomery, ·aesigner for
ing a collection of colored dia- . jeweler Michael Werdiger,
monds, and ·Oprah Winfrey says she has · varying
and Barbra Streisand also have approaches to diamonds. "If I
many colored diamonds. ·
have a really special stone, I
"Colored diamonds always start from the stone, especialhave been treasured and val- ly if it's an · unusual color. I
ued because they' re special ," ask, 'What does this ·stone
.says Morrison . "They ' re deserve ?' When I'm making
exclusive and elitist, but jewelry with white diamonds,
there's been a recent interest I design first and then fill it
in them by the general public with stones."

Holler Center for cancer Cue
ranked in the top 4th percentile
by the AMGA for Patient
Satisfacti()b.

Or. Unprleider

r.&amp;JU.&amp;u~

serveau

aboltt Dr. Humid,~ roll:

'.

·~ CANC.ER C~RE
7b learn more about the

A

BY KEVIN KELLY
KI'ELLY@MYDAILYTR IBUNE.COM

-

Holur Center for Cancer Care,
please coli

1.8oo.821.386o or 1.740.446.5474

Page AS
• Daniel Brookover

INSIDE
• Rallies mark
anniversary of Roe v.
Wade abortion ruling.
See Page A2
·•. DIET: Heart Association
says soy has no significant
effect on cholesterol.
See Page A2
• Cheshire celebrates
continued existence
See Page A3
• Area artists invited to
· Business assistance
workshop. See Page A3
• O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital to offer health
screenings. See Page A3
• Meigs students make
OSU honor roll. .
See PageA3
• Jury recommends life
in prison tor university
shooter. See Page AS
• Columbus drug dealers
set up trade in southem
Ohio. See Page A6
• Lawmakers eye
incentives to boost college
graduation. See Page AS

'

_

_:___..,--___:_

__ _____
.:__

WINNER OF 2006 FIRST BABY CONTEST
POMEROY
Trena Reedsvill e.
Renee Chevalier who was
Deadline for entering the
born on New Year's Day. to con test was Frid ay noo n.
Heather Marie Chevalier of Jan. 20. Several application '
was , Meigs fro m patents with babie s
Reedsvi lle,
County 's . first baby of 2006 born in Janu ary
were
and winner of the first baby received with the earl iest
contest sponsored by local being the Chevalier infant.
merch ants. and The Daily
As the winner of the annuSentinel.
al contest Chevalier receives
The infant was born at these gifts from loca l nier5:06 p.m. on Jan. 1 at St. chants: $20 gift ce rtificate
Joseph' s
Hospital
in fiom
Swisher
Lohse ·
Parkersburg. W. Va . She Pharmacy, a' free case ) of
weighed 7 pounds, 6 ounces Pampers diapers from Fruth
and was 21 inches long. Her Pharmacy, a $25 gift tcnifigrand parent s are Rena Hu sk cate from Powell 's. a tleece
blanket
from
of Reedsville and Allee and · baby
Bill
Chevalier. all
of Daniell e's. a meal for the

parent&gt; from KFC/Long John
c&lt;o sa\',·tn g' bon d.
S .l' vers. a ,,_,
from Farmers sank. a $20
girt ccnifi cat~ to the parent&gt;
from
McDonalds
of
Pomerov.
A M'eigs Cou nty ;:rock
fr.om A nde"on ·s. a s-o
) sav·
ings hand ·from Home
National Bank. " S20 gi ft
...
·
·
ce rtt!tcate
lmm
th.e Datry
Queen, ~~ ·nc'' bah~ gift has ~

C Pntinuou~

for

operation

under tiorma l condi tion&gt;.
Although AEP ha' not
ret:eived authoritY to construc t the plant. :the power
company ha' begun 'orne
preliminary 'i te work at the
si te near the Ra1 ens wood,
W.Va. Briuge. That work is
designed to keep the project
on sc hedu le in the event
pet'milting i' granted.

