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                  <text>. ·Page 86 • &amp;aturba~ llimrl ·iotntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • GJIIIpolls, Ohio • Point Pleasant,
--

-

WV

Girl'$ troubled past makes
friend·fear for her future ·
. DEAR ABBY: I am a 15year-old girl with a problem. For . a couple of
months, a close fnend of
mine, "Casey," was going
out with "Michael," a boy
from school. They broke up
two months ago because
Mike wanted to date other
girls. Casey was crushed
ADVICE
when it happ~:ned, although
onlr a week later she was
telhng everyone (including about Mike would be · to
Mike) that she · was "over introduce her to some new·
him." I know it was a lie.
friends. You could also sugCasey has had major gest she get into some new
- problems in the past activities so . she' II have
d_epression and an eating something else to talk
disorder. It's obvious to me about.
·
that she hasn't gotten over
DEAR ABBY: Over the
Mike. In no way is he inter- holidays, my stepdaughter
ested in Casey romantical- told her father and me that
ly, but she talks about him she is being married again
2417. ·
and to save the second
Abby, I don't know what weekend in May. Shortly
to do for Casey. I feel like after, we received a formal
yelling at her to get the invitation in the mail.
message that Mike's not About three weeks ago. my
interested. I've told her that husband's ex-wife called to
she needs to let go. but it's give us a list· of what she
no use. What now? had spent on the weddin¥,
WORRIED ABOUT MY and to request "our share '
FRIEND
IN RHODE of the cost- to the tune of
ISLAND
$3;000.
DEAR
WORRIED:
This will be the second
Casey needs some new marriage for both the bride
activities and new interests and groom, who are in their
so she can stop replaying · mid-30s. They live together
those old tapes m her head. in the home they own and
One way to help her forget have a successful business.

Dear

Abby

Astrograph

I
Sunday, April 13, 2003

I

By all accounts, they're Please help. BRIDEdoing very well.
TO-BE IN PENNSYLVASince my husband and I NJA
are not part of the wedding
DEAR BRIDE· TO-BE:
party (he was not asked to Add the following to your
walk his daughter down th~ invitation:
"No
gifts,
aisle) -and we had no part in please . Your presence will
the wedding plans, I feel be our cherished gift, and
that whatever "Mom" wish- we respectfully request no
es to spend is up to her, but other."
we owe nothing more than • Dear Abby is written by
what
we
originally Abigail Van Buren, also
promised to give the newly- known tls Jeanne Phillips,
weds.
and was founded by her
Are we off base here? mother; Pauline Phillips.
PUT OFF IN WINSTON· Write
Dear Abby •at
SALEM, N.C.
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
DEAR
PUT
OFF: Box 69440, Los Angeles,
Certainly not. Since this is CA 90069.
a second wedding, and the
bride and her fiance are
well-established, and since
you were not . consulted or
even asked to b\l a part of
the ceremony, I see no reason why you should pay
more than you have already
promised.
DEAR ABBY: My fiance
and I are both 50-plus. We
are being married in four
months - the second marriage for both of us. We
No matter )t'hat
have maintained separate
direction you turn
households and we· really
need nothing.
you can always find
How can we send invitations to family and friends
·It In the
and let them know that no
hou_sehold gifts are needed?

Bv BERNICE BEDE OsoL
There's a good chance you
could get involved in an endeavor in the year ahead with
someone you've known for a
long time. The union will de- ·
rive benefit for bQth, and the
~lliance will forge a strong
bond.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - A friend of yours who
is not necessarily a reliable
source may let you in on what
she or he believes is a great
buy . Check out prices and
quality elsewhere, or you
· - ·
could be taken.
TAURUS (April 20-May
~0)- Watch your back today
or someone undeserving
might try to take credit for
something you accomplished.
Stand up for the credit you are
entitled to.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-: Before being talked into
.making a commitment today
to an endeavor about which
you know little. better check
out what this promise entails.

It might be b-igger than you
think.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Be careful not to be
too talkative today - il could
cause you to get careless and
reveal some confidential fact
entrusted to you and cou_ld
lead to the undoing of your
trustworthiness.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Do not put too much stock oil
a promise made to you today
by a group with whom you 1·ll
be involved socially. Once
you're out of sight, their good
intentions may disappear.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
-You won't have any trouble performing tasks that you
choose to do or enjoy doing.
When it cernes to JObs being
thrust on you, however, it
could be another matter.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- Someone tn your social
group who has an axe to grind
may attempt to involve you in
his or her petty politics today.
Don't allow yourself to ·be
used asPJJawn.
SCO

IO

•

WORD SCRIMMAGE- SOLUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
~ :zoo:l V!'lllld """""~.~rot.

=....n_

-

lndDOWN •

•

~vERAGE GAME 170.180

74

- .
-

3rd DOWN

• 80

4ti'IOOWN

a

JUDO'S TOTAL

ACROSS

wolf
42 A Muppet
44 Quick
swim
46 SHow .of
hands
49 Lodging
place
52 Insurgents
54 Back when
55 Cay
58 Party
cheese
59 Major
leaguer
60 Like
61 Are, in
Taxco
62 Harden
63 Old batik
64 Waver

1 Chipper
5 Desk
accessory

9 "2001"
computer
12 Confess
13 Nope

(hyph.)

14 Unrefined

metal

15 Cartoon

bear

16 Long

story

17 Fanrow of
films
18 Rough

drawing
20 Bundle
22 Write
on glass
23 Co.
honcho
24 Movie
villain
27 Read
rapidly

Buzzing
business, C1

matriarch
36 Polite
cough
38 Fuss
40 Greet a
dog

84

Answer
to
previous
Word
Scrimmage

273

feature
37 Style
tune
11 Stem's end 39 Gush over
19 Lab class 43 Thief
21 Throwa
45 Homer's
tale
party
23 Skeptical
47 Pithy
48 1'1n" crowd
one
25 Fable writer 49 Charts
26 Tanks
,50 Hideous
28 CoHee
giant
51 Beep
holder
29 Nurses'
52 Rip apart
org.
53 Make _
30 - "King"
watertight
Cole
56 Cloud's
31 "My gal"
region
of song
57 Recline
32 Gloating
cry
33 Duck's foot

o-

l

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

•

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • April I l, 2001

'None for Under 21 '
campaign looks_- to
-stem teen tragedy
BY KEVIN KEUY

~c ~
p rom

joy o us
t1me
m
young lives from turning 10
Grau

tragedy, the Ohio State
Highway Patrol is again
launching its "None for
Under 21" pro~ram.
A · combination of education and enforcement about
traffic crash statistics and the
·state 's la_ws about drunken

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.... _

FO\JAPLAYTOTAL =
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN
DIRECTIONS: Make a 2- lo 7-1&amp;11&amp;1 word I?"' !he leners on eacn yardN.

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Add pokltS 10 each WOKI or latter U!llrtg sco~ directions at rl~. Seven-~et~er
wordS ga1 a 60-poinl bol"l.ls. An woros can be tcx.na in Webste~s New WOIId

JUDD'S SOLUTIOpj TOMOAAOW

o&lt;IIY, NOW

l SEf

\1M( NOT'

StE

w~v

0

NOT...

An Iraqi boy offers some water to a United States Marine of Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion. 7th Marines. while he was out
on patrol Friday in a· neighborhood .near central Baghdad. Marines patrolled through streets in search of any remnants of
resistance as well as intelligence on weapons caches or hiding places of enemy forces. (AP)

Marines, Iraqi police work to
stop plundering ot Baghd~d
BY CALVIN

AVERAGE GAME 105-115

I DOtfr

NCM i.ET~
SEE AB0JT
RESWING
11'~

~NeW!

WOOWARD

Associated Press
Joining forces in a city of
·shattered order and ransacked history, U.S. troops
and Iraqi police are setting
up patrols to rein in waves of
thievery
in
Baghdad .
Marines rolled north to confront what could be Saddam
Hussein 's last holdouts.
A wild firefight outside a
Baghdad hotel Saturday and
the threat of suicide bomb-

ings kept American soldiers
wrapped in the urgent business of putting down armed
resistance in the capital even
as looting spread.
They accepted lhe surrender of Saddam's -Hussein's
science adviser, the first top
ofticial of the Saddam era
taken into cu stody. among 55
being sought. Lt. Gen. Amer
al-Saadi is likely to know
about any Iraqi weapons of
mass ·destruction, bul insisted
Iraq has none.

Restraining mobs of looters was a rapidly growing
priority.
Robbing history itself,
thieves pillaged the Iraq
National Museum. stealing
or destroying artifacts going
back 7,000 years - predating even Babylon. The loss
resonated through Baghdad
and around the world.
"This is Iraq's civilization." said a tearful mu seum
employee. "And it 's all gone
now.' ' AI Emory Universily

~

·Inside
• Legion celebrates, See
page A2
• Local DAR chapter
attends state conference,
See page A4
• Fellowship awarded,
See page AS
• Decals -to be used in .
tourism, See page AS

Index
FOR A CHANGE ...

0

approaching, and in
ils annual
campaign
to prevent a

;

~OME

! and~

graduation
season
is
f a s ·t

9\LL'5 \IJ\-If-..1 ~

;'M GLAD TO SEE T~AT
'IOU'VE DECIDED TO STAV

S 1.25 • Vol. 18, No. 9

GALLIPOLIS , Ohio _

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___
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--

a

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News editor

College""""""'

AI'TEI!. ALL, THERE'S MORE
TO LIFE THAN SITTING IN
A FRENCH CAFE DRINKING
ROOT SEER ALL NIG~L

c
UPl&gt;Anl&gt;

t.~G~NI&gt;$1

Z0ft!r0'6 Ftlt6T
ATTtMPT TO

4 Secllons - ll Pips

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds ·
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather
~

tll6 OwN
IU61Ne6f ¥1A6 A

'·

Building
.,relations, A8

Blast of color
with pansies, 01

10 Diva's

1 Settles up
2 Call forth
3 T~esaurus
compiler
4 Jerk
5 Verdant
6 Detective's
cry
7 Make
faces
8 Stage
9 Den or
bu"ow

34 Cruel
35 Ocean fish

Inside

.,

DOWN

31 Sty

,Home and
Carden

Tempo

41 Timber

I

Your inclinations for instant
22) -It's important not to be
gratification could cause you
wishy-washy today when it
to b'!)' a lot of worthless sluff.
comes to issues lhat affect the
AI,.IUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
welfare of your family.
19) -· Unless you are specific
You're the one who is bold
enough to stand up for what's
enough about what you want,
right.
. a friend who is willing to help
you advance your mterests
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- T~ings aren't almight be confused about what
ways what they appear to be,
you wanl and could cause
so be appreciative of what
harm instead.
you have .tnstead of being enPISCES (Feb. 20-March
vious of everybody else. If 20) - Don't take your emoyou had all t~e facts, you'd ' tions too seriously today, bethink differently.
cause_ your ability to an~iyze
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
situatiOns accurately 1sn t up
to
par. You could see things
Jan. 19) - Take care that
those extravagant whims you
either too negative or unduly
get from time to time do not
optimistic.
rear their ugly heads today.

1s100WN

Saturday, April 12, 2003

A3

cs
03-5
insert

AG
A7

A2
Bl-8

A2

2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

driving, "None for Under 21''
is all about saving lives, said
Lt. Richard Grau, commander of the patrol's Galli aMeigs Post.
"Impaired driving continues to be a serious problem
for teen drivers," said Grau.
"Traffic crashes are the lead-

BY

lAWRENCE

J. SMITH

POINT PLEASANT,W Va.
- While saying he would
mull over the matter, Judge
David W. Nibert hinted he
would be ·very reluctant to
reconsider a guilty plea of a
man convicted for obtaining
· controlled substances he used
lo support a drug habit.
Among the matters on the
court's docket Thursday wa~ a
motion filed by James Casey
for reconsiderat.ion of a guilty
plea entered by his client,
George Mayes.
LUst November, Mayes. 32,
pled guilty to one count conspiracy and two · counts of
obtaining a controlled substance by fraud. _
In January, Nibert senl~nced

Mayes to a term of nne 10 five
years on the conspiracy charge
and one term each of one to
fours years on both of the
obtaining by . traud charges.
Nibert ordered Mayes serve
the terms concurrently.
Mayes is c urrently an
inmate at the Mason Countv
Jail, awaiting transfe r to the
state
Department
of
Corrections.
Casey. while not denying
Mayes had obtained con·
trolled substances for personal
use. argued that putting Mayes
in prison would be a tmgedy
given his prior work in health
care.
He mentioned that some
area physicians. including
Breton Morgan. were prepared to offer statements on
Mayes' chamcter.
One statement Casey did

teen drinking and driving,
Grau said.
A tool used by the patrol to
make its point are fatal vision
goggles, used in presentations to allow teens to experience simulated vision impairment.
The goggles _ simulate
impaired visjon caused at .08
blood alcohol concentration
C
(BA ) in the daytime and .14
BAC at night. In Ohio, the
patrol and local police can
file charjleS on anY. under-21
driver wtth a BAC 'of at least
02
· ·
Grau said state law requires
a mandatory fine of $250 to
$I ,OOO and up to six months in jail for first offense driving
while consuming alcohol.
The second offense is a
$500 to $1,000 fine, six
months in jail and a possible
60-day license suspension.
Third-time offenders face a
$500 to $1,000 fine, up to six
months in jail, a 90-day
license suspension with an
option of community service,
and license suspension until
21 . ·
There is a reason behind

the severity of the fines, Grau
said, pointing to Ohio
ing cause of death for 15-to- Department of Public Safety
20-year olds. Of all 15-to-20- statistics for 2001 showing '
year-old drivers killed in traf- teens accounted for 21• perfie crashes nationwide in cent of all alcohol-related
1999, more than 20 percent
h
1
were intoxicated a( the time eras es.
-- - I '
of their death."
Teen s were 1!\0St often
Troopers will visit local involved in injucy,,, prflperly
in Atlanta, historian Gordon
schools to discuss conse- damage and fatal accidents
· one
Newb y sm·d : "Th'IS ·1s JUSt
quences_of when teens drink linked to drinking that year in
three urban Ohio counties of the most tragic things that
and drive, Grau said. The fact Cuyahoga, Franklin and
could happen, for our being
it's illegal for those under 21 Summit.
to buy or consume alcohol . But rural southern Ohio
able to understand the past."
Iraqis who had warmly
will also be driven home:
counties were not immune. ·
welcomed Americans in the
Sp:etal h pr~se~~a:tonsj
For 200 I, Gallia County
capital last week were grow- · moe eras_ est· han ha 1 wnall saw I 0 in)lJfY accidents and
·
·
programs m e sc oo1s w1
·
d · f
rt
ing resentful at the persistent
b
h - d d ·
th
seven mc1 en1s o ]Jrope y_
.
.
___ e_ e.ll!P. aSJZe
un_ng _ e_ damage due ro dnnkmg- and
d1~order, notmg the troops
observatiOn.
driving among teens. Meigs
. . A · mock fatal for ?rea County had five injury crashoften JUSt stood by as pe_ople
·wrme&lt;Lgovernmenl offices,
~chools Will be _staged a~ 9 es, seven property damage
schools,
hospitals
and
a.m. Wednesday at the Me•gs accidents and one fatal
County Fatrgrounds. The
homes
· a grap h'1c re-creatiOn
·
·
eyent 1s
Pluse see None, A7
of the devastation caused by

Mason judge maY not
reconsid~r guilty plea
Staff writer

1

EXPO time

offer was that of Mayes' wife,
who along with other fan1ily
members. were in the cout1room Thursday.
Casey asserted that Mayes'
acts pale in comparison io
other health ew-e profession&lt;~s. He said many others with
access to health care delivery
have abused the system to
"feed their addictions."
Ma'iOn County Prosecutor
Damon Morgan took "strong
exception" to Casey's asser-

tion l
· " I don't know what Mr.
Casey is referring to.'"Morgan
said.
Morgan agreed with Casey
that Mayes' case was "indeed .
a sad situatiQn." But he saw no
reason why the court should
reconsider Mayes' guilly plea

BuCkeye Hil ls Career Center is the site of the annual
Buckeye Hills/ Ohio Valley EXPO, which began Saturday
and continues today from noon until 5 p.m. Many activl·
ties are planned. along with visits to secondary and post
secondary career-technical programs. In the photo above,
Buckeye Hil ls student Allen Hudson shows Bidweii,Porter
Elementary student Michael Haney some of the tricks of
the computer trade in one of the center's computer labs
just prio r to Saturday's activities . (Kevin Kelly)

Please see Judge, A7

f(lJI'I

1'1118 18 ONE OF 1'HD!IE~1~1'1NC!t FLDNE~e

COMPLeH

April is National

FAILU~tt.

Occupational Therapy Month

1'HIB l!i ONE OF THOBE

"Creating Solutions. Rebuilding Lives"

c.L.AWIN&lt;i PP\WS

Holzer Medical Center salutes our

Occup.-tlonal Therapists
•

_--"\
'

_____ -

'

For more information about therapies at Holzer Medical Center, please call
, Holzer Medical Therapy Cenler al (740) 446·11 21
or Holzer Medical Center's Inpatient Rehab Unil at (740) 446·5070 •

.

---,-,

.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org
'•

�J

A
•
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Legio.n celebrates-anniversary

Sunday, April13
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The American Legion celebrated its 84th anniversary March
15.&gt;U.S. Congresswoman Shelley Moore-Capito (center) was
the guest speaker. Fourth District Vice Pres ident and Unit
140 President Susan Hall , and Post 140 Commander Dave
Hall were on hand to greet t he congresswoman.
Tom Marlow. the Music
were crocheted by Aleta
Weaver, and several book s Ma ster, provided entertainwere collected and don ated ment for the dance that fol ' lowed the dinn er.
by Bill Pethte I.
A wreat.)l displayed on
the wall was made by auxiliary member Nikki Fields
a poppy proj ect. It won
fiqt place 10 · the 4th
District an.d helped to rai se
$259 for veterans.
President Hall asked
everyone to remember our
troops in their prayers and
also to remember the aging
and ailing veterans th at
they will be provided the
medical care that they have
earned.
Moore -Capiro thanked
for her co-sponsorship of
an American flag protection amendment. She then
gave. an uplifting program
to the veterans and guests
and encouraged the veterans to_ share their military
experiences · with the children and grandchildren .

'0
YA,

0

ICV,

vice t~ the country and for
being th e reason the
Legion exists.
She announced that commander Hall al so share s
the Nat ional Distingui,hed
Guest co-chair with Kathy
Camerlin.
Deputy
National
Security Chairman Helen
Leasure was introduce d,
along with 4th Distri·ct
Children
and
Youth
Chairman
Minnie
Huffman .
Auxiliary officers were
introduced: Patty Pau gh,
first vice president: Peggy
Harless, second vice president : Janet Oldaker, secretary : Ru th Gilbert, treasurer; Aleta Weav er, chaplain:
Betty Robin son, historian :
Kathleen Rou sh, membership
chairman
and
sergeant -at-arms:
and
executive committee members Minnie Hu ffman ,
Mary - Bob
Roush
and
Juanita Little.
lhe work of the aux iliary was discu sse d. It prepares free lttnCheons for
senior citizen s, sponsors
blood drives, supports the
local food pantry, the
Mason County Shelter .and
the West Virginia Veterans
Home.
At Christmastime, the
auxiliary sent more than
I ,300 card s to troops in the
military.
They also drove to VA
hospital s and donated
more than $550 worth of
personal
care
items.
Seventeen lap robes were
handmade
by
Jewell
Derrick, Arizona Stewart
and
Virginia
Roush.
Twelve pairs of slippers

~

•

·'

i'

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. The Smith Capehart Pos t
140 of the American
Legion recen tl y celebrated
the Legion's 84th anniversary at the leg ion hall.
Post Commander Dave
Hall welcomed about 135
guests, along with gue st
,spea ker
U .S.
Congresswoma n Shelley
Moore-Cap ito to tHe event.
Chap lain Herby Rou sh
gave the in.vocation.
. POWs and MlAs were
remembered in a ceremony
narrated by Hall. The ceremony was cond ucted by
Denver Gibbs. first vice
commander: Ron Roush,
second vice commander:
Adjutant
Bill
Petht el;
Chaplain Herby Rou sh and
Legionnaire
L inco ln
Shinn.
Dinner was prepared by
Mason Eastern Star.
Guests i ni:l uded the past
National Commander all'd
Deputy Adjutant Mil es
Epling.
4th
District
Commander Webb Holley
and
National
Di stingui shed guest Kathy
Carner! in .
Post officers were introduced. They include First
Vice Commander Denver .
Second
Vi ce
Gibbs ,
Commander Ron Roush,
finance
officer
Harry
Rou sh,
Adjutant
Bill
Pethtel, sergeant-at-arm s
Bill Slater, Chaplain Herby
Rou sh, hi storian Ralph
Rou sh and service officer
Roger Barrett.
Fourth District Vice
President and Unit 140
President Susan Hall was
introduced . She thanked
all veterans for their ser-

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Lemon Scent
Deodorizing
Ctuner

101

•

:Sunny, warmer weather slated
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
High pressure centered
:over Hudson Bay will slowly
:build south over the northeastern United States over the
' next few days. The high pres: sure system will produce fair
:skies through Tuesday.
; Low pressure over the
;Dakotas will move slowly
•east to the western great lakes
:over the next several days;
'The combination of the high
·and low pressure systems
: wiU produce a warm south to
; southwest wind causing tern: peratures to gradually climb
:into the 60s and · 70s by
•Monday and· 70s by Tuesday.
: The bottom will drop out
by Thursday as a low pres: sure system moves east over
·ohio and forces a cold front
.through the area. This will
' :usher in some much colder
:air out of Canada into the
:area by Friday.

YVEATHER FORECAST
Sunday ... Mostly
sunny.
Highs in the mid 60s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday nighLClear. Lows
in the upper 30s.
Monday ... Mostly
sunny
and warmer. Highs in the mid
70s.
Monday
night... Mostly
clear. Lows in the lower 50s.

flUSH , HIWHII!E FAIIMS

Bratwunt or
Sweet Italian
Sausage

. COLUMBUS, Ohio _:_ A
; federal requirement to identi: fy dangerous schools has
'clashed with Ohio law that
:protects the identities of
'juvenile offenders.
The No Child Left Behind
Act requires states to deter. mine which schools have had
:too much violence so that
:students at unsafe schools
:can be given the chance to
;transfer.
The Ohio Department of
Educ,ation was planning to
use a Department of Youth
:Services database of roughly
·· 12,000 juveniles convicted
:of serious crimes statewide
' in 2002. The idea was to
match the list against other
records to determine how

•

--· ·--

~

Public ·
meetings

Clubs and
Organizations

Monday, April 14
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. at the .
township hall.
Southern
RACINE School Board will meet in
special session 7 p.m. at
the high school.

Monday, April 14
. RUTLAND
Me igs
County Soccer League w1ll
meet at 6 p.m.at the
Rutland Civic Center. All
coaches, ' commi ttee members and interested parties
are encouraged to attend .
CHESTER - Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the
Eastern · Star, rehearsal for

Clubs &amp;
Organizations
Monday, April 14
POINT PLEASANT
ALPHO meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Mason County Library. Call
Rod Brand at 675-2977 for
additional information .
POI.NT PLEASANT
Mary Kay cosmetics meeting,
6 p.m., every Monday, Point
Pleasant Woman's Club.
RAVENSWOOD - SOAR
meeting, 10 a.m., Local 5668
Hall.
Thursday, April 17
POINT PLEASANT
Lions Club, 6 p.m., Pleasant
Valley Hospital meeiing room.
POINT PLEASANT
NARFE meeting, 1 p.m.,
· Mason County Library.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Friendly 50's luncheon, noon,
Faith Gospel Church.
Wednesday, April 23
POINT PLEASANT
Candlelight and prayer service in support of our troups,
11 a.m ., Point Pleasant
Senior Center.
POINT PLEASANT
Blood pressure, glucose, and
cholesteral sreening, noon,
Point Pleasant Senior Center.
Saturday, April 26
ASHTON - Hannan High
School's 63rd Alumni Dinner, 6
p.m., Hannan_High School gym.
Reservations required. Cost is
$14 for singles and $25 for cou. pies. All alumni welcome.
: Contact Carolyn Cooper at7436745 or Dortha Fellure at 576. 2595 to make reservation.
Tuesday, April 29
MASON - Mason County
Cooperative Parish United
· Methodist Women's meeting,
7 p.m. , Clifton
United
• Methodist Church. Please

bring canned food for food
pantry.
Thursday, May 1
· POINT PLEASANT
Lions Club, 6 p.m., Pleasant
Valley Hospital meeting room.
POMEROY, Ohio - Holzer
Hospice of Meigs County
sponsors
"Dinner
with
Friends", 6 p.m., KFC/Crow's .
Restaurant. Call 446-5074 for
additional information.
POINT PLEASANT - Point
Pleasant Chapter .of the Sons
of the American Revolution, 7
p.m., Fort Randolph Terrace.
· NEW HAVEN - JOUAM #
175 meeting, 7 p.m., Lodge Hall.
POINT PLEASANT - La
Leche League meeting, 6:30
p.m., in the ,Presbyterian
Church on Eighth Street.
Tuesday, May 6
POINT PLEASANT
. Quilts 'N' Things, Too, 5:30
p.m.,
Mason
County
Courthouse Ahnex.
· POINT · PLEASANT
Quilts 'N' Things, 9:30 a.m. ,
Mason County Courthouse
Annex. Salad luncheon .
Please bring salad to share
with others.
POINT PLEASANT
American Legion Auxiliary
Post 23 meeting , 7 p.m.,
American Legion.
POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleasflnt Kiwanis Club meeting, 6:15 p.m. , Melinda's
Restaurant. For information .
call (304) 675-7314.
Tuesday,IMay 13
POINT PLEASANT Mason County AARP Chapter
3192 board meeting, 1 p.m. ,
Fort Randolph Terrace. Plans
for the year will be made.
Officers and committee members are urged to attend.

School &amp; Sports
Monday, April 14
POINT PLEASANT-: Final
day for Point Pleasant girls
softball league registration ,
from 6 to 8 p.m., PPHS cafeteria. T-Ball , ages 4 to 6; slow
pitch, age~ 7 to 9,10-12, 131B; fast pitch, ages 15 and
under and 16-18. Fast pitch
games are played locally and
with the Bend Area league.
Sanctioned USSSA. Fee is
$25 for one person' $40 for
two or more.

'

all officers, 6 p.m. at the
Chester hall.
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Alumni Association planning session, 7 p.m . at
Trinity Church.
POMEROY ~ Meigs
County-Ohio Bicentennial
Committee will meet on at 5 ,
p.m. at the Meigs County
Museum .
Tuesday, April 15
MASON
StewartJohnson
VFW · Lordies

Auxiliary, Mason, will meet
at 7 p.m. at the hall. Officers
to be elected. Potluck to follow.
Wednesday, April 16
ATHENS - An informal
meeting of the Southern
Consortium for Children
Board of Directors will be
held will be held at 10 a.m.
at the office. The next reguscheduled
Board
larly
meeting will be held May .
26.

Gallia County Calendar
Meetings
Wednesday, April 16
RIO GRANDE - GalliaVinton Educational Service
Center Governing . Board
meeting, 6 .p.m., Human
Resource Building at Buckeye
Hills Career Center, Room
155.
Tuesday, April 22
EWINGTON - American
Legion Post 161 , 7:30 p.m.,
Ewington Academy. All members urged to attend and help
plan for the August bean dinner.

Support Groups
Tuesday, April 15
GALLIPOLIS
The
autism support group will
meet at the Gallia County
Health Depa rtment, 6:30
p.m . .
Thursday, April 17 ! ·
GALLIPOLIS
Southeast Ohio Advocates
for Recovert,_9_tun., Holzer
Med ical Center Education
and Conference Center.

Veterans
Groups
Saturday, April 19
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Vietnam Veterans of
America,
Chapter
709,
monthly dinner, 6:30 p.m.,
VFW Building. All Vietnam
and Vietnam era veterans
invited. For information, call
446-9629.

GALLIPOLIS
Kids
Time , 6:30 to 8 p.m.,
Bossard Memorial Library.
Open to children 5-years old
and up. For information, call
245-9664. Sponsored by
Pathway
Community
.Church.

Community
Events
Friday, April 25
GALLIPOLIS Gall ia
County
Bicentennial
Celebration . Gallipolis City
Park.
Saturday, April 26
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County
Bicentennial
Celebration , 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.,
Gallipolis City Park.
GALLIPOLIS -'- Gallia
County Bicentennial parade
and bean dinner, 1 p.m. ,
downtown Gallipolis.

Schools

School . Call 446-3213 fo r
information·.

Commerce coffee and disc;ussion group meets 8 a.m.
each Friday at Holzer
Medical Center.
.
Gallia
GALLIPOLIS County Right to Life meets
Saturday, April 12
7:30 p.m., second Thursday
ADDISON- Baby shower
of each month at St. Louis
for Angie Long, 7 p.m ., Catholic Church Hall.
Addison Freewill · Baptist
GALLIPOLIS
. New
Church.
Brew Coffee Hour, 10 a.m.
· each Toosday in the community room at Gallia Met
Apartments, Buck ridge.
GALLIPOLIS - Choose
to Lose Diet Club meets ;9
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio a .m., eaGh Tuesday ~t
Valley Radio Club Inc. meets Grace United Methodist
8 a.m. first Saturday of each Church . Use Cedar Stre~t
month in basement of Gallia entrance .
County 911 Center on Ohio
Route 160. Licensed amateur radio operators and
interested .parties invited.
For information , call 4464193.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipollis
Rotary Club meets 7 a.m .
each Tuesday at Holzer
Clinic doctor's dining room.
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
of
County
Chamber

Baby showers

Regular
meetings

Monday, April 28
GALLIPOLIS
Kindergarten registration at
Auto- Owners Insurance
Washington
Elementary
School. Call 446-3213 for
Life Home Car RIL'iiness
infoifTialion.
7/e ~ 'P.Jiar. ~ .,.
Tuesday, April 29
GALLIPOLIS
INSURANCE PLUS
Kindergarten registration at
Washington
Elementary
AGENCIES, INC.
School. Call 446-3213 for
information.
114 Court Pomeroy
Wednesday, April 30
GALLIPOLIS
Kindergarten registration at 1---------~
Washington
Elementary

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RHIABLE INTERNEr ACCESIIINCE

1994

Clubs
Wednesday, April16

Fun &amp;
Fund-raisers
Friday, April 18
• HENDERSON - Learn to
square dance, 7 to 8 p.m.,
Community Center. Two-step,
clogging, and line dance until
10:30 p.m. For information,
call 446-6188.

soothe
your body.

Corn Muffin
Mix

25~. 1
o&lt;g

FLAIR

0 'DAV '5

Instant Mashed
Potatoes ·

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN
"BRAND NAME FURNITURE AT DISCOUNT

R1. 2. Gallipoli!) Ferry. W\"

WC.OANIEl'S

2~

many crimes occurred at
each 'school of the state.
However, state law protects the identities of juvenile
offenders under the theory
that they should have a clean
slate when they become
adults. Only the names of the
3,200 offenders in juvenile
pri son can be released.
The conflict between 'the
two la)VS was reported Friday
by The Columbus Dispatch.
The partial list will be
enough for the department to
meet a Ju.ly federal deadline,
Education
Department
spokesman J.C. Benton said
Friday.
"Those are the students
identified by the court system as committing violent
criminal offenses and been
Sentenced," he said.

___j

Public Meetings

IIFn'

Tuesday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Wednesday ... Increasing
cloudiness with a chance of
showers during the night.
Lows in the lower 50s and ·
highs in the mid70s.
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a chimce - of showers.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the upper 60s. ·
Friday ... Partly
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 40s and
highs in the mid' 60s.

Pnll)ium

Assocaited Press

Meigs County Calendar

• All size extra long
for added comfort

Chicken Stir Fry Kit

:BY CASEY LAuGHMAN

Mason County .Calendar
Friday, April 18
POINT PLEASANT
Community Good Friday worship service, noon, Trinity
United Methodist Church ,
sponsored by th e Mason
County
Ministerial
Association. Open lo all
denomipations. A free will
offering· will be accepted at
the door.
Monday, April 28
NEW HAVEN- Red Cross
blood drive, from noon to 6
p.m., New Haven United
Methodist ChurGh.
Thursday, May 1
LEON leon Town
Council meeting, 7 p.m ., Town
Hail.
·
Tuesday, May 13
POINT PLEASANT
Mason Counly Solid Waste
Authority meeting, 6 p.m.,
Mason County Courthouse.

6uttbap Q:tmtf -6tuttntl • Page A:3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Remover

EXTENDED FORECAST

.Ohio looking to identify
~ dangersous schools

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Sunday, April 13, 2003

79
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Chunk Ught

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Reader Services
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MATINEES SHOWN ON

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99

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30PM MON-FRI6

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story, please call one of our newsrooms.

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26 Weeks. . . . . . . . . . . .... '59.70
52 Weeks..
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26Weeks ..
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�PageA4

Ohio

Sunday, April13, 2003

Working poor, elderly
among growing food lines

&amp;unba~
mtmes-ienttnet
West
Vircrin1•1
Page
AS
--------------~~~~~
. ~-~~~---------Sun~day~,Ap_rii~J3,2_003
'

More businesses, rllore w. Va. Briefs
Airline will
debts with wor~er's ~omp renew flights

·Fellowship awarded

'

BY GAVIN McCORMICK

Associated Press

.B Y CHARLEY GILLESPIE

Associated Press

From left, Cassie Graham. Valene Richie and Christine
Vaughn, members of the French Colony Chapter of the Ohio
Society Daughters of the American Revolution. are shown in
formal wear during the 104th annual state conference held
March 7-9 at the Columbus Marriott North.

LOGAN. Ohio- During
the Great Depression. Dannie
Devol waited for hours in
food lines to bring home a
whee lbarrow full of government-issued cheese. nour,
butter and potatoes for his II
brothers and sisters.
The son or a coal miner
says it seems like this southen! Ohio town in the hills of
Appalachia has made a return
In those times.
· "Here we are more than 65
years later and we still have
the '"me problems,'' said
DeYol. 77. who runs the
Smith Chapel Food Pantry.
The pantry is supported by
four area churches and serves
all of Hocking County. where
the. unemployment rate in
February was 9.8 percent,
above the state average of 6
percent.
The poor .• economy and
hight'r fuel prices have
brought an increase in people
seeki ng emergency food
assistance at the . pantry and

A police officer directs traffic on Front Street in Logan as dozens of volunteers load cars with
food during the Smith Chapel Church monthly food drive. (AP)
others in Ohio.
'
Since 1999, the number of
. people receiving emergency
food aid in Ohio has grown
from 2 million to 4.5 million.
according to the Ohio

Association
of Second
Harvest Food Banks. Second
Harvest's 12 food banks provide food fo r the state's 3.000
food pantries. soup kitchens
and homeless shelters.

There has been a 30 percent
annual increase in demand at
the food Qanks each of the
past two years. said Lisa
Hamler-Podolski, executive
director of Second Harvest.

Local DAR·
Chapter atte.nds ,Voinovich not 'uncomfortable' about
state conference clash with Bush over tax reduction
BY MALIA RULON

Staff report

I

shott history with pictures of
Associated Press
their county and along with pertinent infom1ation of Ohio·s
WASHINGTON As
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio _. The genen~ hi story this book is conCongress wrapped up its .
I 04th annual State Conference sidered to be the only book
work on a federal budget
for the Ohio Society Daughters compiled for the bicentennial
plan, Sen. George Voinovich
of the American Revolution concerning Ohio county histosaid Friday that he never once
was held the weekend of March ries. The title is "Glimpses of
felt uncomfortable about
7-9 at the Columbus Manion Ohio."
breaking
with his party and
North.
Locally.· some
middle
President Bush over the size
· Officers from French Colony schools. the Gallia County
of
tax cuts to approve.
Chapter in Gallia County Historical and Genealogitnl
The Ohio Republican and
attended the conference. The Society and Bossard Memorial
Sen. Olympia Snowe, Rgroup included Regent Wilma Library have already ordered
Brown. Vice-Regent Gwen the book to be placed for public
Maine, refused to support tax
cuts of more than $350 billion
McGuire. Treasurer Cathy use.
·
Greenleaf, Cindy Graham and
The tirst copy ofthe book will
even though GOP leaders had
Lisa Richie, Estivaun Manhews be placed in the library of the
wanted a larger tax reduction
and Rosemary Evans.
headquarters of the National
Also in anendance were Society DAR in Wa,hington,
Emi ly Dailey, Denise Dailey- D.c.
Toler, junior member and page
French Colony members .-f--=====--- - - for the conference. respetively, -ehmt Jn~VITI11Ihn.-MTift!Til
and Roberta Roush.
Cathryn 'Ca" 'e Graham and
Roush serves the Ohio Valerie Lianne Richie attended
Society as state historian. the conference for the first time,
McGuire is state chairman of servmg as pages tor the event.
horses ~
Amencanism and DAR Manual Richie is a Junior OS DAR
for Citizenship. Greenleaf and Page. Fleur-de-lis C.A. R.
COLU MB US (AP)
_ Dailey serve as credentials co- (Chtldren of the Amencan
She doesn't call herself a
chairmen for the conference.
Revolution)
Chapter
of
horse whisperer. but
Linda linker Watkins attend~ Gallipolis.
She ila Ryan says she can
ed the conference a' special
Vau~hn is the daughter of
communicate with the ani guest. She is President Geneml Tommte and Nancy Vaughn
mals .
of the National Society and has proven her lineage to
Attendees at a horse
Daughters of the American .JOlll the DAR through
Revolution.
Revolutionary War soldier Pvt.
convention he re packed
Ryan' s booth to buy her
Watkins delivered the nation- Thomas Clark.
al deiense message the openin~ · She and Graham attend Ohio
vi deotapes after her presentat ion Friday at the
night of the conference.
" State University.
Dming the Saturility evening
Graham is th~ daughter of
lOth
annual
Equine
formal banquet a presentation Davtd and Cmdy Grahan1 and
Affaire in the Ohio Expo
wa' giveti by Glenn Harper. Richie is the daughter of Tom
Center . on the state fa trDirector
of
the Ohio and Lisa Richie. Both have
gro unds.
Preservation Office, concerning proven their lineage to join
Ryan.
44.
owns
the historic Route 40 that passes DAR through Revolutionary
HorseSense. a hol istic
through Ohio.
War soldier Pvt. Levi
healing organization based
. Previous to his presemation Trowbridge. Ri~hi~ att~nd,
in Barrington . R.I.
Roush pre,ented the president Gallia Academy Junior High
She uses metal dowsing
general a plaque from the Ohio School. ·
.
rods and studies spiritu al
points on the animal to
Society in recognition of a book
Anyone waming to know
compiled by Roush for the more abollt this organitation
commu nicate.
bicentennial of Ohio. This book and how to join this historical
will be avai lable for sale to the group should contact Marjorie
public in mid May.
Wood at (7.:10 ) +1.6-1444 or
Every county in Ohio was Roberta Roush at (7-Ul) W&gt;contacted and asked to submit a 4274.

and President Bush had lob- then. said Friday that he
bied hard for his entire tax cut would not back down and
package of $726 billion.
expects the final tax cut to be
In an unusual move this no more than $350 billion.
week, Congress approved the
Reflecting over the past two
fi scal blueprint for the fedeml weeks, Voinovich said his dis$2.27 trillion budget with dif- cussions with •White House
ferent sizes of tax cuts officials and Senate GOP
allowed: $550 billion in the leaders had been professional
House and $350 billion in the although strained.
Senate.
"I didn't feel uncomfortable
"It buys them more time," about anything," he said.
Voinovich said. "The issue "They were doing what I
becomes whether or not we would have done if I was the
can hold it."
governor of OhiQ and I was
Still, Voinovich, who met doing what I could to conwith the president last week . vince a member of my party
and has been in discussions to support a particular issue."
with the White House since
Voinovich, who served as

Ohio's governorfrom 1990 to
1998, declined to say what he
and the president had talked
about at their meeting. He
said only that the two had
reminisced about the responsibilities Bush has as president compared to what
Voinovich had as Ohio's governor.
"One of the things that really makes me feel good is that
they may ·not agree with me,
but they still continue to
respect me," he said, adding
that he's a chief sponsor of the
president 's air pollution proposal, which is referred to as
"Clean Skies."

