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                  <text>TEMPO
Mother, daughter
choose healthcare
careers, Cl

BUSINESS

.SPOR35

Roberts utilizes
Army experience, D1

Merola no-nos.
Logan, Bl

•

tmes-·
Newsmaker
Bush calls
Ariel Sharon
•a man of
peace.·

Story, A7

"All of the subsequent
meetings we had, including .
the public hearing with Ohio
EPA 01') Feb. 12, were open
to the public."
Cheehl,. Mayor Tom RHM

'We're very concerned, as you
can imagine, about pollution and
· the impact on their health of our
children. As recently as Tuesday,
we had a cloud settle down whife
children were on the playground."

1.25

5

Plr.!~~ ._...

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.

Weather
High: 60s, Low: 50s
lhbllla.Al

OUR
GREENHOUSES

Mason or .GalliPolis Location ·for the
LARGEST SELECTION &amp; BEST PLANTS IN THE TRI·COUNTY AREAl
(Our retail faciiHies are stocked dally wHh plants freah from our greenhou. .)
.

ALLYOUR

•.

.TOP

POMEROY -The last day
that letters to the editor pertaining to the May 7 primary
will be printed in The Daily
Sentinel is Wednesday, April
24. No ' letters regarding the
election will be printed after
that date.

Fatal aash
lnvestlcated

BEDDING FLOWERS INCWDINCI:
• MARIGOLDS
• IMPATIENS
• COLEUS
.___•...~~

• SALVIA (Scarlet $age) • BEGONIAS
• VINCA
.
• PETUNIAS
• CELOSIA
• SILVER DUST
•••
MORE • •-•----·----

IREES &amp;: SHRUBS

•

(Large Selection of Locally Grown

and Cllmltlzed Trees It Shruba)

..
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· • Crimson King Maple • Red Maple
• Dogwood - Red, Pink White · • Pin Oaks
• Crab Apple ·Japanese Maple
• Red Bud • Barberry • Weeping Olerry
• Holly • Bradford Pear • Junipers
• flowering Plum ·AND MANY MoREl

..

••

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".

DARWIN - A rwo-velticle accident on U.S. 33 at
Darwin that resulted in. one
fatality Saturday was under
investigation by the GalliaMeigs Post of the State Highway Patrol as of pressrime.
The name of the victim was
not released, pending notification offamily members.
There were injuries in the
crash, but the number of people injured was not immediately known, troopers said.
The patrol was notified of .
the crash at 12:20 p.m., troopsaid.

ers

•

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.'

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Filled with your
favorite flowers
• Ready to take
home to set .
on your porch
or deck!

AREWS Lft~[(i
SELECTION OF U£GETABLE
BEDDING.PLANTS
• Hybrid Tomatoes • fieAJers. ~

fUW' STOQW) WITH

MARSARIU.I CONCRETE
S1WI'UMY!
Wide 'Seje tlon to choose from
and spet:lal ordeu accepted!

_,

(Bell-&amp;nana-JalepetiO)
• Squash • G1hbage
~Cucumber (4 Varieties)
• Cantaloupe • Ea Plant

• Watem:elcm

llidex
••
l111d:lellfll- J2 .....

Calendar
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby

A8
C2
02-7

insert
. C1

Editorials

A6

Obituaries
Region

A4
A2-3

Sports

81-8

Weather
0

AND MUGI, MlJCli MOREll

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Yfllllll . _ , .

•

I

•

A2
c...

looks to
control
costs
'

RoeaPie Mllltr, euperlntendent of Guiding Hand
·
School and GaPico Shallerad Workohop

CHESHIRE
Marr. Gladys Miller, 91
Virg1l W. Orange, 82
.William Finkenbinder, 81
Marion Mae Preston, 78
Florence Gothard, 77 .
Ardith Clax Hudgins, 77
· Floyd L Mitchell Jr., 75
William L 'Nig' Metzler, 7'3
Pearl Ann Porter, 61
Randall David Grant, 45
lhbllla,M

Sheriff .

Mayor: Process not secret

Crniser
mar.'ntenance,
overtime are ·
concerns

BY KEVIN KEUY
KKELLYID'MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

CHESHIRE - Village ·
.,officials .who assisted in. the
negotiated agreement to
offer property within the
corporation
limits
to
American Electric Power
· stress there was nothing
secretive about the process
aside from what the legal
end demanded.
About the only thing
that will remain confiden. tial i11 the long run, Mayor
Tom Reese said, is the
price between property
and business owners and
AEP when buyouts begin.
AEP announced last
Tuesday it had reached an
agreement in principle to
purchase 200 parcels of
land - in effect, the entire
village - for S20 million
to allow for expansion of
its nearby Gen. James M.
g.avio fs!we~ l'lant.
Reese said the sale, proposed by AEP in an ongoing dispute between the
village ·and AEP over the
effects of anti-pollution
technology at Gavin, also
resolves residents' health
and envjronmental con- ~
cerns.
"This has been the culmination of events since
our first town meeting last
October;• Reese said. "At
that time we were discussing issues affecting our
lives and our health.
"All of the subsequent
meetings we had, including
the public bearing with
Ohio EPA on Feb. 12, were
open to the public," the
mayor added.
IN THE SHADOW- Students, clients and staff of Guiding Hand School and Gallco Shel- .
An April 12 meeting tered Workshop face the Gen. James M. Gavin Power Plant every day. An air quality monwith residents outlining Itor, one of several placed around C~shlre by the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency,

PIMM ... Proalla.M

Is atop the school building. (A(ldrew Carter)

AEP may utilize Cheshire homes, buildings
FROM STAFF REPORTS

CHESHIRE -American Electric
Power plans to use a number of houses and other structures in Cheshire as
temporary housing for employees
assigned to the Gen. James M. Gavin
Power Plant .and for other plant pllrposes.
"When the attorneys for . the
Cheshire residents approached us with
the option of buying th.e property, the
agreement came together so quickly
that we didn't have an opportunity to
consider u~ for the property that
isn't necessary to accommodate plant
operation needs," said Bill Sigmon,
AEP's senior vice president for unregulated power generation. ·

"We've had time the last few days to use as employee training or meeting
examine additional needs and it facilities."
became obvious that a number of the
Sigmon said the company would
structures can't be used by our begin an informal review of the propemployees," he added.
erty in the coming weeks to identify
Sigmo.n said the Columbus-based structures that could meet training or
utility frequently has employees and temporary housing n~eJs .
contractors temporarily assigned to
AEP announced Tuesday it had
the plant as part of specific projects,
reached an agreement in principle to
"so it is logical for us to use some of
acquire about 200 parcels of land that
the houses in Cheshire i.&lt; temporary
make up Cheshire for S20 million . .
1
employee housing.
. "Providing living quarters adjacent Cheshire has about 90 residences and
to the plant will reduce commuting several businesses.
Some of the land may "be used for a
time for our employees and may also
help reduce costs," he added. "We will potential expansion of the barge
also look at the commercial or city unloading facilities to assist fuel delivgovernmentlocations for the potential eries to Gavin.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED&lt;il'MVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY ~ Meigs
County Sheriff Ralph Trussell
said Friday
he
has
l)lade
a
"conct"rted
effort" to
co ntrol
costs
in
operating
· his departc
mcnt,
TrusHII
although
the ' number
of calls his office has responded to since he took office is
on the rise.
"My office has made a concerted effort to reduce oper. ~tirg costs in areas that do not
affect the protecti&lt;?n of the
residents of Meigs Co unty,
and the safety of my officers,"
Trussell said.
In next month's primary
election, voters will decide
the fate of a half-percent sales
tax increase which the county
commissioners have· pledged
to use to supplement the
operation of law enforcement
and justice operations.
In his first year in office.
Trussell ~aid, it took $693,129
to pay for operation of his
department including
employee salari&lt;·&lt;, co&lt;ts for
gasoline and oil , car repairs,
supplies, contract repairs and
services, uniforms, equipment, travel, and officers'
medical expenses.
Those
expenses
were .
522,000 less than it took to
pay for the department's
operation in 2000.
"Effective law enforcement
protection for the residents of
the county requires rcasonabl~ and adequate funding for
the operation of this department," Trussell said. "There
w~re no expenses for · new
cruisers due to a lack of available funding."
Trussell said he and his
deputies cove r 434 square
miles in 11 cruisers.
"The highest mileage registered shows 210,000 miles on
a 1994 model, and the lowest
is 95,000 on ·a 1999 model,"
Trussell said. "The number of
miles generated per shift
results in excessive car repair
costs and gasoline costs
throughout the year."
"The fleet of cruisers need
to be replaced on a regular

PluM ... Slwolff, A7

National Volunteer

lsAprll2147

NOW

-

''Volunleers ;Lifting Lives, Spirits

MEDICAL CENTER

and llearts"

Discover the Holzer Difference

Holzer Medical Cenler says "thank you" to our volunteers
for their many hours of hard work and dedicatioh.

www.holzer.org

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Page~

lundly, A!HIIIi, lOOJ

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SuiiMy. Aprll21, 2002

Projects in Point Pleasant
financial boost

Ohio weather
Sunday, Apt11 21

Grant money for
River Museum,
tourism center
,·on the way

ol Colu,..,. 1&lt;12',..• I

BY PAM WtWAMSON

o-••·
__ · • ••••

.,.Sunny Pl. Couctj

Clou&lt;tf

-

Ro~

T·-

Flunlel

Snow

100

West VIrginia weather
Sunday, April 21

OHIO

.

.

WhlfsonTip
• $60,000·1n grant funding for comple·
tlon of River Museum on Main Street,
scheduled to open this fall.
• $50,000 In grant funding for con·
structlon of tourism center located at foot
of Bartow Jones Bridge.
• Bid openings for final phase of River·
front Park project, ground-breaking set
for May.
.

PAMWOMYOAILYREGISTER.COM
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The city of Point
Pleasant will soon see an
influx of more than $100,000
pouring into rwo of its major
projects.
The city received the final
agreements for a $60,000 second grant, the museum
grant for the Point Pleasant will only need the notice to
River Museum and $50,000 proceed before spending the
in budget digest funds, funds.
acquired tprough .Sen. Oshel
"If it's approved, . then as
Craigo, for a new tourism soon as we send it back, we'll
center.
get a notice to proceed and.
The $60,000 granted to the since our account is already
museum is in essence the set- establisbecl, because we've
ond half of. the amount that been submitting invoices,
had originally been requested then we can go ahead and
from the state.
. •spend it," Fowler said. "We're
"We applied for $125,000 going to use the second
and we received $62,500 so $60,000 on the rear of the
we've been using · that building.
$62,500 and we've basically
"We're going to add the
spent that money doing what addition on for the offices,
you see down there now," the front exhibit display area,
Jack Fowler, president of the and the entrance. to the baseRiver Mllseum committee, ment, stairs going up the
said. "So, when we didn't get back, and hopefully we'll
the full amount we applied · have some left over to do the
for, we submitted a second restroom."
·
grant for that other half,
Workers Paul Wood and
$62,500 and we were award- · Shorty Gibson have been
invaluable, according to
ed $60,000."
The first grant had been Fowler.
.
awarded complete with a
A firm has already been
notice to proceed but the contracted to perform the
River Museum had requested research and the writing for
a change in scope for the pro- the exhibits, but archiving the
jeer, authorizing past expen- multitude of artifacts the
dirures.
·.
mus~um has already received
After the city signs and is proving to be a momentous
return• the agreement for the task. Anyone interested in

.

.

Fowler for his efforts in keeping the project alive.
,,
"Without him, it wouldn't
be · a reality," Roach sai~.
"They've been working on it
fo r years, and be really ca111e
in and moved it forwud ." ·:
The tourism center will be
getting a full face-lift soon, 1¥
soon as the $50,000 ~~
received for it, which should
be any day now.
"I sent the information in
yesterday and they said they
would send the check,ASAI\"
Roach said. "We asked for
$50,000 and that's what we
were granted to remodel the
inside, and complete . renovations to the outside."
The new tourism center at
the base of the Bartow Jones
Bridge will host the city's
. water department and a weicome center.
City workers will be performing the majority of the
· work, but the roof and the
refurbishment o( the parking
lot will have to be contracted.

volunteering time to help is
welcome.
No money has been spent
in acquiring artifacts, and the
generosity of families ancl
people who have lived their
lives on the river has been
exceptional. ·
"We've been receiving a lot
of artifacts from river boat
captains and their families
and financial support from
river families and local organizations," Fowler said.
"We're going 10 have a very
The city is getting ready to
interesting museum."
wrap up the final phases . 6f
Fowler hoped the museum the Riverfront Park, opening
would be open by June or the bids for phase two of the
July, but realistically expects project on Wednesday and
the attraction to be opera- hope to break ground on tile
tiona! by fall.
new park in May.
''I'd like to thank the gov·
Money for the project was
.awarded through the state ernor, Sen. Oshel Craigo and
from the federal transporta- Frank Lee for their work o'rt
tion enhancement program.
both of these projects and
City
clerk
Marilyn 'keeping them moving for•
McDaniel
praised
the ward," Roach said.
"We have lot to look for~
Department of Tramportation for its interest and ward to and Point Pleasant is
involvement in the River just about ready to really
Museum . Representatives move forward ," McDaniel
from the department have said. "With all these ,projects
visited and toured all of · coming to completion, iel
Mason County.
' ••
going to.'be&lt; WO!Id~1ful fifr
Mayor John Roach praised people to come and visit." ·

a

0 ii.A • .1ift . . .

lumy Pl. Clou&lt;tf

Ciaodr • -

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l'lorioo

1!11n

Wet, cooler conditions forecast
BY TI-lE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The National Weather Service says wet and cooler conditions are in store for the
region.
· Showers and thundentorms
were to return late Saturday
night as low pressure mo\red
· into the central Plains. The
rain and thunderstorms will
continue through Sunday
night as a low pressure system
moves into the area.
Temperatures will fall into
the 50s overnight and rise
into the 60s for· Sunday. Area
temperatures for Monday will
see a high in the mid-60s and
lows in the 30s.
·
Sunrise Sunday will be at
6;45 a.m.
Weathlf Corecaat:
Sund:iy.. .Showers
likely
with a chance of thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
60s. Northeast winds 5 to 10
mph becoming southeast in

iunhq 1t'imtt• jentin.el
COrrection Polley

Our main (X)j-n In ,. atoo1et II
to be accurate. Hyou know Ill .,
«rO&lt; In a tloly. call tn. .-oom
.. 4411-2342« 9112·2155.

-

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Ext. 18
Ext. 23
Ext. 20
Ext. 21

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IY .TONY M. l•aott
TLEAC~YDAILYIENTINEL. COM

MIDDLEPORT - After
43 yean of selling household
goods to residents in the tricounty area, Ingel's Furniture
and Jewelry in Middleport is
reducing its furniture inven1ory and going out of the
~ppliance business.
· Jason Ingel, owner and proprietor of the business, said
Friday recent plans to expand
certiin areas of the store has
resulted in a decision ' to
'!'educe furniture inventory
!:and eliminate appliance sales.
"Basically, we're going to
focus our attentiort on the
·expansion of our Radio
'Shack dealership and other
·parts of the business that, we
feel, best serves the communi·ty," said Ingel.
. Customers can still purrhase furniture from the store,
:either in a much smaller
·showroom, or from a huge
selection of new catalogs,
Ingel said. .
''We will continue to seD
.furniture, however, it will be a
~ittle difFerent than before. It
.will be similar to the old Sears
.concept;' said lngel, as he
helped employees move sev;e_ral couches outside for a liq1'!idation sale.
. Ingel added the store will
.also continue to seD jewelry
.and that customers can expect
.to see an expanded "sleep·
shop" bedding area and a new
wall art/picture gallery.
·... "It is important to note that
o.ur service department will
remain open for those who
need
their
appliances
repaired;' he said. "So, if you .
. have any problems with your
appliances, our door will
11Jways be open."
.

.

Jim Morrleon, Certified Financial Planner

530 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

740.446.1986
"

Bob Hood, left, accapts a Cat's Meow piece from Tommie
Vaughn depleting the Hesklna Tanner building. Hood was partowner of the building that was lost In the August 4, 2001, fire
In downtown Gallipolis. The sale of the Cat's Meow piece Ia a
fund raiser for the Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association with
proceeds going toward the purchase of Christmas decorations
for the city pari(. (OVP)

BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUC.AnON PLANNING
RlmREMENT PLANNING

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River Cities Community Health Coalition - ~Y!f...Q!!!!

Nurse On Call
Medical professionals providing free
health care answers 8c physician referral

· Sponsors:
Coroorate;
.

·

Farmers Bank, Peoples Bank of
Middleport, Pomeroy &amp;. Rutland, ~
Racine Home National Bank &amp;. ·
WYVK 92.1
l\'j
Dorothy Karr, Bernard Fultz
~·
Crow's Steakhouse
lit
Athens Landmark, Holzer Olnlc,
PDK Construction, Don Tate
t
Motors
·lit
Vaughan's Supermarket,
Brogan-Warner Insurance,
~
Family Homes
lit

'1

Platinum:
Gold;
Sliver:

Bronze:

Special Thanks:

"People don't realize these
guys have a heck of a job ·co
do," Watson said. "I understand that in three or four
days everything should be
back to normal."
Watson
worked
with
DeWine stafFer Karen Sloan
on making the donation
request. He estimated that
enough Wj!ter should be available for future emergencies.
For now, Watson sald anyone
in need can contact him at
256-6515, and arrangements

can be made to pick up water
at the township garage or get
it delivered.
"The entire community
united during this time of crisis," De Wine said in · a press
release. "This is an excellent .
example of neighbor helping
neighbor."
"Wai-Mart really bent over
backwards to help us;'Watson
said. "Even though we got a
lot of water, it will be stored
until another problem arises.
It will be put to good use."

IJrCJm 2()()2
Ptltel Slatl AI $81.91
·NEW STYLES

ORDER EARLY

. The Fabric Shop
Pomeroy, Ohio .7~992·2284
Mon•..Sat. 9:00..5:00

Chamber Board of Directors
High Country
Mark Mlcheal
Richard Hill
Shain Custom Signs &amp;. Decals
Chelsle &amp;. Chuck Stearns
Roger &amp;. Betsy Nicodemus
Stanley Meek$
Julie Campbell
SueMafson
Perry &amp;. Nan Varnadoe
Ohio Bicentennial Commission
Christl Lynch
Brenda Merritt
Gina Pines
Brenda Roush
Mindy Morris
Ed &amp;. Sharon Hupp
Patty Pickens
Jennifer McBride
Royal Oak Resort .

Silent Auction Donators:
American Electric Power
Bob Evans of Gallipolis ·
Brenda Merritt
Buckeye Rural Electric
CongressmanTed Strickland
Hearts Aglow Candles &amp;. Gifts
Holiday Inn - Parkersburg
Meigs Chiropractic
Meigs Massage Therapy
Middleport Department Store
Middleport Flower Shop
Ohio Rivet Bear Co.
Ohio River Candle Co.
Ohio University Athletics ·
Peps! Bottling of Cheshire
Representative John Carey
Riverbed Tanning &amp;. Party Supply
University of Rio Grande- Meigs Center
Pizza Hut of Pomeroy
l'leasant Valley Hospital
Point of VIew Restaurant
Can-Do Maintenance Carpenter Inn
Quist! Lynch
Oark's Jewelry
Dale Tampke
Dwight Icenhower
Fruth Pharmacy
Fur Peace Ranch
Hartwell House
lngel's Furniture
· Julie Campbell
K&amp;.C Jewelers
Nalls by Pam
Outta The Way
Patty Pickens
Perry Varnadoe
Roy Grueser
Sears of Gallipolis
Spring Valley Onema Sue Malson
Ted's BP
Wal-Mart of Mason
WYVKRadlo

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~me people dream when they deep.
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Better health for the Tri-State,

Othen dream of ~leeping.

The new Sleep Center of St. Joseph's Hospital
•

can help you get the rest you deserve. We have

state-of-the-art technology with several private, spaciously designed rooms. Come spend the
'

night with us and put the sleepless nights behind you. For more information about a sleep
evaluation, contact your doctor or call (304) 424-4614.

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·1-800-462-5255
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&amp; You" annual dinner &amp; dance.

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IOJ.Il
JIGJ_.

flot.72

Employees of
lngel's Furniture
and Jewelry In
Middleport, right,
spent Friday after·
noon moving a
large selection of
sofas, love seats
and recliners out·
side for lrpmediate sale. The
store, which has
sold household
goods to trio(ounty residents for
43 years, Is
reducing !ts furniture Inventory
and will stop sellIng appliances In
order to expand
other areas
of the business.
(Tony M. Leach)

!'

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FURNITURE
UQUIDATION -

water donation helps out
·Southem Gallia Co. residents

-••.2!
S«t
Om
,_
~ 1D ,_, lht CMNf
-105

..,_.r;o;;Wtdin

t·~·~···········~·~···~·······
The Meigs County Chamber of i
t Commerce would like to thank the
following businesses &amp; individuals
for their support of the "Red, White i

.

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-~ ,.s
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OPEN HOUSE - Rio Grande Community College/University of Rio Grande fine woodworking technology prO:
gram will hold an open house from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, May 1 In the woodl'(prklng building. Pictured are woodworking Instructor Greg Cunningham,
left, and certificate student John Haywood . (URG)

Rural Water used supply from
· its storage tanks in the area,
Bolin said. With any service
interruption, he added, there
;
BY KlvJN Klu.Y
is some discoloration and low ·
: KKELLYOMYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
pre~ure, problems the system
: MERCERVILLE - A ·sig- . is correcting.
)Uticant donation of bottled
A boil advisory was issued
)Yater from Wai-Mart is helping . the day of the break and was
puyan and Ohio township m- canceled on April 13, Bolin
~~~ out while Gallia County said.
~ral Water Association com"We're correcting the probS~letes repairs to a main water !ems and flushing the lines as
~e break in the area.
we go along," he said. "We're
l' Rural Water customers are . trying to finish repairs to the
l:&gt;eing served through a tem- permanent line by early this
"orary line and Brent Bolin, coming week:'
lhe system'• manager, said
Watson said he got a num~epairs to the permanent llne her of calls from elderly resi~hould be complete by this dents concerned about the
situation, and he put in · a
. tweek.
About nine tkids of bottled request for help to U.S. Sen.
!water, each carrying around Mike
DeWine's
office.
rts5 gallon•. were delivered DeWine's staff was instru:Wednetday to the Guyan mental in obtaining bottled
!Township garage and distrib- water for southern Gallia
~ted to needy retidents, County residents afFected
Guyan Trustee Roger Watson during the·1999 drought.
;said.
The request yielded three
: The break ac(llrred in the truckloads of bottled water
,ine on the bottom of Rae- from Wai-Mart, and distribu•coon Creek . around the tion to those in need began
:bridge at the intersection of · immediately, Watson said. .
lohio 218 and Clay Chapel
"There are a lot of people
~oad at YeUowtown, Bolin here on oxygen or who are ill
:Wd. The break happened bte and they need clean water;•
~ April 10, and the tempo- he said, adding that Rural
l,ry line was inscalled and Water i• doing everything
~ling by latt weekend.
possible to restore full service
: • When service was restored, to area customers.

A Aegl•tered lnve•tment Advl•or

6uallap 1timd·6tntintl • Page A3

,.

Retat'f gt'ant
•i· lends a hand

J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

Extended Cor.eaat:
Tuetday.•.Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the upper 50s.
Wednesday... Partly cloudy
during the day, then cloudy
with a chance of showers.
Warmer. Lows in the lower
40s and highs near 70.
Thunday... A chance of
thowers during the day, otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in
the mid 40s and highs in the
upper 60s.
Friday...Mostly clear. Lows
in the lower 40s and highs in
the upper 60s.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Oelllpolle, Ohio Point Pletllnt, WV

'.

the afternoon. Chance of rain
70 percent.
Sunday
night... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers. Lows in the mid 50s.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Monday... Partly
cloudy.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Monday
night:..Monly
cloudy. Lows in the. upper
30s.
.

PRoUD TO BE A PART OF YOUR IlfE

::s::~..,
Aaalgnlng dew

CATS MEOW

.

•

,,

The Sleep Center
ofSt Joseph's Hospital
(304) 424·4614 .

'

•

�.,

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

.

Page AS

trt

• hotl-.ttnaktt. and- jiit(tded in dli\dl hw hiD.
. .
~ art tw0 1011.\ Guy D 'P«Il~ of PtoctoMI' and
RACINE-William R. Finlrntbindet.8l.R.Idne.died ~
William C.~ o(Ctw,IIL: \\110 ~ Pluida Sllmnet of
April2.0, 2002, in Holm" Mtckal Cencer.
'Mn&amp;.MI., and BubaA I mton of~'Mih.: two~
BomMard\ 10,192l,in Kmt.he wanmiredw liK and a US.
o.k
Hill.
with
the
Rev.
md
CrabaH
and
the
Rfi
HHmiln
s.-Navy vetmn oNAxldWu 11. H~ was a membet of the VFW Pb&amp;i
Genld Ktttan of fort M)'tn. Fla., and CNrles Keeton of~
art
officiating.
Burial
wiD
be
in
CM
~
V'wwioo
held
in Racine.
Mich.: and a sitit,Alice Umlaufof~ ROUI' Mich.
Surviving ;w 10 ebildrtn. Linda. Barbara }eln. William Jr., Tun, in the funeral bonle on Sarurday.
~will bt ~by IW lilnenl Howat. P11»
Cheryl, Ptggy;Tamnt)l ~Ruth Ann and Nancy; and~
~\
grandchildren and pat-gr.andc:hildren.
H~ M.S pieeeded in death by his pam~a: an infant 1011. Micbael:
and brothen and sislen.
NEW HAVEN. W'A. - floyd L Mitd\tlljr,, 75, Ntw Hll\\11\
Services will be t t a.m. Tuaday in Bilth6eld Funeral HOIM.
ditd Frida)A.prill9, 2002. at his~
Rutland. Burial will be in Miles ~ Rutland. Friend\ may
Born Stpt t9, 1926, in Swm, W.Vt.,liOJ\ oflht aM floyd L St.
call at the fUnaal home 6um 6-8 p.m. M~
and~ Rippitoe Mitclltli.M- a~Ctup ll\d npairman at KU«
Aluminum Cotp.
liD
He ~ 1 US. Ntlllf vetenn oi''Mlrld 'Mr II, ll\d a 11\tll\btr el
GALLIPOUS -:Florence Marie "Granny" Gadwd, 77, GalVi&lt;tory DapW Church in Middltport. ll\d Smith-~ ~
lipolis, died Frida)~ April 19, 2002, in Hob.er Medical Center.
140oflhtAmeMI\ l.qJ!onin New Ha~.
Arrangemenu will be announced by WauiJh-Halley-~
He""' abo~ in dtlth by his wllt,Bernad~M Hldtmm
Funeral Home.
Mitcllell,in 1996:two blotheft.Htrry Mitehellll\d Mtck Mitcllell:
wl a sisttr, Muy Clark.
.
Survi'lin&amp; 1110 tw0 lOllS, Danny (Jule) MitcMII el RAwt'd\\'OOd.
W.Va.,ll\d Gary (Barbara) Mitch&amp; oi'New Havtn; and tOut pndOAK HILL - William L. "Nig" Metzler, 73, Oak Hill, di~
childml,. ~ldchild ll\d. gmt-pnddllughtv.
Wednesday, April I 7, 2002, at Albors of Gallipolis.
SeMees will be 11 a.m. Mondl.ty in f&lt;VtliOI\t'1\lmr Pwtm1
Born Aug. 28, 1928, in Oak Hill, son of the late Lonnie and
HOlM, Muon,W.'4., with the Rtv..)unes KttM oiBdllifl&amp;. Burial
Gertrude smith Metzler, he was n:timi &amp;om the Davis Briclc YaJd .
in Oak Hill, and attend~ Trinity Wesleyan Chu!Ch.
will be in Sunrise Memorilll Gudem, Lewt.W.\\. Friends mty CliO
He was a member of Oak Hill SeniOI' Citizens and assist~ at Oak
at the IUnml home &amp;:om 6-9 p.m. Sundll~
Hill football garnes. as a.yard marker.
Military pveside rites will be conducted by Smlth-Capelwt
Surviving an: two sons, Thomas L. (~) Metzler of Oak Hill,
Post 140 of the American Legion and Stewart-jolumrl VFW Post
and William Michael Metzler of Gallipolis; and four granclchildn:n
9926 of MilSOil.
and two great-grandchildn:n.
[n lie\• of !lowe!$, the wnUy ttquesa contrjbutions be made to
He was also preceded in death by his wife, Lola Wallace Metzler.
PleNAnt
\\lley Hospice, Viand sa., Point Pleuant, W.Va. 2$550.
PROCTORVILLE - Marion Mae Pmton, 78, Pnxtorville,
on Jan. 23, 1988; and two sisters, Dorothy Taylor and Helen Taylor.
Complete arTWlllll'nenu will be announced lltw.
·
Services will be 4 p.m. Sunday in Kuhner-Lcwis Funeral Home, died Fri~April 19,2002,in St. Mary\ Hospital,Huntington,W.V..

Flew

She -

Deaths

band. De.Mil Pltsl.iX\-

21,2002

Parole board recommends no demency for killer

TiftMf.CiaiiM ··

. . _ L 'Nt Mebler

EVERGREEN.,.. Randall David Grant, 46, of Bidwell (Evergreen Community). passed away on Saturday, April 20, 2002, in
Holzer Medical Center.
He was born December 14, 1955, at Gallipolis, the son of Robert
Grant o!Vinton, and Vivian Mulford Grant of Gallipolis.
David was a 1973 graduate of North Gallia High School. He was
a carpenter fon:man for the Atlas Scalfolding Company of
Charleston, West Virginia, and was a member of the Carpenters
Local No. 650 in I'Qmeroy for 25 years.
He was a member of the BPOE Lodge No. 107 and St. Louis
Catholic Church in Gallipolis.
David enjoyed carpentry and woodwo~g, as Mll as the Yieaving of hand-crafted ru~.He was the inventor and patent holder of
"THE CUTIING MACHINE" used by craftsmel\ who make
hand-woven rugs.
·
· He marri~ Becky Skidmon: on February I4, and she survives
·with one son, Christopher David Skidmon: of Bidwell, and his
fiance, Amy Hauldn:n of Gallipolis.
Also urviving in addition to his parenu are two brothen and sisters-in-law, Dale and Debbie Grant o!Vinton, and Bruce and Debbie Grant of Bidwell; ~ silten and rWo brothers-in-law, Diane
and Dave Browning of Charlotte, North ·Carolina, Chris
Wooldridge of Ray, and Esther and Mark Robem ofVinton; his
maternal grandmother, Lucille Mulford of Cheshire; several nieces
and nephem; and two speci:d nieces, Kelly and Katie Radilf.
He was pn:ceded in death by his paternal grandpanmts,/:t.S. Grant
and &amp;tell Warfield Grant; his maternal grandfather, Dale MulfOrd;
and his father-in-law and mother-in-law, Warren and Mary Alice
Skidmon:.
A Mass of Chriltian Burial will be held at 11 a.m. on Tuesday.
April 23, 2002. in Sr. Louis Catholic Church in Gallipolis. with
Moruignor William R. Myen officiating. Burial will follow in the
Skidmore Family Cemetery at Evergreen. Friends may call at
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinton on Monda",
.,, April 22,
2002,fi:om 2-4 and 6a9 p.m.
.
A Rosary service will be conducted in the funeral home at 9 p.m:
on Monday,April22, 2002.
Pallbearers will be Dale and Bruce Grant, Diane Browning. Esther
Robem, Chris Wooldridge, Chris 'Illckett, Eric Skidmore and Jeff
McAvena.

Bertha (Leo) Carter o£00 Hill, Becky (Danny) Waee ofColum·
bus. and Sue Hiclcn\111\ ofJ&gt;.\IllSkAhi; nun\l!l'Ous &amp;Mdchildttn, pat-

Obituaries
RINER., Va. - Ardith Clay Hudgins, 77, of Riner, passed away
on Friday, April 19,2002, in New R.iverValley Medical Center.
The daughter of the lnte Walter Clay and Mary Ann Cla)l she was
also pn:ceded in death by a. sister, Red!th Bartram; and brothers,
Edgar Clay.and Lester Clay.
•
She is survived by her husband, George W."Bon" Hudgim; children, Becky Cole, George Jr. and Cheryl Hudgins, all of ChristiansbUill,Virginia, and Vicki and Perry Owen of South Carolina; grand·
childn:n, Harvey and Merissa Cole, Henry and Bridget Linkous,
Sonia and Jay Wegrzyn, Bradley Hudgins and Melis!a Young, and
Craig Hudsins and Ryan Hudgins.
Also surviving are gmt-grandchildn:n,Tiana Cole,.Chelsea Link·
ow,Jessica Unkous. Michael Wegrzyn and Mariah Wcarzyn; listen·
in-law, Cornelius Flinchum, Cad1erine Pulmer and Arlene Hudgim;
a dose nephew, Jimmy Hudgim; special friends, Uncia An;e,Amy
Phillips. and DaJla.~ and Margie Hatcher; brothen, Bob Clay, Carl
Ray Clay and .Franklin Clay, all of South CaroUna, and Ivan Clay
and Nathan Cia}\ bod1 ofOhio; sisters, Louise CaldMU andVirginia
Racer; both of Ohio, Mary Lou Gay of Misaissippi, and Geneva ·
Gibbs of South Carolina; and numerous nieces and nephews. ·
Services will be 2 p.m. on Sunday, April 21, 2002, in Horne
Funeral Chapel. Christiansburg, Virginia. Burial will be in Sunset
Cemetery.Visitation was held in the funeral home on Saturday,April
20, 2002. from 6-8 p.m.
·

g..., Gl

·..&amp;. •••..._
,aap
.._..

••OAK HILL _ Mary Glady! Miller, 91, of Kolceen Road, Oak
Hill,p:wedawayonThunday,April 18,2002,atHeartlandofJack·
son.
She was born May 17,1911,1n Gallia County, the claughterofthe
late Ed Farney and Bertha Phillip! Farney.
Glarlyl was a member of the Penlcl Church in Gallla Coun~
Survivon include som, Ralph (Zue) Miller of Oak Hill, Dale
. (Anna) Miller of Oak Hill, Gale Miller of Columbw, and Rw (Kay)
Miller of Oak Hill; daughters; Cynthia Ooe) Dailey of Bidwell,

grandchildren and great-pat-pndchlldttl\.
Also survi\lllliJ are a brother, Hobert (Louise) Pamey of Nopa,
Indiana; and siu.~~n, Opal Wasmer of Otk Hill,J til\ (Quentin) Hale
or Canton, and Jessie Halley of CitcliMUo.
In acktition to her pan~nt!, she Will ptectded in d~th by by her
hwband, Luther Miller, in t 971 ; a son, Bob Funey; and a brother,
Dan Fam~
.
Servlees will be l p.m. on .Sunda)l AprU 21, ~· in ~ulmcr­
Lowia Funentl Home in Oilk Hill; with the 1\ev, Cline 1\owlins ofti.
elating. llurllll will be in Clalllt1 BAptist Cemetery at PAtriot.Visitation was held in the ti.tneml home on Saturday.Aprl\20, 2002, &amp;:om
6-9 p:m.
·
·

PlaiiAnn
POINT PLEASANT, WVa. - Pearl Ann Porter, 6!, of Point
Pleasant, died Thunday,Aprll 18, 2002, at her midenct, following a
brief illness.
She was born January 3, 1941, In jordan, Mllfion Count)\ Welt
Virginia, dte dauahter of the late Georp B. Dunham, and Bthel
Rinehart Dunhant of Fairmol\t, West Virainla,
She was a homemaker, a mother and a wift. She Will a member
of the Can uta c;lub, country and square dancllliJ, the Ladles Auxil·
iary ofAM VETS, Womenof the Moose and d10 An1erican Le1ion

Auxill

·

·

In adXtlon to her r,arena, she was preceded in death ily her husband, Wilbert "Mick' Porter, on Sep~tmber 26, 1990; and by two
brothen, 1\ul S. Dunham and James A. Dunham.
Surviving in addition to her mother are a dauahttr 11nd aon·ln·
law, Karen Lynn And Tim Frazier of Leon, West Virginia; twO sons
and daughters-in-law, Danny and Ruth Ann Porter of New Haven,
West Virginia, and Mjchael A. and Robin Porter of Om, West Virslnla; six grandchlldn:n, Anthony Frazier of Leon, N11llllie Faulk of
New Haven, Aatol\ Faulk of New Haven, Lauren Porter of New
Haven, D!I!W Porter of Ona, and 'Tient I'Qrter of Ona•
Al10 aurviving are a sister, Phyllis Summen of Fairmont; a apeclal
companion, Harold Whitt; the very best of tiienda, Darb and Jack
Barnett; and m~~ny special &amp;lends.
.
Services will be 1 p.m. on Sunday, April 21, 2002, ln WilcOXIn
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, with the Rev. Charles Moses ofB·
elating. Burial will be in Kirkland Memorial Gardetu.VItltatlon wu
held in the funeral home on Saturday, April 20,2002, &amp;om 7.9 p.m.

AG s11ks lnvtltlaatlon

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Tlw U.S. ~tt()rn~y ~nl'ral has a!ktd
th~ FUll() in~tig~w thll dl'llth of Ros-er Ow11n~by Jr., who Wlls
as~hyNl~ttd Nov. 7, 3000, whil~ in polll-c eu~lt'ld)l
. 'You ean btl auured thAI lhhe t\liden~ llho\"' th(\t the~t WM
• 11 pl'\)$~lll!lble viol&lt;ttlOI\ of 1my lildl.l~l erimiMI dvU righ~

' St!ltuti', IIJlllropriatt aetion will btl tlklm," l)e~rtlnlmt ofjll!tlltl!
'Dlrtelt'lr Lurl Sharp~~ l)ay ~ld ln i\ h~tttr reetiwd Friday by
Han1illt'ln County Conmli!!liol'l&lt;er 'Ibdd 1\lrtune.
.
, 1\ntune has ~~~ premng ltlr ll federdl inw~gdtion on bl!half
, of the Owen~by f41'1\ily un~ t\'1\'1 uf th&lt;e otlitt~ in\'tll\.~ \\'\'1'1!
~~~~~i~ oht11tt ehaf81!S lau ~u.
. • Thlltt 11re no \Wrd! lt'l express how WI! ~~ right 1111\1\"
1\o~r 0\-vensby Sr. &amp;~.id Frldily. "W&lt;l ha~ beel'l waltinl! fur !ome
ju1titt, and now ma}'OO wt will ~t lt."