5.2: Jad,...,on · '' ' '-1~ at 7 per-

~~~1:~{-'~:~Y
~~i~~k~~~~)~~~~OI~
Loc~er 219- The Shoe Place.

.

Detans·on Page A6

INDEX
2

SEcnoNS -

Calendars
Classifieds

12 PAmos

. · A3
B3-4

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editori als

A4

Obituaries

As

B Section
A6

(f!' 2f~Oh Oh!n Valle~· Publis hing Co . .

Phi'll1'ps a·n·n·ounce·s .

1

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYD.AILYSEN TIN EL .CO M

ATHE\IS - Athen' Cit\
Cmrr1 c·iI \1emher Debbi~
Phillt]h ann11utll'ed her . L'andidacy for the Ohio Hnu,e
,,f R~presenlati'e' l,ctte Ja,l

.

BY BETH SERGENT

POMEROY - Thi ~ year's
Relay for Life in Mei gs
County will have a 1950's
theme of "Rock Around the
Clock" complete with a return
visit and performance from
Elvis ·tribute artist Dw.ight
Icen hower.
The 2006 Relay for Life
wi ll take place May 12- 13 at
the Mei gs County Fai rgrou nds
·and teams are needed to make
the event a success.
Relay for Lik is · the
American Cancer Society's
(ACS ) sig'nature fundraising
event that raises mtlney for
rc,eart:h and programs nf the
A&lt;;:S. many ol whi&lt;.:h can now
be fo unu and acce»ed in
Meigs County.
The recent rall y had the
music and tlecoratinns Df a
fifties sock-hop which is how
Rela y for Life planning commi tiL'c' member' 'hnpe the
c.tm p,i'tcs at the fairgmunds
" iII resemb le for the"' erni ght
event in May.
· Speakers al the recent rally
itit ludcd
Farmer'
Bank

Vinton was at 8.3 percent,
up .1 . 1 percen t over the 7.2
percent a month earlier.
Lawrence County was the
exception in the immediate
&lt;i rea· with 5. 1 percent. down
from 5..3 in November.
The \tate's unempl(}ymen t
ra te was 5.9 pe rcent in
December. up from 5. 7 perce n't in Nm·ember.
The nati o r~al unemployment rate for December was
~ . 9 1 percent. down slightl y
from November.
·
"A decrease in the number
of serYice sector jobs contributed to a weaken ing of
th e· lab or
market .in
December." sa id Barbara
Riley. the state ihrector of
Jobs and Fami ly Services.
Monroe County had the
highest rate of unemploy ment in December at I0.6
percent. whi le Holmes
County had the lowest rate
at 3.6 ·percent.
The number of wo rkers
uneri1p loyeJ in Ohio in ..
December v.-as 347.000. up
from 3\fO.OOO in November.
The number of utiemployed
has decreased by · JO,OOO .
over the vear from 357.000.
The December unemploy·
ment ra te for Ohio was
down from 6.1 percent in
December ~004.
The c'uUntv rates are
unadiu,ted. 1i1eaning they
dn tint take into accou nt
;..ea..,unal adji.1:-.trnenls 1n
em ploy men t.
.

ke·t frum Bun·, Party Barn. a cent. , up seven-temhs t)f a
$ 10 gift cen ific·ate for the perten.t over !he. 6 ..3 percent
r The A ''·"" 'itltt'.d Press
parents from Wc.nd} ·,. a S25 . po' t ~d in No1-ember: and (·oiurihuteclto rJti, .\'tory.)
certificate
from · ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---:~~~~~gift

BSERGENT@MYD~ILYSEN TIN EL.COM

·Weather
....:._~---,---'-----

•
Charlene Hoenlch/ photo
Heather Marie Chevalier of Reedsville holds he r baby Treria Reena, born on New Years Day. As
Me igs County's first baby of 2006 she was the winner of numerous prizes in the merchants'
annual contest.
·

theme,
Icenhower as ente tatnment
.

WEATHER

Sports

·----·· --:~.

After notor de eli ni'ng
l.atter part of
joble ss rate s in
Meig s and Gallia co untie s
in ched uoward again during
Deceniber.
the
Ohio
Department of Jobs and
Family Services fo und.
Departm e nt
official,
placed the blam e statewide
on decreased se rvice sec tor ·