OhiO BriefS

Woman says
she can talk
to

Lawmaker
won't seek
reelection

Prisoners see
art as an escape
BY JOHN SEEWER

Associated Press
FINDLAY. Ohio - Philip
Sugden remembers shuftling .
through the ce llblock . after
tea&lt;.:hing a prison . art class
when someone grabbed hi s
arm .
It was one of his students.
"Do you realize how much
this means to us. " convicted
rapist Edwin Thoma told
Sugden. tears streaming
down Thomu 's fa ce.
Thoma's pastel painting of
row houses and his intricate
ink pen drawings of sailing
ships are part of an exhibition ca lled "Imagination

Un locked .'"
A series of educat ional
workshops on art and wr.iting taught by vo lunt eers at
the
Lima
Correctional
lnstitution spaw ned the touring display of prison art that
or iginally was disp layed
in side the medium -security
pri~on last year for visitors.
employees and inmates .
Since then, the show has ·
traveled to coffee houses and
libraries in northwest Ohio.
Nex.t month , it is to be at t~e
Wood Co11nty Historical
Center · and Mu;eum in
Bowling Green , following a
monthlong run last month at
Coffee Amici in Findlay.

CHARDON (AP)
State Rep. Tim Grendell
ha' decided against seeking election to a th ird twoyear term, and in stead
plan ' to run for a pending
Geau ga County Common
Pl eas Court judges!Jip
vacancy.
With the announcement,
the
49·year-old
Republican abandoned his
oft-stated goal of succeeding Larry Ho'useholder as
House speaker.
Grendell said gaining
the leadersh ip position
seemed unlikely. "If the
price of being speaker · is
selling my soul and my
principles. that's not a
price I' m willing to pay,"
he 'aid.
Grendell's
district
includes Geauga Count y
and several Cleveland
suhurbs
in
eastern
Cuyahoga County.

Roland Lidel (left ) recently was presented with a Melvin
Jones Fellowship by the New Haven Lions Club. John
Pinkerman. West Virginia Multiple District secretary-trea~
surer, made the presentation that in cluded a plaque and
a pin. Also attending the presentation was Lidel' s wife,
Dottie.

Decals to be
used to promote
W. Va. tourism
CHARLESTON.
W.Va.
(AP)- West Virginia has paid
$30,000 to become the official
vacation destination of the
United States Auto Club.
which holds sprint and midgetcar races across the country.
As part of . the deal
announced Friday by Gov.
Bob Wise, the state's "Wild
and Wonderful" tourism logo
will appear on more than 500
USAC race cars and at 188
races this season in 22 states.
West Virginia also will be
mentioned on the 22 USAC
races televised on the Spee9'

Rescued POW leaves
Germany for United States
BY PANOS KAKAVtATOS

Associated Press

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tl Had Time.cards Altered
. By Mani,gement
tl Not Paid For Hours Worked
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tl Not Given Proper Breaks
tl Forced To Miss Lunches
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Channel.
Wise said he's hopeful that
racing fans will want to find
out more about state travel
opportunities if they see race
cars with West Virginia decals.
"The goal is to promote West
Virgini a as a tourist destination," he said.
USAC races are held predominately at smaller venues,
mostly in !he Midwest and Far
West. A number of USAC drivers have advanced to Indy
and NASCAR racing, including 2002 NASCAR points
champion Tony Siewart.

CHARLESTON. W.Va.
In
1995 . a bankrupt
Kentucky-based coal compa. ny called Meador Energy Inc.
defaulted ori a $2 milli on
' West Virginia workers' compensation bill.
Five years later a second
lsom. Ky.-based mining busine ss. Big Hickory Mining
Co. Inc .. defaulted on a $3. 1
million state workers' compensation debt.
A third. Pine Mountain
Resources Inc.. closed and
left $1.7 million in unpaid
workers' compensation bills.
In February. the state
Workers'
Compensation
Division listed lsom, Ky.based Skyco Trucki ng Co.
Inc. as owing $ 1.9 million.
placing it at the top of the
division's unpaid bills li st.
The company has apparentl y
gone out of business.
What ·do all fo ur businesses
have in common?
West Virginia incorporation records li st Allen Stump
as president, Robert Stump as
vice president. secretary and
treasurer and Edward Stump
as director.
As the state 's insurance
system for injured workers
staggers under a S3 billioo
deficit, owners of companies
that. have run up millions of
dollars in unpaid workers'
compen sation bill s have been
able to receive coverage and. in some cases. run up
new debts - for new compames .

Although the division has
had a system since the early
1990s to stop owners who
default on bills from starting
new companies and accruing
additional debt, a review of
division default li sts and
other state records shows the
system is flawed.
,
'The divi sion has to do
more to stop this. and the
costs · should not be shifted
orito other rate payers or
workers," said Steve White
of the Affiliated Construction
Trades Foundation, a frequent critic of the division\
operations.
By law. all workers· compensation applicants are
required w list any business.
current or past. of which they
.own or owned at least I 0 percent. Division emp)oyees are
then supposed to check the
companies' histor ies to
e nsure no unpaid bills
remain.
" If you ran up a debt. and
then the next month you open
under a new company name.
your name will come up in
our owner-officer search."
said Melinda Ashworth-Kiss.
the division's chief financial
officer.
·
Yet the four Stump companies passed rev iew. The
Stumps could not be reached
for comment'.
"Do we have the system
absolutely foolproof and
under
co ntrol ?
No,"
Ashworth- Kiss said. "But it's
inaccurate to say we have no
way to track. Things are
much more refined than they
were even a few years ago."

ERAMSTE IN AIR BAS E.
Germany,- A plane carrying
rescued POW Jessica Lynch
left fo r the Un ited States
Saturday after a· week of
treat ment at ami lit ary hospital in western Germany.
The. C- 17 military transporter took off from
Ramstei n Air Base at ~:20
a.m. EDT with the 19-yearold private first class. several
members of her family. and
some 50 other injured sol-

diers on board. She was to
travel to the Walter Reed
Army Medical Center in
northwest Washington.
Lynch, a supply clerk from
Palestine. W.Va., was captured March 23 after her
507th
Maintenance
Company
convoy
was
ambushed in the southern
Iraqi city of Nasiriyah. She
was rescued from a hospit al
in the city April I by U.S.
comm andos - reportedly
after a tip from an Iraqi
lawyer - and airli fted to the
Landstuhl Regional Medical
Center in Germany.

The ARIEL THEATRE

The division, however. still.
has trouble tracking if an
owner start s a business under
a new workers compensation
cl~ssificafion - fQr example.
if a coal compa·ny refiles as a
construction business.
,
In one 1996 case that ended
in court, As hworth- Kiss said.
a business listed its maintenance man as the · primary
owner.
In another case. Island Fork
Construction Ltd. of Be'ckley.
a coal mining operation
ow ned by Amon Mahon.
filed · for Chapter II bankruptcy
protection
last
October while owing $10.8
million in unpaid workers·
compensation bills and
prospective payments to
injured workers.
The division has since collected $4 .4 million from
Island Fork's insurance co m. pany. leaving more than $6.4
million outstandin g.
The divi sion inv es ti ~a ted
Island Fo rk whe n It ' fir st
sought self-insured status 'in
1998. Self-in sured comp&lt;~­
nies pay the division administrative and other fees but
cover the costs 0f their own
workers' inj uries. The division must pay if the company
later goes bankrupt .
Workers·
The
Compensati on
Programs
Performance Council. which
oversees the state's program.
has asked the division to
review its decision to allow
Island Fork to gain se lfinsured statu s. The council is
scheduled to receive a report
on April 15.

CHARLESTON tAP)
Flights from Charleston\
Yeager Airport to Cleveland ·
will re sume on June I. ·
Continental Express discOntinued its two dailv.
regional jet flight s fron1
Charleston to Cle1·el and's
Hopkins
Internationa l
Airport earlier thi s month.
Three daily comnllller
llights between the cities wil l
hegin in June on 19-pa"enger ai rcraft and po ss ibly
switch to 30-passenger aircraft later in .the year. .,aid
Rick Atkinson. Yeager' &gt;
executive dire..:tor.
The flights will be operated for Contine ntal bv
CommutAir of Plattsburgh.
N.Y
,

Free clinic
closed
temporarily
CHARLESTON (A P) - A
free he" lth clinic in Beckley·
h:" shut its dt1or' temporari ly due to budget problems .
The Helping Hands Health
Riglll board of di recto rs
.voted Monday to close at the
e1id of the week if $75.000
could not be raised to pay
taxes and back bills.
Severa l businesses were
interested in giving the necessary money. but .not
enough money had been.
raised as of Friday. sa id
Mark Rub in. the board's
president.

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Page A6 ·
Sunday, April 13, 2003

SANDSTORM - ~ TARGE15 H\T +I Y2
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446·2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

BeHe Pearce'
Managing Editor

P.O.W. ·'12

g

'

••

Andrew Carter
Asst..Managing Editor

Letters to the editor are welcome. They ~ hou/d be less titan
300 u·ords. All leiters are s"bjecl to editing_and m"st be
signed and include address a11d telephone ""mber. No
unsigned tellers will be publish ed. Leuq s should be in good
sensus of the Ohio Valley P"blishing Co. s edito rial boa I'll,
unlesS otherwise noted.

China pretending SARS
doesn't exist is irresponsible
• The Cincinnati Post: There's a chance to get to the root
of SARS, the mysterious and occasionally fatal illness, now
·that I!Je Chinese have opened up their records and allowed
international health researchers into Guangzhou provmce.
- The Chinese government knew about the disease in
December, but through a combination of ingrained secrecy, an
institutional reluctance to repon bad news to higher-ups and
bureaucratic inenia, little was done.
.
Cenainly ihe World Health Organization wasn't notified.
" 'The Chinese government continued to stonewall -journalists were prohibited from reponing on the disease - and it
..,asn 't until last Tuesday that it allowed WHO investigators to
travel to the source of SARS.
'International health official s must make their Chinese counterpans understand that China no longer exists in Chairman
Mao's hermetic vacuum, that it is an integral pan of a larger
world, that it has real responsibilities to both other nations and
\'Is own people and that pretending a disease doesn't exist
'ivon' t make it go away.
1. .

j '

:'-TODAY IN HISTORY
"'

-!lY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.'

, Today is Palm Sunday, April 13, the I03rd day of 2003.
There are 262 days left in the year.
: -Today's Highlight in History:
·
1
'On April 13 1970. Apollo 13. four-fifths of the way to the
moon, was crippled when a tank containing liquid oxygen
burst (The astronauts managed to return safely.)
· ·on this date: .
In 1598. King Henry IV of France endorsed the Edict of
Nantes, which granted rights to the Protestant Huguenots.
(The edict was abrogated in 1685 by King Louis XI\' who
declared France entirely Catholic again.)
: In 1742. Handel's "Messiah" was first performed publicly,
-in Dublin, Ireland.·
: In 1743, the third president of the United States, Thomas
:Jefferson, was born.
.
·: In 1870. the Metropolitan Museum of An was founded in
;N,ew York.
:: In 1943. President Roosevelt dedicated the Jefferson
Memorial. ·
: In 1958. Van Cliburn became the first American to win the
'!chaikovsky International Piano Contest in Moscow. ·
; In 1964, Sidney Poi tier became the first black performer in
ineading role to win an Academy Award, for "Lilies of the
Field."
•:In 1965, 16-year-old Lawrence Wallace Bradford Jr. was
ippointed by New York Republican Jacob Javits to be the first
~lack page of the U.S. Senate.
~·In 1986. Pope John Paul II visited a Rome synagogue in the
first recorded papal visit of its kind.
i:In 1992. the Great Chicago Flood took place as the city's
eentury-old tunnel system and adjacent basements filled with
~ater from the Chicago River.
: :Ten years ago: Pulitzer Prizes _were awarded to David
f,1cCullough for his biography "Truman," to Raben Olen
' ~:utler for his collection of shon stories "A Good Scent from
,strange Mountain" and Tony Kushner for his drama "Angels
gi America: Millennium Approaches." The gold medal for
public service went to The Miami Herald for its Hurricane
A;ndrew coverage.
_.
. ;Five years ago: NationsBank and BankAmerica announced
l·$62.5 billion 111,erger creating the country's first coast·to;east bank while Bane One aild First Chicago NBD said they
~ould unite in a $28.9 billion-deal. A 500-pound steel joint
fl:ll from the upper level of New York's Yankee Stadium.
¢rashing onto seats below (fonunately. no fans were ms1de the
~iu-k at the time).
.
·
• :one year ago: Venezuela's interim president, Pedro
··Carmona. resigned a day after taking office in the face of
)totests by thousands of supponers of the ousted president.
ftugo Chavez.
.
.
• Today's Binhdays: Actor Howard Keel is 84. Movie director Stanley Donen is 79. Actor Don Adams is 77. Sen. Ben_
Nighthorse Campbell. R-Colo.. is 70. Actor Lyle Waggoner is
68.Actor Edward Fox is 66. Playwright Lanford Wilson is 66:
Actor Paul Sorvino is 64. Movie and TV composer Blll Conti
ik 61. Rock musician Jack Casady is 5.9. Actor Tony Dow is
$8. Singer AI Green is 57. Actor Ron Perlman is 53. Act~r
William Sadler is 53. Singer Peabo Bryson is 52 . Rock mus•dian Max Weinberg IS 52. Bluegrass sm~ e r- mu s 1c.an Sam
eush is 5!. Rock musician Jimnty Destn (Biondie) is 49 .
~ omedian Gary Kroeger is 46 . Actress Saundra Santiago is
46. Rock musici an Joey Mazzola (Sponge) IS 42. Chess
grandmaster Garry Kasparov is 40. Actress Pag_e Hannah is
39. Rock musician Li sa Umbarger 1s 38. Actor R1ck Schroder
i~ 33. Actor Jonathan Brandis is 27 . Actress Counney Peldon
(•'Boston Public") is 22
; Thought for Today: "In most thing~. success depend.s on
Knowing how long it takes to succeed. - Charles Lou1s de
Montesquieu: French philosopher (I ,689-1755 ).

.Obituaries.
James B. Morris
.Jr.

great' grandchildren.
She was preceded in death
by her par.ents; husband, Otis
Mc.Ciintock; and a brother,
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
Dr. Charles Jividen.
James B. Morris Jr. . 59, of
Services will be I p.m.
Gallipolis, died Thursday, Tuesday, April 15, 2003; in
Apnl 10, 2003, at his resi- the Racine United Methodist
dence.
Church, with the Rev. Brian
He was a former emP.IQyee Harkness officiating. Burial
for John son 's Supermarket will follow in the Letan Falls
and Foodland.
·
Cemetery. Friends may call at
He was born November 13, the church from 5 to 9 p.m.
1943, in St. Albans, West Monday, April 14, 2003.
Virginia, son of the late
Arra,ngements are by the .
James B. Morris Sr., and Roush Funeral Home in
Irene Chapman Morris, who Ravenswood, West Virginia.
sur vives in Nitro, ,West
Virginia.
Surviving in addition to his
mother are "' son. Michael
Morris, and daughter, Nandra
Morris. both of Youngstown,
Florida;
t'ive
sisters ,
Jacqueline (Mike) Hunter of
Winfield, West Virginia. Gale
Ardman of Charleston, West
Virginia,
V.ickie '(Bill)
PROCTORVlLLE, Ohio
Morgan
of Vincennes,
Lloyd "Cookie" ·Ferguson,
Indiana, Pamela (Don) Soto
48,
Proctorville, died Fridar,
of Columbus. and. Sandra
Morri s of Columbus; and a April I I, 2003, in St. Mary s
brother, Wayne (Beth) Morris Medical Center, Huntington,
W.Va.
of Rale igh. Nonh Carolina.
He is survived by his wife,
Others surviving are several close nieces and nephews, Linda Mullens Ferguson ,
Services will be I p.m.
Gina (Kelly Rusk) Morri s of
Monday
in Hall Funeral
Bidwell ,
Eric
(Holly)
Home,
Proctorville,
with the
Gillenwater of ~atriot. Brian
Rev.
Kermit
Webb
officiatMorri s of Charleston, West
Virginia, Brad Gillenwater of ing. Burial will be in Miller
Crown City, and Amy Morri s Memorial Gardens. Friends
and Anthony Morris, both of may call at the funeral home
Gallipoli s; and several other from 6 to 8 p.m. Sunday.
.nieces and nephews.
Graveside services will be
2 p.m. Sunday. April 13,
2003, at the Centenary
.cemetery: with the Rev.
James Patterson officiating.
Burial wi II be in Centenary
Cemetery. Friends may call a
the Willis Funeral Home on
Sunday, April 13, 2003, from
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
I p.m. until the time of serThe Gallia County auditor's
vices.
Please visit www.willisfu- and treasurer's offices will be
neralhome.com for e-mail closed Thursday, April 17
from 9:30 a.m. unti14 p.m. to
condolences .
allow staff to attend software
training.
Citizens are asked to make
arrangements to have any
pay-ins, deeds or other busiRACINE, Ohio - Emma
ness
completed before 9:30
Jane McClintock Robinson,
73, of Racine, died Thursday, a.m. Thursday, or wait until
April 10, 2003, at O'Bieness the next day.
Payroll will still be availMemorial Hospital in Athens.
She was born May 22, able to be picked up at the
192.9, in Racine, daughter of usual time from the auditor's
the late Clark and Lillian office. An auditor's employee
Groslin Jividen.
will be located near the door
· She was a homemaker, and in the foyer.
a member of the Racine
United Methodist Church and
the
United
Methodist
Women. She was a 50-year
member and Past Matron of
the Pomeroy-Racine No. 134
Order of Eastern Star.
She is survived b_y her husRIO GRANDE, Ohio ~
band, Howard Robinson of Bob Evans Farm's sixth
Racine; children , John
McClintock , and his wife, annual "Lunch with the
Linda. of Surfside Beach, Easter Bunny" will be held
South Carolina, Ann Wik:s, from noon until 2 p.m.
and her husband, Larry, of Saturday, April I 9.
The complimentary Easter
'Racine, Carl Robinson, and
his wife, Carolyn, of Racine, egg hunt begins at I p.m.
and Bryan Robinson. and his Children will hunt for candy
wife , Annie, of Mount and special prizes in three
Vernon, New York.
age groups - infant to 4
She is also survived by her years, 5 to 8 years and 9 to 12
grandchildren.
Sarah. years.
Rebecca. Lisa. John. Brian,
For more information, conErica, Cheryl Lynn, Nickki, tact the farm at (740) 245- ·
B.J . and Mark ; and nine
5305 or (800) 994-3276

Lloyd 'Cookie'
Ferguson

REGIONAL VIEW

nup

.

Deaths ,

taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
Tire opinions expressed in {he column below are the con -

'

One really surreal weekend in ~ollywood
Recently, I had the most
surreal weekend of my life. It
goes without saying that this
happened in Los Angeles.
I was there for the
Academy Awards. The host.
Steve Manin, had asked me
to be on the team of writers
working with him; apparently he felt that what was needed, to lend jl.tst the right tone
to Hollywood's most glamorous night, was booger
jokes.So I went to the Oscars,
but that wasn't all: I also
stayed at Steve Martin's
house, which is very tasteful ,
unless you count the giant
arrow through it.
No, really, it's a beautiful
house. and it was the scene of
my first surreal Oscars experience. Here's how it happened:
. ·
On the Friday before the
show, I arrived in Los
Angeles, and the Oscars,people. right off the bat, gave me
a new car. Not to keep, unfortunately: just to drive around .
But it was a Cadillac, and it
was larger than most Third
World villages.
When they gave me the
car, they told me there was a
"gift basket" for me in the
trunk. I assumed they meant
a little basket with some fruit
in it, maybe a bottle of wine .
I was an idiot. It turns out
that the Academy Awards gift
)lasket is a Hollywood legend, Film-industry people
would kill for it. O'm kid-

Dave
Barry

ding. of course; they_would
have their agents kill for it. )
Because this basket contains
thousands of dollars' worth
of cosmetics, jewelry, gift
certificates and other loot
donated by companies wishing to have their products
used by movie stars.
But I didn't know this until
.I got to Steve Manin·s house,
where I opened the enormous
Cadillac trunk and found a
laundry hamper in there the
height of Dustin Hoffman ,
b'ulging and overflowing
with gifts, all of it wrapped in
gauze and tied with a bow. I
tried to lift it out of the trunk.
but it was too heavy, and as I
struggled with it, the gauze
broke . and designer-label
cosmetics spilled out onto the
street and started rolling
down the hill, forcing me to
scrambl e after them .
Steve Manin was watching
this, and - realizing that I.
his houseguest. needed help
- very graciously started
laughing so hard I thought he
would pee his pants. then ran
inside to get his camera.

.

After photog raph ing me
trying 10 corral my gifts,
Steve went to his garage and
got a handcart. and we managed to transport the gift basket in side. I was relieved to
get off the street, becau se I
was afraid that so me actual
working people would drive
by and see me -a man who.
in return for thinking up a
few jokes. got a Cadillac and
thousands of doll ars worth of
luxury items - and they
would have no choice but to
stop and beat me up.
Th e Academy Awards
show was also surreal ,
because I was backstage.

which meant that every few
seconds. a famou s movie star
would walk by. Julia Robet1 s
walked by several times . (I
think she has a thing for me).
There were so many stars
that it staned to seem routine;
I'd be tryin g to get somewhere. and I'd be thinking.
"Man. Joh w· Travolta is
ALWAYS in the wav."
I spent most of the show in
a little room just offstage,
where Steve would confer
with the writers between
stints onstage. I'm biased. of
course. but I thought he did a
terrific job'" host, and out of
respect for our fri endship I
will not rewa! that. when he
came backsta ge aftei· hi s
monologue. he disco vered
that (I am not making thi s up )
hi s tly had been down the
whole time .
After the show. my wife

and I went to the Governor's
BaiL which is' the official
post-Oscars party. It was a
glamorous affair but it ended
with maybe the most surreal
scene of the weekend. which
was the Iimousine pickup
area outside the ballroom.
There were hundreds of
stretch limos, five abreast,
moving slowly up the street,
each with a number; next to
the limos were uniformed
men with bullhorns, shouting
the numbers to the crowd.
The crowd was almost all
film-indu stry people; some
were holding actual Oscars,
bul they still had to mill
around . hunting for their
limos like everybody else,
because thi s was Hollywood,
where EVERYBODY is
important. Off to the side, sitting on a folding chair, waiting like everybody else, was
Olivia de Havilland. Hohum . another night in Planet
Los Angeles.
I had a fine time. but I was
glad to go home to reality.
(OK . not reality; Miami.) To
the Oscars people, I say:
Thank you for the experience. and especially the gift
basket. To Julia, I say: You
are an attractive woman, but .
I am spoken for.

(Dal'e Barry is a humor
columnist Joi· the Miami
Hem/d. Write to him ill care
of Th e Miami Herald, One
He rald Pla~a. Miami, Fla.
33 132. )

The·greatest generation gap
The most evocative news
photo to come out of the liberation of Baghdad may be
one of a young Iraqi man.
dressed in a denim jacket,
holding a home'made poster ·
Diana
celebrating ti)e "Hero of the
West
Peace" - George W. Bush
- and kissing the president's
faintly smiling photo.
Something about this picture seems more significant
than even the shot of marines Saddam Hussein has put libtaking their ease in Ia presi- erty within reality"s gra;;p in
dential palace parlor. And Iraq, it seems unlikely to put
something about it is almost reality within academia 's
more meaningful th~n the grasp in America.
picture of the giant. deposed
This is clearer now than
statue of Saddam Hussein ·ever. and not just after readheading, much to the obvious ing the inflammatory ramidelight of the Baghdad ngs of Nicholas De Genova.
throng. for history 's ash the Columbia professor who.
heap.
at a teac h-in. expressed a
Maybe it's the kiss itself. Wish for the military tragedy
reminiscent of all the fairy- of "a'million Mogadishu s" to
tale ki sses that break evil bring about his vision of
spells. or maybe it's the world peace. (He later
expressive face of Iraqi grati- claimed to have been quoted
tude toward rin American in a "remarkably decontextu , president who has awakened ali zed ... manner." ) The deepa nation· from a nightmare of ening di sconnec t between
brutality and repre ssion . Or academia and reality is also
ma1be it 's something else apparent in the relatively di sy nt1rel y, another face , one not passionate commcnl s appearpresent
the photograph, ing in a New York Times
but easily imagined: the con- story about the "role revertrasting face of chagrin and sals" the war has re vealed
disappointment on the anti- "between professors shaped
War Left (best personified by by Vietnam protests and a
the professorial radical at the more conservati ve student
forefront of anti -war protests body traumati zed by the
everywhere) ! ~ itching at the attack s of .September II.
prospect of having to face up 2001 ."
·
to a popular, American-led
"Profc,sors protest. a; stu ·
coalition victory.
dents debate" went the
After all that has been said storv's headl ine. "Even in
llast ion&gt; like
about Mr. Bu·sh and the war anti:war
~ not to ·mention shrieked, Cambrid ge. Berkeley and
spat and gnashed - thi s Madison. the protests have
won 't be easy. In fact, even been more town than gown...
as the president 's unwaveri11 g it said. "At Berkeley. where
commitment to disarm Vietnam protesters shouted.

m,

'Shut it down '" under clouds should look on the bright
of tear ga,, Sproul Plaza side: At least Iraq's Kurds
these days features mostl y don 't get ·•gassed" anymore,
solo operators who hand out either. And informational
black armb &lt;tnd~, The shut- · pamphlets will probably suit
down was in San Francisco them just fine .
(not the student campuses of
Meanwhile , American stuBerkeley). and the crowd dents are practically AWOL
was grayer."
when it come s to recreating
·But not wiser. if the profes- the sort of mass campus antisors interviewed about the war rallies of yesteryear.
protests arc any me as ure. Wh{? The N~w York Times
"We - used to like to offend has pointed out that war· in
people,'' Profes soi· Martha Iraq entail s no draft - once
Saxton
of
Amherst' s upon a time. a major incenwomen 's studies department tive (and guilt-trip) for drafttold the new spaper. "We exempt, nobility seeking stuloved being bad, in the sense dents of the Vietnam era.
that we were making a state- Then there's the fact ·that
men!. Wh y is there no joy more students today receive
now'"
· financial aid . and may actualFrankly, there\ plenty of ly feel compelled to make
joy ·nnw, onl y . it 's in good grades rather than stateBag hdad, not Berkeley. Thi s. ments -· bad. joyous or othof course. will do 11othin ~ to erwise. And there is another
cheer Ms. Saxton. still pi,]ing expl anation. this one from
for the days when "being Yal e history professor John .
bad" made a "stat ement. " Lewis Gaddi s: 'These are the
And she is not alone. "In kids of Reagan." he told the
Madison. teach-ins were as newspaper. "When I lecture
common as bratwu-rst." said on Reagan, the kids love him.
Austin Sarat. another nostal- Their parents are horrified
gia-mindcd professor at and appalled.:'
Amherst
whose
salad
Their parents and profes·
(bratwurst'!) days came whil e sors. both . Talk about a gen· studying political sc ience and eration gap . But today 's stuprotesting the Vietnam•· war ~e nts hardly form a proin Wi sconsin , or vice ve rsa. reg ime- chang e- monolith .
No w. as the ne wspaper pu ts Every campus poll on the
it . he tell s his students that., war I've seen Indicates an
"if yn u love the United eve nl y divided student body.
Slates, you must, as an uct of h is the professoriate that
patrioti sm. oppose the war." forms the monolith, a statistiWhich i, one way of cop- cal oddity due less to changin g with a prote,ting pa,t . mg tunes than to the_profes'There w:" a ccrlain .nuhility sor' who l&lt;ul to change With ~~ •
in hcin g ga"cu." Mr. S arat the !lmes - and fml , ever, lo
ex plai ned. "Now yo u don't grow up.
get ga"ed. Yuu wa lk intn a
( Diana W~ st is a columnist
dining hall anu hand 11u1 .fiu· The Wwhinl(lon Times.
inform alio nal pamphle t\ .. , She cm1 ht' co11tacted via
Nobi lity '"ide. Mr. Sara! diwlall'lr @all)ilohal.lle t. )

Local Briefs

Ladies
luncheon
to be held

Emma Jane
Robinson

Lunch with
Easter Bunny
on April19

None
from PageA1
involving youth that year
because of alcohol use.
"Troopers work year-round
to modify poor driving
behaviors before they result
in crashes," said Grau. "The

Judge
from PageA7
"given his abuse of those positions of trust."
"I doll't see any change,"
Morgan said.
The only action Nibert took
on Casey's motion was to
leave Mayes' record open for
him to offer other statements
on his behaif. While saying
he would take the matter
under' advisement, Nibert
suggested that the interests of
justice had already been
served.
"I will say this - Mr.
Mayes has received the benefit of the bargain," Nibert
said.
On Thursday,
Nibert
accepted guilty pleas from
five defendants mdicted in
January. Those entering
guilty pleas were:

.

1 . Will be given in GALLIA .COUNTY by
1
I &amp;ltMe TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I
I
I
I
' '
I Call Toll Free
. an
IIP~Intment. I
1The tests wilt be given by a Llcenltd Hearlna Aid Smlallat. I
Anyone who has trouble hearing or underltandinQ
I
I conversation Is Invited to have a filE£ hearing teat to - I f
1 this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon with you lor I
FREE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
I
UAW. ARMCO. AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
I UMWA.your

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

Masons .make donation

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Gallipolis
Parks
and
Recreation
Depanment's
annual "Easter in the Park"
will be held in the City Park at
II a.m. Saturday, April 1.9.
There will be 2,000 Easter
eggs filled with candy hidden
in the park. This year also fea- ·
lures games at the park, beginning at 10 a.m., sponsored by
the JllniOr Women's League.
A bonnet contest will follow
the easter egg hunt in the following categories: Prettiest,
most original and most traditional. The Easter Bunny will
be on hand to greet the children. Ages are from 0 to 2, 3
to 4, 5 to 6, 7 to 8, 9 to I0, and
II to 12.
A bag of candy will be
given to each child at the end
of the hunt.

EE HEARING TESTS

WALK-JNS WELCOME

• Page A7

Easter egg hunt
~t for ~pril 20

-----------COUPON

'

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - All
women are invited to attend
the Candles 'N Things lun·
cheon at noon on Tuesday at
the Holiday Inn, Gallipolis.
' Margaret F. Pierce owner of
Candles 'N Things in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., is the host.
For information and reservations, call Eunice at (740)
446-1897, or Mary at (740)
388-9098.

Offices to close
for training

.. .

6unlra~ G:t~ -6mttntl

Pomeroy • Middlepor;t • Gallipolis •. Pojnt Pleasant

~

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dickerson
Publisher

•'

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Dale Burcham, left, district adviser of the Grand Lodge of Ohio, traveled to Galli a County
April 3 to deliver a check for $500 to the Ariel Theatre in appreciation for the use of the
building during the district's one-day Master Mason course, sponsored by the Morning
Dawn Lodge 7 of Gallipolis, and held last Saturday in the theater. Pictured are, from left,
Dale Burcham, Edna Whiteley, Dan Whiteley, Melvin Cr!Jft of the Morning Dawn Lodge 7,
and Ariel Theatre Director Jan Betz. (Millissia D. Russell)

. '

'None for Under 2 I ' program
will aid troopers in helping
teenagers make good choices, and aggressively look for
those who do not"
Grau said he looks for support from teens and parents to
make "this time of prom and
graduation season ... a time
of safe celebration."
• Ernest C. Richardson Ill,
26, Leon, to a felony count of
delivery of a controlled sub·
stance.
• Mark Steven VanMeter,
45, Letart, to a misdemeanor
count of possession of a con- .
trolled substance.
•
Sidney
Edward
Huddleston Ill, 55, Gallipolis
Ferry, to a felony offense of
delivery of a controlled substance. Huddleston also pled
no contest to DUI tiJird or
subsequent offense.
Alan Lee Underwood, 49,
Point Pleasant, and Harvey E.
Wamsley, 52, pleaded no
contest to a misdemeanor
offense of DUI second
offense.
Also, Nibert arraigned
Mark A. Parsons, 41, Point
Pleasant, who was indicted
last September on one count
delivery of a controlled substanc~ . Nibert set liis trjal for
June 16.

Ohio State Patrol
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio - A
Gallipolis man was injured
when the car he drove went
off Ohio Route 141 and
struck a parked car Friday,
the Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Highway Patrol -reported.
Timothy E. Voss, 18, 502
Debbie Drive, was transported to Holzer Medical Center
following the 1:20 p.m. accident, the patrol s,aid.
Troopers said Voss was
westbound when he lost control of the car, went off the
right side of the road and
struck a car owned by James
R. Dixon, 1464 Ohio Route
141, Gallipolis, that was
parked in a private driveway.
The crash forced Dixon's
car into a tree. It then came to
rest in a yard, the report said.
Both cars were severely
damaged, and Voss was cited
for unsafe speed:

drove went off the right side
of the road, where it strUck a
guardrail and fence before
coming to rest in a ditch. .
The car had disabling damage, and War~ was cited for
failure to control.

•••

PATRIOT, Ohio - Steve~
D. Pelfrey, 16, 4022 HBMilll
Trace Road, Patriot, was
cited for unsafe speed by the
patrol following a one-car
accident Friday on County
Road 50 (Hannan Trace).
Troopers said PeMrey was
northbound, two-tenths of a
mile north of CR 110 (Little
Bullskin) at 9;25 -Jl.m. when
the car he drove went off me
left side of the road, struck a
ditch and overturned.
The car had severe damage,
troopers said.
'

...
EWINGTON, Ohio -

A
Ewington
woman
was
injured in a one-car accident
Friday on Ohio Route 160,
the patrol reported.
Kathy J . Ward, 35, 64
Ewington Road, was transported to Holzer Medical
Center following the 11:10
a.m. accident, the patrol said.
Troopers said Ward was
southbound when the car she

~

,\It

~..:.It"*'
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Next to

446-3283

Gallipolis, Ohio

Route 2 South - 675·3857
I I

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mumps, rubella, hepatitis B diphtheria, polio.
tetanus; pertussis, Hib disease, blood infectiov.s,
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Children need 80% of their vaccines
during the first two years of life.
CALL THE MEIGS COUNTY HEALTH
DEPARTMENT AT 992-6626 FOR MORE
INFORMATION ABOUT IMMUNIZATIONS

Located at tho iniOI'IoOCrioo of
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Invites you to

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Aprtl 16 · Sharon EbUD

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11pr1t 20, Ea•ru Somday ·
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iunbap 11tm~ -6tntintl

·Nation • World

As war winds
down, protests
continue
'

D.
Associated Press

numbers not seen since the
Vietnam War.
Demonstrators took to the
streets
as well in several
WASHlNGTON
Having failed to keep U.S. other countries. albeit not on
the scale as past protests,
troops out of Iraq, anti-war such
as the February march
protesters are marching to
in London that drew up to 2
bring them home.
"
million people.
Opponents of the conflict
This time, police said
said U.S. troops should leave 20,000
demonstrators
Iraq quick\y · rather than marched. Many held placards
remain in a region once con- demanding "No occupation
trolled by Western powers.
of Iraq." They paused for two
"Occupation is not libera- minutes of silence for the viction," said Mara Verheyden- tims of war and· tossed
Hilliard, a civil rights lawyer bunches of yellow daffodils
and an organizer of a at the gates of Prime Minister
Saturday rally in Washington Tony Blair's home.
sponsored by International
Nearly 50,000 school chilAnswer. "Whether they can dren and other protesters
conquer it militarily is one marched
in
Dhaka,
thing; whether they can tum Bangladesh. Around 4,000
it into an obedient client state gathered in Seoul, South
is another."
Korea, to demand the govern· Protesters also were gather- ment rescind its decision to
ing Saturday in Los Angeles send noncombat troops to
and
San
Francisco. help U.S.-led forces in Iraq.
Organizers said they expect- In Hong Kong, around I00
ed far fewer people than at demonstrators c.hanted antiprevious protests, · which war slogans outside the U.S.
111tracted demonstrators m Consulate General.

BY JOHNATAN

\

Page AS
Sunday, April 13, 2003

.

United States Marines Pvt. 1st Class. Christopher Harmon keeps an eye on two Iraqi boys who showed an interest in
his weapons as his squad of Klio Company, 3rd Batallion, 7th Marines prepared to patrol a neighborhood in Baghdad
Saturday. Marine patrols are now policing through neighborhoods to help create a presence, stop looting and to build
relations with civilians. (AP)

BY ALAN fRAM

)
)

WASHINGTON _

The

House passed a wartime spending bill of nearly $80 billion
Saturday, sending President
Bush a .down payment on the
costS of waging the war against
Iraq. The package also combats
terrorism, shores up defenses at
home and provides new aid to
airlines.
·
The Senate approved the leg·
islation Friday night, and Bush.
was expected to sign it into law

quickly.
· "We pay for the supplies, the
ammunition, the training, so
that our men and women in
uniform can do their jobs in
Iraq, in Afghanistan and areund
the wofld," House Speaker
De nrus
· Hasten, R-Ill ., saJ'd•
. The bill passed by voice
votes in the House and Senate,
the last major ·action before
Congress leaves for the twoweek Easter recess. It moved
quickly through Congress as
lawmakers sought to show sol. idarity. with.. lJ.S.. . troops but
reached its fu1al form only after

heated debate over numerous where against terrorism. Bush
items in the package not direct- asked Congress for a $74.7 bil~
ly related to the war.
lion version of the measure less ·
Those items, mostly intro- than three weeks ago.
duced by the Senate, included
Though fast, lawmakers'
$110 million for agriculture work on the bill was also
research labs in Ames, Iowa, fraught with conflict -among
and $65 million for National ·
themselves and with the White
Oceanic and .Atmospheric
House
- over how the money
Administration weather satelshould be spent. In a wide
lites.
divergence
from Bush, lawThe rapid-ftre congressional
votes spotlighted the wide- makers granted him little of the
spread populatity of the bill, independence he requested
which is dominated by $62.4 from congressional controls in
billion for Pentagon costs of the deciding details of how the
Iraq invasion and battles else- money would be spent.

House passes
pro-development
energy.bill
8Y H.