.......
1wwn P ts niW trlI I

InJured man pes hom•

Process
from Pap A1 ·
AEP's proposal to buy the village was offered to residenta
on a voluntary basis, he said.
"We didn't want anyone to
feel pressured;' Reese said.
"And we didn't want anyone to feel excluded:' added
resident and village council
member Chuck Bradbury.
After AEP proposed the
buyout, the matter went into
the hands of attorney•, who
on April 12 presented village
residents .with the proposal at
a meeting. which drew about
80 to 1~ residents.
"We were open to different
solutions and it was AEP's
proposal;' Reese 1aid. ·
An overwhelming majority
of those in attendance favored
the buy, despite sadness over
the loss of homes, relocation
and the eventual disappearance of Che~hire. The yillage
of 221 residents was incorporated in April 1953, but had
existed as a community on
the banks above the Ohio
River for about a century
before.
The viUage was represented
in negotiations by Washington, D.C., attorneys Barry
Neuman and Kathy Bailey,
and Ed Cochran of Cleveland.
"It's been an open book
since day one;• Reese said,
,adding that local media cov-

of the environmental
issue has kept the situation in
the public eye.
Til• next move? ·
Property owners and businesses will be contacted separately by AEP representative•,
Reese said. That'1. the next
move anticipated in the
proce11, which AEP officials
hope to see concluded by the
end of the year.
AEP looks to use the property for a potential expamion
of barge loading Cacilitie1 ,to
assist coal deliveries to Gavin.
AEP sold ita Southern Ohio
Coal Co. complex in . Meigs
County "- and main coal
supplier - to Consol Energy
Inc. in 2001, The la1t of the
mines' employees were
recendy laid off.
The Colunbu1-based utility
also announced Friday it will
use some of the hou1e1 it will
buy as temporary housing Cor
plant employees and other
plant-related purchase~. (See
relatecl 1tory).
"I think the village is at a
point where it e11hau1ted
every avenue of relolution ro
the pollution pr:ogram;• 1aid
Charlie Reynolds, .owner of
Reel 'Em In Bait and Tackle
Shop next to the village park.
"Ever since the te1t1 have
shown there was a health risk,
what could you do?"
Reynolds . referred to a
1tudy is1ued earlier this year
from the federal Regi•try for
Toxic Substances. and Di~ease
Registry, a division of the

Center for Disease Control,
that found imtallation of
selective catalytic reduction
(SCR) technology to reduce
nitrogen oxide emissions from
Gavin aggravated health
problems in the village. · .
After SCI\ - which AEP
installed ,a1 part of Clean Air
Act regulations - went into
effect in May 2001, plant
employee• and resident!
detected a "blue haze" that
settled on the area on hot,
humid days.
The haze proved to be an
unexpected proce11 byptoduct, an increase in sulfur trioxide that AEP announced in
January it was spending $7
million to correct.
By then, longnanding concern• from the village• were
al!Bravated when DTE, a 1ub1idiary of Detroit EdiJol\, filed
for operating permits through
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to build a 1ynthetic fuel plant at Gavin.
The plant proposes to make
coal briquette• using a latel!
binder, heightening ' worries
for tho1e allergic to lateK,
despite DTE'• assurances its
process would be enclosed
within its marufacturing
facility.
Cot~cernt remain
"I'm not thrilled about
leaving;• said Reynolds, who
retired as a Gallipolis police
officer in January 1996 and
opened the bait shop last year.
"We plartned to make this our
.
h
d
retirement · orne, an we

don't want to move, but I'll
1ee what they have to ofl'er.
"Some are happy about the
buyout because the market
here isn't where it thould be,"
he added. "There's a lot of
gossip and 1tufi about it. I'm
sure they'll try to make it Ill·
i1factory, but to what degree
I'm not sure."
For Rosalie Miller,superin·
tendent of Guiding Hand
School and Gallco Sheltered
Workshop, it'1 a matter of
awaiting AEP'• next move.
Guiding Hand student!, .
which number about SO, and
the nearly 60 Gallco clients
face the plant every day. Due
to itl clos.ene11 to Gavin, EPA
placed an air monitor on the
JChool building, one of several around the viDage.
"Technically, we're not sure
if we're in the corporation
limit, and if not, we're very
· clote;• Miller taid. "We're very
concerned, u you can imagine, about pollution and the
impact on their health of our
children. A1 recently as Tunday, we had a cloud settle
,__.....;.·;.....-.......:.·-..;;;·-;...,.

Aulo- Owner• lnturance
Life Home Car ButfDUI

71# "7f- AtU.;; P' ~··
S
IN URANC! PLUS

AGENCJ ES, 1NC.
114 Court Pomeroy

992·6677

down while children were on
the playground.''
Miller uid stafF, students
and client! will remain con·
cerned until more It known

said. "We'll ttay here and
what~ golna on.''

~ee

about
the buyout.
"Because
everyone Ia not , ~!!!!!~
able to talk freely about 1
details, we're not aware of aU
aspects," she said, "We hope
AEP won't forset the students
and cllenu of GaUia County
Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities.''
Tri1h ·McCullough, executive director of nearby GalliaMcigs Communlry Mtion
Agency, ~aid there are no plan1
to move the agency's adminil·
tratlve officea, although 1he
expecta option• will be di1cu11cd when the CM board
meets Tuesday at 4:30 p.m.
~lo7JI3 12116-~'41jl41;~'!,~~~
"Thit has been a convenient
1t.
location for our agency:' 1he .__ _.__w.._""!"'--'

lilt wimmes linm vktims' families
watdl the oexecutiol'l trom a dosal drcuit
tele\lhlon.
T.llt will eomider the ul\anin\oU! tuli"8 by the 00.1\:1 alter hit l~ team
reviews It 0\1\!t the 1.\Wktnd, ~pokesman
joe Andrews said. Talt b expec:ted ro p;et
thti 00.1\:1\ reeummendation on Monday,
AndttM ~id. .
''The legal staff will look it over ro
make sure ewrything il there, whether
there 4ft quesuons ror parole board or
the (Hamiltt&gt;n County) prosecutt&gt;r's
olll~." tl.ndrews said,
.
Earlier Friday, the Ohio Supreme
Court denied a request by Coleman's
•lawyers lt'l review hil~:~&gt;nviction over the
way his ttill jurors were 'elected.
lt'l

Coleman~

lawyers claimed that thenHamilron County Prosecutor Arthur
Ney's tt~ improperly removed nine of
12 blackjurors &amp;om the trial. Coleman is
black.

· The (()Urt unanimously ruled that
Coleman\ request came too late. It
should haw been ~ised on the direct
appeal of his (()nviction, rather than after ·
his appeals ~n out, the court said.
"Coleman's petition is insufficient on
its fact," the court said in its opinion.
"Coleman had a fuUy adequate remedy
at law."
·
Coleman can appeal the court's decision in federal court. His lawyer Dale
Baich said Friday he did not know how
he WI&gt;Uld proceed.

lhundentonns, ha pelt Ohio
IV lHE ASSOCIATED PilUS
'fhundtrstorm~ dnwn~d
tret!~ ~nd llltur~ted ro~d~
~eron Ohio on Frld~y, and

there were two ul\eOJ\•
firmed tornado sll!htings In
1\orthmt
Ohio.
No
lnjuritl or mljor d~ma~
CINCINNATI (AP) - A tttn-llgt;r who Wa! eonvlettthu\\
\"Vert rtported, .
~dult oraill!l'\\\iar\ld 11\llrdtr will get a 1\t!W trial.
Showm . al!d thund;ir·
The Ohio ht Diuriet Court of'App~~~~ tll\ Frltl"y eiti!d pros·
norm! eould tOI\tll\1\11 Sat•
· ~ utor\"1 ml!t'()ntlun ~~ ont' of th~ 1'\'asmu lt owrturl\ed thl!
urday morl'llllg befure It
· ·
fM
W'l
1
1•
"'
tlrlei
up In th~
ronvtetton o Mtm 11011, w ttl \WI " Wnt'l\ Christopher
the N"tlotul
wed\eri\MI'I,
3 ther Ser1\lrks, 17, \Ws shot ttl tlt"th inJnm•ary 2000.
Vttl' laid. Shtlwers will
Wilson \&gt;Jill scntcnel!tl to lire in prison with P&lt;~ltlle po;!ible
1'\'turt\ late Saturday and
·~~.
Witnesst~s rold Wilson shot l~rks in thl' btlek, thl'n stuoo tll't!r eonthtue throul!h SuudAy.
Authorities were t\!lleuhlm anti fired AI!Jin. Appt'rus judl!"s rul~ thi\t the prm~~ution . Mitt(! a · tMblle · home
itnpltll erly rererl\'d to " wim~ss' om-of..eourt !tnt~tn~llt th~t . ilevelopnWIH lue Frid~y il'l
. :iuentificd Wil~on M u IU!jlllCt.
.
Predl!riektown,
Knox
County shull!'! Sl!t. All~n
Oextl!r snld.
" It's all undu water
CINCINNATI (AP) - A tn~n who WM struek by am whllll
there," he said.
walking to " Cin~innMi llenl!~l! gnme in Nnwmber 'Mil
Molt ri!sldentl In the
released from the ho!pi tul Friday.
·
tlevdopment ~hose to stny,
Doctors !aid that Stuwm Williams, 22, af Mlddl~rown, sur.
uld Frederlektown Fire
tQred o br~ht it\iury when h~ \VII! struelt by o ear Nov. Ill at on
Chief Lmy Hu~n.
im~nection in front of Poul Brown St&lt;ld,um A t@en from sub"The WAt"r dldn 't get
' urbon Mason Will klUtd, and !Our othtr pctl~!trlons \WI\'
ll'lto ony trAilers, A eouple
Injured\
of f'llmillt!S WAI'Ited ttl be
, Th• tirlwr,· Dorrln Sml:lOrd, 30, of'li!VIln&amp;vllle, Ind., remolns
jailed on $45,000 bond, cha~d with ono count ·or 11(!8fAVIlttd
vehicular hamlc.!de Al\d three Ct:l\111~ of ~ggrawted Whieulor
0!10\llt.
.
ltl\'llltii!Ators sold he 'Mil drlvlns a car not ~qulpp11rl for hb dis·
' ~blllty Mld lost eomrol, plowing through o erowrl~d cross'MIIk.

mo\ll!d out, It! wt evteuated them AI A preeamiot1,"
he said.
Huen aald thll eva~ua­
tlon was tMlpleted by 1
t.l\\, Saturday. FireRghteu
remtlned on the scene

until about 2 a.m., pladns teported throughout the
sa11dbags alot1g a breach in north-ce ntral Ohio county,
the wall of a dike protect· he said. "It started raining
ittg the development from about 5" (p.m.) and it's just
water carrletl by a drainage rained on and off, real
heavy, since then," Dexter
ditch.
Flooded basements were said.

I

VOTE FOR

eedy to serve as lull·tlme Commissioner.
nteraated In Gallla County's economic future.

C.nng, honest, hardworking man Who stands on
Chrlatlan principles.
Knowledgeable • Al!llloclate Degree In Business.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. employee 27'1• years
unllllta closing. Member UMWA. 1866 ·
llllng to.listen ·willing to serve.
I U.S. fi:,.rmy Vetara~ of VIetnam. Member .
Vlotnam V&amp;terans of America, Chapter 709.
nlormed of oounty'sllsoal needs and budget
responsibility.
New voice lor tho people of Qallla County.

W
I

ON MAY 'P, VOTE FOR RICK SWAIN
IILlll COUNTY CIMMIISIONERI==
. ..

~...:

Outbunt Interrupts trl1l
' DAYTON (AP) - A man who dl!rupted do1lng Rl'(!llments
, 'ln his trial nnd had to be re1lralncd 'Mil fuund guilty of GIJI!fl•
wted nmrder and Rlll!fAvttted robbery with n flreorm .
' The flw.t!Ay triru or Ant'Min 1\eid, 21, wa;1 wlndlnl! down Prl·
,day when ltcid flipped the defense counsel mble In the rur, !ttllld
11p And shouted," I dldn 't killnobodyl"
·
· · Security oflleen srabbed 1\cld ondjurors were taken l'roQl the
, courtroom.
·
. A co-defendant, Cltel!(lry L. McCullar Jr., 24,snt motlottle!! at
, the ntljolnlnl! tAble.

Woman dies In hous• blast

•
e~e

COLUMBUS (AP) - The O~io
hM 8oud oo Friday MOOUI\N\iled
thu C&lt;\\\ BOO 1M\ dtny ~-ney to
tal\~ l&lt;lUer A.ltoo Q)lemlll, mo\11~
hlm 'Utp clo~r lt'l hi\ ~tlon Khedultd fOr April :ltl.
Coii!IMJ\, ~. i' ltl\~1\ttd to die by
lt\1~01! tbr the ~tlng d~th el Mu~~~~~ w~l~n••4, in the Cincll\1\lUi suburb
of Nof\\&gt;OOd, ColtrMJ\, of'Wtu~~J\,111,,
h• ~~~ ~n\llettd of !Our murders thlt
attuned Ill· 1911. and ~ hM ~1\ ten~n~ lt'l d&amp;th in 11\tliQM tnd lDinol1,
Abo on flrldly, tht Ohio Supremt
Court turned down l ehMiwge by Colell\31\ thtt &amp;ee~ned piO'!eeult'ln of nebm
during jury t~leetiOJ\ II\ hb t98S ttial,
tl\d hb ltW)'tn sued owr the til~\ plan

LIMA (AI&gt;) - An e~tploslon And Arebnlllcveletl A house Prldny, killing n wotmn and h\lurlng her liusbantl, flreAghters snld.
Flw officlols Identified the couple AI Lola nnd Herbert "lien"
Maasmon, who wa1 in seriom condition Prldoy night nt St. RitA~
,Medical Center. Flwfightllrl lAid the homeowners wett ouulde
'When thu c~tplo!lon occurred. Fire flfficlo.l! did not know their
ASCI,

----------HEARING TE
COUPON

I
Will be given In GALLIA COUNTY by
I
.1Wdu.- TM HEARING AID CENTER I
I
·
I
I
I
1Ctll Toll
IPPDinlment. I
1Thl lUll will bt g!Y'n 1nr ILiet!!'M "nd• Aid 'ssn!t!!Pt.l

ICODVIIIItlon
Anyo111 who 1111 traubll httrlnl or u'*rttancllng
.
It lnvltld to hlvt 1 !811 hllrlng tttt 10 Iff If 1
llhll probllm otn bt
lhl1 coupon with you for 1
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1 171.00 vlfut.
, ..
INIVMNCI ""OVIDII'I8 I
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11-fe PHOJ\E RANSER WANTS YOU TO SAY"·" '\"
TO TELEPHONE SERVICE PROBLEMS BY CALLING...

•••••••••

I

•

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I
• I

�Page A&amp;

Nation • World

21,2002

Officials report prt.aress

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Den Dlckel'lon
Publleher
1.11rry

Bo~,.,

.

Adverttetna Mtlnager

Dl1n1 K1y Hill
Controller

I.MNn to IIH fflltrw en wtkotw: P•1 **IIH ltu tllfllf JOO 'ftOIWt. AU 1mm
In 1w6j«t le .....,. .,Y •uur H '""" •M _,.....,..,. .,W lfl#t~l~Mtf aM.a.r.
Nt1 t11UipH ,.,., wiU IH ,.WUIIH. I.Mim tltHW H I•
fu•n. 1101 l'f"OMiilftl.
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htlitrtlllf Co.\ ftlllorltrl hMnl. """~' oMfMI'Lr• 1totft.

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fOfllt"'"' oft/It OleJo \W&amp;J

NATIONAL VIEW

••

Feds will seek death penalty

K1ngTom

WASHINGTON (AP) - GovernmeQt lawyers told a
federal judge Friday they intend to seek the death penalty
if they win a criminal conviction agains' a retired Air Force
master sergeant on charges he tried to spy for Iraq, Libya
and China.
The government accused Brian Patrick Regan, 39, o(creating a "grave risk of death" to U.S. ·military pilots
patrolling the no-fly zone over Iraq. Regan allegedly
mtended to sell Iraqi president Saddam Hussein secret
details about American satellites that could help Iraq hide
its anti-aircraft missiles.
Regan · has pleaded innocent to the charges in federal
court.
· U.S. Attorney Paul J. McNulty accused Regan in court
papers of "exceptional planning and premeditation" in
plotting his espionage. Prosecutors said Regan apparently
used a form letter to solicit money from at least two foreign
countries.

Daschle's opposition to tax rut
may cost him the Senate·
• Investors Business Daily. April 19: The House voted
Thursday to make President Bush's tax cut permanent. Now .
the bill is on to the Senate. where it will be ... blocked by Tom
Daschle.
Listen to the words of King Tom. "We will also never bring
up the permanent tax cut the president is advocating," Daschle
said. "It's a bad policy, it's wrong and it compounds the budget disaster we are now facing."
Let's see. Does tluit put the Democrat closer in ideology to
Vladimir llyich Lenin than to Leningrad-born Vladimir Putin,
who has established a 13 percent flat tax in Russia?
Frankly, most of the political class is nearer to Lenin than
Putin. The country desperately needs to rid itself of the burdensome, progressive tax monster. But the old guard of
Washington politicians and lobbyists is comfortable with the
status ~uo. For every Rep. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, and Rep.
John Ltnder, R·Ga., lawmakers who seem to be serious about
simplifying the tax code, there are thousands in Washington
· who prefer the yoke of the current system. It benefits them
politically and they're more willing to fight for it than its
opponents are to fight against it.
·
As much as Daschle echoes Lenin, he might be better compared to the arrogant King George ill, whose contempt for the
colonies led to our independence.
So to with Daschle's decree, handed down from his throne
of Senate majority leader? It may just lead voters to declare
independence from the thinking of him and their party.
Daschle and his court want to deny Americans the right to
keep more of their inoney. And they want the massive tax
increase that would kick in when Bush's tax cut ellpires. To
achieve these ends, Daschle will not even allow a vote on the
matter. Talk about taxation without representation.
Perhaps in an effort to sound less autocratic, Daschle strains
to justify his edict by calling the House move "bad policy."
But he cloaks his denial of a due hearing for the idea with a
shameless lie. "Keep in mind," he said, "every single dollar of
this tax cut will be taken from the Social Security trust fund."
Aside from the fact there is no actual trust fund- it's just
another one of Washington's corrupt pretenses - not a single
dollar will be taken from Social Security to offset the tax cut.
A twt cut simply leaves more money m the pockets of taxpayers, who have the only moral claim to their earnin$s.
Surplus poyroll taxes that aren't paid out in Social Secunty
benefits are not, nor have they ever been, placed in a trust fund
and kept safe for future retirees. They are used to fund the
ellpansion of the federal government.
Daschle all but publicly backs a tax hike. And woe to those
- especially in his party - who oppose him.
"A traitor is everyone who does not agree with me," said
King George Ill, and he lost the colonies. Will King Tom lose
the Senate?

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, April 21, the 111 th day of 2002. There are
254 days left in the year.
·
· ·
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 21, 1918, Baron Manfred von Richthofen, the
German ace known as the "Red Baron,'' was killed in action
during World War I.
On this date:
In 1649, the Maryland Toleration Act, which provided for
freedom of worship for all Christians, was passed by the
Maryland assembly.
Ten years ago: Robert Alton Harris became the first person
ellecuted by the state of California in 25 years as he was put
to death in the gas chamber for the 1978 murder of two teenage boys.
· Five years ago: Police in Franklin, NJ., arrested two teenagers they say lured two pizza deliverymen to an abandoned
• · house before opening fue, killing both men. Koskovich was
sentenced to death, but had the ·sentence overturned by the
New Jersey Supreme Court, and now faces a second sentencing trial; Vreeland was stntenced to life.)
·
One year ago: Western hemisphere leaders meeting in
Quebec ratified a plan baning undemocratic nations from a
massive free trade zone they hoped would expand prosperity
across their 34 nations. For a second day, protesters clashed
with nightstic~·wielding police who fired water cannons and
rubber bullets. The Los Angeles Xtreme beat the San
Francisco Demons 38-to-6 in the first - and last - XFL
championship game.
Today's Birthdays: Ice skater Werner Groebli ("Mr. Frick")
is 87. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is 76. Actress-comedianwriter Elaine May is 70. Actor·tumed·talk show host Charles
Grodin is 67. Singer-musician lggy Pop is ss: Singer-song·
writer Paul Davis is 54. Actress Patti LuPone is 53. Actor
Tony Danza Is 51. Actress Andle MacDowell is 44. Rock
singer Robert Smith (The Cure) is 43. Rock musician Michael
Timmins (Cowboy Junkies) is 43. Actor John Cameron
Mitchell is 39. Ra~r Michael Franti (Spearhead) is 34.
Thought for Today: Why is it that we rejmce at a birth and
grieve at a funeral? It is because we are not the person
involved." - Mark Twain (1835-1910).
.

STUPID P~ lRlGKS

Quake rocks Northeast

OUR READERS' VIEWS
·Check your facts

Not true

Dear Editor:

Dear Editor:
. I am a deputy sheriff with the Meigs
written by Mr. Goodwin in the Sunday County Sheriff's Office and I would
Times-Sentinel, I am a deputy sheriff in like to respond to the letter that was
Meigs County and would like to com- recently in the Sunday paper.
menton some of the facts Mr. Goodwin Mr. Goodwin, ifyou want to slam the
wrote about, which he obtained from sheriff and his office, you need to get
his so called "~ood source."
the right facts before you make any
First, there 1sn't 22 deputies and 18 statements about something that you
cruisers in the sheriff's department. We know nothln~ about.
·
currently have 12 road patrol deputies
I'm not gomg to slam anyone in my
covering 432 square miles, five dis- response because I am not going to
patchers, two of which are part-time, lower myself to the political cut-throat
and one detective, who is paid by a tactics that is going on with our elected
grant. We also have 13 cruisers, one for government leaders.
.each road ~atrol deputy and the sheriff.
Our department does not have 22
Second, m the matter of the criminal full-time deputies and we don't have 18
cases processed today in the court sys- patrol cars. We have only 12 full-time
tern compared to the cases processed in road deputies that patrol 432 square
the l97Us and 1980s, which you miles and 12 patrol cars, which a third
referred to, there is no comparison. of the patrol cars are broke down most
Maybe you should check the numbers. of the time due to heavy use.
To date, we have had more cases We also have three full-time disprocessed through the court this year, patchers and two part-time dispatchers
through July, than last year. So, yes, . that work in the office.
maybe the crime rate is up.
Our department works with outdated
Third, in t.he matter of the sherift"s ej:juipment because we don't get the
budget, it does not ~e a brain surl!eon funding that we need to get the equipto figure out that m the two prev1ous ment and training needed to keep up
years, over $700,000 was spent to oper· with the times, but we do the best we
ate the sheriff's department, and this can because we work hard to keep the
year, we are given under $600,000 for a county safe.
budget.
I have been a deputy in Meigs County
We will run out of money no matter for 13 years and the crime rate has risen
how it is managed. It is easy for you to and we process more cases through the
set back and say lay off, because your court system than any other sheriff's
family will not be hurt financ1aiiX: office has in the past 30 years.
Perhaps your family or your safety will The sheriff of Meigs County could
be if you happen to need law enforce- operate his office if the proper funding
ment.
was given to him each year instead of
So, what I'm saying is, one cent for getting cut each year. I think the county
every $2 you spend is too much to can cut out other line items within the
ensure you and your family's safety? I total county budget other than the sherhope not.
iff's budget.
The tax we are asking for is a sales Mr. Goodwin, as a taxpayer, you need
tax, not a property tax. So, it is fair and to go and check the books yourself
everybody pays, not just the property instead of lakin~ the word of a politiowner.
cian who is trymg to keep his job for
.In closing, Mr. Goodwin, may I sug- another four years. And come and ask
gest that you get the facts fii'St-hand, the people who work at the sheriff's
maybe the sheriff, before you write office and see what we really have to
about things that you and your so-called work with. ·
good source dream up. '
Mr. Goodwin, are you the one who is
Also, just a reminderto the citizens of going to go tell a deputy's family that
the county, we as deputies know that he was killed in the line of duty because
sometimes our jobs puts us in the posi- the county did not properly fund the
tion that we become unliked by the sheriff's office'/ Because you dld not
public. But just remember we are just want to pay one cent for every $2 that
doing a job that we love and are paid lit- you spend m Meigs County.
tie to do, entry level is $8.09 an hour, so If anyone has any questions, please
the citizens of the county may have a call me at the Meigs County Sheriff's
safe place to live.
Office at 992-3371.
·
Also, may I suggest to the citizens
Deputy Daniel C. Leonard
and Mr. Goodwin, that if anybody has
Pomeroy
any questions about the way money is
spent in the county that you look a httie
A good man
deeper that the sheriff's department.
Start at the top fii'St. ·
Dear Editor:
If anybody would like to know more I would like everyone to know that
information on the sheriff's depart- we still have very good people who
ment, feel free to call me and I will believe ri.2ht.
answer ~et you an answer. Mter all, it is On Wednesday, April 10, 2002, I was
all pubhc record.
shopping at Krogers in Pomeroy. I took
Deputy Kevin Dugan my cart of groceries to my car and I put
Reedsville my purse on top of the car. When I
returned home, around 30 minutes, I
In regards to · the Jetter to the editor

•

DROP US ALINE.

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

~

al '1111rcl Ave., OtiHJ)OIIt, Olllo
7-234,2

,,

couldn't find my purse.
I called Krogers and .asked them if
they had found a denim purse in the
parking Jot and explained how I had
forgotten it on the top of my car.
They said they had it and I realized
how lucky I was. Other people have
lost their purse or wallet ·and have never
found them.
I asked them to look inside the purse
to see if my money was still there, and
sure enough, nothing had been
removed. I was going to use that money
to pay for my furnace.
I would like to say to Mr. Terry Wolfe
you are a very good, honest person .
There was money in my purse and I'm
proud you picked it up.
Thank you ever so much. You are
great to me.
Patricia Morgan
Pomeroy

·Low thing to do
Dear Editor:
At C:hristmas time last year, the
Disabled American Veterans sold
Christmas trees as we always do every
year. We sell these trees to help buy
Christmas baskets for .needy veterans,
their widows and orphans. This year,
seven of those trees were stolen from
our parking lot. This meant we couldn't
buy as many baskets as usual so some
needy veterans didn't get baskets.
The next thing that happened is thai
the back door to the chapter building
was pried open, ruining the door. At the
same time, our rifle cabinet was broken
open.
The third thing that happened is the
American flag, the Ohio state flag, and
the POW-MIA flag was stolen from our
flagpole in front of our building.
The person or persons that have done
these lowlife things have to be the lowest type of individual. A person of this
caliber could crawl under a snake's
belly with a top hat on. ·
All of these problems have been
reported to the sheriff's office, and
reports and fingerprints have been
taken. As of this date, no one has been
taken into custody for doing these horrible things.
The sheriff's office has been short on
funds and probably understaffed.
These problems have cost our chapter
may dollars that we don't have.
, We hope whomever done these
lowlife thing$ can live with themselves
now and in the future.
'
Denver 0. Curtis
John IL Brewer

Bradford E. Fillluger

Larry Cochran

Olllc:en or Meigs

ChapterDAV
Cheshire

200 Mlln II., l'olnl "'-nt, W.YL
304-f711-1W
.

NEW YORK (AP) -An earthquake felt' from Maine to
Maryland rattled the Northeast on Saturday morning with
a magnitude of 5.1, according to the U.S. Geological Sur·vey.
.' Th!= earthquake hit just before 7 a.m. about 15 miles
.southwest of Plattsburgh, in northern ,New York near the
Vermont and Canadian borders.
There were no immediate reports of injuries, but the Vermont State Police received calls about cracked foundations
'and.broken windows, and sections of at least two roads collapsed near the epicenter in upstate New York.
Sandy Caligiore, of Lake Placid, about 3·5 miles southwest
·of Plattsburgh, said he felt the shaking for about 30 seconds.
It was so strong, decorations were falling off the 'walls, he
.~ai4.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) President Bush issued an ~n­
handed demand Saturday to
Israelis, Palestinians and their
Arab neighbors to make hard
cho.ices as they seek to end
bloodshed in the Middle East.
"The time is now for all ofus
to make the choice for peace;•
he said in his weekly radio
address.
Some of Bush's rhetoric this
week seemed tilted toward the
Israelis. On Thursday, Bush said
he understood why the Israelis
were cracking down on ·Palestinians, and he called Prime
Minister Ariel Sharon "a man
of peace."
Bush took pains to insist
upon action from an playen in
the Middle East crisis.
"All parties must realize that
the only long-term solution is
for two states - Israel and
ptlestine - to live side by side
in security and peace," the president said. "This will require
hard choices and real leadership

Sheriff
from Pip AI
basis in order to have dependable vehicles to answer the
protection needs of our residents," he added.
TrusseD said his staff include
12 road officers, two dispatch. ers and a special duty officer,
as well as two non-commissioned civil employees who
serve as dispatchers. 'IWo road
officers and a dispatcher are
assigned to each day's three
shifts.
·
"In order to best protect the
residents and provide adequate law enforcem~nt protection, two road officers per
shift are re.quired to assure
immediate response to the
any law enforcement emersency calls,"Trussell · s~id. "For

~efferson· family.

proposes separate
cemetery for slave's descendants

.•
..

Bv AWN G.

BIIIID

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Thomas Jefferson's heirs are
proposing the creation of a
separate cemetery on the
grounds of Monticello for the
descendants of slave Sally
Hemings, but aren't ready to
let her odipring into the .fam)ly association.
A Hemings descendant taid
•Friday that the oft'er is just
'lnother example of separate
'•but unequal.
• "Nothing's changed in 200
'years, has it?" Julia Westerinen
of New York City said after
tleaming of the recommenda,tion by the Monticello Asso-ciation's membership advisory
.committee. "They're still say.ing the same thing:You've got
to sit in the back of the 'bus."
descendants,
· Hemings'
'including several &amp;om Ohio.
;have been trying for yean to
gain official recognition that
the nation's third president
and author of the·Declaration
·of Independence fathered at
."Jeast some of Hemings' children. Their argument was bol.stered in 1998, when DNA
, tests found ihat a"male in Jefferson's family fathered Hemings'last child, Eston.
~ Shay Banks-Young, a Hemings descendant from Columbus, Ohio, has said her family's
1
oral history and the DNA
tesu are more than enough
· proof that she is related to Jeffenon.
But a '24-page report by the
family committee concluded
that there is not sufficient evi' dence to prove Eston Hem,ings' lineal .descent from Jef' fenon, a strict requirement for
, admission and for burial in .
the family plot at Monticello.
' The Jeft'erson heirs own
., only the half-acre family plot
at MonticeUo and could not
on their own create a second
-graveyard on the grounds of
the estate. Instead, they would
'have to request tha~ the foun••

dation that now owns Monticello set aside land for a separate burial ground.
While the committee said it
could not recommend the
Hemings' in~lusion in the
Monticello Association, it
suggested the family create an
umbrella organization for the
slaves and others who built
Monticello and allowed Jef-

s........,. Aprll21, 2002

Bush tells Mideast to make hard for peace

WASHINGTON (AP) - F.inance ministers and central
bankers from the world's seven top industrial powers
reponed progre~s Saturday in intensifying efforts to comoat
terro~m financmg, but conceded that sharp differences
remam over how to tmprove foreign aid programs.
i Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill and Federal Reserve
; Cha~rman Alan Greenspan were the hosts for Saturday's dis:cusnons at the U.S. Treasury with their counterparts from
;the other Group of Seven industrial countries- the United States, Japan, France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Canada.
·
, The finance ministers pulled up in limousine . caravans
'that s.naked through police barricades. Authorities during
the n.tght .had expanded the security perimeter around the
meetmg stte, an area of downtown Washington that includes
. the White House, the Treasury and the headquarters of the
In~ernational Monetary Fund and World Bank.
The downtown area was quiet as the meetings got under
way. The only activity was traffic jams of confused tourists
trymg to figure out how to get to their destinations with so
many streets blocked off.

QaUipolle, Ohio • Pomeroy, Olllo
Point PIMunt, W.Ve. ·

PapA7

. Families of Jefferson's Monticello, would be open to anyone who could prove descent
from one of the slaves or artisans who worked at the plan. tation during Jefferson's life,
or anyone who Jived on the
· plantation at that time.
The committee also sug-

by .Israelis an? Pales~ and &amp;ate Colin Powell\ trip to the
thm Arab ne1ghbon.
rqpon this week "intensiYe and
. He .urged I~ to "continue productive," though PoweU was
tts .wtthdr.awals but did not unable to talk Israelis and the
repeat his demand earlier this Palestinians into a course for
month that it do so "without peace.
delay" or identi(y any specific Bush cautioned Americans
timeta~e.
·
·
· not to expect too much in the
Israeh Defense Minister near term &amp;om American
Binyamin Ben~Eliezer said Fri- eff'orts. "In this region. we are
day tlfat a F,dual .~thdrawal con.fionting hatred that is ceofrom Palesnruan ctttes would turies old, and disputes that
contmue.
have lingered for decades" he
Bush also demanded tltat the said.
·
•
Palestinian Authority "act on its But, he 'Said, "America has a
words of condemnation against . vision for peace and by calling
ter~r." And. he said. "all Arab all the leaden ~ the Middle
nattons must con.fiont terror in ··East to their responsibilities
their own ':gion."
Secretary Powell made prog~
.The prest~ent has bc:en step- toward peace."
·
pmg up his talks wtth Arab The administration assured
leaden. Ne:&lt;t week he meets the Arab countries Friday that
With the King Mohammed VI it Would keep working for
of Morocco at the White peace with Vasser Arafat, effecHouse and plays host to Crown lively sidetrackins the view of
Prmce Abdullah of Saudi An- some senior U S. oflicials that
bia at his Crawford, Texas,
·
ranch.
Bush called Secretary of

the safety of my officers, having :two officers on patrol
allows each officer to assist the
other when resistance to law
enforcement is encountered."
Trussell
said
~fficers
responded to 1,400 felony
and misdemeanor calls la&lt;t
year, compared to 1,130 in
2000.
"The administration of a
law enforcement office is
unli~e any other county
offices due to the unknown
factor of overtime owners in
instances when crime investigation and accidents require
officers to extend their shifts
for the protection of the public,"'Il:ussell said.
As a result, 'Il:ussell said, his
office was awarded a grant for
overtime expenses and a grant
to purchase a computer for
local crime statistics input.

an altemati~ Palestinian leader
should be sought out.
The White House also
expressed support for an international investig.ltion ofllniCI's
in~on uito the Palestinianheld town ofJcnin ih 5euth o£
terrorists.The Palestinian! claim
Israeli fu~ees committed mas·
sacres and wholesale humanitarian abuses there.
A U.S. resolution to have the
United Nations send a filetfinding mission to Jtmin ~
the Security Council un.lrimously Friday night. Israeli
Foreign Minister Shimon Peres
told Secretary-General Kofi
Annan that Israel would welcome a U.N. mission "to dari- '&gt;
fy the facts." He said Israel has
nothins to hide: "Our hand.i
are clean."
Anti-American and antiIsraeli sentiment remained
strong in the Middle East.

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with the Thomas Jefferson
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deeds.
·
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obtained by The Associated creating a separate .cemetery
Press. "We can, however, where those descendants
embrace what we know and could be buried.
assign credit where credit is
The Monticello Association
due or long overdue."
is scheduled to meet May 4-5
The new group, which the in Charlottesville to vote on
committee suggests calling the proposal.

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�Pometoy • Mlddlaport • Gllllpolll, ONo • Pomt Pl•••nt. VfY
tb

this day lOr disposal. No llf&amp;t
appliances, uch IS I'Mfl~n­
ton, stoVN, air conditl nen,
tires or similu items will be
accepted.
Attendants will be on hand
ro assist in the proem, Thwn~ip Clerk Carolyn Halley
Slid.
A cleanup &lt;loy will also be
held for Crown Ciry midents
on April l!ti, Village Clerk
Lan~ Lant announced.
Tires, shingles or large
amounts of lumber or wood
will not bt accepted. Residents should h11vt items out
euly to emu~ pickup.

MERCERVILLE - Ohio
Emerpncy
Management
Agency hu forwuded a check
to Guyan Town~hip for
$21,367 IS fillll ~imbu.ne­
ment lOr expenses cau1ed by
last year\ 8oodina.
The state di$1Ster relief proaram re!mbl.ined C:0$11 to
repair 101ils in Guyan.
On May 22. 2001. Gov. Bob
'Ilft declared a state of emergency for nine southeutern
Ohio counties, including Gllllla, IS a result of sewre srornu
and flooding. OEMA estimates uninsured dam ge to
local gowrnment inftastrucCOUISISit
ture throughout southeastern
GALLIPOLIS Ohio
Ohio last May at $2.9t milDeparunem of Natural
lion.
Resources' Dlv!!.ion ofWatercraft is otlering a water educ:ation .coune for GaUia. County
·citizens.
This will be a home study
MERCERVILLE - GuY!ln course followed by the procTownship will eoncluct a tored test to be given by the
cleanup day on Friday, April divilion 's Dean PAlmer on
26, ftom 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., for June 12 M the Galli&amp; County
Gun Club. immediately foltownship reaidents only.
Residents can bring items lowing the 1nonthly meeting
to the township prage site on of the Gallia County Conser-

Wiler education

.Cleanup
days set

•

-

Thurman
Grange 1418 wlll mall 7:30 p.m.,
wlth paijuotc and blkt ott following.
bring old t~latlll ancl Ctmpbtlft
Soujl lablla. .
GALLIPOLIS - l&lt;nlahtt .or Colum·
but, 1:30 p.m., DoWn Oncltr Rtatau·
rant.
GAL~IPO~IS - So~lhttlt Ohio
Comm~nlty Choir will Ci,aotlot at

:S~~~ ~.m..