·jobs when they announced
new unemployment fi gu res.
Meigs County went to 9:1
percent of its work force
. being unemployed la st
month. (lll eight -tentlh of a
percent
· ~r i se
over
No'vembe r's S.3 percent.
Th e rate still kept Meig.1,
fqr years among Oh io counti es with the highest le\'els
of unemployment. below I 0
percent. Th e trend toward
,single-dig it job less rate' in
Mei gs be~;an last su mmer.
Gullia Cou'n ty' s jobless
rate was 'at 6 pert:ent fo r the
month . an increase of sixtenths of a pe rce nt from
November's ra te of 5.4 per·
cen t.
Th e increase in unem·
ployme.nt was mostly true 111
surrou nd ing~
counties.
Athens was at 5.7 percent.
up fi,e-ten ths of a percen t
o.,·er No.1
. ·,e t11bet··,. t·ate of

0BITIJARIES

the Medical
Director for the
..t
Holzer Center for Cancer Care.
I&gt;r. Ungerleider previously ·
worked for 'Ibe Arthur James
Cancer Hospital in Columbus,
Ohio.

"~HOLZER Centerfor

plant to tlate .
The power plant wi ll be a
ba,cload · facility de;igned

Area jobless rates ·
up during December

Genfor ~

SOURCES: COlor lliomciod Enc:yc:IOjlodia; Diamond -

forPati~t
Satisfa~tion.

-

recover the co n ~tru ction
cos ts which is .under consid"
eration by the PUCO .
AEP has proposed a 600megawatt facility to satisfy
the grow in g energy needs of
the 1.4 mi llion customer;
served by AEP's Ohio subsidiar ies. Th e plant w'ill use
Integrated
. Gasification
Combined Cyc le clean-coal
technology, the first com·mercial -scale use of the
tec hnology for power ge neration and the . largest IGCC

b10••u" '""olluonlol c1r11

f!IIOO ltJOOid lih In lmm /ll(ll'e

---- --

Environmental
Co mpatability and Public
Need for the Great Bend
IGCC Proj ect. the .next step
in receiving . state approval
for the $ 1 billion clean-coal
plant.
AEP announced plans to
seek the rettuired approval
from the Ohio Power Siting
Board in a letter to the
Public Uti lities Commiss ion
of Oh io earlier thi s mont h'.
AEP is now await ing
appn)val . or it s plan to

•lvpoY COMt
_..tho
_ onci_....

top 2nd
percentile

-· -·---·

line plan s for a new powe r
plant in Lebanon Tdwnship.
It will begin at 6:30 p.m . at
RA C INE
Tuesday Southern Elementary Sc hool
eve ning's public meeting, at and members .o f the local
Solllhern Hi gh School community are encouraged
relates to American Electric to attend .
Power-Ohio's plan to file . The meet ing will all ow
an application with the Ohio residents to obtain informaPower Siting Board for it s tion concerning the need for
planned plant in Lebanon the projec t. · the project
Township.
schedule , the .plant 's design
Columbus Southern Power and other information abou t
Co. and Ohio Power Co. the project. It is a requirewill use the meeiing to out- ment for a Certificate of

· Sierra Leone- . .~J'il ··"'c..;:"·

Medical Specialists, the
Anierican Board of lnremal
Medicine, and the Ainerican
Boar~f of Medical Oncology:

.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAI LYS ENTIN EL. COM

• Meigs falls to River
Valley. See Page B1

. • •'&gt;·

Dr .•James
Ungerleider .
ranked in the

group of hi3hly skilled, specially trained nurses are
staffed at the Holter Center fur Cancer Care. Havin&amp;ll
drive for Patient Satisfaction, our nurses will go the
·extra mile to make you feel at ease.

AEP public hearing relates to upcoming state permit application

SPORTS

Dr. Hamid is board certified
by the American Boaft:l of

nurses for the Holzer Center
for Canoor Care mnked in the
top qth pe•·ccntilc.fur Patient