JOSEPH

HEBERT

: .Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The
. House approved nearly $19
billion in tax breaks Friday
for energy companies and
power producers and set up a
showdown with the Senate
over energy policy, particularly oil drilling in an Alaska
wildlife refuge.
The House-passed bill
inc! \Ides sweeping incentives
for oil and·gas development
and a mix of tax and other
financial breaks aimed at
promoting the traditional
fossil fuel industries.
And it revived the longstanding fight over whether
to allow . oil companies
access to the millions of barrels of crude oil beneath the
coastal plain of the Arctic
National Wildlife Refuge in
Alaska.
Three weeks ago, the

Senate rejected drilling in
ANWR, as the refuge is
called; and Democratic senators - including sevenll running for president - have
vowed to block any energy
bill that would expose the
refuge to development.
ANWR drilling has been a
top White House energy
goal.
The House and Senate also
are taking different paths on
energy tax incentives.
·
More than two-thirds of
the $18.7 billion House proposal. covering 10 years, is
aimed at helping natural gas,
coal, and oil development. A .
. slightly cheaper tax measure
- about $16 billion - in the
Senate focuses : more on
renewable energy, like development of wind power.
Unlike the House, the Senate
also gives a tax incentive to
spur construction of an
Alaska gas pipeline.

Start With Excellence
•
•

Judge extends ban
BY CHRISnNA

AlMEIDA

Associated Press
. LAS VEGAS - In a counroom filled with vociferous
tax opponents, a federal
judge Friday extended a temporary ban on a book that
argues Americans do not
have to pay income taxes.
Senior U.S. District Coun
Judge Lloyd D, George asked
attorneys to submit more
information
before
he
decides whether to permanently ban Irwin Schiff's
"The Federal Mafia:. How It
Illegally · Imposes
and
.Unlawfully Collects Income
Taxes."
The
American
Civil
Libenies Union of Nevada
filed a· friend-of-the-coun
brief saying the 75-year-old's
opinions should not be supI•

Buffalo blanks Wahama, Page B2
2003 NFL schedules, Page B3
Dillon skips mlnicamp, Page B4

Brookhaven
basketball
. coach
dead at 43

Associated Press

Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham listens as Rep.
Billy Tauzin, R-La., right, talk during a news conference on ·
Capitol Hill , Friday on a new energy bill. (AP)

iunba~ lime! ·ientinel

Page Bl
Sunday, April 13, 2003

Congress approves war package
.I

Inside:

Building relations

SALANT

I

(;

pressed.
"A total ban on a book containin¥ political and autobiographical (elements) is
unconstitutional,"
ACLU
lawyer Allen Lichtenstein
said outside coun.
The federal government
argues that the
First
· Amendment .does not protect
speech advocating illegal
conduct.
\
Department of Justice
lawyer Evan Davis said
Schiff had 3 ,I 00 clients
attempting to evade $56 million in taxes. He has called
Schiff's work one of the
largest tax scams in U.S. history.
.
"Criminal prosecutions (of
those who follow Schiff's
. advice) can take months, if
not years. The harm'is occur~
ring how and it must be.
stopped now," he sa!d.

·Ohio Valley Christian School would like to invite
you to come and visit. Each parent is i.nvited to call
740-446-3960 to arrange a personal visit. You may
qualify for a' free Kindergarten screening to check
your child's readiness for school.

Chrlet-centered
Ac;.idamlc
l!xcellance

•

Playground

•

28YNrTHC.,_

•

LaarntoReacl

•

Phonics

•

Music

•

Snacks and Fun

26
Years of Starting
Students Toward
'
College

Ohio Valley Christian School
1100 4• Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .

740 446-3960

Call Now!

I

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Brookhaven boy s basketball coach Bruce Howard,
w ./ won a state champio hip during hi s II years
' th the Bearcats, died
F 'day of liver failure at
Ri erside
Methodi st
Ho. pita!. He was 43.
Howard, whose team won
the Division I state title in
2002; first became ill on
Jan . 25 after Brookhaven's
69-59 win against Miami
Christian in Orlando, Fla.
· He underwent emergency
~tomach surgery i.he next
day and was diagnosed wiih
cirrhosis, a degenerative di sease of the liver.
Howard was unable to
coach the rest of the season.
Assistant Drew Williams
served as interim coach and
led Brookhaven to the state
finals, where they lost 73-65
to Cincinnati Moeller.
"He was like a big brother
to me," Williams told The
Columbus Dispatch. "He
was larger than words, larger than life ."
The Bearcats went 198-52
under Howard .
His teams won AP Poll
championships in 200 I and
this season and took I0 City
League North Division
championships.

Lewis strikes
out20in
Buckeyes' win

\,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
- Scott Lewi s tied an Ohio
State record with 20 strikeouts and pitched a complete
game two-hitter to lead Ohio
State past Iowa 4- 1 Friday.
· Lewis (5-0) allowed only
two singles, one .walk and
one unearned run. He took a
no-hitter into the ·sixth
inning, giving the Buckeyes
(16-10, 5-4 Big Ten) 12 consecutive hitles s innings
"
pitched.
Greg Prenger pit~hed
seven
hitless
tnntngs
Wednesday in the first perfect game in Ohio, State
baseball hi story.
Reed Pawelk (1-4) took
the loss for Iowa. He
allowed four runs and II
hits and struck out four over
eight innings.
The Hawkeyes (9-14. 2-7)
took a 1-0 lead in the second
when Brian Bucklin stole
third and scored after Ohio
catcher
Derek
State
Kinnear 's throw skidded
down the left field line .
Brett Garrard 's RBI single
and a sacrifice fly by Derek
Kinnear put Ohio State
ahead 2-1 in the bottom of
the second. Paul Farinacci
and Steve Caravati added
~BI singles for Ohio State.

Pittsburgh LF
Giles sprains
iigament
·: CHICAGO (APr - The
PittSburgh Pirate s placed
left ftelder Brian Giles on .
the 15-day disabled list with
a sprained ligament in his
tight knee Saturday. ·
: The Pirates recalled Adam '
Hyzdu
from
Triple-A
Nashville.
Giles sprained the medial
collateral ligament when he
tried to stretch a single into
a double cluring the fifth
inning of Thursday 's victory
against Milwaukee.
Giles was placed on the
disabled l'ist Jar the first
time in his Pirates career.
Giles was last . on the disabled list in 199R, with a
sprained left ankle while
playing with Cleveland.
· "It was worse than I
thought;" Giles said. "I
nc:ver had a knee problem so
it is hard to telL I don ' t
lcnow how long its going to
take. Hopefully, in 15 days I
will be ready to go ."
: Giles,
who
missed
Friday's
~arne
against
Chicago, wtll be re-examined by team doctors
Monday in Pittsburgh .
•

.Raiders down Angels
BY BUTCH COOPER

Staff writer

•

'

GALLIPOLIS , Ohio On Tuesday, the softball
teams
from
Gall ia
Academy
and
River
Valley looked on from
their dugouts at the rain
and rouddy field . it produced.
Both teams showed up ,
but there would be no
game on that afternoon.- .
Saturday, though , was a
different story as the 'sun
and warm temperature s
greeted both squads and
the Raiders took home &lt;I
6-2 win.
River Valley pitcher
Geri McFann struck out
13, while allowing only
two hits, one walk and no
earned runs.
Amanda Lewi s, the
starter for the Blue Angels
(0-2), allowed six hit s,
five walks ana four earned
runs, while striking out
five . ·
The Raiders had a pair
of sacrifice grounders by
McFann and
Ashley
Caldwell in the first and
second innings respectively as River Valley led 2-0.
Nicki Tracewell, who
scored in the tirst inning,
was 2-for-3. while catcher
Kry stal Adkins also had a
pair of hits for the Raiders
(2-2).
River Valley added to
that lead in the third when
McFann scored· on a
Krystal Adkins base-hit
and Adkins proceeded to
scare on a wild pitch after
advancing to third on a
gro und out and steal.
Gallia Academy cut into
that lead in the top of the
fourth with the help of
back -to-hack River Valley
errors thaJ led to a run by
Eva Lyons.
The Angel s had a
chance to score earlier in
the second with ·runners
on second and third following a double by
Whitney Brooks .
But, McFann s(ruck out
Kelly Abrams to end the
mmng.
The Raiders answered River Valley's Nick i Tracewell ,and Gallia Academy shortstop Ashley Jones watchthe Angels' one run in the ' es the pitch from Gallia's Amanda Lewis after Tracewell singled and advanced to
third in the first inning Saturday. Tracewell scored on a Geri McFann sacrifice
Please see Raiders, Bl grounder to Jones. (Butch Cooper)

·Vintori
raceway
roars . back
to life
I!IY

KEVIN KELLY

News editor
VINTON, Ohio -Attention, amateur
racing fan s: The Vinton Raceway is
reopening later this month for drivers and
supporters of street car and motocross
competition. ,
Two separate tracks to accommodate
cars, motorcycles and off-road vehicles
have been developed at the site off Scenic
Drive. ·cars will race every Saturday starting April 26.
· .
A slate of motocross races has been set
for Sundays, starting May 4 and continu. ing on May 18, June 8. July 13 and Oct.
26.
hirley Potts owns the propeny where ·
the raceway is based, about a quarter' of a
mile from Ohio Route 160 along the
banks of the Raccoon Creek, and is working with area radio personality Rodney
Tomblin in bringing the raceway back to
life after several years of inactivity.
"It had sat idle since the late '90s and
some interest was expressed n racing
there again," said Tomblin, a national
announcer for the American Motorcycle
Association (AMA) and better known as
"Porterhouse" on Jackson's MIX96-FM.
"There is a great deal of community
interest in racing at this site," he added.
Potts, Tomblin and others reopened the ·
raceway for car racing last fall as a kind of
shakedown period to see what the tracks
needed. Potts said that even after the
scheduled races ended in October, local
racers were still practicing at the site.
Cars now have a half-mile track to race
on, while motorcycles and ATVs can run
on a course featuring tabletops, "whoopde-dos" and a ()0-foot triple jump,
Tomblin said.
"It will be amateur racing sanctioned by
the AMA and District II , which means
points paying for the region," he added.
Potts said alcohol is not permitted at the
track. The goal is to provide a place where
fans and families can enjoy the races.
"Our rules· are· really big time behave," said Potts. "But they do. We
want this to be a very friendly and interesting experience for everybody."
. For information on car races, contact
Potts at (740) 388-9300. Motocross racing
details are available from Tomblin at
(740) 286-2517, or from the website,
www.raccooncreek.mx.com.

Pratt
drives
Masters
in three in
Woods struggles just to make cut
Phillies win
over Reds

BY PAUL NEWBERRY

Associated Press

AUGUSTA, Ga. -Tiger Woods
wasn't supposed to be in this position - needing a 3-foot putt to
make the cut at the Masters. · ,
Wood s sank the te sty . putt
Saturday morning to complete the'
second round, ensuring that he' ll

be around fm the re s~ of the week' more that eight strokes. baGk after
36 holes to win the Masters .
en d.
But hi s pursuit of an unpreceAfter the putt dropped in, Woods
dented third straight victory at pursed his lips. gave aquick tip of
Augusta National is in serious the ~ap and rubbed h!s brow. He
jeopardy. Woods fimshed the sec- dtdn t smtle unttl later. . .
and round with a l-over-par 73,
"That putt was either gomg 10 or
leaving him 5 over for rhe tourna- going off the green." Woods smd.
ment and II strokes behind leader - ''No doubt about it." he added,
Mike Weir.
No one has ever co me from
Please see Masters, Bl

Royals rollin'
with victory
over Indians
BY TOM WITHERS

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - '·Nine up, nine
down for the perfect Kan sas City
Royals .
The Royals extended baseball' s best
start in 13 years Saturday as Raul
Ibanez and Michael Tucker hit tworun bothers Saturday to lead the
Royals to a 5-2 win over the
Cleveland Indian s.
At an unlikely 9-0, the Royal s are
the majors' only undefeated team and
are the first club since the 1990
Cincinnati Reds to w.in its first 'nine
games . Those Reds went on to win the
World Series.
It would be hard to imagine the
small-market Ro;-al s duphcating that,
bul'·no otie predtcted thetr fast start,
either - especially after they went

Please SM Indians, Bl

Kansas City Royals second baseman Desi Re laford forces out
Cleveland Indians' Josh Bard at second base, but did not complete
the double play in the sixth inning at Jacobs Field Saturday. (AP)

I

I

BY TERRY KINNEY

Associated Press
CINCINNATi - .Todd Pratt drove in
three run s, offsetting solo homers by
Austin Kearns and Adam Dunn, as the
Philadelphia Phillies beat the Cincinnati
Reds 8- S Saturday.
'
It was the third home run In two \\ames
for Kearns, whose two-run shot m the
bottom of the ninth inning beat the
Phillies
on
Friday night.
~ e v i n
Millwood (2-0)
allowed just
one hit until
the
fourth,
when Kearns
and Dunn ·hit
consecutive home runs. and Reggie
Taylor singled in a run to make it 3-1.
Millwood struck out seven, walked
two and allowed four hits in six innings.
Jimmy Haynes (0-3) lasted five
innings in his third ineffective start of the
season. He gave up four runs on_eight
hits and four walks. At that, hts ERA
actually improved two points to 10.38.
Pratt singled in a run in the second and
drove in two more with a bases-loaded
single to cap a three-run ftfth .
Ricky Ledee, whose bases-loaded
walk forced in a run in the fifth, and
Tollllle Perea·had RBI singles off Josias
Manzanillo in the Phillies seventh to
make it 6-3.
Brandon Larson singled f?r the Reds in
the eighth to m~e tt 6-4. J1mmy R~lhns
hit a two-run smgle for 'Phtladelph1a m
the ninth.

�Page 82 • &amp;unbap Qt:inteii -illentind

Masters
from PageB1

Sunday, Aprll13, 2003

Pomeroy •'Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

T H E

6 7 T H

M A S T E A S

Augusta. Georgia o April 1o-13

2003

Masters

rolling his eyes.
Woods obviously was
relieved to have' a chance to
play two more rounds. If his-at Augusta
tory -is any indication,
though, he'll be handing out
T his year Tiger Woods will attempt
the green jacket to someone
I to become the first player in the
else Sunday night.
67-year history of the Masters to ever
Weir, trymg to become the
three-peat at Augusta National. Only
first left-bander in 40 years
two other players - Jack Nicklaus
to win a major champi(1965-66) and Nick Faldo (1989·90)
onship, went into the th1rd
even had a chance.
round ·Saturday afternoon
with a four-stroke lead.
First- and second·
He completed a 68 in the
round coverage
morning, giving him a two(all times Eastern)
round total of 138. The 6Aprii1Q.11 , 4 p.m. to 6:30p.m.,
under total made him one of 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
(replay), USA Network
just four players to eclipse
par at tl!e halfway point, a
Third-round coverage
April12, 3:30p.m. to 6:30p.m.,
testament to the soggy, elonCBS
gated course that has
Fourth-round covaraga
brought most of golf's best
April13, 2:30p.m. to 7 p.m.,
players to their knees.
CBS
Woods stands at 149. Jack
Burke overcame an eightPar Yards
shot deficit after 36 holes to
win the 1956 Masters, but no
Out
36 } ,6.'1.0 .
one has ever come from furIn
36 3,650
...........................................
ther back.
Total 72 7;290
Woods may have to settle
for extending his streak of
' - sudden
cuts made to 102. He's now
Format- 72 holes of stroke play,
Lut year- Woods chipped in for birdie on No.
II short of the tour record
death playoff if necessary
6 to take control, then let everyone else make the
held by Byron Nelson.
Purae- to be determined ($5.5 million in 2002)
mistakes on the back nine. He closed with a 1Finishing up at No. 9,
Field - 94 players, including live amateurs
under 71 to finish at 12-under 276 for a threeWoods had to scramble just
stroke victory, only the ttilrd player lo win
Change• -The fairway bunkers on No. 5 were
to make the necessary par.
consecutive green jackets
extended 80 yards closer to the green
He knocked his tee shot
under the pine trees on the
r.p
right side of the fairway, . SOURCE:r.ugusta National ClolfClub
then punched a 5-iron into a
by making a bunch of 5- and " progressively worse," he his worst opening at a major
bunker on the left side.
since he was a 20-year-old
6-foot
comebackers after said.
But he was able to get up
and down, blasting out of the sliding putts past the hole.
At the ~ar-3 fourth, Woods: amateur playing the U.S.
sand to 3 feet and making Those are the shots. of a pulled h1s tee shot into a Open in 1996.
Only 18 players were able
the P.utt. At least now he Masters champion-in-the~ bunker, then skulled out of
won t have to hang around making.
.
the sand, across the green to get in 36 holes Friday.
all weekend just to give out
"I have always felt like the and into another bunker, The rest of the 93-player
field returned Saturday
the green jacket, a fate that next step for me is to try to making double-bogey. _
befell the first man to win contend in major champi- · Then it really got bizarre. morning to complete the
two straight majors.
onships," said Weir, who
At No. 6, another par 3, second round.
After winning at Augusta bogeyed just three of the Woods wound up ch1pping
While they were finishing
in 1965-66, Nicklaus failed first 36 holes. "So far I'm from on the green and up, Martha Burk's supportto make the cut in '67. He doing it. We'll see if I can do putting from off the green, ers gathered on a grassy
missed out by shooting a it all week."
making bogey to slip to 5 patch of · land along
second-round 79.
The most immediate pur- 'over- right on the cut line. Washington Road, a half"It's not.a lot of fun when suers were not Woods, but · He answered with a wedge mile from the front gate to
you're used to winning and Darren Clarke of Northern to 6 feet for birdie at the Magnolia Lane.
you're struggling just to Ireland at 142, followed by . seventh, then had his first
Jessica Terlikowskia, a
make the cut," Nicklaus Phil Mickelson and amateur three-putt of the tournament 25-year-old
full-time
said.
·
Ricky Barnes at 143.
at the next hole. After miss- activist 'from Washington,
Barnes, who played with ing a 3-footer for par, he had said thousands of people
Nick Faldo is the only
other golfer to win two Woods, was six strokes bet- to , make a 6-footer for support Burk's cause to
. straight Masters, 'in 1989-90. ter than his partner.
bogey.
admit a female member at
Unless Woods can pull off "Woods was upset early. In
White Woods is capable of Augusta N~tional. But only
an incredible comeback this good position for birdie on making up II strokes, the a few hundred people weekend, he'll have to settle the second hole, his first of most imposing number is 42 including those who oppose
for tying the record.
the day, he could only get - the number of ~layers Burk - were expected to
The 5-foot-8 Weir isn't a his 67-yard pitch to 20 feet between the world s best picket outside the. club.
big hitter. Certainly, he's not and had to settle for par.
player and the lead.
"This is not just one
the sort of player who's sup"I've got a name on my
Yet Woods wasn't giving woman battling Hootie,"
posed to be leading at ·bag. I should be able to get It up.
Terlikowskia said, referring
Augusta, where the course closer th;m that," he said.
"You never know," he to Augusta National chairwas stretched to 7,290 yards
Woods had a 7-foot birdie said. "If I can get 10' even par man Hootie Johnson. "It's
last year. After five days of putt to get to I over- at the at the end of the day, things qefinitely io show that she's
rain earlier in the week, the time only six strokes out of are looking all right."
not alone , and that many
The start of the tourna- . people recognize that for
course has been playing the lead- but he pulled that
even longer.
one and flung his putter into ment was delayed unti I women to reach full equali·
· Friday by all the rain. ty, we have to have access to
But
the
32-year-old his bag.
Canadian bolstered his score
all places."
''From there, things got Woods started with a 76 -

Indians

for the Indians, who blew
early scoring chances and
had some bad luck, too.
Cleveland left the bases
from Page 81
loaded in the first and had a
potential big inning sabo62-.100 last season.
taged
in the sixth when Matt
With _a win Sunday, Lawton
got hit on the leg
Kansas City would be the while running
to second on
first team since the 1987 Josh Bard's single
and was
Milwaukee Brewers to open called out.
·
10-0. In any case, the Royals
Sabathia,
who
left
his
preare the AL's first 9-0 team vious start- against Kansas
since the 1984 Detroit
City - with a hyperextendTigers.
ed elbow, gave up three runs
Ibanez's homer in the sixth and seven hits in 5 1-3
inning off C.C. Sabathia (0- innings.
2) put \he Royals up 3-2, and
He took a 2-1 lead in the
Tucker connected in the seventh off David Riske to sixth, but gave up a leadoff
single to Ken Harvey. Ibanez
·make it 5-2.
then
worked Sa,bathia to a
Chris George (2-0), one of full count
before connecting
the many Royals batting a for his second
homer this
flu bug the past few days, season and the first
allowed
allowed two runs and seven by Sabathia in 18
2-3
hits in 5 1-3 innings.
innings
.
Jason Grimsley and Albie
Tucker ·followed a leadoff
.Lopez got the Royals to the single
Mike DiFelice
ninth and rookie D.J. with his by
first
driving
Carrasco got three outs for Riske's pitch homer,
into
the
seats
his first career save.
in
right.
.
Milton Bradley and rookie
his ieam was shut
Brandort Phillips homered outAfter
1-0 Friday, Indians man-

ager Eric Wedge held a posilion players-only meeting
before Saturday 's game.
. Wedge's raise!! voice could
be heard in the hallway outside of Cleveland's auxiliary
weight room.
Apparently, a few of
Wedge's well-chosen words
got through to Bradley, who
led off the first with his first
homer, a shot to right-center.
Phillips led off the second
with his second homer,
pulling a 1-0 pitch from
George over the ·wall in
right.
The Royals trimmed it to
2-1 in the fourth ,when Desi
Relaford ran through third
base coach John Mizerock's
stop sign to score on Mendy
Lopez's double.
Relaford drew a two-out
walk and Lopez followed
with a double into the leftfield corner. As he rounded
third, Relaford hesitated
before heading home ' and
scoring when Bard, the
catcher, couldn't handle
shortstop Omar Vizquel's
relay throw.

I

Whittington·
hurls two-hitter·
against Wahama
Bv GARY CLARK

of safetie s while Kyle
Sports correspondent
Chapman had a base knock
for .the winners .
Wahama received a fir st
BUFFALO, W.Va. -Al l- inning single from sopho.State pttchtn_g yheno~1eno~ more Johnny Barton and a
Anthony Whnungton fired d . second inning base hit from
two h1t shutout over VISIItng Chance Reed but couldn't
~ahama Fnday .evem_ng tn get to Whittington to mount
leadmg the thtrd ranked any kind . of real scoring
Class A B1sons to an ll-0 threat.
wh1tewash over the Wh1te WHS did put runners at
Falcons:
.
second and third with one
. The_d1amond ouung lasted out in the opening frame
fi_ve I~ntngs bet ore betng after Barton 's 'single, a walk
halted m the Buffalo half of to Ryan Mitchell . and sue·
but
the fifth due .to the
. 10
k drun cessive
s1olen bases·
.
I
b
mere~ rue emg mvo e ·
Whittington got the next two
Wh1tt1_ngton fanned 10 and Falcon hitters on strikes to
walked JUSt one WHS batter
t' uish
the · Mason
m add111on to smackmg a ex tng
·
two run homer in the fifth to County teams early sconng
.
bring the affair to a sympa- threat
th'etic conclusion.
Semor Aaron Davts lasted
The contest was the first an mmng and two - th1rd\~s
in nearly a week for the WHS starter on. e
Wahama as the recent I?ound before being lifted
weather pattern wrecked for sophomore
Duslln
havoc on the Bend Area Ytckers.
teams spri ng schedu le.
Vtckers worked one .fr~me
The setback · saw the with Brandon Hodge hmshFalcons 2003 season record tng. up on the hdl for the
dip to 2-3 on the year with a Whtte _Falcons.
Davis gave up .seven runs
doubleheader date at Eastern
beginning at 1 p.m. on tap on three hns wtth two stnkefor today.
· outs and four walks. VIckers
Buffalo raked three WHS allowe~ tw~ runs on three
pitchers over the coals for hits wtth f1ve free passes
II runs on two extra base with Hodge also allo~tng
knocks and seven singles in two runs on three htts with a
. .
capturing the diamond vic- couple of st_nkeouts.
Wahama 1s slated to vtsn
tory. .
Whittington blasted a two Eastern th1s after~oon tor a
run homer in the fifth with two game set begmntng at I
Bret Reed sockin~ a triple p.m. before opening play Dl!
just prior to Whmington's Tuesday of next week at
bases clearing round-tripper. home agatnst Mason County
Shane Boggess singled nval Potnt Pleasant
three times in four plate Wahama
000
00
- 023
appearances
with euHalo
m · o~ - 1191
Whittington adding a single
to go with his home run . Davis, Vickers 121. Hodge (3) and Rife.
Jones !5). Whinlngton and Chapman. WP
Eric Donahue also had a pair - WhiHinglon LP- Davis. HR: WhiHington

Raiders
from Page 81
fourth with two of their own
after Tracewell and. Nicole
Watkins were walked witt\
no outs.
Both runners then scored
on an error in centerfield to
make it a 6-1 game.
Gallia Academy added a
Lewis run in the seventh
inning, but it wouldn't be .
enough.
It was a needed win for the

Raiders, who fell to Fairland
2-1 in a pitchers dual.
In that game. McFann
struck out six with no earned
runs, but Fairland's Je ssica
Mann recorded I0 strikeouts
and held the Raiders to three
hits . Sarah Russell and
Leslie Ward each doubled in
the loss.
River Valley play s host to
Rock Hill Monday. while
Gallia Academy entertains
Warren.
AiverValley 112 200 0 -664
G. Academy 000 100 1 - 222
McFann and Kr Aclkins. Tracewell (7). Lew1s
and Abrams. WP - McFann. LP - Lewis.

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SOUTHEAST
IMPORTS
582-2487 • 83

Colun~bua

Arizona Cardinals
Atlanta Falcons
Baltimore RaveQS
Sept.
Sept.
Sept
7 at Detroit
1 pm
7 at Dallas
4:15pm
7 at Pittsburgh 1 pm
14 Sea"l•
4:05pm
14 Washington 1 pm
14 Cleveland 1 pm
21 Green Bay 4:05pm
21 Tampa Bay t pm
21 at San Diego 4:15pm '
28 at St. louis 1pm
28 at Carolina
1 pm
28 Kanan City 1 pm
Oct.
Oct.
OC1
5

12
19
26

Nov.
2
9

at Da!las
B~Himore

B~ E

1 pm

San Franclaco 4:05 pri1
Cincinnati

at P!\sb&lt;Jrgf1

16 at Cleveland
23 St. Louis
30 at Chicago

4:05pm
1pm
1pm
4:05pm
1'Pm

Dec.

7 at san F!llrdsoo 4.ffi pm .

14
21

28

Carolina
at Seattle
Minnesota

5 Minnesota
1 pm
13 at St. Louis 9 pm
19 New Orleans 1 pm

4:15pm

4:15pm
4:15pm

4:05pm

26
Nov.

2

9
16
23
30

BYE
P~ll-lphla

4:15pm

at N_ .Y. Giants 1 pm .
at New 01a:ns 1 pm
Tennessee 4:15pm
at Houston
1 pm

Dec.
7
14
20
28

Carolina
8:30 pm
at Indianapolis 1 pm
at Tampa Bay 1::ID pm
·Jackaonville 1 pm

5 BYE
at Arizona
at Cincinnati
Denver
Nov.
2 Jackaonvllle
9 at St. Louis
16 at Miami

12
19
26

23 Sea"le
30

Dec.
7 Cincinnati
14 at Oakland
21
28

at Cleveland
Plnsburgh

GALLI-A AUTO SALE

Road
W. Don't p,.. .u,. 7Jul Cuetomer .. o We Pr•••ure Th•
'

I

Buffalo Bills
Sept.
7
14
21
28

New England
at Jacksonville
at Miami
Philadelphia

Nov

2 BYE
9 at Dallas

1 pm
B::J'&gt; pm

16 ~
23
30
Dec.
7
14

1 pm

I pm
1 pm

1 pm
1 pm
8:30pm
1 pm

Oct.
5 Cincinnati
12 at N.Y. Jets
19 Washington
26 at Kansas City

4:15p:n
tpm
1 pm

San Franc:lsco 1 pm

Houston
Ind ianapolis
at N.Y. G1ants

1 pm
4:15pm
1 pm
8:30prn

1 pm
8:3J pm

7 Jacksonville

1 pm_

14 atTampaBay

4:1:6~

21

28·
Oct

Chicago Bears
Sept.
7 at San Franasco 4:15 p-n
14 at Minnesota
8::J)p-n

21 BYE
29 G"'"" Bay

BYE
AU~tnta

1 pm

Oct

5 New Orleans

12 at Indianapolis
19 Tennessee
26 at New Or1eans
Nov.
2 at Houston
9 Tampa Bay
16 Washington
23 at Dallas

1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm

t4 atArizona

21 Detroit
28 at N.Y. Giants

5 Oakland

9 pm

1pm

12 at New Orleans 1 pm
19 atSeanle
4:15p-n

26 De1rolt

pm
4:1.5 r::m
pm
1 pm
1pm
1pm
1 pm
1 pm
3J Philadelphia 1p:n
.Dec.
4:15pm
83) p:n
7 atAtlanta

N.Y. Jets
at Tennessee 1 pm
21 Miami
1 pm
27 at New England 1:30pm

4:00 prn

Carolina Panthers
Sept

1pm

Nov.

2 Sen Diogo

1
1

9 at Detroit
16 St. Louis
23 at Denver
3J Arizona

Dec.
7 at Green Bay
14 Minnesota
21 Washington
28 at Kansas City

4:1 51111
1 pm

4:ffipm

1pm
1pm
1pm
4ffip:n
· 1 pm
1pm
1 pm

AU times Eastern
Home games In bold

_Cincinnati Bengals Cleveland Browns
Sept.
Sept.
1pm
7 Indianapolis 1 pm
7 Denver
4:15pn
14 atOakland
14 at Baltimore
1 pm
21 a1San Frandsoo 4:1 5pn
21 Pl"abUI'l!h 1 pm
1pm
28 at Oeveland
28 Cincinnati
1 pm
Oct.
Oct.
1 pm
5 at Buffalo
5 at Pmsburgh 8:3ll"l
12 BYE
12 Oakland
1 prn
19 Baltimore
1 pm
19 San Diego
1 pm
1 pm
26 Seattle
26 at New England 1 pm
Nov.

2 at Arizona
9 Houaton

4:C6pn
.. 1 pm

16 Kansas City 1pm
23 at san OiegJ 4:15p:n
30 at Pinsburgh
Dec.
7 at Baltimore

14 s.. Francloc:o

1pm

21 at St. Louis
48 Cleveland

1pm

1 pm

Nov.
2
9
16
23

30

BYE '
at Ka nsas City

1 prrl

Arizona
Pittsburgh
at Seattl e

1 pm
1 pm
4:15pm

.

Dec

1pm
1pm
1 pm
1pm

8 St. Louts

14 at Denver

21 Baltimore
28 at Cincinnati

9 pm

4:re ~
1 pm

1 pm

((e3)
Dallas Cowboys
Sept.
7 r.ttanta
4:15pm
15 at N.Y. Giants

21

9 pm

BYE

28 at NY Jets

Oct.

4:15pm

5 Arizona

1 pm

19 at Detroit

1 pm

f2 Philadelphia 1pm
26 at Tampa Bay
Nov.
2 Washington
9 Buffalo
16 ,- at New England
23 Carolina

2r Miami

1 pm
1 pm
4:15pm
8:30pm
1 pm

4:05pm

Dec .

-

Denver Broncos
Sept
1 pm
7 at Cincinnati
4:15pm
14 at San Diego
9pm
22.-.0akland
4:15pm
28 Detroit
Oct.
5 at Kansas City 1 pm
4:15pm
12 Plttabul'l!h
1 pm
19 at Minnesota
1 pm
26 at Baltimore
· Nov.
3 New England

9 BYE
16 San Diego

23 Chicago

30 at Oakland

9pm
4repm
4:repm
4:15 p:n

1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm

Miami Dolphins
Sepf.
'
1pm
7 Houaton
1 pm
14 at N.Y.Jats
8:3lpm
21 Bullalo
28 BYE
Oct.
5 at N.Y. Giants
12 at JacKsonviUe
19 New England
27 at San Diego
Nov.
2 lndlanapolla
9 at Tennessee
16 Baltimore
23 Waehlngton
27 at Dallas

Dec

fpm
1pm
1 pm
9pm
fpm
1 pm
t pm
8:3)pm
4ffipm

7
14
21
28

Kansae City
Clevelarid
at Indianapolis
at Green Bay

15 Philadelphia
21 at BuffalO
26 N.Y. Jots

9pm

1 pm
1 pm

.

4 : 1~pm

4:05pm
8:3Jpm
4:15pm

Minnesota Vikings
Sept.
7 at Green Bay

14 Chicago

21 at Detroit

28 San Francisco

Ocl
5 at Atlanta
12 BYE
19 Denyer
26 N. v. Giants
Nov.

2 Green Bay

lpm
83lp:n
lpm
I pm
1

pm

1 pm
1pm
all~

23 Detlolt

4ffip:n
4:15p:n
1 pm

30 .at St. Louis

11"'!

9 at San Diego
16 at Ojlkland

Dec.

7 at New England 4:15pm

Sept.
7
14
21
28

Sept
Arizona
at Green Bay
Minnesota

at Denver

Oct

Oct.
5 at San Francisco 4: 15 pm
12 BYE

19
26

Dallas
at Chicago

Nov.
2 Oakland
9 Chicago
16 i:H Seattle
23 at Minnesota
27 G!wnBay

7 Seattle

14 at Chicago
20 Kansas City ·
28 at Arizona

1 pm
1 pm

5pm
4pm

1p:n
1p:n
4:05p:n
9p:n

7 MlllMSOla
14 Detroit
21 at Arizcna
29 at Chicago

1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
4: 15 pm

5 Seattle

12

KamasCity
19 at St. Lous

1 pm

26 BYE
Nov.
2 at Milnesota

1 pm

1pm
1 pm
4:15pm
1 pm
123Jp:n

10 Philadelphia
16 aiTampaBay

23 San fn!ncloco
27 at Detroit

Dec.

Dec.

' 7 at Philapetphia
· 14 at Washington
21 N.Y. Giants
28 at New Orleans

Green Bay Pa~ers

Detroit Lions

Dec.

7 San Diego
14 at Kansas City
21 at Carolina
28 Sl. Louis

7 Chicago
14 at San Oego
22 at Daklard

1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm

28 Denver

1p:n
1p:n
1p:n
8:3Jpm
9pm
4:15pm
lpm
123Jpn
1pm
4:15 p:n
9p:n
4:15p:n

Houston Texans
Sept.

1· at Miami
1 pm
14 at New Orleans 1 pm
1 pm
2~
Kansas City
1 pm
26 JackSOr:'Ville

Ocl.
5 BYE
at Tennessee
N.Y. Jets
26 at indianapolis
Nov.
2 Carolina
12

19
9

16
23
30
Dec.
7
14
21
28

~~

Cincinnali

at Buffalo
New England
Atlanta
at Jacksonville
at Tampa Bay
Tennessee

Indianapolis

t pm
4:repm
4:15p:n
1
1
1
1
1

pm
pm
pm
pm
pm

14 at Philadelphia
N.Y. Jeta
2B at Washington

21

Oct.
5 Tenne11ee
12 N.Y. Olanta
19 at Miami
26 Cleveland
Nov.

3 at Denver
9
16
23
30

Dec.

4:15pm

14 Houston
21 at Tennessee
28 Indianapolis

1pm
lpm

Oct

1pm
lpm
1pm
1pm

5 ·at Carolina

9pm

BYE
Dallas
at Houston
at Indianapolis

1· Miami
14 Jacksonville
20 at N.Y. Jets
27 Buffalo

8:30pm

1pm
fp m

4:15 pm

lpm
8:30pm
1:30pm

12 Chicago
19 at Atlanta
26 Carolina
Nov.
2 at Tampa Bay
9 BYE
16 Atlanta
23 at Philadelphia
30 at WashingtOn
Dec.
7 Tampa Bay
14 N.Y. Giants
21 at Jackson11ille
28 Dallas

1 'pm
1 pm

8:30pm
1 pm
I pm
I pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
4:05 pm
I pm
8:30pm
1 pm
1 pm

15 Dallas
21 at Wash ington

28

Indianapolis Colts Jacksonville Jaguars Kansas City Chiefs
Sept.
,
Sept
Sept.
1pm
7 at Carolina
1 pm
7 at Cleveland
1pm
7 San Diogo
( pm
14 Buffalo
1 pm
14 ·Tennessee
1pm
14 Pl"oburgh
1pm
21 at Indianapolis 1 pm
21 Jacksonville
1 pm
21 at Houston
28 at Houston
1 pm
28 at New Orleans 8:30pm
28 at Baltimore
1pm
Oct.·
Oct.
Oct.
5 San Diego
4:05 p:n
6 at Tampa Bay 9pm
1pm
5 Denver
12 Miami
1 pm
1pm
12 Carolina
1 pm
12 at Green Bay
19 BYE
19 BYE
9pm
20 at Oakland
4:15pm 26 Tennessee 1 pm
26 Houeton
26 Bullalo
8:30pm
Nov.
Nov.
Nov.
1 pm
1pm
2 at Bahlmore
2 at Miam1
2 BYE
1pm
9 Indianapolis
9 at Jacksonv ille 1 pm
1 pm
9 Cleveland
4:05pm 16 at Tennessee 1pm
1 pm
16 N.Y. Jeta
16 at Cincinnati
fpm
23 at N.Y. Jets
1pm
4:15pm
23 at Buffalo
23. Oakland
30 Tampa Bay
.8:30pm 30 at San Diego 4:15pm
30 New England 1 pm
Dec.
7 at Tenne$See
14 Atlanta
21 Denver
28 at Houston

1 pm
I
1
1

pm
pm
pm

New England Patriots New Orleans Saints New York Giants
Sept
Sept.
· Sept.
1 pm
7 at Buffalo
7 at Seattle
4:15 pm
1 St. Louts
1 pm
9 pm
4:05pm

BYE

Oct.
5 Miami
1 pm
12 at New England 1 pm
19 Philadelphia
1 pm
26 at Minnesota 1 pm
Nov.
2 at N.Y. Jets
1 pm 9 Atlanta
1 pm
16 at Philadelphia 1 prn
24 at Tampa Bay 9 pm
30 Buffalo
1 p01
Dec.
7 Washington
1 pm
14 · at New Orlean s 8:30pm
21 at Dallas
1 pm
28 Carolina
4:05 pm

pm

1
1 pm ·

.8:30 p:n
1 pm

New York Jets
Sept
4 at Washington

9 pm
14 Miami
1 pm
21 at New England 1 pm
28 Dallas
4:15pm
Oct.
5 BYE
12 Buffalo
4:15pm
19 at Houston
4:05pm
26 at Philadelphia 4:15pm
·Nov.
1 pm
N.Y. Giants
9 at Oakland
4:15pm
16 at Indianapolis 4:05pm
23 Jacksonville 1 pm
Dec .
9pm
1 Tennessee
7 at Buffalo
4:15pm

2

14 Pittsburgh

20 New England
28 at Miami

1pm
830 pm
1pm

Dec.
7
14
21
28

Houston
at New England
New Orleans
at Atlanta

1 pm
1 Jim
1 pm
1 pm

·

Dec.
. 7 at Denver

14 Detroit

20 at Minnesota
28 Chl~ago

4:15pm
1 pm
5pm
1 pm

Philadelphia Eagles
Sept.
9pm
8 Tampa Bay
8:30pm
4:15pm 14 New England 4:15pm
21 BYE
9pm
1 pm
4:05pm 28 at Buffalo

Oakland Raiders
Sept
7 at Tennessee
14 Cincinnati

22 at Denver

28 Sen Diego
Ocf.
5 at Chicago
12 at Cleveland
20 Kansas City

26

BYE

Nov.
2 at Detroit
9 N.Y. Jeta

16
23

1 pm
1 pm
9 pm

Minnesota

1 pm
4:15pm
4:15pm
4:15pm

at Kansas City
4:15pm
30 Denver
Dec.
7 at Plnsburgh
1pm
4:05pm
14 Baltimore

Z2 G&lt;Hn Bay
28 at San Diego

-\

9pm
4 f5 pm

Oct
·5- Washington
12 at Dallas
19 at N.Y. Giants
26 N.Y. Jets
No11.
2 at Atlanta
10 at Green Bay
16 N.Y.Giants
23 New Orleans
30 at Carolina
Dec.
7 Dallas
15 at Miami
21 San Francisco
27 at Washington

4:15pm
1 pm
1 pm
4:15pm
4:15 pll)
9 pm

pm
pm
lpm

1
1

1 pm
9 pm
4:15pm
8:30pm

~ (~)1
Pittsburgh Steelers San Diego Chargers San Francisco 49ers · Seattle Seahawks
Sept
Sept.
Sept .
Sept.
7 Baltimore
1 pm
14 at Kansas City 1 pm
21 at Cincinnati
1 pm
28 TennesSH
1 pm

Oct.
5 Clevefand
12 at Den11er

8:30pm
4:15pm

BYE
1 pm
4:05pm
1 pm
9 pm
1 pm
1 pm

7 at Kansas City 1 pm
14 Denver
21 Balllmore
28 at OaklaniJ

Oct.
5 at Jacksonville 4:05pm
12 BYE
19 at Cleveland
1 pm

27 Mleml

Nov.
2
9
16

·
at Chicago
Minnesota
at Denver
23 Clnclnnad

30 Kansas City
DeC~

2f San Diogo

pm
1pm
4:05pm

28 at Baltimore

8:30pm

1

4:15pm
4:15pm
4:05 pin

7 at Delroit

14 Groen Bay
21 at Pinsburgh
2B Oakland ·

9pm
1 pm

405pm
4:05pm

4 15pm
4:15pm
pm
4:!5 pm
4:05pm
1

4:15pm

7
14
21
28

OCt
5

Chicago
at·,St. Louis
Clevelalld

at M1nnesota

Detroit

12 at Seattle

19 Tampa Bay
26 at Arizon a
Nov.
2 St. Louis

9 BYE
17 Pittsburgh
23 at Green Bay
30 at Baltimore

4:15pm
1 pm
4:15pm

7 New Orleans
14 atArizona
21 St. Louis

lpm

28

7
14
21
27

4:15 pm
4:05 pm
4:05pm

BYE

bet.

