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                  <text>•

BUSINESS

INSIDE

Early Care open
for children, 81

Alaslil-a
f1ietdship. (1

Oash injures
two, A8

,.,
nnes
•

IIpolis
Rick Carter starts
job]une 1

new

under the city commissioners
and
provides leadership and manage·ment for the city's
daily operations.
including oversight
of nine distinct
departments.
He will begin his
duties June I .
Carter
Commission
1.
President
Gary
Fenderbosch said Carter fit the bill in
the commission's search for an experienced administrator familiar with
management issues and interde.part-

BY KMI Klll.'t
mtlY~VDAtli'TI!tBUNE.COM

GALUPOUS - Rick Carter, a
22-year U.S. Air Force veteran, bas
been chooen the next Gallipolis city
manager.
·
Carter will succeed E.V. Clarke Jr.,
who's been city manager since April
1998 and announced he would be
stepping down hast month.
·
The city manager serves as
Gallipolis' chief eJtecUtive officer

1.15

1

•

manager

•

mental Communication.
"We were extremely impressed br,
him
and
his
experience,'
Fenderbosch said. "We had two differenr imerviews with him as a candidate, and we wen: able to come up
witb a package that was accept.able
to him and the commission."
Carter was among the top six of
around 14 applicants for the JOb. The
list was winnowed down to six that
were called in for interviews.
''The other candidates were exceptional too," Fenderbosch said. "It
was a difficult decision to make."
Carter comes aboard as Gallipolis
looks at attracting additional popula-

I

HHith fair set

UNIVERSITY OF Rio GRANDE EXPANDING?

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Congratulations
•

c

~0 2002

To All Our Local GrtulUAtes••• .
Here's to all the young mm And women
· who hAve worked so hArtl towtJrJs
comm171M11111t J.y. Sliu tbl tl4y and
""'Y all your dreAms come trtul

a

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Comny Health Department is
otrering a free heallh fair fur
residents ofGallla County on
ThursdaY,, May 30, From 8~30
a.m. unttl 12:30 p.m.
The health fait wlll offer a
variety of servk-es and educational Information fur the
participants. Scteenings that
will he offered include cholesterollgluoose, blood pressure, hei~htlwelght, body fat
analysis, computerized stress
evalualton, Derma Scan,
hearing, and osteoporosis.
Community members that
· will be assisting with the
health fair include; staff from
the Gallla County Health
Department)
Bonnie
McFarl"nd, Ho1ter' Medical
tenter Community Health
t~nd Wellness; Beclcy ColllM,
Ohio State Extension Office,
Gnllia CounLy; Marissa l"ulk,
G-J· M Bonrd of Alcohol
· Drug Addiction and Mental
Heallh Services; Debbie
Btircus,
Holzer Clinic;
Amlmda Carter, Medconnex;
Melvin Mock, Advanced
Hearing; and Wyngate of
Gallipolis.
For those . interested in
recelvinll the cholesterol
screeninll, it is required to
call the he~lth department
and make an appointment, h
is recommended to be fasting
for 12 hours prior to your
appointmellt.
Rellularly
scheduled medications 'lila)'
be taken wUh a sip of Wllttr.
Call the Galha County
Health Department at 441·
2950 to schedule a cholesterol appointment or with
any questio11s you lila)' have.
· the 1\eal th fair will be loellt•
ed In the Ga,llla County
Setvlce Center Conference
Room tit 499 Jackson PIke,
Gallipolis.

lndax
•••cttona-nPI...
Calendars
Celebrations
·Clesslfieds
Comics
DearAbby
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

AB
C2
D2-7
Insert
Cl
A6

A4
A2

Bl·B
A2

c 2002 Ohio Vallev Publlohtni Co.

tion. downtown revitalization and
overcoming the etTects of the August
2001 fin: in the Second Avenue business district.
Carter recently retired from the Air
Force after ~erving in numerous
leadership positions, most recently at
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base
near Dayton.
Carter served in multiple leadership roles as di=tor of the Mission
Support Directorate, director of
human resources, and as the
squadron commander for the Air
Force Institute of Technology, the
PluH ... "-n•pr,M

'

Group eyes
La
Lands
•
.preservation
•

BY KRII DonoN

be remembered," she added.
With much persistence
GALLIA -The Lambert and research, Matthews and
Lands
in
Greenfield her· righthand pal Charles
Township are in need of Murray enlisted the help of
attention, with its cemetery their friend Virginia Garnes, .
dotted with unmarked then Glenn and Corliss
11raves, many of them sol- Miller. Bufford and Calvin
diers'.
Minnis, and Barbara Scott.
A newly-formed commitTogether they formed the
tee of concerned citizens society and found there
that recognize its ~istolicll!. wet;e 16 destroyed or missVlillle and platls to i:lo some, ing markers for soldiers,
thing about it.
and many unmarked graves
The Lambert Lands of others.
Preservation Society was
With the help of Denver
the brainchild of historian Curtis, service ofticer and
and community activist lej!islative ·chairman of
Estivaun Matthews.
Dtsabled
American
What are the Lam bert Veterans (DAV) Meigs
Lands?
Chapter 53, and Ellen
"Three men named Frank, Darby, its adjutant, the sociMiller and Minnis Lambert ety received permission to
were plantation owners in get government markers for
Virginia,"
explained the black soldiers.
Matthews. "And in 1843, 20
The Society. has three
years
·~fore'
. the goals in mind: To purchase
Emanctpatton the soldiers' markers; make
Proclamation; they decided a map of the Lambert Lands
to not only free their slaves showing who settled where;.
but buy them their own land and pay for and erect a monnorth of the Ohio River, ument for the others buried
where they and their fami- there ·that don't. have marklies could start their new ers.
lives in freedom."
"It's always been an ache
This is one of the most in my heart - those
unique settlements in the unmarked graves - those
U.S. and it is receiving were some of the finest peonationwide attention.
ple I knew," Matthews said.
Around 30 African- "My mother always said to
American adults settled on me, 'Esti vaun, make the
the property, ali taking the world a little better place
first names of their owners ·because you've been here.".
as their last names.
And this is maybe the last
The families thrived and thing I could do in rememstill have relatives that live bra~ce of my parents."
there todar. Matthews' famThe · Lambert Lands
ily lived JUst over the hill Preservation Society is
and befriended many actively looking for donaMinnis and Miller family tions for the monuments
members.
and encourages anyone that
"I lived by the Lambert wants to help in the effort to
Lands and they were some call or send a check payable.·
of the sweetest ~ople .+ to the Lambert Lands
they were and sull are my Preservation Society (a nonfriends," said Matthews. profit orsanization) in care
"When I went to their ceme- of Corhss Miller, 3680
tery about six years a11o. I Clark
Chapel
Road,
was deeply saddened to see Bidwell, Ohio 45614, phone
all of those sunken holes in 740-388-8648.
the ground· where people
The group plans to have a
with the same value as you massive celebration someand me lie in rest with no time in early fall with local, .
marker to remind the world slate and national dignithey were hen:. · .
taries in attendance when
"To me, if you lived and the markers will be dedicathad a nP me, you deserve to ed.
KDOTSON&lt;G&gt;MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TOUR FACILITY -:- Meigs Local Superintendent Bill Buckley, Bill Childs, chairman of
Middleport's Citizens Committee, and Dr. Barry Dorsey of the University of Rio Grande are

l)lctured during their tour of the Meigs Middle School Friday. Dorsey said the university and
village should continue consideration of the building as a potential site for a university
branch. (Brian J. Reed)

Dorsey tours middle school facility
Will consider.expanding
Rio branch in
Middleport
IV liliAN

J,

RIID

BREED&lt;I&gt;MVDAILYStNTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Officials with the
University of Rio Grande will .continue to
meet with Middleport residents and officials to determine If and how the university can make use of the Meigs Middle
School building once It is vacated.
Dr. barl'l' Dorsey, president of URG,
University Trustee Jack Frutl\, Community
College Vice President Luanne Bowman
and others met with Middleport's Citizens
Committee and key development leaders
Frldlty to tour the building and ,discuss its
possible use as art expanded Me1gs County
branch.
·
'rhe Village of Middlepon will assume
ownership of the schoor and two others
once Mei11s Local students move into their
new schools. The village has determined
the best use of the former high school
building would be . education ..related,
hopes Rio will find a new home there.
The unive.rsily is not actively seeking a
larger site for its Meigs Center, but Dorsey
said Friday he and the Middleport
Planning Commission and Citizens

Committee shou ld continue to pursue the
possibility of the university's usin11 the
space, either exclusively or in a sharing
agreement with the village .
Middleport plans to convert the
Middleport Elementary School building
into a new village hall and jail facility, but
has no concrete plans for either the Middle
School or Central Building on the same
propeny.
.
"This Is a center for the commu mty and
the village wants to keep it that way,"
Economic Development Director Perry
Varnac;loe said Friday. "Education has been
determined the best use for this buildinl!,
and it's a great opportunity for the
University of Rio Grande to expand in. the
community."
Dorsey and two of his maimenance and
buildings and grounds administrators said
the bllildinll might be too large for Rio
Grande to use exclusively, but agreed they
and the village should continue to discuss
its potential.
The 41 ,000 square foot building on
South Third Avenue could be available by
the middle of next school year, according
to Meigs Local Superintendent Bill
Buckley, who attended Friday's tour. It
includes II classrooms, offi..:e space and
an auditorium with seating for hundreds.
Bill Childs, chairman of Middl~pon's
PIMM ... Doney,M

Tit. /npolienl Reliab Unil a1 Holur M«Jir:ol Clnfltr i• lfXHIJDrlng o Strolco Eclucofion Program

• .,.rff,..Now•
Whtn: Ewry Monday • Friday
nme: 3:00 pm · A:OO pm
Where: HMC Inpatient Rehab Unil

M ED I CAL C E.N T E R

u Mare 'bt FQ(fl oncl Flflu- ol Slrof.o • \}nclor.londing Chong.s • How Slrof.o Alfoctt
Mob/lily on&lt;! Oaifr. !Mng • How Slroko Affod. Canmunia&gt;tion, (Dgnilion oncl Swol/owing
M«/i.:o/ Me.,_,...,, ond RecuiTIJnl Slrob ,..o:dioo

,

Community It lnviledl

,_-Lu •••....., lho doN,

or....., lho lnpoliontllthab

·
~ ot Holw Modica~ eo..., cal

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

(740) 446·1070

•

�...,...,,....
Ohlo•lthet
Sundllr..., 11
GAU..JIIOIJS- *1 WI

~finlandt-*':r•

RiD t:inllllt FlrnwtibiJ Sr bool,
llltl fiw: ltio Orlllde ........
pr j ++I tbeirp+ E ill~
melllirc de Bdtt2iletia
for PufotmMCe
kmce
~ !heir school ~bin~

r ·rn: Jo:e..,_~

lloMd OfEdncmo.
'Jbrou&amp;h a power pan JR-

senwion, Lallham described
how it all sta-.1 wilh staff' visits
ID Lincolo Elerueuta ol lhr:
Ashllnd (Olio) -~!Schools.
cminut:d with de two clll cisDid-wide inservic:e .entilled
"''l::l:her Student l'lrlnershiJls
-Tholsllvln.:hniqotstOr
Puformanc:e Exc:tllc:nce.II llld
luis blossonlcd into a sdlool·
wide implelllellllllion involvina
the entire staff .. Rio Grinde

0 ."""" Pt. Claoodf

Elerner~~ary.

-~

·
Claull!

r-

-

. . !IQII!M •~w• V1MtCERS ;... Southem HW~ School ser"&lt;~~s teee~W 11 schok!rships were, fnlm
11ft, flont row, Stacy t.tlls, llnclsty Smith, Robett1l f'omtet, Matt Johnson, Macy Rees, Sheri
CUmmins. Slephanie CM!lelt: second row, Chellssa Barnes, Rachel Marsllall, C8lol')&lt;l1 Bel1tl, Km
McOenlel. AsNitJ Hamlltoll. ElWlbetll BlfO; tN!d row, Amber Duffy. Tyter .lottnson, ABOll 01'11~. Nate
Mertlu, Rachel Pwsons. Russell l&lt;tlder, Blandon Ple!te, Brittarly Riffle, .Lori Slly!e, hTft Wll&amp;ln; laSt
row, Tytef Little, Joe Cornell, Matt Ash, T.J. Mool'e, Joe Manuel, len W\5&amp;.( ~ M. L~ photos)