TRI·COUNTY BlliEFS
\'ltlon Club.
This l a mandatory test tor
anyone born on or after Jan. I,
1982. Rtabtntion I rurrently
av.ilable for the proamn.
Contact Mtlba Wyatt at 388t122 to acquire materials
needed for ·tit&amp; home study
eoune. For more infOrmation,
ronta t the Division of"'lf,\rercraft at 7•0-353-7668.
Seatina wiU be limited to
about 60 people and those
plannina to attend are urged
to contact Wyatt now.
"If ym1 own or operate any
kind of watercraft and have
not taken this coune, I recommend th1t you do 10." Wyatt
said. "It is very important that
\vt educate ountlws fOr the
safety of everyon.!' in the
water.
"We live right here on the
river, a.nd most of know or
haw heard ofaomeone .IO$Ing
• their lives In the rlwr for dlffcrent re'!ons," sho added.
"Let'l do what we can to
ensure that there is no unnecessary loss of lit\,' especially in .
our youth."
The mandatory testfor those
•

born on orafttr)an. 1, t983,b
for \ 0-hp moton or more.

City IMMiil tax
achlsory

30 teen~n. wU perfornt
Monday at ? p.m. in the Fine
and Ptribrml~t~Am Center at
the Unlvenlry ofRlt~ Orand .
Th group\ n1i i n b to
eommunleate tht low of God
thmujJh son;. ehorti)IJmphy
and drilma.
The gtoup btpn touring
Frlcliy and will perfOrm 35
concern around te re9ion
throul!h M~y 19. UM\Id In
Ventura, C11.Uf., the Younl!
Slnalna Continentals wtnl
formed In 1992 M an interdt·
nominatl&amp;nal, nonprofit minIstry.
For more lnlbrmatlon, contact J&gt;aul or Lori Sanden tt
379-2152.

GALLIPOUS - The following items are due to the!
GQilipoUs Tax Office by AprU
30:
• 2001 city income tax
returns.
• Fint quatter 2003 city
Income Wt estimates.
• March 2002 nu'lnthly
withholding repom and paymenu.
• Flnt quuter 2002 q\lamrly withholdlna reports and
payments.
.
• Annual withholding reconciliation and Ws.
• Copies of all t 0991 sent to
TUPPERS PLAINS the IRS.
&amp;stern
High School alumni
The office advbed timely
payment of tms to avoid late will have their 11.nnual bAnquet
on &amp;turdAy. May 25 at 6 p.m.
fees, penalties and interest.
In the Ea~tern Elementary
C11.t\torium. ·
The dinner will be tbllowed
by 11. ®nee, with Hl9h Coun·
try providing music. Tickets
RIO GRANDE - The 11.re 120 lbr the dlnnt!r-danee.

Group to sln1

MOncllf

TRl-COUNTY CALEN.DAR

Monclly, Allrtl U
HARRISONVILLE - Martlton.tlle
Senior Cltlaena wlM meet MoMay at
11 a.m. at Mam-.tllt llrenouu. A
Cijo':k lunoh will bl 11Md tnd
plltlllrtl will bl taktn. All
arta Mnlort are lnvlttd to atttna.
CENTERVIL~E

~una Singlna C ntlnentil.ls,
a1t ewnaeUeal IJIOuf ohbout

tht April

POMEROY - Pomtroy Chapttr
188 OES lnapeollon, 7:30 p.m.
Atftllhmantl to follow.
80UTM810E, W.Vt. - Chuba
wtlghllolt auppon Qroup, Southlldt
Community Ctnttr, wt1Qh•lntl:30 to
8 p.m. followed by a thor! meeHng.

about luput during lht Ctrlng and
Sharing Support Group mttting,
Tuttday, 1 p.m., at the Mtlga Coun·
ty Multipurpoet Senior Centtr.
POMEROY - Mtlgt High Sohool
Junior Partnta mtttlng will takt
place at tht Melgt County ~lbrary 11
7 p.m. to flnallatlllt prom.
EWING TON - Amerloan .Ltg1011
Pael111, 7:30 p,m., Ewlngton Aoaeiemy. All mtmblra urgtd to ttltnd.
~I! TART, W.Va. - HELP Oltt
Cllll, Letart Community Ctnttr.
WtiQI1·1na lfoin 5:30 to e p.m. lol·
lowed by lhort mtetlng.

parent or ltgal guardian tnd thol
rtOOid mutt bl provided.
POINT PLEASAN'I: W.Va. WIKintaday night Blbla oluba lor
prtaohool up through 1l1h gradt, 7
to 8:11 p.m. at GOiotl Llahthoult
Church, Natl R011d. For lnlilrmttlon
oall 875-'71118 or 878-eeiiO.
POINT PLIABANT, W.Va. Clothing gl'll away t'llfV Wldnlt·
10 t .m. to a p.m. at Point Plata·
an PrttbYitrlan Church, lth and
Main. canlrlbutlona of olatn olothta
are IPP'"Iattd.

a•r·

area cancer patitnta, ramlllta tnd
caragl\ltlll Invited.

TllurtdiVt April II
POINT PLIASANT, W.Va. TOPS (Take Off Poundt Senalbly)
4:30 p.m. wtlah In and meeting at 8
p.m. It Trlnfty Unlttd Mlttiodlat
Church. ~or Info ottr 175-4874 or
875-3eQ2.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. - M
mtatlng, 1a p.m. In raar of Preattru
Ctnttr.
.

ADDISON - Butlntat mMtlng
and B.lblt atudy al Addlton Frttwlll
llaptitt Church, 7:30 p.m.

POINT PLIA8ANT, W.VI. Clood Shtphtr~ Church olothlng
giveaway, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

lltul'llev, Aprtl 17
IIOWILL - AnneUt Johnaon
alnglng at Garden or My Heart Holy
Tablrnaolt, I p.m. For lnrormttlon,
741).388·0414.

w.Va. - Community
u~~:fM~th~"::Pch~rc~:'ltl

MABON,

g::'

.POINT PLEASANT, · W.Va. - .
Aloohollol Anonymoua, 7:30 p.m..
HENDERSON, W.Va. - · ~Ina
111 Vlancl St. UM aldt tntranot of danolng, Mtndtraon Community
CIMY Llw Olllot.
Building, wlth lnatruotor Dawn Mal·
ltttd. Btglnntra e p.m. and
MABON, W.Va. - C.l'i. Clratnt advtnotd 7 p.m.
will bl 11 tht Ml- Senior Chlzen to
explain tht Muon County Vtttrant
WIKintldly Aprlll4 .
from 1.0 a.m. to 1 p.m. Thit
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lit•
Ia diKIIolliKI 10 toknowllcllng . trary Club mattt at a p.m. It tht
p~ tht oontrlbutlona 01
homt or Gay Perrin. J11n1 a-n
111 tht Muon County Vtttrant ortht will ltld a dlaouaelon or 'lot Bound'
20th Ctntury.
by Or. Jllri Nltlatn.
POMEROY - Childhood lmmu•
'TIItldly.L April n
nltttlon Cllnlo, 1·11 a.m., 1·3 p.m. It
POMEA"bV - Yvonne P11raon or Mtlgl County Health Otpartmtnt.
Pltuant Vallty Moepltal \'1111 aptlk Chlldrtn mutt bl aooompanild by

a::

~~~~~M~f.l:n~ry

Baptiat Church
otltbratea the 131'11 annl-ry of
Rev. Ctlvln Mlnnlt at lilt ohuroh the
during momlno urvlot at n a.m.
wHh l'ltv. e. Ha111ey. Afternoon ..,.
vlot at 2:30 p.m. with Flev. I. Hurt.

RIO CIAANOI - P~noe Madog
Leoturea, 1:30 p.m.. Gratr Muatum
Archl'lla, Unl'llraltv or l'llo Granclt.
For lntormaH011, oaO 74o-248•7118,
l'ltYiYIII
FIUTL.AND - Community rtVtval
for Gallla and aurroundlng oounllat
ADril 1a.ae. 7 p.m. nlghtfy, Auuaiiil
Civic Ctnttr.

Pearl 81~ April 13•18, 7:30 p.m.
ntghlly, 1Q a.m. and 7 p.m. Sundty.
l'or more InfOrmation, oall oea.aoo1 .

Erurem girls d{tdr Metgs1 .1\tgt B2
Itt The OJ,ett1 Awt BJ
Bttl'ltMrdt still sttlts for idettrlr}IJ

Goodnlte

,.....
IICMI

GAlliPOliS - ' Abby

Ooodnlte hi:~! been promoted
ro program ou~rvl!&lt;~r •t tnm·
Cl&amp;lon Man~ment Corp.\
OA!IIpolls eall centet."
The G~lllptlllt resident
jtlined lnlbCislnn u a eom.munlmor ln 200\. She
eun\ld her bllehelor\ desree
In eontmunlc:Mions from the
University of 1\.lo Grandt,
where · she l!radutttd eum
laude,
Goodnlte has been publlsh~d In wrlous referenet
manuals and aettltn\ie journals, lndudlng the Welt VIrginia Eneyelopedla.
As proj!ram supervisor,
Ooodnlte will specialize In
running telephone marketlniJ
progn~ms and work with all
usdiJ!Ied team of eomntunlea·
mrs. Her n!!pon&amp;lbllltle! will
Ailo lnelude I'I!Aehlng estAbllsh~d performance gollls fur
the company~ eliellt proIJI'llms.

nor at 73 Spruot St., Galllpolla, Ohio

(6~1 •

Blmtr Fowltr will Olltbrttt hll
toth birthday on April 17. Clrda may
bO aont to him 11 (01 Ptrtdnl Ad.,
Galllpolla, Ohio 48831 .

""noh

P---~----------~

HOLZER
CLINIC

ADDISON ... Additon Frttwlll
llptlat Church Iunday aohool, 10
a.m.: prtaohlng llflllot wllh l'llok
Barcut, l ·p,m.

.Ill Blacks roll ·
overR11d1n
Ant pulled ~way £rom a J·O
advantage to defeat River
Valley, 12-J.
Matt W~wer holttered for
the BI!J Black!.
Dusth; Glbb1 pleked up
the lou for the !\.alders,
who play host ttl Lllgan
MondAy.

llueAnpls
f1ll to Lqan
Lllgan
111 secot\d plAce in
the SBOAt with a 11· 2 win
over Gnlll.a Academy itt high
· LOGAN

remained

The Chlcftalni, only up 3·
2 after flve irmln11s of play,
scnred eil!ht rum In the bott'nnt of the · dxth to pull
away for the win. '
All eight runs were
uneamed,

OaiHa

A~ademy

play; host
tt:l Athetu Mtmday.

South G1lll1
trick I'IIUits
MtAR1'HUR

-

The

South Gatlin track team
tt:lmpetefl at a meet Thurl·
dny At VhHOil CouHty High
s~htllll.

nu1tln Lewb tlnlshed second In he 200-meter sprint
with a time nf 23. 13, third
In the too and fourth ln the
hll!h jump.
Sm Kuhlcr Wa1 ibtth In
th~
800· 11leter, while
St~phen Reece wni .sixth in
the 400•11le!et al1d lo11g
jump.

Gllllpolll Parks
to holt pitch, hit

· 1nd nan event

The event of for children
ar~e 7·14.
"~ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ~ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ ~\ \ \ \ '\ \ \'lw

'\
'\

.

~

~
~
~
~

~

Tue1day, Apr/123, 2002

~

'

\

· Kitty lltttr 1
:cure lor lOllY
ba•blll flerd

;

~

Kroger Pharmacy
740 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohfo

~·

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~

; 1\.0CKPOIW (AP) .::_

;

1_\11111 and bai~ball do11 't
IJ'IX, 10 the .:oa.:h at one
l)orthwell Ohio high !tht:lol
qame up with a 1olution -

;

~ltty litter.
l~nrkway

;
;

6 pm

~

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Pl«qll rtql•t•r by ca!l!na bebblt Bqrcut

~.

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at a10) 416-DiM ·
. or (740) 992-0060

$

Mut In the Pfwnw;y Artq!
Tour !get about 2. bon!

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C.llSH IRti - Point Pleas-

a local event In the Pep!l
plleh, hit nnd run t:lll Satur·
day ~~ ntllln.
Rcglurulon may be .do tie
day of the eve111.

..

ero a no-nos

HIGHLIGHTS

GALLIPOLIS -1'h ~ · gal ·
llpnll1 Pdrlu nnd Reerentioll
D~pnrmwtt will be houlng

latul'llay, June II

great

..

SUN~v's

. tc houl iuftball aetlun.

7 p.m. nlghlly wllh pratohtra Sampy
Man and"Willy Man. Slnatrtlnoludil
lht church group on Sunday: 'lbgalh•
., 4 Ohrlal 011 Mondty: Phylllt Kin•
Margaret Hall1y Alme will tum INI
nlard on Tutadav: Meroy on on April aa.Carda may blllllll to htr
Wtdnt~day\· Singer lo Chrllt on It 18 Luoky Btratt, Choehirt, Ohio
Thurada~· Roherd Nlbln on "rlday·
48820.
ltllt'llr ilor CMII on llllurday: and ·
VINTON - I'IIYIYII II VInton Fal· Milroy on Sunday.
Cltln-1111 DIVI
IOwahlp OhaPtl April 11 •113, 7 p.m.
MASON, W.Va. - Tht town Ill
nightly, with l'lobtrl larbte PIIIOh•
~~~~~~~P~~h~~~t~\
;~
W~a~
Maton
will hold townowldt oltan up
lng.
~L7 p.m. with lptCiillllnglno nightly. aaya, April 11•14, 10, lnd 30. 0111
CI'IOWN CITY - l'ltYIYallt I&lt;IIIQe MOn.• lilt llulldtrt: Tun•l'wo lOr ?7~·1200 to aohtdlllt plok up of your
Chapel Church ~~~~ 11-11, 7 p.m. JeeUI' Wtd.• Jimmy Conley and trath. TrUh load dlttrmlnta thl
nlghliY, with the l'lev. Bob Thompa011 wilt: Thur.· Crota Clratki ""·· ""~"r amounl ohar;ed. NO tlrtl or appll•
· prtaOliiiiQ. IIIIQIII lnDiudt Monday, and ,allh lllng1111 Sal.· Chuck an0111 wllh retngertnta.
the llavtr Family: Tutldly, ltnny Abattn ana Baran• Bun.• l&lt;annv anct
Murllt Cllwttl. ktv, Nylt ~llhtr
POINT PLIAIANT, W.Va. • 1'011\1
llmp~lna and ohuroh alnatrti
PIIIOhiiiQ,
Pltllllnl
Will hold OiiY•Widl 0i11n up"
Wldnelldty, fill ltapltlorlli TliUII•
day, Saturday, APril 20. Parllolpanta
day, "ora1111n "our: and l'rlday, lht
Dlrd thowtrt
thould Mill It Point ·PIHelnt Mid·
l'"amlly.
MICIOLIPOI'IT - l'ltvlvalll Wtl•
Ada Chamblra wlll otlobrllt hor dlo Sohool at I a.m. 1100 prlal tor
leyan llblt Mollntae Church, 78 Nih blrtl'ldlly, Clrda may bt aant to group who plokl up tht moa.l traah. ·
GALLiPOI.IS - l!vangollal L.ynn
Summara wlllaptl~ at !'frat Church
Of God, 108 Garfield Alii .. ADrll 11 •
14, SUnday 1110:18 a.m. and e p.m.,
Mond:r lhiOUQh Wtdntlaay, 7 p.m.
llpeal alnglnQ and numry 11rvlole
provldtd.
.

Pap 11
Sunday, April 21, 2002

MabOI Philllpa will oaltbratt htr
ASHTON, W.Va. - IIIIa Chapol 80th blrthdty on April 22, Clrdlllily
Church, 7 p.m. nightly, wlth Evano•· ·bl 11nt to htr at t 48&lt;10 Stitt Flout•
llat Truman Dtvla and Pattor JQII 7 south, Gelllpolla, Ohio (8031.
Dolan. Bptllltl tinging nlghlty.
GALLIPOLIS I'I!IIRV, W.lll, •rltallnt
.."...
,..... churoh, Aprl111•al,

•

Awt 86

II

'•

baseball coa~h
Mike Sthumm 1ayi' one o£
6b players brought A luad of
Nitty Utter to a. game la1t
ll.oeek that wa1 111 danger of
being called off bccaU!e of a
IUl!lfY .flcld •
• Playen and coaches uaed
Ave !!alton bucket! to. lptcad
t.hc Ucccr and ukes to
· 1mooth It out, then !'laycd a
doublehuci.er
agalmt
Shawnee H'l11h S'hool.

"All day lo11g there waa
ju1t chi! artlf!clal sweet
1mell ," 1ald Shawnee eoach
. Chuek LaGrande. "'You'd .
11m m l't:~rget about h, at1d
1omebudy wt:luld 1Hde ltttd
a blUe."
Parkway won rhe 11m
[!llhle 14· t. Shilwttee cook
the •econd.9· 1.
·
''We told the guy1, '£!very
tat In Parkway It l!oilll! ttl
be over here romorrow,"'
t.aGrande uld.

.

•••

'

HeWJ

PIIIH HI Devlll, 12

It's .a team ·effort as·Meigs tops .Eastern
IY JtM IOULIIY
OYP CORRESPONDENT

ll.OtK SPRINGS .- The Meig.;
bM&lt;!b:tll Marauder~ clilimed their third
strail!ht victory Friday eVening with a
12-7 win over the visiting llastern
Eagles,
It was a tea111 effort (or the Marauders :u they got collttibutiot1! front every
player In the llneup. Senior Darrick
Knapp catne on in relief ol' starter
jimmy Smith and pitched 4 2/3 inning&lt;~
allowing just two hits and one run
while fa11t1lttg four Ea!!les.

ihe w:mc looked like it would be a
pit~hcrs dl1cl early as Smith f.11mcd two
batters in the top nf the first and Eagle
hurler Chris Lyons struck out three
Marauders in the home half of the first
after allowing aJacob Smith single.
The second inning pl'!lvided most of
the games fireworks as the two teams
combined for twelve runs in the
inning.
, .
Eastern drew Am blood when II.. yan
Smith .and Casey Paulk. reached on
back to back singles. Chris Meyers then
reached una Marauder error ami Smith

crossed home with the g;nnc• first run .
'With runners at second and third Cody
Paulk lifted a long sacrifice fly to left
scoring Ca!K.'Y Paulk.
Brad IJrannon reached when he laid
down a perfect bunt and promptly stole
second. Lyons grounded out to the
pitcher scorin!l Meye~. Charlie Young
ripped a single to lefl scoring Urannon.
AJimmy Putman single to center put
runners on the corners with dean-up
hitter Ben Holter at the plate for the
Eagles. l'ut111an stole second and when
the throw went into center Acid, Young

came home to make it 5-0 Eastern.
· Putman tried to advance to third base
but was !!Unned down by ccnterfieldcr
Jacob Smith on a perfect throw from
short centerfield.
The bottom of the second saw thirteen Mcig&lt;~ battc~ go to the plate with
seven making the complete circuit.j05h
Napper, Zach Glaze · and Urandon
11...1tmburg all drew walks to load the
bases with maroon and gold base runne~ and nobody out.

PINIIIII Melli• 12

No big secret as Texans

ride with David carr

,

NEW YORK (AI') - ~resno State quarterback
David Carr ofl'iclafly became the cxpamiun
Housto11 'rexallt1 fltsl drafl pick, going No. 1 overaU lu Saturday's NfiL draft,
·
Carr and the Texans agreed during the week to
a seven-year contract worlh $46.2 million. He led
college pa11cn In yards and touchdowns last year
and won the ~ohn Unitas Golden Arm Award as
the top senior qumerback.
·
" I am going to do eVerything I can 10 be ready
tu play that fint game, but it'a going to be the 'rexall!' call," Carr said. "What I'm going 10 do is·
wurk at car11ing the spot. I don't want it handed
t() fl1e t

to
tportJ@mydallytrlbutle ..:om
E-mail yuur tjl!lrU

NO.NO- Gatlili Academy pitcher N!ck Merola gets set to let loose of the bell during the Blue Devils' 8·0 win over
Logan Friday. MerOla pitched 11 no-hitter In .the win as he Improved to 4-0 on the season. (Shannon Shipley)

GALLIPOLIS - In a tim" wh"re
everyone's focus is on how hard you can
hit the ball, it's nic" to see a game where
a team dt•monstratcs solid defensive play.
On Friday, with strong support from
his defense, Gallia Academy senior pitcher Nick Merola hurled a no-hittt•r as th"
Blue Devils blanked Logan, 8-0, in high
school baseball play. .
"Eve..,tlliiJn
Merola
(4-0)
'I .
~
struck · out seve n. ca~lt togtther
while allowing only
tonight.
to walks. ·
Everyth/nn
"I t JUst
. feeIs· gr~at, II'I.'UI our wav6
cspt'Cially
:~g:nnst
I'
Logan," said Mt·rola.
liH! played
"Since my freshman great dej'tnse.
year, we m·vcr ·beat
We ,~:ot great
Logan that I c:m l&amp;ittltltr, Good
remember. Tht·y rc
"
,
:1lways a tough tt•am.
btuerunnlllg.
My teammates field- A11d ~f co11ru
ed great."
~rcat pftcltStrong pitchin~ · &lt;
ill ,
along with defense
g.
kept Logan in check.
011111 Acacltmy
htad OOIIOh
Like the diving
Brack Houohtnt
catch hy lcftfiddcr
Angelo H.:rdy in the sixth inning.
Like the line drive hit by Logan's Matt
McCormick pulled out of the air by
shortstorp'Andrc Gei!!cr.
·1t st•cmcd like almost everythin~~; Lo~1n
hit was pulled down by Gallia Academy
dctcnders.
In f:1ct. the C:hkft:1ins only got to second ·bast· once when, with only one out
in the sixth inn in~. Mer11ia waikl·d Cody
Disbennm and Alex Penrod.
The next two Logan b:mers, though.
flew out to end the Chieftains only scorin~ threat of tht· ball ~am c.
.
"Everything came together toni~;ht,"
~aid Gallia Academy head coach Brack
Houcl1cns ."Everythin11&gt; went our way. We
played great defense. We got great hitting.
Good baserunning. And of course great
pitching."
.
While Logan struggled at the plate, it
didn't take long for the Blue Devils to gN
going.
In the bottom of the first inning. Gallia
Academy (5-4, 4-2 SEOAL) played a little small ball as Donnie johnson, who was
walked, scored when IH· was stealing sec_ond and the throw went imo centerfield.
Geiger, Bobby Jones, Merola and
Hardy each com1ccted on singl&lt;ts as the
Devils took :1 4.- 0 lead ofT of Logan starter
McCormick .
Gallia Academy added :\ run in the second on :i solo home run by Jones over
the rightficld fence.

•

Nine llncnten went !11 the lim 15 apou- three
off'ehalve tadde1, fout D1'1 and two Dlls.

Carolina, as expected,
mcd the second pick for
a local player. North
Cal'!llina defensive end
juliu1 Pepper!, a junior.
l'cppcrs, . who aim
played basketball for
the Tar Heels, has been compared to Terlnmec Titam star
jcvon Keane.
"He plays the game phy•ical, he playt the game
tougll . I tnean, he's •trong," said John Fox, the Pan then' 11ew coach. "The thin1:r that people make
reference to i1 comi1tendy dominating. You lee
this physical prowcJ&amp; in him ."

Plean111Dr.tt.12

•

NO SURPRISE - Top pick In the 2002 NFL Draft,
Houston Texans· David Cerr. (AP)

�. ..
•

•

SUndly, Aprlll1,1001

Pomefoy • Mldd~ • O.Uipotla, Ohio • Point Pl1111nt. WV
.

-~ ~

I

"

Pomtrvy • Middleport • Ollllpolla. Ohio Point PIHaant, WV

'

OUTDOORS EXTRA

Eagles defeat Marauders in softball action
lhJIM$01UaY

OVP COME.SI'ONOENT

What started out to be a pitcher's
duel ended for the Lady Marauders
in the top of the fourth with Eauern 's Lady Eagles chalking up seven
rum enroute to a 9-1 win over tht
Maroon and Gold.
With the victory, the Eagles
improve to 11 -1 overall and 8- t
· inside the TV C. Against conference
opponents, Meigs il.6-3.Their overall record is even, ll-6.
The first three frames saw .little
action from either team as the

ers resuht'd in Tiffany Bissell and
Jennifer Arms gAining scoring position. Phillip ripped a triple before
Meigs ~o\ald record the third out of
the inning.
A lead-off double by Anllnda
Fetty in the Meiss fif\h went for
n~ul!ht as hurler Katie Robtruon,
in a stellar ·p&amp;rformanee on the
mound, . fanned the next two
Marauders and made the_ third fly
out to right field,
Following an uneventful fifth,
Eastern plated two more marktrs u

F~ulk collected the second of his

Brannon.
three singles on the night.
Hitren lOr the Eagles were
A walk to Chris Meyen Casey Faulk three sinsles. 'Brad
loaded the bases with Easles Brannon and Ryan Smith two
from,...Bl
with just one out.
sin(lles euch. Chl\l'lieYoung and
.David McClure then drew · · Cody Faulk drew a walk scor- Jinuny Putman each singled.
the fourth consecutive 6ee pass ing Smith and leaving the bases
The &amp;ales used lOur pitchen
and Napper came home to put jammed with Eastern base run- in the contest with the loss
Meigsontheboard.RyanSmith nen.
IJOin~o~ to Ryan Smith who
then crone on in relief of Lyons
Meigs Coach Dan Thomas worked two inninJ. Lyons and
and induced Krulpp to pop out then turned to senior Darrick Jimmy Puanan each fanned
to third for the 6nt out of the Knapp illld Smith moved to three Mlll'lluden during their
inning.
shoi'IStop.
stina on the mound and AllisJacob Smith then blasted the
Knapp got Brannon to bury fanned one. Meigs hitren
second of his four hit! on the ground to StalVey at thi!d who were jacob Smith with three
night as he doubled to left cen- threw home to force out Casey singles 11nd 11 double and four
ter scoring Glaze and Rams- Faulk.. Knapp then fanned Ken RDls.
·
.iburg. Kyle Hannon daen deliv- Amsbury to end. the Eastern
Stanley had twa singles and a
ered with two runners in scoring threat. Meigs collected two double, 1\anJSburg two sinales.
poMtion by singling to right · more runs in the bottom of the Knapp had a double with Hanbringing Smith and McClure third when Jacob Smith made it non, Fackler and N11pper each
home.
three for three on the night by singling. Smith worked 2 113
Hannan was thrown out ·at lining a single up the middle.
innings fanning two and walksecond for the second out of the
Buzz Faclder reached on an ing three. Knapp picked up the
inning. Duu Fackler then infield single and both scored win fannin~ ~ur and .all~wing
walked followed closely by an when Stanley dropped a single only two hia m 4 2/3 mrungs.
infield single by John Stanley. ju1t inside the right field line.
':This.~ a big win for our
Josh Napper kept it IJOinaror the The Mlll'lluden pushed the lead program Coa~h, Dan Thomas
Marauders when his single to to 12-6 in the bottom of the _lllld after the Wln. 'The last time
center scored Fackler. '
founh when with one out, games we have reaDy played
Zach Glue was safe on an Ramsburg singled and McClure team ball and today beat a very
Eagle error that loaded the bil.les drew a tiee pass. · .
· aood Eastern team whonl plays
for Brandon Ram.!burg who
Kmpp then helped his own hard"headded."Dmick Knapp
walked forcing Stanley in for the cause with a double to left scor- reiilly stepped up today and
SL'Yilnth run of the iMing lOr ing Ramsburg. Agllin it ms that\ some.thlng we h.aven~ .had
Meig1. McClure bounced into a Jacob Smith coming up big lOr a lot of thls year, he 11 a senior
"'dielderi choice to. end the big Meig1 when he singled to cen- and really ca~e thtough t~y
Mlll'lluder iMing.
ter scoring McClure and ~hen faced With a tough lltua~
Ryan Smith started an Eastern Knapp. Eastern plated the IPlllts tton, It was a good !Pille today
rally in ~e ~ innin~ for the final run in the top ~f the fifth he conduded.
Eagles With a smgle to tight and . when Ca5ey F~ulk llnfed and
Eastern dropped to 9-2 on
adv:mced to second whenCuey · scored on an inJield smgle by the season.
.
'
made with the way we were playing bauboll
tonight:• !Aid Houchens. "Llke 1 told tlie lddA,
this is the best game I've seen a Blue Devil team
plav in a long time.
·
fromPapB1
.•rThey really deserve a lot of credit for .how
hard they worked to get to this.point."
Jones and Merola each finished 2-for-3.
The win pua Oallia Academy in a tie for the
"(McCormick) beat us last year up (at
SEOAL
lead \\lith Logan, who dropped to 4-2 in
Logan):' ~id Houchens. "He handled us. My
impmsion was ·he's one of the best pitchen in Jeal!Ue·play, Marietta and Athens.
.rwe re goinll to enjoy this one:' said
the league, if not the best, Of coune, I might be
a little prejudice toward Merola."
. Houchens. "We've got a iob left to do.We Wllnt
"For us to go after him like that just really set to be league champions.'r
Gallia Academy travels to Athens Monday
the tone for t.he game. I think it put them back
before playing host to Meigs Thesd4y.
on their heals."
But, Logan's woes later in the game came off'
of errors as half of the Dlue Devils runs were
unearned as the Chietl:ains committed five
erron.
"We forced some of the mistakes that they

Meigs

Merola

Draft

from Pap.II
In a mild stunner, Detroit
went for quarterback Joe Harrington of OreiJOn at .No. 3.
1l1e Liom finished bat ~eason
with 2001 fifth-round pick
Mike McMahon at quarterback, but they had been
thought to have their.sighu on
Texas cornerback Q.ucntin

Jammer.

"I was unbelievably surprised," Harrington said. "Honestly. I had been told five minutet earlier ~~ th~ were going
m another direction. So, I wu
j11st about to sit down with my.
mom and dad and wateh the ·
Lions pick someone else; and I
got a phone call. I wu lhcx:ked.
I wu caught oB"-suard. but I'm
thrilled to be there.''
Hurinpm Jed Oregon '10 a
No. 2 ranklng 1ut ~euon and
wu the MVP of the Pinta

Bowl.
Massive of!'entive tackle Mike
WilliaiTII of '!exas was ch01en
fourth overall by Buffalo. The
Bills get one of the biggest
blocken in the nation - the 6foot-S 112 WilliaiTII goes anywhere from 360 to 375 pounds.
Williams could replace the
decllningjohn Fin.a on the Bills'
line.
Jammer, considered the best
cover cornerback available,
became the ~econd atralght
1:&lt;1nghorns player selected,
aoing fifth to San Diege. The
Chargers ranked 20th in pall
defense lut tea10n.
With their for.mer coach and
expert d!:atl:er Junmy Jolwon
wa"hing fi:om the ESPN tower
at the Theater at Madison ·
Square Parden, the Dallu
Cowboys wed up all 15 minutet ofrheir time without makina a ~election, eUclling a loud
groan fi:om their faru in die
GI'DIYd- and taun111hm1£am
of other teanu.

IDOl NPL Drall

IY DAN AOKINI
OADI&lt;INS2MYDAILVIIItGISTEA.COM

CHESHIRE
- Point
Pleasant senior Miranda
"Engine No, 9" Dunt found
the right spot with the aluminum Friday, . hammering
out a third-inning homer to
lead the Lady Kniahts to a 52 conference win over the
Lady Raiders of River Valley
. and an 8-0 SEOAL record.
Durst, who's proven venatile from either behind the
plate or on the mound for the
Lady Knights thus fu this
season pounded out the.
homer'- the second this sea1011 from the Point squad - ·
from River Valley's Geri
McFann (9-S).
"That homerun was a
bone-crushing hit," sald Point HAMMIRID- Point'l Mirenda Ourat, ahown above in thla ttre
Coach Lmy Wria;ht."It was a photo, neilect II homerun In the third lnninl of pley Frfdey to
picture-perfect,
beautiful leact the Lady Knl&amp;htl over River Vlliley, ~-2. (OVP file photo)'
swing and that ball just another home-plate crouing hard to beat and she wasn't
1eemed to sal) forever." .
to slve the Lady Knish.ts ·a goinl! to sit O\tt the game."
Sophomore Amber Rainey four-point lead.
· Junior Kendra Riffie (11 -3,
hammered out the first
Adkins later followed that 8-0 SEOAL) fanned eight
homer for the Knights against up in the top of the seventh Lady ltaiders durina the
Ravenswood on March 28.
inning with a run on her own campaign, scattering eight .
POint jumped to an early 2- after scorching out a triple hits and leaving two manded
0 lead by the end of the third from Riffle and closins th~ on base.
inning behind an RBI single gap to three, bm the Lady "Kendra pitched a very fine
by Rainey . that drove in Raidcn ran out of steam and game," ~aid Wri11ht. "'lbnisht
. senior Katie Roush d~aring time.
. she wa1 hitting the cornlh .
the llrat Inning of play, folRainey, conshtently nailing very conli!tently."
lowed ~1p by Dur~t'l hamm~r- tho leather out for the Lady In junior vmity action,
~ng of the ball m the th1rd Knights throu11h 17 pmes 10 Coach Tracie Jlrlcc's relerve
mnlng.
far, finished up the day 1-for- aquad was aho auccen£1!1,
. It wam't until the lixth 3, 11 dicl Durat.
notchin11an 8-6 win over the
mnlng .that the score board
Freshman Lacey Powell wa1 vltitin11 Lady Raldcn' re1erve.
sa~ acuvlty from RlvcrValley, t.for-4 aaalnst tho Lady
four Point playen were 1·
With Saundo.ra cro11lng home Raiders, with an RBI single for-3 on the night with Shauplate on a triple by Wood.
in the top of the fourth na Drain, Tarren Aullin,
Saunders and Adk!n• were innin11. Sophomore Aileen Mindy ltlchardson and Erin
both 1-for-3 durmg the Casto wu 2-for-3 with her Gib1on, while Laura Caato
game. .
,
lingle In the fourth Inning and Mallory Thoma! were tBut 1t wasn t enough to and a double In the 1ixth.
for-4.
··
overc9me the visiting Point
Rou1h, although Ill, fin- jan1i Cole• lind Thomat
.squad, as Kim Oliver and Ali- ilhed out the 1evcn lnnlnss of 1pllt 111ound duty for the
cen Caito ran In points In the ·play for Point.
junior vmlty, while Glb1on
fourth inning and Casto fol"Katie'• a tough nut to and Whitney Forbet thared
lowed up In the fifth with crack:' Wright uld. "She's dutlet behind the plate. ' •

tlJ5JOMI P
·~~MJ

PIPfllrt. dl,

NOr#! Olrollna.
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A~~ PILIATIOH

SATURDAY, APRIL 2~
11 A.M.· 2 RM.

I . HOUI!On. David Carr, qb, ~r11110

Jullue

hitter, struck out seven, walked lWO
and hit one b1tt\'r In htr win.
The Eagle dtftnse played flawless
ball,
Katie Jtll'ers, charged with the
loss, aaw up eight hil1, fanned six,
and Issued on free pa as the
Marauders committed thtee mit· ·
'
cues.
.
. .
Phillips led the wlnnen at the
plate with t trlpl and two singles,
Wolfe ttnd Dillon each h.ad a pair or
base hi11 and Arms contributed' a
double,

·Point beats RaiderS

111urc11v
Plrttllound

a. O.roNna,

Arm doubled to c~nter and Phillips
drove a blase hit down th~ third bla e
line,
The only Maraud\lr score came in
the lower eventh u Ctlrrie Abbott
walked,Ashlt)' Burbridge was hit by
a pitch, both advancing on a pa sed
ba11 putting nmnen on second and
third with one out,
Mirimda Stewart slapped a single
to left scorin&amp; Abbott and Burbridge was cut down at tilt plttP "n
a close play.
.
·
A. strikeout ended the inning "nd

•

1

1h• Flnt 11

......

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

TURKEY CONTEST

,r;

I

...,...,.....,.r"'"";

r"M'11

,

.

IIIIWIIIIF . . III ...... .

reeman

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

••
• •.

.