4:15 pm
8:30pm

5
12
19
26
Nov.

4:15 pm
4:05pm
4:15pm

9pm
1pm
tpm

4:05pm
Arizona
1pm
at Cincinnati
at Philadelphia 4:15pm
5pm
seattle

St. Louis Rams
Sept.
7 at N.Y. Giants 1 pm
14 San Fra"clsco 1 pm
21 at Seattle
4:05pm
28 Arizona
1 pm

Oct
at Green Bay
San Francisco
Chicago
at Cincinnati

2 Pittsburgh

Dec.

1 pm
8:30 pm
4:15 pm
1 pm
4:05 pm

' 9 at Washington 1 pm
415 pm
16 Detroit
1 pm
23 at Bal timore
4:15pm
30 Cleveland
Dec
7 at Minnesota
t pm
14 at Sl. Louis
1 pm
21 Arizona
4:15pm
27 at San Francisco 5 pm

5 BYE
13 Atlanta
9 pm
19 Green Bay
1 pm
26 at Pittsburgh 1 pm
Nov.
2 at San Frarcisco 4:15 pm
9 Baltimore
8:30 pm
i 6 at Chicago
1 pm
23 a; Arizona
4:05pm
30 Minnesota
1 pm
Dec.
8 at Cleveland 9pm

14 Ses"le
21 Clf:'lclnnatl
28 at Detroit

Tampa Bay Buccaneers . Tennessee Titans

Sept
a
14
21

28

- Sept.
at Philadelphia 9 pm
Carolina '
4:o5pm
at Atlanta
1 pm

6 Indianapolis

9 pm
12 at Washington 1 pm

atSanF......,

4:15pm

26 Dallal
1 pm
Nov.
2 New Orteana · 1 pm
1 pm
9 at Carolina
4:15pm
16 Gr"n Bay
9pm
24 N.Y. Giants
30 al J~ksQn.viJ!e 6:30pm

Dec.

pm

1
• 1 pm
1

pm

14 at Indianapolis
21 New Orteans
28 at Pittsburgh

BYE

Oct

19

7 Oakland

Ocl

5 at New England 1 pm
Houaton
1 pm

12
19

at Carolina
1 pm
26 at Jacksonville 1 pm
Nov.

2 BYE
9 Miami
16 Jacksonville
23 at Atlanta

Dec.
1 at N.Y. Jets

7 lndlonopotls

7 at New Orleans 1 pm

14 Houston

8:30pm
1 pm
1pm
1pm

20 r.tlanta

1:30 pm

1 pm

.t4

28 at Tennessee

1 pm

21 at Houston
28 Tampa Bay

Buffalo

1pm
1pm
4:15pm
9pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm
1 pm

Washington Redskins

.....

9pm
4 N.Y. Jete
1 pm
14 atAtlanta
21 N.Y. Giants 4:05 prri
28 New England 1 pm
Oct.
5 at Phila-delphia 4:15pm
12 Tampa Bay

19 at Buffalo
26- BYE
Nov.
2 at Dallas

9 Sea"lo
~ 6 at Carolina
23 at Miami

1
1

pm
pm

t pm

1 pm

1 pm
8:30pm

30 New Qrtnn• . 4:05pm
I pm
I pm
1 pm
27 Philadelphia 8:30pm

Dec.
7 at N.Y. Giants
14 Dallas
21 at Chicago

r.P

: SOURCE:

-'- " - s11 ,900

IMPORTS SU
Red &amp; Ro.\d Ready!

- 2 0 0 3 N a t i o n.a I. F o o t b a II League schedule

19

.'98 Wlndstar V•n LX

ti11I7, Auto, AM/FM/CD,

.

26 St. Louie
Nov.
2 at Seattle
9 Arizona
17 at San Francisco
23 at Cle11eland
30 Clnclnnitl
Dec.
7 Oakland
14 at N.Y. Jets

·oo DG dflt.oulltlde
Neo_n
4 Door,

sunbap m:imfli -~rntinrl • Page 83

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

-·

Prep Baseball

T 0 U A N A M E N T

Sunday, April 13, 2003

:Reds puzzled by
fading inscriptions
on new bricks
: CINCINNATI (!\P) - The it."
:Cincinnati Reds are trying to
The 5,000 bricks were laid
·figure out why inscriptions in November and covered
·paid for by fans who bought with boards to protect them
brick pavers at the team's durin~ the final stages of connew ballpark are already structton. The Reds noticed
-becoming illegible.
the problem when the bricks
: Fans paid $75 or $150, were uncovered just before a
:depending on size, for the public open house at the new
:right to place an inscription stadium on March 22.
·of their choice on the bnck
Don
Vulgamore,
of
pavers in Crosley Terrace, the Springboro, bought a brick
main entrance to Great for his father that reads: "To
-American Ball Park that our father, Gary Vulgamore .
:Opened two weeks ago. We love you dad.''
:About half l!f the inscriptions Don Vulgamore attended
:are now nearly unreadable, an exhibition · game last
·while others remain pri stine. month against Cleveland. He
"It's . weird," sa1d Amy looked for the brick paver,
Schneider. director of promo- found it and was disappoint,tions and game-day entertain- ed.
·
·ment for the Reds. "It could
"It is very difficult to read,"
:be· something in the b(icks he said. "My dad has bec;n a
:seeping out, it could be d1rt, tl Reds fan hi s whole life, so it
:could be a chemical used in was di sappointing. But we've
the cleaning process. .
. got tickets on Father 's Day,
"I don't know what to tell and it sure would be nice if
people; other than be patient the situation was fixed by
with us. We're working on then ."

E-mail your sports news to:
sports@mydallytribune.com.
sports@mydailysentinel.com.
or sports@mydailyregister.com

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•

Page 84 • i;?;lunbil)' m:m,trs -i;?;lrntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis~ Point Pleasant

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Dill~n ,a. no-s~o~ for

BY JOE KAY

Associated Press

"They should look
up 'voluntary' in
the dictionary. I
volunteered to be
with my family this
weekend and if
anybody there ·
thinks anything is
more important
than my people,
they better talk to
·me. If it's mandatory, I'm there."

CINCINNATI
First.
Takeo Spike, _ N&lt;&gt;W. Corey
Dillon.
The Cincinnati Bengals
opened their first minicamp
under coach Marvin Lewis
with one notable absence
Friday - their record-setting running back.
Dillon is skipping the voluntary weekend workouts,
'which represented Lewis ~
. first chance to get together
wit h his entire team. Lewis
spoke with him several times
- Bengals' running back
recently. and figured he wasCorey Dillon
n·~. geing to at~encl.
. . . 1 When it became clear that
, W~ll. I don t know Lt dts.-. Spikes wasn't going to
.1pp01~ted would ,, be_ the_ . change
his mind. the
word. Le_wts sa_td . I ktnd of Bengals let him leave for
expected Lt.· We II mov.e tor- Buffalo.
'.vard. I thmk our guys are
Spikes. was· the leader of
IL~.e w~th Lt. .
the defense. Dillon is the
. We re gomg to be a go_od team's career rmhi ng leader
football team. and. we_re and only the fLwrtb player in
gomg to have people JOmmg NFL h-istory to rush for
us. along the w~y. whLc.~ IS 1.000 vards in cac \1 of his
goLng to be the tun o.t 11.
first six season,.
The rest nl Ddlon s teamDillon also is moodv - he
matesn~ade a ~OI.nt _to be _on re fused to talk to reporters
hand tor the teams trrst ottr- for most of last' season. as
eta\ gath ~m1g under tts ne~ the Bengah struggled to a 2coach.Dtllon told the team s 14 record that was the wor't
Web ~He late Fnday that he in franchise history.
doesn t have a pr?blem wllh
Lewis has tried to acce ntuLewis. but he preterred stay- ate the positive during his
mg Ill Los Angeles wlth ill s three months as head coac h,
fam~ly.
..
.
,
. and cut off questions about
Dtllon w:LS upset that lm his missing run ning back.
no-show W&lt;LS getttng publtEverything else went as·
Cl~_ed. .
.
planned during workouts.
The_Y shou ld look up vo l.~ which were struct ured much
untary rn ~.he dLctronary. differently than those under
Dtllon satd .. _I volunteered to Dick LeBeau and placed
be v,nh my famdy thts week- more emphasis on detail.
end and II anybody there
Different, but enough to
~hLnks anythtng LS more make a difference''
~
tmponant tl:an my peopl7.
"To say there's something
th~y ~etter t~lk to me,-, If l1 s earth -shatterin g or mrndmandator~: I m there.
blowing about what's goi ng
The
ILrst-year
coach on now, it's too early.'' quarthou~ht Sptkes would JOtn terback Jon Kitna sa id . "It's
htm .m trytng to ~ebutld the Day 1. We'll see what hapNFL s worst_ te~m, but the pens down the road."
lrneba~ker dt~n t . want any
For the last 12 years. the
part of Lt. L:wts trr_ed to con~ Bengal s have gone down . a
vmce Sptkes that. thtn gs dea!i end. They have n't had a
would be dLIIeren':_ and the winning record since JI.JI.JO.
team used Jts transttton tag and the 2- 14 finish prompted
on hun .
owner Mike Brown to bring

in Lewis ami give him more
&lt;Luthority than hi s predeces.
sors.
He ha s tried to change as
much as he can. from a refurbished weight room \Vit h
inspirational messages painted on the walls to an overhaul of the coaching staff.
Assistants Ken Anderson.
Kim ' Wood, AI Roberts and
Tim Krumrie· are among
th o~e who have left.
The front office remains
the same, and has a history
of reining in coaches if
things don't go right. Brown
also has a habit of meddling
in quarterback decisions. so·
Lewis cou ld be in for some
surpri .~es if things don't go
right.
'
His most important job at
the outset is to convince
players that he 's in control
an d things will be different.
During a team meeting, he .
gave a presentation off his
a noticeable
laptop change for a pencil-andpaper organization.
·
"He preached loyalty
toward teammates, to ; be
together as one," offensive
tackle Willie Anderson said .
"He preached on the John
Wooden succes s pyramid.
He's a· well-disciplined,
we ll-educated man and
wants hi s players to be that
way.''

While winning I 0 national
b&lt;isketba\1 championships in
12 years at UCLA, Wooden
refined his Pyramid of
Success. which .includes 15
building blocks.
By
contrast.
LeBeau
opened minicamp last year
by donning a Superman outfit. bursting through a
"Bengals Super Bowl 2002"
banner and lip-syncing to
Little Richard 's "Slippin'
and a Slidin"' for several
minutes.
''I'm not going to predict
anything, but fans can rest
assured it 's being run differAnderson
said.
ently,"
"That's one of the things
people wanted to know, if
there was going to be any
change. It 's a big change."

BY

KEITH

ATLANTA - Atlanta coach Terry Stotts
made his team stick to the plan, even atier the
Hawks fell behind the Cleveland Cavaliers in
the ftrst quarter.
"Coach said we just needed to get up by I0,
and they'd fold,." Hawks forward Ira Newble
said. "They didn't want to play if they didn't
have a chance to win. So we just had to get it
together."
Sill different players scored during Atlanta's
26-0 run in the first quarter, and the Hawks
went on to beat Cleveland I09-89 Friday night.
The Cavs have lost 20 straight on the road
and fell to 15-64 overalL They dropped all four
games to the Hawks this season.
"We weren't even in the gym tonight,"
Cleveland coach Keith Smart said. "Our guys
think they can do it with one jump shot. One
guy thinks that, then five do, and pretty soon
you're blown out."
Dion Glover had 20 poin.ts, and Theo Ratliff
and Shareef Abdur-Rahim scored 17 apiece in
only three quarters as the Hawks put all ftve
· starters. in double figures for the second straight
game.
They won their fourth in a row at home. and
fourth out of five overalL Glenn Robinson
missed his · second straight game with a
strained Achilles' tendon, and Darvin Ham sat
out with the flu.
. With its 33rd victory of the season, Atlanta
matched its total from last year.
Reserve guard lierre Brown had season
highs with 15 points and 30 minutes for
Cleveland, and Ricky Davis and Jumaine
Jones had 13 apiece. With three games leti. the
Cavaliers need one more victol)' to avoid ·tying
the worst season in franchise htstory.
Cleveland went 15-67 in 1970-71 - its
inaugural season - and again in 1981-82..

Zydrunas llgauskas said.
The Cavs took a I0-2 lead in the first quarter, forCing Stotts to call a timeout. Ratliff then
hit a jumper to cut the lead to stx and. dunng
the next eight minutes. Cleveland missed 12
straight sho\S and five free throws. and also
made five turnovers.
.
·
-Jason Terry had seven points during the
Hawks' run, and Ratliff and Abdur-Rahim
each scored six. With 32 seconds left in the
quarter. and his team down 28-10, Smart called
atimeout.
·
Terry then stole the inbound pass and fed
Alan Henderson for a wide-open layup, but the
ball rolled off the rim, and Cleveland raced to
the Other end. Brown hit a jumper, part of a 3for-4 half for him, to end the drought. .
'"We came out and got a little lead and then
gave up a 26-0 run," Jlgauskas said. "When
you're playing on the road, it's impossible to
come back frolll that."
It got so bad for the Cavs that Davis complained about the rim after he missed a free
throw. Terry stepped up the line and shook his
head, signaling that he didn't see a· problem.
and the referees apparently agreed.
After the quarter. a maintenance crew
brought out a ladder and a level to check the '
basket, and they also gave it the OK. Cleveland
finished 7-for-15 from the line.
"Normally, we are a decent free throw shooting team," llgauskas said. "Not tonight."
·Unfortunately for the Cavs, the remaining
three quarters didn't get much better. Their
deficit grew to 30 in the third quarter, and only
a late run kept the final · score a bit more
respectable.
"We've emphasized defense and playing
hard but the truth is, I think we've become a
better offensive team in the second half of the
season and that's had a domino effect," Stotts
said. "We've played better offense and we've
played better defense because of it.''

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1
6
tt
16
21

Ruallc dWtiiF.g
Snooped
Phll1lly 118m

Mrili lnlt
22 Sat lof e peillar

23 lnuc:t • •
24 M-. Wile»
25 Hot I bit tipey
28 Act of b!Mlhing
28 Bini of prey
28 -AYrv

30 K'omono Slllh
32011ltear
33 Colt ol yam

105 Crirrnl
107 Javtln
110 Simian CnlllkJre
ttt Walk hlltngly

t -Rlca
2 Bittef drug
3 The Good Book
4 ·- Gol a Secrll' .
5 Adding dMflOI
6 Tlme of year
7 Farm irrclltmlnt

1t301washlpt
115 Oletrea Ctlllellers
117 Beige
tt8 Trar tlpCWied
t20 San- Oblapo
122 Fall rro.
123 Fll1k&gt;g
125 French friend
126 Masonry lrr1Jiemenl
128 Bar bill

=~tnlt -

t 0 Mrs. An:hie Blroker
tt Polltr
12 Rodent
't3 Eye part
14 llloughl for1h
t5 Scenrlln8'lllnl
16 Blltilhp
t 7 Ootong ia one
t 8 Flah with hook
and line
19 Tooth
20 lroo
27 Street diiiOIIler
31 ~ftre
34 Ooclrtna (dw)
37 Lawyers' org.
39Klln
40 Bill
42 Genuila
« Put on the payroll
46 Opera by Verdi
47 SitS1a
49 Use a blue pencil
51 DeStiny
52 Tow playor

t30T~

132 New YDIII mdUn
t33 Ringe of knoot1edge
134 Consumed

35 -Vegas
36 Bntdored
38 Soon,

135Go,INml

oltHI)it

41 Frost
-43 C...lld laller
« That gltfs
45 Shopper'• &lt;lelight
48 Brou;lllll bay
50 Roman 1051
52 "Tht Thomel
Crown-'

137 Rusllc

139 Belelt
141 Psychlc'sabiHty
(abbr.)

143 ·- Mamer'
145 LJnge&lt;ed
147S1alce
150 Undole, 10 poetS

152 - Stariey Gardner

55 Unwnecl

..mall

DOWN

100 Uken ·
103 Uoinlra at _ ,

Contour

154 Tee-llee C0U11n

67 Pop
58 Hutlly-p!y
62 MerquH nob
63 Flft
65 So" loocl for blblts
67 Klndlld
69 Sowld system
70s.71 lnthepul
72 CNrey or Morrllon
74 Lolly
76 Gllme
n Floor CCMIIngs
71l Comll*t
81 EIIMm
83 Stale ol mind
85 Puaowoy

At

Sixth Grade

155CdoltUmnt
159 Gabor or Perm
160 Jeweled t.dbllnd
182 OIJnmy
, 84 Anc:ien1
168 Chit! at a bullfl~
167 Name

531~101'

173 Sllgl wtrilper
17&amp; Conlalllavorlng
176 Food l!cm hMVIfl

1n Btto-

54 Blue tlow8f (hypll.)
56 t.fttary rank
59 F1aj)jack
60 Nest on a helghl
61 Obeorv8d

118 IQld ol prinllr

84 Wander
68 Bowling .., •

t71lF~

68--o·-6t s.tllngveael

169 Vtrybravt

1eo 1cy 1111n
181 Clotl1worl!el11
182 Abrulvl ma1811ai

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Fourth Grade
Sunroot Auto. Trans., Tilt Cruise,
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tOO Social ctau
101 I.Uical drama
102 FlghtleM bird

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Otsltoya
1t2 Fnll !dono •
114 Prorrlae
116 Kind ol delvery
1t9 lllrd sound
121 Indian garmanl
t09

124 Counterwelglt
127Prlntmauures
128 &amp;rde
131 Fanatic
132 Antit&gt;lh
138 I'Jotdve hlll:lgear
138 Conlerr(&gt;1LI:&gt;UI cry
140 Toicyo. long ago
142 Luou food
1-43 Program
In ins1llrnen1s
144 Gin fta\iOrlng
146 - liChalar
147 Flower pari
148 01 sheep
149 Lustrous fll&gt;r1c
151 TropicellriH
153 Antelope
156 Charm-!ldlool reaul1
157 Aot-raslslln!IIIOOCI

Arst Place -

Kyger Creek

Second Place -

Bidwell-Porter

Locally Ownea, Auto-Trans.,~
Air Conditioning Er More!

Third Grade

2001 PT Cruiser

158 Oistrus~
160 River in EfiVIInd
161 Top-notch (hyph.)
163 'Iliad' scene
t85 Valley
188 Drug lttt1111
170 Opp. of s.s.w.
171 C..vet
172 Go wrong

174 Uncle-

13 Flmlty meonbor
75 Throw In a curve
7ti~

86 KMII'

·--

SOF!Jifr~

8t -ofTroy
82-'Boltro' ~
84 Club c:hlrgN
87 Spoken
at Blut
9t Nolting
93 EliCk ol fit fliCk
gs \VIlrt)llng 1011\d
98 Olwn goddlll

Low Miles ana Locally ownea
First Place -

Kyger Creek

Second Place -

241/2 Ft. Terry Camper

Bidwell-Porter

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Southwestern

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

•

-· _....

~------.
•

~-

--~·

--·.

-

BS

WEEKlY SPECIAlS

BIDWELL RINKY DINK-TOURNAMENT

Cavs skidding into
Lew1s f1rst m1mcamp final week of season

~unbm• 'Q::imi'S -~rnhnrl • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

•

•

�'

·Prep Basketball

usee task

Spring Valley's MOore
,named W.Va. player of year

/"'.

f9rce proposes
drastic changes
BY JOHN MARSHALL

BY

RANDY PAYTON

f(!)r the Associated Press
~. HUNTINGTON. W.Va. If ever
rljere were a player who exemplified the
&amp;dage that one game does not a season
make, that player would have to be
Spring Valley's Brandon Moore.
•The 6-foot-3 sen io~ guard endured his
worst outing of the season, hitting just
four of his 20 f1eld goal attempts ;md
aommitting four turnovers. as the topranked Timberwolves lost to Martinsburg
in the opening round of state tournament
fllay.
But for those who had the opportunity
t~ watch Moore play on a nightly basis,
lus final pe1fonnance of the 2002-03
tampaign was clearly not indicative of
hls season overall.
; ·"I think the state tournament loss
_shouldn't diminish what he's accom;plished," said Spring Valley head coach
.(lary Norris. " I think his overall num:bers, his conduct, and his attitude are
·extremely important, too. Everybody we
played was complimentary of the way he
·played and the way he acted on the

floor."

_ As a result of his exemplary play,
:Moore has been named the winner of the
;Bill Evans Award, presented annually to
•the boys' basketball state player of the
:year by the West Virginia Sports Writers
Association.
·: He'll receive the honor at the association's annual Victory Awards Dinner
~May 4 at the Westchester Village in
:Fainnont.
: Moore averaged 19.4 poiQts. 3.6
:rebounds, and 2.9 assists per game for the
·JVolves, who won a school-record 23
~;ames and made their second state tour:aament appearance in the school's five:~ear history.
::-Moore connected on 50.3 percent of
;))is field goal attempts. 42.6 percent of
;¥s three-point tries. and was an 82.9 per:•c:nt fr~e throw shooter for the season.
:fl:is 81 three-point goals were second
·~nly to Ravenswood's Brett Rector, who
·whished the season with 82.
:~:"To win this award is definitely an
and I appreciate _i~ very much."

Moore said. ''When you think that there '.s
almost 150 teams in the state and only
one player gets picked, it's pretty important. But you can' t win an award like this
without having good teammates, and I
was fortunate to have a bunch of them."
Moore. who'll continue his career at
Eastern Kentucky University as the
state's lone Division I signee this year,
failed to miss a start over the course of
his prep career and finished with 1.492
career points.
The two-time Class AAA first team allstate selection reached double figures in
74 of his 92 hi gh school outings. scoring
20 points or more on 26 occasions. His
career-high of 31 points came in a win at
George Washington last December.
"I think he 's at a different level. and the
interest thill various colleges showed in
him illustrate that," Norris said. "In this
day and ag~ it 's a rarity that someone
comes in and starts as a freshman, especially in the conference we're in
(Mountain State Athletic Conference). To
come in and contribute the way he has
over the last four years, I think that says
a lot."
Yet for all of his accomplishments this
season, and in his car~er, Moore continues to lind himself trying to escape the
shadow of doubts about his abilities
caused by the off-night in the state 's
biggest spotlight event.
"People are entitled to their opinion,"
he' said. "But that game was ~razy. We
felt like we were ready to play going in,
but nothing went our way. We all got
open shots, we just couldn't hit them.
Looking back, it's like it wasn 't meant to
be."
Moore finished ahead of Ted
Talkington of Class AA champion
Magnolia in the voting , while Matt
Shamblin of Class AAA titli st
Parkersburg South was a distant third.
Talkington, a junior guard, led the state
in scoring at 29.5 points per game. He
also averaged ti ve rebounds per contest
for the Blue Eagles.
Shamblin, a senior guard, averaged
18.4 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 3.7 assists
per game for the Patriots during the 'regular season. He was dominant throughout

Associated Press

Evans Award winners
1972: Warren Baker, Greenbrier East (WVU)
1973: Denny Hams, Charleston (West Virg1n1a State)

1974: Maurice "Mo~ Robinson , Welch (WVU)
1975: Sam Brooks. Charlestor:t \LOuisville)
1976: Will Johnson, DuPont (Concord)
t 9n ~ Jeff Schneider. Clarksb.Jrg Wash. INing (Va Tech)
1978: Schneider

1979. Earl Jones, Mount Hope (U. of Distnctof Columbia)
1980: David Daniel. Sherman (University of Charleston)
198i. Jim Miler. Princeton (Virginia)
1982: Gay Elmore, South Charleston (VMI)
1983: Mark Cline. Williamson (Wake Forest)
1984: Herbie Brooks, Mullens (WVU)
1985:. Bimbo Coles. Greenbrier East (Virginia Tech)
1986: Greg Bell. DuPont (Tennessee)
1987:Tracy Shelton, Oak Hill (WVU)
1988: Anthony Strolher. Williamson (Garden City. Kan )
1989: P.G. Green, Oak Hill (WVU )
1990: Marsalis Basey. Martinsburg (WVU)
199i · Matt Gaudio. Brooke (Penn State)
1992: Jared,Prickett, Fairmont Senior {Kentucky)
1993: Ryan Culiceno. Woodrow Wilson (James Madison)
1994: Randy Moss, DuPont (Marshall footbaH) and
Anthony Scruggs, Woodrow Wilson (Fork Union, Va.)
1995: Moss
1996: Cornelius Jackson •.Oak Hill (Tennessee/Marshall)
1997: Rafael Cruz. Wheeling Park (Massachusetts)
1998: Tamar Slay. Woodrow Wilson (Marshall)
1999: Brett Nelson, St. Albans {Florida)
2000: Greg Davis, Tug Valley (University of Charleston)
200i . Patrick O'Malley, George Washington (RichmOnd)
2002: MarX Panon. Gabell Midland (Marshall)
2003;Brandon Moore , Sp r~ ng Valley (Eastern Kentucky)

.
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Sunda~Aprill3,2003 ·

.

Restoration -Committee·restocks··cheat River
· KINGWOOD, W.Va. (AP) - Rick
. Perry and his friends picked a good
day to !ish in Preston County, a day
when the. Cheat River was being
stocked wtth 10-pound trout.
"A couple of these trout are a lot
bigger than what the state stocks,'.'
PefTY said. "We went to Bruceton
Mills this morning, and we fished for
a little bit and we decided to come try
the Cheat."
Stmting out that morning, Perry didn't know that the Cheat River
Restoration Committee, a volunteer
group that stocks th,e river, ~as conductmg ns second stockmg &lt;it the year.
The dates are closely guarded secrets.
When word has gotten out, up to 60
cars and trucks have lined up behind
the stocking truck.
·
Two Kingwood companies, WFSP
Radio and Preston Distributors, paid
$300 each for an additional 375
pounds of brood trout in the recent
stocking.
"These trout range from probably 4
up to I0 pounds, which amounts to

about .6() trout," WFSP owner and
Cheat River Restoration Chairman Art
G\:orge said. "They were scattered the
whole length of the 12 miles we
stock."
Indian Lake Fisheries of Elkview
brought the brood trout, along with
175 pounds of brook trout, 175
pounds of brown, !50 pound of gold
and I ,)70 pounds of rainbow trout.
The youngsters of Mountaineer
.Challenge Academy did the heavy
w'ork, hauling buckets of fish down
.the riverbanks and dumping them into
the sparkling waters of the Cheat
south of Pringle Run.
This is the second stocking this year,
with six more planned. Last ~ear the
committee raised $30,000 m state
grants and donations ranging from $20
to $1,000, to pay for the fish . This year
it has enough for the S\ockings again,
· "but the donatiOns have completely
stopped," George said.
•
That puts more heat oil two ·of those
who watched the stocking, Delegate
Larry Williams, D·Preston, and Sen.

Jon Hunter, D-Monongalia, who
helped get $22,000 from the Budget
Digest for the project last year and
have requested the same in the next
fi seal year.
"I understand tiJat there may be a little less Digest money," to go around in
the coming year, Hunter said. "And, of
course, who knows what will be cut.
But this is an awful popular program."
News of the project flows from
angler to angler, and proponents say it
has hooked the local economy.
"We know .that there's been. some
people in here from Maryland who
bought licenses to fish," George said.
"I know the state's gelling a little
payback on this too, through the sale
of trout stamps," said Williams, whose
family runs a small store. "I've got
people buying trout stamps who never
did before."
WVU Professor Randall S.
Rosenberger of the Division of
Resource Management surveyed 108
anglers last year for the cot1111llttee and
the WVU Extension Service's

I

Aquaculture Project. His rer.ort,
issued in December 2002·. isn l as
ringing an endorsement for the eco'
nomic impact of the stocking as the
committee had hoped.
·
Ninety-three percent of those surveyed hve in-state, 92 percent buy a
state fishing license and 96 percent
buy trout stamps. Most, 93 percent,
sa1d they fi sh primarily in West
Virginia and spend an average 'of $17
per trip to the Cheat River.
The study concluded that, based on
an average of 6.39 trips per year to the
river, each angler generated a consumer surplus of $275. Local anglers
would also save an estimated $64 per
year in out of. pocket expenses by
fishing closer to home, generating
about $102 per year to spend on other
things.
Rosenberger concluded the total
annual benefit of the program is
$320,000.
Hunter is hoping for economic
impa ~t of another sort as well. He
notes it cost the state $4-$6 to raise a

trout at a state hatchery, and the hatcheries are limited to 750,000 pounds.of
production a year. Private fish farms
can.produce fish for half that cost, he
said, and are successfully raising
trout, salmon, char and bluegill.
"So it makes ·sense for us that
instead of building a new hatchery,
that what we ought to do is buy from
private hatcheries in West Virginia,"
Hunter said. "We can use an!;! sell
every fish that we raise in West
Virgmia, so why not ,promote aquaculture?"
·
·
He predicted "If we could raise the
number of trout we put in (statewide)
to a million and get the others from
private aquaculture, we'd help not
only our tourist industry but also our
aquaculture."
Aside from the economic pros and
cons, it's hard to find a more feel good
project.
"Everyone's enjoyed it," said committee member Bob Martin, 75, as he
directed traffic around the stockin~
truck. "Everyone feels good doing it.

Weekly Ohio fishing report
CO LUMBUS, Ohio tAP} - The weekly
llshlng report provided by the Division of
Wildlife of the Ohio Department of Natural
Ae~ources .

CENTRAL OHIO
• Alum Creek Lake {De laware County) Shallow water areas away from the main
channel are good locations to fish for
crappies (minimum size is 9 inches). Use
minnows beneath a bobber at depths of 3
to 8 teet around submerged structure tor
best results . The upper. end of the lake
near Howard Road Is the best area to
locate white bass at th is lime of the year.
Slowly troll medium or large crank baits at
depthS of 6 to 9 f&amp;et near the dam for
muskellunge.
Hargus Creek Lake (Pickaway County} Crappies measuring 7 to 9 Inches are
found In th is 132·acre take near
Ctrcle&gt;JIIIe . Use jigs and minnows fished
around shoreline areas with submerged
structure lor best resu lts . Try using small
spinners, plastic worms and live baits In
the upper hall of the lake when seeking
largemouth bass. Bluegills and channel
catfish also offer good llshtng action. Over
10,000 yearling channe l catfish we re
stocked last fall. Electric motora only.

excellent at this lake. Crappies, 8 to 11
incnes In length, are being caught on
small plastic jigs. Jig vertically for crap·
pies In about 4 teet of water around brush
l!lnd docks. Saugeye averaging 15 Inches
In length or laJger are hitting twister lalla
tipped with minnows. Saugeye can be
caught along moat rlprap or rocky 'botroms .
Dillon Reservoir Spillway (Musklngl(m

"Now you can think about your call,
not how long it is."

Coun1y)- Waler Ieveii&amp; a little low In !his
area and rolly In clarity. Water temperature is 49 degrees.. Saugeye fishing Is just
coming on at this area with average alze
catches being 10 to 12 Inches In length;
however. acme fish up to 18 Inches and 3
1/2 pounds haVe been reported. Shor8
anglers are using yellow, white, green, or
chartreuse jig heads with tails.

OHIO RIVER

Jefferson 1C.nunty - Below the New
Cumberland Lock and Dam, anglera are
catching Sauger, white bass, and catflah
from thl) Ohio side of the river. Catcl'les of
up to the legal Umlt of ten aauger have
been reported. Minnows or white Jigs
tipped with night crawlers are the pre·
ferred bait.
Belmont County - Water level In this
SOUTHWEST OHIO
area is normal, but rlalng due tO recent ·
Adams Lake (Adams County)- Rainbow
rains. Water clarity Ia slightly muddy.
trout are being caught along the shore In
Anglers are catching sauger, striped
about 3 to 4 feet 9epths. Use a number 2
bass. smaUmouth bass, and white ban In
or number 4 long·shanked hook tipped
with wax worms, corn, minnows, or Powe r the area of the Pike Island Dam, on the
pier, or within 1/4 mile of the dam. Most
•Bait fished under a bobber about 18 to 24
inches deep. Enjoy fishing along the successful balta have been Jig and minnow cast and retried slowly or vertlcal\y
south side of the lake by the walking path.
jigged
off the pier or blade baits Jigs vertl·
Stonelid ~ake (Clermont County) Anglers are catching rainbow trout near celly of the pier. Stripers are hitting on tap
the beach area and marina . Use char- water plugs In the evening just before and
•treuse or orange colored Berkley Power after dark. Smallmouth and white baas
'Bait or mealworms on a number 2 or a are being caught at that time also.
Channel catfish are being caught almost
~Aumber 4 long-shanked hook .
Cowan Lake (Clinton County) • Ang lers anywhere akmg the river on chicken liver.
,are catching crappi~s 4 to 8 feet deep use Monroe County - River condWons In this
&lt;minnows as bait. Fish near the .handicap area are at normal flOw, but slightly
ftshing pier located on the Beachwood muddy with water temperature around 52
;Road off of State Route 350 on south side degrees . Fishing pressure is light, but
10f lake or at the dam on State Route 730. anglers are catching channel catfish on
chicken liver and hot dogs, or night
.
SOUTHEAST OHIO
.Timbre Ridge Lake (Lawrence County)- crawlers fished on the bottom .
Water le&gt;Jel is normal with water tempera- Adams. Clermont. &amp; Hamilton Counties
'lure betng sa degrees. Trout fishing is -Water conditions along these counties
. excellent at this lake with catches up to 13 Is high and muddy with little activity being
inches in size . The best bait is 32 ounce reported.
black and yellow jigs tipped with yellow TIP OF THE WEEK - There Is no
·absolute" bait lor trout fishing this spring.
Power B811 or ·meal worms.
When you stop by the grocery to pick up
Piedmont Lake (Belmont County } Wate r clarity IS clear in most ot the lake, snacks for the fishing trip, pick up a can ol
but murky around Ieeder creeks. Water corn and a package of Velveeta cheese.
·level is normal, but rising due to recent These two baits work as well as meal
:ra ins. Water t'emperature is 5~ degrees. worms, salmon eggs, or any other type of
Creppie and saugeye fishing is good to bait.

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'"'W.Va. Fishing Report

2002
DODGE GR.
CARAVAN,

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prised of independent directors.
·
• Having the CEO and another designated person speak tor
the nrganization to prevent media leaks. Board members and
USOC emplqyees would by subject to an ethics violation tor
speaking to the media about USOC business,
• Creating an Olympic Asseli1bly to serve in advisory role
to the bom·d.
The task force recommended the bomd be comprised of
four independent directors. two nominated by the USOC's
national goveming bodies. two nominated by the Athletes
Advisory C'urnmittee and one U.S. IOC member.
The group detined an independent director as someone who
has, or has had, an immediate t~m1i l y member connected with
the Olympic movement the previous two ye~u"S. That includes
relationships with companies that do business with the USOC.
The task Ioree also called tor a stronger ethics policy and
improving its system for identifying p&lt;:&gt;tential contlicts of
interest.
The task Ioree w(ll take 'uggestions from board members
on Sunday. then present a tina! document to a Senate commission also looking at resuuctwing the organi7l,ttion.
1l1e group plans to make &lt;!djustnlents atier the Senate commission issues its recommendations in June, then will present
its tina! recommendations at a bom-d meeting in September or
Nov~mber. ,

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nurnin:lling and govemance, and an ethics committee com-

Soultl's state tourney run, however. aver31.7 points and 8.7 rebounds in
three-outings·.
1
Moore now has his sights set on the
start: of his coll ege career and the
prospect of playing in the Ohio Valley
Conference .for the Colonels, who are
coached by former University of
Kentucky standout Travis Ford.
''I'm certainly looking forward to 'eeing how I' ll do at that level ,'' Moore sa id.
"It's been a lot of fun playing here and
I'll never forget thi s, but I'm starting all
over now. I'm going to approach it with
the attitude of working hard and showing
what I can do."
Norris has no doubts regarding
Moore's chances of succe'ss.
"He's as good as anybody I've ever
coached," the veteran coach said.
"Eastern Kentucky's getting a good player who'll fit in well with the style of
game they play. They're also getting a
very good student and an excellent person as welL"

Norris Northup Dodge
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

.

agio~

COMMUNITY

AUTOMOTIVE

FORT WORTH. Texas - A proposal by an intem;~ task ·
fl)rce calls ti)r a urastic reduction in the U.S. Olympic
Committee's board of director&gt; and al~J lishmcnt of its executive committee.
During a P''"entalion Saturday. the task force proposed
trimming the 123-member bomd down to nine and eliminating the 21 -member gqveming exenuivc L'!lllllllittee.
"In my 12 years of service to the Olympic Committee, this
has been the most signitkant meeting." acti ng president Bill
Manin saitl. "The one that had the most red meat and not
sprouts ami tofu on the agcnua:·
The task force was created in Februmy atier three months of
turmoil led to .;ight resignations and drew the ire of Congress.
The group's proposals. if adopted, would be t11c most
sweeping changes in the 25 -year history of the organit.ation
ch;u·gcd with running America's Olympic program.
The proposed changes inclutle:
• Giving tl1c chief executi ve broader powers and holding
that person responsible t[Jr the success of the organi7.ation.
• Eliminating the position of presidcm and creating a chair.
of the board to oversee 1]:lc nine-pe1-srm group.
• Limiting board members' tcm1s to six yem'S. ·
• Rewording the USOCs mission statement so the focus is
on Olympic athlcles and winning medals instead of"being all
things to all people: ·
• Creating fom bomd com mittees: audit. compensation.