West VIrginia weather
Sunday, M.Y 19

Lanhnril wall On to explain
how the Blkkige model bas
been emlxaaxl by the staff and
students at Rio Grande
Elementary, and how it bas EXPlAINING THE PROGRAM - Kyle Be!Mf explains her date folder to Gallipolis City Schools
~the way they appua:h board of education membel' Dennie Greene and ·Principal Michael Perry while Tiffany Fout dOes
learning.
.
the same for board member David Welker arid Superintendent Jatk Payton. Matthew Anney
She WIS assi~~ and lechery Stewart .explain their data folders to board members Timothy ~r end Nancy
Kelsey
Beaver •
), Mullins.
·
Zachary Stewart (first grade),
Millie lanham (second grade),
Matthew Fmney (fourth grade) plemental contract.
.
trict: Lori Billings, Lori Bullion, conch; ~ Stanley, Ylii'Sity
nder conch; Beth
and 11ffany Fout (fifth ~).
•Approved the following staff Richard Corvin, · Helenlu and N
The power point continued to fQr the Summer SChool Ehman, Larry Hilley, Joyce Hill, Covey, ninth gt!llle cheerleoder
demonstrate the various · 11\tervention Proanun on an as- Karen JohnsOn, Lee Mlltthews, couth; und Chris Bullion.
Teamwaic: Quality Thols IISSI&gt;- needed basis: lori Billings, Julia Roderus, Bllrbom Shel\011 . MOOrignls director.
.
ciated with the Baldrige model Chris Jeffers, Judi Jerome, and Amber Wheeler.
• Approved u contrUCt with
that he\'e been implemented at Owrlene Johnson, Kelli Keams.
• Approved the following sup- Holzer Clinic fur athletic tr.liJJ··
Rio Grande.
Charlene King, Marcia Payton, plerneiltal c:ontracts fur 2002- ing seMce5 in 2002..()3.
The presentation outlined the Julia Roderus, Ann Sickels, 1era 03: Jim Niday, assislllnt vursity
• ContrUCted with Churley
leadership, process manage- Stewart, Donna Thompson, football coach and seventh Sheets ror professionnl development, student achievement and Unda Vollbom and Angela grade head boys busketbull ment services under the su~i­
.
coach; Steve Patterson, assislllnt sion of District Thchnology
student and stakeholder focus Walton.
• Approved hiring Robert varsity football coach; Tony Coordinntor Dean Mnson.
groups, their responsibilities,
• ApProved renewul of
.and liow they work IOgether to 'M:lodWilrd to teach high school Thompson, assistant varsity
Earth science and general sci- football coach; Dwayne Forgey, bershtp
· achieve their goals.
.
in
Educnrionnl
••
Each of tliese groups meet ence for the 2002~ school ninth grade head foolball coach; 'lechnology Services. ·
.
Brack Hw:hens, eighth grade
• Approved un . nweement
individually and cocpoiiltely to year.
• Appoved the foUowing cus- head football wach; Mike with the: Ohio DepllMlellt, of
carry out the plan, do, study,
todians
for cxlnl hours per day Harden, eighth ltl8de assistant Education and Jayne Blll'gCI' to
adjust cycle 10 improve schoOl
June 3 through Aug. 19, on an football coach; llill Wamsley, udminister and provide fundiQg
prooesses.
AB written goals must be SJl6- as-needed basis: Stephanie seventh gr8de head football for the Thacher in Residence
cific, measurable, acoounteble. Harris, one hour; Fmnk ~th, coach; Josh Don~seventh Prognun
realistic, relevant and have a three hours; Chris Stapleton, grade assislllnt
coach
• A~ved the sule of the old
time line. In addition, all ~ two hours; and Maxwell WeDs, and ninth gndtl head basketbull bnsei)WI and softbull sco·reooach; hriny Roush, head var- boards for $1 each to the Ky.ger
must align with the wntten three hours.
•
Approved
the
following
as
sity aoss country coach (coed); Creek . Little
League
School Improvement Plan for
Rio Grande Elementazy and temporary summer heiJ&gt; on an G&amp;r~Y Adlc!M, head varsity vol· 'Ibumament.
• .Set lunch and breakfast
with
the
Contfnuous as-rleeded basis: Mark Brown, loybill coach; Gary Hanison,
Improvement
.Plan
for James Clarkaon, Plillip Corner, junior vanity volleyball coach prices for 2002..()3.
Marilyn Corwin, Nellie ~. and JV bo~ bultetball coach;
• Authorized lldvertisina of
Galllpolls Cry Schools.
"BIIdrlae naa cbanaec:J us Dlvid LYons. Chris Meek. Chid Jim Po~ head vanity aolf bids for a handicapped-acceisl·
·
:
from a telcher-centered system Michlef. Jeremy Payton, Beth t:01eh; Terela Peele, elallth ble bus.
Ro~
B~thany
Slmmona,
pcle
volleY.ball
coach
and
•
Approved
the
amdualtnll
10 a l111l1111Nl01lllnd a)'Stllm,"
1
Lanham lllcl. "It hu 6een 10 Mark Wlllllley, Jean WoU1 and ~th Jl'lde held J1r1a bulcet· senior lfst.
IIICCOII~ that we will IIIIVW 10 VJrall Willet.
~.i. _____ , held van!·
•Approved a fleld ll'ip request
la:k 10 the WI'J we were bef'Oi'e . I APP.ft)vecl Daniel Olblon u "' _
~.
,.._ 18 Wrl~
from idviiiOI' Barbw Shlilft;&gt;n
a aulis6tute bul driver tor the v .......... ......,. -...
Blldrip."·
and elaht Key Club mem~ 10
attend" the International
A!ri6 Lanham'• p:~wer point, I'IITIIincler or the CIIITellt achoo1 vanity Wflltllna coaCh;
M~, JV ~!Una COICh; Jim Convenlion in Anohelm, Calif.,
the five etlldenta ~their
YI!"·Acceoted
$4,369.36
from
O.l:iome,
held boil vanity baa· . July 2·8, at no expense to the
lierlona1 data foldlin 10 Jll!ll1l·
the
Ohfo
DeDinmet.t
of
ketball
coach:
Roaer boird.
bell Of the board of educllion,
Educadon
to
establish
an
Bntl)'
Brandeberry1 ~tant boys var1 Approved revisions .to the
suoerlntendent. treaaurer and .
otfien In llltendance. There Year Proaram. and qreed 10 aity bukltDIII coacll; Kim dress COde sec~on or the GAiiS
were a110 various examples of pay the followln.l tor helplna Adklna, head ~Ia vanity bas· student handbook, and texts and
charta and ~ that depicted ilevelop a forma[ proaran; o1 ketball coach; BNce Wl1~1 lnsii'Uedonal materinls for the
:
the 11\ldentj proaress In their mentonna euppcrt for~the dis· wlstant airla vanity basketDBU district.
classroorns.
Principal Michael Perry then
Introduced Rio Grande teachers
Shari Rocchi (first arade), Diana
Drummond (fourth grade),
Kristy Eldridge (fifth grade),
Bonnia Hamilton (kinder·

SHS kEY WINNERS- Key Wi~ners nt So~them High Sc~ool's Award Dar, were, from
left, front row, Amundu Ashworth, Ltndsey Smtih, Roberta Forester, Tiffany Wtllinms, Amy
Wilson; second row, Joe Adkins, Cherissa Bnrnes, Rachel Marshnll, Russell Krider, Elizabeth
Bird, Tyler Johnson; last row, Tyler Little, Joe Cornell, T.J. Moore, Lori Sayre.

rnern·

0-········
__

..,'""ny ill~

~

&amp;hOwtll Tof10!ml

"-~

I'IUIIIII

lnOw

lot

Cool conditions will linger in area
IV TH.I AIIOCIATID PREll

The National Weather
Service says cool tempera·
lures will hana around the
realon.
.
A cold mound ofhlah pres·
aurc over central Canada will
build south and east into the
Great Lakes and the Ohio
Valley through Sunday. A
weak line of low pressure
will move north to south
through the lower Great
Lakes.
.
Low pressure that brought
rain to Ohio overnight Friday
was along the East Coast and
continued to move east into
the Atlantic Ocean on
Saturday morning. Rainfall
was heaviest in eastern Ohio,
where more than one-half
inch of rain fell.
Sunri~ Sunday will be at
6:13a.m.
Weather forecast:
Sunday... Partly cloudy with

a chance Of brief rain lhOW•
en. Hlaha In the mid !Oa.
Northwest wlilda 5 to 15
mph. Chance of rain 30 per·
cent.
Sunday
nlaht ... Partly
cloudy. A chance of frost.
Near record Iowa of Iowa 32
to 36.
·
Monday... A mixture ofsun·
shine anu clouds with a
chance of brief sh.owers.
Highs near 60. Chance of rain
30 percent.
Monday
night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows 3S to 40.
Extended forecast:
Tuesday... Mostly c1ear.
Highs in the mid 60s.
Wednesday ... Mostly clear
and wanner. Lows near SO.
Highs 65 to 10.
Thursday
and
Frida;r... Partly
cloudy.
Mormng lows SO to SS.
Daytime highs in the mid and
upper 70s. ·

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:::::e.'dL-

Anlgnlfll editor
lpolta

P~ .

Ext. 18
Ext. 23
Ext. 20
En21

Dtpal1mtnltxtentlonl .,..,

Gtntt II M1n1g1r

Ext. 12
En13
Ext. 14

.....
.....

On the wtb

TNstees
Scholarship ($750/quarter for

:Rio program . a peals
for summer sc olars
IY KIVtN KILL\'
• KKELLVOMVDAIL\'TRIBUNE.COM

•· RIO GRANDE - High
• &lt;10hool will soon be out for
summer break. So what's to
do7
·
For those retumlna to their
:alma maters this fall, or
:recent araduates Interested
;In pursuin11 studies durlna
, the luy, hazy days to come
• can cfo so throuah the
: Summer Scholars Proaram
: offered at the Uni verslty of
: Rio Grande/Rio Grande
; :Community Colleae.
: Summer Scholars Is Ideal
·for jtaduate or high school
: :atuc:fent lookin11 to obtain
• some early colle(e credit,
: said Luanne Rase Bowman
: vice president for financial
: and aCiminlstratlve affairs at
• RGCC.
Credits earned In Summer
·Scholars, from specific col·
:lcae·level claues such as
•· En11lish, math and science,
: are transferrable to other col·
: leaes or universities if par·
: tlclpants plan to attend
: another fnstltution, she
•: added.
.
, Open to students in grades
9·12 or those who have
graduated in the past year,
~ Summer Scholar• 11 offered
: in two, five-week eessiona.
: "If you think about it, you
• can hike one or two cluses
: per summer, and be that far
ahead you graduate hiah
1 school,' Bowman said.
~ The pro11ram is Ideal for

garten), Batina Corvin (kinder·

garten), Kelly Mayes (frrst
arade), and school secretary
Ruth Comer.
Perry then had the srudents
introduce their parents. grand·
parents and siblings who were
present for the presentation.
lnlroduced were Brad and Kyla
Beaver, Bill and Karen Stewart,
Karen, Allen and Charissa
Nolan, Donna Evans and Mary
Lou Lanham.
The parents were given the
opponunity 10 comment on how
the Baldrige model has llelped
their child 10 be more responsi·
ble for their own leamiilg. and
how it has helped them 10 visu·
ally understand their child's
progress at any time along the
way.
.
,
ln other business. the board:
• R~ Alan Clifford
for his efection as Ohio Key
Club governor, selection 10 the
Martin W. Essex School for the
Gifted Scholar, and was award·
ed a $2,500 Discover Card
Scholarship.
• Approved a resolulion desiKJII(Ing May 6 as School Bus
Drivers Appreciation Day.
• Appr&lt;wed a resolution hiring
noncertificated individuals to
supervise pupil activity programs~.
....
. . of
•
u"' fOSignatiOII
Jackie
·ght. effective May
31, due 10 retiremenl.
• • Accepted the ~ttal

"lrY
Peden's country's
Palntless Dent Removal
Our highly trained technicians use state-of·the-art equipment to return ..•
the metal to ~·s original shape without harming the factory paint.

• FREE Estlmatel
• Repairs Take Minutes NOT Days Like Traditional Body Repairs · ~
• Palntleas Dent Removal Provldu Flawleea Results. Restoring
Your Vehicle's Finish As Good As New Without Fracturing
The Paint.
• Recognized By All MaJor Insurance Companies As The Belt
Way To Repair Hall Damage, Door Dings &amp;Creaaea.

.5employment

-·~·..-

•

•

••

·~·~~----------~------------------~--------~
,
•

'

"It's a tremendous oppor·
tunlty · for students from
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and
Vinton counties," Bowman
said. · •
·

....... Clll

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l'tlll
448•4367
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1~
OR
·1•800•214•0452

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oorn ®
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Spr1119 Yalllv Plaza • Golllpollt, Ohio

+

It Is illegal to host or allow teen
drinking parties in your home.

+

It Is unhealthy and unacceptable
for anyone under age 21 to drink.

404 S1cond A~1nu1
Ckllll oils • 446·1647

+

It Is unsafe and Illegal for teens to
drink and drive.

+

Parents can be prosecuted under
the law.

MOAHIHG

1:00AM • 12:40 PM

lkOOPM ·11:40 PM

WOIIDPkOC I
I'IIUIMTAYIOH lnWII
ACCOUMTIMOII
POLITICAI.ICI
'I'YI'IMO I

WilD l'tiOC I
I'YI'IMO I
PAYIIDLLACCT ·
I'IIOP DIVILOI'
.IYIT AIW.UIIOH

Wc:r~lcaP&amp;OC
llmiDTOIUI

WIDHIIDA'I'

MHIHG

+

Everything associated with a
violation, such as personal
property, can be confiscated.

1'110' aiiVII.OP
ACCOUMTIMO I
MIDIMICODIMO

~='r''

PIHINVUTMIIITI
. IMT ACCTII
. coM, ACC'I
WilD l'tiOC I
' IN'IIIOTDIUI
IICDSMOittiT

Calll-877-4-MINORS to report violations.