-·

;Redwomen sweep Carlow; take big step toward post-season

For moralnformauln: 304-815·5250

. The 1\edwomen Added All hurler Jell!lkA Thtnpl~ (2-6) and tom the eighth with a bloop Wlliked three in the masterful
run In the 61th when Carlow,sje11 .Biumling.
lingle 0'1/er third blUe, WIU sacrl· per£ormance. She carried a noMarie DcMey sinQ!cd nnd later . Thtt~ple out-did lliumlhll! and fieed to second and 1lid home hitter illto the tifih inning.
scored on a two-out double tellmmnte Cook by pft(hinll a 111fely on ~ seeillll-ey.! single by Rit&gt; G!llnde will host Seton
ti:otn Alhley Phlpp.~.
two-hit shutout.
Carrie Laufer.
Hill &lt;ltl Sarurday and wiU pi~k­
Carlow (4· 1O; 4- 10 AM C)
Both te~nu ml!!ed opportuni~
Laufer hi.d two knocks in the up the 1uspended Tiffin game on
mounted one threut In the l!lllllt, tlesto seor1H 11tl th~ l!llnl~ wtl8 (). QQme a; ruo had !pnlyed seven Sunday Qfiernoon. . Saturday,s
In the 1eeond Inning.
. ohending into elttl'll innitl~.
hit! around the yttrd.
game! are set to begin at I p.m.
Th~ CeltiC! londed the bases
Kelly Adkin1 started the bot- 'Thmple fntlned o11e ~nd SundAy\ till!! st,h'lll at 2 p.m.
with no bull! nnd could not
' .'
score.
Cook wtl8 in control &amp;om that
• GIULIA AUTO SALES • GALLI AAUTO SALES • CALLI AAUTO SALES •
point on, 1101.ns the dlstanee,
strilclng out eight and Wlllklng
thi!d.
only two.
Conn tinaJed, wu lllctlllced to
Nicole KOWIII!Id took the loo
tec:Ond and aeored on two-bue · lOr Carlow..
.
hit by Krista 'I\Ieker. 'IUcker Oam~ two WM a pltcher,s duel
would Iacer ICOrt on an error.
deluxe between l\lo . senior

ry in rhe 5-0 flnt awe triumph.
Otrensivel~ Rio Gn1nde scored
In each of the lint three lnnintJ.
Carrie Laufer singled wirh two
oull in the lint and &amp;cored on A
double by Amy Conn.
CoM had two hill In the
pme.
.
Carrie Reed bepn the aeeond Inning wirh a bui knock
and aeored on a single by Thngy
Laudermllt to glw the Red·
women a 2..0 lead. Rio would
pulh the aeon to 4..0 In ·the

: IUO GIV.NDE - The Rio
.Grande softball team accompUahed.tomethlng that it hlld not
yet achieved in the American
Mldsat Conference this ~euon,

i r.veep.
Rio Grande tumed rhe trick
•on Friday afternoon with
tremendoua pitching and timely
hlttlns. In 10 doin&amp; the Red.women have taken a big 1tep
toward a poalble berth in the
1AMC poat-1ea10n tournament.
· · Rio Grande won same one,
5..0 and captured two, 1.-0, with
tome extra-Inning magic.
· , Rio Grande (10-12, 7-5
~C) tielhrnAn hurler Amanda
Cook (3·1) lll;ed a fbur..hlt beau-

or

imun~nee

•

:Southern girls beat Wellston
A!ld Dwry Cremean1 Wlllked. An error at second
and a Patrick aill{!le pwhed acrog two more runs,
the score 5-4.
·
Southern got some lruul'!lnce in the top or the
aevenrh when with one out J&gt;ulllns, who.!COred all
four timet, walked tor her ~eeond rime. Brigette
Barnes then tripled, and KAne SAyre singled her
ho111e for two lmurance ruru, 7-4.
Welhton IAI!Ied a run. in the seventh innlnl!
when with one out Klm CrelllCAill doubled.Then
on a pop up dOWII the thlrd bAle line, 1homtop
Brigette l!m'lll!llllAdi! a 1peetacular divinl! play for
the 1econd out.
Kltn Wll.ldren walked to put runnen on the eornen then on whDt appeared to b\l the lAst out on
a ball hie back to the pitcher by Stacy McGinnis.
An overthrow, however, let in one run and a1111in
put runnen on the cornen 11nd the l)'ing· run on
bue.
I.Uchel ChaplllAn then came back to mikeout
the Jut batter and preserve the win,
·
ChilplllAn pned the win with six ltrikeourl!,
three Wallcl, and elaht hits in another (!ftAt pitching elfort. AbbyTfiomusufl'ered the lo11, fanning
aix, walking four, lllld giving up nine hi~:~. Southern made four erron tO Wellston~ one.
·
Sourhern (IOet to Pecleml Hock.!ng Monday.

IY looTT WOLJIII

OVP COAAIIPONOINT

WELLSTON - Behind a nine-hit attack and
aood overall defenae, the Southern '!bmadoel. out.alttanced rhe Welliton Golden Rocke11 7-5 in an
inttrdivisional10ftball game Friday night at WeUIton Ciry Park.
·
Southern It now 8-4 and 5-3 in rhe Hoclclng
.OlYilon of rhe league.
... Southern hltten were Deana Pulllru who went
.~2 with a double, lingle and two wallcl; KAtie
Sayre 2-3 with two singles and a walk; Brlaette
.Barnea a double, triple. and a walk; Brooke Klier a
pair of l!npes; and Aahley Roulh a alnale.
•: Southern !Cored in the lint when PliDlns ~ed
eo lead of rhe pme,atole ~eeond and ldwn on
Cwo Plllld ballt to score, the ICOrt 1-0. Welllton
l:ied ihe score in the ~econd wh~n Hilary Patrick
~blld and Kayla Crace •lnsled, the score t-1.
·· South.ern went back on top In rhe third when
~mUy Hill ·Wlllced, Deana Pulllm doubled hel'
,!lome. and Kade Sayre had an R.Biaingle, the~eore
3- I Sourhern. Southern cook a 5· 1 lead in the
~ when Pulllru walked and 11ole H!Cond and
'rlpttt Barn~~ doublld her home. Barnes rhen
~rtd on a 4-6 sround out after Katie Sayre
Walked and Brookl Kiter added a alnale, 5-1,
;: That lead wu thort-Uved becawe Welltton came
101 020 1 . 7t•
liorrnlnl back wlrh three rum to tlgh!A!n up the IOIItlltm
WIIIIIOn
010
1 • U1
jame ac 5-'1. Abby Thomu and Courtnl)' Brill Wi'oi'IIGMI Ci!IPmln andoao
Katlt layre. L~·Abby
!fnaled and doubled lllpiCiively to brlna In a run I:JutlyO-

: ~oush accident shadows Talladega

~fie!'

II. C!Mind, Wllllm CltNn, rb,
._,Oolltgt.

'

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

1M

lrlm reminder oC alnccldenll "All oC ua have the underhe took thtllvet of cwo Win· ltandiniJ that in our lives chat we
are to 10 forward and compete
-'on Cup dtlwn.
: R.outh wu. criticllly 11\)ured th11 weekend, which It whlt

11. Ttr1n11111 (ltom N.V. Qljlnil),
Albtll HlyiiMWOIIh, d1, Ttn•

i

I

Monday Is Earth Da~ so please Those gtoupa, and other huntiniJ
lbunder of th~ W~rd Burtun Wildlife tion projects induding streamside
lake a moment to consider the Earth and f\shiniJ oriented organiaationa,
Foundation who fl'l!qutntly pure hal· fore111.
and our environment.
. do great thlnp toward pre erving
e1 land that is under rilk of developor eourse other pi~nting projects
• Th.tre aren't a whole lot or local and enhanelniJ habitat, which btne.
ment to prote~t its habitat for like wind bNaks and privacy screens
tvents commemorating Earth Day. 1111 both aame and non•game ani~
wlldlife,
or even Christmas trees may be easbut one tvent, the Leadiq Creek mtls alike. ·
lffi
or r()\}rse, al\er winning the 'Day· ily handled with the tree planter.
Stream Sweep was planned for Sat- . While .reading through the recent
ti:)Jt~ 500 h~ may hAv, had a little ' Fl&gt;r· mol'~! hifortnation about the
urday.
Issue of Ohio State Parks nugnine, I
elttra mon~y to buy some more land. planter aud Its a\'ailability, contact
I'll probably haw more lnfurma- the Mei8S SWCD at (740) 992' • However, you don,t need a special dlscowred the Forked Run State
day to think about conservation. Park, whieh is loc:o.ttd In northemio.o:...., IN THE OPEN
titltl about the NASCA!\ ~ekend 4282.
Ptrhaps ewry day should be consid- ern Meip County, is holdinll Q
at Forked Run Sme Park Ol the tittle
I laW whel'l! Mei~ County Wa.!
ered Barth Day.
NASCAR-themed c:11mpout du~iniJ · world withom biiJ nate hud~et eut! appro~ch~s . Of course, yt'IU nn e~tnp lined in a recent fishing report indiTbe Ohio River Valley Chapter of thelona holiday weekend beginning - ll big stre~n t~levision W&lt;1uld at the p4rk practicGUy anytltt~e.
c&lt;~ting good sauger fishing below the
the fllational Wild Thrkey federation July 4.
cm y th~ ~eke nd's big Smtrtl.1 y You m~y have 1een where the . Racine Datll.
held 111 fundraislng banquet Friday During the recent Multi-count}• night rllet, the }'epsi 400 lit Daytona, Meii!S Soil and WD.ter Conservation
1 wonder if that was before the
Right at the Royal Oak Resort near Envirotbon, which was held at the Fill,
Distrlet recently purchllsed a new river came back up?
Pon1eroy. ·
.
' park, I had the opportunity to ll!k So whllt does NASCI\1\. hllve to tree planter.
Even if the fishing has gone sour,
' About 200 people attended the Puk ManAger Randy Wachter just do with the outdoor sporting world I The new planter has been busy try to have a nice Earth Day, and I
social hour, dinner and auction, what exactly does a NASCAlt
Jllenty.
.
lately; planting evergreens and dedd- hope you get a chance to experience
which. Included plenty of prl1e1 and Camping Weekend involve?
First, NASCAR is wry popular uuus trees. .
the great outdoors first-hand during
:other con~sta.
.
W.chter said C:llmpers 'will be with ftlllny hunters and anglers, Sec·
I wotehed one landowner ~·· latlt Ohio and West Virginia 's spring
:: If you ever get the opportunity to encouraged to deeorue their ond, 1t11ny drivers and own en are part or a row or pine tree!, an Wlls turkey hunting seasons.
:attend an NWTF or Ducka Unlim• campen and campsites in NASCAR themselves outdour enthusiASts or impressed with how easy and quick
ltememb~r though, hunt safe and
:lted banquet, I stronaly encourage themei thQt weekend, ~nd thAt there 1ponsorcd by sporting goods ( OIHP~ · the job was - ~t leMt eotllpared to don't forget to take along a kid.
:~u do so. especially lfyou are In th.t llliiY be raciniJ IJalllel and r:ont~!tl ror nl~s . .
piatltilll! with the traditional hand· Jim
FreemdH
is
wildlife
: ~narket for some nice wildlife prints, younasten throullhout the we0kend,
Consld@r W~rd ll~Jrton , winner of operated planter or "dibble" bar.
$pttiallst1Wiirtrshecl cOcJnliHator with rhe
fSome ofthem IJO for whllt I eonaid- and m11ybe even a real rachiiJ car on thil }'t!U,&amp;Daytona 500 and driv~r of The dlstri~t pul'l:hA!ed the planter, M~ig; ·SWCD. He can be amracted at
lr really reasonable pricet, consider- display.
·
· the nun1ber 22 Caterpillar Dudge. which it ren~ to landowners, pri- (740) 992· 4282 . or at jim·
t ~g the qu111ity.
·
In an ideal world - thAt Is, a Ward Is A notud eonsemtionl!t and . mndly m a11ist In pla.ntlnl! eon1erva- frteman@Jh .nacdnet.oiJI

·'·' TALLADBGA, Ala. (AP) - day u docton worked to
~k ko111h.\ plane cruh wu ·• Routh\ life,

.·

Continence Is a distressing and emb3rrasstng condition. Only one-lhlrd of lhote who suffer from Incontinence
report It to their physicians. The Plll.niVIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~D OIDIIr hu acontinence
program to teach lhe Incontinence sufferer how to control blaOder function In an aCtive, non-surgical manner.
Don't walt any longer... get back to living.
/

,

i

•

ThOmll

'99 !lord Wlndltar LX
u .,.. Llodld, Loclll Tradl

. $12,700

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

die •mall plane he wu
pdodna durlna • 60th bkthclay
C..llbntion wlih !!endl crubed
in IOUfhlllt Alabama late Ffj..
.day, two dayt before the Aaron\
400 atTillldep Supenpeedway.
Th~ wen no piiNIIptl on
boud with ll.oulh.
, GeofSmlth, 8IMfll manapr
of Routh P.aclna.llld ac a neww
confetenc:e S.iu!day that the
tam owner Nm&amp;lnldln critical
bile ~Cable condition ac l1AB
Holplcal in Blrmlnahern.
He llld R.oulh hid a had
11\)ury and \nob borh lep.
~rh uld the tam would
COIItlnut to Plfddpete In chi
:raclna ewnll ~tu!day and Sun-

all prepared to do and
haw baen pnctlcina.'' Smlrh
aald.
The lonBtfme NASCAR
entrant hu two can entered In
S.tu!day\ Buteh .S.rlet event
and four runnlns in Sunday\
liatured Aaron'• 499 on the
2.~mllt CMI.
The accident recalled two
other mlhet liMIIvlna Winlton
Cup ncen.
Alan Kulwicki, the 1992
terlet champion, wu lc!Ued In
chi cruh oft private plane on
chi Witf to a race In BrlJcol,
~ .• In 1993. Davey Alliton
died when he cruhed hit hellcopter on the Talltdep Super·
1

Wl rt

..,. ....- . . .. . --

·-

llariJt~:.
mlllt,
l'acloly Wlmlniy

$20,70()

GMCXCab
271,4114

'00 Blazer LS .
4X4,CD,I.oadod

'99 Tahoe LT
4X4

l.laltw, learNt, CDifCIIII

$19 900
'00 Grand Am SE
'99 Blazer LT 4X4
4 Door, All The Toytll

$14,500
BenzC280
Nlcell

speedWIIy property later that
same year.
NASCAR driven, owners
and ofllclals regularly criucro~~
the country In priYJfAI planet to
keep LIP with their schedules.
A atatement &amp;om Bill Prance
Jr., chairman and CEO of
NASCAA, aald In part: "Jack
ltouah is an Innovator and
leader In the NASCAR lnduacry. Hla clrele11 etrortt have
helptd che tport achieve the
aucctMlt enJoys todAy. All mem·
ben oC the NASCAA family
are pnylna for his recovery."
All !Our R.oulh driven quailfled Friday for Sunday\ race,
with Mark Martln t 9th, Kurth
Dutch 20th, Jeff Burton 25th
•nd Matt Kenaech, a two-time
winner thit ~euon, havln11 co
takA! 1 car-owner'• provllfonal
Cor a 371h-place ltart In Sunday\
43-car lleld.
·

4X4
llariJt, COITape. l.oadodl

l.oadeil

lnd

race

'99 Suburban

'01 Orand Caravan

'98 Pontiac TraniPOrt
.
Exttnded

,.•'

sunar In Silence...
.

Every day is Earth Day and NASCAR Campout

1\vo fielding ~rrors by the Maraud- Robertson reach~d on an trror, the game, Robcrt,on twirled t thret

Marauden had a blse knock. from
Kara Musser and the Eagles stranded two on a fielding error and 'lhri
Wolfe's single.
The fourth saw the Lady Ellgles
send eleven batters to the
plate.Nikki Phillips infield pop-up
fell .safely behind third.
.
With onr out, Wolfe beat out Jll
infield . hit cthen advanced on a
passed ball. Jessicll Dilloia hit safely,
reaching third on a fly out to the
next hitter and another passed ball.
Amanda Yeauger drew a free pass;
Katie Roberuon was safely aboard.

'99 Ford Contour SE

$6,595
Buick LeSabre

$12,500

v•. Lo 11_1d, Poelwy WhMII
$10,500

'97 ToYota
Avalon
.

....,,

'00 Impala

$9995

$12,700

'96 Olda Cutlau
· Supreme SL

'OOMaUbu

$9,900

I Door, 0111\' 61,000 ,.....

$6,700

'00 Dodge lnt11pld

$8,995

'98 Escort ZR2
I Door

$5,595
•

'oO s.btinQ c;om,.,

11111!1. IWWfwlllrflmejlll;ttl

$13,900

'99 Grand Am SE
I Door, ,.,_., WI II, Yl, CO,
0111\' 11,000 Mill

'"Tahoe L5 4X4

$9,500

IIMr N!. COIT1111

900

SALES
------

�I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Qalllpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

Pltl14 • 6tnhp Cl:imtt·6tnllntl

·sundly, April 21, 2002

NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION ·

Twins get payback in Knight out as Grizzlies'
victory over Indians general manager ·
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) Minnesota's four losses last
week in Cleveland stemmed
from poor starting pitching.
Kyle · Lohse made sure that
didn't happen this time.
He threw seven strong
innings in the 1\vins' 12-3
victory over the Indians on
Friday night.
"He's the key," manager
Ron Gardenhire said. "When
your · starting pitcher does
that, you've got a good
·chance to win the game."
Tom Prince hom,ered
twice and Brian · Buchanan
came off the disabled iist to
drive in three runs for the
1\vins, who had lost . 18 of
their last 23 to Cleveland.
Minnesota scored one in
the first inning, four in the
· fourth and six in the fifth to
build an 11-0 lead.
"Bottom line: We were
embarrassed in Cleveland
and it hurt," said Doug
Mientkiewicz, one of six
1\vins with two hits. "One
game is not going to do it."
Using his curveball well,
Lohse (1-1) gave up two runs
and four hits while walking
nol)e and tying a career high
with six strikeouts. He didn't
allow a runner past second
until Ellis Burks hit a tworun homer in the seventh
and lowered his ERA from
11.74 to 7.36.
"I had a good mix going,"
Lohse said. "The key was
being aggressive."
1\vins starters gave up 30
runs in 15 1-3 innings in the
series last week againll
Cleveland.
Even if they could've gotten some more hits against
Lohse, the Indians had no
chance because of a poor
performance
by
C. C.
Sabathia (2-1 ), who gave up
eight hits and a career-high

eight runs in 4 1-3 innings.
Sabathia, who won his previous two starts, surrendering two runs in 14 innings,
walked two and struck out
four.
The Indians have lost four
straight after starting the season 11-1. Uecause of a rainout last Sunday and a day ofT
on Monday, they haven't
won in nearly a week.
"Win 10 in a row and lose
four in a row now. Why? If I
had the ·answer, I wouldn't be
standing here talking," said
Cleveland manager Charlie
Manuel, ejected in the ninth
for arguing.
Before Manuel's ejection,
umpire Phil Cuzzi had
warned both benches when
Minnesota reliever Mike
Ja.ckson hit Ricky Gutierrez
with a pitch. Jackson was
wild in warmups and apologized to Gutierrez as he
walked to first.
. The 1\vins might have
been irked by last week's
trading of beanballs that got
reliever Jack Cressend suspended for three games for
hitting Gutierrez in retalialion for Bartolo Colon beaning A.J. Pierzynski.
But there was a lot more
motivation comi.ng from the
beating they've taken from
the Indians lately.
"There was never a doubt
in my mind we wouldn't
show up," Gardenhire said.
"We got killed in Cleveland.
They were hot. They were
smoking."
·
Not anymore.
"The momentum we had
going kind of faded away,"
Gutierrez said.
Matt Lawton went 6-for15 with two homers and five
RBis against his old team last
week. He had two of Cleveland's five hits Friday but had

a rough time in right fieldhis position for the 1\vins for
six seasons.
Jacque Jones hit Sabathia's
first pitch for a triple that
bounced over Lawton's head
in right-center, and Cristian
Guzman drove him.
Lawton tried making a
sliding catch of Cor.ey
Koskie's sinking liner in the
second, but the ball bounced
off · Lawton's glove and
Koskie hustled for a double.
In the sixth, he overthrew
catcher Einar Diaz, allowing
another run to score.
NOTES: · Prince, who
made his major league debut
in 1987 with Pimburgh, has
three tnultihomer games in
his career but only 20 home
runs. He tied a career high
with four RBls .... Sabathia's
outing was his shortest since
last August 23, when he lasted 2 2-3 innings against
Oakland. ... Lohse set the
Indians down 1-2-3 to start
the ·game, the only time a
1\vins opponent ham 't .
reached base in the first
inning so far this year.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP)The Memfhis Grizzlies
fired genera manager Billy
Knight on Friday, two days
after the team finished its
first season · in Tennessee
with a 23-59 record.
·
In a brief statement, the
Grizzlies said, "Billy Knight
will not continue as general
manager of the Memphis
Grizzlies."
Kirk Clayborn, the team's
chief spokesman, tefused to
give further details. "All we
can say at this point is what
is in the statement," he iaid.
Knight also refused com-.
ment.
"I'm not going to make
any comments and that's all
there is to it," Knight said
when contacted by phone.
An assistant in Grizzlies
owner Michael Heisley's
Chicago office said Heisley
was traveling and could not
be reached.
Charles Ewing, one ofthe
team's minority owners in
Memphis, said Helsley had
given no ·word on why
Knight would be replaced.

"That is a decision that is million arena is expected to
made ·by our majority be built by 2004.
.·
owner. He has the right to
Before joining the Grizdo that;' Ewing said. "All we zlies, Knight was with the
can say is when he reveals Indiana Pacers. where he
information to us we can held a series of jobs over 14
share it with others. Right years, including assistant
now•.there hasn't been any coach and vice president of
information revealed."
basketball operations.
Knight was with the
Along with the Grizzlies'
Grizzlies for two seasons.
move to Memphis, Knight
Jerry West, the longtime helped direct several major
Los Angeles Lakers general changes in the player lineup
manager who is now a con- · this season.
sultant with the team, has
The Grizzlies traded star
been mentioned in reports Shareef Abdur-Rahim to
as a possible replacement for Atlanta for Memphis native
Knight.
Lorenzen Wright, guard
"Jerry is not. interested in Brevin Knight and draft
responding
to
tl)ose rights to Pau Gasol of
reports," said John Black, Spain.
'
•
public relations director for
Gasol led the Grizzlies in
the Laker!.
scoring this season with an
The Grizzlies played this average 17.6 points and is in
season in Memphis after the running for NBA rookmoving from Vancouver, ie of the year.
·
British Columbia, where
The Grizzlies also drafted
they joined the NBA in Shane Battier, a Duke AU1995.
American, and traded GrizThey played at the zlies standout Mike Bibby
19,000-seat Pyramid arena, for point guard Jason
averaging 1~,415 fans for. William of Sacramento in a
· home games. A new S250 four-player deal.

1!

'

~

Iverson's status still unclear for playoff openerPHILADELPHIA (AP) - All~n
Iverson wants to play apinat the
Boston Celtics. Philadelphia\ team
doctor will decide, though.
lwrson practiced with the 76en on
Friday for th~ first time since h\)uring
his lefi hand nearly a month ai!O, but
he didn't participate In contact drills.
· He'll be examined in Doston on
SAturdAy, And hopes to be cleat~d for
C~~me I of the Eutern Confertnce
seria on Sunday.
"If itl up to me, then I will play;•
lvenon1aid. "I felt real good throughout d1e whole practice, never had any
problems or any pain, so hopefully I
can play.
"A couple of days really doesn't
matter with an injury like this. I don't
know how much A couple of days can
do. If I don't play the first game, then
I probably won't play the second."
Slxers coach Larry Brown said Iverson could stare against the Celtlcs,
even if he doem't pnctice SaturdAy.
"If he\ healthy co play, he should
pllly.lfhe's not healthy to play, I don't
WILL HE PL.AY? - Phlladelphle
7eera' Allen Iverson alta on the
bench with a wrapped left hand dur·
tna the flrat half of the 78era• aeme
·aaelnat the New York Knick• In
Philadelphia In thla March 24 photo.
(AP file)

•
.
:
:

:
:
:

;
:
:

:
:
:
·

...

2002 CHRYSLER SEBRING
LXI CO.UPE

2002 DODOI
COUPE

• Rebates

Slle Price

halftln~e.

ln11e1d of surgery, Iverson chose tu
wear 1 cut, He had the can remowd
last week and was clured to begin
shooting, but he hasn '1 tllbn pm In a
full practice yet.
"I don't really fel.'l like I have to
(haw contact) because if I do prlictlce,
and 1 don't gee hit on It, I wquldn't be
uptetthAt I didn't set hit Orl It," he
said. "Hopefully I won't.get hit on it
tomorrow. Once I do get hit on it in
A Ill me, if I do SUI hit 011 it, hopefully
it won't hurt n1e thM much ."
Some of his teanm~licet pl'l!fer if
Iverson waits until the if\llary I! fully
healed before returning.
"I would like to soc hhn relt his
hand AI much AI po1sible:' forward
Dorrick Coleman said. "I would like
to see hhn go through pmctlce and
really get bumped Around a little bit

2002 CHRYSLIR 2002 DODOIINTRIPID
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AUtO, llr, ~~~.
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stops in Hun~lle,
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•
euy driving range of 21 coui'KI on

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and 1~ how h~ feds . I dlln 't think h~
1hould rush bo~k j111f tu prove he tAn
play. We all kMw he\ willing to .do
thmt, but I think he ~~~~~~~ to At 1~1 1
pl'llctice and h~vr IOllll!bc)tly kno k
hint down to s~e how hi! hnnd re~etll
..
to tItat.
•
lver5on, who mlsmi the lm 14 ,
1!3111~1 of the regulAr 1\!Ritlll, led the
NIJA in scoring uwruge Rt 31.4
pointi. The defcndm11 Eastern Confenmce chantpions were 7-7 Riter
Iverson went down, but piR~d without Dik~allbe Mututubo and Coleman In the lAst two KJIItcs - both
losm.
The Slxers were 7 ~ 15 without lwrson this s ~mson, but tlu:y 11110 tlidn't
haw Aaron McKie nut! Eric Snow for
6w of those losses.
"It's not one I!IIY, who's HOing io
111akc R difference,' Hruwn said. "I
keep lmushlng about our record without hlm.WeU, we didn't have all awful
lot of ljltys when he wnM
rt't playlns."
lwnon also mls~cu the tlrst nw
gtllllel 11f th~ st4!&lt;l11 itl\cr surgery on
his rlsln dbuw, Mid wns huthe~d by
dl~ ir\)ury throul!htlllt th~ ye"r. He
shot jult 3CJ.8 p~rc~nt - the worst or
his care~r ....., nnd nvcrnl!ed 5.5 n11ists.
L"st ·sensun, Iverson wns the Iengu e
MV11 nnd led the 76cn to th~ Nl3A
flln"i1 for the fir1t time In 18 years.

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want him 10 play," Brown uid. "That\
goin11 to be up to the doctor. I don~
want him to come back early, because
he hu a career ahead of hint, and I
don't want him 10 come back If he~
not ready. It won't help us anyway."
Iverson broke a bone in his let't
hand when Boston~ Thny ·Bittle IWilt~
ted At him on 1 driw to the b3skct in
the first quarter March 22. lverstm
stayed !n the IJ:Ime and scortd 22
points before going to the hosplt3l At

Iowa on everv vehicle In stock!

The forec:Bst calls for .

Clement, Cubs
shut down Reds
CHICAGO (AP) -People , record doesn't reflect it.
have talked ,about Matt
"He was our 'bad luck pitchClement's potential for years. er:'' catcher Joe Girardi said.
He was th.e San Diego "He's really pitched three pretPadres top pitching prospect ty good games. Tab away one
one season, and a Triple-A All- innipg in the firtt game, and
Star the next. He was one of then we didn't tcore any runs
the florida M•rliru best.young (in the second)."
pitchers.
.
But the Cubs gave Clement
But he was never quite able a 4-0 lead in the 6nt friday,
'to make that bteakthrough. and he cruised from there. He
Until 'now, the Chicago Cubs allowed only four hits in seven
hope.
. .
innil)!l', and one walk. He had
Clement struck out 12 for at least one strikeout in every
the second straight game, and inning. with all but one swinghe!.;! the Cincinnati Reds ing.
.corele11 for seven inninj!l PriThe Reds had runners in
day as the Cubs won 5-2. It scoring position three times
was his lim win with the after the lint inning. and the
Cubs, who acquired Clement only real threat came in the
from the Marlins at the end of sixth. Aaron Boone and Casey
spring trai~ing.
hit back-to-bac)t singles with
"Th get this type of game two outs, but Clement retired
li:om him, he's goilig up," Cubs Juan Encarnacion on a fly ball.
manager Don Baylor said.
"There is no explanation for
~·somebody'• going to find that guys not hitting when guys
diamond in the rough. Hope· were in· scoring position;• ·
fully we did."
Casey said. "He made pitches
Clement (1-2) aiJo hit an when he had to make pitchet.
RBI single, and Roosevelt He was duowing that tllder
Brown had a two-run homer. whenever he wanted to throw
Sean Casey, startinJ his tint it, and that was the Jtory of the
game since getting hit in the game:•
.
head with a pitch last weekend,
lt was the third double-digit
went :Z..for-4 with two RBis strikeout game of Clement's
Cot the Reds, who outhit career, and matched his career
Chicago 7-5. Joey Hanlilton high. He aiJo ~k out 12 in
(1-1) gave up five ruru- four a 3-21ou to the Pintes on Sa£eamed - .five hits and five urday.
·--IL.
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• mrunil'•
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"" his .........
,. r·-r
"Clement has pretty good high because he• got great
stuff;" Reds .manager Bob sN1t'' Girardi laid. "You'w got
Boone said. "When he locatet, to tpeed u to hit his faJiball
he'• tough. He'• F really good and really
down to hit his
stuff; always has.~:·
Ah, but location is the key.
Clement leli afi:er 'the sevCiemenc hasn't always been endi having thrown 117 pitchable to tame his lively Wtball. et, and }eJf Paero save up l:he
In his fourth fuU season In the ~n tingle to Cuey in the
majon, he has yet to pitch a t:ijbth. Joe .Botvwllti relieved. ·
complete game. Hit 1.ut JWt and retired Enca.rnacion to end
- Only the third in which be that threas with the Cubs JtilJ
didn't give up at leatt one walk. leading S-2.
Since coming to the Cubs,
Antonio Alforueca pitched
though, Clement seems to · the ninth fur his third .ave,
have settled down. Even if his striklng out two.

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BROWNS FOOTBALL

NASCAR

Cup

Orange.helmets
with orange jerseys?

.......... Earnhardt still searching for identity

Sd:adult•ftcl

The 1001 NASOAR Win·
liOn Cup IC!Itdult (winntll

In parentllaaaa) and drl\llf
point allndlnga:
Jllb. 1'7 - O.ytana soo.

DlytoMIIMoh, Fit. (Wird

Burton)

Ftb. 14 -

Subway 400,
AocklnQhtm. N.C. (Matt
Kanatth)
March 3 - UAW•DIImltr•
Ontytter 400, 1.at Vtgla.
iSttrtlng Martin)
March 10 - M NAAmarlcll
500, Htmplon, Gt. (Tan~
Bttwart)
March 1'7 - Carolina
Dodga Dultra 400, Dar·
llngton, S.C. (Stirling Mar·
lin)
·
Maron 14 - Food City 500,
Briatol, Tinn. (Kurt Buaoh)
April
8
·Slmaun~AadlaShaok 500,
Fort Worth, 1'1~11. (Mill
Ktnnth)
April 14 - Virginia 500,
Martlnavlllt.
(Bobby
l.abcintt}
April 21 - TalladtQI 500,
Tallldtga, Ala.
April 28 - NAPA Auto P1rt1
500, Fontana, Calli.
May 4 - Pontiac Exoltt·
mtnt 400, Alohmond.
Mty 28 - Coca•Cola 800,

Conoord, N.C.
June 2 - MBNA Platinum
400, Cover, 011.
Junt 8 - Pocono eoo,
Long Pond, Pt.
Junt 18 - MIChigan 400,
Brooklyn, Mloh.
Junt 23 - Oodgt/Savt
Mart 380, Sonoma, Calif.
July II - Ptptl 400, Dty•
tona Btaoh, t'la,
July 14 - Troploana 400,
Cletrc, 111.
July 21 - Ntw England
300, Loudon, N.H.
July 28 - Penneylvanla
1100, Long Pond, Pt.
Aug. 4 - Brickyard 400,
lndlanapollt.
Aug. 11 - Watkin• Glan
lnttmatlonal, Wltkint Glen,

N.V.
Aug. 18 - Pepal 400,
Brooklyn, Mloh.
Aug. 24 - Sharpie 1100,
Brlttol, Tenn.
Stpt. 1 - Southtm 1100,
Darlington, s;c.
Stpt. 7 - Chevy Monti
Cal1o 400, Alol!rnond.
Stpt. 18.:... Ntw Htmpahlrt
300, LaUdon, N.H.
Stpt. 22 - MINA Amttlol

400, Cover, 011.
Stpt, 28 - PrOIIOIIon Ont
400, K.lnlll Chy, Kin.
Ool. 8 - I!A Spoftt 1100,
Ttllldlgl, Ala.

Ool, 13 - UAW·GM Quality
IIOO,Conoord,N.C.
Ool. 20 - Mertlntvllle 1100,
Mlrtlntvllll, VI.
Ool. 27 - NAPA eoQ,
Hampton, 01.
Nlov.
Pop Bloret 400,

a-

Aooklnglltm, N.C.
Nfov, 10 - Ohtoklr Auto
PlrttiiOOK, Avondale, AIU.
Nfov, 17 - Hometllld 400,
liOmltllld, Fla.
atlwtltlndlrlft
1. llllflng Merlin, 1,2011.

2. Mill~. 1,182.

a. Milk~. 1.oeo.

.f. Autty WllhOI, 1,010.
a. TOll!' lltwart. 1,052,
8. t&lt;urt Buloh, 1,027.
1. Jlrnmlt -.;wn, 1,o21 .
• • Jtll Gotdon, 1,ooe.

f,·Datee.rnNtldiJr., eta.

*·

1o. AlokY Audd,
11 . Jtlllullon, f2f.
12. . . Llllonll,ltl.
13. H EMH!II, f07,
14. W•d llunon, Ill.
11. TillY Llllonll, Ill.

TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) - Mil·.
lions or adoring NASCA!t ram
would llkt to know the rul Dale
Earnhardt Jr. Maybe they could
enlighten hlm. on the subject, too.
In recent months, Earnhardt hu
come across.as a lald•back party aninul 11 well as a younl! man dreaming
or seullng down : Like most 27-) uo,rolds, he doesn't seem completely sure
whert he's headed ln life.
"I'm real happy with the exposure
that we've gotten, but I feel like
we've just really overnturMed the
public .with, 'Where's Dale Jr. now?
How's he feeling now? And where's
he h~aded from here?"' Earnhmlt
sold.
"And those are some hard questions to answer, because I don't even
know what ... I'm golnl! to be doing
next. And I don't care to really dissect
lt thAt fnr."
The 1un of a NASCA!\ legend has
established hlnuelf u one of the top
drlvm on the Winston Cup clrcult
- and perhaps its most popular.
In a recent Newsweek mlcle, he
sa ld he and hh buddies ofien down
12- 15 beers apiece durin!! drln king
binges.
"I'm not a social drlnk~r," he cold
the magazine. "If I'm gonna drink,
I'm drlnklnl! to gee drunk."
Even chou'-h he Is 1ponsored by
Budweiser, Its ott image that Earnhmlt Isn't entirely comfortable with.

At 4 trtt.tlt attto,qmplt ltldOII
He hasn't always lived up tu the get that, you know NASCA!\ won't
UJitlt aboltt J() driver• in
heady rtsponllbUity as perhaps hell tate to kick you !lUI llf 11 race, and
thu really huru.
~1
~:
b
NASCAI.\'1 top draw.
~~ ng.tpnrt, l'tma.,,,aHI Ctata
At a recent outogrmph session with
"That\ million! of dollm to . you
lining up abmd t'a.m. But about 30 driver&amp; ill Kln!J8porc, Tt!nn., and your sponsur and r,ou ean't have
· Bcmtlltlrdt- tltt driller mo.rt CAnt begon H11lng up about 1 a.m. But that. That~ why I dldn t say anything
·
uf them Wttnted to ltl1 Bunhudt - the driver most of them about Shawna."
happened
lm
weekend
Itt
MuIt
repnrtlldf_u .rldtttw•d the I!Vtlllt to wanted to see - reportedly rklpped
'
rrs
the evetlt to attend a concert ln tlntvllle, Va,, with NASCAR sitting
attend a cunctrt In HNtttlll,qtcm, H untlngton, w. va., by hh friend, Kid Kevin Harvlck down for · Sunday's
W.Ua., by hl.tfritllfd, Kid Rock, 1\oc:k, ond that Anl!ered some (ans. Win ton Cup race,
Harvick, already on probation until
a11d thtJt angllnd IOtntjaHJ.
Earnhardt I! more reliable on the
Thel'll ore nights, he sold lm week,
that "I j111t sit .around and bong and
talk to my C:Atl and cook .IMAI!nA !n
the n1icrowave and watch 'Sportl·
Center.'" ·
"There's clntes when l'nt at home
and I'm I!Ubblng my buddies atid I'm
like, 'Man, let'a go. Let~ go down to
this bar and jult have 1onu1 been,'"
llunhudt said, his shirt hanging out
and cap tugged low.'' And then there'!
times when I jmt !It at honu and It's
real pathetic.
"I think thot people Allume that
there'• way more happenhtg than h
really happenin(!."
Two month! AI!O, the driver known
na "Junior" or '"Little E" spoke of
mmlage and starting ACamlly; .
"I defihhely WAnt ro have A little
son that I can take to the rAcetrack
and he'• old enQugh to know what'!
golnl! on," he said. "I don't want to be
retired by then.'~

racetrAck, where he l! 11th In the
Wlnuon Cup points race headlns
Into Sunday's Aaron's491) at'lillladei!A
Supertpeedway, a nee his Cather
dominated: He hM thre~ top five fin·
ishes In his fim seven events here,
lnelul.'iing a win lm fall ,
Last month , 11 frustrMed Barnhardt
bumped 1\.obby Gordon after the
ract !n Bristol, 'Thnn ,, ended. Gordon
retaliated by splnninl! Barnhardt on a
crowded pit road. Both drivers were
fined , Earnhardt said he was an(!ry
beeaUie -Ourl.'iott, who hAd been
lapped, wouldn't let h!Jn pall.
Earnhardt hit the WRll on lap 184
after a brush with the lapped ear of
Shawna Robinson two weeks BI!O In
Port Worth, 'Thxns, but this .time he
didn't lose hil eM!.
"NASCA!\ I! pretty l!c:lOd at
throwing the fine&amp; out there," laid
Barnhardt, adding he nevtr htard hi!
father bash other drivers. "l'robatlon
11 che 1carle!l thing because once you

CLEVELAND (AP)
.Orange helmets: And orange
jerseys? · The . Cleveland
Browns may look a little like
highway construction barrels
fot one home game this season.
Don't call the fashion
police just yet.
The NFL has given teams
the option to we'ar an alternate jersey at one home
game during the upco~rting
regular season. The jersey
can either be a '·'throwb~ck"
or "cla!!lc" jersey or teams
can introduce a new, third
color.
. "As long as that color is
part of the team's existing
color palette," said Brian
McCarthy, the league's director of corporate communications. "It will be a one-time
thing, and it gives reams a
chance to try something new
or to honor a season or coin· clde with an event.'' .
The Browns have traditionally worn either white or
brown jerseys for home
games, leaving orange as the

Aul!. 28 fllr gubblnl! llusch serle1
driver Oreg Biffie alter a raee lm
month, wa1 punlihed for spinning
out Coy dlbb1 during Saturday's
truek race in Martln!Vllle.
On Suttday, Earnhardt wlll. be ~hat·
htH his ieellnd mal11ht win on 'Th.l·
ladega'l 2.66•tftlle ovitl.
He hal hla (athdl comfort level
with remletor plate rddng ~ and a
similu confidence In hla abilities.
"I like rem!Ctor plate radng
beeause it'&amp; 10 hard to pau," Earn·
hardt uld. "I'm not the molt phyil·
cally itron8 I!UY In the ileld, but I
think when It comes down to makIng dedllons under those circum·
stances, I think I'm the bell there II
out there •.
"That'! not me bragging, that's my
outlook on it. !go In there thinking,
'I'm goi11g Ill beu you because I can
set myself up to be up front when It
count!. Not becau1e I outdrove
you ."'
'ICk- conneotiout'a Sue Bird signals a teammate's three-point basket during the NCAA
, Midelllt Regional eemlfinel game agalnat Penn State In Milwaukee In this March 23 file photo.
1 Bird wee taken NO. 1 by the seattle Storm In the WNBA draft Friday, one of four players from
: unbeaten NCAA champion Connecticut in the top &amp;lx &amp;elections. (AP file)
·
'

iNo. 1 Bird ·leads UConn
,players in WNBA draft

,__...,_.,._---l!"'"'"!"!!P'"--!P'"-----""'J'

f

OHIO VALLEY
CHECK CASHING
·&amp;LOAN

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-2*

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IIJ.M1

IJMJJIImtom•
~CITIIItr ..