1970: Charles Hickox, Parkersburg (West Virg1n1a)
19 7~ . Bill Lindsay, Charles Town (Fa1rmont State)

Page B7

oon

'
Sunday,
April13, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

CHAR LESTO N. W.Va. (AP)- The West mouth, have been caught using worms.
.Virginia fishing report released Thursday Crappie are also starting to hit minnows.
·by the Division of Natural Res ources:
STONEWALL JACKSON Lake is
BEECH FORK - LaKe is about 4 feet approximately 1 loot be low summer
.below summer 1ecreatio n le&gt;Jel. The ale- recreation level. Lake and taitwater are
vation of th e lake will rise daily this milky. Fishing has been lair w!th the
,month as the Corps ot Engineers brlngs water temperature on ita way up. A few
the lake level up to summer pool. Lake bass are being caught around bridges
and taitwater are muddy. Saugey.e and with live bait. .Crappie are also being
walleye f1shing will be fair while fishing picked up on live minnows around the
rac~y structures with j19.~ tipped with
tailwaters.
chartreuse grubs and minnows. Early SUMMERSVILLE - Lake is approximorning and tate evening is the best mately 38 teet abo\o'e winter recreation
..:ime for fishing th1s method. Open water level. . Lake and taltwater are cloudy.
fishing with minnows will work well on Water temperature Is 44 degrees .
hybrid striped bass. Largemouth and F1Sh10g has been fair In the lake. Walleye
spotted bass will become more active as and catfish are being caught from the
'th e temperature increases and can be shore. Also, small mouth are being picked
taken on spinners and crankbaits . Trout up around drop-otis and bridges. All winhave been stocked In the ta1lwater and ter launch ramps are open.
can be caught using a variety of baits.
SUTION - Lake Is about 9 feet above
BLUESTONE - Lake is slightly above winter recreation level. Lake and tailwilsummer fecreation level. Lake and ta if- ter are cloudy. The tsllwater was stocked
\N&amp;ter are muddy..Biuegltl fiShing is good Monday. A few largemouth are being
around fallen trees and weed beds. A caught on spinnerbalts and plastics
taw bass may ce caught on Jive bait fished slowly. Crappie and bluegill are
'fished around rocky points. Small jigs, being picked up around structure while
.worms and nightcrawlers have been sue· using a light line and micro-jigs. The out'tesstul for catching bass. sunfish and flow temperature of the lake Is 51
carp , Fishing In the tailwaters has been degrees. Spinners and powerbalts are
good. with spotted bass~. being caught. working the best for trout. Boats can be
Channel and flathead cafflsh are hitting launched at Bee Run and behind the
in the main lake on large nlgh.tcrawle rs dam.
.and chicken liver. Bast area to find these TYGART- Lake Is 1 foot below summer
tallish Is In the upper part of the lake recreation level. Lake Is clear and tallwajlear Bull Falls.
.
tar Is slightly milky. Water temperature Is
lBUANSVILLE - Lake is about 3 feet 52 degrees. Walleye should be finished
·~elow summer recreation level. Lake an d spawning. Start fishing for ws!leye at
~ailwater are cloudy. A few bass ,were dark when they move l~to shallow water
·caught recently on plastics fished slowly. · to feed. Walk the shoreline and cast
The tallwater has the best fishing action . large rapalas. 'The heads of coves will
Trout were stocked on Monday an d warm taster than the main lake so bass
powerbait seems to be working the best. and sunfish will be more active In these
'Saugeye and walleye are being picked areas.
.fJP on jigs.
OHIO RIVER - Large walleye, saugeye
·EAST LYNN - Lake is at summer recre· and sauge~ are moving Into the tallwater
1ltio'n level. LaKe and tailwater are clear. areas of the lock and dam projects and
Walleye and saugeye can be caught providing some great ll&amp;hlng opportunl.while fishing rocky structure and deep ties. Us 1ng minnow- and grub-tipped jigs
water near rocky points while using grub w1th a slow retrielo'al ahould produce
·and minnow tipped jigs . Several nice some nice fish. Hybrid striped bats and
saugeye, over 20 inches have recently . white bass are also "loving In the tallwabeen caught. ShOreline fishing with ter areas. Some decent sized small·
.crankbaits and spinners will take large- mouth and largemouth are being caught
mouth and spotted bass . The tallwater along the shoreline while using
'area was recently stocked with trout and crankbatts and spinners.
.
is prov1ding some good catches .
KANAWHA RIVER -Walleye, aaugeye
A.D. BAILEY- Lake Is approximately 1 and sauger have moved Into the tallwafoot below summer recreation level. Lake ter areas al they atage before apawnlng.
.Is clear and tailwater Is muddy. Walleye Minnow- and grub-tipped jlga are proare being caught in the upper end of the duclng some nk:e flah. Large hybridlake on jig and minnow combtnatlona. etrlped ball hav. betn reported below
Live ball is working best and has also the Wlnlleld and Marm,_ lock and dam
produced a lew nice spoUed basal projects.
Shoreline
flahlng
with
Spotted bass are hitting small crankbalta crenkbaits, buzzbalts and spinner• can
Ushed alongtjtolnts and drop-otfs. Some be uaed to take black ball. Oetp water
hybrid striped bass are being caught flahlng with large mlnnowa and chicken
along rocky points, primarily on chicken livers has b11n doing wall for catching
~ver. Trout are being caught In the tall- catftah .
,waters on small jigs or bait suoh as corn CHEAT LAKE - Walleye ahould hl\o'l
·ar cheese .
spawned for the tlrat tlma thlt apring 11
STONECOAL LAKE - Lake Ia at sum- a reaull of stocklnga madt In 19e9 and
mer recreation level and cloudy. Fishing 2000. The embayment&amp; at the Cheat
, haa been good wllh trout are being Lake Park and Trail will warm up fllttr
picked up on a variety of baits. A. 42-lnch than tl'le main lake . Th!a It a good area
musky was caught on powerbalt recent· for bank anglera to catch auntlah and
ty. Bass, both largemouth and small· largemou th bass.

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�Page 88 • &amp;UillJap tEi~-&amp;mtint1

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Inside:

6tutlr«!' Ql';ime~ -&amp;entinel

Cook of the Week, Page C2
Boo.kshelf, Page C3
.
Celebrations, Page CS-6
Dove Awards roundup, Page C6

Page Cl
Sunday, April 13, 2003

WINSTON

I BUSCH I

CUP

Martinsville
Speedway

NASCAR TOP 10

Driver standings
Top t 0
Points
1. Todd Bodine
996
2. Jamie McMurray
957
3. Ron Hornaday
927

Race No.
9 of 36

4. stmeHmiel
5. Jason Keller

David A. Green
Mike Bliss
Scott Riggs
Kasey Kahne
to. Mike Wallace
6.

7.
8.
9.

Winston Cup Series
Driver

897
889
855
853
815
813

784

AP

NASCAR Craftsman
Truck Series

Banking 12°
In turns
'- - - - - - =

TV schedule (EDT)
Schedule: Friday, qualifying
(Speed Channel, 3 p.m.);
Sunday, race (Fox, 12:30 p.m.).

Driver standings
Top t 0
Points
1.
Bobby Hamilton
505
2.
Rick Crawford
481
3 . Brendan Gaughan 474
4.
Travis Kvapil
450
5.
Robert Pressley
439
6 . Jon Wood
423
7.
Teny Cook
419
8.
Dennis Setzer
410
9 . Ted Musgrave
406
10. Andy Houston
382

Pointe

.Wine

Prev.

Sa

rank

t.

Men Kenseth

1,233

4

7

2.

DaleEarnhardtJr

1,104

4

5

5

3

3.

Kurt Busch

. 1 ,046

4

5

7

2

4

Ji mmie Johnson

~

,013

0

t

4

8

5.

JeffGordon

1,0t1

0

2

4

4

6

6.

Ricky Craven

1,000

3

3

5

9

7

Michael Waltrip

994

1

3

3

8

4

8.

Kevin Harvick

977

0

2

3

6

tO

9.

Tony Stewart

937

0

2

4

8

7

10. Elliott Sadler

895

0

4

2

20

11 . Ryan Newman (894); 12. Dale
Jarren (884); 13. Robby Gordon
(871) ; 14. Mark Martin (858); 15.
Bobby Labonte (851) ; 16. Sterling
Marlin (850); 17. Joe Nemechek
(641); 18. Rusty Wallace (623) ; 19.
Ricky Rudd (817); 20. Dave Blaney
(801); 21 . Jeff Burton (798) ; 22.

Jamie McMurray (790) : 23. Johnny
Benso (786); 24. Terry Labonte
(765) ; 25 . Greg BiHie (779); 26.

Ward Bur1on (773): 27. Steve Park
(760) ; 28. Kenny Wallace (756) ;
29. Jeremy Maytield (748);

AP

Top

.'

5

'

Beekeeper.
perfects
technique

30. Jimmy Spencer (740); 31 . Jeff
Green (722); 32. Bill Elliott (716);
33.JerryNadeau(683) ; 34.John

Andretti {646); 35. Casey Mears
(825); 36. Todd Bodine (619); 37.
Kyk! Petty (594); 38 . Jack Sprague
(578); 39. Ken Schrader (575) ; 40.
Mike Skinner (566); 41 . Tony
Raines (527); 42. Larry Foyt (287);
43. Mike Wallace (211); 44. Brett Bod1ne (201 ); 45. Derrike Cope
(144); 46. Christian Fittipaldi (1 07);
47. Hideo Fukuyama (64); 48.
Hermie Sadler (34)

BY KANDY BOYCE

AP

SCURCE NASCAR

Staff writer

Next race
Auto Club 500
April27, Fontana, Calif.

Driver standings
Top 10

Virginia 500
Martinsville, Va.
Sunday, April 13
2002 winner
Bobby Labonte
Race length
~ laps, 263 miles
Race record
Jeff Gordon
82.223 mph, Sept 22, ,1996
.· Qualifying record
Tony Stewart
95.371 mph (19.855 seconds),
Sept. 29, 2000
Site
Date

.

Points

1. Matt Kenseth

1,233
2. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 1,104
1,046
3. Kurt Busch
4. Jimmie Johnson 1,013
1,011
5. Jeff Gordon
6. Ricky Craven
1,000
7. Michael Waltrip
994
8. Kevin Harvick
977
9. Tony Stewart
937
10. Elliott Sadler
895

,

~

'-)1

Balance of

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Bumper

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SOURCE: Associated Press

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After his new bees acclimate themselves to the hive a few
days, Reebel lifts out a frame to check it for honeycomb. Sure
enoughl They've been busy as- well- bees!

BY KANDY BoYCE

Bowie _____'15.14,.

Stan...

The hives are placed in a
protected ~rea, usually
- - - - - - - - - · with a natural windblock of
GALLIPOLIS FERRY. some type and near . crops
W.Va. - Each layer of the or trees that the bees can
beehive is called a super. collect pollen from.
The honey bee has to pay
The supers are stacked on
top of each other and have the_flower about 2 million
ventilation and ew~anCeS. VISitS to COllect enough
Each super is fill~with a pollen to produce a pound
number of frames that hang of honey.
down like files in a file
Bees are usually pretty
docile unless they sense
drawer. ·
A wax honeycomb-pat- danger. If a bee dies, it
temed structure fits into the emits pheromones which
frames which the bees tell the other bees it is in
build on to form cells. distress. They then go into
Those are filled with either a protective mode, and
honey or eggs and then may then sting as a natural
defense.
sealed with wax.
Staff report

Annua\ _

s

Bill Reebel tasted a bit of honey from his beehive while his friend, Clark Harper, a veteran beekeeper looks on. Reebel's bees
from last year died over the winter and he checlked to see if there was enough honey to get a new colony started until they can
produce their own.

GALLIPOLIS FERRY .
W. Ya. - Bees are the late st
buzz at the Pepper King
Farm in Gallipolis Ferry,
Owner Bill Reebel decided to raise honeybees last
year to help increase production of his crops and to
bring in more income after
researching the little critters and fi-nding out how
beneficial they are :
One of the rhain duties of
bee s is to pollinate crops
and trees , both fruit and
non-fruit.
Reebel rai sed Italian bees
last year and lost the whole
hive over the winter.
"I don't know why they
died . There was ample
honey left in the hive and it
was not a very hard winter,"
said Reebel.
Reebel said that the new
queens that he ordered are
Russian queens. Last year,
he ordered Italian bees
because they were known
as docile. bee s, but after the
entire colony died ov~r the
winter, he decided to try
another variety.
He received the new bees
last Sunday and had to wait
for the rain to stop to turn
them into the hive . He
released them on Tue sday.
He said that they would
begin producing honey
when it is above 50 degrees.
Reebel harvested 150
pounds of honey last year
from one hive and still had
enough left to start a new
hive of bees this year.
Reebel said that the hive
should be checked for disease before adopting that
practice. though .
"In spectors from the
USDA (U nited
States

Department of Agriculture)
will come out and inspect
your hives about once a
year and treat them for dis. ease," said Reebel.
Reebel said that harvesting the .honey - harvesting
at the proper time to get the
most from the hive, without
taking too much - is a
management technique that
he's still trying to perfect.
He said that · if the honey
is harvested early in the
season , the bees will work
harder to produce extra
honey for the winter. That 's
the practice he adopted last
year.
· "The bees live over the
winter on the honey that is
left in the hive . If you take
too much, the hive will
die," said Reebel.
Actually harvesting the
honey is a tricky process,
he added .
"You have to suit up in
special protective gear and
approach them very gently," said Reebel.
He blows smoke into the
hive to calm them. then lifts
out one frame at a time and
brushes the bees off before
carrying it away to extract
the honey.
Reebel said that you can
also buy fume boards to
insert in the hives 'to make
the bee s leave and then
carry off the whole super,
or layers . to extract the
honey.
"You cut the ends off of
the honeycomb using a hot
knife , which releases the
honey. Then you spin it in
an extractor so the honey
flows out, or you can just
cut the comb into squares
and package it with the
wax. Most people like it
best that way," said Reebel.

'

After two days in their new home. these honeybees are already making honeycomb in preparation to store honey.

. GALLIPOLIS FERRY,
W.Va. -Three types of bees
in the hive are the queen, the
drone and the workers. ,
The only job that the queen
· has is to reproduce. Sbe lays
3,000 to 4lXJO eggs a day all
summer and most of the winter.
She is larger than the other
bees and there is only one
queen to a hive. She does not
eat honey like the other bees.
She only eatS royal jelly, a
special substance secreted by
the hypophai)'ngeal glands
of the nurse bees.
She is made - not born
- by being fed the royal
jelly. It accounts for her larger size and longevity. She
lives four to seven years
compared to seven week~ for
the other bees.
If a queen dies, a baby bee
is fed royal jelly by the other
workers to produce another
queen. Several are produced
and then they engage in a
battle. The winner becomes
the new queen, who mates
with the drones and continues to repopulate the hive.
The drones are the only
males in the hive. Their only

to change.

..

. .

t

•

job is to fenilize the queen.
They laze around the hive all
sununer. depe~ on the
worker bees to ~
and care
for them.
They are without stingers,
have huge eyes and wings
and are larger than wodrer
bees. The only down side to
being a drone is that at the
end of the summer, they are ·
kicked out of the hive to die
to save the precious boney
for the babies. More drones
are created in the spring.
-Workers make up the bulk
of the hive. They guanl the
hive, make the honey, tencl
the egg cells and care for the
queen. They also air condition the hive durin¥ the heal
of summer by bringing in
water, putting it in cells and
then fanning their wings. It
produCt!$ a natural air conditioning as the water evaporates.
In winter, the bees fonn a
ball, disengaging their wings
and laying them back along
their bodies. They move the
appendages where the wings
connect and it produces hea,t
to keep the hive wann. lbe
bees on the outside of the ball
move to the inside as they get
cold and the ball evolves
from inside to outside in a
cycle.

•

�r

Page C2

iunba~ otim~ ·itntintl

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Cook of the Week

Pro's advice
for entertaining
family style
'

Cooking for

m-ultitudes .·
Dee Hysell
·Pomeroy, Ohio
Hawaiian
Chicken

BY CARRIE ANN WOOD
Staff writer

.POMEROY. Ohio - With
comparison shopping. an eye
for detail, an army of volunteers and a husband that
enjoys helping his wife, Dee
Hysell manages to cook up ·a
storm for church functions.
Dee whips together meals
on average for groups of
around 40, but manages the
massive task of serving dinners during the Sternwheeler
River Fest.
"I enjoy cooking and that
makes it easy." Dee said. ,
When Dee makes a dish, it
isn't in the usual· way.
Cooking for a group · means
adjusting the recipe. She said
her husband, Harold, helps
with the fractions.
The couple works together
to shop for the large amount
of groceries needed to pull
off delicious dinners.
"We shop around," Dee
said.
Bargain hunting . is one
thing, coordinating volunteers and their dishes is
another. Dee said staying
organized is the key to success with preparing so many
meals . She said everyone
pitches in to help.
.
At the church, meals are
almost always served on
china, which means doing a
lot of dishes. Before and after
preparation is another item to
consider when cooking in
large guantities.
Dunng the Sternwheeler
Fest, the group served more
than 300 people. They made
44 . batches of homemade
noodles and 90 pounds of
chicken.
Dee said she · has not
always cooked a lot. She said
until she got married, she
rarely did. Dee likes .to try
new recipes, over the years
she . began collecting cook
books. She currently owns
around 250 cook books.
Dee is the chairman of the
- --ways and'"'Means commitiee .
for Trinity Congregational
Church .in Pomeroy. The specialty of the group is dinners
provided for groups and for
church members. The group
uses any proceeds they make
for the church or for community projects and needs.
Dee said the group has
served meals for the retired
teachers,
the
Meigs
Ministerial
Association,
Daughters of the American
Revolution, . Delta Kappa
Gamma Teachers and several
others.
"I love to cook," Dee said.
Harold said he loves to
cook, too.
They said they both enjoy
the time they spend working
on the dinners together.

(40 servings)
40 chicken breast halves,
skinned and boned
5 (8oz.) jars apricot-pineapple jam or 2-' , jars of each
5 (8oz.) bottles Catalina
salad dressing
5 envelopes dry onion soup
mix (Lipton)
Heat oven to 350F. Place
chicken in greased pans (will
take about four 9X 13 pans).
In a bowl. mix together
remaining ingredients: pour
over chicken. Bake uncovered for approximately 1 - ~,
hours, or until chicken is tender.

Beef Barbecue
(40 servings)
12 lbs good beef roast
6 ribs celery, chopped
6 large onions, chopped
2 green peppers, chopped
2 bottles ( 16 oz.) catsup
6 tbs. Open Pit barbecue
sauce
4 tbs. cider vinegar
2 tsp. Tabasco sauce
4 tbs. chili powder
4 tsp. salt
2 tsp. pepper
3 cups water
l cup brown sugar
Preheat oven to 300
degrees. Cut beef in to chunks.
Place in roaster. Combine
re.maining ingredients and
pour over meat. Cover and
bake until meat is tender
enough to shred with fork
(about four hours). Take meat
from roaster, remove fat and
pull meat into shreds. Return
to roaster and mix with sauce.
If too "soupy" .cook uncovered a little longer.

·Easy Potato
Casserole .
(40 servings)
.
3 (32 oz.) pkg. frozen hash
brown ~petatoes, thawed•- - - ·
3 l"edium onions, chopped
1- h cup green pepper,
chopped
3 ( 10.5 oz.) can cream of
potato soup, undiluted
3 (10.5 oz.) can cream of
celery soup, undiluted
3 (8 oz.) cartons sour cream
1, tsp. pepper
3 cups (12 oz.) shredded
Monterey Jack cheese
Preheat oven to 325
degrees. Spray three 9X 13
pans. Combine all i n ~redie nt s
except cheese; st1r well.
Spoon potato mixture into·
pans, dividing evenly. Bake
for one ·hour and IS minutes.
Sprinkle with cheese, and
bake an additional 15 minutes.
*You can use about 6 lbs.

his fault: it's yours," she says.
She believes the same principle applies to friends.
·.
CHICAGO _ Meet Ina . "You can make really dehGarten. She's attractive, cious food that's really simsmart, fun. One m.inute she's pie," she says. "There's no
barefoot in her kitchen or gar- need to make yourself crazy."
den. The next, she · may- be
If the food becomes a bamwearing a classy neck scarf, at er to inviting the friends over,
the wheel of an even classier l't~s backwards, she says. "I
black BMW convertible.
would rather order takeout
One year she's work.ing in Chinese food and have my
the White House; the next, friends over than pass it up
she's running a specialty food because I'm overwhelmed
t N ,y ,
with the notion of cooking
t · Ea st Hampon,
sorem
To many fans, this best-sell- dinner for six people."
ing cookbook author and tele- · She believes the best way to
vision personality is better make friends feel loved aod
known as the "Barefoot nurtured is to offer "real tradiContessa."
tiona! food but with the velAlthough Garten made the ume turned up little bit"
moniker a household name in
Her French 'toast recipe, for
Dee and Harold Hysell serve up sorne good food. (Carrie Ann Wood)
the culinary world, it refers to example. replaces ordinary
the store she owned more than bread with rich challah or
20 years, and to its original brioche and boosts the tlavor
namesake: the 1954 movie with orange zest, honey and
Ava Gardner as a for- vanilla extract
She suggests cooking no
dancer who
becomes a contessa.
rnore than two or three items
"It's really abotit being ele- for a party and assembling or
gant and earthy," says Garten, buying the rest. On one TV ·
interviewed in a Chicago tea program, for instance, she is
room, on a recent visit. ''I shown buying the brownies
think the elegance comes her guests will have for
from the simplicity, and the dessert. Back home. she
earthiness is just very simple dresses the brownies up with ·
ingredients."
vanilla ice cream and chocoGarten's newest cookbook, late sauce. Her friends, she
"Barefoot Contessa Family says. won't have any more
Style" (Potter, 2002, $35), fun if she spends the day rnaktells home cooks and party- ing the brownies herself.
givers how to be, well, simply
Garten believes people too
elegant
often emphasize food over
"I don't tend to like fancy friendship.
food," she says. "My style of
"I used· to do it," she says,
food is to take really good "This huge dinner party takes
in~dients and cook just to a week to make, and it's on
enhance them. You don't have Saturday night And by the
to have white truffles and time everyone goes home,
some spice that you got fron\ you' re just exhausted."
India in order to have deliThe first thing Garten adviscious food."
The booK: and -ner Food
........,,.......es harried hosts to do is forget
Network television show Saturday night, when guests
focus on food and entertain- tend to stay too late and hosts
.mg. Her TV pro
have feela1 they must serve a huge
ranged from a b' day dinner meSh,
s d 1 h
she gave a friend, to the roaste suggests un ay unc chicken dinner she cooks for es with good sandwiches such
husband Jeffrey on Friday as turkey on raisin-nut bread
cream cheese, or
n1'ghts when he returns home with scallion
·
b
from his dean's job at Yale,
somethmg simple like era
At SS, Garten is a woman cakes with. coleslaw and a
~--:--~--~...,....~--~---:-lwhollaul!hs heartily, entertains dessert. "And you've got-a
f· d
th · · 11
really easy party with friends
nen s en ustasllca X ~et who come over during the day
practically, and says, 'I like when you're not exhausted,"
my very simple life."
Hawaiian chicken is one of Dee's favorite recipes. (Carrie Ann Wood)
However, her 'life hasn't she says,
.
The best place to serve your
glued her to the kitchen. She
worked in the White House guests may not be at your best
Regular potatoes. Peel and
Cook macaroni according
on
the nuclear-energy policy table. The biggest m.istake she
cut into cubes. Measure to get to package directions; drain.
budget
under Presidents Ford says many peo~le make is
96 ounces. Cook until just Divide one-third of macaroni
and Carter before deciding using a table that s too big. "It
done, This way is much
into
two
9X
13
baking
pans
·
she
wanted to do something can ruin a perfectly wonderful
cheaper.
(sprayed with Pam). Sprinkle
more fun and buying the party because you're too far
Barefoot Contessa.
apart," she says.
with one third cheese; repeat
She had always liked sciShe suggests limiting dinprocedures. and top with
and
says
cook.ing
is
like
ner
parties to six to eight penence
remammg
macaroni.
science, "but. instead of ple. "Over eight, the table's
(Reserve remaining cheese).
hydrochloric acid, you end up too big. You end up talking' to
Combine milk, eggs, salt
with tiramisu."
the person to the right and the
aRd pepper: divide evenly and
(40 servings)
Now the author of three person to the left. and that's
cookbooks, Garten sold the not really a party,"
2 ( 16 oz.) packages elbow pour over " macaroni and
store in 200 L She cooks about
Garten suggests inviting
macaroni
cheese. Cover and bake at
two days a week, entertains guests into the kitchen, espe5 cups (40 ozh.5 lb.) shred- 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
something
ded sharp cheddar cheese, Uncover and lightly stir mix- . once a week and says, "I don't cially ·when
want
to
spend
a
day
mak.ing
requires
last-minute
attention
divided
ture;
sprinkle
with
remaining
something. I just don't
such as 1isotto. She'll serve
6 cups milk (I qt. + 2 cups)
cheese.
Return
to
oven
just
"If
you
spend
an
entire
day
drinks
and a])petizers from the
4 large eggs, lightly beaten
long
·enough
to
melt
cheese.
mak.ing
dinner
for
your
huscounter
and let a guest stir the
4 tsp. salt ·
·
band,
he
can't
possibly
apprerisotto
while she makes a
Let stand l 0 minutes before
',, tsp. pepper
ciate it enough. And it's not salad.
serving.
BY DEBRA HALESHELTON
Associated Press

a

Associated Press·

· PARKERSBURG, W.Va. Cindy Williams of Parkersl:lurg
experienced Emeril Lagasse's
cook.ing ftrst hand after she
won a trip to New York City to
attend a taping of the show at
the Food Network studios.
Contestants signed up
through the Food Network
Web site for the five-day trip,
Nov. 20 throu~h Nov. 24, to
. attend the tapmg of "Emeril
Salutes Amenca."
One contestant froin each
state and their guest, includ.ing
a contestant from Washington,
D.C., was chosen to attend a
taping. '
Williams was chosen as the
winner for West Vrrginia and
she took her friend, Brenda
Sni&lt;jer, ·
The two received free airfare, some transportation, hotel

•

Suntay, April 11, 2003

'

At Bo"ar~l Library I was
deligh ted 1o find a copy of
\he Bicentennial Ed ition of
" Lewi s and Clark : Voyage
ol D1scoverv." by hi&gt;turian
Stephen An1hrose: It cont;~ins magnifi,·em photography hy Sarn Ahell for
N;~tional
Geograp hic.
Amb rose and his family
have L'amped in many of the
same locations as Lewi &gt; &amp;
Clark . He adds a narrative
of both their journeys and
present conditi o ns at the
si tc·s. It is both an intense
~rama anti fa~l'inating h i. ~ to ­
ry.
Cljlla in
Meriwether
Lewis was the sec retary of
President Thomas JetlersmT,
He was 2X years old. an
armv officer. son of ''
Virginia planter. · It was
.kffcrwn\ dream to find a
"atcr rou te to the Pacific .
He wished to create an
e mpire of lihcny stretchi ng
fro m sea to shin in~ sea .
A Canad ian . Mackenzie,
had already done so me
e .~plma ti on, published a
_1 ournal , and urged Great
Britain to develop a land
paS&gt;age to the P;1cific. Thu s,
it was urgen t th ;1t the United
States act immediately. It
was necessary to establish
an America n presence west
uf the Mississippi. Twothi rds of the continent was
at stake. Jefferson had also
made
the
Louisiana
Purchase.
Jefferson appointed Lewi s
to lead the expedition and
pe tition ed Congress for
$:2.500
to financ e it.
William Clark , also from
Virginia. was four years
older than L ewi~. There was
mutual respect, and Lewis
as ked him to become a COcaptain in the adventure.
There was ne ed for information about the native
nations, their languages and
cuqoms, about how and

·

Beverly
Gettles
BOOK REVIEW

what they had to trade,
about the flora and fauna of
the region . Many believed
there mi ght be mastodons
out there. What the y found
dnstead was hu ge herds of
buffalo.
Lewis left Pittsbu rgh on a
pa "e d
keelboat
and
Gallipolis in Sertemher of
I 803 on hi s way to meet
Clark
in the
Indiana
Territory, In recruiting sol diers for the ta sk, they
,vanted yo ung, unmarri ed,
tough fr ontiersmen with
spec ial skills, such as blacksmith , carpenter. boatman .
They .had hundreds of volunteers.
Also present were Clark ' s
black slave, York , and
George Drouillard, fluent in
both French and English , ;Is
we ll as a couple of Indi an
languages and signing. The
party .
also
included
Charbonneau, a Fren chman.
and his Ind ian wife:
Sacagawea, about IS years
old and six month s pregnant
The journey progressed
with no small difficulties .
The Mis souri River was,
filled with sand bars and
shallow spots. Most of the
Indians were friendly, but
there was much apprehension whenever a new tribe
was encountered. Only one
Indi an was killed by the
explorers, a Blackfoot who
tried to steal gu ns and horses on the return trip. Mostly,
the interpreters were able to

Lewis had painstakingly
pressed hundred of plants
which he sent to Jefferson.
Clark had made a wonderful
map of their travels. The
map and the journals were

Martha Drennen. Princeton $6,000
Mickey Ely. Logan $3,000
David Jeffries, Oak Hill $3.0CX&gt;
Frank Mucciolo. LouiSVIlle. KY $3.000
Krysti Skoglund. Charleston $3.000
Douglas Tingler, PennsbOro $3,COO
Pennie Wiles , Tunnelton $3.000
Carl Worley, Mullens $3.000
William YeliCh, Rivesville $3.000

tendent of Indi an Affairs for
30 years, as well as
Governor of the Mi sso uri
Territory from 1813-1821.
He died in 1838 at the age
·
of 69 ;
Sacagawea later had a
daughter and died at 22.
Charbonneau li ved to be
around 80. Pomp , the son
born on the trail , became a
linguist after studying with
the Jesuit s. He traveled to
Europe, then returned to the
wilderness as a guide . and
interpreter. He died of pneumonia at age 61 .

Sandra ,&lt;;a,\1 Ball
Charleston
$10,000

9ouglas Stephens. Alum Creek $3,000
Great 8'11
Brenda Lanham, SISsonville $888
Tammy Leasure. ClarKsburg $888
Lisa LOY.te. Sp13ncer $888
Ear1 Shepherd, New Cumberland $888
Connie Wh ite. Roncevene $888

HalkJwHn Caah
2 $500 Winners

Hot lotto
Sandra Kay Ball. Chat1eston $10.000

llookJack

Kl•• N C•eh

Clarence Kimb~. Harrisv1lle $2.100
Dale Lipscomb. Row le sburg $2.100
Tanya Pruitt, Bluefield $2 .100
Bonnie Williams. Logan $2.1 00

CarOlyn Adkins. West Hamlin $1 .400
Roberta Besares. Fairmont $1.400
Stephen Carico, Lavalette $1,400
Me!lssa Cox, Fairmont $1.400
Charles Dobbins, Lost C~t~ek. $1,400
JanK:e Gatrel , Kenna $1,400
Scot: Al len HelmiCk, CO~~; Mills $1.400
James ArnOld Hill. Oak HIH $1.400
Evelyn Holstein , St Albans $1.400
Kaien John. Weston $1 ,400 .
Rose Johnson, Walker $1,400
Luke Justice. f)arkersburg $1.400
Paula Leonard, Weirton $1 .400
Sherry Matlack . Parkersburg $1,400
Danny Maxon. Elk1ns $1.400
Jesse Roberts. Spurlockville '81.400
Earl Williamson. Martinsburg $1 ,400

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3 S250 Wlnnar1
Diamond Binga
Debra lnsl.:eep , Maysville $1,000

Wayne King, FoUanstlee SS,cioo
Jerry Mason, Proctor $5,000
William Melrose, Washington $1.000
Davi:J Park, M8rtinsburg $1,000
John Profflt , Princeton $5.000 ·
Kennelh Shamblin Poca, $5,000
Doris T1pping, Ridgeley $1 ,000
David Wirtong. Enterprise $1 .000
wanda. Winkler. Huntington $1.000

Fab '"

Wilda Campbell. Huntington $4.000
Thelma Lou Gardner. Thurmond $4,000
Gerald Lilly. Cool Ridge $4.000
Donna Newcomb', Martinsburg $4,000
AOben Reed. Belington $4.000

Flit Full of Dollars ~
Barbara Browning, Nitro $3,000
Sandra Burg9ss. Chesapeake $3.000
Dawnie Denny, Crab Orchard $3.000
Sophia Hickman. Nortrlork $3.000
Aomona Sh1pman, Valley Head $3,000

In 1904 , the complete
journals of Lewis and Clark
were. publi shed in eight volume s. They ha ve sub sequent editions. Thi s is our
I national epic . It speak s to us
of vision and courage and
that unending curiosity we"
American s have about the
unknown . Th(s ·was the pioneer spirit at its best and we·
celebrate Lew is ana Clark's
accomplishments with a
hei ghtened sense of pride
and patrioti sm.

Luck Dog 5
!5 $100 Winners

Road to Vegas
Mandy Johnson. Tad $15.000
Amanda Jane Mullins, Beckley $15.000
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Lew1s W1nnings. Ramella $15.000

Ruby Red 7'1
Mark Barnett. Independence $777
Joseph Conti, Mill Creek $777
James Kitchen. Danville $7.000
Charles Minor. CarrTllchaels. PA $7 ,000

SCratch Keno
Gary Clendenin, St. Albans $1,000
WIUiam Frame, Lost Creek $1 ,000
~uth Aflfl Hatcher. Ripley $1.000
Emck Koreskl . Shinnston $1 ,000
Raben Louk. Nirro $1.000
Farrel Parsons, Prosperity $15,000
. Faye Reid. Cleveland. OH $1 .000
Dorothy Rhoades, Clarksburg $2.000
Barbara Sharp , MSrllntoo $2.500
Harold Stroehman , Parkersburg $1 .000
Carol Yacenech. Gratton $1.000

I
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Sh•ll Qame
Em1ty Best, YOlyn $1,000
Jacob J . Kimble ,
Shenandoah Junction $1.000
Twlc• The Luck
Barbara Hobson. New Mar1insville $2,000
Dav1d Ramsey, Sistersvitle $2 ,000

More Stlemrock GrHn
Shirley Bandy, Weston $17,000
Thomas E. Pnller, Ill Martinsburg $777
William Williams. Charleston $17,000

Veteran• C11h "
82 $100 Winners
Chad Harris. Leet $4,000
Wilfiam Lannon. Moo refield $4 000
Joseph Watts, Dunbar $4 ,000
Robert White. Hedgesville $4,000
Ma~ine Williamsori, Bluefield $4,000

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Freeman Adams . Charleston$ 1,000
Mary Bradl ey. Chapmanville $1.000
Mike P~1n0 . Elkm $8.1S1
D1XI8 Snuffef. Coal Ci1Y $•1.000

Frederick DaVJs: Fa1rmont $25 .0:JO
Ronme Kashola . Statesv111e. NC $5.000
Theresa M1tvet. Avella. PA $25.CXXI

Polar Buc:ka

Mary Robinson. Fayetteville$ t ,000

Windfall
Prent1ce Dalton , Morgamown $4.000
Mel vin Jones. Ballard $4.000
Joseph Mo~one. Glenshaw. PA $4.{)(X}

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Zodiac Dollan
Melissa Bnck:les. Branchland $1.200
Bonn1e Vance. Culloden $1 .200

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'
conv
111cc the Ind ia ns the the most valuable re sults of
party me ant theni no harm . . the trip. The journals were
Actually, the help from the not published until 100
Indians was indi spensable years later. Lewis never pre for the party's survival orr pared them for the printer.
m:my occasions. .
.
After r.eturning from the
The hunters · provided great adventure, Lewis fell
meal, about nine pounds per into depression, began abu sperson per day. from buffa- ing opium and committed
lo, deer, elk . and beaver. suicide in 1809. He was 35
When they got to Nez Perce years old. Clark married his
country, they dined on dried cousin and had five chi lsa lmon and hoiled camas dren. When his wife died,
roots, which played havoc -he remarried and adopted .
with their digestion. For the his wife's three children , '
most part , they remained and they had two more, a
he althy. except for a Sgt. total of ten . He was superin - .
Floyd. who probably died
due to· a ruptured appendix .
The most difficult part of
the journey, both going and
coming back , was in the
Bitterroot Mountains, where
there were huge drifts of
snow, no gnr:-s for the horses, and ex treme. temperatures .and wind.
They finally reached the
Pacific, an~ they wi ntered
there fur several months.
Clark recorded that it was
4. 142 mile s from' the mouth
of the Missouri. He was less
than 40 miles off in hi s calculations.
T!1e return trip began on
March 23. 1806. They were
short on supplies and had
little left to trade with the
Indi ans. The men cu t the
brass buttons of their uniforms to trade for food.
When they finally arrived
back in St. Louis, they auctioned their remaining supplies for 5408.62. Thus, few
articles from the journey
3 For Tha Money
remain.
They
paid
Wayne
Aliff, Beck.ley $3,000
Charbonneau $500 for his
Jenny Atkinsor1 , Vienna $3,000
horse, his teepee and his
Susie Bolyard , Moatsville $3,000
services. Sacagawea got
Dassie Dillon. CraiQSVJRe S3,000

Caah St11h

Old-fashioned
Macaroni and
Cheese

~·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·---·-·--·-

accommodations, $500, a Food
Network Duffel bag, magnets,
luggage tags and each received
a blue jean jacket with West
Virginia embroidered on the
front and "Emeril Salutes
America" on the back.
The two arrived in New York
City on Nov. 20 and the next
day, Cindy and Brenda were
driven to the Food Network
studio about 2 p.m.
Emeril's challenge for the
show was to use an ingredient
from each state in every one of
the five dishes he cooked. He
made a dish for each district
including at least one ingredient from every state in that district
West Virginia was in the
southeast district. The dish
from this district was catfish
salad with sweet potato dressing. Within that dish, ·Emeril
included West Virginia's item.
which wa~ black walnuts.

ookshelf
Lewis &amp; Clark: Voyage of DiscoVery

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•

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'.