MIDHIIMI

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MATMII
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MIDTIIIMI

A progr11m of Ohio P11nnt1 for Drug F"' Youth
lnfoNtWI•• ,. ....IJttl"' F•"''" AJJ/ctl•• c..... ~.,, rrttl/mtnl Slrvltn
tiH (',Ill• C.•••'1 l'orrtttl Wh• Ho1t LA~t Tht Moll

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With ••ppm ftom th' Oltl• V.,.r""'"' •fAkohnl •nli Dr•t AliJ/Inio•
S.rtJittt •lUi tin

Ohio O.por""'"' ofPobllt &amp;tfory

In recognition of Better Speech &amp; Hearing Momh, Pleasant Valley Hospitl\1 will be offering

••'

FRRB speech and hearing screenings at these locations on the following dates and times:

,,'
•:••

• 'Ibclday, May 7
• Thunday, May 9 • Thunday, May 14
• Thuraday, May 23
Ripley Senior Center The Middleport Clinic Mason County Action Group PVNRC (&amp;.nd Hill Rollll;
Ripley, WV
Middleport, OH
Point Pleasant, WV
Point Pleasant,WV
(HIIIrifiB ~~~~¥ On!1) 1 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. (Huri'l6 Strteningt Only)
l p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
10 a.m. to noon
9 a.m. to 11:30 p.m .
Walk-ins llltkDIIII fll' you ""'Y call (304) 675-5250, Ext. 3502 to malte an appointnunt.
Appoinmuntt/Jre being nuull sep4r4tely 4t "TheMIIUiepon Clink." PkiJSe call740·99"2-4226 for that location.

••~l·
v

of

__ -

---

PULSAR

It's against
the law.

4.

CLASSU

J
•

•

...

To enroll for Summer
Scholars, contact Rio
Grande's admissions office
at 245·7208 or 1·800-288·
2746. Bowman encouraged
anyone Interested in partlci. patlng to act soon, since reg·
1strntlon for summer classes
is June 3. Classes begin June

teenage drinking.

nus

CIII1·800·8ZZ·0417 or 572·2844 l
....-----...-.......,:

as bead varsi
softball
effective A~
17. for the balanoe of the supHealh

Don't be
a party to

"Treasures
worth
Cherishing. "

GalUrtnUs
t;~ ~'eef' ~ntter~ e
·.,.~areersckoseYo &amp;en IV·

I

HoweU as head varsity Softball

•

summer learning· due to
smaller class sizes, lndlvidu·
allzed attention and · "short·
term commitment," she
added;
"[n this case, tuition is
free, but · the student must
pay a lab or institutional fee
and · for books," Bowman
said. "The student Is makh111
an Investment here. Students
can enroll for up nine semes·
ter hours for each of the two
summer terms for a total of
18 credit hours."

. ~----------------------

'

coach, effective April17.

-·mydallyMntlnel.oom

•

rueyW.~;
Ohio
State

conii'ICt resignalion o( Larry

.fll)'dallyll1bune.com
www.mydallyatntinol.com

E-mail

Ohio Stnte University Gmnt three qUWlei'S) - '!¥1er Lillie;
Rucioo Home Nutionnl Bunk
for foor Y\lllfS) Century
Aluminum Scholarship ($480) - Kim
Joe Manuel:
Scholarship ($1 ,IXXl) - Man Md&gt;Miel.
Ohio Stnte University Gmnt Ash; ·
($4,0CXN'Yellf for foor Y\lllfS) ($2,71~

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PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL

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ISll . . . . E '•n ltliltl SdiOOI. fnlftt. tnlm ltft. .._ ._tl,
llallon Sdloll Ohio Nllfthtm ~ O.!tt\ lt.trt,

POINT PLEASANT - Manie Jane Litd\fidd, 79, Pbinl
J&gt;leas•nt, ctied Frid3y, M:ky 17, 2002. in ~~ 'Y.IIJey
Hospital.
.
lklm Aprill4, 1923. in Mason County. daughtu of the late
OWiie and Muy~Siders., she was a horntm:at:u.
She was 11ts0
in de:kth b her hu.sbcmd, M:uion
Litdlfield; and ree brotlten, Ch~ Dennis. ;and Elmer

~ St:ho181$11ip, Ohio sa&amp; ~ ~ ~
DHn's ~Ohio Not\Mm ~ ~ . wm,
1hls\t:e St:Miatst._ O$U; IIICI ltiiillll$ ltiiMOn, ~·s
SI:MIMsNP, NMietle Oollle&amp;e. 8adt, ~ Heett, Don
Jld!Silll Mtm011lll StholllsNp (2): 1111¥~ ~. M\di)M's
~ ~ CQII.;
Mlnstltl!.l, Ohio~
'illletktoriM's ~ Ohio~ ~ ~~.

Siders.

s..

Sllrlivina are three Sons. Clarentt (Rub~) Utdlfield of
AJIP.'t: Glove, Raymond Litdlfaeld of .Soulhside,. ~ Jollllll)'
Utddidd of Gallipolis Feny; r.w daupla's, Connie (Larry)
8\itris of Apple Grove, and NllllCy .( DaYid=Hof
Oallipolis Feny; 17 ~ildren and 12 ~ildmt; a brother, John (Velm.t) Siders of Bici'Ndl; 1111 three s.is.ters, 801111ie Harless of Barbow nille. W.Va., Dosbic

of 600 f.acultylslllff and s.soo
students at 400 loc:.lltions

Sydenstricker of Pomeroy, and Ruth (Bill} Kinniard of
• Gallipolis Ferry.
.
.
SerVices. will be I p.m. Monday in Hambrick Otun:b,
Southside, with the Rev. Lee Baird officiating. Burial will be Air Force's pmnier universiin Hambrick Otun:h Cemetery. Friends may call at Deal . ty for g.radllate 8J!C1 post-gradf\meral Home. Pnint Pleasant, from 5-8 p.m. Sunday.
uate college studies.
~is ·extensive resjlonsibi~­
ties as a member of the uruvenity president's senior
staff
included management of
POINT PLEASANT - Charles Lee Mash, 80, Pnint
all
human
resources/services
Pleasant, died Friday, May 17, 2002, at the home of his niece.
programs, faculty/staff ualnTina Mash Watson.
Born Marth I, 1922, in Ambrosia, W.Va., son of the late mg and education ~s,
Otarles F. and Tina Brewer Mash, he was a farmer, and had resident carnP.us facilities,
worked for lhe New York Cenlral Rai Iroad as a laborer.
quality of hfe programs,
He was also preceded in.death by a sister, Reba 'stover; and extensive indi'lidual and famthree brothers, George, Cecil and Marvin Mash.
ily outreach progmms, safety
Surviving are two sislers, Clara Mash of Pnint Pleasant, and programs, mentoring proOma Wamsley of leQn; and two brothers, Dana Mash ofl'nint grams, and a newly estabPleasant, and James Mash of Rutland.
·
lished $6 million Institute
. Services will be noon Sunday in Crow-Hussell Funeral security program in suppon
Home, Pnint Pleasant, with the Rev. Johnn)' Hayman officiating. Burial will be in Brewer Cemetery, W.Va. 62, Pnint
Pleasilnt. Visitation was held in the funeral . home Saturday
from 6-8 p.m.

Chaltes Lee Mash

Fem. G. Smith
MIDDLEPORT- Fern G. Smith, 87, a former Middlepon
resident. died Thursday, May 16, 2002, in Conway, S.C.
Born April II, 1915, in Columbus, daughter of the late
Nellie McClain, she was a homemaker, and attended
Middlepon Nazarene Church. ·
Surviving are her children, Mary V. Ramey of Columbus,
Frank Sherman Lewis of Hebron, Anna Mae {Arthur) Krumm
and Harry Lee Lewis, both ·of Tennessee, and Shirley A.
(Willie) Causey of New Marshfield; and 17 grandchildren and
several great-grandchildren.
.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, .Frank Lot
Lewis; two sons, Richard and Robe11 Lewis; a brother, Harold
Sams; and three grandchildren.
Services will be I p.m. Monday in Fisher Funeral Home,
Middlepon, with the Rev. Adelben Winegardner officiating.
Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Monday from II a.m. until the time of
services.

worldwide.
.
Prior to his Wright·
Pranmon stint, Carter served
in variOIIIi field and beadqu~Uters level manqe~~~ent
positions while assigned to
bases located in .Teltas (three
times}, Missouri, Virginia,
Nonh Carolina. Mississippi.
Seoul. South Korea and Ohio
(twice).

Caner has earned nu~~~er·
ous awards durin&amp; his c:an:cr.
including the annual 2000
Headquaners
Level
HRJTraining
Program
Management Award (Ohio};
1998 Corporate level Senior
Personnel Manager/Director
of the :Year Award (ltxas);
1981, 1990, and 1994 Annual
.Personnel Manager of the

White House goes on
offensive to contain criticism
over pre-Sept 11 warnings

WASHINGTON (AP} The White House dug in for a
protracted political bottle as
new details emerged a.bout a
pre-Sept. II warning to U.S.
mtelligence that terrorists
might try to fly airliners into
government buildings.
While Democrats demand·
ed ongwers, the Bush administration sought to put criticism of how the president
handled advance information
• out of bounds.
White House spokesman
Ari Fleischer said Friday: "I
LANGSVILLE - Vada Ada Smith, 83, Langsville, died think that any time anybody
Thursday, May 16, 2002, in Holzer Medical Crnter-Jackson. suggests or implies to the
Geora• w. Buah
Born June 15, 1918, in Garrets Bend, W.Vn., she was the. American people thaf this
daughter of the lnte Bevin and Flossie Gladys Bowles · president hod specific ;infor- Gephardt, D-Mo.
mation that could hove preMcCollister.
·
Fleischer said the adminisShe was also preceded in death by her husband, James vented the attacks on our tration was aware of the
Smith, on July 4, 199.4; a son, Darrell Smith; a grandson; and country on September II, report prepared by the
that crosses the lines."
five brothers and two sisters.
·
Library of Congress .for the
Repons surfaced that two National ·
Surviving are three sons, Tom (Mickey) Smith of Cheshire,
Intelligence
and James (June) Smith and Jerry (Golda) Smith, both of years before the Sept. II Council, which advises the
Bidwell; seven daughters, Dot (Carl) Smith and B.etty (Bill) attacks, during the Clinton president and U.S. intelliLambert, both of Langsville, Wanda {Donald) Nelson of administration, an analysis gence on emerging threats.
. Malta, Bonnie (L&lt;~rry) Cleland of Pomeroy, Stella (Bob) prepared for U.S. intelligence He said the document did not
Blankenship of Shade, and Flossie (Mike} Jude and Geraldine warned, "Suicide bomber(s) contain direct intelligence
(Sklp) Moore, both of Vinton.
belonging to al-Qaida's
toward a ·specific
Also surviving ate 33 grandchildren and 38 great-grand- Martyrdom Battalion could pointing
plot,
but
included
children; and two sisters, Pauline Pauley of Albany, and crash-land an aircraft packed assessments rather
about how terVonda Lee (Tiny) Roy of Arizona.
with high explosives (C·4
rorists
might
strike.
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday in McCoy-Moore Funenil and semtex) into the
"What it shows is that this Home, Vinton. Burial will be in Temple Cemetery, near Pentagon, the headquarters of
information
that was out
Albany. Visitation was held in the funeral home Saturday the CfA or the White.-House."
from 7·9 p.m.
Until the report became there did not raise enough
with anybody,"
public, the Bush administra- alarm
Fleischer
acknowledged.
tio{l has assened that no one
Former President Clinton,
"We must consider the in government had envi- golfing Friday in Hawaii,
needs of the university, and sioned a suicide hijacking played down the intelllgence
·
determine how innovative before it happened.
value of the 1999 repon.
Democrats
suggested
the
we can be in utilizing this
fromPipAI
"That has nothing to do
much space," Dorsey said. expansion of inquiries into with
intelligence," · he s·aid.
what the White House and
"But
Meigs
Countr
has
a
Citizens Committee, which wonderful cooperall ve spir- federal law enforcement "All that it says is they used
has raised funds for studies It, and that's .worked for us knew about possible terror public sources to speculate
of the buildin~s· possible in
on what bin Laden might do.
attacks.
the past."
uses, said the. vllla~e would
Let me remind you that's
"Our
nation
is
not
well
URG's Paul Harrison rec·
prefer an outnght g1ft of the omrnended
a joint effort served when the charges of why I attacked his training
building to the university between thethat
university, the 'partisan politics' is leveled camp and why I asked the ·.
over a lease agreemel)t.
Economic
Development at those whp simply seek Pakistanis to go get him, and
Rio Grande now operates Office and the Middleport information
that
the why we contracted with some
a full-service branch on Mill community ~rsue gnnt American people need and people in Afghanistan to go
Street, which Dorsey said fu11ding to develop the deserve to know," said House get him because we thought
has been lllore successful building for full use.
Minority Leader Dick he was dangerous." ·
than originally anticipated.
"People said it was impos·
·~ slble when we began dis·
Auto-·Owner•lmurartce
cussing a Meigs Center,"
Let ua ·copy your old family
Doraey said. "Nothing could
hotoa. Speclllla 2·5x7'a for
Lite Home Car Buslneu
be more wrong. Our dream
1·U5, reg. S1U5. SAVE
'1'- "1!. Ar(l ;tl ~~~ •
5.001 We alao do paaaport
hu always been a larger
photoa, lcllntlflcatlon photoa
facility here."
·
INSURANCE PLUS
and Kodak procaaarng on
Dorsey said the university
photo·flnlahlng.
Watch
must closely evaluate the
AG£NCJ~, INC.
blttlrlea
lnatlllld
while
you
student demand for a larger
walt!
·
branch in Mlddlepon, and
114 Court Pomeroy
consider what other uses
could be made of the facility. .

Vada Ada Smith

Dorsey

•

,.