II

.

Dragon Internet

I

'Ifibune and
Sentinelfor the
wrapup of
today's
Talladega"500

'
i

1------------------~------------------

,_.
""""'
10...,,__,
.......,,
.,. ...................

- ~ US. \NOmen win volleyball exhibition over T~anjin
=
:= COLUMBUS (AP) -

1·888-657-0977
I re18'mhm tnd!fdr

The U.S. f.oomen's
"'v11U.yb.U uam rallied (rom two sell down
Ptl~l co beat Tlanjln of China 3-2 In
1 b
vt exhibition march at Nacion·/
• wide A
,
·
Tht A ericant dtof!t!ed che fittt two tets
• 12-25,20--2~. but won th•llnllthree tett 25: 15,2!1-22, 1?•1!1.
j Tayylba Henetf, a 6· foot-7 middle blocker,
: 1td tht U.!l. wirh 26 poinu on 22 klllt, two
: blcwkf &amp;ltd two lett. Cherfl Weaver added 18

!
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Monday~

s~e

SECAUCus, N.r (APi' Bird
··
"There wa• ,.ever any doubt
l het Connecticut teammatea extended their
h . (.S Bl dll
'
•
~ dominAnt Ieason tu the WNBA draft.
' e Ut!
r 1 wa1 tr1e prentter
~ . Bird wa1 picked 11m by the Seattle Storm,
player in tile draft. I tall her
one of (our playen taken from the unbeaten
a blend between (Olympians)
, NCA~ champion Huskies in the top six Tennifer A.t.:i and Dawtl Sta/MJ, "
! teleeuons Friday. Swln Cash was selected No. J'
·
-s· .
: 2 by Detroit, Asjha Jonel fourth by Washing8elltle oo.ah Lin Dunn
: ton and 'l"amlka Wllllamlslxth by Minnesota.
~ "That's why we went uitdefeated and won guard, ahooting guard or forward. ~'There's
f 11 n~tlonal championship thil year," Bitd said. not a more versatile perimeter player in this
: "If anything can show you, it's that. I'm so position," Summitt said. "She's a winner."
• happy for the other girls." .
Dales-Sthuman is looking forward to play: UConn's senlot dan finlahed with a career ing with Jol1es, whose UConn team beat the
:record of 136-9, three ~ina! ~our trip! and Sooners 82-70 in the national title game.
: two NCAA championships.
· "She's one of che toughest players I've
~ ConnecticUt coach Geno Auriemma got to come across;' she said. "Her physical stature
~ ttand back and be satisfied for a minute.
and mentality for the game. 1111 take.Asjha on
: '"Ib lee the families a11d their faces, ic my team rather than playing against her."
: makes you {eell!ood," Auriemma said. "The . Baylor's Sheila Lambert was selected sev:: challen(!e now is going to a program and enth by Charlotte. Alabama-Birmingham's
: tur11!ng {c Into the program they just lett Deatllla Jacklon, who is recovering from a
That't ·che price you pay for being r~ally broken lower right leg, was chosen by Cleve: sood."
land at No. 8. Shaun Gortman of South Car"' Connecticut fiche lint school to have four olina went 11inth to che Sclng, and Houston
::player• telected in the first rcund of the completed the top 10 by picking Michelle
"'WNDA draft
Snow ofTennessee.
"Thl; 1uin1 It all up;• Wilt12mt uid. "As for
The 5-foot-9 Bird is the first guard chosen
chit elm, everybody it dh a high.''
as the top pick in the WNBA 's six-year his: Wuhington alto chose Oklahoma't ·Stacey tory. She was a consensus choice as national
t Oalet-Schuman with the No. 3 selection - player of the year and helped UConn go 39~ the highetc tpoc for a Canadian player~ and 0 and win ill third national title.
~ the fifth pick Wll North Carolina guard ·Bird liVeraged 14.4 points, shot 46 percent
( Nikki Teatley to Portland.The Fire then trad- from behind tl!e arc and led the country in
: td Teatley and veteran guard Sophia Wither· ftee·throw thooting at 89.2 pe"ent.
tpoon co the Lot Angeln SparkJ (ot flatting With the Storm, she'll try to revive a team
tpolltc IJUard Ukari fil!IP an4 1econd-round that lost 15 of its last 18 to finish 10-22 last
t draft pick Oerpna Slavtcheva, .a guard from seaton. Bird wiU join forward Lauren Jack1ftotida lnrernatlonal.
ton, who was the cop pick in the -2001 drall:.
J "lc't beeflln exclliftl month.'' Dalet-Schu· "There was never any doubc she was the_
: man uld. "Pinil four, marriage, draft, gradu- premier pl~er in the draft;• S~actle coach Lin
l atlon. Fcur bll thlnp in my life. I wouldn't Dunn said. "I call her a blend between
cradt any o£ ic. lc't been a really 1pedal time.'' (Olympians) Jennifer Azzi and Dawn Staley."
The Mytdc:t u!fd · Tenne11ee coach Pat Bird would like co try to turn the franchise
Summitt 11 th•lr draft contultant to ;elect around.
1
~ Oaltt·lchuman and Jonct to compl•menc
"1 really, really don't like toting," Bird said.
: All·!lur Chamiqut Hold"law.
"That probably .11 going to be 1 problem.
: Dai,..Schuman, who play•d for the Cana-. HoJ!efully, I'll be able co help out 10 they
dltn Olympic team In 2090, can play polnc won't lo1e thac much.''

i

II, Jtrllf'IY ~. eee.

Check out

. WHEN YOU PURCHASE
RECEIVE A

'

or

If, 1M e.dllf, • •
20, OM ~~Mntr, tat

.

'

BY 1111 AIIOCIATID PRUI

17, ~ I!MMII'IIIIl, M8,
11. ~ Crtvtn, ....

only other color. they could teams. However, he said the
wear.
idea isn't totally revenue driBrowns spokesman. Todd ven.
Stewart said the ~lub is
"It's not a full-scale marthinking about updating it; keting push,'' he said. "But it
look.
gives teams a way to show ofT
"All NFL teams are eligi- a different color or to honor
ble, and it is our understand- . a classic season. Some teams
ing that several teams are are looking to evolve their
considering it," Stewart said. uniforms and this is one way
McCarthy said teams can't to do that."
·
wear the uniform ·until the
Teams, in pther professionsecond half of the season.
al sports have worn alternate
If the Browns choose to go jerseys for years. This season,
all-orange on top, a perfect the Cleveland. Indians added
time could be on Nov. 3, in a a vested top they'll wear at
Week 9 matchup against the home ori weekends, and the
rival Pittsburgh Steelers.
red accents on the club's uniDuring the 1970s and '80s forms have been replaced by
Cleveland teams
wore blue.
orange pants, but never
NFL teams previously
. orange jerseys.
wore throwback jerseys in
McCarthy said NFL own- 1994 as part of the league's
ers agreed to the alternate 75th anniversary.
uniforms during last mgnth's
Last year, teams playing on
meetings in Orlando, Fla. He Thanksgiving Day wore classaid a dozen teams have sic tops. McCarthy said that
already notified the . league would happen again this year
they plan to wear a third top. when Detroit plays host to
McCarthy said fans will be New England and Washingable to purchase jerseys simi- ton visits Dallas on Thankslar to the ones worn by glVlng.

SIMPLE SALE!

Dale Jarrett looking
to bounce back
that I know of. w~ can't look where we've run really well
In hit upbeat way of looking ahead.''
and the flnlehet don't back that .
at thlnp, Dale Jarrett hope1 his "We," for Jarrett, again means up, so until you !tart putting 1111
fourch-place . flnl1h at Mar- working elotely with'lbdd Par- of chat tol!eth~r. we're nc:lt
· dnsviJJe mark• the end
a roct, who returned u c~ 11olnl! to advaneenurett 18ld,
fru~tntfn11 ltArt to the 1eason chief before che April 8 race at
Havln11 l;mott' officially
and ·a 111!11 that thlniJI wlll Tt!XAI when owner P..obert back In command thould help.
Improve.
Yatet abandoned an of!ieason "'t'hlnjp have alwayt been
The former NASCAP.. Win- experiment to' give Jimmy good between 1bdd and 1. It's
non Cup champion, hampered Elled11e the relnt.
·
just 1 matLcr that our II'YI and
by bad luck, bad gamble• and a Parrott 1tarted the teason as everybody know• who'• In
ceam leadenhlp controveny In team manager but found he charll• now:' Jarrett ~aid.
1
che lim seven racn, even over- watn't quite ready to walk away v 1111 h
came 10me more misfortune to front hil crew chler duclet, ere'
opes 1t prove. a w n·rally Sunday at MartlntviUe atlns confution and ftumaclon nins comblnitlon Al!llln, and
Speedway.
for alllrwolved.
quick.
"Atler our air wrench broke Jarrett, like Yatet, hat pnlted "I·just hope that 1\ldd has
and got ut a lap down, 1 dldn •c . Efiedge'• work and lnslltt It found hia hormhoe and can
have any Idea we cc)uld be rae- would be unfair to make the ·gee us baek to the luck it
ing for the win:' he ~aid ~Iter departed chief the 1capegoat seemed like we had when he
cheVirsinia !IOO."But our 11\!YI for the rcam'ttroublet. huread, came here:' he ~aid.
did a great job and soc me back Jarr&amp;~tt uld, the blame 1hould
and ac leatt IJOC u1a top tive.'' be thored by many.
It wa1 the 11Ht top-llve llnlth
"What luck we'vt had hat
· oC the teaiOn for Jarrecc, the probably been bad r.aein&amp; luck,
champion In 1999 and a con- but you're going to hliVe that,
ttant In the Iitle hunt the late you've soc to expect It and
NVen yeart.
you've got to work amund it:•
It also lifted him from 24th h• taid. "lt't jult circumatancet
to 2ht In the poin11 ra", 396 with each place that we've
behind fionc-runnln8 Sterlln11 bem.
Marlin with 28 racn remainOveradjuttins the car at
ln!J.
.
Atlanta, he tald, turned a flAbIt'• a biJ deticit that · lw place machine into a 13thhelped narrow the bl8 picture. place ftnlther. P..unnlnJ out or
"flight now, our focut II jult gat whlle· l'llnnlns ~econd at
on Individual racet, nor even Texulatt week wat "1 mlKIII·
COMiderinJ where the 1t1nd- culatlon." And . cryins to
hlp att and what they are," he Improve on hil fourth-place
uid. "I'd uy our pn1 right now 1pot In tlw field on the flnallap
would be co work our way 01' the teiiOII-open:rn Oaytom
back Into the top 10 bet'ottthe 500 mulled In 1 nout rhac
end o( the y,.r, if we looked ac dropped !tim co 1 place.
it like that. That'• the only Wllf
"We've !'lin rtuonablr weU.
that you un pc throuJb chil We've had a couple oC qm

'

a.unbap ~imel -ioentinel • Page 87

Pomeroy • Middleport • Galilpolla, Ohio • Point Pleaunt, WV

OhiO

44'-1

•
" ',

points on 12 killt and 1ilc block•, equaling
Tlanjin'1 block tow.
··
1.1 Wangled Tianjin wich 26. points on 25
kilt. and an ace. Yanan Yang and Ziqian
Zhang eath added 1&lt;1 pointt.
Columbu1 was the 1econd stop for che
teams on their three·city, three-night tour.
The U.S. beat Tianjin 3..0 Thursday night
in Grand !Upidl, Mich.The tour finitbct Saturday night ac The Palace In Auburn HiUs,
Mich.,.outtide Detroit.

18
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Eagles continue strong recovery in Ohio
OAK HARBOR , (AP) - Just the toxic matenals that had killed th.e country were placed in the of the wildlife biologists.
don. and now new eagle nests are
over 20 years ago, Ohio had just so many eagles wl!re outlawed and nests to be reared by the remaining
"Their beauty and grace is showing up in areas we never
eight bald eagles, and the outlook slowly started to work their woy Ohio birds.
something you never get tired of dreamed they'd nest in."
for the bird's future was bleak.
out of the ecosystem.
·
"Those transplants really jump- watching," Dolores Wein:mdy, of Eagles are present in .44 of
Suitable nesting sites were hard
Next, nesting sites had to be started the eagle population here rural Tiffin, said. "Once you've Ohio's 88 counties, with Sandusky
to come by. Eagles still laid eggs, shored up. Eagles need large, tall in Ohio in the 1980s, but every- stared through a telescope and and Ottawa counties leading the
but few hatched because of conta- trees with extensive canopies to thing we were doing was essential- . looked an eagle right in the eye, way with 53 resident birds each.
mination from pesticides and other hold their 1-ton nests, and since ly buying the bird time - time it you see what on amazing creature
Biologists hope to $ee. the bald
environmental poisons.
trees of this stature were in short had to have in order to survive this is. It's chilling. and it keeps eagles, which generally live I 5 to
today, Ohio has at least 79 active supply, wildlife age ncies built arti- here," said Mark Shieldcastle, chief you coming back." .
20 years in the wild, to start nesteagle ne,ts, compared with the four ficial bases and support systems in biologist at the state's Crane Creek
Weinandy watches nests in ing along all of Ohio' major rivers
nesting pairs in 1979.
other trees to get the eagles' home- Wildlife Research Station near Seneca, Crawford and Wyandot and around some of · its larger
A field survey conducted earlier building started.
here.
counties. Eagles in flight have reservoirs.
this year counted 147 adult eagles
With the population decimated,
"The way they have come back grown more and more common in
"For · a while there was some
and . 112 immature eagles,' well every bird was precious to the gene' has been a real rewarding thing to the rich river bottom farmland concern about where they might
beyond the record 204 birds docu- pool, so injured or sick birds had to watch. All they needed was a legit- around her home and throughout go, but the eagle has shown a great
mented in 2001. There were 105 be quickly recovered, and then imate fighting chance."
the rest of the state.
ability to adapt and find new nestyoung hatched last year, and that rehabilitated tor release back into
A. big part of the protection
"As the eagle population has ing sites, so that trend should con•
record is expected to fall when this the wild.
comes from more than 200 volun- recovered, we have seen them tinue," Shieldcastle said.
year's official count takes. pla ce.
. finally, with such poor rates of teers who monitor individual nests increase the numbers of nests in · "Considering how close we
The resurgence began with leg- success in produ&lt;;ing young, the and keep . detailed accounts of the traditional stronghold along · came · to losing them, · thinking
islation on a number of levels that population had to be artificially activity. Using binoculars and long the southwest shore of Lake Erie," abput where to put all of Ohio's
made the bald eagle the most pro- augmented. Young eaglets from · viewing scopes, these shepherds of Shieldcasde said. "They have also eagles - now that would be a nice
tected bird on the planet. Many of captive breeding programs around the bald eagle are the eyes and ears spi~ad out along the river corri- problem to have."

'I love helping people, thafs the main thing~'

·Dear
Abby
ADVICE

Mother, daughter make
healthcare their career

Stepfather~

1Jlay' is
abuse, pure
and simple

Big
Strange

Duck .

.

turkey
contest .
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Wal-Mart sporting goods
department will be sponsoring
a big turkey contest.
All entries, up to two birds

. WHAT'S THAT? - A
Canada goose takes a
look at a strange took·
lng Muscovy duck as It
waddles by near the
shoreline of Grand
Lake In Celina last
week. (AP)

11om either Ohio or.West Virginia, must be made before 11
a.m. April 21.
Turkeys must have visible
legal tags connected to the bird.
First place will be a 75 per- .
cent payba.ck with five free bow
. sho1!is at Bladen Archery for
scJ:ond place and a turkey
hunting vest for third place.
The winning turkey will be
determined by . the NWTF
official method of scoring.

•
18" Alum.
WhHie
CD Pliyer
Remote
Keyleu Entry

''

••

'

LOVING Hilt JOI- Heather Cottrill preparee for life In the poat.operetlon section of the hospital. (Den Hermes)

Family helps those in need when it counts the most
.
Powerllellt
• R11r Audio sretem
• 7 P1111nger
Captain Chair~

•CD.Caelltle
• Everything Power!

BY MAliK HALLIUIIN

. MMALLBURNGPMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

OINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. "- "Like Mother,
like daughter." You'll
find Heather Cottrill, and

her mother, Brenda
Peaytt, working as registered nurses at Pleasant Valley Hospital.

BUICK
itsallgooc::t

'

12\

'£I

PONTIAC.

EXCITEMENT MATTERS

. $3000

REBATE
ON ALL

SUN FIRES
'

...
..w
··as.-

Because they are nurses, you hope
you'll never need their services. But if
you do, you' U be glad they touched your
life. · .
Heather works in · post-op. That
explains why you would rather meet her
·at a social engagement than at work. But
her enthusiasm and Jove of her job and
the people she treats, make you want to
have her on your teem when the surgeon
comes calling.
Brenda helps deliver babies into the
world down in the Ob-Gyn ward. .
Nursing is a natural tit for her, Heather
said.
"[ love helping people, that's the lllain
thing. I've always been interested in
physiology, the bo4y, anatomy, that was
even my ex.tras in high school."
Heather graduate4 from Point Pleasant
High School in 1990. College took her
over the ri vcr to Rio Grande, where she
earned her .associate degree in nursina in
1993. While studying there, she saw a
familiar face in class - her mother,
Brenda, who went back to school II the
·same time to also earn a nursing dep.
That was the start of a dUal nursing
career for the two . at Plealant Valley
Hospital.

· .

industry.
·
After having the babies, it was time to
come bw:k to work. "I had to come back
to feed .them," she joked. "I stayed home
with my chlldren some. Pleasant Valley is
a nice place to work. I like it here. I mbst,
I keep coming back,"
More than the job market has changed
in the eiaht r.ears Heather has been a
nurse. "11iere s lots of pa~rwork, and a
lot more legal issues now,' she said. "You
have to really prove exactly what you do,
when you do it, how you do it. More legal
issues is the biggest change,"
·
Despite the clianges involved in nurs·
in~, Heather can't see herself doing any·
thing else.
"No, [ don't think ·I would want to
change. I definitely wouldn't want to be 11
doctor, .that's way more responsibility
than I would want. I like somebody
tellin~ me what to do and I just do it for
them, ' she aaid.
Still, while the doctors have niore
responsibility, Heather said there is still
plenty of responsibility and stress that
goes with nursina.
"You always rieed a gOOd break. You
always need a good break because it can
be very stressful. The worst part is if you
feel like you're not helping or you're not
making a difference,'' she added,
At any point, Heather may have up to
18 pat1ent1 at a time, which explains the
stress that goes with her career. On the
average, abe said she has about 12 at a
time to CII'C for.
"It's very busy, very fast Pace4· Always
moving, there's always sometliing new,
You gotta have about 10 hands, you have
to use all your ICJISCi, smell, touch, feel;
how do they look? You can't always look
II the s-1JC1 work lllld say [t just says do
Ibis, you have to Jook 11 the ~ as a
wbole," lhe laid.
. .
And u you may wel.l imagine, the real
world of nunina is a far cry from those
cute 1V show episodes you watch In your
living room. Hollywood is a long way
from Point PleaMnt. Neilhcr Brenda or
Heather set to work alongside George

Heather worlce4 elsewhere for a year
.before slarting at Pleasant Valley, in
1994. "Back then they only had so IIIIIIY
openinp," Healher remembered. "You
really liad to fi&amp;ht for the positions."
She is now on her third tour of duty·
with Pleasant Valley. In between the work
sessions, Heather took. IOIDC time ott to
give birth w four children. They live in
Point Pleasant with her husband, Micby
Cottrill, who works in the aluminum Clooney.

.

"Sometimes it's very · thankless,''
Heather sold. "You work really hard, you
make people comfortable, and sometimes
they're just aggravated that you aren't
making them comfortable."
And what is It like working with mom?
"I don't really work with her," Heather
explained. "We work on different floors
in dift'ercnt departments, doin~ different
things. But it gives us somelhmg else in
common, and somelhing else to talk
about together. It's nice.''
Of course, the worst purt of the job for
any healthcare worker 1s losing a patient.
Heather said she ha.~ learned to deal with
it, but she still worries about the patloQts'
spiritual Stale as well as how the family is ·
doing. For her, it's the sudden deaths that
are harder to deal with.
"If it's something unexpected, you just
cry 10 get it out of your system and do the
·best you can to let the family cry on your
shoulder, or Jet them yell at you, whatev·
er they need to do to make themselves
feel better," she said.
But then there's the positive side:
Heather said patients often do remember
10 later say "thank you," and often.send
cards or gifts after their hospital stay.
"'They're always appreciated," Heather
said. "We always hang them up at our
desk. We get people that call our supervi801'11 M,d say, thank you, and ~!!at's always
appreciated too. They get ured of the
complaints. So the !hank yous are very
nice."
Sometimes she sees children who were
her patients,. some that her mom even
helped deliver, out at school playing or
shooting baskets at the city park.
. ''Thai's li~e the hign point," Heather
said. "Every job baa highs and Iowa, but
it reinforcu what we do. You think, PK.
maybe we do make a Jiule bit of a dill'erence. Even though it's not me persooaDy,
it's healthcare, doctonl, nurses, pllanna·
clsts, evervthing. Yeah, it makes you feel
real goodf' -·
Helpin' heal people, for Brenda and
Heather, n's "like mOiher, like daughter."
'

DEAR ABBY: I am de •
perntely wonied about my
brother's two children.
Their mother remarried n
man who .abuses them:
This guy has tom the chil·
dren's eorlobes by Junking
on them; threatene to kin
their P._Cts; says he '11 bent the
kids 1f they tell their dnd, as
they have in the past. Last
time it happened, their dad
confronted his eK·wife nnd
this man, but they denied
· everything nnd told the kids
. after he let\ that thetd get
"beaten senseless'.'. tf . they
ever told ngai n.
. My brother's eK·wife is ·
·not being abused by this
man. The children tell me ·
she laughs when he hurts
them: She culls it "playing"
- or claims It's the kind of
treatment the kids deserve.
These little children are in
first and second grade,
, Abby. What can we do?
Please send us some information. Do . not use my
nume or city. - VERY
SAD AUNT
DEAR SAD AUNT: If
ever I read n letter where
intervention is needed yours it is. Call Childhelf.
USA immediately. The tol •
free phone number is 1·
. 800·422-4453. the people
there will refer rou to child
protective servaces in the
state where the children
reside.
DEAR ABBY: I huve
been married to my won·
derful husband, "Jerome,"
· for more than 20 years. He
is a good provider and we
own our own home.
The problem is the TV.
Jerome eats in front of it,
does/aperwork in front of
it an reads in front of it. I
really don't believe he
could exist without it. One
day the TV was on 16 hours
strai$hl. I know he isn't out
chasmg other women, gam·
bling or drinking in bars
because he's home watch•
ing television. The noise
box is on even when
nobody is in the room.
Abby, .I'm tired of him
turning it on as soon as he ·
. wakes up and turning it off
. when it's time for bed. I'd
like some quiet time and his
full attention. Kindl¥ $ive
me your opinion. Th1s 1sn't
a new thing - it staned on
our honeymoon. -SEEK·
lNG
PEACE
AND
QUIET IN NEW JER·
SEY
DEAR SEEKING: Tell
Jerome the honeymoon is
over, It's time 10 cut the
cable and put a stop 10 this
''menage a trois." You need
a TV-free zone - at least
one nlaJtt a week ~ with
adult convel'llalion and no
distractions. It may be an
adjustment for him, but it's
iiOt too much to ask ..
1'11u·Im'

Phillips and her

Abigail Van
Dear
Abby
at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440. Los Angeles,
CA 90069.

�tui'ICirly, Apftl 11, 1001

Papa ·

..._.. Jentbcel

.Pomttoy • Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio Point P11111nt, WV

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21.2002:

oris H

BUCKm HILLS PROJECT

GOOD JOB
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' GALLIPOLIS - 'lusan Kay liylor, RN,
of the Information Systems Department It
Holzer Medical Center, was named the
April employee of the month, according to
LaMar Wyse, president and chief executive
officer.
Born in Bluefield, W.Va., Taylor is a gradu.ate of Northfork High School in North- .
. fork, West Virginia, and Berea College in
Berea, Ky., where she received her bachelor's
degree in nursing.
Taylor began her nursing career at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Lexington,
Ky.. in June 1973, before coming to Holzer
two years later as an instructor at the Holzer School of Nursing at Davis Hall on First
Avenue in Gallipolis .
In June 1977, Taylor began work at the
Medical Shoppe in Gallipolis until Novem·
ber 1979. In January 1981, she returned to
the Holzer School of Nursing as a teacher,
and then began work on the Four East Unit
at Holzer Medical Center thrre months
later. She has also worked on the Five East
Unit at HMC, and the Progressive Care
Unit from 1994- 1999.

.t;\.
..,

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Shlnn0n D•.Stuta llldlryn Lynne Shetta

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Sheets-Staats engagement
. GALLif&gt;OUS - Dr. and
Mrs. A. Keith Sheets of Gallipolls, Ohio announce the
..Jengngetrtent of their daughter
Eryn Lynne Sheets to Shan·
niln Douglas St~ats. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Staats
of Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Kfncade of Athens.
Sheets is a 1996 gradu~te of
G:illia Academy High School
~nd a 2000 grnduate of Ohio
University with a BS degree
In Speech and Hearing. She is
currently en~lled at Wayne

State University in Detroit,
Michig:an. She will trnnsfer to
The Ohio State University ·
thi! surim1er to complete her
graduate studies in Audiology. .
Staats is a 1995 graduate of
Meigs High School and a
2000 graduate of Ohio University Russ College of Engineering. He is currently
employed at Trim System in
Dublin as a design engineer.
The wedding will take
place on Sunday, May 26, at
Cheers Chalet in Lancaster.

Mr. lncl Mrt. IVIn Line
..J

LAne 5O~h anniversary

GALLIPOLIS - Ivan and
Betty Hilley Lane of 4165
))laden Road, Gallipolis, celebra ted their 50th wedding
anniversary on Aprll19, 2002.
They were married in Kentucky on Apri119, 1952.
To thit union they had
aeven children: Linda (Francis)
Broderick of Pomeroy, Steve
(Sheila) Lane of Indiana, and
Greg Lane, Sc:herry (Jimmy)
Spean, Cynthia Ruuell, and
Ivan (Pete) Lane, :ill of Galllpolis. One daughter, Robin,
;died in infancy.
They have nine grandchildren : Vincent Broderick of
Pomeroy, Kelli · (Windell)
• McKinney and Heather Lane
of Indiana, and Elizabeth

Cox~Allen
GALLIPOLIS Gloria
(Jean) Cox and William Allen
a111 announcing their engasement.
The bride-to-be it the
daughter of George Clonch
of Callipollt - and R. uth
Clonch of Oalllpolil.
The bridegroom is the .on
of Billy and Janet Allm of
Crown City.
Tho bride-to-be lw twO
children, Todd (Tanya) Cox of
OalllpoUt, and 1bnya (Doyle)
Callihan of Chillicothe, and
I

Lane, Brian Lane, Niccole
Rua1ell, Randall Shea Russell,
Anthony Lane and Lacey
Beth Lane, all of Callipolia.
They alao have two stepgrandchildren, Malj (IJ) Welty
andjame~ Spears ofSandusky;
three great-grandchildren,
· Allyua and TriJten Blandford ·
of Indiana, an.d Corbyn Broderick of Pomeroy; and four
.
atep-great-grandchildren,
Chelsea Spears, Wyatt and
Clay Welty, and Emllee Spean
of Sandusky.
.
They celebrated with a dinner reception on April 20
with friends and famlly.at the
Holiday Inn in · Gallipolis,
baited by their children.

engagement
aeven grandchildren. She is a
homemaker.
The bridegroom it the
father of Jennifer Allen of '
Bidwell, and Stephanie and
Robin Allen of Crown Ciry,
and has one granddaughter.
He it retirrd from tile U.S.
~ine Corpa after 20 yean
of se rvi~e and is now
employed by J.B. Hunt.
Wedding plaiU are incom·
plete. The couple will reside
in Chillicothe.

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•• MODULAR HOUSE COMPLm- The 2002 Buckeye Hills Career Centars' Trades pro• gram Is presently completing construction of another modular house to ba euctioned to
• the public on Saturday, Mey 4, at noon on the Buckeye Hills Career Center Campus In
Rio Grande. faatures of tl)e house lncude: 26 feet wide and 58 feet long; one story
·frame ranch style; built as one unit to ba dlvided·lnto two halves for transportation to
, foundation site; three bedroom and two full baths; dry walled walls and ceilings;
Installed custom oak kitchen and bathroom; a fold-down ·roof for ease of moving; and
200 ampere electrical service. For Information call the Career Center at 740-245-5334.
(Buckeye Hills Career Center)

EFFORT AWARDS- AEP's Effort awards were recently presented to students at Southern Elementary, grade 1-4, for the first;
nine-week perlod, Pictured are, from lett, front row, Mary Scarbrough (aecond"Crade reading), Natalie Marler (second grade:
mathematics), Cody Wolfe (first-grade reading), Whitney Weddle (flr•t'irade reading); second row, Zachary Manuel (third-grade.
reading), Mlokale Hill (third-grade science), James Evans (fourth grade aoclal studies), Katie Woods (four~·grade social stud-:
ies), Alishe Lawson (fourth·grade social studies); third row, Randy Humphreys, AEP representative. (Submitted)

Addaville
Elementary
releases
honor roll
ADDISON ..:.. Addllville
Elementary School honor
roll for the third nineweek period.
Mn. Wolfe's l- A class *Katie Campbell, *Shalin
Comer, *Arnanda Furtick,
*Kyle Gillispie, Josh Glan·
burn, Ricki Holmes, Jat·
mine Jonea, *Jacob Leach,
Dalton Masten, *HanJ:Jah
Overstreet, Lenae l&gt;ence,
*Dustin Shepherd, *Olivia
Walker.
Mra. Carpenter's 1- B
clau · .*Michael Clark, •
Addy Coldren, Kanoa Facemire, *Jacob Gilmore,
Dillon Hill, Dillon McCoy,
Lexi
Moles,
Michelle
Montgomery,
Juatin
Northup, Cayla Spaun,
*Emily VanSickle, Auatin
Whobrey, *Caroline Wilson.
Mn. Thompaon's 2-A
clan *Bryce Amos,
*Stephen Brown, Chebey
Eblin,
Devin
Kirby,
*Craigory
Long;
*Nathaniel Shuler, Eric
Snyder, Jordan Rife. Mn.
Bapot's 2-B c,l au - Kelley
Butcher, Emily Coleman,
Cheyenne Eblin, Aaron
Harriaon, Colton Hill,
Jultln Myen, *Kelsey Potter. '
Mn. Coleman's 2-C clan
- Annie Cruz, *Derek ·
Flint, Abby Hammond,
*Bethany Milner, *Lind1ey
Pohley, Cody Spaun.
' Mn. Kuhn'i 3-A clau -

DON 'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

TheAreai•

Sentinel and Register ... .

Largelt Selection
Plain DIDmond

EF. .
Qandmade
Holiday Treasures
Spring Craft Show

Denise Madriz, Aahley
Randolph, lade Roush,
*Kyle Sanda, Courtney
Shriver, *Wlll
Smith,
Matthew Workman. Mrs.
Short'• · 3-B clan • *Zane
Carroll, *Brody Lookado,
Alex Mel!, Kelley Sandt,
*Paula VanMeter, Rot.e
Walburn, *Britni Walker,
*Carina Wolfe. Ms. Crum's
3- C clau - Katelyn Birchfield, Katelyn Poster, John
Jackson, *Tommy Long,
*Taylor Moore, Courtney
Saxon, Drew Spaulding,
'!Yier Upchurch, Sarah
Veith, Cody Wimmer,
*Nichole Wiae.
Mu. Hollanbaugh'a 4-A
cla11 *Maria Corfias,
Leslie Klein, Chrhta Martin, Matthew Mulford, AJ
McDaniei, Jordan Saunden, Kristin Stump, Jenna
Ward.

Taylor transferred to her current position,
clinical information analyst in the information systell\s department, in 1999.
Taylor and her husband of 28 years,
Harold, who i.s a high achool science teacher
at Ohio Valley Christian School, reside in
Sua•n KIY Tlylor
Bidwell. They have three children, Benjamin, 2.3, a senior at Dordt College in Sioux "influence quality patient care through
Center, Iowa, who will graduate · thia year computer documentation ."
with . a bachelor's degree in agriculture;
As employee of the month,Thylor re ceived
Jonathan, 19, a junior at Kettering Univerli- . a $100 U.S. savings bond, a reserved parking
ty in Flint, Mich., majoring in computer sci- space designated in .her .nam~ , a.compli mcn·
ence; and Chriatina, 17, a junior at OVCS.
tary meal in the hospital cafeterb, her pic In her spare time, liylor says she el\joys ture displayed on the employe e of the
reading and· apending time with her family. month wall near the employee entrance, and
She aaya the best thing about working at her name engraved on the 2002 ep1ployee of
Holzer Medical Center are the people the the month plaque, also diaplayed on the
works with, and the opportunity she has to employee of the month wall.

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Hprll'1.7,2002

wer .

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~unlly 10 a.m. • 5 p.m.
hint Pleaent lllldlle Sdl11l
U12 Jld!An Rue.
Point Plelslnt, WU

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8pouond ..,.,
n County Community Edoocolloul Oul..ch S.I'Jtb)a..

V&amp;

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SCHEDVLE OF EVENTS
In honor of National Volunteer Week,
April 21st • 27th, Rocksprings Rehabilltation
Center would like to thank the many groups and
individuals who have dedicated their time and
servkes to our residents over the past year.

Queen Crowning
.
.
&amp; Singing team .............12:00 ·12:30 pm

VFW, Wllovene BaUey, Linda ~r, Rev. Alan Blackwood, .

Country Ora.. Banct ............... 12:30-2:00pm

PARADE •••••••••.••••.••.••••••••••••••••••••••••• 10:00 am

Aock-N..COuntry

Cloggera

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1

..........

.

Larry Grueser, Lifting Up Je~~~~ Nunlna Home Mlnlltrles,
Larry &amp; Joy Clark. Raventwood Church of God, South Bethel .
CHurch of God, Ravenswood Apoltolk, Out of the Blue,
Countrllled and the many Nbool organizations, community
gNups, 4-H, boy and glrlseout, brownie troops, and frlendJ and
famUy who help make throu&amp;bout the holiday le8BOIL
THANK YOUIII

~

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

11 :G0-12:00 noon
.

KIDDIE TRACTOR PULL ................... 1:OOpm

DOOR PRIZES

TO BE GIVEN AWAY
EVERY HALF HOUR
(•••t ~. preltd t• wl•l

Dena Warren, Aedvtty Director and

Crafters Set Up Free!!

the staff at ~klpiinp Rehab Center

Mike Hemmelgrarn
(Juggling Ventrlloqui..) .......2:G0-3:00pm
Mountain Alver
Blue Ora.. Band..................3:G0-4:30pm
Steve &amp; Beverly

. POI'tlrleyer ••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••• 4:30-I:OOpm

Celebrate the American Volunteer, Volunteers ring so true.

CourtnyOf

:PRINGS
REHABIUTATION CE1S£R

38758 Aocqprlnp Aoed, Pomeroy, Ohio • (740) 882.-o&amp;

_:__ __-r---------

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~tt\If.S\

CRAFTS

fOOD-·

�PapC4

PageCS

21,2002

'

or you
When you think of going back to
eollege, do you think of sitting in ~
' traditional clwroom liuening to ~
professor give a tedious lecture
about the anatilmy of a frog or the
literary Works of Chaucer? If lhe
anatomy of a frog doesn ~ really
inten:st you, and hands-on activities
are more your style, then. consid~r
entering into one of the many technical progt~~nu of study available at
your local conmtunity college.
Thchnical programs of study offer
excitin(!. hands-on' cl~sstoom activities. Students ue still required to
completc traditillnill coursework in
English, communications and mathematics, but the m!liority of the
Cilurses required to complete an
associate degree an: within the technical field of study. Most ilf the programs can easily be completed in
two yem of full-time study. Let's
examine a few of these prograins in

.J

highw~ys.

Luanne
Bowman _
.