Kevm Baker. Harnsville $5.000
01ana Barr. Wetrton $2.600
Anna Beatty, Fairmont $2,600
Salty Bennett. Buckhannon $8CXJ
John Cashwell, St. Albans $2,900
Thomas Cook. Fa1rmont $5.CXXI
Mack Oamrofl. Catlettsburg. KY $2.600
Chnstopher Dawes, Inwood $2.6CJCA
Wilma Eplin, Branchland $2 .600
Paulette Fltzpatnck Crab Orchard $2,600
Mel1ssa Henderson. Elk Garden $2.600
Marv1n Honeycutt, ChMeston $2,600
Domentco Mennillo. Wheeling $2.600
Bernard Minor. Morgantown $23,200
Joseph,Norris. Beckley $2.500
Kamalaben Patel, Beckley $2.500
Grace A1ffle. Fa1rmont $2.700
Margaret Sorensen. Charles Town $2.600
Dollie Spencer, Paw Paw $2.90J
Robef1 Walker, Madisoo $2,500
Jerry White. Martinsburg $800
lrtlne Wil~ams. Charleston $2,700
Oet&gt;ra Witcher. Fayanevnie .$2 .700

Randy Bosle)l. Clarl&lt;sburg. $4.000
Linda Gross. Bradley $1.500 .
W1ll1am Gross. Waynesburg. PA $800
Hany McEldowney. Bndgeport S800
Phihp McMullen. Ch!:isapeak:e. OH $800
Lou1s F. Ruffner. Jr . Bmyvtlle, VA $ t .000
Martha Tolll\ler, Dan•els S2.odo
Robert Ton1s. Weirton $1.500

Gregory 8a1sden. VerdunVille $S.OCO
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Mary Dus1eko. Wheel1ng $5.000
Edward L Eugen1. Jr .
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John Farmer. Wellsburg $5 ,000
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Page C4

Health It Fitness

Research

Sunday, April 13, 2003

Health beat

Cocai ne-addicted
rats
experience bursts of brai n
chemical activity just
before seekin~ out their
next fix. scientists report in
a finding that could open ~
new ave nue for treating
human addicts.
- ·
When the rats merely
heard or saw cues associated with cocaine, their brains
pumped out extra doses of
the same reward-related
chemical that helps produce
the euphori a that human
users feel.
. The rats' brain activity
may explain the intense
cravings human addicts
experience when something
reminds them of the drugc
"They're having a miniature high before they even
get there," said Anna Rose
Childress, a professor of
psychiatry at the University
of Pennsylvania's School of
·
Medicine .
"It acts like a salty potato
chip, or the · smell of the
brownie across the room,
the chocolate croissant in
the window- it's a primer,
it's a seductive pull." ·
The new work may help
scientists find drugs that can
damgen drug cravings in
people who have quit
cocaine, said Childress,
who was not involved in the
research.
She said the findings
could also apply to other
drugs such as amphetamines, heroin, opium, nicotine and possibly even alcohol.
·
The rat study is presented
in Thursday's issue of the
· journal Nature by psychologist Regina M. Carelli and
chemist R. Mark Wightman
of the University of North
Carolina in Chapel Hill .
They
detected
the
dopamine pulses in rats
llSing a new technique thai
makes rapid "real-time"
measurements of changes in
rat's brain chemicaJs.
The scientists made the
rats addicted to cocaine,
then implanted an electrode

in a portion of a rat's brain
associated with drug use.
The rodents could receive
coca ine~ _by pressing a special bar wh1ch activated a
pump implanted in them
that injected cocaine into
their system.
The drug delivery was
accompanied by a tone that
sounded and a light that
turned on in the area where
the experiment was unfoldmg.
When the rats were presented with the light and the
tone was sounded, the
researchers detected rapid
pulses of dopa[\line in the
rodents' brains. Dopamine .
level s also rose as the rats
approached and pushed the
bar to receive their fix.
In contrast. rats that had
·.not been addicted to cocaine
showed no comparable
increase in dopamine levels
when exposed to the same
cues. That indicates that the
dopamine levels increased
in response to cues the rats
learned to associate with
cocaine, Carelli-said.
She said the rodent findings may explain bursts of
brain activity seen in human
addicts when they crave
cocaine or see paraphernalia associated With it.
"People had suspected for
so me time that just the
anticipation ' of receiving
cocaine could cause rapid
increases in dopamine levels. but no one had been
able to acc urately measure
it," Carelli said.
Roy Wi se, chief of behavioral neurosciences at. th
· National Institute on Drug
Abuse, said although . the
studies were conducted in
rats, rodents have proven to
be a good predictor of how
humans respond to drugs.
"The same thing is almost
certainly happening in
humans," he said.
Michael Kuhar, a profes- ·
sor of pharmacology at
Etnory
University
in
Atlanta, caJled the research
"a technical tour de force"
that will refme models of
how the brain acts in ·
cocaine addicts.

Study: 2 minion
.women could
benefit from drug
WASHINGTON (AP) Using'tamoxifen in hopes of
preventing breast cancer
would benefit more than 2.4
million women, the vast
majority middle-aged and
white, despite the drug's
serious side effects, federal
researchers reported.
Tamoxifen is a breast canser· treatment that also can __
cut by almost half a stillhealthy woman's risk of
de veloping the disease.
Deciding to use it preventivel y is a tough choice,
however, because tamoxifen can cause uterine cancer and potentiall y fatal
blood clots.
Since preventi ve use
in
1998,
emerged
researc hers have offered
dueling estimates of how
many women are eligible.
But the new study in the
Journal of the National
Cancer Institute marks the
first national esti mate of
how many of those women
actually could benefit from
tamoxifen - and who's an
optimal candidate.
"Chemoprevention
of
breast cancer with tamoxifen is a choice, and it's not
appropriate for 'all women,"
said study author Andrew
Freedman, an epidemiologist at the NC I. "We would
like to have those women
who would likely benefit
from tamoxifen taking the
drug .''
Currentl y, few do. Some
600,000 American women
take tamoxifen each year..
most to treat cancer, not

prevent it, says leading
manufacturer AstraZeneca.
Freedman and coiieagues
estimated that 10 million
women ages 35 to 79 are
eligible for tamoxifen
because they' re at increased
risk of developing breast
cancer within five years, as
assessed by such factors as
family _~;ancer histQry. ·
But subtract those most at
risk of serious side effects
and Freedman estimated
2.47 million women could
potentially benefit from
tamoxifen without suffering
undue harm .
All those women weren't
destined for breast cancer;
doctors simply can't predict
that precisely. Nor is tamoxifen completely protective.
But if that many wemen
were to take tamo~ife n for
five yea rs, more than
28,000 breast tumors could
be avoided or delayed, the
study found .
Most potential tamoxifen
beneficiaries were white;
only 43,000 were black.
Optimal
candidates:
W~ite women a~es 40 to 59
who have a h1gh risk of
breast cancer, particularly
50-somethings who have
had hysterectlomies, which
would avoid the drug's uierine risk.
Although older women
are at higher risk of breast
cancer than the middleaged, they also are more
prone to tamoxifen's serious side effects. That makes
a net benefit beyond age 60
less likely, Freedman said.

BY l.AURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press

Walking 10,000 steps a day

WASHINGTON - Try to
· Specialists recommend 30 minutes of moderate physical activity a
take 10.000 steps a day, Dr.
day for good health. Yet, few follow that advice. Now health groups
Julie Gerberding advised the
congressmen, a mostly grayare studying if small step-counters that show how much they really
ing bunch with a bit of
walk will get people moving. The goal is to take 10,000 steps a day;
paunch who ·curiously finthe average person gets less than 4,000 from routine daily activities.
gered the beeper-sized stepcounters she'd brought them.
Achieving the goal
If doesn't sound like much,
'
until you consider the averlloFor
two
weeks,
wear
a
pedometer
and
continue
your
age person takes far less than
normal daily routine. Record the total steps daily.
4,000 steps a day. Our environment - long commutes,
llo- Determine the highest number of steps recorded and
elevators, computer-dominatmake that your new goal. Record your total
ed jobs, remote controls that
keep us on the couch daily steps for the next two weeks.
makes it too easy to be sedenllo-' lf the goal is achieved, increase it
tary.
Now instead of lecturing
by 500 steps for two-week intervals
Americans to exercise, health
until 10,000 steps is accomplished.
officials are. trying different
experiments' to build fitness
Size determines distance
back into society - playing
music to entice elevator users
Men tend to have longer strides
onto the stairs, starting walkthan women, thus walking
to-school programs , conmore mil~s in 10,000 steps.
structing sidewalks and handing out pedometers.
"We have to build opportuStride of 2.5 feet
nities for physical activity
4.7 miles
into everyday life," explains
Stride of 1 .5 feet
Dr. William Dietz, fitness and
2.8 miles
nutrition chief at the Centers
for Di sease Control and
•
AP
SOURCE: Shape Up America!
Prevention,
which
Gerberding heads.
- Jazz. classiCal or country Associati on also is pushing
Specialists have long Less than a third ·of schoolchildren
get
daily
gym
class.
fill stairways in Dietz's commun ity programs 10 build
music
adv1sed at least 30 minutes of
Suburban
sprawl
has
their
at CDC. Posting walki ng paths and safe sidebuilding
moderately intense physical
parents
spending
hours
sits1
gns
by
the elevators that' walks.
activity every day for overall
ting in cars comf\]uting to e ncouraged taking the newl y
- Some preliminary data
health. Few people listen work.
Roads
built
without
stairCaliforni a suggests P.E.
painted
and
carpeted
from
nearly four in to adults report
sidewalks
mean
even
famiways
only
te
mporaril
y
classes
improve st udents· test
getting no exercise at alt.
lies
who
live
near
schools
walking.
But
stair
performan
ce.
somethin g
mcreased
It takes additional exercise
to lose weight, which 60 per- and stores can't walk to them: use is up 8 percent for eight CDC now want s to study.
Then there's the growing
ent of U.S. adults need to Inner cities lack safe play- month s and ·counting since
grounds.
Office
buildings
.
CDC
added
music.
to cli p on a $20 advice
do.
ut put aside size:
sport
dank
stairwells,
often
Less
than
a
third
ofchilpedometer
and track how
Studies show fat people who
exercise, even if they don' t locked to keep out intruders, dren who live within a mile much you walk. wh ich peoshed pounds, have half the forcing people to use eleva- of schoo l walk . Programs ple usually overestimate. The
such as Safe Routes to hope is that the coun ter will
death rate of sedentary skin- tors. '
That's
not
even
counting
School
and the Wa lking remind them to seek out ways
ny people .
In fac t, despite legitimate time spent in fro nt of TV s or School Bus push those stu- to compensate for a couchdents to walk or bike . often in potato environment.
worry over super-sized por- computers.
Wuh
all
those
obstacles,
groups accompanied by an
Taking I0.000 steps a day.
tions and junk food , some
hectoring
shou
people·
to
exercise
adult,
while
lobbying
local
ld let many people reach
scientists argue the nation 's
obesity epidemic is mostly has had little success. Dietz governments for safer side- the national goal of 30 min due to inactivity - that aver- doesn't even like the word walks and ways to ease traf- utes Qf a~tivity, proponents
a\le calorie consumption has- exercise anymore - it sug- tic . CDC points to one such say - though skepti cs noten t changed very much in gesis boring, sweaty, repeti- program in Marin County, those steps must be brisk, not
recent decades yet how many tive motion, while "phy sical Calif., that has cut almost in a stroll, to count. Colorado,
calories we work off each day activity" includes walking half the number of students however, is studying if it
the dog or playing catch with arriving alone in a car.
helps to add even 2,000 steps
has plummeted.
the
kids.
--CDC
and
groups
such
as
to
however much people reg"We've engineered activity
Hence
the
new
focus,
and
the
Robert
Wood
Johnson
ularl
y walk.
out of daily life and we need
(Editor; note: Lou ron
to think about how to reverse · millions Of dollars, on Foundation are studyin g
researching
ways
to
change
and
land
urban
development
Neergoard
col'ers health and
· that," says Steven Blair of the
our
environment
use,
hoping
so
it's
easier
to
spur
pedestri
medical
issues
for Th e
Cooper Institute for Aerobics
an-friendly
change.
The
to
get
moving
regularly.
Associated
Press
111
Research in Dallas.
American Public Health Washingto11. )
It wilt be a massive job: Some examples:
'

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LaugheryBannie
TUPPERS PLAINS. Ohio
- Deni se Michelle Laughery
and Todd Andrew Bannie
bot h or St. Paul. Minn .:
announce their approaching
marnagt: .
The service wi ll be held at
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
Church in Pomeroy with &gt;I
private reception to follow.
The bride -e lect i&gt; tile
d&gt;!ughter of Denise Laughery
ot Tuppers Plams ami Victor
Laughery of Reedsville. and
the granddaughter of Bob and
Bea Lau ghery of Parkersb urg
and' Theodore and Becky
Pullins or Long Bottom.
The prospective groom is
the son of Dave and Sandy
Banme of St. Paul. Minn.,
and the grandson of Ed and
Vera Bannie of St. Paul and
Harry and Mary Little of
Maplewood, Minn.
The bride is a 1992 gradtJ ate of Eastern Hi gh School
and a 1997 graduate or Ohio
Un iversit y. The groom is a

Anniversaries
Sigman-Nichols
COOLVILLE .. Ohio Jack and Linda Sigman of
Coolvill e announce the
engage ment and approaching marriage of the ir .
daughter, Kri stin Joy, to
Jase n Ralph Nichols, son of
· Linda Nichols and the late
Dan Nicho.ls of Toledo .
The bride-elect is the
gra nddaugh ter of Leora
Sigman of Cool vi li e, and
the late Max in e Owens of
, Pomeroy. She is a 1994
graduate
of
Federal
T~d Bannle and Denise· Laugher~
Hockin g High School and a
1992 graduate of St. Agnis 1998 graduate of the
High School in St. Paul and a University of Rio Grande
1997 graduate of Edgewood with a B.S. degree in
Biology. She . is currently
College in Madison, Wise.
by
the
employed
. Lau ghery is a personal
banker and volunteers as a Was hington County Career
Sunday ·school instructor Center of Marietta as a
with St. Stanislaus Catholic bi ology teac her.
Church in St. Paul. Her
Her fiance is a 1997 gradfiance is a commercial bank- uate of Delta Hi gh School
ing officer and is working and a 200 I graduate of th e
toward his MBA in finance.
University of Rio Grande
The cou ple will make their with a B.S. degree in psyhome in St. Paul.
chology and is pursuing a

Davis-Grimm

Neal-Alderman

'

TOWSON. Md . - Jill
Alexandria Davis and Leslie
Allan Grimm will be united
in marriage August '!. 2003,
at the Trinity Episcopal
Church in Towson, Md .
Jill is a 1997 graduate of
Harford Christian High
School and a 200 I graduate
of the College of Notre Dame
of Maryland, where she
earned a bachelor's degree in
history. She is currently
employed by St. Timothy's
Day Sc hool.
Leslie is a 1995 graduate of
Brooke High School and a
.1999 gradu ate of Ohio
University. He earned a bachelor's degree in communications. He is employed by
Johns Hopkins School of
Medicine.
Jill is the dau~hter of John
and Jean J;&gt;av1 s of White

VINTON, Ohio - Jackson
A. Neal Jr. and Barbara
Smith Neal of Bluetield, Va. ,
announce the engagement of
their dau ghter, Jacquelynn
Michelle Neal ' to Rodney
Ryan Alderman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Rodney W.
Alderman, of Vinton, Ohio.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of 'the late Jack and
Ruth Neal, Sr. of Bluetield, Va.,
and James Smith of New Kent.
Va., and Sue Smith of
Bluetield, Virginia. She is a
Leone Gdmm and Jill Davlo
1995 graduate of Graham High
School,
Bluefield, Va. She
Marsh, Md .
earned
a
bachelor of science
Leslie's parents are Les and
in
Business
Susan Gnmm of Paducah, degree
Ky., formerly of Wellsburg. Administration in 1999 from
He is also grandson of Bluefield State College,
Frances Grimm of Point Bluefield, W.Va., and a Master
Pleasant. W.Va., and .the late of Business Administration in
2000 from Radford University
Everett G. Grimm.
in Radford, VIrginia. She is
employed as a Financial Aid
Advisor at the University of
Rio Grande, Rio Grande, Ohio.
The groom-elect is the

Flowers create sweetsmelling nuptials
(WMS) - Selecting the
right flower for your wedding
_is_ an art, and extending its
scent throughout the wedding
party and the entire event is
pure genius.
'
. - wliat's tile best flowe r for
your wedding? Consider the
location, the time of day and
the season. Yves Rocher, an
innovator in botanical beauty,
offer~ tips on how to add
"scent-ual" intrigue to your
wedding day by selecting the
flower that best suits your
' style and weaving its color,
its scent and of course, the
flower itself. into all aspects
of the day.
A French country wedding
in summer is the perfect se tting for lavender. Honor the
tradition of "something old,
something new. something
borrowed. some thin g blue"
by adding sprigs of thi s timehOJiored· blue-hued bloom to
complement you r bridal bouquet and headpiece. Finish
the took with Yves Rocher's
Pur Desir de Lavande fragrance. part of a collection of
five single note 1fragrances.
Your lingering sce nt will
make guests feel as though
they are walking through

&lt;'

Sunday, April 13, 2003

'

Engagements

Scientilsts find_
From gadgets to urban planning, ~
clues to cocaine's getting couch potatoes moving
hold on addicts
BY RICK CALLAHAN
Associal eQ Press

Celebrations

iunba!' mtme' -ienttnel

Page C5

fields of fresh lavender every
time you near.
If a chic, black-tie affair
suits your style, then seduce
your guests with the intoxicating red rose . This gueen
a mong- flowers hidesaspicy
rich aroma within the velvety
tlesh of her petals. Unleash ·
its sweet rapture by scattering
these petals down the aisle
for the nuptial procession .
Create more majesty by having bridesmaids wear Pur
Desir de Rose perfume to
mfuse the roolb as the wedding party makes its·entrance.
Thi s irresistible elixir and its
luxurious bath and shower
products make wonderful
bridesmaids' gifts as well.

&lt;ifi&gt;

2003

Ball 50th

Kdstln Sigman and Jaoen Nichols

POMEROY, Ohio
Edward· and Hazel Schreiber
Ball of Pomeroy wi ll celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary frqm 2 to 4 P·l11·
on Saturday, April 19. with
an open house at the
Rocksprings
United
Church
in
Methodi st
Pomeroy
The couple was married on
April 19. 1953, at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church by the Rev.
L. M. Mohrhoff. They have
two sons and daughters-inlaw, Tom and Debbie Ball of
Syracuse. and Bob and
Tammy Ball of Pomeroy.
They have three g randchil ~
dren. Chris. Sarah. and
Michael. .
Mr. Ball is a Korean War

. master' s degree at Marshall
University in clinica l psy chology. He is cmrently
employed by Solutions
Outpatient Services , Inc.
arid the behav ioral hea lth
unit . of St. Josep h' s
Hospital in Parkersburg .
An ope n church wedding
is planned for 3:30 p.m.
. .
Jun e 14, 2003, at the
(WMS)
The wedding is
Mullen Memorial Baptist
.
just
the
beginning.
There's
Church , in Belpre.
plenty of exc item ent plan - .
ning the -honeymoon as well,
from choosing a travel
adventure to decid iHg what to
bring along on the journey.
And for many, planning this
"G reat Escape" is ill&lt;t as
important as planning the
weddi ng. Regardless of
where you decide to go, there
are some things you should
know to make it the kind of
experience yo u want it to be.
First, you must decide on a
b.ud get. If money is not an
issue, bon voyage! However.
if you're like most engaged
couples, you're already paying for more than you antici·
pated.
Establi sh a budget and use
it as a guide. You may also
Michelle Neal and Rodney Aldennan
want to consider using a hongrandson of Milton and Phyllis eymoon gi ft registry like the
Alderman of Waverly, Ohio free one provided by
and John and Opal Payne of www .TheHoneymoon .co m.
Vinton, Ohio. He is a 1994 Honeymoon registries allow
graduate of River Valley High guests, friends and family to
School, Cheshire, Ohio. He is contribute . towards specifi c
e~(lloyed as ~ spri!lkler litter elements of your honeyw1ili Central Frre Protection.
moon, like shore excursions,
The couple will c;xchange parasailing, spa services and
vows May 24, 2003, at the tours. If you already have a
University of Rio Grande, crock · pot, toaster and
blender, this may be just what
Rio Grande, Ohio.
you need .

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ball

Veteran and is retired from
the Kyger Creek Power Plant.
His wife is a homemak.er. The
couple requests that gifts be
omiued.
.

Honeymoon trends for 2003
After setting a budget, you
need to dec ide· where you
would like 'to go. If you and
vour tiance want the same
iype of honeymoon experi em:e, no problem. However,
if one craves adve nture while
the other wants to relax in the
su n. you need to compromise. There are destinations
that can satisfy both of you..
- you j ust need to do some
research.
To get started, check out
www.Honeymoo ns.com, an
informational Web site publi shed by Susan Wagner. a.
fo rmer travel editor of
Modern Bride.
Next, you have to decide
whether yo~ want an allinclu sive package or you
would prefer to be on yo ur.
own a little more. For those
with tight budgets, an all-·
inclusive honeymoon has the
advantage of a package price.
This inclu\les most activities
at both all-inclusive resorts
and on cruises, though there
are usually some expenses
which are not included.
.
Now you need to book and;
pay for this trip. Many honeymoon suppliers offer spe-·
Cial s for early booking, which
may or may not include airfare.

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and,enhance the lives of up to 50 more. Become a donor by placing your name
in the Ohio Donor Registry at any BMV or by downloading an
enrollment form at www.lifelineofohio.org.
. ·

•

&lt;

(740) 992-3279

,,

Toll Free 877·583·2433
God be with our troops.

FOR MOR.E INI'OIIIATION ON ORGAN AND TISSUE DON!JION, PLEASE CALL 1- 800-525-5667.

•

•t

..

�Page C6 • 6unbap

G:tmd ·6mtfnel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Sunday, April 13, 2003 '

•

Inside:
Classified ads, Pages 03-5

Christian music .

Page Dl

Michael W. Smith again win·s
.top honors at Dove Awards
'

Andrew Meyn and Usa Bowman

Bowman-Meyn
C)ALLIPOLIS, Ohio - Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bowman of
Gallipolis announce the engagement of their daughter, Lisa, to .
Andrew Meyn. son of Mr. and Mrs. Craig Meyn of Duluth
Minnesota.
The bride-elect is a 1999 graduate of Ohio Valley Christian
School and will graduate Spring, 2003 from Cedarville
University school of nursing.
The prospective groom is a 1999 graduate of Ohio Valley
Christian School and will graduate in 2003 from the
University of Nebraska at Omaha school.of engineering.
The weddingjs planned to take place May 24, 2003. at First
Baptist Church, Gallipolis.

NBC pushing
development
on Lynch movie
LOS ANGELES (AP) NBC is . hurrying development of a movie about the
rescue ·of POW Jessica
Lynch.
The network is meeting
with potential writers and
producers for a made-for-TV
film intended to air early in
the 2003-04 season, a network spokeswoman said
Thursday.
"We're not going to jump
into their moneymakin~
schemes. Thafs all it is,'
Jessica's father, Greg· Lynch
Sr. said last week before
going to visit his daughter ata U.S. military hospital in
Germany.
"If they're sincere, and
they're making offers right
now, if it's two years down
the road, they'll offer that
same deal," he said. "If not, it
was a hoax. They wanted a
quick promotion, and this is
the way they thought they
could get it. It's not going to

work that way."
Lynch, a 19-year-old Army
private first class from
Palestine, W.Va., was captured March 23 after her
, 507th Maintenance Company
convoy was ambushed in the
southern Iraqi city of
Nasiriyah.
She was rescued from a
hospital in the city April l by
U.S. commandos.
NBC is attempting to get
official rights to her story but
is willing to proceed with a
script based on news reports
and other public information,
Daily Variety said Thursday.
CBS reportedly is considering pitches for a Lynch TV
movie but has yet to decide
whether to proceed.
·
Greg Lynch Jr., Jessica's
brother, said last week that
his sister would have the final
say about any book or movie
deals.
·
''It's her story ·to tell,"
Lynch Jr. said.

NASHVILLE.
Tenn.
(AP) - For the second
straight year. contemporary
Christian singer Michael W.
Smith earned the top award
of best artist at the Dove
Awards on Thursday night.
In all, Smith claimed four
of Christian music 's version of the Grammys including best male vocalist
- bringing his total to 41
since 1987.
"Somebody asked me
backstage, ' Does this "really
ever get old? Do you ever
really get tired of it?'"
Smith said in accepting ~is
third best artist award in
five years.
"I said, 'You know what?
I' II always be grateful
because it is an honor and a
great responsibility to be in
this business and be about
the things of God."'
But money and awards
don't bring peace, Smith
said. "I just want to fall in
love with God and be his
man," _he said.
Christian
pop
star
Nichole Nordeman, expect-

ing her first child this sum- and peace ," Winans said as
mer. won seven awards. the show opened.
She fought back tears after
The audience raised -its
winning songwriter · of the hand s in support of U.S. .
year.
troops at the urging of
"Amy Grant made me Third Day - which won
start crying and now it 's group of the year for the .
just a · hormonal train third straight year and best
wreck," said Nordeman, rock recorded song for "40
whose other honors includ- Days."
ed best female vocalist and
"I want to say real quick,
song of the year for "Holy." there is freedom in Iraq
The Dove Awards recog- tonight ," Third Day memnize everything from staid ber Mac Powell said, drawgospel quartets and country ing cheers and a standing
to rock , rap and teen pop. ovation.
The 4,500 members of the _ After receiving nine nomGospel Music Association inations. Toby Mc~ehan
nominate and vote for the of the group de Talk sett led
wmners.
for one award. McKeehan,
PAX TV will air the who performs under the
show, .which was not broad- pseudonym tobyMac, won
cast live, on April 19.
for short form music video
Six-time best artist win- for "Irene ." ·
ner Steven Curtis Chapman
Other winners included
and Cece Winans, one of the Paul Colman Trio as
Christian music's best- new artist of the year and
loved divas, hosted the 34th Brown Bannister as producannual event at the Gaylord er of the year.
Entertainment Center.
Banni ster joined Vince
"We're here to celebrate Gill in producing Grant's
the music that delivers the "Legacy
Hymns &amp;
ultimate message of . hope Faith," the inspirational

Sunday, April 13, 2003

album winner.
Grant and Gill, who are
married. also won for country recorded song for 'The
River's Gonna Keep On
Rolling," while Randy
Travis 's "Rise And Shine''
was the country album wirTner.
Even if he hadn 't won,
·Smith knew it would be a
special night as tl.te Gospel
Mu sic Association paid
tribute to his 20-year career.
He joined Point of Grace,
Michael Tait, Anointed ,
Avalon and others in
singing hi s signature song
"Friends."
Smith described all the
attention and . awards as
"another thing that! have to
lay at the foot of the cross. "
He said he was shocked
to win best male vocalist
for the first time.
''I'm being honest when I
say this: I don't really think
J'·m a great ; ·gre.at , great .
singer. Who knows why I
won it this year? But I really was not expecting to win

with pansies
.Pansies perfect
for livening up

any landscape

alone, be massed in beds
or potted as an accent,
make wonderful border
RACINE , Ohio
treatments, or can be
Gardeners who want to grouped
with
other
add a quick blast of color plant s, like spring blooming bulbs to create a
to their flower. beds right beautiful splash of color
now, might consider pan- in spring.
stes.
The plants which come
They'·re readily avail- in about a hundred or so
able in most greenhouaes varieties and a limitless
and gardening shops, and spe·ctrum of color are
come in a variety of color
and design .
easy to grow.
Pansies planted now , " All they need is a
will bloom through June, · sunny spot in the garden
take a hot weather rest in and plenty of water,"
says Sue Rice, who has
July and August, and tbe·n been growing pansies to
start all over · again in sell in Sue's Greenhouse
September.
It's
not
M ·
s R d
unusual at all to see pret- on
ormng tar oa
near Racine for more
ty . pansies
peeking years than she can
through the early snpws remember.
&lt;if fall and winter.
Pansies are perfect
Although pansies grow
plants to liven up a land- best when planted in light
. th ose t·m
scape d unng
r es loose soil s, they do well
when little else is in
flower. They can stand Please see Pansies, D6
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

News editor

it. ,,

N

***EVERY
FURNI,URE'S

***
When all of the pansies are so pretty, it's no easy task for customers to make a selection. Here Dr. Laurel Krrkhart and Dr.
Evelyn Kirkhart of Gallipolis take a long look before making a choice.

FROM ...BE GIGAII...IC

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich

***

WB show to offer
shot at $1 billion prize
'

LOS ANGELES (AP) - · contestants. The contest starts
The e.volution of television May I with the sale of Pepsi
-continues: A $1 billion prize products that could lead to a
will be at stake in a WB spe- chance to be on the TV special.
cia! and a monkey may help
Details of . the show are
decide if there's a winner.
under discussion, executive
"Play for a Billion" will be producer Matti Leshem said
the culmination of a Pepsi sum- Thursday. One proposal ·
mer promotion in which contes- _ involves having JLmonk!:y
tlll!tShave The chance to play for .put previously selected numthe top prize on a live, two-hour bers in an order that must be
show wring in September.
matched for the $1 billion
The program, te be pro- prize, he said.
"What could be more randuced by Michael . Davies
("Who Wants to be a dom than that?" Leshem said.
Millionaire"), represents a
He's hoping to get a
partnership between WB and capuchin monkey to do the
· Pepsi-Cola North America.
job. There was some controThe two companies are also versy surrounding the idea,
teaming on a summer variety Leshem said, · refusing to
show, "Pepsi Smash," which . elaborate. There are also
will feature performances by those promoting an orang. top musical acts, WB said in a utan as a better, more intellirelease. The six-week series gent choice, he said.
. will begin airing in July.
There is a one-in-1 ,000
"Play for a Billion" guaran- chance that the $1 billion will
tees a $1 million winner and a be awarded, according to WB
shot at the grand prize for I0 and Pepsi.

Bees
from Page C1
Reebel said that honey
comes in many colors and
tlavors. depending on the
type of pollen that the bees
collect. Reebel planted
·white clover especially for
his bees.
"Clover honey is the best.
It is very light in co lor and
has a mild taste. There are
different colors of honey,
'

,,

ranging fronl almost white
· to dark brown, ·depending
on the type of pollen that
the bee collects. Each has a
different flavor, as well,"
said Reebel.
. Reebel said that he is
looking forward to a new
year raising bees.
"I am hoping to have better luck with this new hive.
Italians are known as lovers
but Russians are very
'hardy, so maybe these will
do better," Reebel joked.

GOING ·OUT OF BUll Ell PRICES

A EXTRA SBO OFF
PLUS E'LL.PAY 'BE SALES 'AX!
c:::..-.y

p._.rc:h-=-•-

c;._._ ...

$399

_Pansies will take gardeners through the best and barest of seasonsr
Planted now they will bloom until June, rest during July and August,
resume blooming in September and continue right into winter.

Pansies grow best if they are well watered on a regular basis. Sue Rice sprays flats of pansies she's grown at
her greenhouse on Morning Star Road near Racine every day or two.

An1ount of sales tax will be deducted fron1 your pUrchase _ Custonil•r Is r•sponslbl• for all taxes

.TOP QUALITY

TOP QUALITY

TOP 'QUALITY

BEDROOM SUITE 3 PlfCf CINfMA SIMMONS
.
QUEEN SIZE LIVING ROOM SfT SLEEP SOJ.A

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Rtf ~ m9 b"'""""
"'"""' ,...,....., . Rtf ~ M ,rv•.."'ri.,m.....""',.n Rtf ~ tHt
o

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6oilf Out Of Busiaess $1741 6oilf Out Of lusinesr S1547 Goint Out Of lusinesi SSIJ

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AJID WE PAY THE SALES TAX! AND W£ PAY THE SALES TAX! AND WE PAY THE SALES TAX!

Pansies come in many varieties as well as corors and among the most popular of .the face
flower is the ·poker joker."

The single, clear colors of pansies, like these yellow and purple ones with a velvety look,
displayed by Sue Rice, appeal to many gardeners particularly if they are to be .used in
mass arrangements or area borders.

�Page 02 ~ i&gt;unba!' O!:imrs -&amp;rntincl

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

Sunday, April 13, 2003
'

Pomeroy • Middleport ,. Gallipolis, OH

Patios: The new family room

meets .
needs of growing
families
7 ',,
.

/

www.cxlihomeplans.com

center where homeowners un-

(amrose

Camros~

By Associated Design/'

Dimen5ions
81' X II'
2000 SERIES

Bv DAVID BRADlEY
FORAPWEEKLYFEATURES
rRO MLOWE'S HOME
IM ~ R OVE M E N T W
AREHOUSE
Picture thi s: you settle into
your most comfortable chair
after a long da y. and ·as you
chat with fam ily or fri ends
whil e sipping a cop! beverage. soothing tun es and the
aroma of frcs1•1 y cooked food
lilllhe:tir.
Could thi s be a fan cy den?
Or an urscale famil~ room
with adjoming kitchen.
~
How about yo ur patio?
Pat ios arc in . Forget cheesy
tubular. flim sy nyl qn strap
furniture and hibachis on a
concrete slab. Today s patio
ser ves as a de facto outdoor
family . room -entertainment

PLAN 10-007
living Area 2630 sq.h.

G01oge

594sq.h.

/

Deck

The sprawling

Vaulled

Camrose is a con- /

19'2. 1119'2"

Fomlly

temporary home

I

~'

High-usage

~

Jiving spaces -

11'5" x12 '

des1gned to meet
the needs or growing families .

Nook
10' X 10'

Vaulted

Dining

Garage
24'4H)( 24'8"

kilchen. family
·room and

din ~

Y'

/ /'&gt;

ing room- are
at its core. Master
suite and li"ing
room, areas where

C2002 Asaocla1ed
Oea1gn5, Inc.

--~,_ -, ·=--

\ fonnal eating walk. -in cl os et
.-, bar for snacks. and vanities in two separate areas.
13'8' X 13'6'
Vaulted
quiet are usually
Ame hi ties 1n One has a shower and water closet ;
Maeter Suhe
most appreciated.
the
generous
the other boasts a spa tub.
15' X 17'8"
are in the front
Walls in the li vmg and di mng
k1tchen in·
wing, well away
elud e r an'ge rooms include some interesting
from the high en- · ~L..--.r­ and oven in a central wofk is- angles . The Camrose also ha s a
ergy sounds and
land. a second oven, plenty of skylit entry and a media room or
ac1ivi1ies of family hving.
counter space , a walk-in pan1ry, study, wh1 ch could be used as a
Two olher bedrooms, each wilh microwave and dishwasher. Utilities home office.
a built-in desk, are adjacen11o lhe art out of sight, tucked in an alcove
For a review plan , including
kitchen and family room. Both have with a window.
scaled floor plans, elevati ons. secdirect access to a compartmental·
Double doors in the family room tion and anist's conception, send
ized bathroom that offers prh·acy to . open onto a deck. Placemenl of lhe $25 lo Associated Designs, 1100
two people at once -a boon to fami- fireplace allows il to warm lhe Jacobs Dr.. Eugene. OR 97402.
lies with teens.
kilchen as well as lhe family room. Please specify lhc Camrose 10-007
The Camrose offers a chmce of
Both Ihe living room and masler and include a.return address when
three eating environments, with the suite have vauhed ceilings and are Ordering. A catalog feaiUring more
Vau lted

Living

der time con straints and stress
from work can unwind amid
tiered decks. fountains. musi~
and mood lighting, fine furniture and full y equipped kitchens.
"Everyone is talking about
the se new outdoor rooms,"
says Marybeth Cornwell. vice
p~e s ident for Lowes Home
Improvement Warehouse.
"Thats how hot patio living is.
Consumers tell us they want a
place whcre· they can tum off
the cell phones and pagers
and relax, " says Cornwell.

wv

Utribune - Sentinel - 1\egister

" And lhey want the same
Even the old standby grill
comforts found inside tlieir has seen a facelift. Stainless
1
home."
mode ls with upward o f
Patios continue a cocooning 50,000 BTU heat oulputs are
tre nd among homeowners favored by outdoor cbefs.
who view $500 solid alumi- Warmers for sauce s and side
num cast furniture sets as a dishes are standard fare.
good alternative to $3,000 va"'Theres no doubt furniture
cations.
is an inve stment," says CornTodays patio is no longer a well , "but we see peopl e
"hodgepodge of items thrown ready to make the most of
together." says Cornwell . The their outdoor dollars. The outsame coordinated design ap- doors is where they want to
proach applied to inferiors has be." She says retailers have
simply moved outside,
step_Ped up consumer mforlt starts with furniture, in- . mat1on efforts to help buyers
eluding a new tine by Cole- understand good-better_- best
man . Solid cast aluminum ta- opt1ons 111 outdoor furmture,
bles and chairs are the norm apphances, and fabncs .
but are joined by sofus, oversized cflairs and ottomans in
And in a new twist, patios
conversational arrangements. have become the latest selling
Of course, no stylish design point for home buyers. "A
would be without matching $500 furniture set makes a
UV -resistant fabrics on fluffy patio look great, it adds curb
cushions and coordinated side appeal and buyers respond to
elements including torches that," says Cornwell. "People
and occasional tables.
think a home is their largest
Seven-to-10-year furniture investment. and buyers no
warranties are common in fur- longer see the patio as ju st
niture ensembles from $399 that place out there . They
to more than $1,000. ·
want to live outdoors , too."
And no patio is complete
•••
without refrigerators and
Lowe's is a national chain
coolers, fountains for tran- of nearly 750 home-improvequility, chimenea heaters for ment, appliance and gardencool nights, a first-class sound ing stores.
system and accent lighting.

CLASSIF-IED

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
·arrthune
To
Sentinel

Place
Your
Ad ...

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a!m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
Help Get Response ...

Monday, April 14, 2003

B·on·ing ·up-o-n- Eiectricity_1 _01~

74

C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit
for sate Chester Towns h1p,
Me1gs County. send leners
ot mteres t to The Da1ly
Sent1nel , PO Bo)( 729-20,
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769 .
Do you need your GED or
High-School D1ploma? Do
you know how to wnte an
effectl\19 resume? Do you
!&lt;;now what qualit1es employers are look,ng For 1n an
employee ? Do you !&lt;;now
how to keep a JOb once you
get It? We can HBip! For
more informat1on. call the
Me1gs
Coun ty
STEPTJOG/ABLE Program
at. 740-992-6600 or 740992-6930. or stop m Monday
_ 1hwugh Er1day at 111 Wes1
Second Street m Pomeroy,
Oh Make a d1Herence •n
your l1fe Today '

Al ii.110N Al~ll
FLEA MARKEr
Kessel's Produce and Flea
Mkl Open Thurs-Fn-Sat.
Now renting spaces. 135 4
Jackson Pike, (740)446·

7787
--::::--"!':":----.,
WAN"I..D
lll HUY

__
Absolute Top Doll ar: U.S
Silver,
Gold
Coins,
Proolsets, Diamonds, Gold
Rmgs,
U.S Currency,M T.S Com Shop. 15 1
Second A\le nue. Gallipolis.
740·446-2842
I\UJI(H\11'\1

Sunday Dlloplay:

For S&amp;:~ndays Paper

·

POLICIES: Ohio Vallay Publlahlng retervQ the right to ldll, reject, or cancel any ad at any time. Error• must bt repo~ on the flrat day of
Trlbune-Sentlnei·Ragllter will be retponaible for no mora than the coat of the apace occupied by the error and only the firtl insertion. We
any loss or expenae that roaults from the publication or ornlltlon of an advertiHmenl. Correction will be made In tne first tvallable edition. • Box
are always confidential. • Current rata card tpplles. • All real estate advertiHmenta are subJect to th• Ftd.sl Fair Housing Act of 1968. • Thl1 ""'"~'""''I
accepts only help wanted ads meeting EOE standard I. We will rtOt 'knowingly accept any advertising In violation of the law.

Attn: Work from home.
$500· $1500/mo. PT

$2000- $4500/mo FT
800-286-9748
www retire 41 1 com

HELP WM'fED

DIRECTOROF SOCIAL
SERVICES

ATTN: Po1nt Pleasant.
Postal posit1ons. Cterkslcarfle rslsor ters
No
e11p.
req uired . 8enel 1ts.
For
exam, salary, and testmg
mforma tion call {630)3933032 E~t . 782. 8am-8pm. 7
days.