. .. &lt;

i

l

992-6677

•

STU

lmtee$~p, ~ ~ ~~;
Wllllney lllrf, Oeen's ~~of Rncllt:;; ~
Wro\$ori, AtNa\lc ~ Ohio ~ley Collece: ~a
Trustees Sd'loii!Shlp, Washlfii\On St•~: janet

fessiooal echlcatioo courses.
Texas, MiMOUri): 1993 lllld the selecti¥e Acl\!anced
Korean
Customs Senior
HUIDIIl
Admirlistratioo lnternltional Resourees/Peuonnel
Leadership Award: and 1986. Mlfie&amp;ers course. This tfiOOuiSIIIIKiing Y~ Mto of time tollllllaDdtr is also ·a
America Award tec~pient.
of the Air Force
He is currend1 a member graduate
senior
leaderslc:Ommanders
of the Mimn.i Yzllley Hlllllllll
Resource Association, Air courses'
Carter and · his wife,
force Associ11tion. and severTlunmy.
ha'lt twO dau,.bters..
al veterans associations.
Caner earned his under- Kristen and Jessica. MIS.
Rtaduate degtm from St. leQ Carter is employed at WrightUniversity in haman resource Patterson as a senior human
administration. and graduat- resources man~F. Kristen is
ed with honors (magna cum a sophomore at Wright State
laude}.
University near DaytOn, and
His graduate degtm was their daughter Jessica is a
e11tned
from
Central
Michigan Universil)' in 1988. junior at Beaven:reek Hi&amp;h
Caner is · a distinguished School. His parents. Mr; and
graduate from the Air Force Mrs. H.C. Caner, reside in
Officer Training School, pro- South Point.

eonao.

Yev Awards (North Olmlina.

Rlderiour, Trustees SdlolenNp, WhlllfC\0'1 Sta~: ~~m
Mlldnko, Thomas t.ll. Wolle ~p ~~~~~~
AWMI, NolthHeSt Pipe Cltlltns ~ StMIMhlp; ltttan.y
Spencer, Don Jachon ~p (2), ttherltne Ho(!ftk;h)

SCHOLAR ATHLITII - Chl'ts L)-Ons, Sara Mansfield, Janet
Cataw~~y, and Garrett Karr were honored as outstanding senlpr.
schotar/ llthletes during f'tiday's awards ooremony at Eastl!rn
High School. (Charlene Hoeflich)

•
.

Group starts advertising

campaign against
new lottery. game

LOTTERY RESULTS

.

. ATLANTA (AP} -A sin- lion - was sold in Chicago.
In addition to the grand
:gle player has won the •rand
·prize from Friday mght's prize winner, II players
Mega Millions lotiO draw- matched all five nurn6ers but
ing.
·
not the Meaa Ball number.
Lottery officials said the They will receive second
winning ticket from the prizes of $175,000 each.
Another
25 players
drawing - worth $27 mil·

.·

· COLUMBUS (AP} Public Television on
·As Ohio joins a multistate Wednesday and began to
lottery game to pump up air on the Ohio News
state finances, an op~onent Network on · Thursday,
is taking its campa1gn to Zanotti said. They also
the airwaves to get people will be aired on other tetenot to play.
vision stations in the state
. "The idea is to reinforce and three similar ads will
what people already know: be broadcast on 25 radio
That the lottery is·a scam,'~ stations beginning next
David Zanotti, president of week.
the Ohio Roundtable, a
In one ad titled :"The
public advocacy group, · Shell Game," two hands
said on Friday.
"One of the major wearing white gloves are
themes of the ads is that shown moving three small
gambling and good gov- silver cups on a table surernment don't mix."
rounded by playing cards,
Ohio joined the Mega red and blue poker chips
Millions game to raise and white dice. The hands
money tO hel~ patch a $1.5 move the cups around over
·billion deficit. The state . a small red ball as a narra·
hopes to raise about $41 tor talks about the history
million a year from multi· of lottery proceeds helping
state lottery sales. The first schools.
drawing was Friday night
fer a jackpot of $27 mil~
lion. The numbers drawn
were 15, 18, 25, 33 and 47.
The Mega Ball was 30.
There was one winner and
the Winning ticket was
sold in Chicago. ·
Sales for the new game ·
were strong since they
began Wednesday morning
and totaled $2,153,492,
said Ohio Lottery spokeswoman Mardele Cohen.
The campaign against
Mega Millions started just
days after Zanotti's group
along with several church·
es lost a legal battle to stop
the state from participating
in a · multistote lottery
game.
The four, 30-second ads 144~7:
were first shown on Ohio · ,.,._

1W 10 - Ee:sll!tfl H~ SCMol l&gt;rincipai ~ EdWards ~
sen\s 'olilt~t)flafl Sara Matlsfield with a medal l'ec&lt;lgnllfng
~ M OM of EMIJ!tfl HiRI\ Sdlrool's tlass of 2002 Top 10
Sti\OI8t$. Otllret ~erial'ls ate, l'roin left., Janet Ridenour,
l'GMeta SisS\111, ~tt l(;m, SaiutB~an Bradley llrannqn,
&amp;en ~. ~ Wi~. thns Lyons, Amanda Yeager and nna
~l@~Crot. ~tharleM Hoellidl)

matched four numbers, plus 30.
Other lottery picks from
tile Meaa Ball number good for third prizes or Friday:
$S,OOO each. .
OHIO
The winning numbers
Buckeye 5: 3·12-20·21·2:1
from Frida~ night's drawina
were: IS, 18, 2,, 33 and 41.
The Mega Ball number. was

Poppy Days Observed

Pick 3 Nil!ht: 2·4·8
Pius jnckpot was $7 million.
Pick 4 Night: 2-9·11·5
WESt VIRGINIA
Daily 3: 3-2-3 ·
Pick ~ Day: 4-9-9
Pick 4 Day: 6· 7·4·3
Dally 4: 2-4-6-9
Saturday's Super Lotto
Cash 25: 8-17-19·20·22·23

Mono1Street

'

JICUDn,OhiD

140·288·2101
serving the area's housing needs since 1977.

0 0 0 SPRING SALE 0 0 0

1'1ADI111

. WElCIMif
.'

· · Friday, May 24 will be Poppy
. Day In Gallipolis, when mem·
: · bars of American Le11on
Ladles Au~lllary Unit 27 will
~ell poppies In the Cllty to
· honor past and ourrent ve~er·
ana of America's wars ~or
. their sacrifices In t~e preser: : vatlon of freedom. City
: .. Commissioner Bob Marchi,
· : second from right, presented
• the unit with a proclamation
declarlnl Poppy Day and pur• chased a poppy from Ashley
·: Oiler, second from left. the
: unlt'a Junior Mlea Poppy.
Flanktn&amp; them are Barbara
• HUI, left, the au~lllary'a sec• ond vice president, and
• Auxiliary Preeldent Elele
• Cral&amp;o. Memorial Day wtll be
observed May 27. (Staff)
•
•
•

tiNINO

lOOM

liVING
10011

DISHI
,,... , ............,., 12-ti.....,•TI!IG

flriiii!IUM,. ... .-.;..-•IIII_..'IV_.,_IIII
,;

n.ru••••

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

llfiiiii"*AII ' IIIMIIMI!•I•

,.,..,., . . . . . . lUI~~~~

__ _
•

IUtOOMI

MMTU
IIPIOOM

llflOOM I

· This·28x8o Patriot Lin
Park with 4 bedrooms,
2 full baths, LR, Dining Room, Kitchen, B.reakfast Nook,
and
room with ional sunroom windows! ·

••• Liaflllfl . . . . . . , ............

'"

•

. PROUD TO BE APART

OF YOUR LIFE.

.•
•
••

Sub1cribe today.
446-2342

•

Houra

Mon • Fr19·7
Sat 9·5
Sun 1·5

1111Mirlll 111'111
Jet. It II. 83 a II 3111

IICUGO.Ihlo

141·288-2101 .

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�I Briefs
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Gttllfaa:Ra, Ohio• ll'oft•or. Ohio
Point Plett tnt. W.V..

· Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.
Den~

Publlther

j

• Fort Worth (Texa..~) Star-Telegram, 011 summer Mideast
summit: Seizing what he calls a '"new window of opportunity," Secretary of State Colin Powell announced last week
that the United States and three partners - the European
Union, Russia and the United Nations - are preparing a
Middle Eastern peace conference to take place this summer.
Those are lofty goals indeed, and we must be careful not
to pronounce the conference doomed before it has had a
chance to achieve even modest concessions from both sides
of the conflict.
If adversaries are talking, with the assistance of other powerful interested panies, there is less chance t~at the fighting
will continue on the scale of the past year. ·
The Bush administration is right to proceed with what
Powell called "serious and accelerated negotiations," and it
is squarely right in insisting that the leaders on both sides
take greater responsibility fur actions thaflead only to more
violence.
It is to be hoped that Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat will see this gesture as
an opening for crucial negotiation - a real chance to end the
·bloodshed and then begin the hard and tedious journey
toward a meaningful peace.
The Israeli and Palestinian people have suffered enoughindeed; far too mlich.
The proposed summit is yet another opportunity to try to
ease that suffering If not end it altogether. We pray that the
:two peoples' leaders will be men enough and selfless enough
:to take that chance.
·

TODAY IN HISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

• Today is Sunday, May 19, the I 39th day of 2002. There are
226 days left In the year.
Thday's Highlight in History:
On May 19, 1962, Democrats staged a fund-raiser in New
· York's Mi!.dlson Square Garden that was billed as a birthday
salute to President Kennedy, during which actress Marilyn
·Monroe performed a sultry rendition of '"Happy Birthday to
: You" for the guest of honor.
: On this date:
· In 1536, Anne Boleyn, the second wife of England's King
Henry VIII, was beheaded after being convicted of adultery.
In 1643, delegates from four New England colonies met in
Boston to form a confederation.
ln .1906, the Federated Boys: Clubs, forerunner of the Boys'
. Clubs of America, were organtzed.
: In 1921, Congress passed the Emergency Quota Act, which
·established national quotas for immigrants.
ln. 193S, T.E, Lawrence, also known as "Lawrence of
Arabia," died in England from injuries sustained in a motorcycle crash.
In 1943, in an address to the U.S. Congress, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill pll;dged his country's full support
in the war against Japan.
·
• In 19.!58, the United States and Canada formally established
·the North American Air Defense Command.
In 1964, the State Department disclosed that 40 hidden
microphones had been found in the U.S. embassy in Moscow.
In 1967, the Soviet Union ratified a treaty' with the United
States and Britain banning nuclear weapons from outer space. ·
In 1994, former first lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis died
.In New York at age 64.
: ~en years. a.so: The 27th An;ten~IT!ent .to the &lt;;onstitution,
· ;whtch proh1btts Congress from ~lvmg 1tseif m1d-term pay
·ralsesl.. went into effect. Vice President Dan Quayle criticized
the CtsS sitcom '"Murphy Brown" for having its title character decide t.o bear a child out of wed! :x:k. In Massapequa,
N.Y., Mary Jo Buuafuoco was shot and seriously wounded by
her husbllnd Joey's teen-age lover, Amy Fisher.
. Five years ago: NBC .sportscaster Marv Albert was charged
:In an indictment with assaulting a woman in an Arlington, ~;~.,
!hotel room and forcing her to perform oral sex. (Alben den1ed
·the charges, but at trial, ended up pleading guilty to assault
and battery.)
.
One year ago: The Arab League called on Arab govemment8 to sever political contacts with Israel until the Jewish
•lUIIe ended military action against Palestinians. "Point Given"
:won the Preukness as Derby winner '" Monarchos" finished out
:or the money.
Today's Binhdays: PBS newscaster Jim Lehrer is 68. TV
personality David Hartman is 67. Actor James Fox is 63.
Actress Nancy Kwan is 63 . Singer-songwriter Mickey
Newbury is 62. Author-di~tor Nora Eohron is 61. Rock
singer-compoiJCr Pete Townshend (The Who) is S7. Concert
:pla11lst Duvld Helfgott bJ ~S. Rock singer-musician Dusty Hill
('CZ Top} Is S3. Singer-actress Grace Jones is SO. Rock musician Phil Rudd (AC·DC) is 48. Baseball catcher Rick Cerone
Is 48. Actor Steven Ford is 46. Rock musician lain Harvie
(Del Amltri) Is 40. Rotk singer Jenny Berggren (Ace of Base)
It 30. Actor Eric Lloyd is 16.
Titought for Today: "If every nation gets the government it .
~iJCrves, every generation writes the history which correepondll wJtll its view of the world." - Elizabeth Janeway,
American author.

•

.

Exchange

.

Meeting slited

GALLIPOUS - InfoCision

! Management Corporation wiU

"'"-

~nsor the Chamber's next
Quarterly Business Elcchange.
This event has been scheduled
: forThesday, May 21, from S:30
. p.m. to 7 p.m. ill InfoCision,
• 242 Third Avenue in Gallipolis.
The speaker will be Phyllis
.Mason, president of the Society
of
Human
Resource
Management (SHRM). Ught
refreshments will be served.
Anyone wishing to attend
this networking opportunity
' should RSVP to the Chamber at
740446-0596 by Monday. ·

',

NATIONAL VI 'E W

Summer midest summit may be
opportunity for ending bloodshed

Spedal meellng

'GALLIPOUS - Gallia
RIO GRANDE - Gallia·
Academy High School choirs'
Vinton
Educational Service
spring-vocal concert is 1\Jesday
at 8 p.m. In the OAHS auditori· Center Governing Board will
meet in special session on
urn.
Thursday,
May 30 at 7 p.m. In
Selections will be presented
the
Human
Resource Bnilding
bythe'. and
. ~
.at Buckeye Hills Career Center,
choirs, :f~AHS S:~
Room 1.!55.
·
·
This . will be the seniors'
The
board
will
discuss,
in
perfOI!IWice.
Tickets will be available at executive session, personnel
the door and are $3 for adults. issues.
Children are admitted free.