EDUCATION
detail.
The computer :Uded drafting and
design majoris an exciting ~nd wrsatlle choice. The· program offers
basic instruction in mathematics nnd
science while emphasizing drafting
and design in manufacturing.
· Drafting is a graphical language
· describing the shape, size, location
and any additional information used
in the production of itenu that are
constructed such as autotri&lt;&gt;biies,

clothing, appliances, and
tven toys. These items are 6nt drawn
u a graphic picture to explain the
detQi!s ~nd steps necessary for con~
struction.
Whlle the students learn the basics
of manu~ drafting, computers are
used to g1w the students a more ereative, aniluated and detQi!i!d method
to create and modif}r 'their designs.
Cotnpllter Aided Drafting (CAD)
offers more accurate designs, faster
modifiqtions and gives the student
the 11bility to •easily explore other
possible designs. CAD is the graphic
design program that is the m!lior
communication system used in
modern business and industry. It is
probable that any new product
invented in the future will be finalized ln design by a CAD operator.
Another very exciting program is
thu Plant M:lintenance 'Technology
program, which emphasites electro-

mechanical machinery. This program
prepares students ·for careen in
industry u repair technicians who
ttoubleshoot ptoblenu that may ariie
with today's modern, highly technical ptoduction machinery.
This program is designed to produce a manufacturing technician
with the skills to quickly learn the
maintenance requirements ofmanufacturing plant equipment and the
ability to keep that machinery operating at full capacity. Courses of
study include exciting classes such as
. schematic design reading, welding, ·
electronic troubleshooting and
repair, industrial conttols, and preventative maintenance planning and .
· scheduling. Graduates ' of this program are in great · demand to keep
today's highly technological manu•
facturing facillties in excellent
working order.
The Manufacturing n ·chnology

program dewlops technicians who
are also in demand for today's tech- .
nologlcaUy advanced manufacturing ·
faa.lities. The gnduates of this program are highly skilled and trained
in metal fabrication, time and methods study. production control, quality control and industrial supervision.
Students take such diverse courses 11
blueprint reading, hydraulics and
pneumatics, manufActuring ptocesses
and metallurgy.
As you can see, there are many
options that are available to students
wh.o want to complete a .technical
degree and haw an exciting career
in a hands-on environment. Contllct
your local community college today
and put college in your future.
(L11aHHt R11.1e Bowman Is vil'l! prtsi·
dtHI for jiHaHtial anti admiHistralive
l!ffairs at Rio Grrmdt Community Col·
lege, P.O. Box J26, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, 24S-72J6.)

Working at home: The wave ·o ·the uture?
.

.

From the expert!:
The workplace may have a
changed loilk for more and mor~
workers - a home-like look. Since
the terrorist attacks on Sept. 1t,
2001, more employers are being
asked to consider !elecommuting.
The International 'Itlework A11o~
dation and Council (ITAC) report!
a four-fold increase in employers
and employees wanting to know
more about "working from home"
since Sept. 11. In fact, some experts
say the events of 9/11 may be
pushing telecommuting (or the
"virtual office") to a new level.
i According to a human resources
consultant at the ITAC, "We're
going to see telecommuting
explode in the next 10 years. Technology h allowing lt, and traffic is
demanding it. And, it can be a great

Becky
Collins
FAMILY
retention tool."
According to the ITAC annual
survey, telecommuting is up 17
percent over last year. More than
two-thi·rds of these workers say
they have greater job satisfaction
. and are more conunitted to their
organization than when they were
·reporting to the office everyday.
Thleworken also said that work-

ing at · home interferes less with
their personal activities than working in an office - even though
they are apt to work before and
after normal working hours as weU
as on weekends.
Families benefit too. Thleworkers
said their families experience less
conflict and have a better quality of
life. They report feellng less stressrelated to balancing work and family reiponsibilities.
If you are considering telecommuting, look at what has worked
and what hasn't.According to Work
&amp; Family Directions, a consulting
firm designed· to look at work/life
issues, an out-of-control workload
is a huge barrier to successful
telecommuting. If you contend
with lots of lut· minute requests,
very little planning, constant emer-

gencies and seem to always have
too much to do, telecommuting
may not work for you.
According to Gil Gordon, an
expert in teleworking, there are
some quillities that contribute to
telecommuting success. See if you
can answer "yes" to these questions:
Do you enjoy working alone, trust
your manager, keep your word? Are
you self-disciplined and independent? Do you make good decisions, complete tasks on schedule
and keep others informed? Do you
have good communications skills
and are you comfortable with tech- .
nology? And, do you have a safe,
quiet place at home to work as well
as a childcare arrangement during
working hours?
If your "yes" list Is long, talk with
your manager or employer about

•

ion be identified.
The leghlatlon ls supported by the American Acade·
niy of Audiology, the Amerlean Academy of Pediatrics,
and the Joint Committee on
Infant Hearing and the
National Anociation of the
Deaf,
The technology utilized at
Holzer Medical Center is a
bi
com nation
Ot.o·
acoustic eminions and
Auditory Brainstem functlon. Both are non-lnvuive
techniques that involve tiny
ear probes that fit into the
ear canal and produce click•
that vibrate ear . ltructures
and identify retponses using
computer software. lnformation II given to all parents · regarding hearing
screeningt and ways to con· tinue to evaluate their baby
for signs of hearing lots.
"Intervention and prevenlion i1 our key motivation
for providing thi1 service,''
said Sandy Hart, MSA,
RNC, Director of Materniry Family Services at Holzer. "We feel rhat early identification of a hearing loss
can really make a difference
in a child's 1 ucce 11 • The
audiologists at Holzer Clinic have helped u1 develop a
tyttem that will detect the
children that need further
I .
L
eva uauon and _tnen refer
them ~o the resourcet that
ca~ Ulllt them.
')Ve have a com~itment
to our communsty to
retpond to the health need1
of our children and to make
technolosv avaibble to meet
those needt."
For information about the
heating IGreening• now
offered to infan11 born at
Holzer Medical Center, call
the .Ho•pital'• Maleriliry and
Family Center at. 740-4465030 ..

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earntn

WILTON, Conn. (AP) College students often are ·
•1 knit
IIPnfS of
~,
r --·
multitasking masters, and
tight now many students lire
I nit walking aaoss campus.
I
knitting their worries away
elfen seamed a
as I walked/ I
it' •
O •
·· and coming up with some
.. fashionable clothing at the
n tn
1
same time.
andsome professors me knit during
. Contrary to popular 'belief .
In
school,
hod z:...;.
~·
lin:
' that knitting is a grandma. only craft, the Craft Yarn hours of meetings ever FricJcrt afternoon
Council reports that the
and without my knitting, I .J;..ntr think I ,
number of new knitters and
uu
''
· trocheters under 35 yean of
.
have
uge increased 400 percent
since t 998.
Dlln~y Wllllllma, 111'111111111 ol maater" progl'am al WUil11111 1nc1 Mlly

k

() Grant Mecllcal Center
OhioHealth
Sp('cialized (em· for Tola/1(/lf'f'

ami/lip

ll'f'pluu · n~r·nl

For Initial evfluatlons or follow-up vltltt, w• offtr
office hours at 2915 3rd Avenu1 (1crou from St.
Mary's Hospital), HuntlnJton, WV.
Our next clinic date It
Friday, April 26, 2002.
Call (614) 221·63J1

Joint
Implant

Surgeons, IIJC;
for'" appolntm•nt. Adolph V.Lombardi,Jr., MD, FACS

SUrvived."

The . fashion _world has • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
responded with fall 2002
homespun collections chock
"1 kru"t through all 51·x yean tee hntques,
.
and ,'big sisters"
full of patchwork, chunky- of school," Williams says. "I frequently knit scarves for
knit and apron-inspired styles. knit walking across campus. incoming freshman students
But what spurred many Oncel even seamed a sweater and pass on the skill to them
teen-agers and t:wentysome- as I walked! 1 knit in the 10 as well.
-thin"'
. een cl·sses
and
Linda Daniels, owner of
.,. to pick up their own minutes betw
•
needles instead of. pursu1'ng some professors let m·e kru't N
. ort hampton Wools since
their other passion of shop- · during class. In .graduate 1988, says she has seen a big
ping? For many, it was stress. school, we had five hours of increase in the number o(
After Alexis Johnson gets meetin""
.,. every Friday after~ peop1e, incIuding professional
'home from. a day of gr.duat•• noon, and without my kn1't- women an d new mothers,
'studies in as trophy· sics at ting, I don't think 1 would wanting to le~rn the craft. In
University,
she have survived."
fact, Daniels had to rent a sec'Boston
unwinds and does a little
At Sn]ith College in ond clauroom space and hire
,, knitting. .
Northampton, Mass., knitting two more teachers to accom" I Wlmted to be able to do is almost?- re"quiremimt.At the modate this boom.
· i,omething produetive while very least, it's a regularly · Many of her . students take
th e c1ass Wit· h her an d then go
. my brain recove-d
·~
"~rom my offered class.
The class, offered during back and share their new
,day before I went back to the
books," Johnson says. "Knit- the school's short January knowledge with friends.
. flng appeals to me because term, often has a waiting list.
"I think more women have
&lt;"'u
take
t:wo
sticks
and
·some
One
year
the
proiect-centr
·c
1
ru
•
returne d tot hejoyofcreating
class was called "'"
.'arm somet hi'ng and the joy of this
Yarn and create something."
""'
Darcy Williams, who Heads;" this year it was portable craft. It is meditative
'\ecently -ce1'ved
her m"ter's
"Fuzzy Feet."
·
·~
~
an d therapeutic," according
to
degree from the College of
A campus group called the D · 1
'
and Mary 1•n Knit Wits meet! monthly to ' aKime sb. 1
• W, illiam
'm er y Cheney from
questions and .·Ar·!Zona is a senior studying
. W,illianisburg, Va., has been share proie~ts,
,
~ddicted
for
years.
teach
each
other
different
1
.
geo ogy at Smith. She's a knit-

to help familie1.

.• .••

ChUdnnwlth
MIIIIICIII HandlcaPt
(BCMH) Ia available

. cherished forms. While making a scarf, it takes your mind
off rythi
aU the 1lab reports
h and
~;,:.
ng e se you ave to
At bookstores across the
country more and more knitting
th 1books
h 1 are dappearing
h • on
1
b e· · e ves,bl.anh d eyre
J ·not
b
emg
pu
IS e
on
Y
needlewo k d ft
'alY
r an era spect isti.
have Mainstream
·
d
hpublishers
k
JUmpe
on
t
e
nltting
b d
11
an
s wagon
F as we ·
an rancisco-based publisher Chronicle Books pays
clos~ attention to what is happemng ln the marketplace.
Editor Mikyla Bruder
noticedd more young knitters .
- an more chunky garments in trendy shops such as
Anthropologie and Urban
Outfitterson
K · p - ·'so she signed
·
h
til . etCIVill to write t e
b
bl' h d b
soon-to- e pu ts e , ook
"Knitting
Pretty,"
d
rd all which
h • h is
geare towa
I • ' ip•
ster" knitters she was seeing.
It ' 1 d
"
.or a
hip 1temeku eshi patterns
r h
r ere e., ats, soarves
and cell phone cozies.

•
•

CFDA likes

:• Lauren, llcobs

. NEW YORK (AP) -,
P..alph Lauren and Marc
Jacobs are favorites of the
;Council of Fashion Designers
";Jf America this year: They're
poth nominated IS the top
:womenawear and menswear

NOTICE
Dr. David Humphreys I New Hope
Christian Counseling Center Is
announcing the closing of their Pt.
Pleasant omce at 2415 Jackson Ave.
effective April 8, 2002.
New Hope Christian Counseling
Center still has offices In
Huntington, WV (304) 526·9189 and
also In Charleston, .WV (304) 9268600.
We would like to thank the Pt.
Pleasant and surrounding areas for
Jetting us serve you for the past 11
years.

,
'

WIMSUIT
SHOPPING TIPS
Glamc;&gt;ur magazine had . would·be
bathing beauties try on 904 swimsuits In a
quest to . find flattering styles for all
shapes. ·
.
·
Some of the findings:
·
• Swimsuits today have amazing bulh-ln
Lycra content.
.
• Swimsuit tops· have durable underwire
to help support big or small busts.
·.
• Some swimsuits offer natural padding
up top (and even some on bottom).
• There's an Invention called "the slimsuit" or "the miracle suit" that comes with
a tape .measure to see how effective the
suit holds In and shapes your body's problem areas.
• You're no longer stuck with a swim set.
You can, now you can mix and match tops
to find ttie perfect suit to flatter your figure.
The magazine also busted some myths:
• Swimsuit sizes are not the same sizes
as your regular clothes. Buy a size larger.
• Black swimsuits are not always the
moat slimming.
.
• One-piece shiny swimsuits don't disguise your problem areas.
• Classic tank suits aren't the· best
·choice for every shape.
·...
• Boy shorts typically aren't flattering on
thick-middle or big-bottomed figures.

-TRIVIA

PROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

Mary Steenburgen (Living
Wiril rile Dtai/). alons with hus band Ted

. Gan of Harper's Bazaar and
· Visionaire magazines.
Nominees are determined
by a !election committee
!~eluding CPDA memben,
fashion journalist! and indua. II)' figures, who voted on cat. egoriu within their respective ·
areas of expertise.
Winners will be announced
at the 40th annivenary awards
'
.
.
prttentatton on June 3 at The .
New York Public Library. The
CFDA, a nonprofit trade association, counts over 250 of
AmeriCa'• Jeading 4esignen
· among its' membenhip.

. ·designer~.
The
CPDA
recently
-\clnounced the nominees for
irs annual Fashion Awards, the
'i!quivalellt o( the 01c:ars or
Grammy• for the fashion
Industry.
. "The CFDA flathion
~wardl are the pinnacle of
what ukes pbce in American
uty
(uhion every year. Not only i•
it the most glamoroui parry of
NBWYOR.K (AP) -Kate
the uason, it i1 an awards Spade, known for her bright,
event where select American colorful and practical acce..
fashion detignen are recog- sories, is getting into · the
nized as the best. in their beauty bu1ine11.
field,'' said Nadja Swarovski,
However, the fint producu
:'ice pmident of international &amp;om Kate Spade Beauty
~ommunicationl for crystal won't be color cosmetic•, but
~ker SwarovJki, in a state- . bath, body and fragrance
ment. Swarovtki it the awards' producu.
'\lie sponsor.
"I'm into ~eents right now
: Also nominated , in rhe and ·I love. to layer tcents, so
womenswear category II Nar- this prder is narural;' 1he 11y1.
l:ilo Rodriguez, and Sean (P. "I never forget my functional
Piddy) Combs it in the. run~ rooa~, but I a!IO want to have
lllng IS bett memwe:ar deflgn. fun:•
er for hlt Sean Jean line. CarThe collection II supposed
JO. .Palchi, 'Ibm Ford forYvet to be Spade's "favorite thin111"
~aint wurent and Jacobs are
1Jornlnated as the leading
pcceuory detignen, and Rick
pweru, Zac Posen, Behnaz
Sarafpour and Peter Som are
lip for the Perry Ellit Award
lbr emergin1 talent
: Karl Lagerfeld, who hat
itetigned for hlt own label and
t:hanel, and Vogise creative
director Grace Coddington
are being recognized for their
llfetime achievement~.
: This year'1 .Eugenia Sbepl'ard Award for Fuhion Jourtsalism will honor Cathy
Horyn of The New York
Times. The Crtative Visionary
Award recipient iJ Stephen

enten
biz

'

- distinctive, feminine, elegant, confident, unexpected
and witty all at the same time.
Hilneytuckle is at the heart
of the fragrance, repmenting
joyful momenu from Spade's
childhood. It'• enhanced with
a complementllry bouquet of
gardenia, jasmine, tuberose
.and fresh muguet.
In addition to parfum and
eau ·de parfum, the Kate .
Spade Beauty collection
include body wash, body polish, bath oil, soaps, moisturizer and dutting powder.
.
The llne it the result of a
liceming agreement between
Kate Spade and The Bstee
Lauder Companies.
·

Feet or f•hlon?
NEW YORK (AP) - It's
not euy putting your best
foot forward during tandal
seatOn.
More than half the women
in America admit to willingly
sacrificing their feet for fashion, according to the A.meri- ·
cari Podiatric Medical Allociation.
Dr. Robin ROll and Dr.
Kathleen Stone, podiatriltl
and members of the APMA, ·
recommend the following
c:ompromise• to maintain foor
. health and style:
• Choose thong tlip-dops
'····

Danson, un uvid

sculptor, is un acknowledged
patron of the uns .

Bits-n~Pieces

d

Joint Implant Center

ter but she says some of her
friends prefer to crochet or
.quilt.
Cheney says, "There is lots
of female textile stuff happening at Smith that you wouldn't expect to be happening."
Smith sophomore Molly
Butler from Berryv.ille, Va.,
said that she resisted knitting
at 6nt but the "peer pressure"
finally got to her.
It's easy for her to identifY
what ~t her hooked: "procrutmabon one of our most

th

see

The

school.

Once

WOU/d

•
•

°r

er Medical Center posee with the molt recent technoloay for
acreenlnl hearlnl In lnfentl. HMC now hee the cepablllty to
tett lnfantl' hearlnl within 12 houre after birth. (HMC)

throunh a/1 six

sweater
e mtnutes between dasses
let
class. nraduate
we

k

The Bun1u for

have a ehlld thlt has
h!M~elal health care needs you may
· be eli&amp;ible for 111i111nce.
Call the Oallla County Health
Deplll'lltlent at 441·2039,
for more information.
CIIIIOcll)' 1nd - the ltNII,

HILPINQ INFANTI- Cheryl Frazer, RNC, BSN, IBCLC, of Holz·

nts
nittin 101

•
•
••

HMC maternity.and family center offers .
technology to detect hearing ·loss in infants
GALLIPOLIS - Their
mother's voice, . their first
lullaby, and all the many
sounds of the world.
How do we know lf newborn babiel can hear all
thete wonderful thingt?
Holzer Medical Center
now has technology thai can
detect hearing. lon within
hours of birth.
Why is thi• important?
.J Early· detection of a hearing ion il critical immedlately ~fter a baby 11 born
becau1e hearing impacts
infant speech pattern•.
Determining a hearing losf
early can help aid in speedy
intervention should a need
arise for an infant with a
hearing probl•m. Most
hearing lone• are undetect·
ed until after the age of
thr,ee. Unfortunately, after
this age, delays in speech
development are with a perton for the test of their life.
Problems with speech
·often cau1e children to be
labeled at "slow,'' wben
""bften there il nothing
wrong with the child's IQ.
1~ re1pome to thi_s informa·
tJon, Holzer Med1cal Center
hat moved forward t~ prov1de a hearing scre.enmg for
all new~or~s dehvered at
rh~ ':fotpllals Maternity and
Family Ce,nter. State-~(- ·
·the-art ,eqtupmtnt is available, With hcarmg screeninp now performed on
newborn ·babies delivered at
HMC.
Many ltatel have mandated universal newborn hearing
tcreeningl.
Ohio
presently hu proposed leg·
illacion before the General
Attembly that hal cleared
the Houle, and it now
be{ore a Senate committee.
The proposed law would
not only require thar hospitall provide hearing tcreen·
inp, but al10 offer a method
c;f referral 1hould a hearing

being part of a telecommuting
pilot project. Experts say ·a
telecommuting project is more apt
to succeed if it's first planned and
piloted. That way, adjustments can
be made to make sure 1111 parties
involved are satisfied with the
e~rt.
·
A project manager at ScherinjiPlough says the company ·started a
pilot project with 25 workers,
Employees were
monito.red,
tracked and the project was modified. Now the company has 400
telecommuting employees. Mdre
than 25 percent have been promoted since they started telecommuting.
(Btclty Collins Is Gall/a County~
Bxttmlon ilgtnl for family a11d ton·
sumtr ICitnw/community dtvtlD,P·
mtHI, Ohio Start Unilltnlty.)

o e estu

21,2001

made of natural material, such
as leather, and ensure the foot ·
doetn't hang off the edge.
Flip-flops are known to
cause irritation between toes
where strap fits and callus and
dead skin buildup around the
heell because of friction.
• Moilturize feet at bedtime instead of the morning if
you're likely to be wearing
mulet or tlides. This allows the
cream more time to absorb
into the skin. Then use a
pumice stone in the shower to
gently slough away dead skin.
The back edge of these
shoes rub exce11ively ag&gt;tinst
the heel, causing skin to
thicken, which leads to callus-

RAMBUN'
JACK •:LUOT
TOMMY
EMMANUEL
ORRIN
STAR
ROY
BOOKBINilKR
STEV•:
JONES .

ct.

• Pay particular care to fit
when buying dingbacks,
which can caute blisters, 'toe
pain, and twi1ting of the heel
and ankle. The tight 1trap
chafe• the back of the heel,
and the foot slidet forward in
'
the shoe, 'cramping
the front
of the fQot.
·

JONATHAN

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•

�C6

a--..Sma·ladinel.

CHAPEL HILL. N.C (AP) For 2S yean. l mmped apuunent
in New York City served u one of
the first recording studios for douns
of struggling artilU, some l)f whom
would go on to be 1M bi~J~!t$t
names in fOlk n1usic.
hopes they would be pmerwd and
Bob Dylan, ~te Steger and janis also made available to the public.
lan wo:rt among those who made
No~ the National Academy of
the ttip from the Greenwich VU!.ge Rec:ordina Arts &amp; Scienci!S, the
cotTeehousH to an Upper West Sidt same group thtt sponsors the
housing project for jam stssions C111mmys, has stepped in to help
worthy of a country front porch. . with a $22,649 grant, or about $96
. Agnes "Sis" Cunningham and her a reel.
husband, Gordon Friesen, a pair of
Dylan's folk tnthenl "Biowin' in
former CommunistS who became·a the Wind" wu published for the fint
son of counterculture mom and time in "Broadside." Steger recordpop. recorded ~I mer rtel of gui- ed his nuclear war parody "M•c:lc
tar-rich ballads and protest son!J$ . the Bomb" in that New York living
about nuclellr war, racism and room.lan,th.en known as janis Fink,
Vitmam.
sang an early; sttipped-down version
Cunnin11ham -11n accordion and of her popular "Society's Child."
guitu player who performed in the
"These were some of tl1e best
topical songs of the day," Seeger,
1940s with Woody Guthrie would then t111nscribe the lyrics and now 82, said !'tom his home in
melodies for "Broadside," a mimeo- Beacon, N.Y. "The big companies at
g111phed magazine the couple besan that time were not interested."
priniing in their aputment in 1962.
The collection includes 1,000 to
They sold them for 35 cents.
1,500 songs, as well as interviews
The recordings and nugazine · with. several artists, including Phil
chronicled a moment and .a move- Ochs, an Influential singer who
Jnellt.
.
committed suicide in 1976.
In 1997, nine yean after the cou"It's a tremendous collection. It's a
ple stopped their informal recordin11 snapshot of an ern," 11id JefF Place,
sessions a.nd a year after Friesen's archivist for the Smithsonian
death, Cunnin.gham gave up their Institute Folkways archive, one of
, collection of 236 3-inch reels to the the nation's largest collections of
Southern Folklife Collection at the folk music.
University of North Carolina in
The Broadside recordin!J$ are jmt

On the Net:

•••
••

a

..•

untU.Part of the unlwnity\

arehi~"""'&amp;r nmly 90,000 'ound

recordinas

than 3,000 vidto
end ta million Mt o£

PRRUVINQ HIITORY -

Steve Welaa, heed of Southern Folkllfe
Collection, listens to a 40.y,lr-old acet1te audio tapa In tha Wilson Ubllllr~ ··
arehtves et the University of North Carolina In Chapa! Hill, N.C. The National:
Acllde~ of Reeordtna Arts &amp; Sciences has Riven the UNC llbrar~ S22,849
to preserve and make vallable 238 recordlnp held In Ita Southem Folldlte
Collection, lncludln&amp; tracks b~ sln&amp;ert Bob O)llen, Pete Se aer, Tom Puton ,
and Janice lan. The rocordlnas will eventuall~ be made available to tha pub-

.

~.~

themselves In . ~re in those demos,"
Greene said from his office .in Sunm
Monica, Calif.
Jetf Carroll, a sound eugin&lt;!et,
handles much of th¢ hands-on work
!'tom a sound studio in Wilion
tlbmy on the UNC campus. He
plays each tape frq,nt to back, listettlns for glitches and splites. His
equipment allows him to remove

"1bday" and became acting execu•'J'ha Early Sh9Vt' has bean a mixed bag for CBS; It has ·
tive producer when jefF Zucker
tumad a profit after years of suffa~ng for CBS In the time
became NBC entertainment prelislot. But hasn't climbed above third place In the ratings
dent. But when NBC bypmed him
behind "Today" and ABC's "Good Momlng America'' and
for jona.than Wald In selectins
some at CBS are Impatient with Its progress.
Zucker's succesaor, Bus was out of 1\
job.
"The Early Show" has been a
mixed baa for CBS. It hu turned a he didn't have the energy to spend
"lt'a. very difficult to do a new
profit after yean or sufl'erlna for aeveral more yean with the 1how sho)'t' while you're !tlll on the air
CBS In the time slot. But It hun 't and the timing was right to leave.
with an old one," Friedman tal d.
climbed above thifd place in the 1'111· . CBS Is ffportedly conliderina
He wouldn't talk about any
lngs behind "1bday" and ABC's Meredith Vteira of ABC't "The pote~dal new anchor!, but warned
"Good Morning America" and View" as a potential succettor to aplntt making big changes.
"You have to do a show depensome at CBS are Impatient with its Gumbel, among othen, and debacprogrell.
"Ins whether to tlgnlflcantly alter the dent on the calent thac you have," he
Friedman, 55, 11id he concluded format.
llid. "But I think anyone who made

n

the pops and crneklts and ~1\jun the, ,
chaniJing spe~ds that mar th~ tapti. ,
Then he burns tht !Ofl!J1 Of\tu COs.,;
He also tries to mMeh up th~
song1 till eaeh tApe 10 llsu on thl!, ,
~~. which Ire onl!n Incomplete,·
inaccurate or eMfusi11g.
" It's really a tl't'asure hunt,"
Carroll lllid. "We haw dlseowred
quitt A feW 11'\llll doing that."
.•.
.,•

ter.

Ml:Beal'• collasun It her
. 6aicious Botton bw 6nn equally quirky. One man had a
fetith for d!nnt wauln; another wem by the ernbarmfillJ
1W1V of"The Biscuit." '
Kel1ey. one of Hollywoocfj
ltiOIC proli&amp; 1V wriler1'f0'"
duan, had a hand in creaDIIJ

•

m01t of the script~. The show
retlected his oftbeat, often dark
sense of humor and romance. It
won the bett comedy seriet
Emmy in 1999.
He had characters break out
·in courtroom song, had Ally
viiit with her dead boyfiiend
· and generally created a world
where fantasy. if' not happy
endinp, ruled.
McBeal'a great love was portrayed by Robert Downey Jr.,
whOte own real-life troubles
with dtup led co 'hll departure
from the •how.
Musical ttan wenralto a fix-

a tremendous, dra1tlc ch~np from :'
what morning t~levl!lon ha1 ~IWIIys .. •
been have all failed."
· ~·
Busaald It Will too early to discuss : .
changes In the 1how. He aald he\ :·~
"looking fol'WIIrd to being back In •
the fray."
•..
"Morning televllion II really the .
moat competitive part of the day and
potentially the molt pro!ltable," he •·
. taid. "!love newl. I love live televl- ,'
lion an.d I love tbat adrenaline ru1h •·
you get every mornina at 7 o'clock
when you go on the air. I've mined _
that and thl1 II a tremendoua opporNnlry to do what I love."

·1N ENTORY
REDUCTIO
SA
.

·Fox and Kelley decided
against another year as the
ratings fell. The show, which
once scored close to the top
20, recently finished 43rd in
. . the ratings.
· ·
turt of the show, with Elton
John, Barry White, Barry
ManUow, Mariah Carey and
· othen maldrig SUett appear·
ances,
Kelley, a former Boston
lawyer who Is married to
actreu Michelle · Pfeifl'er, told
the AP lalt fall that he knew
the character-driven "Ally
McBeal" wu a more perithable
commodity than hit other lepl
series, the more plot-oriented
"The Practice" on ABC.
• . "I alwaya thousht the teriet
would end after lix yean!' he
said then.

It's Tax Time Again...
u)1hlag we tell, we do.aot
Jaave to pay t.:xe11 oa...

Si\VE STOREWIDE

•

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•• • •

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,.

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CORNEA 3AD a OUVE

,
~-

chicken wllh honey butter
IVM ~l'tb 11MU

The 6nt ch'l'ter summa- pounds)
oil 15 to 20 minutes, turning
1 llblespoon black pepper- once, until juice is no longer
know tbout chicken types corns, crushed
pink when centers of thickest
and chicken raising, and buy1 tablespoon white pepper- pieces are cut.
Ing, storina ami cookin~ corns, crushed
Mix margarine and honey.
techniques. Each recipe is
1 tablespoon vegecable oU
Top chicken with honey- ·
shown in a color photo. and
~ cup margarine or butter, !llilfl!ltirte mixture.
many include "Betty's Tlp'1so softened .
Makes 4 servings.
yau don't W.Ute a minute 2 tablespoons honey
Nutrition information per _
looking it up somewhere else.
Coat both sides of chicken serving: 320 cal., t 9 g total fat
The ~p with. this recipe with peppereorns. Heat oil in (9 g saturated fat), 105 miJ ·
ttlls you how 'to crush the to-inch skillet owr medium- chol., 140 mg sodium, tO g ·
ptppercorns calll!d for. "It's high heat. Cook chicken in carbo., 27 g pro.
easy using a mortar and pesde, mlni-lbod processor, or
spice or coff~e grinder. Or,
Lit ue copy your old family photoa.
place them m a resealable
Speciale 2·517'1 tor $14.15. Aeg
plauic bag and pound with a
$18.15. SAVE $5.001 We tlto do
meat trtallet or rolling pin."
pueport photoa, ldenllllcellon
photoe and Kodak Proc11elng on
'l'Wo-Ptpper Chicken
photollnllhlng. ··
With Honey Butter
Watch
BaHerltt lnatallad while you
(Preparation 8 minutes,
wall.
cooking time 20 mlrtutes)
. 4 boneless, skinless chicken
breast halves (about t ~.

Half e doftn iqrediena rim all the buies you need to

combined with ~rw and
imqlnatlon turn inta. l main
dhb for four people In under
htlr lll hout.
No dream, It\ in the book
..... ''Bttty Croeker\ Best
Chltktn Cookbook'' (WII~
$2i.95), that Is. Of the book\
total ar about t 30 recipes, ~0
are group~ Into one chapter
devoted to "super eltpress"
dbhet.
Thl&amp; two•repper chicken
prepillratlon nb the time
·description, but it lsn\ actually In the spel!dy chapter; It Is
Included In the next one, on
stir-fries and skillet meals.
Other ch~pters lhture soup$,
salads, broiled and maned
chicken ~mon8 dishes cooks
can tnllke with this wrutile
bird.

a

decided tO ltoek lOme locill
The ple111nt affinity of ttore thelvel with the drett•
romance with food, and lng. It aold au well that the
love with cooking, Ia of'ten · joke "got out of control,"
explored. One example aeeordlng to Newm1n, and .
among many II the reeent on Arrll t, 1982, beet me
"Two
for
ToniJht'' the food butlneu that now
(B1rtleby, 2001, 1.26.95), A rackl up more th1n 1100
cookbook by Jocquu E. million In annual aaln
HaerlniJer, tubd ded "Pure
Charley 11 the benetlclary.
~omance from L' Auberge Since founding tht com"a•
.
r
Chez Prancolt."
Haerlngl!t h chef ar ny, Newman baa donat~J
L' Auberge Chez Funcoli, a more than 1125 million to
country Inn In Om! Pallt, thouaands o( clurltlet in the
Va., and It hott o£ the pub· Unlted;Stuel and (Wtraeu.
lie televltion aerle1 "'IWo
What began with ·ode
Cor Tonight.''
ulad drenlng now Includes
Moet of the 200 recipe• In . 11 t1avort o( dreselngs and
the book aerve two. They 1even llavort 1u1ta ••uce,
are grouped 11 tultable Cor at well •• popcorn, lemont'Omantlc ICIIIAriOI fiiiJlng ade, 11111 and ltelk laUCe,
from breakftu chrouah
The company nam• 11
"after . midnight," f'rom utually quoted In e&amp;ndem
acrambled eaat wlch caviar with a de1crlptlon of Itt
to rupberry aouffiea.
ethos: "Shamel•}• exploita·
The inajorlcy oC dlahea are don In pursuit of che com·
entrcea, r1flecdna · fairly mon 1ood."
tophilclcated contemporary
-#Itt and calling for. rattier
1\IXUrlout
lnaredl•ntt,
ijowever, the recl{lel ue
put co1echer wlch plenty o£
ilecall and Include headnor.• to help lnexpedtnccd
cookl, Some llnlthed dlahea
art thown In color pho«H.
COOKIOOii ,011 LOVIIII

or

The

...

ddl.M\1,
the wnther,
Mtltet l 0 •f'VInp,
wha~~t\ RIOwiq In aut
Nuttltlon 11\&amp;tmttion pet
~ ljlriq It an aut &amp;etvlna: Ig7 tal.,.ll4 I totU &amp;t
mlndt al\d fOod ttl Mltd\ It (8.5 a.rurtted-t&amp;t),
lllit
ahould taatt . tplrlttd and ehal., 1496.? rna todlum., lU
IJMn.
8 e•tbo., 3 1 dlttary &amp;btr, 5,8
Try l btlRhtly seasoned g pro.
spring awtet pet and tplna h
potage (In nwe has m old·
Sprlq Grten Salad With
fuhiantd sound, using the Supr Sna,p Pau, Orlllpl
French word tbr taup), and R.ed Onion
Anather option: Set a simply
For the vln~IJrettt:
calarM lllld on the table,
4 large on.nget
madl! with t~~gtr snap pels,
II tabl!!Spoom oll\11! oil
on.ngts and ttd Mlon.
2 tablespoon! balaatrtie
Sprlq Swttt PM and vlne~Jar
.
Spinach Potap
I tablespoon IJreel\ pepper
4 mb!Mpoons butter
!lUC~
.
2 small leeks, washed, For the s~lad:
trimmed
~nd
eoanely · 40 &amp;Ukar snap fiN!, trimmed
ehopptd
il eup1 milled spring !llo.d
-4 ~ups ehleken broth
greens
12-ounee b'K ltesh spln~eh,
t tibleipoon ehopped litth
chopped
t11rrason
l O.ounee ptektQe froten
~ eur thinly alleed red
_peu, thtWI!d
onion
\ IdAho potato, peeled and
1h m~k~ the vinAigrette:
cubed
Gra~ t ~ltpoon ornnge rind
. .J 2 cups lOI'Isely paelted l:ftsh Into llli'At bowl. AddY1 · cup
mint
.
. juiel! &amp;om onnl!'\. Add ollw
2 tablespoon! sreefi pepper oU, vini!IJ!Ir And grten pepper
aauee
t~uee; stir ttl combine. Set
1 eup heavy eretm
Alide,
Salt tu tlste
Using ll knife, cut peel and
Mint tprlgs fur garnlih
white pith rrom . remaining
Melt butter In lar11e oranges. Cut betweert mem·
saucepan owr luw heat, Add branes to releue segments; iet
leeks. Cook, eowred, 20 trtin- ~~Side. Heat Wllter (aillted) to
. utes or until leeka Are lightly bolllng In lat~Je saacepan. Add
colored And tender. Add sugar map peas; eook 3 ro 4
eh!eken broth, spirtaeh, peas minutes or until eritp tender.
and potaro; bring to t boll. Drain, ttllnafer p~lil to bowl of
. ~eduee heat. Simmer, ptrtlll~ lee Wllter to euul.
ly eowted, 20 minutes or . 'Ib make the &amp;iliAd: Arrilii~Je
until peu are tender. Ad~ peas In aunbunt pattern on ·
mint and (Jrten pepper aauee; 1llild plate!. Pl11ee orArtl!'\ aeg·
menu betwl!en peu. Mound
Iimmer S minute&amp;.
., In several bttehea, puree greens. Sprinkle salAd wllh
~oup in food p!Octllor fitted tArragon. 'top with red onion
with ateel blade. Proct~s until 1llcet; drlnle with dreaslng.
· amMth. ~eturn aoup 10
Makes 8 uladl.
Nutrition Information per
!auei!r.an; add heavy cre11m.
Cone nue (o cook over medl· aervlng: 122 cal.,6.9g rotallit
um heat until mixture Ia hett• (.9 11 aaturAted flit), 0 mg
ed through. Seaaon !o taate ehol., 47 mg wdlum, tU a
arbo., 3.8 dietary tiber, 2 g
with lilt.
Garnish with mint apriQI, If p!O. .

a

CBS names
another
'Today'
veteran
to
replace
top
executive
at
'The
Early
Show'
:
.
'
'
'
.
'
I'

Case closed for Fox's ~ly McBeal' lV series

Bright green tastes
suit this time of year
Wbl~vet

NCOrdinas. mole

61m.
But the unall KqUisition has got-ten attention.The Smith\Onian bar-.
10\Wd abaut • donn of the tapes lin
its album ''The Best of Bro~dside
· t 96'2-1988: Anthems of the
American Underground from the
Pages of Broadside ~apalne." The
album was nominated fOr two
Gmnmys in 200 t - fOr linn nom
llld historical album:
.· It's the historical aspect that makes
the recordings attractive to Steve
Weiss, head of tht UNC f'olldirt
collection. He says folk music: 'I
Southern roots metch back At ltllst
150 years..
Like their Southern foterunnen,
many of the 1960s songs \veren 't
written down, one ~eason that
Cunninghall) - now 93 - and
Friesen felt they should document
the life of the folk mo~ment.
The grant from the recaiding
academy will pay for conversion or
the capes to more dunble compact
disca and preservation-quality mas~
ter tapes.
Michael Greene, head of the academy; s11.id his group didn't wa11t. to
risk losins the 40-ye~~.r-old acetllte
tupes tha\ he called "living hiltory."
"Let\ Face it, mmy times, the
most candid comments, the mast
revealing situations that people put

•

l't M MMIW.1t0 ~

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--~_.------------------·~

LOS ANGELES (AP) "Ally McBeal," the EmmYwinninsTV series that set feminists epinning with itt depiction of i Oighty, man-hungry
attorney, is cndins itt tive-year
run on Fox, the network said..
Creator David E. Kelley
Jllide the announcement on
. the set Wednesday.
"There WCR tears. It ·was
emotional.''
said
Chris
Alexander, a spokesman for
20th Century Fox 'television.
The final episode of the series,
which had slipped in the ratinp, will air May 20. ·
· "It's sad to say goodbye to
something you love, even
when perhaps it it time," Kelley
11id in a statement.
Calitta Flockhan starred as
Ally, a smart but emotionally
needy lawyer who focwed as
1111U:h on her love lift as her
case load. With her biological
dock ticking. the was bedev. . ..,Ued ~ an image of a dancing
baby.
"Ally MeDea!" became a hot
·
water-cooler topic. In 1998, a
Time
cover
ditplayed
Flockhart opp01ite feminitt
icoru such as Susan B. Anthony
and asked in irt headline: "Is
. o-·
. .,.. .
Femi.num
.--...
The actrell took exception.
"I mean, this if a comedy
about an exagmred chamrer, and co compa her 10
Susan B. Anthony il outrageous;• she cold TV Guide it
the rime. She alto nid she'was
ofl'ended dw people conlUted
her with her neunxk charac-

21, ·2 002

1:112 •

folk music tapes to be

NEW YORK (AP) - The top
executive at "The Early Show" has
decided to follow Bryant Gumbel
out the door, and CBS is turnins to
another "Thday" show veteran to fill ·
"'lhe job.
Steve Friedman, who started "The
Early Show" with Gumbel and cohost jane Clayson in .November
1999, nid Tuesday he's quitting at
the end of May. Gumbel announced
two weeks ago he was leaving, too.
Michael Bass, who like Friedman
has apent time as the top executive at
NBC's "Todlly," was immediately
appointed hia replacement.
Baas, 40, spt~nt nearly a decade at

Page .C7

•

ChiOkln COOkbOOk" (AP)

R1mlndlng M1
-'.111111114i111 ... diiiiiiKII
-'t tlli llnok oldaJ
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Hill wife lutd Ia PIJ

..... - * 1 .... blorW
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••.• .....,.1M .......