Satisfaction.

""'" ·mydailyscntind.com

I\10NI&gt;AY , .JANUARY :.!;1, :.!oob

$1NO

The Receptionists atthe

Hematology .and Onwlogy

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

'

Diamond• with IPIIICIII l!lfanlnge ...................................................._

The American Medieal Group As8od11.tion (AMGA) represents medical groups, including some of the nation's
larges~ most presbgious integrated hcahhcue delivery systems. ln a ret:tnt survey, which included ovei SO million
patients in 4l smtrs the Hol~er Center £or Canc~r Care rost above some of the nation\ finestin Patient Satisfaction.

Rhawt\,)a
of Holler
Centtlr fur can~r Care was rankOO in the
top 9th pcn·t·ntik for Patient Satisfaction
by the AMO.t\. ·

e

'

'

VIIIH! of colorild dii!!IIOnds, ntimated p(fce of • 1;car.t,;¥Md Of lnblnle ~ of medium purity ·

are ont orr the best. Now we have proof, thanks to you!

Dr.

Cincinnati mayor,
police and schools unite
to fight crime, A6

\\Cd .

.

Phi llip' has been hc·en
in Yah ed in rL"fortnin~ the

~t ah.~\ -.chou!

fundin~. . ,,·:..-

tern, . She
made ' i1er
annuun!.:c.mt..'nt 111 .... e\c,.'ra l
communitte, in the · Ll:i1J
Hmhe
Di-trkt.
"hi,·h
inclutle, \kig, . .\ thc'll'..
Mnr~an

and ·, part
! )J
Debbie Phillips
\Vd:-.hine.tnn Cuuntic . . . Thl·
di ... tri cl ""eat i-.. tH.m he ld h)
Stale Rep. Jimnll Stc11.u-L and 110rking fami lie' have to
b~

"'II eu al the 'late level. "
Phillip~ rn c11.k hc·r \kt ~ ' 'Wtc•d Phillip, . Governor
Cnuni: annuHt lL·emen l al Ta ft and th e Repuhlican R· ·"'lh all\ .

1

SubfT'IItted photo

Thur,J a, ·,

lllL'L'ltiH! of

th e Jom in.neJ lcf!i,J;.tture

The recent Me igs County Relay for Li fe Rally ktcked ·off the l.~lei ~' C'uunt: J)emc1&lt;'1'dtiL'
relay fundraising season. The re lay. w111ch takes place May 12· E\c-:utile C&lt;&gt;mmittcc 111
.13 at the Meigs County Fatrgrounds rarses mciney fo r resea rch Pomero: . She i' 1111\\ the·
and programs of the America n Cancer SOCiety .Cancer s ur '"le Cllldidatc r.. r lhe pan:·,
vivors that attended the rally were tfrom le ft \ Edt th Srsson . nomin:llion in .\la1 ·, pnnw ·
Ferman. Moore and Maxine Gnt ft th .
·
1'1 .
" It h a , ·bt.'(\ lll1l'

Preside nt Paul Reed who Jo,l thrort ~ hnu t 't hl· ~ l' J r .., \ ia
his i110t hc r to breast cancer .tt fun d r.ll ' lil:2 l'f tn rt ... tP . . uppt•rl
age four. Reed spoke about rl' ..,L',ll l'il. t: d iiL ,IIIllll dtll! ~llh P~
hope a~ a weapon 10 figh t can - l' aL· ~ lU Jl f'P\ ld \.' . '- PL'L'l al \l'l'
·1
cer and hi s appreciation h&gt; the
ACS ·and its loca l 1nluntcer s
Please see Rally, AS
for generating !hat hunL
l

~'u r

not·

fm " c han~c ."
·.-\ , " ' memhe r uf the
House . .1 II ill \\Or{ hart.! I ll
'"" ,. these pruhlcrm . anJ to
h n n ~ the l ~&gt;,· u, had. 1t1 the
llll rL' . t'in~ - rL'&lt;~ l . . l "" l h..'&lt; , ;,ud Ph1lllp' . "I

I\ l'kar !\' t.Hl' th.tl th L' j,..,u~.-- ~

.it'fl.·\.' t tn~

Jre

ch,in~ th~ir jnb. ctnd it\ trme

d.1 1h

l1\ t.' '

-:-

Oht P·, ,h l1!l!l.., h ·l· ,: ~H h'r'n,.
, laL· ~ ul a~..&lt;·c. . . ~ t tl h ~.· ~tl t h ~.,' :.tr~.
L

lun~ f~,n\ u rd tn "baring rny
1 dC &lt; ~'- . 1~'-lL' Il inp 1,1 the pt"ople
til

the J l,t rh.:t. anJ \\tlrking .

harJ tor h1..' lll' t' , •.:hl)l'l ' .

rthlrc

l.1ck· uf : ~&lt;·n· " hl educ·attundl .111d beltc'r I'' "'· anu aff(lrd" l-lJ'i1rlllllil rc-' . ·and the unfat r · :r bk hc,tlth ' arc· for e\'CI) 1.\ \

h111\ kn

\ 111

1m'

IIK' Dllk'

n tk '

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