.......

•

. -i!ir·

Lunch is at 12:30 p.m.
Andrew Davis and son.
All former teachers, students
(PubUahed with permJs.
and spouses are welcome. lkla)
BrillJ covered dish.

NORTHUP - "What are
. you 8oina to do with the rest of
your life'r' will be the topic for
i a presentation at 7 p.m.
i Monday by Alice Click. state
, directot' of Concerned Women
: for America, at the Northup
: Baptist Church in Northup.
; Rev. Jimmy Chapman Is the
! pastor. Women are cordi~
, mvited. For information,
: 304-895-3590.
••

••

OUR READERS' VIEWS
. hmen( unrfiaz"r
Rathburn, whose case has attracted a adu Its - you and I.
Pums
great deal of attention in your communiVery simply, the issue boils down to
ty.
I
Dear Editor:
r am aware of a good deal of control am writing in concern to the field trip versy regarding the actions of
policy for sixth graders at Meigs Junior Prosecuting Attorney Brent Saunders in
High School, decided on by Dolphin Chris' case. Though we have had setteam teachers.
backs in our efforts to secure Chris'
They decided that children who had an release from prison, it is my belief that
alternative school assignment or deten· Mr. Saunders has attempted to coonerate
tion after a certain date in the year would
c
not be allowed 10 attend the field trip to in that goal. He supP.Oned our motton to
Forked Run or Camden Park.
withdraw. Chris' gu11ty pleas, and stood
This Is a double punishment for these ready to enter a new plea bar~ain which
children. Th% have served their dues for would make Chris eligible for Immediate
release by the common pleas coun.
their miscon uct and deserve the right to
Unfortunately, the court did not agree
attend these once a year special activities. with our legal position in the matter, a
This class had had fund-raisers to pay for ruling which we are appealing. It Is my
these trips, but not all of them are allowed belief that Mr. Saunders' position in the
to attend, some of whom have not cause!! ,pending appeal will be consistent with his
any serious problems·at school.
knowledge that Chris had paid his debt to
I believe most of these teachers are society, has insight Into' the behavior that
lookin¥ only to serve themselves by led to his imprisonment, and is fit to
excludmg these children from this impor- assume a role 10 society.
tant event. Perhaps they think it will be
Though it seems clear to me that Chris
easier on them to have only the "easiest" . received a raw deal, 1do not believe Mr.
children there. What of the children who, Saunders to be responsible for that fact,
perhaps, have disorders such as ADHD and he has continued· work with us to
or emotional problems? They may not be secure justice for Chris'.
perfect, but they deserve the same oppor·
Dennis Pusateri
tunities as the other children. School field
, . ·, •
Columbus
trips are supposed to be educational, by
'
the way; aren't they? The website for
Camden Park describes tliis as a year-end
u ·•
celebration and describes the educational
Dear Editor:
""
program, one on Louisa Mae Alcott, for
A big thank you to the Sunday Times•
the date of the trip.
Sentinel · for publishing Dr. Nancy
I have spoken with management at Graham's letter to the editor (May 5)
Camden Park and they will be allowing titled "Illogical Argument."
me to take my son on this trip (although I
Dr. Graham'sletter addressed the issue
will be responsible for paying our admis- of embryonic stem-cell research and
sion) but that does not change the fact human cloning, both of which the
that this policy should never have been biotechlmedicaf research industries seek
allowed and shouldn't be for future class- to dis~ise and obscure with vague and
es. This .should not be viewed as a deceptive labels, such as regenerative
reward, but as educational and fun for all medicine, primitive cluster of cells, !herkids. This policy is like saying ''you're apeutic cloning or other such-like crass
grounded so no Christmas for you," utilitarian ethos to deceive.
.
ridiculous.
ln early April, President George W.
I will be fmwarding a copy of this let- Bush took the "high road" by stating:
ter to members of the sehool board.
'The most fundi!mental principal of medTlna Wolfe leal ethics is that no human life should be
;
Pomeroy exploited or extin~uished for the benefit
fio. rj'US(;Ce
of another." Cleary, no moraii,Y intelli·
rrc
•
gent perso11 can deny that at Jssue are
human lives in their most vulnerable and
Dear Editor:
nascent stage which, if allowed to grow,
I write as the attorney for Chris will develop into "'bies, then kids, then

Spare parts?

UT.orkz'ng

good or bad, joy or sorrow, love or hate,
moral or evil, life or death.
It seems to me that this technological
age has little or no respect for the sanctity of human life - a lack of respect as
expressed in egregious acts of inhumanity including abortion. . infanticide,
euthanasia and who knows what's next
-cloning human beings for the sole purpose of harvesting, warehousing and distributing spare body parts?
Bob Murphy
Vinton

Response appreciated
Dear Editor:
On May 8, 2002, at 5:55 p.m., a tornado struck Gallia County in the areas of
Raccoon and Springfield townships. The
damage was confined to an approximate
four-mile area beginning on Adamsville
Road. The tornado then crossed U.S. 35
and traveled in a east northeasterly direction.
·
·
· On behalf of the Gallia County Board
of Commissioners and the Galli a County
Emerge~cy Manage":lent . Agen~y. I
WO\IId hke to take .th1s opportumty to
express our heartfelt sympathy to those
residents who suffered losses as a result
of the incident.
lb the emergency service providers,
law enforcement personnel, state and
county highway workers, American Red
Cross and volunteers (known and
unknown) who responded to the scene
and to those who assisted in any way, we
say thank
ln addition, Gallia County would like
to say thank you to individuals and businesses,_known and unknown, that provided assistance during this emergency.
You J!CVer expect something lil,ce this to
occur m your area. However, Gallia
County respo~ and handled the situation well due to the ongoing training of
emergency personnel.
. Again, to all those who assisted In any
way, and continue to assist, thank you.
Mkhael Nun
Director
Gallia County Emergency

rou..

c.

~anagementAgency

ATIIENS- The May meet·
GALLIPOLIS . - Bossard
ing of Southeast Ohio
Memorial
Library will be
Woodland Interest Group
closed
Monday,
Maj .27 in
(SEOWIG) is Monday at 7 p.m.
in the Athens County Extension observance of Mernonal Day.
Office, 280 W. Union St.,
Athens.
For more information, conRIO GRANDE - The viitact Doyle Melick at 74()..669..
lage of Rio Grande will flush
3131.
hydrants on Tllesday and
Wednesday of this week from 9
'liPC
a.m. until 4 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia . There may be some tempoCounty Local Emergency rary water discoloration. '
Planning Commiaee's regular,
bimonthly full committee meet•
ing is Monday at noon in the
911 Center basement conferenceroom.
GALLIPOLIS
Past
Exalted Rulers Association of
Gallipolis Elks Lodge 107
announced that scholarship
VINTON - Vinton Area applications are now available
Alumni B~uet is Saturday, at area high school guidance
May 25 at 1nton Elementary · offices.
School.
The scholarships are sponRegistration is 5 p.m., with a sored l!Y the association and are
social hour until dinner is In the fonn of tiJreC: $ J,000
served at 7 p.m. For more infer- scholarships to graduatin_g hil!h
mation, call 388-8504.
school seniors living m tlie
__.._
lodge's jurisdiction area of
U.U • • - •
&lt;;Jallia, Meigs and Mason counties.
GALLIPOLIS
0.0. ' Scholarships are awarded
~clntY,re, Board of ¥
based on scholarship, financial
Commissioners' May ~ need and ~nal achievement.
is Monday at 7 p.m. m the
The Past Exalted Rulers
district office at the Gallia Scholal!lhip program is now in
County Courthouse.
its 14th year and has been preIn addition to the monthly sented to 35 area students.
business meeting, the board .Money for these scholarships is
will be presented with .the pro- derived from the Interest of the
POled .Raccoon Creek CoUnty Past Exalted Rulers Scholarship
l'ark Jona-ranae JDiinlenance Fund (a 501-c-3 tax exempt
and enhailcement pilljt&amp;m by corporation) established solely
Rick Mone.
for this purpose.
Any penon may contribute to
thla tax-exempt fUnd. For more
inforination. contact the Elkl
GALLIPOLIS .- Gallla Lodae or . any Put Bxalted
Ac"'•oy Hlah Sdlool aiWMi Ruler.
for the
at 1943, 1944
ltld 1945 w!11 have their third

Hydrant flush

meellng

High court's (superch¢' serve up indigestible hash
In an improbable metaphor,. the
Supreme Court is composed of nine
superchefs who are charged with preparlng superdishes- dishes that lowerCOUI'!8
will savor and respect. On Monday the
superchefs gave their clientele a plate. of
indigestible hush.
.
This culinary disaster occurred as the
court struggled once again with the
intractable problem of smut. The
Constitution says In the P'll'5t Amendment
that Congress may make no law abridging
the freedom of speech or of the press.
Monday's question was straight to the
point: Does the Child Online Protection
Act of 1998 violate the FU'SI Amendment?
Beats me, said Justice Clarence
Thomas, speaking for five members of the
court.
Beats us, said Justice Anthony Kennedy,
speakln$ for himself, Justice David Souter
and Justice Stephen Breyer.
It . surely does violate the First
Amendment, said Justice John Paul
Stevens, speaki11g- as he so often speaks
- only for himself.
·
lntheend,52pugesafterthey~the

justices took on the roles of
tome111. They sent the hash back to

cus3rd
Circuit for i'unher tasting and seasoning.
Meanwhile, they lljP'C'ed that enforcement
of the act will continue to be enjoined.
The Child Online Prot«tion Act
(COPA) is the successor to the
Communications Decency Act of 1996
(CDA), which the Supreme Cowt struck
down in 1997. In that opinion, the court
f!Qwned upon the act's "ovetbreadlh." The
CDA took in all forms of conununicatioo
on the Internet, includinB communications

by e-mail, Ustservs, newsgroups and chat
rooms. It was too much. Even so, the court
in 1997 reaffirmed that Congress has a
"compelling inldest" in proteetin_g the
·physical a00 psychologicaf well-bemg of
minors.
Congress dutifully lried again. The prohibitions under COPA apply not to CVCf,Y·
thing in cyberspace but Ollly to material
posted on the World Wide Web. The act
makes it unlawful IIi use the Web for malerial that is "harmful to minors." The act
then defines speech that is harmful to
minors in terms thlll reach back to 1957.
Prohibited speech is speech that "the average person. applying contemporary communny srand8fciA, would find, taldng the
matenal as a whole and with respect to
minors, is designed to appeal to or pander
to prurient In~"
Other criteria take in speech that depicts
sexual acts or sexual organs "in a manner
P*ntl_y offensive with respm to minors."
There 1s an exemption for material that has
"serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value for minors."
· In Monday's fractured opinion. thejlllltices dwelled especially upon the act's
requirement that questionable material be
judged br, "contempo(lll)' community
standards. ' Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
Jaid the court lihould define "conununity
standards" as national standards. Justice
Breyer, displaying an unellpected reckless
&amp;treak. said he believed Congress had
almldy ~the meaning of"conununily." ~ poinled to a starement. in the
HoWle Conunen:e Commiaee report that
community standards are national and
adult standards. not geographical stan-

•

dards.
Justice Kennedy said his c o l . was
giving too much weight to "the vteW of a
majority of one HoUse committee." He
found no reason to believe that a majority
of the whole House holds a uniform view.
Justice John Paul Stevens said his brother
Breyer's novel opinion was conttadicted
by the clear te"t of the statute. Stevens and
Kennedy got it right.
My own view, as a cwbslone constitu· tiona! lawyer, is that a "contemporary
community standard" is indeed a geop-aphical standard. It is therefore an
unpossible 8tandacd to steer by. The Fll'5t
Amendment cannot rationally be invoked
to prohibit speech In Las Cruces that is
permissible in Las Vegas. One
Constitution fits all.
,
What is the answer to smut? As a rnaaer
of law there is no satisfactory answer.
There are only degrees of dissatisfaction.
In this particular kitchen the superchds
wiU never cook up anything that is constitutionally edible. Government can do its
part Jl9( by punishing the mere depiction
Of anti-socilil acts, but by punishing the
acts themselves: prostitulion, PCdei'lillt)',
child abuse, ind«ent exposure. ff the evils
of obsclmity are to be combated- and
the3e evils should be combated- we will ·
have to look ·beyond the l11alble halls of
Con$fCSS and the court. We might tty
loolc1ng at our homes, our churches, our
schools and 011111elves.
(Lettel1l to Mr. Kilpartidc should be sent
in care of this newspaper, or by e-mail to
kill!llljj(at)aol.corn.)
James J. Kilpatrick is a co/U1111iisr for
Universol Press Syndicme.

Friday:
CENTRAL.DISPATCH
I:S6 a.m., Bowles Road,
Nellie Michaels, Pleasant
.... ft1nS
Valley Hospital;
.
I0:30 a.m., Rockspnngs
GALLIPOUS- Damage to Rehabilitation Center, Violet
a structure at 119 Cedar St., · Duncan, Holzer Medical
Gallipolis, was estimated at Center.
.
more than $30,000 to ptopetty
MIDDLEPORT
and contents as a result of a fire
4:57 p.m., Pearl Street, auto
Gallipolis volun- fire, Brenda Lemley, owner.
teet firefi teis reported.
RUTLAND
P)'obab e cause of the fire
I: l 7 p.m., with assistance
remains undetermined, fire- from Pomeroy, Syracuse, auto
fil!llters said. The blaze started accident, Ohio 124, Russell
in-the basement of the structure Crider, Holzer; Lamar Lyons,
and was reported to GVFD at O'Bieness Memorial Hospital .
8:57 p.m. two trucks and 21
SYRACUSE .
volunteers responded and were
l I :48 a.m., Yellowbush
. on the scene for about Jhree Road. Gertrude Neigler, Holzer.
hours.
The house is owned by John
Saunders, and was tenanted by
Catherine Snyder, the report
CHESTER - Plans are
said
being made for a fund-raising
GVFD was also called to benefit for John B. Ridenour on
Gallipolis
Developmental June 22 beginning at 10:30 a.m.
Center. at 9:26 a.m. Thursday, at the Chester F'rre Department.
which proved to be a false
The ·event is being sponsored
alarm. One truck and seven by the Chester community and
firefighters responded.
friend~ of the Ridenour family.
Included will be a spaghetti din•• .-. _. ___ L
ner and auction. For more infor.
1IVICIOWS"
mation, residents may call 9853537. .