Newmatt'• OWn eel•·
brattt 20 lhttnllttf y..,,
W!STPORT, Conn. (AP)
- Actor Paul Newman's
(ood compa11y, Newman'•
Own, which donac•• all
profltt at'l:er lllCII co educ•·
tiona! and · chaticable purpotct, It celt!butlna lu 2{)ch
annlvera•ry th!J yur.
Here'l che hlnory, In
brief: For yean, Nnvman
and hit &amp;lend authot A.l!.
Houltllll' liUed old wine
bonlfl with Newman'•
homemtd• ulJd dre.,lni.
(or Chrlttmal 11£11 for
&amp;lend! and nelabbort. ·
One yar, If a jot., they

MMM ,, YUMMY - TwoPtpper Chicken With
Honey Butter provea .that
half • dozen lnaredlente
oomblned with verve and
lma.inatlon can turn Into
• m11n dllh for 4 people
In under half en hour.
Rtolpa end Photo aretrom
""Betty Crooktt'l But

...,..,-•...,

Hotw ....... da I 1111•• .....

............. 11'1 ''' ltll.tlitl
.... ntu#r••~·
Niitlllr~AI

Crime

Yktlm 'I Rlthtl JHtk

Aprll21 • 27, 2002
Bringing*

•Honor to

. FlAIR
aDEIIGN

Vlctlmt

**

~ bOllfO&amp;t 17

ol-p•opltaad ••toN

.....,.., ........ u.......

..DtdfOVdedaJOil.

�..

Travel

- PageCI
Sunday, Aprll11, 2002 .
.

.

Steamboats ••• dinosaurs ... 1·1ove France!
·Mls$1sslppl River
steamboats to be chumlng .out of New Orleans again
-

.

NEW ORLEANS (AI') - The Delta Queen and Mississippi Queen steamboats, along ' with a headquarters and
300 jobs, soon will be coming back to New Orleans.
The . bankrupt American Classic Voyages has agreed to
sell the boats to a Chicago investment firm. Privately held
Waveland IJ1vestments LLC plans to take over the boats
·
officially in May.
The Mississippi Queen is scheduled to begin cruising
· again May 7 and the Delta Queen will take on passengers
on Aug. 26, says Jordan Allert, executive vice president and
general counsel for Florida-based American Classic Voyages.
The Mississippi Queen stopped ·operations in' October
and the Delta Queen followed in January after American
Classic Voyages, which was hit hard by a decline in tourism
fqllowing the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, went to bankruptcy court.
Allen says Waveland Investments plans to locate a headquaners for the two steamboats in New Orleans and will
create about 300 jobs. In the past, the boats had a headquarters in New Orleans, but_that operation was lost in late
2000 when American Classic Voyages moved to Florida.
Waveland is paying $3.75 million for the two vessels and
has agreed to commit up to $10 million in working capi-

J:al. .

-

.

.

.

the deal is still subject to an auction May 3 in Chicago.
Allen says the _ships could go to another company if a higher bidder emerges at the last minute.

.

Construction of S311
air and space museum
ahead of schedule
CHANTILLY, Va. (AP) -That's no ordinary ·airplane
hangar under construction near Washington Dulles
International Airport.
.
It's the Smithsonian's newest air and space museum, the
Udvar- Hazy Center, a massive 294,000-square foot
structure that will anchor a display of more than 200 airaaft and 135 different space vehicles . .

"""

Inside:

Jwbq Tm.es· Jeutiu:el

Classified ads, Pages D2-7
Business Notebook, D7
Around the nation, D8

PageD
SUnd1y. Afrl 21.2002

.

The flagship Air and Space Mu.seum on the National to raise private and public funds for the expansion and start
Mall, as large as it is, has room f9r only 62 aircraft.
construction in 2004 .
·
Construction of the $311 million center is ahead of
The hall was originally built for .one dinosaur skeletonschedule thanks to the mild winter, says Jack Dailey, that of Carnegie's namesake and the first dinosaur skeletob
director o\ the Smithsonian's Air and Space Museum.
discovered by Carnegie scientists, Diplodocus carnegii, alsl:)
The hangar's superstructure, which rises 10 stories high known 'as Dippy. But it now is home to 15 dinosaur skelewah a length of nearly three football fields, is about 62 tons, including aT. rex fossil.
percent complete and is now a clear la'n dmark to travelMuseum officials envision crea-ting a group of new
ers as they approach and take off from Dulles.. · ·
exhibits called "Dinosaurs in Their World," using the orga"This is going to be an architecturally stunning facili- nization's current collection of dinosau.r, mammal, fish,
ty," Dailey says. "All of those steel trusses are U!tsupport- _ invertebrate and plant fossils ,
ed. The design is _exquisite."
·
·
. ¥useum officials say the Udvar-Hazy Center, named
for the 'billionaire who donated $60 million to its construction, will allow the Smithsonian to display 80 percent of its collection that doesn't fit in the museum on
the Mali.
NEW YORK (AP) France, which hosts more
Among the artifacts slated for display- at the ChantiUy
site are the Space Shuttle Enterprise, the prototype shut..: tourists than ·any other country in the · world, hopes to
tle us~d in test flights in the late · '70s by NASA before stay on top this summer with a new J'aime Ia France- I
_
the launch of the Space Shuttle Columbia in 1981, and . Love France - campaign.
Initiatives include a new summer high-speed train
the Enola Gay, the plane that dropped the atomic bomb
between
London and Avignon, in southern · France,
on Hiroshima.
·
Although construction is ahead of schedule, the muse- increased Air France flights from U.S. gateways 'to Paris;
um still plans to open in December 2003, to coincide and additional offerings from Rail Europe, including new
with the tOOth anniverury of the first flight at Kitty cu~tomize d online packaging.
Hawk, N.C.
'
Early indications suggest t"urism, is picking up from the
doldrums it Sl!ffered after the terrorists attacks in September, according to representatives of both Rail Europe
and Air France, speaking here recently at the launch of
the new campaign.
· :
· Despite the unre.st and a faltering worldwide economy,
France had 76.5 million tourists last ye ar, 3 niillion of
them from the United States, according to figures from
the French government tourist otfice . lt was their 11th:
PITTSBURGH (AP) -The Carnegie Museum of Nat- straight year as the world's No. l toBrist destination.
•
ural History has never had enough room to show off its colAir France says it will have increased summer service!'
lection of 21 million objects, specimens and artifacts. Right between Paris and Boston, Los Angeles and Washington.
now, just 50,000 pieces- less than 1 percent- are on dis- · In June-, it plans to increase from five to seven the numplay.
ber of Concorde flights from New York.
But a $37 million facelift and expansion of its nearly 100Rail Europe's new customized E- Vacations. com allows
year-old dinosaur hall should give the museum the space to . travelers to fix their own itineraries, as well as add whatdisplay its now-hidden fossils in an appropriate environ. ever rail, plane, hotel or car reservations that suit their~
ment.
,
·
needs. Set .packages are also available.
The museum is the third-largest repository of dinosaur
To obtain brochures from the French Government
fossils .in the world, behind the American Museum of Nat- - Tourist Office, call 410-286-8310, write them at 444
ural History in NewYork City and the Smithsonian Institu- Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022, or check online ·
tion.
at' http:/ /www.franceguide.com.
.
The dinosaur hall Was built in 1907 by steel magnate
Rail Europe can be reached at (888) 382-7245, or at .
Andrew Carnegie. Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh plans http://www.raileurope.com.

..

THE WEEK 1N STOCKS
This cliart shows how local stocks of intel'f!st performed last week.
Each clny ~ closing figurts art provided by Advest of Gallipolis.

AEP

MON.

TUE.

WED.

THU.

FRI.

47.25

47.70

47.85

47.87

47.87

I Love France (J'aime Ia France)
campaign kicks off for 2002 .

,Camegie museum's .
dinosaur hall plans S37
million expansion

PROUDLY DISPLAYS - J.P. Roberts displays the recognition award he received from his soldiers of the 595th ·
Maintenance Company just before leaving his post In Seoul, South Korea. (MIIIIssa Russell)
·.

~

.

Kmart

.

.

April 21st - April 27th
( Assorted-Varieties

OLD TIME POP
.

6

¢

.

$1.19 ......

12 Oz.

Sold In 10ib bags

Bor.eless,• Skinless

CHICKEN

CHICKEN

LEG QUARTERS
¢

$

Lb•

.Lb•.

-a Piece

5 Lb. Bag

ROUNDY'S SUGAR FRIED CHICKEN

$

¢
. Limit

INVESTING

•

1\vo

VidaIa

Markets pay -£?{, too

ONIONS

BY Owl YWOVICH

NEWSAif'EII ~Sf ASSOCIATION

Evecy so often I'm asked
whether there are mutual
fWJds that come with guarantees. My first tespotlSe is that
.there are no performance
~- when it comes to
mvesting.
My second
. RISpQilSe: There are very few
fWJds that offer mum--of-ap: ital guarantees 011 their funds.
To get those guamntees. how~
ever, you've got to foUow the
_rules. And pay extr.L

¢
Lb.

Whenever die marlcd gelS

zerocoupon bonds maturing at
aboullhe same lime the guarantee ended.
Today, it's equity funds that
are coming to lll8l'ket with
guarantees. Pioneer has one in
the works. Saloman Smith
Barney . already has introduced the Smith Jlamey

- potlfolios typically held

~tal Pn:servati011 Fund and
the lNG Funds, a Classic
Principal Preservati011 Fund
series lbat has been around for
a few years. What's -behind
lhese gu&amp;f311te00 funds is.

•W'It¢i'DUDloa
•l'a1IJUclaa .

Mlddlepor&amp;f OB

• Vldeo "Reatal

'

•

Owntdmul
•

Sinet 1910"
J

.

· - ·

n•••tte.?

• Caterlac •• , •••

lnhrlllre
•'

ft

• •edenJEqweai

(740) 99t-J471

Carpenter bees can be controlled
Are you being hassled by

attacking bees that bore
round holes into unftoished
wood around the home?
You may have carpenter
bees. Catpenter bees look
like aggressive bumble
bees. Fortunately, lhe
female c&amp;rpenter _bee is
docile and seldom stings as
irs time is occupied by

insurance.
In all cases, lhe minimum
n~th.oft"g pollen and excainvestors have to do to qualify
~;;gu~w galleries to lay
to get their money-back: guareggs. _
antee is hold 011 to their fund .
The stinger-less inale
shares for a specified amount • carpenter bee is the aggresof time - typicall~ five years
sive bee, watcl!ing over tbe
- and pay an extra annual
nesting area to keep intrudexpense
to
cover
lhe
cost
of
. lhe principal amount that they
ers away. Irs awessive
the insullUlCC. Usually, all - behavior is more s6ow than
invesr.
·
true danger to us intruders.
In lhe pa5t, Unit Investment income and divjdmck have to
·Trusts guaranteed a rerum of be reinvested back into tbe
-~ is only one t~·
tioo of carpenter
a
principal. provided that the fund and DO money taJr.en out
year, the adUirs we see now,
lllllDI!)' ilay invesled for a spe-- wilhin .!be ~-back par- .
antee
tune
periOd.
.
.
overwinleml
in lhe galcific amount of lime. To make
leries that wen: built last
lhe gtWliDtte possible. lhose
Year. 1bese· adults will be
ow· 11 and .laying a new
of eggs i.nto new
chambers
~~Mt••• 't
The eggs will emerge
'
into larvae · and eat lbeir
GM • • al.t fl•:tll 2J.t2. eat. 2S
way through the pollen
AI.'$ left by their molbm.

skiiDsh, so do investors. But
wanting to bave one foot in
lhe matket while b!eping the
ocher out isn't unusual. So,
. througbout the ages, fund
families bave come widl vari·
ous ways to get investon into
lhe marlcd ~ guanmttJeing

407 Pearlltreet

tO the
community,''
Roberts said, "There really
GALLIPOLIS - J.P. is no place like home.
Roberts joined the U.S.
"I went oui and saw a litAnny just a few years after tie bit of the world and
graduatin$ from Kyg~r · decided it wasn't so. bad
Creek Htih School m here," he joked.
1992. After"being stationed _Roberts said that no
in Seoul, Korea, · he was
&amp;
vehicle ·IS too.b'12 or sma11
ed
b
k
th
U
S
mov
ac to e _ · ·.or for his business. r.lf it's got
a stay at Fort Bliss in El glass in it, and it has
Paso, Texal, t~ back to
Seoul to fmish ~career.
wheels, that's what we
While in the military, specialize in," he said.
Roberts' achieved the mnk
"If you make the trip,
of se~eant and worked in we'll make it worth your .
the 95th · Maintenanc.e while," he added. · "We
Company, doing anything want to make sure you're
from regular vehicle ser- happy when you go out the
vice to replacing transmis- ~r. and i~ ~e don't have
-sions, en$ines, and wind- tl m stoc_k, 11 s no ~~oblem
shields 10 large semi- . to order II for yo~.
_
trucks, Humvees, and
Store hours w,tll be 9
civilian vehicles. a.m. ~o 5 p.m. da1ly, or by
. The 28-year-old is now appomtment, and c~osed
takin~ that knowled~e and on S~ndays. ~ated ~~!he - expenence and startmg his Paul s Towmg_ facthty,
own auto ~lass business truck accessones, auto .
Paul's Discount Aut~ repairs, tires, rims, b_igh
Glass.
performance accessones,
Roberts Will be working and Eu~o s!rle "Fast and
·with his father Paul the Funous style accesRoberts who own~ Paul's sories are also available.
and . Truck
"We w~t to !'e a one
Towing'
Accessories, 245 Maddy stop shop, he sa1d_.
.
INSPECTION- J,P. Roberts ln$pectS the windshield of Cemetery Road, just -off · Roberts and h1s w1fe
a vehicle at his new auto glass shop, located on Maddy Georges Creek Road in Cynthia, have a 6-year-old
son, Seann, and a 2-1/2Cemetery Road, just off of Georges Creek Road In Addison Township.
. "I wanted to come back year-old daughter, Kaitlyn.
Addison Township. (MIIIIssla Russell)
BY MIWUIA RIIIIELL

MRUSSEWilMVOAILVTIIIBUNE.cQM

.
'
.
Here at Vaughan's once every-month we are lowering the cost of · .
·advertising to raise the savings to you - the customer.·
Come in and SAVE BIG on these iteaa1s and other
unadvertised quality products throughout the_store.
.

•

izes Army experience

Roberts

,.

•

Is

...

Hal
Kneen

into
adufts after a dorJnanl pupa
stage in late July or early
August. These adults
remain alive sheltered in
their wood galleries until
next spring when they will
ll'lllk and begin the life
cycle anew.
Control measures stan
with prevention. Keep
exposed bare wood surfaces weD painted. Wood
Stains will not prevent
damagt::. (kmical cOntrol
The metarnorphasize

~}f'sthe~

seal the hole, allow the bee
to trilck through the dust to
kill it and its offspring Jarv~. Liquid sprays of similar material may be sprayed
intO lhe hole for those pileries too high for du~1mg.
You may have to spray
twice to get effective control.. After the bees bave
been lu11ed you can plug
the hole$ WJdl putty and
repaint the wood. For further information, call our
office at 992--&lt;1696 and a~k
for fact sheet 12074,
"Carpenter Bees."

•••

Need some landscape
and gardening questiODII
answmd? Meigs Coonty

• Asparagus sprouts are
shooting out of the ground,
so keep the sprouts cut on a
daily basis. Capture and
destroy any asparagus beetles that overwintered as
they are laying new eggs
for this year's hatching. ,.
• Keep rhubaro from set·
ling seed to ~imize this
year's harvest of rhubatb
stalks and to increase the
development of next year's
crop.· Use aged manure
oompost as a mulch to help
retain moi~1ure and keep
weaJs 18-24 inches away
from the rhubatb crown.
• After your spring bulbs
flower, fertilize daffodil
and
plants with a
high
ho$phorus and

J'ps

Master Gardeners will be
answcriag
homeowner
questions at their booth at
the Anona! Racine flower pocash enilizers ljke 6-24Festival on April Tl from 24 or bonemeal at one
feet.
JO
they

'"'""'' e &amp;ees i
galleries. Use a residual Wc:dnl:sd;ay monungJ
dust like catbaryl (Sevin), 9 am. to Noon and d1ey
boric acid, bendiocatb or will ~your inquiries,
, •••
. pyn:thrin and place it into
Gantming TipS For The
the gallery ~ Don't

'

Week:

(Hal Kneen
Meigs
County's £.uensiim agent
for agriculture and flO/Ural

resources,

Ohio

State

. University.) •

�'

Qtribune -Sentinel-

CLASS I

IE D

Includes free Yard Sale Slgnl
Up 'To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 1 S Words 20~ Per Word
Ads .Must Be Prep1ld

Monday thru Friday
8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.

\'\'\tll '\ 1 I \II '\ I ..,

AMI Ettltt General

PubUo Slit and Auction
MII.L!A UTATI AUCTION

I Adjo~hg Ho1110!1 E1&lt;h oell! lo H'lleoll!td """S!O,OOOI
.
Ws ' Slili\p Colleetlolll ' MllqU!!
f..s agot;ts lor the
A.tllltlfti!,
£11!tutor, l.c.P.t.
Em~ 0.
Sltawser~

Trustee. we

lll!t Thursday,

M&gt;!y

P~·

Account M;Hlil~Jer
Delivery Spec.
We're growing •g•lnl
. Are you re•dy to at.rt
your new

c.,..,.,

Exptrltnot htlpftll .. ,
· Winning ettltud•
.end tntr;y • muatl

FAIR HOUSING SEMINARS
Tho Oallla County Comrnlulonen will be
hold ina a filr hou•ln11tralnlna eomlnar In the
Oallla County CourthouH 2nd floor meetlna
room located 11 18 Locu11 Street, Ollllpolla,
Ohio. Theuulon will be AI rollowa:
May I!, 2002 • 9:00 AM to 12:00 11M •
ror looil rultora/brokon • A th roo hour
certified coune on Fair Houalna ·
oncompaulna Fair Houaln11 hl1tory, law,
reaulatlona, the Ohio Rovltod Code for
landlord•/Tenanta and Predatory Lendlna.
'rho· preuntatlon will utilize overhud
preuntallon, vlaual aids and Informational
handout!.
Thl1 aomln1r Ia rree or ohara•· PltaN
rtlllllr with the Oallla County
Commlulonera Offict on or befort May I,
2002.
.

Benefit. lnclyde
• Heelth lnaurenoe "401·K

::.r~:~::."rt~~~~a~~e:

• l!lonu••• " L.lfelneurence
• Orowtl'l I Adv•noement
* CC)IIege Aeeletanoe

•

STAFF RADIOLOGY
TECHNOLOGIST
O'DLENESS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ·
hat a tull·llme openlna with rotallna thlfll. .
Mutt hav• valid A.R.R.T. Mutt have lllatt
of Ohio llunH. Wt o«tr ' comptdllv•

QUALIFICATIONS: .

.

talarylnfOfiTIIItlon,
and benefit pll111
paekap.
For 111011
I:OIIIICI:

Baehelort Dearu In publle tdmlnlttrtllon, O'BLINISI MIMORJAL HOSPITAL
b111lne11 ldmlnltlratlon, menaaement, or
relevant hiiiTIIIn Hfl·lut field It detlrablt.
A minimum of five yeart expertise and
27
experience In non•pront relatlont It
ettential.
·
The Aaency offers a eompedtlve 11lary,
Htlp Wlnttcl
frlnae benefl11.and it an equal opponunlty
employer.
Vctcrant Memorial Skf!lc4
F~ll Job description may be obtained
from Oencle Plana, Phone 446·7000, or
write Oallla County Senior Resource ·
~nter, P.O. Box 441 , Oalllpollt, Ohio
tered
4'631.
•
Applleatlon• mull be pottiTIIIrkell no
Skllkd Nunlna C.n"r • Full time/
later than May 3, 2002, and .mull be
Pan dt!N vll'loul tl!l(ll.
addrmed Ul:
Pmonnel Commluce
· Oalllu County Cou1111il on AJlna
1/flllti'IIJ#, p/IQII CtmltJCI Hu/IIIJII
P.O. 8~441 ·
.
R#~urr" m (7«1) P92·2104, Mt»&gt;li4y
Oallipolit, Ohio 4~31-0441
throu h Frll/4 9AM • 4PM
.

!:.:::'6= =~~

-

~

ADCIIV

1-100·121·5101 .
lint It ~Jo.JJ~

on

;::==========::,
.
Spri'ng into a
0.·ew career! 1.
Htlp Wlnttd

·.

~·

Our business is ~ .
Blooming!
W• hav• new cU•nlf, Ilona wllh 1110111
callt to makt ror ••ttbUahed Glltnlf,
which mean• We IIMd youl

N'FC:J!fl!:'"
e
Nurse

..

We thAnk you .a.

•

•

1·800·821·8131

OLD GLORY

AUCTION HOUSE
-00 tach Strttt, Mtddltport, Ohio

lvtr¥ Iburtdey I I PM
·

Ml~ VOihtl • AuctiOnttr

SPECIAL SALE
Monday, April 22

Licensed Practical Nurse

, .....,.,. ,

ColiletU.~

·~~1111
,,.,

11
I

if

I '

j

I

L
,f J

1 1

d

I ••II

1111

llr1

lr1ollt

'1111 •• •ill '

1·877·4634247, ext.184t:

Wt wiN be urllng our ntW lttm Ill•
·•g~ln. Min)' 1ttmt to el'looM from:
dollt, toolt, toye, and mud! morel
Come Olil and tnjoy the tilt, .. wtll
u good hOn1t oooktd IQUpt and pitt
frafl1 our oonctttlon ••
Sptelll AuctlonMr, Sill 8cott

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

"""' • ......,, ii,CAIAOIIIIOOOf &amp;11011.- ....

�lt.IODI ·

-•"' 'IMCTOIII John Oee1nt
325. BMitf U8ld. «'f1oPIUic ltiOt'Jef
dick. 1Bhal llllll•'*· $4900. Mewing

to city. Ctll 000.0000 alter 6p.m. or
e-mailjlmOwlllmlssmV!feere.com.

i .-".., ..,,. .,"' . I'
.,.,.

\

'

..

~.

'

ClllakMit

In classified advertising I

•rs
..
litH

New.apaper classified advertising Is
1 powerful resource lor connecting

buyera and aellers.

clllllllll

Whether your greener pastures are
a hOuae on 1o
acrea, classllled will equip you for
the change .

.

,.unbap Grimel·
~

.

. ''

1 job In the city or

...
itntintl

(

.

$33,660

---....

•

•

IIN1II

RHI Ettltl Gtntral

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

. ....... Mt\M. .

Real Estate General

• Wia ..... _ . .

,.....,.....,._

........ - - * '

. .................
~

,.t. ....M'tiM.._..

·.........
--_""=_
::..~

REALES
Su.u 1941

~HOO '1HO '}',!•l

MIDDLEPORT • Thlt home hat a large
kitchen, a dining room, living room, and a bath
downatalra. The enclcaed back porch can be
uatd 11 a
room, It hu an ••tra
you have 4 bedrooma.
porch out lror\1.
an

WE HAVE

SOLD SOLD SOLD

t

THIS SPRING, AND IT HAS JUST
BEGUNI PLUS WITH THE
ANNOUNCEMENT OF THE
CHESHIRE BUV·OUT, WE ARE
EXPECTING A LOT OF MARKET
ACTIVITY. IF YOU HAVE BEEN
THINKING OF SELLING, CALL US
NOW. THIS MAY BE A GREAT
OPPORTUNITY FOR VOUI

,aniiiiiO llttltlgll A Yltw
that you Clln, quilt 111t
enough ot and a loolt!M
thtl 11 both privati and

oonvtnlent. Thla a ·~
homt It 1 mutt IH. 4 BAt,

Ill 01n110UIIy liltd, 3

bllhl, Lll, tormll Dll, ,II,
. til-in
!IIOhln. Oui!IIIY

oonatruotlon Oltoughout &amp;
Iota ol cullom hlalurtt.
Within 1 milt oltht llotpltal.
Call
Davt tor mort

ROAD· Approx . 3.0?
land with water and electric
abull two roada . poulblllty
Iota, Great for
mobile

IOIH

JUST OFF ROCK8PRINQ8 ROAD • A now
home that 11 jutt btlng flnlthtd now. Just off
the • lane 11 thll nice home lilting on a hill with
3 btdroomo and 2 batha. Thora are 3.43 acres
with loll of room for children. Hao an opan tool
bttween the living room. dining room . and
kltch41n with o•tra wide doort. Alao hll taller
oelltnga for an extra dlmonalon. A muot I H .
You will fall in tova . REDUCED TO 17?,000

-a

InfOrmation. t103

bodRICimt I
b l - . 30 I
oiO blm, _ , mloa . ..,... I
pond, Lcl4l ol pelturt land. CIH far
~ lilting. OWner hU

drtllloltty
I18Uod.oo. -111111

pilOt

.

to

WWW. WXSEMANAEAI.ESTATE.COM

I VIR . DREAM OF OWNING YOUR OWN
IU81NI81? • Well, here Ia your Chanco. A
growing pizza butlneaa II ready for you to ltop
right up and take over. Comu with tne cvena,
mlxtr, tllctrt, HVtrll refrigerator~ and freezer.
Too many ltomt to mention. Comet with all
IIXIUrtt. equipment and cuotomera, plus ttock.
Ownert will help ttaln If needtd.

.WOOD liEfiLTf,
INC.
·
446-1066

3211lCtl!iT STUI!T

erow.

IIOUII.t MoM'rt ltiO IIIII to 4tl0 pm;IIL ltiO a.m. II 11
· Allin C. WNd, lfolrll. 441 1111
.
Kilt Mottln, lroltlt. 44UI71
oltllllllt ..,., • Ul-1f4)
, . . . " - 740 4411011

Vtry

dtclOtlt~.

Corner lot,
Vlotorlan alyle, original woodwork,
OOCI oondlfloni u~ to 3 btdroome,
'lo balhtl M.W. lloort ' oarpel,
beautiful o~ar area. Mama looka
Qood
lntlelt ' out . Oaraat,
'
MIDDI.II'ORT•

~rohlt man~ ltalurta.

Nt,OOO

·

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 4!631

ln/t'. . . .

Clpl Cod WKh
to

Ctlllor mora detllla. 110,000

AU EXtrTIO
PICT\Jlll AND

OUR

·AIKINQ

J liii/•II(Jilll,fJf•lll',f i 'Jr',/',lfJIIJ!~ r .1f• f i1Jf l1f•ll

fJ I~ ',!fJ i'ISilf J it/\

Ill/ 1 tJ/11\1/11/II'f' l ', lfJ r 11/tlf(fltHlk/1 f '

MEIGS COUNTY

Cheryl Lemley

tpprox. I acral

1 btiUtn"l
horN
by
Thltt
11•
2 bathe, tnd II lollrl riltclrlc .
Comet
• 2 Cllt gt111ge, ........ grOllnd pool ,
and ...., 1 CIOlfi In tile wOOdl. A great plac.
forkldl.
tea,IOO

"'*"" R-.

...

www.wisemonrealestote .c om

~a

a

David WIHmtn, QAI, CAl lroktr 44HIII
Carolyn Waeoh, QAI 441·1007 lonny Qarnee 4414707
Jennifer llpple 24M020
Aobtf1 Bruce 44Ht21 Alii WIHtnln

•

J

(740) 446·3644
' J

V~LMII

NIWUIIINO

1.1 ACIIO OH lA' 011110
........
ft11t

J'OR MOitl! INIIORMA110N PU!ASB CALL. S-MAIL US OR
STOP BY tHB OFFICB MON·FRL UO A.M. 1'0 HO P.M.

.

. I

tn rr nenc.

llalM

""*'

J\'f'll

DOmE TURNER,Iroker........tt2-lllt2
JERRY IPRAOUNO................ 14..2131
CHARMELE SPAAOUNQ ..............2131
lETTY JO COLLIN8 .................14..2048
BRENDA JIFFERI ...................tt2·305e

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

•

�Sunday, Apr1121. loot

Pomeroy • Mlddlitport • O.lllpolla, Ohio • Paint P11111nt, WV

the

ftfmtf 6enttitl

•

••

pro-lld11alot ofEXikdll
Cartoons

Coupona
TVnmes
&amp;Morel _

·Had it up to here
with your old iob?

UAL btu a hit
•

•

Subscribe Todayl
992-21 55 or 446-~~~~.3~~~~

Find a new career in the..
Employm~nt section of the
'

•

~unbap t!f;lme~ ~entlnel

.PUBLIC
NOTICE
Public NotiOI

Classifieds!
.·

I

'

Publlo NotiOI

OhiO
Townthlp
'fi'UitMI hiVI called
I lriOIII mtttlng
Aprl 22, 2002, 11 the
TownhOUII _II 7:00
p.m.

Aprll11, 21, 22, 2002
Public Notice
NOT1CI! TO IIDDI!IIS
PURCHASE 01'
COMPUTI!R
HAIIDWAIII!/SOI'TW
AAI! AND SERVICES
MI!IOS COUNTY
COURT
letled bide will bl
~lived !IV the Melge
County llo1 rd of
Commleelonere, on
blhlll of the Melge
County Court; In tf\1
offlon of the
CommleeiOntrl
loattld In the Melgl
County Courthouee,
Street,
Second
Pomeroy, OhiO 4S71t
untll1:00,.m. on the
1et diV o Mey 2002,
lnd 11 thet time
opentd by lht Cltrk
of llld 1o1rd 1nd
IIIII IIOUd for the
purohan
of
hardwlrl, ao1tw1r1
end en ongoing
malntenenct aomreot
for 1 _oomputer
•v•t•m dlllgned lo
met! the ""de of the
Court In kHplng en
ongoing automated
oom"puter court
dooktt for orlmlntl,
trlfflo, and aiYII OIH
man~gemam,
·
lpeolfloellona for
thlt 1y11tm and the
nttdl ·of the Court
mey bl obtaln•d ~Y
oontaotlng Kelly
Mllem, Clerk of the
County Court, Third
"aor, Melga county
Court
Houae,
Pomeroy, OhiO 41711,
tllher In pereon, by

-··
u-- --•

·

a·

oiOHNNIIIIUIIILL.........................N7~

Gllllpallt, Ohio nJ
·
41!e31
WI

14047 LOOIIING '011 TMI
GIIIATIIT UX:ATION fat a now
nome. 3 101t, 1 ac. - r!VI. Fladv
SuMyed

'

e~ll4-- Lte ~eatt,

M4 Second Ave., GallipoUe, Ohio 45631-0i
""

:':.·..::..~r,.l1~

with newer: wlndowo, tiding,
lniUIIUOn, furnace, rck)f, a•ntr•l
'"r oon11111on1ng llld 01rpe1.

......

'

740-446-0008 740-441-1111

ev8Dinaodzoomnet.net
fo,.,.rl)' Bln••••rn Booby "Sem.. S""1hern OINo Foro .. , .t Q~~t~,.or

• HOUSTON . (AP) ·l

DAVID MDI" ..................................441-MII
OUA WEe fiAGIII:www.vtamlthrulftlale.oom

....,..1:-e.....oom

-3-..

..o44 ONI 0' A KIHD Flrll llnll
afltred. LDcaiOid 8R T lklutlt. All
fCI&lt;jlpptd kit,

fOrn\lll LA,2-.
10ith
don

,....

NO,oGOYLI
114041 IIOMI IH TMI COUNTII'f
WITH LOTI 01' LAHD. VI('(

nome ..., Forme~ LAm fli.
1111, rfl,, !IUIIt In ....,.,, il lull

~

btlho. full dry buemant. l.llvely

Ollplllhr~.

3 0 - rrVI ol
WOddrld, 101M dllrtd,
An -nome 1 bini on-"'·

..,., IIOMt

r-.

Oook on tnt
Comlv &amp; oozy
wall homo one! you ...
~·

lrnrnedlate

pollllllon.

..-111

IOHUI TO IUYIIII 1816 8kyllne
,_nome. t4' x 110'
tnt - · 2 - · 1 bllth, 111·111
lilt.,
lovtly LA, · - · dfY«, range
&amp; ref,
Everything II 1,_.,11, 1
M rrVI o1 well londwltped groundo,
2 autbulldlnQo, Moot on thlt 111111

CIIIYLI44HIOt.
14017 I IIIII. Ma MI. Clrmtl
1141.. 3 INidooarn, 2 bllho, CEDAR

CONTEMPORARY HOME 0111

- 10
- .....
· OWrw
tnJIIoul"
to
....
""' . .II,.,.
lind ln.•
hllny. IIL8

.

, _ CH•1•11 AIIIA old llrlp

m1ne lind. eeoo "" ... 1N
Groot lor hundng or
rtotlltlon. AIIO 14 rrVI
lA 7.
·
................... 1 Aolrllll
., PI
~ V...., lid. IIT,IJCIOo

...,•...,on
YLI

,

mto 'AIIILOUI IAIICUIH

1111011 a W!yl . • IR. 2 lA nome on
ptyrtr 1 aero lot 'emily room,
h1IIO 1'00111 w/flt..,._, 011, anc1

-·-2. . . . . .
iltgo uflllfy - I n N

ono-

full

blnmM. ... ~ 2 c. fi'IGI

-

t. -

lor ...... Priotd
l o r . - -· ....

_ , MIIIIOfll ~-I
nloo- """"'· 2 •• l ...... lg.
Ul., Kllohoft, Wily_,., 0.0. or
ln:l •. , ....... ,.....
t

1

. . . ..,

nloo - ....., nl ...... ·
llll ...,
M.GOO.
to
lftlliCe . . ..
01
Otlflllo!IIOft · ,.,... tOol and
Ml'ldOWf, - tiding. c.ll WaMio

,.,.,.,*.,.

,_I'
LA7
CN1N1
.11.110\1

f1UOO

LOT~ on Clorlr

lid. 2 -

1 N:re- rllll.

IALI.
-

-lllrm

to -

opeolllon

-

....,._lkiffcllng
oodl. Conlnuaut
1111.

Pr1ot

-

.... -,.. c.tl N7-o323 at HI 1101.
COMMCIAL 1.01' ON Ill 7
HOfiTH. .n o1 an -· Cllylon
110m1.
' 2 bllho, 2 DOlt ..... and
tt. . . ~. Call for -

'

· Joe A. Moor.....Broker 441-1818
Sarah L. l!!vana·Moore, Broker 441-1818
Patricia Haya- 448·3884 Care Caaey-245-8430
Cynthia Siciliano- 388-1841
Candace
448·741

"'*'

:7li111P"'

a

,.,.,...... \iLl
114043 LOVII.Y II WHAT YOU
WILL lAY -lllclng e -~~ tt1lt
hOml ... ,... bltn •• , ·~Ill~

- ·...._
a - -·
2 bltll, 1ovt1y
""""
In ................
_,. PMft fOf' tnotf _., M Jt .ICII
lMd . . IIi t l*f II aot ol 1111
-

· Vauwl_10_1111

.,., OIIIWIIMior I.,.....

, _ OWIIIII f'IIW«iltlll IN

1111 ern """' Fllllllt hOml w/4
IAt, 2 bdll, rcl. LA, OR, pon:tw,
P1f111i1 t
Priotd rtgj'l1 for e

••II.

~ - · IN.OOO VLB, MAKE

OfFEAf 0..... wl lind _ 1 0 , _,

14011 IUYAH ~ eo Mil rrVI
- 01 on,.,.,
7"""2 Act.
2 bllnl
1n
,_,
_,.,
..,.
lMd ~.

...,., JA

a.... fM1IIng"' 11'1+

The move came after the Labor ing Friday as a large credit ratings
Department, which is investigating service lowered Its assessment of the
how Enron officials handled the creditworthiness of the telecommuplans, ·suggested that the officials nications company.
deceived the government by reachFitch Ratings downgraded the

CONDO

Serenity House

N. Myrtle Beach
Now taking reservations
for

May-Se'p~.

Across from Beach

,2071 An t11g1nt brlok

Friends are Invited to join

oo1an111 on I• urH. Cuatom
country homo with 3 BR 2 1/2

ELMER FOWLER

SA, Smith cuatom c1blnett, two

oar attached garage, 30 x 40
dtllehed molal building, hot tub
and abo•• ground pool.

Call446-8657

and his family to

I

celebrate his

COURTS IDE

90th birthday on

BAR&amp; GRILL

April 27th.