·

Occupa tional
Cert1lied
Ther apy Assist ant- The
Therapy team at 0 \/erbrook
Reh ab Center, a beautiful
100 bed s~illed nurs1ng and
re hab fac1l1ty 1n Middl eport.
Ohio IS seeking a tutlt 1me
CO TA Wages are $32-S37 K
depending on ex p er~e nce
and benefitS 1ncl ude med·
1cal. d8ntal.. life rnsurance
22 pa1d days oft For more
In formation cal l Greg Stout
at AZ D1\lers1fied Health
Corp, 1·800·577·4310.

6 ktttens, 3 black. 3 orange.
litter tra1ned good &amp; children . week s old (740) 44 11590

Lun 1\Nn

Data Entry Clark

Fou~n

Take a closer
look at
LOST OR STOLEN- $100
reward tor mfo lead,ng to
lnfoCision!
return of D1rlb1kA 1997
Honda XR100 white &amp; red.
with ~s . Call (7401~41-1892

We offer:
• Up to $7/hour
• Weekly bonuses
• Paid training
. • Pa•d vacations
• Patd holiday1s
• Ful benefits
package

LOST- Blond. shOrt ha1red
dog m East End area,
-1nswers
to
"Magg1e'"
Reward 1740)446-4395
Lost Tptran1c ~h ock collar
on Carson Farm. (Clifton.
WV ). red With reflective
tape Reward . (30 4)773·
9542 aft er 5.00 p.m or
!eave message.

If this is what you
have been looking
for give us a call
todayl

po

I_ · \'ARil SALE

1-877·483-6247
ext. 2454

YARil SAt.t-;.
GAI..t .ll~li.L~

• or etop by:
242 3rd AVIUI
G111Ipolle, OH

3 Family Ya rd Sa te, Monday
&amp; Tuesday. 14111 &amp; 1~ th .
Rear ot 201 8·,/2 Eastern
Avenue, acro11 from Wa l·
Mart Baby CIOtl"l lnQ, aaiOrted Items, toya. mlec ltema.
women &amp; Mens clothin g,
g!rla clothing, ahoea, alol of
things not mentioned.

DRIVERS

Now hiring OTR. Must have
Our tong-term facility has an COL -A, 23 yrs. of age with 2
1mmediate openmg for a years e:.::p., 1 yr. flatbed 1·
ext. 19
Director at Sac1al Serv1ces 800·826-3560
The r1ght candida te w111·
Po ssess str ong org aniza tional skills
Experien ced .
liCensed
Possess the ab1lity to plan, Physical
Therapist
adapt , and Implement poll· Assistant , excellent benefits,
cies an d procedures relating send
141
resume :
to the Social Services c'o tumbus Rd., Athens , Oh
depat1men t
45701or tax 740-593-8221 .
Assist resid ents/patients in
the ac hre\lement and ma1n·
Full· time secretary needed
tenance of max1mum psy·
tor a fast-paced Gallipolis
ch0soc1 al functioning and
business . Applicant needs to
Independence.
be familiar with basic 0111ce
Make use ot co mmunity
procedures , telephone com·
resources and assist in the
mun1cattons &amp; computers.
fac ilitatiOn ot the re sland enJOY dealing with the
dents's/pa tien f s discharg e
public Send resume to P.O.
planning.
Box 1133, Gall1polis, OH
If u1teresteQ, plea se send
45631.
resume to Rocksprmgs
Rehabilitation Center, ATIN ·
Melissa Wamsley, 36759 Help wanted caring lor the
Roa d, elderly, Darst Group Home,
Aoc ksprm gs
now paymg mm1mum wage,
Pomeroy. Oh10 45 769
E:-:t end1care
Health new sh1tts· 7am-3pm, 7am·
Services. Inc IS an equal 5pm, 3pm -11pm, 11pmopportu nity employer that 7am, call 740-992-5023

Entering new and upda ted
descnptive and numerical
mtormat1on mta a database.
Ma y also do commumcat1on
memos, spreadsheets, or
othe r documentatiOn Good
ability to organ ize daily work
process .
Good
Commun1catton an d people
skill. Goad computer ability
and working knowledge of
word and excel Hours are
8:00 to 4:30 M-F Send
res ume to JR12 , 200 Main
Stteet, Pornt Pleasant, WV

25550

Delivery Person needed for
local Furniture Store Send
Resume to JR 10, 200 Ma1n
Street. Fto1nt Pleasant. WV

25650

Needed

30pm, Monday th ro ugh
Friday 'with paid holidays,
vacai!Ons, sick leave, a
40t(k) plan and medical
msurance? Our newspaper
m Pom._ero')l has 1 opening
for a permanent. profession·
at
ins ide
salespers on
Com pen sation IS a comblna·
tion of base salary a nd commiSSion. This job will not be
open long, so call Larry
Boyer today at {7 40) 446·
2342
Monday
th rou gh
Fr1day morn mgs be tween
Bam and 9am and alternoons between 4pm and
5pm. If those hours are not
convenient far you to call.
emall a cover letter and your
resume to Larry at [bgy:
erOmydailytri byoe com Be
laatl

Local body shop seeks qualified repair tech Competltl\19
pay good working environment Call to set up interview. (740)446·4466
Lost your Job? Need to
Work? Let's talk ...The new
A\Io nl
There
are
"" 25,000 .. customers 1n our
area needing service . Earn
$1 .000+ Monthly by selling
$20. ol Beauty Products to 6
People, 5 days a Week!
Great tor: Couptes-Slngle
M om s - F Ei milies Handicapped. Ftlans to Fjt
any Need. No Slock Ups,
No Door to Door. It will Work
for You! $10.00 Start up

Fee , Cl!11 April, 304·8823630 foe Detallt.

Gallipolis/Pt.

Ploaaan• area tull ttmo REAL ESTATE
REAL ESTATE
reslal'~an1
ma.nagar, expert· -;~~;;~~;;~;.~~~~~~~~
ence required . Ftlease eend 1
reeu~e c/o 8011 JAOa Point
Pleaunt Register. 200 Main
Street, Poln1 Ptuunt , WV

25550

ANNOUNCEMENTS
AVON! All Acoaal To Buy oc
Soli. Shlctoy Spurs. 304·
875·1429 '

New 4 Bdrm Sectional

I
Just Sou1h of Logan

•

,

,

740•385•4367

Mary's Tee Time Grill at
Ri\lerside Golf Club- now
accepting applications for
kitchen and waitstaft, partlime and fu ll-time positions
a\lailable, (304)773 -5354
McOonatds Ala Grande now
hiring any tlme positions.
Insurance available. Paid
vacation and holidays . Apply
within.
Needed· 1 Receptionist,
must have expenenced on
computer &amp; typing and 1
Medical Assistant for Pam
Management
of
Southeastern Ohio opening
June 1, in Gallipolis. Send
resume to Gary Stone , c/o
Pain
Management
of
Southern Ohlo. 1616 Grant
Street , Portsmouth, Ohio
45662 . Train ing will stan
May 19.

NURSES (RNo)
$47.00
per
hOur,
Columbus, OH. All UOI!s,

FULL TIME [800)437-0348

SPECIAL
AMERICAN
LEGION BINGO
in Rutland Post 467
Starting 4/14/03
We will be paying
$80.00 per game.
Several special
games for extra
money.
Starting time 6:30.
Everyone Welcome

55 acre farm on SR 554
3 bedroom, 2 bath house with
basement; 2 barns; 10 a~res pasture;
ng fed livestock tank; good hun1tinl!;l
stocked pond; free gas

S1l5,000

cell (740) 167·7166
between 9 AM &amp;9 PM

REAL ESTATE

. REAL ESTATE

REDUC~DI

READY TO MOVE INI

Set on 2 acres. 3 bedroom, bath, and a half, LR, DR,
Kitchen . Den wilh Fireplace, and Sunroom.
Covered Carport. 3 Nice Outbuildings.
Located al 3863 Kerr Road, Bidwell. Ohio.

Call (850) 982-7668 or (850) 932-6959

II'~ ~ 1....16....--H-OME'i---~
Man agee- Galllpolla ~a... r College r
I:
f{l

I1110

Ohio 4578Q

II I ' I I

11

HEI.PWANJID

Residenl

FOR SALE

Woodland Centers , Inc is
(Careers Close To Home)
currently accepting applica- Call Today! 740-446-4367, (3)FHA &amp; VA hOmes set up
for tmmed1 ate possession all
l 1ons for the position of
1·800-214·0452
Resident Manager for Carr www gallipoliscaree rcollege.com within 15 min. of downtown
Gallipolis Rates as low as
Street
Apa rtments.
Reg ~90-05 - 12 7 48 .
App licants must have a
or High School
Diploma and valid dri\ler's
license
Dulles
would
include O\lerslght ot apart·
ment comp lex , Including
maintenance, lawn care ,
transportation, housekeep·
ing , and safety/ security.
App licants with past residential or maintenance
e:.::penence preferred.

GED

Woodland Centers, Inc., is a
not-for profit pri\late community mental health ce nter
serving Gallia, Jackson, and
Meigs Counties. Restdent
Manager pos1tion benefits
would include a one bedroom apanment. \lacation
and sick lime, 13 patd holi·
days , retirement
plan,
health, lite, and disability
msurance offered. Positions
must maintain valid drivers
license as de fined by
Agency's fleet insurance
carnBr.
Please.
send
r'esumes to Sherry Gordon.
Manager
of
Human
Resources.
Woodland
Centers, Inc., 3086 State
Route 160, GallipOliS, OH
45631 . EOEJAAEmptoyer.

Medi Home Health Agency,
Inc. seekmg AN's for the
GalliPolis, OH area. We after
a competitive salary, bene·
fits package, 401k, flex time,
and s1gn on bonus. Please
send resume 10 430 Second
Avenue. Gallipolis. OH
45631 , Attn: Oiani Harless, Truck Drivers. Immediate
hire , class~ COL required ,
Clinical Manager.
excellent pay, experience
----~---­ reqUired Earn up to
Medi "Home Health Agency, $1,000. per week,Gall 304·
Inc., seeking a West Virgima 675-4005
Physical Therapy Assistant .:__:.___:.____ _ _ __
tor the GallipoliS, Ohio area.
UNIQUE HEALTHCARE
We otter a campetiti\le
OPPORTUNITIES
salary, benefits package. Rocksprings Rehabilitat ion
401 k, and f1ex time. Please Center has exciting poslsend ·resume to 430 Second lions available for health
Avenue . Gallipolis, OH care professionals. Become
45631. Attn: Diane Harless, a part Of the team!
Clinical Manager.
fmmed1ate openings are
- - - - - - - - - available for lh8 tollow1ng·
D1rector of Nursing- We are
Go to Work lmmedlalely!
seeking a creati\le individual
Laborers and Clerical needwho has good team building
ed in Gallipolis Area. Call
and system skills and IS
Extras at (304)522-4975
Interested in makmg a sin- - - . , . . - - - ' - - - - cere commitment to perSeeking Activ1tles Olreclor formance impro\lement
who is Uexible, mnovative, Assistant
Director
of
creative and"enjoys working Nursing- EnJoy a great posi·
with Residents who are hBv· tlon that wtll continue your
lng skilled care or rehablllta· development of supeNisory
tlve services. Responsible skill&amp; and will broaden your
tor planning, organizing and aenlor nurse managemant
Implementing the recreation caceer path! .
and activities program In These protaaalonal peal·
accordance with re~ulatlon , tlons Include a full benefits
E11ctUent benefit&amp;, environ· program and competitive
ment and manaQemtnt aatory peckago. Call Mallua
Adm lnlatrator,
118m to work with . Very lll· Wamatey,
ble atart If tnrertattd, today for 1 confidential Inter·
plea11 eend r11ume to: vlaw at [740) 8ti2-8808.
Health
Rocktpclnga Rthtblllttllon E.~etend l cara
Center,
Attn :
Metlaaa Strvlcea, tne. 11 an equal
wameley,
Admlnlttrator, oppo~untiy amptoyor mal
3875Q. Rockoprlnga Rood, ancouregea
workplace
E.~tttndlcare Health Service,

FOR SALE BY OWNER
Dlx Soaker Bath • Upgrade Carpet
• • Bedrooms • l.ai'Je Donner
• Lined Chestnut Cabinets
• Large Walk-In Closets

liELP WM'fED

~omtroy,

REAL ESTATE

M-F8:30.8, Sal H
Sun

I ro

Looking for
a job? _

6

Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Fax us a · (304) 675-5234
E-mail us at:
' classlfled@mydallyreglster.com

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid·

Thur&amp;dayforS••n&lt;la•••

10

-------_.1

3 pupp1es. 112 Australian
Shep l 112 German Black &amp;
Wh1te. 8 weeks old 740-367·
7947 alter 6pm

gasket

Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.

CNA'S
&amp;
Re sjdent
Assistants lntervrews Are encou rages
workplace
Join the team of quality care
Now Berng Co nc;tucted For diversity. M/F ON
- professr onats at Overbrook
.CNA &amp; ReSident ASSiS tan t
Center. We are taktng appli·
Posi tions. II You Are A
Caring
Enthusias tic.
cations tor part time
COMPANION Dependable Person, Then - - - - - - - - - LPN's/RN 's tor 12 hour
ADULT
Excellent
References. We Warlt ~ Yo u To Jo1n Our Benettt package
sh1fts
Privacy of your own home. Team Come On 0\/e r &amp; Do you enJOY talki ng to peo- available Please come 1n
ple on the telephone? Are
ctea'n1n g
Etc. Check Us Ou t! Competitive
meals
an d complete our applicayo u pe rsuasi\le an d ca nJi·
Openings fillmg up last. CNA
Wages,
Paid
tion today at 333 Page
dent? Do you enJOY know1ng
(30418_BU766
- - - - -Vacat,ons. Paid Meals Many
Street, Middleport, Oh
wh at is go1 ng on 1n Pomeroy,
Other Benel1ts.
Middleport an d all ol Me1gs - .,.---- - - - - - Ra\lenswood Care Cen ter. Coun ty? Would you en oy Liv9-in nanny lor 2 children ,
1
111 3 Washm gton St..
a career tn inside sales free roam and OOard plus
Ravenswood. WV,
with no n1ght or weekend $200/month , call (740)992References Required
hOurs? How abQUt 9am . 5 5472

~--1--~ ·male
house
cats,
neutered. (740)992-?588

that leaky

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication

~,r.IO__H.EI·.I·'W-ANTE_._D_. ~1'.-·HJ:-~."P·W-ANl_Ul_. • I ro

'I f{\ II I ·'

Repairing

DisPlay Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

·

2 tree rabbits. 2 Now
Zealand doe. 1 , black mill ,.,1 ,.,
10~-------,
buck. (740)667-0631 ask for
HEU• WANll:n
L..aura
L,

Protect Our
Planet and
Everybody
Wins.

•

YARD SAI.F.-

M1ddlepor1-Pomeroy 's 6th
annUal 6·mile tong Yellow
Flag Va rd Sale, May 2 &amp; 3.
look for the yellow llags! Call
for in to about locations. 740992·4055

roo

Word Ads

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

PO~IEROI'/MIIlllU:

JO

l\egtster

'

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis Visit us at: 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Call us at: (740) 446-2342 ·
Call us at: (740) 992-2155 ·
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@mydailytribune.com
classified@ mydallysentl nel.com

Offiee 1/tJwc-~

Astrograph

CANCER (June 21-July you'll have excellent chances
22) ~ Having both the in- of achieving tftem and possiBY BERNICE BEDE OsoL
sight to know where your op- bly even more.
It would prove to your portunities lie and a willing- , SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23benefit in the year ahead to ness to be enterprising in go- Dec. 21) - You may need
concentrate on projects or en- ing after what you want will the gauntlet to be · thrown
lerprises that are bold and make you a big success today. down today in order to get
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)- you going. Otherwise, unless
slalwart. Your success will
provide you with personal ful- Someone you thought you you are faced with some type
fillmcnt and rewarding divi- hadn't been able to reach and of challenge, your attitude is
dends that can ' t be bought.
make progress with could put likely to be too easygoing.
dining room al the formal end oflhe dramatically illuminated by custom- !han 350 home plans is available for
ARIES (March 21-April this erroneous assumption to
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22spectrum. lhe richly window~d designed arch-top windows. The $15. For more information, call
19 ) Chances are some rest today when the person fi- Jan. 19)- Do nothing that is
nook for everyday meals, and the in· huge master suiiC features a large [800) 634-0123.
knowledge you recently ac- nally becomes responsive to devious, but by \he same to&lt;JUired could come in mighty your overtures.
ken don ' t be too obvious
handy today when you realize
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) about your purposes today, eiit's the perfect solution to ap- 7 _Friel!!!.Lwo__haye_you in . ther. Use the indirect ap---plyto a problem you ' re con- their corner today will be_ proach in all your undertakfronted with. Good thing you pretty darn lucky. You'll ings to achieve your ends.
li&gt;tened .
come through for them and
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
TAURUS ·(April 20-May give them fresh courage and 19)- Try to team up with
Bv JAMES
(where the main power comes dryers at Ihe same time, the
·AND MORRIS CAREY
into the home and the meter is process drew more wall age 20) - Hang tough when nc- strength to carr.y on with what friends or. associates who are
as energetic and enthusiastic
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
generally located) are one in than the circuit was rated to gotialing a financial contrac- needs to be done.
Recentl_y one of our daugh- the same.
carrv and. thu s, the circuit tual agrce~e~t !oday. Call thl!__ LIBRA .(SeRt-.23-0ct._23) _ab.out what the-y're doing to--~..c.•&gt;, Jamte....w.as m. a state-~! --t n our case, ·ttre sUI:ipanel i-s - 6real&lt;er tripped.
orner guy s 151ufflfTiic terms - Your mental faculties are day as you are in order to ease
app:ar
out of li_ne. If you still especially keen today and can your restlessness . They're
If breakers arc constantly
distress when. wilh her hatr located in our laundry room.
st•ll_ "'_et, her electnc blow Jamie still wasn't clear about tripping and you· find yourself don t get a sattsfactory deal. be focused on most any pro- your cure.
.
ject you fancy, but cash in on
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
dryer ceased operatmg._
what this had to do ":ith why n_ipping breakers or replacing walk away from 11.
W1th blow dryer In one her blow dryer wasn t work- fuses .often. chances arc you
G~MINI (May 21-June 20) your cerebral prowess by se- 20)- Th_
e more ambitious an
hand, a da'!'p . towel_ 1~ the ing. We assured her that we are overloading a circuit. - It s gomg to be up to you lecting the toughest ones to undertakmg IS, the better
you,' ll be able to perfo ~m and
other and dnppmg hatr m her were working our way toward Consider splitting the load by to show some le_ade~ship and work on.
become
the
mouvaung
force
SCORPIO
(Oct.
24-Nov.
ptish yourself today to
wake, she ran down the hall the answer.
plugging devices into differ~~~ search of an answer to her
We opened the subpanel ent c1rcuits. Recurring electri- in a partnership arrangement 22)- Because you're willing achieve your ends. Channel
dllemma.
door to expose a neat arrange- cal problems should be inves- today. Your counterpart will to work hard and long for your efforts toward some kind
We gave the d_ryer a once- ment of bfack switches called . tigated by a qualified electri- follow your cues and supply what you hope to accomplish of worthwhile objective._
the back-up.
today, the aspects indicate
over _and determmed that the circuit breakers. We ex- cian.
housmg appeared to be all plained that each of the breakFor more home-improvenght - the swttch was oper- ers in the panel controlled ment tips and information
atmg properly and the electn- power to the various electrical vtSII our Web site at
cal cord and plug appeared to circuits throughout our house. www .onthchouse.com.
•••
be fme. Confident_ tha~ the Among the group of neatly
dryer presented no tmmment arranged black switches in the
Readers can mail questions
danger, we plugged 1t mto an- panel was one errarit switch. · to: On the House , APNewsother outlet. The dev1ce ~~~- We compared the number on Features, 50 Rockefeller
med~ately produced 1ts famtl- the breaker with the corre- Plaza, New York , NY Hl020,
iar whine along with an ample sponding number on the leg- or e-mail Careybro(at)onthesupply of hot a1r. Jam1e end located on the inside face house.com. To receive a copy
of the panel door and discov- of On the House booklets on
seemed perplexed .
We unplugged the blow ered that it was the breaker plumbing,
painting,
dryer, returned t_o her bath- that controlled the power to healing/cooling or deckslpatroom, plugged It mto t11e out- the electrical outlet in her ios, send a check or money
let beside her sink. switched it bathroom.
order payable to The Associon . Noth1ng. An mquiSillve
We moved the breaker to ated Press for $6.95 per book11 -year-old, Jamie couldn' t the off position and then let and mail to: On the House,
understand why her blow flipped it to the on position P.O. Box 1562. New York,
Keeping the planet clean start~ in your own neighborhood. Follow these tips to ensure a
dryer worked when plugged and returned to her bathroom NY 10016-1562, or through
healthy, prosperous and sustainable future for all living things.
mto an outl~t across the toseeiftheblowdryerwould these
online
sites :
house, but not m the outlet Ill now function. As we ex- www .omhehouse.com or up• Volunleer with a local or national environmemal group such as a highway cleanup program.
her bathroom.
pected, and to Jamie's delight, bookstore.com.
• Buy products thai are energy efficient or use recycled materials as much as pcssible.
S1nce the blow dryer her oultet was back in busi• Conserve electricity by turning off lights when not in a room and running major appliances
seemed not to be the culpnt, ness. However, by this time,
al ni ght.
we turned our attentiOn to the Jamie' s hair was nearly dry
utlet 111 her bathroom and and her concern turned from
te st~d i1 for _power. We u~ed her dryer problems to why the
It's Our Only Home.
an mexpens1ve two-pronged breaker had "tripped" in, the
voltage ·tester that consists of first place.
·
Protect It.
two sh~rt lengths of msulated
We explained that breakers .
Keeping the planet clean starts in your
w1re wuh exposed metal ter- and their predecessors. fuses ,
own
neighborhood. Follow these tips to ensure a
minals at the ~nds, and a are safety devices that prevent
healthy, prosperous and sustainable future for all living
small light bulb at the oppo- electrical wire from overheatsite end. The test is simple. ing~ a condition that could rethings.
The termmals are plugged suit in an electrical fire. AlBY MORRIS
• Conserve water in the home: have leaking faucets
into the outlet, one in each of though. a breaker can trip for'
AND JAMES CAREY
fiKed promptly, and avoid overrunning water.
the two slots. When the bulb many reasons. it is usually
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
• Recycle! Newspapers, glass and certain plastics can
lights, power is present. No caused either by a short or an
Q. Judy asks: I have a leaky
be recycled in most communities.
light, no power. Our test re- overloaded circuit. A circuit bathroom faucet . Can you tell
vealed that the outlet was in- becomes overloaded when the me some simple instructions
• If your community doesn't have a recycling program,
deed not "hot" - meaning it power draw is greater than the to fix it? Please include specontact local authorities and ask them to start one.
had f!O po~er.
.
circuit is designed to supply. cific tools. and pa1ts needed.
Th1s senes of events led to The breaker, the wire and the
A. It sounds as if you might
a discussion about basic home outlet are sized to meet the have a faulty gasket. Changelectrical - Electricity 101, sl'ecific power demand of a ing a faucet gasket is easy.
Protecting The Earth if you will. A home's _electr!- g1ven circuit.
But remember. if it is leaking
When this limit is exceeded. from the valve housing, it is
cal system. we explamed, 1s
More Important Than Ever.
divided into ~lrcuits _that the breaker trips, preventing the packing gasket or was.her.
Keepina the planet clean starts in your own neighborhood.
branc~ out tC' bnng electnc1ty the wire from overlieating and If it is leak:mg from the tip of
Follow
these tips to ensure a healthy, prosperous and
to vanous ~pa~es through~ut a possibly causing a fire.
the faucet, it is the valve gas·
· suatainablc future for all living things .
ho~e. A Circuit can conSISt of
So, Jamie wanted to know ket.
• · Donate or recycle used electronic appliances such as TVs
a smgle out!e\ or several out- what caused the breaker that
Be sure you understand the
lets tliat are JOme&lt;! together by supplies power to the outlet in previous terms before pro and cell phones. ,
w1res c_oncealed m ~ails a!ld her bathroom to trip. Just as cecdin~ . NeKt , type "valve
• Use public trash receptacles. If none are available, hold on
the atile. All_ electncal _Clr· we were preparing to further gasket' into our search. engine
to your trash until you find one.
cu•ts, we contmued, termmate investigate, her older brother (www.onthehouse.com).
•
Walk,
bike, skate or usc public·transpcrtation instead of
at a subpanel - more com- Chris arrived on the scene to There you wi II find 800
always using the car.
monly kn?wn as a breaker report that his blow dryer words or so and a picture that
bo11: or, With old~r homes, a stopped wo~ about the will help walk you through
f~se box. Dependmg upon the same time as Tinnie' s. We the repair. By the wa y. the
Help protect ourPf;net by doing all you can, not just
)
s•ze and age of a home, m~re then discovered that the sib- pans for the · repair are less
on Earth Day, April 22, but every day.
th~n one subpanel can e11:1st. lings' outlets were on the than a dollar for tw o- handle
Suit . 111 oCher cases, the s~b- same electrical circuit: when faucet s and about $5 fo r sin Brouaht to you by lhe jtunbap -Qi:imrf 6rntinrl
panel and the mam serv1ce they powered up, their blow gle-handle faucets.
i

Pt. Pleasant,

.

dlvortlly M/F ON

Aockeprli1QI Rthabllltetlon

lnc. 11 an equal opponunlty
employer !hat encourage•

Ctnltc 38759 Roeklpnnga

workplact dlvorol1y, MIF DN

45789

HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Aced, Pomeroy, Ohio

The Gallla County Health Department Is
hiring 2 plrt·tlme employeae to work
evenings/nights May 19 to October 17.
These lndlvl.duals will be requ ired to
become licensed as pesticide applicators
for the health department . Interested
individuals must have a valid drivers
license, be willing to have a background
check completed, and be at least 18
years old. For information on pay and
benefits please contact Coleen Murphy
Smith , R.S., at 441 -2945 . Application
must be submitted to:
The Gallla County Health Department
at 499 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
by close of business Friday, Apnl 18,
2003.

1170

I 6%. (740)446-321 8

li.AI.c-......,. • • ..~ ~

l YLL..'-r.u . .t1 .ruA.nxt

Agco·AIIIs (slmpllctty) 1 71 B
garden tractor 50~ deck.
hydro. 637 hrs . new block,
ao tires, 304·675·5253

·------_.1
1110

WANTED

t acre, nver1ront , bnck and
vi nyl. 3 bedrooms . 2 bath. 2
fireplaces. hardwood floors.
appro:ocimately 2000 sq.ft .Full basement, $160,000

(740)446-0538

To Do

BEOROOM

3

HOME .

2 bath, only $17,900 For
Handym an, yard work, list1ngs call 1·800·719-3001
(740)992-2741 ask lor Tim.

Ext.

F144

Lawn Care. Tree Trimmin g, 3 Bedroom newly remod·
Tree Aemo\lal, Sprinkler elad. m Mtddtepol'!, call Tom .
System, Light Construcbon, Anderson aher 5 p m.
and Excavation (304)638- 992-3348
5877 Leave Me~sage .

3 bedroom. 2 bath. 508 •
l awn
Care . Slate Street , Thurman, OH
Log an 's
(740)441 -0720 Lawn mow· $45,000. Call (740 )379ing in Gallia and Mason
9249 or (740)245-0358
Newell's Lawn Mowing 3 year old Br1ck Ranch,
Services. Call (304895·3399 3 000+ sq ft .. 2·-112 acres,
Cell (304)674·0870
inground
pool. Storage
---~- rm lld t ng .

.
Will pressure wash homes.trailers , decks. metal build·
ings and gutters
Call
(740)446·0t51 ask fo r Ron
or leave message.

hood.

(740)446-0149

i

-------~

4 roo ms. 2 bedrooms. 1 ·
bath . full basement. Price,
Red uced (740)446- 1828

m~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 55 acre farm on SR 554 . 3
iO
B~
bedroom , 2 bath house w1th

r

OPPoR1UNITV
1-w------~,J
1NOTICE1
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

ba sement . 2 barns, 10 acres
pasture Spnng ted li\les tock
tank. Good hunting. Stocked
pond. Free gas. $125.000 .
Call (740)367-7266 between·.
ING CO. recommends that
9am &amp; 9pm
yQu do business with people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the mail unttl Beautilul 3/2 hom e in pr1vate
you have in \lestigated the Charota1s Lake on 3 acres
m/1 Many extras Must See !

(7401446-2927
DEBT CRISIS!
Consolidation 1s the key to
personal loans. mortgages ,
and other financial serv1ces.
Available up to $500,000.
Low Interest. CALL TOLL
FREE : 1-877-436·6297

r""--iiiiiiiii.iiiil-PR~ONAL

SERVICES

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 1881?
No Fee Unle811 WiJ Win!
1·888·682·3345

New 3 bedroom , bnck, 2 car
garage , corne r lo1. Great,
locatio n. 2 miles from
Holzer. Green &amp; City

Schools. [740)446-9966

Coun1ry home , 10 rooms , 7
acres, fenced pasture, River
Valley district (740)3670144
For sale or rent, 3 bedroom ,
1 bath, fun basement nome
on
Evana
He lghls .

(740)258-8848

-------HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

NeeiiCd IIIIIIICII131CIV

PHARMACY MANAGER
Holzer Family Pharmacy, a Joinl Venture
between Holzer Medical Cenler and Hol zer
Clinic, is seeking a pharmacist to assume the·

role of Ass iSiant Director and Pharmacisl-in-.
charge of bur Jackson Pharmacy in Jackson.
OH.
Molivated pharmaciSI will enjoy lhe full -time
benefits of being an . employee of Holzer
Medical Cen1er including a 40 hour workweek.
advance sel[-scheduling, grea1 vacalion/holiday
package: professional educalion allowance,
exceptional pension and investment opportuni-

ties and

at

a

v ery

c ompetiti ve

salary.

Advancement opportunities are avai1a.ble.
Interested candidales mu st be registered in the

Slate of Ohio or in lhe process of reciprocil y
and have

previous

management experience.

Mu&lt;1 enjoy working wi th phy&gt;icians. allied
heallh professional s an~ !he general public.
If interesled. please contact
Kenny Coughenour
System Stall Recruiter
Holzer Medical Center
100 Jackson Pike
Gattlpolls, OH 45631·1563
Phone: (740) 446-5205
EEOIADA E¥PLOYER

�Page 04 • 6unbap t::hntf ·6mttntl

Pomeroy • MiddleJ)ort • Gallipolis, OH • pt. Pleasant, WV

Ir ~~~ lr~.,.-·roa·H·O!SI'li·lCNT·'b·.__,I r
6

All rul

Reedsville corner-o1 SA 124
&amp; 681. garage. equipped
lube room wltire changer,
parts 'room or store on side
and ti re room in rear. on
90x90
lot,
$50 ,000,
(740)378·6201

••tat• adv~trtlalna

In thl1 ntwtpt~per Ia
aubject to the Fed.,tl
F1lr Houalng Act of 1N8
whlc_h maku It Illegal to
tdv.t:IN "tny
preference, llmltttlon or

Rio Grande area, 2400
sq.h., Office/ Commercial
Building for RenV Lease.
Plenty off parkl~g . (740)245·
5747

r

dl•crlmln1don blted on

rtce, color, rtllglon, nx
t.mllltl status or national

origin, or any Intention to
make any auch
prefer•nce, Umltttlon or

acres, and 5 acres tracts.
Green Sct1ools. Great location. At 588. {740)446-9966

Thit newaptper will not

knowingly accept
advertl•emont• tor real

eatate which l1 In
violation of me law. Our
readere .,. hereby
Informed tl'lll ell
dwellings tdvertiMd In
thla new•paper are
IVtilable on 1n equsl
opportunity ban•.

1 Acre lot out Jerrys Run
Road, · Apple
Grove.
,$10,000. (304)5?6·3389
Bruner land

~~~~-~~--.

MOBILE HOMF.S
FOR SALE"

ACREAGE

I acre building lots: 3&amp; 112

dltc:rlmlnltlon."

r

Lars&amp;

I.

1..--~~::;;::;.,_,J

1998 28x56 Duchess, 3 br.,
2 full baths, must be moved
740-2S6-1683.
2001 14x80 Oakwood, 3
BR, 2 bath. all appliances
included. We'll make down
payment, you take OYer pay·
ments of $370 month , or buy
lor$22,000. (2t6)351-7086
evenings and weekends, or
(216)257·1485 days.

. 74Q-441-1492
Gallla Co.: Cheaper than
• $9000 or roam
Dirt ... 5 acres
32 wooded acres, $31,0001
Vinton, Dodrill Ad., 5 with
·barns, $20,000 or 13
cleared acres, $23,000, co.
water, Rio Grande, 8 acres,
wooded, $23.500. Oft Teens
Run, 33 acres of dear &amp;
tu rke Y $28 •500!

Near Cliffside Goff Club, 3 BEAUTIFUL

or 304-593..Q369

I

Hom~s From $1 99/Mo ..
FORCLOSED HOMES 4%
Down, 30 Years at 8.5%
APR. FOI' Listings, 800·3193323 Ext 1709.

Valerie Jean Ne,ivli~r4
6129156 - 3/30/03
Perhaps you sent a lovely card,
Or sat quietly in a chai r.
Perhaps you sent a floral piece,
If so we saw it there.
!J't,.haps you spoke the kindest words ,
As any friend could say:
Perhaps you were not there at all,
Just thought of us that day.
Whatever yo u did to console our
heatts,
We thank you so much whatever the
pan .
The family of
Valerie Johnson Neigler

• ,

HOUSEHOUl
-Gooos

Drive from $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
-7-40_·_
44_6_-2_56_
8-_ ,__E_q_ua_l
Housing Opporlunity.

585R

"j'""'__,____..,

WEIGHT~ LOSS

SP.o\CE

REVOLUTION

~--tottiiFOROiittiiRENriiiilioo_.l New product launch October
23, 2002. Call Tracy at
Trailer space 1or rent in
(740) 441·1982
iiiiliiliiilddle
, 740 992-5858 - - - - - - - - -

I r10

HOUSFJIOll)
Gooos

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repai red, New 8. Rebuilt In
Siock. Call Ron Evans. 1·
800·537·9528.

For Sale: Reconditioned
washers, dryers and refrig- - - - - - - - - erators.
Th.o mpsons New &amp; Used Heat PumpsFurnaces.
Free
Appliance. 3407 Jackson Gas
Estimates.
(740)446-6308
AYenue, {304)675-7388.
Good Used Appliances ,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed.
Washers.
Dryers, Ranges, and.
Refrigerators, Some sfart at
$9S · Skaggs APPIIances, 76
Vine St., (740)446-7398
Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porler, Ohio.
( 7 40 ) 446 ~ 7 444 1 " 8 77 " 830 ~
9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash. Visa/ Master Card .
Drive- a- little save alot.
Queen Anne Sola, 2 chairs,
2 end tables, $600 .
(740)367-7591 Call after
-5p_m_.___________

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For Concrete, ·Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel
Gfjlting_ For . Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am·4:30pm. Closed
Thursday, Saturday &amp;
Sunday. (740)44&amp;.7300
Pool dOme. 24x33, asking
$2000, only used .6 months.
(740)446-6982
.
Riding lawn Mower. $350
(740)256-1102

CARD OF THANKS CARD OF THANKS

On November 8, 1980. God put a very special
person on the face of this eanh. She had a very
short-lived journey, bul she touched thousands of
lives. After successfull y winning the battle of hean
surgery at th ree months, hrain surgery at 5 years,
wearing two hearing aids for the majority of her short
22 years, she seemed to bl oom into a \'ery beautiful young
She
option and had an associate
~~~~~~~~~
- when
graduated
highyear
scllool.
all but.
one semester
of a four
more education .
Only a pound ''slip" of a girl, (her book bag weighed
more than she did). she alway~ had a smile for life, eager to
Mironda Pearce
make new friends and anxious to hear from old fri ends.
Thei-e was never a sweeter or purer person lo live.
We would like to thank all these friends. and loved-ones, McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Rev. fvlarvin Sallee, Rev. Chester Hess and members of Vinton Baptist '-"'"' n-.1
The firstresporx:lcr team to help at the ~cene of the accident. The EMS te.am.s, fire
depa rtment, itnd the Ohio St¥1e Highway Patrol. Gallia and Meig&amp;Sheriff.
Depanmenl~. and the Emergency Room personnel at Holzer Hospitnl. We would like
to take time to personally th11nk each and eYery one that gave comfon. brought food.
sent nowers, gave money, and the hundreds of prayers on our family's behalf. There
are no words to ti:ll you how this touched our heans and gave us comfon.
Thank you all - from the strangers that otTered a kind word to the young lady that
brought us all together- she wus one of a kind that brought sweetness and sunshine to
all thai knew her. She brought nothing but pure love to those of us who loved her.
Her parents, David &amp; Bemetta Pearce
Her sis~er, 'Missy
Her brothers, Brian. Donald &amp; Charles
Her fiance, Ryan Young
Her second family, Leslie &amp; Donna Young &amp; Cqrey
We will miss her and grieve fur lhe young life
that was snatched from us so unfairly.
Thank you for being a part of her life.

~

~

· ! CtJrinthitms

2:~ :

I J Corimhium 5: I

Friendship is the shndow of the evening, which
slrenglhens wit h the setting sun of life.
- La Fontine
There are many friends we wish to thank for all
your kindnc sse_s ... warmt h... caring ... loving .. the
many cards:, visits. prayers. food and flowers. the
Waugh Halley Wood and McCoy Moore .Funeral
Humel'i and Directors. emergency squad . Pastor
Fetty and Pastor Holley. Bui most of all- for your
praye rs !hilt help us th rough lhese losses. You,
hElve touc hed our Ji ves in so many spec ial ways.
We don't ha ve the words 10 express our deep.
heartfelt love and appreciution for all of yo u.
Whalever you did tQ consple our he11 rts. we Thcmk
You so much· whatever your part . We are speechess wit h nothin,g left to say hut... ·
THANK YOU

r

ro~ALE

Ii

A CARD OF THANKS
As we try to piece our li ves back together after the sudden and unex~
peered loss of Chris. we would like to try to eK prcss our sincerest thanks
and appreciation for themmpouring of love an d kindness from a11 who
offered condolences. each in their own WiJ.)', as we shared the joy of
Chris'life, and the tragedy of his early passing. There arc reaJJy no
words to fully state our gratirudc ; no way to let you know how much
you've helped us. or how deeply your caring has affected us all.
It hegan that horrible Sunday morning Chris collapsed. The squad
came, and then the care gi\'ers at the hospital exhausted all. their skills,
and all their emotions, to help a fallen comrade. As all effons failed, we
were alread)· being supponed by cloSe frie nds and family as well as
medical personnel who had been clu.-;c to Chris through his work ~sa
paramedic.
After the long ride home. friends were already there, movi ng furniture
bctck, scurrying up the breakfast dishes, and pausing I{) wrap their anns
around us for a moment. in the num bness of the day. This was the
heginning of the cons1an1 now, th rough the blur of the ncKI few days,
of visi tors. cards, phone calls, flowers, food brought and served, dis hes
done, and grief shared. Thank 'you all, fQreverything.
We will alway!' remember with grateful heans each and every person
who sent tlowers and came, from near and far. lu the Funeral Home:
Friends, neighbors, teachers. classmalt:s, business associ ales.
co-workers, family :
And then the nex1 duy. the unforgettable 1ribute to Ch}is. as the
funeral procession passed ben·eath the American Flag suspended from
the ladders arched across the road as Chris lc(t Pt . Plcusant on hi s final
journey Mor:nc.
,
So many hcart.s·pourcd out at the burial site- many with silent tears.
some with words of love, respecl and .praise for Chris the man , the son,
the dad , the brQther, the co-worker, the friend.
~
In the ensui~g days, your caring and suppbrt is s u 11t~ initli: u~ still . We
will never forget your kirn..lness. We have not listed namcs.'lor fear of
leaving someone out. Yuu all know who you arc: know also your ki ndness will neve~ be forgotte n.
"Thank you" is so very little to say for all you've given. all yo u' ve
done. Chris touched so many lives in such u po'iitivc way in 12 short
)'car~ . He will be sadly missed, and always lovingly rememhercd.
Vernon and Millie Facemyer '
Mike, Leslie and Sydne_,. Facemyu
Greg, Tonia ·and Cody Stover
Amite and.Alex r~emyu

I

"'-llil-i.iliiiiiiiiiiiiioollil;.~
'

LIVI'SI'OCK

I;;~;;16;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;;;u;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;; L~
100

•

31St Anni..lal Bentley Pig
Sale, Friday. April 18th,
7:30pm. Fayette County Fair
Grounds,
WaShinglon
Courtt1ouse ,
Ohio.
Consigners Roger Bentley
(937)584·2398 Consigner
Leroy Larric~ (937)780-4802

l

FOR SAl£

10

I'

Aurus
I'OR SALE

I 98 Dodge Stratus, 4 door,

Trucks from $500.
For
listings t-800-719-300 1 e)(1.
3901 .
----'-------1968 Ford Mustang, 72.000
miles, automatic wloYer·
drive. Excellent Condition .
(740)446-1635 or (740)441 -

great.
$4800
(740)441 -154 7 ·

080 .