Wednesdafe

planned

.

Sddarship .
avalable .

Meeting set
POINT PLEASANT- The
· Mason County Teen-age
· Republicans (TARS) will have
· an organizational meeting and
the Mason County Republican
Women will have a re-organi. zational meeting at 4:30 P·~·
Thesday, May 22, at the Point
· Pleasant Women's Club
Building on Parrish Avenue in
Point Pleasant, beside the
Lutheran Church and across
from Ordnance Elementary.
A nomination committee will
be appointed for the porpose of
• electing officers for both orga' nizations The TARS will meet
just before the Republican
Women. For information, call
. 304-895-3.590.

Alumni banquet

••-r

Juh•
{

·

PATRIOT
Chase
: Galdwell of• Patriot is a new
junior member of the American
. Anaua Auoclation, llld s~
: Crouch, the ~on •
•executive vice
; The asaoc adon'• junior
. memben are eUJlble to reJIIIe!'
·, Clltle In the auOClatlon. ~·
P.ll' In pro~~ by
. ihe Nlitional Junior Anaua
Auoclation, and lalce ~ In
· uaoclatlon.apontored -~~~ t11111111 combined reunion on
and other national and ~ Prldty, June 28 It the Holldty

cl•••

Inn.

eventa.

J:.~~~~

New.......,

(clau of~43
ll61+279-3026;

Juanita

Saunden (' 44)
at 446-2 00; or Geraldine
"Tootle" Bolla' EllcetiiOI' (' 4~)
at 446-3~21.

CROWN CITY - Ban:u1
Hollow Angus of Crown City,
Jeff Daniela of Patriot, arid
Matthew Sprague of Bidwell
: are new memben of the

MIJ25

-=~~ex:
· utive vice president of the St

CROWN cri'Y -A reunion

Joseph, Mo.-based organiza- ol alumni of the Conner Brush

College Grade School on Teenll
Run "Road has been 8et for

tion.

KILPATRICK'S VIEW

. Dill:btrJtl May 16- Mrs. answered the following calls on 5921, or Carol McCullough,

Rolld.

With more than 35,000 active
adult and junior members, the Satulday, May 25 from II a.m.
association is the ~ beef until 4 p.m. at Providence
. cattle registry associallon in the Baptist Church, Teens Run

.

banquet

GALLIPOLIS - Mel Craft,
Master of Morning Dawn
Lodge, Gallipolis, announced
that a Widows Banquet will be
held Thursday, May 23, at 6:30
p.m. at the lodge.
The dinner will be in honor of
widows of lodge members who
have passed away, and will be
prepared by the Eastern Star.
Entertairunent will be provided
and the dinner is free. If anyone
needs assistance to the lodge,
ca11446-2706.

992·5322.

Banquet set .
POMEROY - Final piWlS
have been made for the
Pomeroy Alumni Association
banquet May 25 at Meigs high
School cafeteria. Dinner will be
served a1 6:30 p.m., followed
by a Wince at 9 p.m. ·
Reservations are to be made
by Tuesday. Local alumni can
purchase tickets at Swisher and
Lohse or Francis Aorisl
through Tuesday. They are $15
each. As in previous years,
alumni are permitted to take
guests to the reunion.
Decorating for this year''
banquet will be done on
Saturday morning because or
the Meigs High School grdduation. Any.local gmduale willing
to help with the decorating are
asked to come to the cafeteria at
8:30a.m.

Auditions set
MIDDLEPORT
Auditions for the Riverberid
Community Theater's presenta·
· lion of 'The Wizard of Oz" will
be held June 22 from 9 a.m.
until noon, for adults, and June
23 from 2 to 4 p.m. for children
at the Riverbend Arts Council.
Those auditioning should be
prepared to sing a song from tl1c
musical.

'

SYRACUSE - Pool passes
for London Pool in Syracuse
are now available for purchase.
lb obtain a pass, call pool
manager Bobbi Hill at 9925475 or 992-5418, daily, from
noon-6
p.m.,
except
Wednesdays, which will be
pOMEROY - Meigs High
noon-3 p.m.
School
class of 1992 will
Please do not contact the
EMS or sheriff's department for observe its I Oth year reunion on
pool infonnation.
May 25 at the home of Jon
Sargent.
·The event will begin at noon
and the cost is $5, with families
CHESTER- A boil advisowelcome. those attending arc
ry issued for customers in the
to take a chair, along with a side
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
POMEROY- Meigs junior dish or dessert. Other food will
District in ·Chester, Sutton, golf league signup is
Bedford and Salisbury town- Wednesday, May 29, 9 a.m. to be provided.
All classmates are invited tu
ships has been lifted.
noon at the Pine Hills Golf come.
To RSVP or get direcResults of a sample taken Course. ·
tions,
call
Julie Buck Howard.
· Thursday are considered safe.
Play starts on June 5 with
sign-in at 8:30a.m. and tee time 992-1044, or Sargent at 992
9 a.m. for children 8 through 0413. Invitations were sent, but
MIS
high school. For more lnfonna- the addresses of many of the
POMERQY _ Units of tion, call the course at 992- graduates in that class are nOI
·
Meigs Emergency Services 6312, Debbie Davis at 992- known.

·Reunion planned

Golf league

slgnupsset

EMS

. KC 1111111111

CHESHIRE- Kyaer Creek
Alumni Banquet is "Saturda~,
¥a)' 25 at Rlver Valley Hlf! .
Scliool. Rejistration and IOClal
hour bejlnl at 6 p.m., with dinnet at 7 p.m.
.
Reservations are $10 per perIOD and can be sent to Bcicky
Hockman Meaige (class of
'74), SS1Iohnson Ridge Road,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
phone 446-3194. Reservations
can also be emailed to Elva
W!lliarns Davis (' 61) at mcejdav@zoomnet.net.

HMCnotes
Holzer Medical Center

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l.wt (4J. , ...... WTII
955 Second Avenue Galllpoll•, OH
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740 44&amp;-1171

1-80CH84-5482

'---~·--~---------------------------------------------------------------------·----.

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Page AI• 611•N!' ~int~-6t11ti11tl

Pomeroy • II tkllapoct • Ga'lfli1lla. ONo • PofM PI

, Inside:

rt,WV

w• .- rG~~Nc~ at' ,.tpOiftt. Polf! 112

'

GALLIA COMMUNITY CALENDAR
. CROWN CITY- Forgiven Four
ATHE.NS - Survivofs of &amp;lfl:ide
CROWN CITY - Darrell Woten will sing at Mount Zion Missionary Support Group, 7 p.m.~
will be ~ing at the Good Hope Baptist Church, 6 p.m.
Chufdl of ChriSt. 785 w.
St..
Baptist Churdl SUnday at 11 a.m.
For~ c:al740-593--7414.
and 7 p.m.
Monday, Ma_y 20
.
GALLIPOLIS The Galiia
s.tunlay, GAlliPOLIS - 25
lOimdsotdatlo.,,IQ will be
ADDISON - Sunday school at County Animal Welfare League
AdcH1011 Freewill BaptiSt Church. meets at St. Peter's Episcopal in concet1 at Gel'ipnk Ctilrdl ol
10 a.m.; 1)111aching service, 6 p.m. Churph at 7:30p.m. Public is invit- Christ in Christian UniOn, 2173
with Rick Bancus.
ed to attend.
Eastern Ave., 7 p.m. Pre-concert at
6:30 p.m. with Joy FM Trio.
GALLIPOLIS- Ralph Workman
GALLIPOLIS Knights of
will preach at Mina Chapel Church. Columbus dinner meeting, 6:30
CENTERVIllE - Centenrilte
7 p.m.
p.m., Down Under Restaurant..
Been Dinner and Parade. 11 a.m..
okl Centerville ElementaiY School
MORGAN
CENTER
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Academy
Homecoming dinner at Morgan High School Choir picnic, Raccoon
PATRIOT Southwestern
Center Holiness Church, noon, on Creek County Park, 6 p.m.
Elementary alumni reunion wil be
the grounds. Services at 1 p.m.,
6 p.m. at lhe grade school. For
with singing by the Pilgrims and the
NORTHUP - Alice Click . of mpore information call-446-9287.
Beaver Famll)'.
Concemed Women of America will
speak at Northup Baptist Churdl, 7
Sunday, May H
.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County p.m.
VINTON - Ebenezer Church .
Historical
and
Genealogical
150th anniversary celebration.
Society, 2 p.m. Program wiiT be
CENTERVILLE - Meeting at Mount Carmel Road, 12:30 p.m.
winners ·of History Day competi- Thurman Grange 1416, 7 p.m., to
BIDWELL - Annual Lemleytions from South Gallia and Gal.lia plan bean dinner. Potluck to follow.
Ralph reunion at Poplar Ridge
Academy high schools.
Tuesday, May 21
·
Church fellowship building, dinner
GALLIPOLIS -Whitt Family will
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County at12:30 p.m.
sing and Teresa will preach at Bell Chamber of Commerce Quarterly
Business Exchange, 5:30 p.m.,
Saturday, June 1
Chapel, 6 p.m.
lnfoCision Management Corp., 242
RIO GRANDE - Celtic Festival
GALLIPOLIS
Sammons Third Ave., RSVP to chamber at at the University of Rio Grande. .
Family In concert at First Church of 446·0596.
BIDWELL - Gospel sing, 6 p.m.
God, Sp.m.
VINTON - Huntington Grange at Garden of My Heart Holy
GALLIPOLIS - Randy Lee 731 regular meeting, 7:30 p.m., Tabernacle shelter house\ 4950
Ohio 850. Featured s ilgers,
Patterson Jr. will preach at Debbie poltuck refreshment to follow.
Cherry Ridgft Bluegrass Gospel
Drive Chapel, 6 p.m.
Thursday,
May
23
Singers,
Benny
Simpkins,
'

" • Nttltlle IOfm. hi• Bl
CMSWG~-~IH

Sunday, May 18

I

. SUNDAY
. POMEROY - Steve Little
will be preaching at the
Freewill Baptist Church,
Route 7 and Story's Run
"'""'Road, Sunday, 7 p.m.
Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND Rutland Church

'··..

. . .... . . , ,.. 1111
-

.I

... .....

_._

_., ..

Revival,
of the

Nazarene, Sunday through
Wednesday, Sunday services, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m. Monday, Tuesday and
Wednesday, 7 p.m. Rev.
Mervin Smith, evangelist;
singers, The Sisson family.
Pastor Sam Basye invites
public.

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
County Right to life,
Middleport Church of Christ,
7:30p.m. Monday.
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens,
Monday, 11 a.m. at the firehouse. Linda King, speaker;
Diana Coates to take blood
pressure. Potluck.

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Church . of the
Nazarene will hold a gospel
POMEROY - Veterans
contest May 19 at 6:30p.m.
The Pine Ridge Boys will Service Commission meet·
sing. Pastor Alan Midcap ing, 9 a.m. Monday, at the
invites public. Refreshments offiCe, 117 Memorial Drive.
will be served.
POMEROY . - Pomeroy
MONDAY.
Chapter 186, OES regular
LETART
Letart meeting, Monday, 7:30 p.m.
Township Trustees, Monday, Take ltems for auction.
5 p.m. at the office building.
Refreshments.

CROWN CITY - Revival at
Crown ~ Methodist Church, May
20-24, 7 nightly. Ryan Massie wiH
preach, loliied bv Wes Ervin on
Friday.· SlnfPrs include For His
Glory, Monctay; Pannell Family,
Tuesday·
church singers,
Wednesday; Earthen Vessels,

Hallie Smith will ceh'blale her
86th birlhda1 on MlY 17. c.nSs
. may be sent to her an71M Stale
RoUte 160, Vinton, ONo 45686

D«olby Wallace Friley, a foii'MII
Gallia
resident. wil c:elebrate her
birthday on MlY 26.
Cards may be sent to her at lM1
Vbrkshira Court, Springfield. Ohio
45503.

cor'a:l

Community Calender la IMIVlce to naft..

llahecl "M a he

grou~
wlahlng to
announce meetings and .I ii**'

profit

even... The calender Ia not

dHigned to promot.

aaiM or

funcHiilaera of any type. lttM'M
are printed as space permlta and
c:~~nnot be gual'llnteed to IPPilf.
Fax ltema to 7*441-3008: em.~!
them to ahapkaOmydallytrt.

.• '

bune.com.

Tuberculosis Clinic closes. .
TUESDAY
POMEROY ...:. Childhood
POMEROY Senior
immunization clinic Tuesday; Citizens Day to be observed
1 to 7 p.m. at the Meigs Tuesday beginning at 10:30
County Health Dapartment. a.m. arid cOncludfng with a
Take child's shot records. luncheon. Joy Pad!jett from
Children must be accompa- the Governor's office of
nied
by
parenVIegal Appalachia to apeak.
guardian. Children enrolling
rn kindergarten who need a
WEDNESDAY
TB skin fest should plan to
POMEROY Meigs
attend the clinic before 4 p.m. County Board of Heahh SP4t
at
which
time
the ctal meeting Wednesday, 5

..