CUSTOMER

From 2:00 pm to 4:00 pm

APPRECIATION DAY

at Providence Missionary

WED., APRIL 24th
Live Music
No Cover Charge

Baptist Church

In IOWn and CIOII to
tohoolt, ptrk rron1, grootry
end much morel Thla 2 o1ory
homo hat tnt poulblllty of halllna
3 rentelo will! II. Llvo In ono ond
le11ht rant from tho olhero pey

on Teens Run Rd.
Cake and punch will be
served.
EAST END FLEA MARKET
Set up &amp; Sell your Items Fast.
Loll of cuatomeral
Beside Wai·Mart &amp; Arby'l
on Eutem Ave.
.S.SIVJ!;1 F;

Ullllty """" II l!llrl tor!'!: 2 IJtr
.In lhl .... wllh 311 lngrDund
pool. Many lnolllr- - . . llncl

DEMOCRATIC

· llplinklll ll'lllm In lhl
rw.
2
oar "'""" and o
OI(Jl0f1. 2 IIOry bini building.

FUNDRAISER

_ , . , and -IYf. A
nome
!011'1 • proud to own. v~
llmllh c..&amp; eeoe
.

Aprll22nd

taM7 Llrot hOml In toWn, new

Gallla Co. Gun Club

tOol 1"'· 4 lA, 2.5 lA, 2 Olf
glltgt,
~
lilting.
,.,.

6:00p.m.
at6:30

_,..,oct

w-·-·--·
~

from ~

p.m.

HOMI

&amp;

'*'

Let us design a
plan to fit your
budget.
Ronnie Lynch

MOLLOHAN CARPET .
SPECIALS
$6.96 Berber
$12.96 Berber On Sale
For$8.95
74().388·0173

Don't Miss This
Truck Load Sale

ANTIQUE TAG
SALE

Dwight Icenhower as...

322 Second Avenue

Speakers, Entertainment.

. Gallipolis, Ohio

$20 per person
:

at the dOor.

446-8235

I

12 and under free.

1·800·447-6235

Celebration

Auction

Drink Specials
Party Favors

441-9371

Victorian Furniture
Aprl128 &amp;27
8amto4pm
8 East Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
(In Monkey Run)
Rain or Shine

-

· 2 112 bllhl, 3 -.....
•

In lhl coumry, 101 10
nl lllltnllln .,.
Ir

•
'

COURTSIDE BAR &amp; GRILL
GREAT LUJ';!CH SPECIALS
Tuesday· 2 ·l or 1 hamburgers
Thursday· Create your own pasta
Friday·
All you can aat deep
tried perch
We deliver to downtown area
($10.00 minimum)
441 ·9371
42 Court Street

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Do you have a local
agent to help you?
Call for

a quote .

Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

AMVETS POST 23

446-2342 or 992-2156

-hal ......~. roc.

-

Watch Good Morning
America's Eye Opening Health
Special Mon. Aprll22.
Especially II you're dlabetlo,
oveiWelght or jYst sick &amp; tired ol
being sick &amp; tired. For more
Information call 448-0388 or visit
USE HERBS INSTEAD
at 2nd &amp; Court448·1818

Cinco De Mayo ,

GALl.-... - - 3
IR,n111Nit11-..-.
- - In IQidltll, ..,., lllgt lot

CIPIIonl.
lot ..
-·
,...
-- --)IIIII
lor..-

BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
74().446· 7283
1·800·468·8844

Court Street Gallipolis

For More Info ...

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114041 HAP,.HIII • WHIIII .
YOU I'INo It'. Thlo otwmi11g -

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Billed to Insurance
Little If no cost
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We do all paperwork

Sat. May 4th

INCOIII

Alto 11 • 311' . . . . . . I IIIII
building 1/Z ... olllnd. Good .....
101. Plfottl10 .... VLS
fliTS 1111
PICTUIII
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HEALTH
INSURANCE

pond ' ~. Llrgo bini
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INVIITIIIH'I' 128. 130 .......
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MEDICATION

COURTSIDE
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- · , _ dining. rm a LM .
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14011

Dental Hygienist Wanted:
Olllce Ia aeeklog a
professional who Ia Interested
In a lull time poaiiiQn at a
r•pldly growing dental
practice. Individual must be
· dependable and have
experience In soft ,tissue
management. II you are
Interested In contributing to
the total care of patients and
receiving excellent
compensation please call
(740).441-0123 .
or send resume to:
230 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis, OH 46631.

SOUL CAGE
Drink Specials
1/2 price appetizers
New menu Items
Court Street, Gallipolis ·
441.:ml .

The Lynch Agency

Dinner Served

I'LUII
ACII..
HOMIIUILDIIIGI ~ fUhfOII dtlml
111111 111 .,.. 4
IR, a llo'Y 110m1, 2 ,.....
I~ tub). Lmly tqiiiiJped
Wemlly rm -

"""'*"

GOOIIes freezes
Comcast customen

'

.

dlohw-.

lhl

1he
on \Vall Sbeet

The Dow Jones industrilll a\l\'!11gt
endtd a lightly tr~d~ s.-S!Iion up
51.83,.or 0.5 percent, at 10,257.11 .
Far the week, the. Dow ~ned 0.7
percent.
' The broader market \V4S nuxed •.
The Nasdaq composite index fell
5.60, or 0,3 pertem, to . , .796.83,
The Smndard &amp; fuor's 500 indtx
inched up 0,70. or O.O&lt;l percent, to
1.125.1 7.
Front-month May rud.. oil
futures rose 20 cents to S2fl,38 a buret, ending the wo:ek ll percent
higher.
Petroleum products fmu~s ended .
mixed, witb Ma.y heating oil gaining
0.33 cent to close lit M cents a ga.)·
Ion and M3y I!:ISoline f31Hng 0.73
cent to close ~~ ·80 cents,
The price of nBturnl (!tiS wus up 4
NEWYORK (AP) -The popu- cents to $3.53 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Qwest shares drop

Enron

. ....

1s lower

BULLETIN BOA

c.,.,.,. ..

DILIGHT'UL
HOMI Prttty u 1 platutt. Very
wt11
frtme rancll
nomepfllnnld
.,... .-11nc1
3 btdraomt,
__.,
clolt1, 2 lUI bllho, olllrmlng IMng
Ntw ook 011&gt;1nt1a
Nne lhl kltclltn. Aonga, rflrlgtrotor,
and oompoctor oH atoy.

-.g

Co.

•

TIIULY

lkloll,~.-.

........... Post

br ~aicli engtne ('~ cut oil'
atttu to dom\s o( mnooo~t Comcast sublaiben tuber tM month
out oHnwntion wtth pelfom~
draining automa~ :lllm1\ robol1.
Con~ officiU. lil • ~"~ than a
hundred sul:li!cribw ''~ 11iltd~•
and full atttss \\'U ~ within a
few hou.n.
Ne~rth~ the mt:~&lt;knt highlights Google\ growing con~
over autom ~ ~utsl$tnd the ll&lt;:k
of precise ~ tools in its u-.
naL .
Lib mmy other haghly traffidt~
utes, Google boans the uSte ofsoltware
robots that automatically n:trie\.~
information I'IO!u itl :\Ilardi engines.
The company · btlitws such
requests can !lilt. its MOuites and
"un slow Googl~ \ pt'rfurtnllllCt fur
the millions ud millions of consumers wha use , it &lt;!\&gt;try dQy,"
Googl~ said in a statement

I

on 2 a - a ldtchln, Olllmlc ~In kl1ohtn &amp;
AdciiYIN. INdwtll, ....., bllht. NEW oo~~, lhRiudl out. ~.--TLC
Vtlill'. Vau on 01W IPPI'«'illt flli nt1J1ral dtOo&lt;. d ACAES WI. but prtood rtgj'l111.,.,.
nome 11y IIIIIUnG an~ to t1ot,OOO. TIWiat DIVI
MO» IT'I
I'IIIIONALITY
Fronllr!Q

BeiiSouth
Ju... sharply

Enron pension plan

serves victims of domestic
violence call 446·6752 or
1·800-942-9577

WOOded 101
neturt abound thlt raload
renoh on ~ AC 11111. With
hardwood floart, remocltlld ~k
kltchtn .•nd ample living apac:a
onhlnoed by • flnlahtd 1 lrvll, -lhlt gem twalfa you.
1114,1100.00

Fri.

Feels take over

· Enron boss quits

ou nr..,_.., htat pur!lt), now
~
1n Or-o.pt,
Twp. Aoor
... e oerptl, · - · dry11, r111111 &amp; rfl. r"""' ....,........

ml from tDwn on 8~ 1111.
-r1c11vt- apply. VL8,
MO:If. IUILII1NO LOT Ill AI I
MITCHIU. 110. 1 M IIIII -

In

4

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

lng an apemeo.t they dicln\intend te:lecom COI'llpMIY to a notch abo\-.e
to keep to cramter COD.aol to Slate junk, stll\1$ I day ~ Q\\&gt;$ said it
Street.
woWd fall short of ~eulier ~~ue
Many employtes lost hurty all forecaus fot the year.
their ~ent mecs as EniOn SIOc.k
Shares of ~ fell 97 cents to
fell steadily over a period of -w close at $6.60 a share
on the
months and they were blochd fion1 New York Stock Exchange.
seUing it for about tbRe weeb last
Q\'ltst ~ Thursdly estimllr.d its
fall.
2002 ~wn~ would ranae fiom .$18
billion to $18.4 billion. about $1 billi.oo less than previous estimates.
Earnings were expeckd to be $6..4 .
billion to $6..6 billion, down fiotn
17.1 billion. Capital spending \\'U
ATLANTA (AP) - Profits rose
lowered to 13.1 billion to $3.3 billion,
sharply at BeiiSouth Corp. in the
fiont earlier tstinutes of$3.7 billion.
lint quarter because of one-time
gain on an asset sale, but thoe
telecommunications giant again cut
its euninss outlook for the year FriNipol1
day on the prospect of continued
weak sales.
Not counting the one-tim~ gain,
BeliSouth's results for the JmuaryWASHINGTON (AP) - The
March period fell short of analysts' Washington Post Co. ~pomd lower
expectations,
net earnings for its 6nt quarter comBeliSouth, . the nation's third- pared to the same period a }"ear lgo,
largest regional Bell company, said it when it had a gain from the sale of
earned $1.15 billion, or 61 cents per cable systems,
share, in the first three months of
Th~ first-quarter earnings teport2002, compared to $891 million, or ed Friday beat Will St=t exp~ta47 cents a share in the same period ti~ns, than~ ~ what the comp~ny
last year,
'
wd was Slgruficant growth at its
'--·-d by · cable and· education divisions.
· ·aut the res· ults were SI&lt;Cm:
WASHINGTON (AP) - The investment income, as BeUSouth , The parent con\pany ofThe Wuhfederal judge overseeing Enron's conve.rted its holdings in a German mgto_n Post and Newsweek_'7Ported
· 1ess lirm ~•Or 234 milli'on shares · net mcome of $23.7
bankruptcy proceeding granted a wsre
. million, or
Labor Department request to take in the Dutch telecom Royal KPN, $~.~ a share. That mcludes a ~6.1
control of the company's employee ~d a subsequent $857 milliori prof- :::~;~::!: ~~o~:S:eriJ, ~:::
pension plans away from Enron offi- 11 last month when BeliSouth sold
· f S3 nilli'
th sal f
· that stake.
gam ?, ·8 I
on on e e o
cials.
secunaes.
U.S. Bankruptcy judge Arthur
Excluding those ~ffects, income
Gonzalez ordered Friday that conwas $26 million, or $2.68 a sha~ .
.1101 of the plans be turned over to
Anal)"ts
surveyed by Thomson
the State Street Corp. investment
DENVER (AP) - Shares of
firm, Labor Department officials - Qwest Communications Interna- Financial/First Call were looking for
. . ..
announced.
tional Inc. fell 12.8 percent in trad- $2.26 a share.

I
I

a.:r."•ndlrboiOh,

YIIIGINIAIMITH, 1-111............... ttl 1101
QAIL81LVILL.I. ......" ... """"'"""..'"''ttlla
TJIIH.INYDifl"''''"""'"''"'''""'''""'.441.oMII

29Looull St.

858 Cla11t Cnaptl Ad.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

= -""

Re11 E1t1te Gener11

ANI Eatlte Gener•l

Re11 Eltlte Gen•r•l

446·6806*~~
COftllfUOIIon.

f

DETROIT (AP)- Ford Motor Co.
· said Friday that it is shaking up management of its slumping Uncoln and Mercury luxury brandt b~ them off'
.Jiom its Elm)peill name .plati:S.
The world's No, 2 automaker also
announced the departure of .the
head of its restructured Premier
Automotive Group; now encompassing Aston Martin, Jaguar, Land
Rover and Volvo.
Wolfgang Reitzle is leaving effective May 1 as head of the group to
become chief executive of the German engineering company Linde
AG. He will remain a consultant to
Ford under a contract that ban him
from joining another ·automaker,
t:ord chief executive Bill Ford said,

=------

~~ ~ - t;~mttt

,.,

Ford shake-up

°

R111 E1t1te Gener•l

;

Public Notice

Public Notice

mell, or telephone 1t
I!NTI!R INTO
epply lor lhl ltrHI
(740) 182·2278. The
AGREEMENT
paving In
the
Comm1111onere
FOR THE ODOD'I
etreellolpl ' 1r11
r111rv1 the right to
FY'2002 CDIIQ
projeoL
reJect 1n; 1nd 111
FORMULA FUND
SECTION 2: Thlt
bldt 1nd/or eooept
ALLOCAnON
011111 County II
thl lowell 1nd b11t FOR STREET PAVING . hereby aulhorlnd to .
bid lor the Intended
IN THE
1dmlnleter
and·
purpo11, ae they, In
STRI!I!T8CAPI!
Implement e1ld grant
lhelr tole -dleoretlon,
of
Thlrty•two
_AIII!A
mey dttermlne.
· Thou11nd Dolllra
Olorle Klo.., Clerk
WHEREAS, the City (U2,000):
wllh .
Melgl
County ol Qalllpolll It addltlonll city fundi
Commlttlonere
ttloolted U2,000 of · l!lght Thoueand
under thl lmall Dolllrl (..,000) with
(4) 7, 14, 21, 2002
Cltllt CDIO l'ormula eeld pro1eot not to
310
Fund Allocation, and
ua .. d
Forly·
- - - - - - - WHI!RI!AI, undtr Thoullnd DOIIIrl
the ltrma of the (140,000),
P bile N tic.
_.;..;;u;;...;..;..;0;.....__ agr~tmant with the
SECTION 3: Thlt
PUILIC NOTICE
Olllo Dtpartmtnl of Ordinance 111111 blln
.DlveiOpmlnt,
· full foro I and lfflot
The SyraaUII• IIIOOIIIone Ol laee lml'(lldlallly upon
Recine Sewer Dlltrlct than taO,OOO will bl p1 11111 11 1n
award • d
to, e!Mrr.nav m~~eure.
Will aacept llaltd admlnllllrtd and
PA liD: April 1t,
bldl lor 1 1111 Chevy 1 1
db h
2002
·
a-1 o pickup, 4 ayl· mp amlnte
Yt e
county
of
m1nu11 trailmlaelon. JurltdlotiOn; end
ATTin
All bldl mutt be
WHI!AI!AI, the City
rtatlved by the
f 0 Ill 111 11h11 A tt1 M L -"· 1
dlltrlat no laler than
· e.....r •
e po
w
nne
to expend 1uoh Cltrk of th1 _City
1 :00 p.m. Mly 20, formula fundi lor Commleelon
~~all Will bl IOid llrHI
piVIf!ll In lhe
.~--~c
lnd J.
•• It, no werranty
City' Prall nt of the City
WHI!R A.• 1...
expr111ed or Implied
,,.
..~. Dl rlct M1 n llltr
h 1 1 Commlulon
by the .....er ., ' recommended In
forgoing
Tr
u ak elm 1 Y 1bht writing the PIIIIII' The
1ntpeote
11
1 of lhll Otellnance •• Ordinance le lllrtbV .
tr11tment plent, . an
emergency approved 11 to form.
Vellowbueh lloed, mauura 11 11 le
during
regul1rI ne0e111ry 1Or I he DDUll 1II c OW 1ee,
butlnlll
hOI!rl
to'NO
lmmedllll
.
Qalllpolll
City
1' ; itl:,;::· thl PriiiiYIIIOn ~ lhl lolloltor
1
01
Thl foregoing
right to reluM 1ny or :~=~ ':,d pr~~
Ill bldl.
1nd In order to Ordinance It hereby
provide for the u1uel oertllled 11 to Iundt
~~1t,21,24,2002
optrltlona of the eaoordlng to City
munlclptl
Chlrllr.
d1p1rtment1 and to
__P.;;ub;;.l.;.;lo..;N.;.ot;.;;.;;IOI.;__ enturt timely Dllng of Annette M. !.andere,
thupplla.tlon.
Ollllpolle
City
ORDINANCE NO,
NOW, THI!RI!I'Oftl!, Auditor
02002•30
II! IT ORDAINI!D by
lhl City Commlulon April 21, 2002
the City of·
A.N~~~:::tiy of
Oalllpolll, llttt of.
'
AUTHOIIIZINQ THI Ohio:
! ·'"',;JIM /,JI I
II!CTION 1: That
CITY MANAQI!II
~ k!lh Nr 11 / .Jf''
the City M1nager II
TOIUIMITAN
htreby a~horlled to
APPLICATION AND
'

Judy Wright, Clerk

CHICAGO (AP) - UDl~ Airlines' parent company reported a
$510 million 6nt-qu:arter loss Friday, its second-bigest setback ever,
reflecting its continued struligles to
lure back business travden in a skittish economy. ·
The·loss was the ~nth in a row
for UAL Corp., exceeded only by
the $1.16 billion loss in last year~
third quarter, when the terrorist
attacks threw the airline industry
into crilis. Passenger revenues tumbled 28 percent, largely due to
schedule cutbacks made last fall.
Results did show imp~ment for
the nation's No. 2 carrier,
· The operating loss was significantly smaller than expected, the number
. of seats 6lled edged back up to 72
percent and the airline burned
through cash at just half the rate of
the previous quarter, cutting the loss
to $5 million a day.

Corp. 'Pmident jefiey McMahoo,
who compl.ained two yean ago
about impropriety of financial partnerships that helped fuel the company's swift down&amp;ll, said Friday he
will resign dfecti....: june t. .
'
McMahon, 41, said he decided his
resignation was nect'$Sif)' to help
ensure Emon's successful reorganization into a movv of electricity and
natural gas.
Stephen Cooper, a restructuring
specialist hired in January as Eruon 's
interim chief ~tive officer, said
McMahon's position will remain
open until an outside successor is
found.
McMahon has accepted two promotions since Enron bqpn a dizzying descent into bankruptcy last fall
that left thousands jobless. ·
He succeeded Andrew Fastow, his
former boss, as chief financial offitet
on Oct. 24; McMahon later moved
up to president and chief operating
officer in January when Lawrence
"Greg" Whalley folio,_} E010n's
energy trading business to UBS~r­
burg.

Thursday,

April 25th
7pm
Finnis "Ike" Isaac

ELVIS! II
Friday, April 26, 7:30 p.m.
Meigs Middle School
Auditorium
Admission $5.00
AdvlnOIIIcklll IVIIIabll from any
Pomeroy Eltmtirttry Filth Grldt
Student or 11 "omeroy Eltmtntlry.
All ,._. wll go toward the """""'r
E~ Fifth Qrldt Spring Fltl&lt;l To1p.,

446-8235
1-800-447-8235
ATTENTION
TURKEY HUNTERS
BIG Turkey Contest
Sponeored by: Galllpolle Wai·MM
Sporting Goode Oepl .
$5.00 Entry F18 (AIIentriea mutl
made before 11 p.m
April April 2111. Alttr thie dale no
further entrlea will be accepted) at
Sporting Goods In Wai·Mart.
111 Plaot Winner 76% Payback
2nd Pl1ce Winner· 6 lr11 Bow
Shooll 11 Bladen Archery
3rd Place Wlnntr • Turkey Hunting
Veil
All tUrllll)'l mull 01 tlrwghiiO Wti•Mirl'l
~wn and Qoldtn Dtpt. antra- whtrl 1,
lpor11na Qooda tNOOie11..;11aoora tho
turlctya.

be

�Rl Dlt••

Tllf~PU

...

Sunday. Apfll11 1 1001

Meigs girts finish sth. B1

Tyson ~anager accu~ in !~migrant

smuggl1ng pJot commits su1ade . · ·
bond and fatal trill next

SHEL8YVIU.E, Tenn.

{AP) - One of six foru~
~

Foods

~ (liOSCCUtor bas

mana~

tl-Ill
smuaalina

~ with ..........:
.
i . ---PII
tn m ITil\\lghrtt

said the ntaXJmwn ~sible
sentence fur any defendant
convicted on all 36 counts
would be 395 yean in
prison.
.
"l knew 1te was havi~ his
ups and downs but didn't
know he · was this
depressed," said Doug
'frant, Rowland's attorney.
'"This is one of the worst
traaedies t've ever known."
Authorities said Rowland
had been working as a hos·
pitul nul'l!e. His ~Y was
found in the bed of his pick~ truck, parked in a wood·

sdleme killed l;limself widt

his rifte, police said Friday.
In~ said Jill\11'1)'
Rowland, 36. was found
with a~~ wound In his
d\est 11\ul'Sda)i four days
aftr.r he left ~ telling his
wife he needed to get away
to think.
Bedfunl Coonty coroner
Aubrey Richards ruled the
death l Silicide.
Rowland, a funnet manager at 'fYson's SltelbyviUe
plant, was indicted Dec. 11 ·
on federal charges of con·
~ is survived by
~~ to · sMuggle illegal pany plants in nine states.
nnnupnts to work al com- He was free on a $100,000 his wife and two sons. .

rooms a rare security
for cautious.homeowners
.

NEW YORK (AP) Welcome tu the new world
of real estnte ads: t'ouNtury
brow.-.stone, six fireplaces .
- and high·te&lt;:h, armo~
reinfurted silfe room.
That describes the house
in Jodie Foster's hit movie
"Panic
Room." In real life,
Wlitch.lng "World Traveler"
safe rooms are still exceed·
in a morning sefftlling at the
ingly rare, but offer cautious
Toronto International Film
(and very wealthy) home·
Festival.
owners a safe haven from
Freundlich subsequently
home invaders.
·
decided the trade-center
"People who think these
images were appropriate for
are
like bomb shelters the film, wltlcn re~::ounts a
that's not what they're for,''
man's journey tu reclaim his
say:;
l..ou Palumbo, director
soul. The flnal shots of the ·
of the Elite Group, a securi·
towers come in a dream
tY . firm that has designed
sequence in which the man
safe rooms in New York and
furitasi:tes happy endings for
Los Angel~. ''The concept
the troubled people he's
is to insulate you aod your
encountered on a cross•
family
from intruders who
country ramble.
"Him irnaalnina everyone , are trying tu rob or kidnap
he met along his journey as
healed, as whole qaln, and
here's \his shot of the World
1\'nde Center. Somehow, 1
felt it was paying respect to
those
events,"
said
Freundlich, who added that
he's heard only positive
reaction about the images
from audiences at advance
sc:reenlngs. "It reminds them
of an innocence before Sept.
11. It Is a little bit painful,
but it doesn't leave a sour
taste. It's a little bltter5weet."
"It Just worked, and I
wanted It there as a symbol
of my belief in the city,"
Freundlich 8ald.
Jel\nifer Westfeldt and
Heather Juergensen, writers
and stars of the current
romantic comedy "Kissing
Jessica Stein," went the
opposito route, shooting new
Manhutum overviews to
replace trade-center footage.
Their film screened Sept.
I0 at the Toronto festival nnd
again Sept. ll, the second
screening drawing pained
gasps from . the auolence .
when the trade center
ap~, they said.
When those imnges.came
up, it really wu like a kick in
the solar plexus," Juergensen
sold.

.Jimages of trade center preserved
· in fresh films shot before Sept. 11
LOS ANGELES (AP),Lnst weekt:nd's tup boll·
The World Trade Center office druw, ''Chlin.ging
lives on in a handful of new l.lines," included britf nash·
tllms whose makers left es of the trude center. ''World
intact their pre-Sept. II Traveler," a road-trip drama
footoge of the ty.oin lOwers starring Billy Crudup and
out of respect for the dend Julianne Moore that opens
and defiance of the terrorists Friday, fentures a prominent
. who destroyed the buildings. .skyline view of the trude
. In the weeks after Sept. 11, center early on 111\d 11 aorthere was a ruSh to ec~tclse , gcous nighttime view oflhe
shots of the trude towers , {owers near the end.
from · such comedies ns . A&amp;B home video releases
"Zoolander"
and another reminder of the toW·
!"Serendipity." Studios and ers April 30 with ''The World
flhnmnkers felt the imnges Trade Center: A Modem
would be too wrenching so Marvel," 11. History Channel
soon after the terrorist documentary completed a
attacks.
few months before Sept. II
But other movies that on the construction of the
came out late last year such stcxscrapers. ·
as "Vanilla Slty" and
'It references the events of
"Sidewalks of New York" Sept. II, but it's not about
included shots of the tmde those events," said Jason
center. As time passes, film· Campbell, murketing direc·
o.nkers say they sense audi· tor at New Video, A&amp;B's
!nces are better prepared to distribution partner. ''The
handle the sudden nppear· program really is a love let·
ance of the vanished towers ter to the trude center."
on screen.
..
.
The originnl script for
"I think It's hke our me.m~ "Men In Black ll," due out In
orles of 11 loved one," said July, Included an action
director Sam Raimi, who left scene toward the end that
images of the trade center in would hnve showed the trade
his upcoming adnp,tntion of center in the background.
"Spider-Mnn." • Probably Director Bnrry Sonnenfeld
right after the death ot' some· said thnt after Sept. 11, lt was
one we love, it's sometimes shifted to a rooftop with the
hard to look nt their pictures. St11tue of Liberty on the horl·
Then Inter, there's a need to . :r.on.
look at them."
"Men in Black II" co-star
A "Spider-Man" trailer Will Smith snld he thinks
..!that included images of the peo~le are increasingly able
World . Trade Center was to vu1w trnde·center pictures
quickly pulled Ia t fall, nnd with wistful affection instead
the action sequence depicted of pained memories. .
in that ad hns been cut from
"Just the other day, I
the movie. But Rnlmi said it looked nt a picture from two
was important for him to years ngo with my kids, ..
leave the skyscrapers in Smith snld. "We were at the
other shots.
. · Statue of Liberty with · thll
"I didn't want to erase the twin towers In the back·
image of the .twin tower5," ground, nnd It really did feel
Ralmi said. "They're seen good seeing the towers
throughout the course of the standing."
·
movie, because we didn't
As the towers collapsed
want the terrorists to win."
Sept. 11, audiences were

i

Markets
fromPIIIIDI
On the upside, these funds
offer comfort to the other·
wise nervous investor.
''These ilren 't a bud thing,
if the investor feels they need
them," says Don Cassidy, n
senior analyst at Lipper Inc.
"And sometimes the (insur·
ana) are not horrible, I've
seen them os low os 25-30
basis pOints a yeur on vnri·
able annuities, And then, of
course, hi~her,''
The Srruth Barney Cnpitnl
l'reservation Fund can invest
in both stocks and bonds, and
the guarantee behind it
comes from AMBAC insur·
~~nee, Investors in this fund
have to hold on to their
shares for a minimum or live
years. The COIIt for the insur·
ance is 7S basis points per
year on top of the fund's
Other annual expenses.
'Julie Russel, a financial

consultant at Salomon Smith Cassidy. "Yeah, the fund
Barney in Wellinaton, Fla., could b6 down at some point
says the Capilill ~servntion In time, but you'll nave
Fund a great flt for some of unlimited upside potential if
her clients. "I can honestly you Mid It (the fund) long
say to a client that they can term."
buy a premier money.manaa· ·" And then there are the mar·
er 1111d no matter what tfie kets. Look nt put performW'ket does five years from mance over five· and IQ.year
now, ,rou 'II get your money · rolling periods of the S&amp;P
bn~o'
p.
500, and you •ve got to won·
s ,
· rmc1Pll1 der if gunrnnteed funds are
Pre$crvalton funds also worth the extra cost:
require a flve·year Invest· According to Ibbotson
ment commitme.,t, and Associates the Chicngoshare~olders mu1.1 reinvest b ·e· d •ec'uritles resea h
ull dividend and interest a.
•
n:
income back in to the fund firm, over the past 76 years
and not take any money out (from 1926 through 200 I)
of If the Insurance backing Is there was a . IO·pen:ent
to be honored.
chance or market I~ over
On ,the downside, five five-year rolling penods; and
yeurs 1s considered a long- over 10-year rolfing periods,
term investment In the minas the chonee of loss wu 3 per·
of m1111y money pros, and cent.
insurance Isn't the only way
(Dian l,i4uvlch Is a nation·
to cover your asset•, ally syndicated mutual fond
"Another way to give your· columnist, auJhor. and pubself more of a potential liJI~er of an educaJional fond
upside is to buy o decent, bal· mutual
Web
site:
anced
fund,". suggest hJtp:llwww.allbouJjimds.com.)

.

you."

The safe roam can be as
si-;nPle as a closet with a
reinfotted door and a phone
inside. 'IYPiclllly, it's a room
separated · from the rest of
the house by reinforced
walls and a hidden, magnet·
icaUy locking door. Features
include independent ventila·
lion systems nnd phone lines
-and, for longer stnys, pe~
haps 11. toilet.
For the ultra-security-conscious, options can include
lining the room with armor
or bullet-resistant Kevlar,
setting up a closed-circuit
TV network: to watch the
rest of the hoine, and
installing a backup geilern·
tor.
Foster's battle against
Intruders from within her
secure walls earned more

than $73 mi Ilion at the box
office in three weeks, creat·
ing a buzz about the littleknown security technique.
(Screenwriter David Koep~ ·
changed the name to "panic
room" for a more com·
pelling title.)
The idea is simple,
Palumbo explains. [f an
intruder enters your home,
you flee to the safe room.
Inside, using a phone line
protected from the attnckers,
you summon the authoritit:~~.
Industry experts won't
speculate about how many
safe rooms there are,
although 11 number are in
Manhattan townhouses and
Hollywood mansions. None
come cheaply: A fully
equipped room can cost up
to $500,000.

Mel~

SOUTHERN ROYALITY
Weather .
High: 50s, Low: 30s
Detlllls, A2

·Letter deadline

·obsenatlon
APPLE GROVE - The
85th birthday of Harry
Stobart will be observed
with a dinner at the Red
Barn in Apple Grove on
Sunday. April 28 fro"rn 1-4
p.m.

aubmeets
MIDDLEPORT
Wildwood Garden Club
will meet Wednesday at
11:.30 a,m, at judy . Kay's
. Restaurant in Middleport.

·RACINE Racine
Area
Community
Organization will meet
Thesday at 6:30 p.m. for a
potluck meal.

Southern High School's prom king end queen were chosen Saturday night In front of a
large capacity crowd at the school.'s gymnasium. Macy Rees and Rachel Marshall, pic·
tured above, were selected from a large group of candidates who competed for this
year's coveted titles. (Tony M. Leach)
·

Jobless rates down in March
FROM AP, STAfF REPORTS

OHIO
Pick 3: 4-5·7

Pick 4: 9-4·9·8
~ptrl.ottll:

3·11·33-35-40-47

10nul·llllt43
Klcktr: 1·2-6·9·3-1

Pick 1 (nl&amp;ht): 2·3.0
Pick 4 (nl&amp;ht): 2·5-3·2
W.VA.

Dally 1: I· 7·5
Dai(J 4: 1·7·5·5

Pa\'11111111: 27-~2-44 (8)

hctlon• -

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

12 , ....

AS
83·S
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
81·3
A2

C&gt; :1002 Oltlo volley f'ubllshln1 Co.

lost control in a right-hand
curve, slid le(t of center and
was struck broadside by a
westbound 1997 Ford Ranger
pickup truck driven by James
M. Drehel, 40, Langsville.
Drehel and a passenger, Alan
L King, 36, Pom~roy, were
injured. and taken to Holzer
Medical Center by Meigs
EMS, the report jaid.
The crash, the .second traffic
fatality of the year reported by
.the patrol in Meib"' County,
remains under investigation.
troopers said.

Bloodmo.bile
collects 68 units

Plan

2

(740) 145·5334

DARWIN - An IS-yearold Athens man was killed in a
two-vehicle accident Saturday
on U.S. '33 that also injured
two local men, the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Clyde A. Brown was pro.nounced dead at the scene at
the 12:10 p.m. crash by Dr.
James Witherell, assistant
Meigs County coroner.
Troopers said Brown was
eastbound in a 1969
Volkswagen Beetle when he

POMEROY - Meigs
County Health Department
will provide free blood lead
screenings on May I for
children from six months to
six years as part of a state·
wide effort to fight child·
hood lead poisoning.
Screenings may be schecl·
uled and materials obtained
by calling the health depart· ·
ment at 992~6626.

.RACO meets

Weekend·
crash kills
Athens:man
FROM STAFF REPORTS

POMEROY - The last
day that letters ro the editor
pertaining to the May 7
primary will be printed in
The Daily Sentinel is
Wednesday, April 24.
No letters regarding the
election will be printed
after that date.

·1nc1ex

For more Information
about the
opportunities
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
offers, please call

Hometown Newspaper

County's

POMEROY - With the exception of
Lawrence County, the area's unemployment
rate declined slightly during March, the Ohio
Department of Jobs and Family Services
reported.
-'
That was in contrast to the state jobless
rate, which rose last month.
G:illia County's rate dipped 0.3 percent
from February to 6.4 percent, ODJFS found.
Meigs County, listed at 10.9 percent in
February, decreased 0.5 to 10.4 percent in
March.
Lawrence County's rate jumped 1.5 percent during March, from 5.6 the month prior
to 7.I percent. Other counties, however, saw
a decrease: Athens, 0.3 to 5 percent; Jackson,
0.6 to 8.3 percent; and Vinton, .09 percent to
14.6 percent.
,
Ohio's unemployment rate rose O,J percentage points to 5.7 percent in March, the
st.1te reported'Friday.
The national rate was 5.7 percent in
March, up from 5.5 percent in February,
"Even though the economy is showing
signs of recovery, the rise in unemployment
in March continues to reflect low demands
for workers," Tom Hayes, director of the
ODJFS said in a news release. "Employment

.ON THE WEB
Unemployment information
can be accessed
from ODJFS at
http://www.state.oh.us/odjfs/
was down slightly compared to February
while the numb~r of those seeking jobs
increased."
The number of unemployed Workers
increased in March to 336,000 from 322.000
in February. The March unemployment rate
in Ohio was up from 3.9 percent in March
2001. The number of unemployed has
ipcreased by 111,000 over the year froni
225,000.
Rates decreased in about three-fifths of
Ohio's 88 counties and ranged from a low of
3.5 percent in Holmes County in northeast
Ohio to a high of 14.9 percent in Morgan
County in southea.u Ohio.
Aside from Morgan, Meigs and Vinton,
four other counties had unemployment rates
higher than 9 percent, including Adams, 13.2;
Pike 10.2; Monroe 9,7; and Huron, 9.

lhe Holzer Health

•

POMEROY - Donors Langsville; Donna Hawley,
gave 68 units of blood when Robert Barton. Tim Smith,
the Red Cross Bloodmobile George Harris Jr,, Jennifer
visited the Meigs Senior Garey, Heather Brooks, Trish
Center last week.
Garey, Daniel Thomas, Cinda
Multiple gallon donors were: Eaton, Christopher Miller;
Harry Brown, 1 gallon; Marsha Mike Wilfong Jr., James Eaton,
Barnhart and Robert W. Frank Herald Jr., Dinah
DartQn, 2 gallons; Barbara Stewart,-Unda Haley and Don
Dugaii, 3SaJions;Janet Pea'vley, Vaughan Jr., all of Middleport.
6 gallons; Mary K. Spencer, 11
Raymond Mueller, Adrian
gallons; and David M. King and Hubbard
and
Marta
Thomas Hart, 13 gallons.
Blackwood, Rutland: John
Donors by community were: Rice,
Reedsville: Darla
Susan Reeves, Susan King, Thomas, Carolyn Charles, and
Gerald Rought, Virgil Windon, Oris- Smi!h: Syracuse; Urban
Harley Johnson, Jackie · Graf, Marrilee Bryant and
Hildebrand, Dolores Will, Jim Esther Smith. Long Bottom.
Will, Paul Marr, Thomas Hart, Beatrice Morgan, Gallipolis;
Phil Ohlinger, Dennis Gilmore, Joseph Bailey, Chester; Richard
Marsha Barnhart. Mary Voss, Spencer. Coolville: Charla
Janet i'eavley, Harold Gilmore Brown, West Virginiac
Jr., lletty Coughenour, Jack Retired and Senior Volunteer
Coughenour, Mary Spencer, Program (RSVP) workers
Billy Spencer, Donald May.. assisting were Helen Bodimer,
Dan
Follrod.
Melody June Ashley, Betty Spencer,
Lawrence. and David King, all R.ita Buckley. Mary Lou
of Pomeroy.
Hawkins, Gerry Pullen, Jerry
Barbara Dugan, Evelyn Crawford. Ted Hatfield, Peggy
Mugrage. Charles T. Mugrage, Harris, Ken Harris and Carolyn
Janice Salser, Ronald Salser, Grueser.
Harry Brown. David A. Beattie, The Rocksprings Better
Michael Swiger. Doris Grucser, Health Club worked in the
Randall Arnold, Paula Brown, canteen. The next scheduled
and Timothy Thorne, all of visit will be June 19 at the
Racine.
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Lenneth
Lonb'Stteth, Center.

One lane

An Inspection of the Pomeroy;Mason Bridge Is scheduled to ·
begin today. The Inspection will result In a one-lane closure of
the bridge through Friday, according to Ohio Department of
Transportation spokesman Stephanie Filson. The Inspection will
be conducted .by ODOT's consulting firm, URS. (Tony M. Leach)

•

tne IS now...

River Cities Nurse On·Call
i

1·800..462·5255
If you have health questions or concerns, call
River Cities Nurse On-Call and speak to a
specially trained RN.
Check wilh

/ MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference
•

www.holzer.org

about medication concerns.

"

•

I

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