D

r7'0

y

riO

..,!,ARM

I

rL--------

PUBLIC
AUCTION

AUCTION

AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION
April 19th 10:00 am
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Spenser is no longer farming &amp; camping
we will sell lhe foltow1ng items. From St. Rt. 248
Chester. Oh10 take Seoul Camp Ad . to 48470 nex1
Bridge on Shade River. Watch fo r signs.
"Camper"
'
27' Corsica by Cobra 5th wheel (queen bed. gas
electric), air, ref. stove , Intercom, electric jacks
awning. Very nice!I
"Equipment''
323 N.l one row picker, picked less 100 ac . of
BU. wire corn crib. gravity wagon w/J.D. runnm&lt;ll
, hay or grain elevalor w/elec. moto r. 3 pt . •n'"""' I
row w/roller pump, Ford slip scraper. H.O.
blade. 3 pt. wheel rake. J.D. 245 corn planter. drag
row, 3 pt cult., &amp; trailer
"Tractor"
1942 J.D. B Built arou nd Pearl Harbor 16th Nov.
Shipped to Toledo, OH. It has new rings, bearings,
brakes, overhauled. Got bills tor parts.

Dan

11344

Alan

99 3 3/4 LT Silverado. 4x4. 2001 Keystone Horne~
ext. cab. exc . cond., heated Camper 24 feet, Extra Nice
seats 70k, $19,500 304- · (304)675·6436
675-3664 or304- ~93-12S1. -:-::-~-"''----2002 Jayco 26ft Travel
Trailer, sleeps·6. sofa·-ste6pVANS&amp;
er, awning, jacks used once.
4-WDs
$18,500. (304)576·2573

r

" I It \ I( I "
94 GMC 4x4 153,000 miles,
loaded. new tires $6000 .
r,~--:-~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
68 Jeep Grand Waggoner. pno
HOME
needs so me work. runs ·--~~iitPRiiiiOiioViiEI:I;MFNrS,;:,;.;,;;·,.I
good. loaded $1500. 740- 245·0372
. '
BASEMENT
«l
WATERPROOFING
MomRCYCLJ-};
'Unconditional lilelime guar1-.____,..__ antee. Local re1erences furnished . Established 1975
$1500 reward tor mfo and Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
recovery of stolen TAX 0870 , Rogers Basement
450
ES, yellow, VIN# Waterproofing
478TE224X24305505
. Engine# 8606549 (740)367·
7893 call anytime
C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting, Yinyl
sid ing, carpentry, doors.
$5000 Reward lor the return windows. baths, mobile
of 3 ATV's stolen on home repair and more . For
Bulav~lle Pike &amp; inlo .l' ading iree estimate call Chet, 740to arrest &amp; conviction of anY 992-6323.
party
involved .
2002 ~--------..
Cannondale Sp~ed, 1999 ~
400EX Honda, 1986 250A
Honda .
(740)441 -5643
(740)446-1221

,J

Delivered

1998 Yamaha Wolverine
4x4, 350 with hitch, ra mps &amp;
storage bag. $3200. Call
(740)208·7258 (cell phone)
Bidwe ll area.

BoATli &amp;
.

McrmR~

lllRSALE

i 975

Chrysler outboard
electric s1ar1, w/tiller
arm and wlremote cables.
runs good . Sale/Trade.
(304)675-2787 Glen D.
Hatten
1Ohp.

RIGHT
to YOU
Saturday
TimesSentinel

~ 994 Stratos 264 Bass Boat.
·Black &amp; Silyer, 120 h.p.
EUinrude 421b trolling motor
fish finder .. Great shape .
$7500. (740)742·0509

99 Fisher Bass Boat . 4
stroke Mercury engine.
Garage kept. like new,
$6500 080. (740)388·941 6

AUCTION

AUCTION

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
·----------------------·--·----

.
:

/'.&amp;'50LUT£ AUCTION

.

-~ ·

:

'

Stlls tot.. Hil~tstlloldtr
•
*
t...,rdlm Of Price Ill
1:
Pool Table Fine Fumlture Appliances ':

•

Do you love the look of an J;nglish garden ''
Easy Gardener 's new Cott age Garden
Border'", with its embossed wheat patte rn,
w ill he lp gi ve your ya rd the fee l of an infor·
mal Engl ish garden ,
The edgi ng is easy to install (j ust pound it
in) and looks like real car ved stone, bu t is
actually made of durable UV-resistant plastic. It won'tchip o r crac k like stone.
Once you'~e determined where your border
should go. pound it in place wlrh a rubber

(740) 709·0545

June thru September
Sleeps 6

HARTFORD USED
FURNITURE

pies early to beat the rush .
Call

454

446·8657

- NOW OPEN

on them too. Order your

446-8480
2nd Ave .

$5,000 Reward
for the return of 3 ATV's stolen on
Bulavil le Pike &amp; into. leading to
arrest &amp; conviction of any party
involved.
2002 Cannondale speed
1999 400 EX Honda
1986 750R Honda
7 40·441-5643
740&gt;446-1221

Twilight Special
Sat. &amp; Sun. after 3:00 .
$22 .00 with cart
Tee Time Required

(Jack Roush)
4 miles east ol Walmart (Mason, WV)
on Route 33 past Riverside Golf
Course Hartford, W.Va.
Antique Kitchen Tables &amp; chairs,
Hutches, Antique &amp; Modern
Be droom Suites, Living Room
Ruites, Gun Cabinels , Book
Cases , Large selection of End
Tables , Baby Items : Strollers, High
Chairs, Bassinets, Car Seats ,
Large Selection of Mise, Items
1 Main Showroom

&amp; 10

Garden Border.
The border m easures se ven inch es t a ll ,
w hich' means that it re main s highly visible
while it stops creepi ng g rasses, II also leatures a quick stiap connector and flexible
living hinges that bend easily to form curves
or ri g ht angle s around yo ur landscape bed.
Check o ut your favorite garden or home
center to find these new e d gings, or call
(800 ) EASY-INC

Swing Into Spring .
With the Sounds of Music
• H ang your chim e' directly from the meta l ring or luop at lhe
lop of the ch me 10 a fixed hook. Using chain or additi onal
string may c:tuse the entire chim e to swin g, when only the
center suing and clapper should move.
• Han g your chime where the w in d can reach it from as
many d irections as po ssible. An open corner is ideal w hen
hanging the ch ime from a build ing.
• Hanging a e himc underneath a porch may l)elp protect il
from the weather. but avoid hanging il wi thin 2 feet of a wall
ur too close lo plant s. furniture ur a nything thai mi g ht
· obstruct or diven the breeze .
• Try hanging your. chime in d ifferent locations d uring di fferent times of the year becau se winds change seaso nally.
For information o n whe re you can purchase Woodstock
C him es in the Un ited States, call (800) 422-4463_ or visit
www.chimes.com.

446-2342 • 992-2155 • 675-1333

Dates available •

www.ohiorivercottages .com

color~d UV-resislanl plast ic as the Cottage

tu

IVI N /) CHIM ES ARE A FAS IIIONA BI.E ami alfimlah/e war
add 11"01/del.-fid Sot/ lid~· /() the outdoors. A hoi '(' .fimll hfr /() ri~Ju. a
f"e11 · of the wy l f!.\ off"ered hy Wood\lock Chime.c 1i"ki Chimt' (w ,ai!rtMt' in 1nl. blue or .~ret•n): Vespa Chime. spedrlffy tun ed tn :m wrd
like duurh he/1.1; Bu/)y Birdlrm.r.w Chim e; Pati(/inder Cllim e, ll"hich
doflhle.1· as a candle /an/nil am/ S11 ·wr Lak(' Chim t'. twu•d ·to the
rlu•m e fmm rhe Tdwikonky IJlillel. ·

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

FOR RENT

CLIFFSIDE GOLF
CLUB

Terms Cash or Check with I D.

land scape beds. T,his spring, g ive your beds yard 1he look of w! il!{omwl Enxlish ganien.
the perfect fini shing touch - add new edging to your landscape designs.
•
Alm ost ·everyo ne is aware of the imponance m a llei. It co mes wi th built-in connectors.
of cdgirig. It he lps form clean, neal lines You can mak e st raight or curved borders
between planting areas and turf o r ground - 1 w ith the edgings ''living hinges." It 's so easy
covers. II also acts as a barrier between beds thai even novice ga rdeners wi ll enj oy using
a nd migrating 'weeds . Creep in g g rasses w ill it.
stay oul and yo ur mulches will stay in.
Another border th-at is sure 10 frame your
Try choosing edging that is not o nl y prac- garden masterpiece is the Gothic Border""·
tical , b ut also pic turesque . Obviously, the Also made ' by Easy Gardener, th e carved
mai n focus of your land sc ape beds are the sto ne-like arc h o n th e Gothic Border wi ll
plants and flowers in them, but w hy not draw the eye toward the flowers a nd greenc hoose an edging that will help sh ow .o ff .ery you've worked so hard on. The cla ssicthose plants?
looking border is made from the same stone-

North Myrtle Beach Condo

Eggs . Have your kids name

AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
713-5785 OR 713-5447

(MS) - Decisions, deci s io ns. All wi nter
long. avid gardeners hav e heen thinkin g
about whm to pl a tll this spring - perhaps
some flowers for a dash of color or maybe
some new shrubbery?
Face it, gardeners are like· artists a nd their
yards are their canvases. Paioting s just don ' l
look right without frames and ne ither do THIS DECORATIVE BORDER cctn give wur

Ohio River Cottages
Hot Tub Getaways

Located at the Huctlon Center on Rl. 33 In
mason, WU.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION
COMPANY

Make Your Yard
Pidure Perfed

BULLETIN BOARD
is taking orders for Easter

Auction Conducted bY:

.

.

&amp;unbap Gl:tmif-&amp;mttnd • Page 05

CAMI'ERS &amp;
-MmoR H011-o-:&lt;;

THE BAKE SHOP

Table &amp; 6 chairs, Crosley big Screen TV,
TV cart , twin size head board &amp; lrame ,
chest, Sears Kenmo re side by
refrigerator, Kenmo re washer &amp;
Gravity rider exerciser, Slepper ~t~ •...;ho,l
exercise r, lg . amount ol glassware , r.A,nrl11l
d ishes, cup &amp; sauce rs, ftgu rines, vases,
stemware, Roseville , McCoy. Kurt and
Watl , Sev. pieces of silver &amp; s te rlin g silver,
oil lamps_, cabbage patch kids doll
·
still in box . Several box lots plus much
more .

.

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

5:00PM

"Mite."

5th wheel hitch, space heater, Shop Smith, Craftsman
10" radial arm saw. push mowers. SirTJPiicity mower &amp;
snow blade. 5 HP pust1 mower, self propelled mower,
girls bicycle wlbasket, range hood, two te nt houses
(Tree stands). wood &amp; brooder stoves , orange fencing,
new gold caddy, wheal cradle &amp; parts. Singer sewing
machine that embroiders, Smith· Corona typewriter &amp;
stand &amp; misc. household items.
"Truck" 1984 Ford picku p
Owne'rt· Mr. &amp; Mre. Dayton Spenser

TRUCKS
lllRSALI:

.

98 Pont1ac Grand PriM:
$4,200. 96 Chevy. Monte
Carlo $4.?00. 99 Pontiac
Sunf1re $4,500, 98 Pontiac
Sunf1re S2,9.00, 97 Pontiac
6629
Sunfire $2.600. 96 Ford T·
Bird S2.695 : 96 Pontiac
1969 Camara less motor, l;lonneville
$2.695. 98 Gao
740
2436
3900
379
$
·( ) 1964 Sulek Llmiled, 83,000 ~=~~~- ~~g~~~Y ~ 6~ ~- :~~~
miles. clean. NC . e1ectr1c 6865.
·
windows. AM/FM radio. ru ns
good, (740)446·0971
99 Ford Contour. aproM:
Boar
goats. January-.' :=.:;::..;__c:.:_:_~:::.'---- 44 _000 miles. auto. ac.
Restore joint &amp; muscle February kids plus Yearling 1986
Sedan
Deville cruise.
$5800 _740 _245 .
strength in adult dogs with e1mes F40)446-411 1 or Cadillac. $600. OBO call 0372
all new Happy Jack {740)339-0057 ·
304-675-4579
;;;;:;;..-...,----.,
FleMenhance . Also repels
[720
TR.lJCKS
lleas &amp; ticks , R&amp;G FEED &amp; Red Getbvieh Bull for sale 1992 Corsica V-6 auto, lots
FOK SALE
SUPPLY 74Q-992-2164
Sire ,
1999
National of new parts &amp; paint. Great "'----iiliiiiiiiii.-,.1
Champion. Add muscle and shape. S3200. 1989 Escort
M USICAl-:"
milk. 740-245-5805.
4cyl. auto, 4dr, ru ns great. 1978 Ford F-100. 4x4 .
E)(cellent
Mechan ical
ii'SrRUMF.NTS
$1800. (740)742-0509
Rag. Angus bulls- Top perCondition. Lots of new parts.
A
r
fo rmance bloodlines. Maine 1994 Ford Escort LX , 4 dr. 5 $1500 . (304)675 -2558
1
compete
pubiC address Chi- Angus show hailers, speed. CD player $2500.00 - - - - - - - - system tor Ouarte1 singing. heifers , bred heifer.s and OBO 740-709·156&amp; or 740- 1979 Ford truck F150 $400
740 )378"6258
crossbred bulls. , Siate Run 245 · 5399
OBO
pao FRuns &amp;
Farm.
Jackson.
OH. 1998 Dodge Neon 4 dr. 1993 Chevrolet Corsica.
Vl!:GE"I~
run s ---~ good , working ale
(740)266·5395
Sedan $3500. OBO 76.000 $
_ _ _
1850 304 675 1407
miles 304-593-1417
Home grown Asparagus , Registered Black Angus
1999 Pontiac Bonneville SE 1983 Ford F-150 . Extended
Chares
1 McKean Farm 740- Bulls and heifers. Yearlings
94
and older out of N BAR, V-6 autorrialic , 70 ,000 miles. Cab. 4X4 . 300- 6-cylinder,
446- 42.
EXEXT, TRAVLEAS and E~eceltent ConditiOn. $8,500. fair s hape, runs · great.
Eclipse. Gentle. Guaran1eed 2001 Chevy S-10 4cy. 5sp . (740)446-2847-$2300 .
Bull. $1 .000. and up . Heifers LS package cd player, air - - - - - - - - $750. and up. (304)372- con. aluminum wheels bed 1997 Ford Ranger XLT,
42 .000 miles. exc. Runs great. looks great .
2
~3811'9--~-~-...., cover,
""-"'IJ'I\1Er.'J'
cond $7,500 . (304)675-. $5,500 (304)675-6986
0
HAY&amp;
6325
2001 Dodge Ram Quad
GRAIN
2001
Pontiac Sunlire, Cjib. lots of extras, 25,000
Fence post- call 740-645·
2743 ·will deliver.
45.000 miles. sunroof, CD miles Askmg $21 .900 .
Good quality straw. Volume Player. Warranty· 70.000 _17_4_0_12_5_
6--14_2_6_ _ __
discount &amp; delivery aYail·
John Deere Model 435 able . Heavy square bales miles/ 7 years . $12,000. 2002 Ford Ranger 4cyi, 5~
(740)709·1597
sp. AIC, bed liner. 13,000
round baler. Baled less thap S2.85 per bale. (304)675800 bales . like new,, 5724
88 S~y l ark BUICk , new bat- miles . Excellent Condition.
Condition. list new $18,200 - - - - - - - - - tery &amp; tires. runs but needs Asking 59 ,000 (304)576·
will sell for $8.100. Large round bales o1hay for motor, $300, (740)742-2481 2573
(304)675-5724
sale, (740)698-7244
91 Honda Civic, good dean 97 Honda SRBOA , new
-------car. runs good. ( 7 40 )2~6- motor $1200.
IN MEMORY
IN MEMORY
611 6
88 S-10 4 cyl ., 5 sp. $1000.
92 Sedan Deville. low miles. _3_o•_-6_7_5_-3_9_59_ _ _ __
garage kept asking $4800. 98 Ford Ranger $2.600 96
Marjorie C. Saunders.
OBO 304-675-2563
Geo Tracker $1 .900, 95
Born 4/25/21
93 Chrysler LeBaron . V-6. 4- Dodge ConYers1on Van
Died 4/9/03
door, low mileage , good $3.200, 99 Ford EM:ptorer
She was born In Gallipolis.
COI'Idil10n. $3,000. (740)44 1- $5,500, 97 GMC P/U Work
0953
Truck $2 ,200, 86 GMC 3/4
For the last several years, she lived in
Ton P/U S1 .600. 92 Dodge
her home in Gulf Breeze, Florida .
96 Monte Carlo Z34 , excel- P/U $2 .500. B &amp; o Auto
-lent shape, ground effects. Sales. Highway 160 N_. 446~
Our mother invested her life in her
dual eMhaust, law mileage, 6665.
family and people she knew.
(740)339-3267
.
She was loved so very much .
AUCTION
AUCTION
Recently, she moved to join her
husband In the Heavenly Oty,
where they will live forever .
l:ier children, janice, joyce, Karen
and .Rick, grandchlldren and great .
grandchildren will join her sometime
In the future. Mom. we love you and
greatly miss your presence.
Your loving family .
TUESDAY,
Get hook, . round, &amp;
Tapeworms. Rotate Happy
Jack tapewOrm tablets and
Uqul-vlct®.
Athens
Landmark (740-985'-3700)
- - - - - - - - - 6 yeac old quarterk ho•se
geld1ng Brown . blac ta1-1 o
Pet Grooming- dogS &amp; cats. ma ne, white blaze on face .
pick-up &amp; deliYery, Linda wh1te Socks. Broke to ride,
Wade, Side Hill Ad., spirited, saddle and bridle.
Rutland, (740)742-8916
$1100, {740)949-2574

AUCTION

CHRISTOPHER DALE FACEMYER

In Memory and Thank You
From the Families of:
Mary E. Moore 911127 - 216103
and
Eugene F. Moore 4/29125-312 1103
No funher away than a picture.
A smile or remembered phrase.
Our loved ones live in memorySo close in many ways.
For how often does a sunset
Bring nostal ~i(,; thoughts to mind.
Of Moments that our loved ones shared in days
now left behind')
· How often ha!i a fiower.
Or a crystal autu mn sky.
Brought golden recollections
Of happy de~ys gone by ?
Yes, memory has a magic way
Of keeping loVed ones nearEver close in mind and hean,
Are the ones we hold so dear.

8 UI[J)ING I
SuPPI,.m;

APART· Kenmore washer, $95; G.E. Block, brick , sewer pipes, 1 Black Simmetat-Angus

From the Family of

CARD OF THANKS CARD OF THANKS

I. r~

i

iL.---W~AN'IID:::;,-A:;.n:_,.J ::~a:;::::opon.rt~:~~-

Corner
Restaurant
Middlepo_rt. Ohio estabfished 1991 business &amp;
buikllng, tum key operation,
(740)992-3955

IrlO

washer, $150; Kenmore
wasner &amp; dryer set $300;
Table and chairs. solid
Ijdl,, MOBFORD.J:n'!.~&amp;
.IV.rlt
wood, $125; several night
stands, $30 each . Queen
Furnished efficiency. All utili- size rra me &amp; headboard,
14x72, 2 b.&amp;droom, 2 bath, ties paid, share bath. $135 very nice, ·s2oo. Skaggs
all electric, air. PriGe $450 + month, 919 2nd Ave nue. Appliances, 76 Vine Street,
deposit 1 year leas~ . (740)446·3945
(740)44tr7398
(740)446- 1062
'
;~-------,
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
2 bedroo m~ large living room. apartments at Village
~
room. air. porch &amp; awning, Manor and • AiYerslde ..._
slorage ·building. Very nice, Apartments in. Middleport.
in Gallipolis. (740)446-1409 From $278-$348. Call 740- Buy or s9tl. Riverine
2 br mobile home for rent, 992-5064. EQual Housing Antiques. 1124EastMainon
like new call 74 o. 446 _2003 Opportunities.
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74()..
992-2526 .. Russ Moore.
3 Bedroom ." 1-1/2 bath. CIA, Now Taking Applicalionsall elec1ric, also 3 bedroom. 35 West 2 Bedroom owner.
1 bath house, no pets, each Townhouse Apartments, - - -- - - -$450 + deposit. (740)441). Includes Water Sewage, Oil lamp. collection for sale
Trash, $350/Mo .. 740-446- 740-367-0002 call for
4824
0008
appointijllenl
3 bedroom. vel)' nice on ' .:,:_~-- - - - - - ;;«&gt;
218, references required. One bedroom lurnished
MlscEu.ME.ANF~
$475 montil , (740)256·1417 apartment in Pt. Pleas~! 1,-.,;;oiiiiiRiiCHAiiiiiiNliiiiiliSE;,;;;,.~
very c1ean an d mea
· .1o
or (740)256-6228
::.:..~::=:::.:==------ Pets. Phone (304}67~·1386 10 porcelain dolls, baby
3br. Mobile Home 2 miles
items wicker hutch 2 old
outside of New Haven . Tara
Townh~use doors·, !russel of mi~ items
Adults Only. (304)882·3362 Apartments, Very Spac•ous, · tor· sale 304-675-2801
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA. 1
3br. Mobile Home. Sits on 112 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
appro~e . 3 acres. Central Air. Adull Pool &amp; Baby Pool , Affordable • Convenient
Excellent condition.· Lease Patio, Sta rt $385/Mo. No WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Required. (304)895-3400 or Pets , lease Plus Securl.._, low •.
MOnthly Investments
.,
·
304-895-3562 after 6pm.
Deposit Required , Days:
Home Delivery
FREE
740·446-3481 ·, Evenings:·
Color Catalog
Beautiful River View Ideal
Call Today 1~8()().7 11 ·0158
740_367 -QS02
For 1 Or 2 -People, - - - - , - - - - - - wv-w.np.etstan.com
Refere nces, Deposit. No Twin RiYers Tower is acceptPets,
Trailer Park, ing applications for waiting BURN
a. 441Foster
Fat
BLOCK
74
0181
:_.:::..;_:.:_:·~~----- list tor Hud-subsized. 1- br. Cravings , a nd · BOOST
Mobile home for rent, no aparlment, ca.ll 675-6679 Energy Like
You Have
pets. (740)992 •
EHO
NeYer Experienced.

"r

~-N-ew_3_b-r/-2b_th_._O_n_l_y

FOR RI!Nr

br.. 2 ba .. 2000 sq. h. home ~ENTS
AT
BUDGET dryer, $95: G.E. electric windows , lintels, etc. Claude bull Jor sale 2 years o!d.
2.4, 4 cylinder, lull power.
$695 per mon. dep. &amp; lease PRICES AT JACKSON ranQe, $95; G. E. refrlgera- Winters, Rio Grande: OH (304)675·3308
$5001 Pollee Impounds! CD player. new tires, 80.000
req . (no pets) 740·446-2957 ESTATES, 52 Westwood tor, $95; Kenmore portable Call740-245·5121 .
·
'
Hondas, Chevys. etcl Cars/ miles, A/C, runs &amp; drives

Mel gl Co.: Tuppers PI atns,
off Succes::.&gt; Ad ., 5 acres
abutts state ground $16,000
o·r 5 acres with mobile home
$23,500. Co. water. SR681 ,
6acres,$15,500or22acres
$21 ,000. Carr Ad., 11 acres
$20.000! Chester,
2002 Clayton, 3 bedroom. 2 Bas!lan Rd., 17 level ·acres c.:::::.c:.:..:=..::...:='---·bath , 14M64, like new, $26,500 or 7 acres $18 ,000, Nice 2 br. !railer, Church St.
$19_000, (740)742-8716
co. water. Danville, 5 or 7 Bidwell $325.mo . plus
dep.re1· req. 740. 388 •8070 ,
$
95 Commodore Citation 1!2 acres 9.500!
One bedroom trailer, $300,
furnished. $16,000 Neg.
Call now for maps and other
' (304)675·3094
parcels available for hOme- water paid, 49 Spruce St,
sites, hunting &amp; _recreation. ,17~4~0:.;1446,;;;.-;8;;6;,;7,;.7.,:da;ys;;,-- - .
Good used 3br/2bth. Only
___ENTS
_ _•
$7995. Includes delivery. Owner financing with sllghl L_ _AI'AKIM
FOR RENT
.
Call Karena 74D-385·9948 prop~rty mart&lt;up We buy
land 30 acres &amp; up!
l and Home Packages avail· - - - - - - - - 1 and 2 bedroom apartable. In your area, (740)44&amp;. BUilding lots, State Route ments,
furnished an_d unfur3384.
141, 10 minutes from nished . security deposit
Gallipolis. Restricted, with required, no pets, 740-992·
Last 2002 Model Lincoln water &amp; eleclric. All with road 2218 _
Park. 64x28, 3 beclroom, 2 frontage. (740)37 g. 2830
-------bath, total electric. heat - - - -- - - - Bedroom Apartments
81
pump, delivered &amp; set on Corner Building lot 80x130 Starting
$289/mo,
your foundation, reduced on Monroe Ave. (304) 593 _ wa.sher/ Dryer Hookup,
. from $55,365 to only 3104
Stove and Refrigerator.
$47.485 , Cole's Mobile
(740)441-1519.
H
s 50
----~-'--~U.
·
East,
Lot
for
sale
in
Racine
,
ames,
At~ens . Oh, 740-592-1972,
Apartment Available Now.
·where You Ge• You r (740)992·5858
RiverBend Place, New
Money's Worth•
- - - - - - - - - Haven, WV now accepting
Rio Grande area, 3 to 30 applications for HUD-su bsiNsw 2003 Ooublewide. 3 acres lots, some restrictions, dized.. 1 bedroom apartSA &amp; 2 8 lh 0 I $1695 water &amp; elec1ric. (740)245- ment. Utilities included Call
a · nY
.
down and &amp;295/mo. 1-BDO- 5747
(304)682·3121 Apartment
691 -6777
REAL Esr.
available for qualified sen-S-9-95
down and only $197.47 per ...,
month . Call Harold, 740- 'J bedroom house or new room furnished apartment,
385-7671.
model trailer w/ nice yard 1or utilities paid, deposit &amp; refersale-on tand~contract:··--eocas ....no.....pets,. (740)992We have new ·sectional &amp; ~ _o1_6~~-----------single wide homes as low as
$1 80 per month. SQ0-837- - - CARD OF THANKS
2338.

Reduced

APAN'!Mmlli

'

Sunday, April13, 2003

Sunday, February 23, 2003

Mini

Dwight Icenhower

15th Annual

ELVIS TRIBUTE
SHOW
Ariel Theatre
April 26
at 8 p.m.

FORGEY CLUB

7:30 pm at the
Gallia County Fairgrounds
• Selling approximately 60 top
quality club lambs!
Check us out on the internet
www.clublambpage .com

FWB

Church

Sunday, April 13th 6 :30pm

Ohio Thunde r Instant Bingo
Win $1 .00-$599.00 instantly
Stop by and see Kim al
.11 06 Spring Valley Plaza
Mon-Fri. 10 am- 6 pm
Sat 1o:oo- 4 :00

Club Lamb Sale
April 13th , 2003 at 2:00
19548 St. Rl.

7 South

Crown City, Oh

CLARK CLUB LAMBS

740-256-1.027
• 2002 Res. Champion Ohio

ARE YOU CARING FOR
SOMEONE WITH

Special Singing

'

Springfield Twp. Special Meeting
Tuesday, April 15 , 2003 6 :30 pm
Bidwell Porter Elementary
School All residents invited to
discuss and devise plans to
imorove two.

Friday, April18, 2003

Now on Sale At
Farmers Bank, Tawney's,
Oak Hill Banks, Jhe .
Purple Turtle and the Ariel

Featuring : Higher Calling

Showrooms
Open Mon-Sat !0:00 a~ to 4:00pm

LAMB SALE

Advanced
RESERVED Tickets

Poplar Ridge

MOLLOHAN CARPET
Spring Sale
Porch turf: starting at $3.95
Commercial carpet: starting at $4.95
Berber: starting at $5.95
Quality at low price
call 446-7444

-

ALZHEIMER 'S DISEASE?
Would you like to talk to other
families who are also dealing
with this disease?
Scenic Hills Nursing Center is
offering a support group
--meeting.
Mo nday; April 21st
6 :00p .m. a t o ur facility.
The meeting will include
information a nd time for s h ari ng .
Refreshments will be
provided . If you are interested ,
please ca ll Scenic Hills
446-7150

Val ley Jac kpot· Couny Lamb
• 2002 Class Winner·
Ohio State Fair
• 2002 Class WinnersGallia, Mason &amp; Lawrence
County Fairs

HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
Breastfeeding Classes
Tuesday, April15, 2003
6:30 pm • 8:30 pni

HMC
French 500 Room
.For more information or to
register, please call 446-5030

AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION
Friday, April18 5:30pm
AMVETS Bldg., off Burnett Rd on
Liberty St.
Gallipolis (Kanauga), Ohio
We wi ll be se lling the contents of o llkr
Kanauga area home, 'plus additions.
ANTIQUES : 2 Ball and Claw stools. nice
press back rocker, oak press back chai.rs,
waterfall bed~oom suite, chest of drawer~ and
. dresser, Singer Treatllc sewing machinl":, cast
iron fl oor lam ps. oak rocker, lihrary tab le.
walnut half-bed, Victorian pictures and
frames. steamer trunk . wicker, 50's Coca·Co la
pop vending cooler, coffee and end tabh.:s.
stoneware. ironstone pitcher &amp; bowl iron ski I·
1
lets, granite ware, old lice nse plates. adv. tins.
linens. quilt, old button collection. 2, ya rd
goods salesman's maple boKcs. Fairmont
cream can. old picture s. blue canning jars.
oval beveled mirror, hall tree, furniture in ''as
found" condition. old tools , surprise items
fro m the outbuild ings!!
GLASSWARE: Cambridge. Fenton. Fostoria
·(Ame rica), DepressiOn. Pa11ern and Prc~~cd ,
Pedcstal ·cake ·stands, Carnival. }ohy mug, oil
lamps, coloni al Homestead dis hes, Blue Ridge
Plates, childs di shes, McCoy. Brush, Shawnee.
cookie jars. old dishes, co ll ectihle glass.
HOUSEHOI1 D &amp; MI SC : Maple dinette w/4
chairs. small hutch, corner she lf, sofa, chairs.
lal'lle sectional hutch, lamps. porch glider.
pols. pans. flatware. small kitchen appl. cast
irnn wys &amp; hanks, much more ...
12 Yccy Njce Lon~abcr"er Baskcts! 1!
Autlioneer: Leslie A. Lemley'
740-245-9868
C ash/Approved Chec~ Only
Concession Stand
.. Plea~e note early start tim e~ We will hcgin
selling ou"tside with ncm .. · from ou 1building~·
and " As fou nd" fumiturc!

Ohio River Front Home
m•JOst1cally
perchf:(l on the banks of the Ohto R1ver &amp; Chidl:a·
• munga Creek. 4 Bedrm.' s, 3% Bath~. living
: Rm, Dining Rm., Krtchen. Family rrn .. Endosed
• porch, 2 cat garage. OPEN HOUSE May 111 4-6
* PM &amp; Moy 11th 1-11 PM R.E. Tenms: $25,000.00
: down at time of
! sale. balance &amp;
: pouession . at
• closing by 6-17-

•

•
7_mmerse yourself in all the pleasures of a

•

P•raonat
••• 2003.
Proptrtr. Fr..

! ProV.

Dining

: suite 111fllable, 8
: Chatrs, buffet,
: hulen &amp; tea cart Fr. Prov Bedrm sutle : EA cedar

•

.. .{•

S H ( Br&lt;AW

.

*

•
•
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
[

European Spa. Experience the latest in spa

spa at MARRIOTI's GRA!'&gt;D HOTEL GOLF

therapies and treatments. Allo,;, traine d hands

RESORT AND SPA, part of the R esort Division

t o manage away

• chest on legs assorted chairs tables. lamps,
! pnnts. full size pool table ; wid&lt;:er pat1o furn iture:
! refrig: washer &amp; dryer Very few smalls be on hme'
: Terms Cash/check wilD's all sales f1na1. aU
: sold as-is.
CarolS Wedge, OWner
1N :
:
Call for Free BrOt;hurel
:
•
STANLEY &amp; SON, INC . (740) 776-3330 •
: &lt;9~&lt;0
WI'YW.STANLEYANDSON,COM
:
1t
,,
Harry M S1tn~ey HI CAl. M Ht A..c.ltOI"lE! SI
:

POINT CLEAR, AL

luxury o ffered in the new 20,000 square foot

t~remnants

of a hard day of

ALABAMA'S

of the ROBERT TRENT }ONES GOLF TRAIL.

golf or just the cares o f the world, as you relax

·Enjoy golf at the resortlakewood Courses or at

in luxury. Experience the p o pular HorRocks

nearby c hampionsh ip Magnolia Grove courses.

tre atment, Vichy shower, anti-aging facials or

For- Spa reservations call 251.990.6385. For

give yourself a work -o ut in the cardiova scu lar

golf and h otel packages at The

workout ro·om. Give yourself over to all the

where on the Trail, call 800.257 .3465.

Gra~d or any-

Golf's Greattft Road Trip

�Page D6 •

6anbap ti:U.U. -6mtinel

Pomeroy •1\fiddleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant-.

,Sunday, April 13, 2003

'

Pansies
. from Page 01
'

in all but the heaviest clay.
They prefer full sun, but
can tolerate a bit of shade,
although too much will keep
them ·from flowering well.
· Though the heat of full
~ummer is too much for
pansies, the cold of winter
seems not to bother them
much. They continue to
bloom when temperatures
dip into the 20s.
While not considered true
perennials, they are "winter
hardy," says Rice, and usually carry over year after
year. Spring or fall are both
good times to plant the
flowers and right now is an
excellent time to get them
into the ground, she advises.
Sometimes described as
the Hercules of the flower
garden, the common pansy
can tolerate conditions that
would wither lesser !lowers.
They're the perfect plant
for the novice or lazy gardener, and the price is
right. In the Bend area,
flats of 36 plants can be
bought for between $7 and
$12.
Planted six to l 0 inches
apart and spreading out as
they reach a height of six or
so inches, a tlat or two will
go a long way in creating a
mass. of color.
Seeing that the plants
have plenty of water, feeding them occasionally, and
removing the dead flower
heads and stems occasion·
ally is all that hardy pansies require to keep .blooming. They are virtually
immune to disease and
pests tend not to bother
them.
Seasoned gardeners rec-

-fi'

•.

•

ommend that when selecting plants go for the ones
that are stocky with dark
green foliage and lots . of
· buds, not particularly a lot
of flowers.
Avoid the "leggy' ones
like the plague, but if you
do happen to end up with
that ktnd, their recommen.dation is to clip them down
after planting to give them
a fresh start.
· As with all other plants
purchased in tlats, the recommendation is to water .
them well while still in the
containers so that they are
easier to ·remove without
damaging the root system.
Once in the ground, the
plants should be fed well so
they will get a good start as
they acclimate to their new
home in the !lower bed:
That contributes to longterm productivity. It's also
suggested that sins;e pansies require co nsiderable
water, putting a mulch
around them helps to retain
the moisture.
Pansies come in a variety
of colors, patterns and
sizes. The !lowers with the
velvety look have one of
three basic color patterns
- single, clear color, such
as the beautiful yellow or
purple ones, single color
with black lines radiating
from the center, called
"penciling," and those with
a

~~face."

The
· delegate-looking
pansy, often with a "happy
face" in the center ol Its
petals, will take gardeners
through the best and barest
of seasons.
The word "pansy" traces
back . to the French word,
"pensee" meaning thought
or remembrance .
Is it any wonder . that the
pansy is said to . have
mspired
W1lham
Shakespeare to write about
romance?
'

Look for "Familiar Faces"
in your Monday paper.

House of the.. week

Contained in this modest, angular roqfed two-level plan (2,490 sq. ft.) are separations of various living spaces. (AP
Photo/ AP House of the Week) .

Ang_
ular lines anything but ordinary
BY BRUCE

A.

NATHAN

Associated Press
One hallmark of appealing home design is the creator's ability to · move
beyond the ordinary. This
plan. APWB-100 from AP
House of the Week, is one
such example.
yontained in this mode st,
angular roofed two-level
plan (2,490 sq. ft.) are separations of various living
spaces.
Starting with a covered
porch, the flow moves past
the accessible first floor
master bedroom to a grouping of the ample kitchen,
dining and great room.
Unlike many homes where
access to the upper tloor is
in full view· at the front
entry, the climb to the two
second floor bedrooms~is. next to the kitchen . This is

convenient for families to
retreat upstairs and downstairs out of view of visi·
tors.
This design al so accommodates outdoor living
pos sibilities. Notably, a
large deck is situated next
to a protected screened
I, . I
porch. A private sitting garL.______ l
den is tucked between a
minor breeze way joining
the two-car garage and
kitchen entryway.
For a study plan of this
house, send $5 to Hou se of
the Week, P.O. Box 1562, The flow moves past the accessible first floor master oedNew York, NY 10116- room to a grouping of the ample kitchen, dining and great
1562, call (877) 228-2954, room. Unlike many homes where access to the upper floor
order
online
at is in full view at the front entry. the climb to the two second
or
APHouseoftheweek .com. floor bedrooms is next to·the kitchen (AP)
Be sure to include the plan
number. For downloadable
2,490 sq. ft. Two floors Can be fitted to moderate size
study plans imd construc- lot Modest size equates to energy and cost efficiency
tion blueprints of House of Ideal for family of 2-4 Master bedroom is tucked away
the Week before Apri! yet accessible to first-floor living a.rea~ A breez~~ay
2003 ,· se~-huu'S"eofrhe ­ . msulate-s- the house from garage nmse Outdoor lmng
areas are a step away from the kitchen and dining areas
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