•

p.m. in the conference room
at ·the Health Department:
Purpose of the meeting Is to
discuss personnel issuas.
THURSDAY
ATHENS - Survivor of
Suicide Support Group,
Thursday, 7 p.m. at the
Athens Church of Christ, 785
W. Union St., Athens,
Everyone welcome. For more
lnformatoin, call the church,
593·7414.
•

...

. $5 pays your
first week's rentll*

····-·

&amp; llllci'IIDI

*CIIiihle talk to our friendly RENT-2-0WN folke today for detalle

.... . r

r&lt; r ·:·: : I~-··, ·I· () \f \, I,.
.

Because we all should have nice stuff

CRASH INJURES Two·

Rive~

online at:

a:':·r~:~cp~=.

~

....,..

te..

POMEROY
- The
Soulhem HiP Sthool a~m
vmity ~boll team will
be servi~ tt Wendy's
Restai&amp;Wit Ul Pomeroy tbt
comina Moadty, May ao
from ~:00 to ~:30 p.m.
Wendyfs is sponsorina
Sauthem n· ht with ten ~
ttnt of all ~nlng room pro.
teeds aoina to the Sautllem
Girls blllk~tbllll prognm.
• The Soutbetn High
School girls· bllsketbllll team
and Wendy's of Pomeroy
will be sponsorina a 12-team
var&amp;ity girls basketball
shoot-out on June 22 at
Sautbern High School and
Sauthern Elementary build·
inas. The shootout begins ot
8 o.m. and guarantees lit
leust three gWlles. The entry
fee is $100 due by M11y 20,

2002.

.

All inquiries should be
directed to Conch' Scott
Wolfe nt 740-992·1490 or
C.T. Ch~apmnn at 992-5270.
Other informution may be
found by contnctina Wolfe 111
Southern High S"chool 111
949-2611.
All entry fees should ~
mulled to Scott Wolfe,
Southern
Basketball
Shootout, ·Bolt 872, Rncine,
Ohio 4S77l.

.Eastemhoo~
camp slatei:l
·for June

REEDSVILLE The
Eastern High School Eagle
basketball camp will be
heldJune 3-7 from 9 a.m.noon for boys and girls enter·
ing grades 3-6.
Preregistration Is $30 and
registration on first day of
camp is $40.

Citie$ Community Health Coalition

Eastern 3-on·J

hoops toumey

REEDSVILLE- Eastern
High School will play host to
a 3-on-3 basketball tourna·
ment Friday and Saturday for
agee 11-and-up.
The tournament. which
begins at 6 p.m. Friday, will
be single elimination and cost
is $25 per team.
For more information, call
Howie Caldwell at 667-3368
or 985-3329, or call Rick
Edwards at 992-6174 or Tim
Simpson at 662.0110.

Medical prof(!ssionals providing free
health care answers 8c physician referral

1-800-462-5255

•••

E-mail your sports news to
sports@mydailytrlbune.com.
All itelllJ will be published as
1100.0 as possible.

Better health for the Tri-State.
•

RACINE
- The
Southern boys und girls ele·
mentary basketbull camps
will be slated for the first
two weeks In June. The boys
camp will be June 3· 7 from
8:30 to II :30 and the. girls
camp will run from June 10·
14 from 9·12.
Cost of each camp is $35
per student-athlete and
· should be submitted prior to
May 24 so that shirts can be
ordered. Families with more
than one child in camp will
pay no more than $SO total.
Each camper. will receive o
camp bull und !·Shirt if preregistered. ·
Registrution ut the door is
$40 with no guarantee of a
shirt pr ball. Camp forms
have already been distrib·
uted at Southern Elementnry
School.
·
For further information
contact Scotl Wolfe at 992·
1490 or R)'an Lemley at
Southern High School.
Elementary baSketball play·
ers will recei.ve their winter
sports awards at awards day
next week.
·

Galllpolle
448 - 4417

Nurse On Call
A IWI&gt;Yehlcle collision Friday on ,Ohio 124 near Minersville sent a
dr1Yer and his ,passenger to area hoSplUils with injuries, the
Gaiii&amp;Meigs Post of the State Hlgtlway Patrol reported. Troopers
said Anthony C. COffl'nan, 18, 2378 Addison Pike, Gallipolis, was
westbound at 1:10 p.m. whEin his vehicle traveled through standI~C water, causl~ him to lose control, spin around and COllide
with an eastbound vehicle driwn by Lamar L Lyons II, 21, no
address available. Meigs EMS transported Lyons to O'BienesS
Memorial Hospital, Athens, while his passenger, Russell Crider,
18, 30870 Old Portland Road, Portland, was taken to Holzer
Meclleal Center. Both vehicles had disabling damage, and
Coffman was cited lor ~safe speed. (Staff)

"

-

~

·Prep

Southem yoUth
hoops camp·.
sctiedulecr

'

SERVICE SLATED- Calvary Ba_ptist Church in Rio Grande will hold a public installation se~ice for the Rev. Heath A. Jenkms today, Sunday, at 2 p;m., with a reception following ·
the servtce.
.

-

~

GAWA - Old fashiOned tenl
I8VIval wilt be held at Gallla ~
Chun:h May 13--11 7 p.m. ~
with evanilelist bavld Frazee.
Sr1ec:ia1 Singing by Gospel
Bl~ Boys, Headed Home
and FOtgiven 4. Pastor Cline
Rawlins irivita 8118fY01'18·
·
.
ADDISON- Revival at Adcbon
Freewill Baptist Churdl, May 1318, 7 p.m. nlgtltlv. with Revs. Bob
Thompson, Jidt "Parsons and Don
Estep preaching and sln!llna by
Glorytand · Befievers, Earthen
Vessels, Addison Choir, Johi'lson
family and othen.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR

Community Calendar Is
publlahed 11 a free service
to non-profit groups wish·
lng to announce meetings
and apeclal events. The
c:~~lendar Ia not dealgned to
promote sales or fund·rals·
era of any type. !lema are
printed only as space per·
mila and c:~~nnot be guaran·
teed to be printed a apeclf·
.
lc number of days.

1

•

I

Tennis
UNa FOR RIDI TICKmt - Fans stand In line waltlna to purohase Cincinnati Reds' tickets at Clneray
Saturday at Clner&amp;Y Field In Cincinnati. The Reds' sold the tickets for It's final home urles at Clneray Field. (AP)

Crowd endures cold,
rain to get Reds tickets
'

.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Al\cr 44 hours of slcepina on
concrete und dodalng the rtlln, Mutt Berry slid onto the
front se11t of his truck und headed home ror 11 shower.
·one of ihe first fnns to buy tickets for the Cl'nclnnntl
Reds' lust scheduled homestalld nt Clnergy Field didn'l
mind whut he endured to 4et those 18 tickets.
"It wus totally worth It, ' llllld Ben-y, 2i, 11 mlll'ketina
mi\Jor nt Cincinnati StatlJ. "I'll do It ugnln next yeW' for
opening day tickets. That will be bl&amp;~~er than this,"
·
More than 100 fans huddled on me piiiZII at ClnefllY
Field In lhe momlna cold Soturduy to buy llckcts for
what mlaht be the IIISt baseball games played ot the Sill·
dium. ·
.
The Reds put tickets on sale 111 the sllldlutn nnd 111
numerous other locations for their Sept. 22·24 series
against the Phihtdelphlu Phillles. It could be the lllllt
series before Cineray Field is tom down to muke woy for
the Oreal American Boll Plll'k, scheduled to open In

2003.

·

Tickets 110ld out In 40 minutes for the tlnal grune on
Sunday, Sept. 22. The Reds plun to dill up home plate
after the final out of that gllltle und move It to the new
ballpark under construction beyond the left. field wall.
Even though they're in first place In the NL Centro!,
lhe Reds haven't been able to dt'uw bla crowds. Openlna
day sold out in 26 mlnu~es, but the Reds haven't come
ciOBe to matching that flrst-gume crowd of 41,913.

Clncinnutl hus the flfth-lowest uttelldunt'll In the
Nutiomtl Leuaue, u disup~lntment for club offid~ls whn
hoped thut nostulgiu for ClneraY's flnlll seuson would
trtlnslllle Into better ticket sule8.
Tickets for. the flmtl series drew 11 wnve or fw1s from
ucross southern Ohio und northern Kentucky. Dozeng
cumpcd out on the ClncraY pllllJI despite 11 d11ylona ruin
Frlduy und overnight temperutures thut dipped Into the
low 40s.
"Thwnrd the end, I wus'' gettina doa tired," suid
Anthony Jones, 24, who II ves In Rnrden, n town 70 miles
eust ofCineinnuti. "l'v11 been hllfe 24 houn. I Willi one or
the flrst in line."
Berry, who wu~ on the Red~' amunds crew lllllt yeur,
wus 111 the t'ront of the ticket line. He sot the honor by
being the 11rst to urrtve - ut I p.m. Thul'!lduy•
''It was quite lonely," he snid. "I just sm there In my
choir."
·
·
The cold and ruin forced the ellltlpers to hide under the
overhong nt the tleketgute, donn ina coots nnd blunkets to
st11y wwm. When the ticket windows opened, two ven·
dol'8 stood ut the ed11e of the crowd, trylna to l!llllll'ro~n
malts and cold soft clrlnk8 to the bundled funs.
"I huven 't110id nny," one vendor suld.
Fnns were limited to buying 81X tickets for ench 811D111.
Tickets cost $3 more than usuul for the flnulaames which miaht not wind up belnathe tlnull!llnlC8.

DIITRICT IOUND - Gallia Academy'l
Ryan Matura, aeen here aaalnet Athana
thle paat week, tlniahad 1econd In aeo·
tlonal action at Portamcuth Friday.
Mature will Join GeHle Aoedamy'l dou·
biu team of Joah Stapleton and Carl
Herinlnl at the diatriote on May 24-28
at the Columbua School for Glria with
the winner• advancing to the 1t11t1 tour·
nament et Ohio State the !ollowlnl
weekend. (Butch Cooper)

Regular season games during the postseason?
When should high school teumN
cOmplete their reaular l!ell80n7
Better yet, ahould 11 team play a
reaular season game when they have
already beaun their postseason tour·
nament?
Should a team that·ha8 been ellml·
.nated from the postseason be allowed
to continue to play reaular season
game1?
Theae are question• that have aone
throuah my mind since I've been
here where, irt the ltatlJ of Ohio, a
team can continue playina reauhtr
season malceup games as alona 111 the
postaeason is underway. W~CI\ the
statlJ tournament of that respective
sport concludes, then no more make·
up games are allowed.
With the ralns playlna havoc to the
end of most hi&amp;h school baAeboll and

Butch
Cooper
THE BUTCHMEISTEA
softball teams' reaular Aeasons, teams
have rescheduled their re spective
conference aames to be played fol·
lowin&amp;
tlieir
first
8Cctlonul
gamu .. und even district aumeH. .
If there is 11 league title fit stake,
then perhup• the teum or teams
Involved 1hould be allowed to ploy,
but what if a leaaue .chump ion ha8

alreudy been determined'/
Finlshina second, third, founh or
whatever In n lenaue is kind of lrrele·
vant.
This leads to a new question, is the
reaulur lleUilOn IICheduie mudll 10 pre·
pure team8 forJhe po8tsenson?
Wlth the exc'tiptlon of football. the
OHSAA and WVSSAC tilona with
most high IIChool amx:lutlonM across
the country, allows every team In
their respective state to ponlcipote In
the poslseason.
When the IICB80n Is over, every
tenni get!l their chance 10 udvunce to
the dlstrlc:t, realonul und perhnp!l
even state tournaments.
. Should a team thut hull been ellml·
noted from the po8tlleall0n be allowed
to continue playina?
What's the uu.

In West Virlllnln, If uteum Is ellml·
nnted from .the P.OMI.,euson then that
team's season h over. No more
lllltnes nrc nil owed.
None.Perlod.
If you hove two teums ploylna one
unother In the dlstrlet or realonul
tournament und one of those teams
hn8 tt MI!U tar season mukeup gume til
be
played
prior
10
their
dlstrictlregionul aame, '1!0118 thlii l!ive
lhat team un unfulr udvuntuac'/
After nil. whut muke8 for a ~tter
pructice,.. Onll hlUtn jlOing through
their usuui pructice routine, nr u team
pluylna a competitive cuntl!8t against
another team prim to their tournu·
ment gume7

PIMH Me c••,.,, 12

�•
· suray, May 19, 2002

Polweloy• MldtprAt• G~•. Ohio• Point Plaaunt, wv

The $5 million man:
Woods dominates in Ohio.

• •

•

Witnesses now
allowed to peek inside
the NBA draft lottery
=:ns

SECAUCUS. N.J. (API - Wben t'oor
balls ~ cllosetl one at a ti~ne to
. lilt the wlrniet or the NliA drat\ lot·
~tty, rout new~ or eyes will lie watching.
AI~ the NBA says.the policy~
has nothing to do with debunking 'COils('im·
cy theories, it has de(ided to let The
Associated ~ SpottS llluslrited. ESPN
Ma.g!'Lint; and USA Today watch the pro-

cee~hngs Ill

person,

The lottery results will be announced at
halftime tlF Sunday's Boston-New Jer.-sey
pla.voff ~arne, with the Cblcago Bulls a.ni1
Golden -state Waniors having the most
chaliQls- :2l5 each out or 1,000- of win•
ning the rights to the flnt overall pick.
Chinese tenter Ya~:~ Mllli and Dukt
undergraduates Jay .Williams and Mlkt
Du~lea.vy have been projected by many as
having the best cl\aoces of landing at'i\01\g
the top three p1cks.
"I think there Is potentiallY a number of
players thllt could go No. l ihls ye~tr," said
New York Knicks president Scott Layden,
whose team finished with the sevemh-best
reconl and has onlY a 4.4 percent chance of
landing the l'lnl selection.
The last till\e the Knlcks won the drnft lot- te~ was 1985, when every team that missed
the playoffs had nn equ:il chaliCe of landltli
the top pick
·
,New York won the right to choose
Georgetown center Patrick Ewing, and conspiracy theorists have long suggested that
th~ envelope containing the Knicks' logo
had been placed in a freezer prior to the
drawing, or doctored in some other way.
The NBA has dodged more than hs share
of conspiracy theories ov~r the years, sometlltleS to the amusen1ent and other times ro

J

the chagrin of Commissioner David Stem.
A ~sentative of me accounting finn
Einst &amp; Youlli, along with the fuur inedia
members, various league officials and a rep~tl\ive or eat~~ or the l3 lot~ teams.
Will witness the ietual dtawlng, whtcb takes
place about an hour beftft the resul~ :are
annoui'tced.
Pingpong balls numbered 1-14 an: piKed
in a hoill)er, and four are drawn In suCcession.~ :are 1,001 possible ways those
numbers could cotne up, and each combination is uslped to a different team. (There
ue I ,000 assigned combinations; the
I,~ bt is assigned lo no one. If it is drawn,
ot lf·lhe team that won the first pick is also
~n fur the second pick, extra drawilliS
beheld).
·
.
. .
The Bulls and Warriors haVe 225 different combinations, the Menlphis Grizzlies
{Who htd the leasue's thihl·worst record)
wUI be assigned 157 combinations, and so
on. The norr-~layoff team with the best
record, the Milwaukee Bucks, will have
only five Winning pingpong ball combination~~ ot a 0.5 percent chance of winning
the No. I pick.
Drawings detennlne the top three P.icks,
and the rell\alndet of the draft order is ileter·
mined by inverse order of finish during the
season.
·
So when the firs( envelope is opened, the .
Bucks will know whethet they will pick
13th or haVC!IUcked into the top three. Same
thing forth~ Clippers at No. 12, the Wizards
at No. ll, the Heat at No. 10, and so on.
The other teams In the lottery, along with
thelt chances out of 1,000, ~: Denver
(120), Houston . (89), Cleveland (64),
Atlanta (29) llltd Plioenill (IS).

wm

Sabathia robbed at gunpoint
CLBVliLAND (AP) - Cleveland Indians
pitcher C.C. Slibllthla was robbed at gunpoint
·,wly l'lriday mominM at a dt&gt;wntown hotefby a
group of men, who stole his necklace, earrings
and wallet.
·
"It's a llfe-alterlng situation." a shaken, but
unlniured Sabathla said Friday. "It was totally
my limit..There'&amp; nobody to blame bmme.''
Indians assistant general manager . Nelli
Huntington llllld Sabithla and 11 ct&gt;usln went
bilck to tile Min'ltJtt Hotel with 11 ,aroup of Jli!O"
pie they hild Just met at 11 niahttluo.
As Sabllth[a, 21, and a ttlllsln were gettllli
ready tt&gt; ll\av11, two or thret! men pulloo guns,
Huntington said. Sabathla tailed hotel $ecurlty
lifter tfie men left and later tontacted the
Indians to tell them what happened. .
Cleveland~ pollee spokeswoman Denise
Reeves ~llld FrldiiY a pollee repon had not been
flied and details or the case were still sketchy.
Rilllves believed the assault occurred at 4 a.m.
"I can eoni11111 that he was the.victim of Ill\
aggravated robbery," Rilllves said.
·Huntington said when he spoke with
Sabathln, ihe let't·hill\der was dlstr11ught by thl!
robbery.
·
"You stllfe lit the end of a gun, It.'s 11oin8 to

effect you In n1any ways," Huntington said.
"He ~'Willes he made a mistake. Bein~ 21, you
don't lilways mllke the right choices.'
Sabilthla didn't go Into any of the details
about the robbeey. He said he didn't think there
Wlls iii\Ythlna to be concerned about until one
of the robbets pulled a weapon.
"I don't remember anything really," Sabathia
said. "[just rell\etnber lielng there, It's helpless
when soll\ebody else has yoor llfe in his
handil."
Sabathla &amp;llid he dldn 't know any of the men
who robbed him and blamed himself for llet·
tina Into the situation.
.
''It was my fault," he said.
Sabllthia will go ahead and make his scheduled start In the first same of a day-night doubleheader on Saturday.
"I think me. ge~ing on the field will help me
even more," he sbld.
Indians manager Charlie Manuel was
relieved nothing more serious happened to
Cleveland's yoUng stat pitcher.
"I'm glad he's OK," Manuel said, "I support
C.C. too percent. I think that C.C. realizes that
he made some mistakes. He's 21 years 'old1 he's
going to make mistakes.

DUBLIN (AP)- T i g e r . - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - +..
Woods grew up in_Califomia
..._.
and has grown rich in Ohio.
•
W.V -·:
He has won the last six
"" .. ,.
;~
tournaments he has played !1111
Ill
,_, .,
in the state, including three : :
NCAA- .....,....o;~Miuiufi=.....~
~
straight
Memorial
P\0111 1'11'11
'
Tournaments and three !1111
'Pn
· ,
•
8111111 ..,_ . •,
strai ".. ht
World
"olf
· , ,.,
llill
---~
llod.&amp;n.
13-eoo :. ':
'-'
NEC•
Woolll Sooloa · ,
_
'ntd. ~ $1141,~
Championships at Firestone.
,..
.....'llliogt · 11oc1, s1111 SS.t48 ••
1•
How dominant is Woods
NEC Woolll- A • 1 '"
11od. !5111 us.soo ••
in the Buckeye State? When : :
:=!:~aeon• ::::-:_~ ::
f:~O:U :
he won the NEC Invitational 11000
-•
·
~~-~ 111
me.ooo :
I tA
11000
NEC-001-.,_
Ill
SI,OOO.!J!II! •
as us.ust, .he had
. twi,ce as 1001
.,..,.,..
~
1111
$738.ooo·. •
many vtctones t.n Oh1o as 1001
NEC-Golllwl.,_
1111
11.000.000:
the .Cleveland Browns since Mor-.ypornuod - SIM.thelt return to the NFL.
Mol-.71*--ll.m
•••
He has earned nearly $5
:·
million within the boundaries of the state, $1 million play very good here," Midwest. · He encounti;..s
more than Arnold Palmer Woods said aft~r his most heavy rains at Muirfl!lld
and Gary Player wbn in their recent victory in the state: every year and has battltd
careers - combined.
the NBC Invitational at everything from cold wiRds
In the · I 0 tournaments Firestone Country Club in and horizontal rain to hiatt~ ·
Woods has played as a pro- Akron. "And then all of a humidity days in the 90s
fessional in Ohio, his aver· sudden it just turned during his march through
aile paycheck has been around."
Ohio.
$496.385. He has made Woods' tournament wins It took tlMO years on etch
S124,000 for every round he have come in all varieties. course for Woods to disepvhas played, $1,839 for every He defended his title in the er how best to attac)c
stroke at Muirfield Village :2000 NEC by II shots, then Muirfield and Firestone.
and Firestone.
last year won the same event "Anytime you've won on
Next up is the Memorial at in a seven-hole.playoff with the golf course and you go
Muirfield Village Golf Club, Jim Furyk. ,
·
back, you're always goini to
where Woods will try to
His Memorial Tournament feel a little bit more combecome the lint player to wins, piled up on the fortoble," ·woods said.
win the same tournament in Mulrfield Village course "That's a very warming feel four consecutive years since designed and built by his ing, especially coming down
Walter Hagen won the PGA boyhood
idol,
Jack the stretch m the touril.a·
Championship from 1924- Nicklaus, have come by two, ment."
27.
five and seven shots.
He calls Muirfield one of
Gene Sarazen is the only
After Woods won last his favorite places to play:· ·
other player to win the same year's tournament in a run"I've always loved the
tournament four straight away, Paul Azinger, who layout," he said. "I've
times, the Miami Open in tied for second, actually always fell that it suited .my
1926 and from 1928-30.
apolollized to him.
game. I didn't show that
"That would be nice, to be Woods has won from in early on when I first played
able to put myself in elite front and come from behmd. it as a/rofessional, but I'IVe
company like that," Woods No matter the situation learne how to play the golf
said. "Those are obviously through 18 holes, two course."
·, .
. two of the biggest names rounds or with nine holes to , That same comfort zone
that have ever played the play, it is always Woods who applies
at
Fires torte,
game, and hopefully l .can ends up In the winner's cir- althoullh Woods will have ,to
do the same." ·
cle.
· go for his fourth straight
Ten yeats ago, Woods was "Since I've been playing NEC Invitational victory Qn
just 16 when he made the the sport, I've never found a new track. It is moving for
cut and advanced to the sec· anybody that's dominated one year to Sahalee Country
ond round of the U.S. anything more," Nicklaus Club outside Seattle, where
Amateur at Muirfield before satd.
· Woods tied for lOth in the
losing to Tim Herron in Marbe it's not such a '98 PGA Championship. , ·
m11tch play,
.
coinctdence that Woods has
"I'm llOing to miss not
He returned with his st~un¥ together ~o many going to Firestone," Woods
Stanford teamll\ates for the , wms m the st11te, sm~e ~oth said. "I've always loved 1ljat
1995 NCAA Championships Muirfield and Firestone golf course because it's so
at Ohio State's Scarlet seem to fit his ~ame. Then simple. It's strai~htforward. .
Course. Woods tied for fifth again, with 31 wms in his S All the trouble ts right 'in
in the medalist race, with . 112 years on tour, a lot of . front of you, and .the golf .
Stanford losing the team courses seem to fit that course just says, 'Come get
title in a playoff.
description,
me if you can.'
.
.
He made the cut and had
Botti courses · are old· "You don't find that a lot
two top-10 finishe~ in his school, layouts. Both · a~e in tnodem courses. They flY
first four pro events tn Ohio, exceedmgly long tn to trick things up."
,.
Since then, he has been as excess of 7,100 yards - but There have been no tricks
unbeatable
as
Randy have relatively wide, forgiv- about his play in Ohio. For
Johnson with a 10-run lead. inll landinll areas and larlle · the last three years, Woods
"For some reason, I've greens.
has shown up, defeated
played well. [ can't explain Even thoullh Woods ·llrew world-class fields . and
why, because previously up in Southern California, walked away with a trophy
before that, I didn't really he enjoys the weather in the and a large check.

Cooper

. from Pilip 11
'

Can huvlng. n regulur season garne durlnll
a learn 's postseason tournament run be a bad
thins?
.
You could risk Injury, the likes tliat usually occur during a game. Of course the ume
arguement c11n be made that that iame Injury
tould occur during practice.
Now, back to the part where a team hat
already been ettmlnaled from their aectlonal
or dlllrlct.
·
I h11ve never seen the aen1e of ,two team•
playlna I rcaular UiiOft 11me after they
have no more pc~sueaaon aame1 left. ·
·
Aaaln, 11'1 u1eleu.
Por fourth or f'ltth or 1ixth place In their
ret!lectlve leaaue? Like luld IH!fore, doe1lt
really matter?""
Playlna experience? Pleeeemmeeeeeee.
If a team dldn 't aet enouah experience
during the aeason they had aTready played,
then a game or two lan'taolna to mauer.
It's anti-climatic.
1 know there's a •mall group of lndlvldu·
all out there that ahow more lntereat In
leaaue achievements than the poat•eaaon
tournuml!nt. They eat, drink and sleep
leagueatandinga and t~ey don't even· play or

•

of 11bout 100 people.
·
. .
After officers left, Curry and Dig~ were
standing In the street when one or t e suspects from the fight fired a gun lldly,
Logghe said.
Curry was a starter last season until he was
suspended after being charged with domestic
vlolente. Curry was sentenced in Febrvary to
one yellt of prob!itlon.
Dlgl!s played in all 12 games last season,
recordlnj 42 tackles and one lntetceptlon.
Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr was
making ltrrangetnents to retum early from a
Big Ten coaches .meeting in Florida, athletic
depllftment spokesman Bruce Madej said,
coach.
They wonder who's going to win the
.m~~~~~al fourth place _!l.o,yard.
Where was I.
·
Oh, yeah... ·
Willi the exception of football, where
wins and Jostles can determine If you rnake
It to the playoffs or not.• the regular season is
to make thattearn better for their respective
sectional a.
Il'a preaeason acrlmmage, regular season,
eectlonala, districts, tealonals and states,
It's shouldn't be scrfmmaae, reaular seaBon, sectlonala, rescheduled reaufar aeaaon
11mea, dlatrlcu, aome more re1cheduled
reaulat 1euon aamea, realonala and atatea.
Maybe I'.m .studylna too much Into it. .
Perhape...
. ·
• There Ia only one re11on l would aee to
play a reaulil' aeuon followlna the bealn·
nina ot die poataea1on.
In the miii·!IO'I, a measles epidemic hit
the northern p1111handle of Weal Vlralnla,
caualnJ their aprin1 1poru reJionala to lie
pushed back a few weeki.
That meant the state baseball tournaments
were moved to mid-to-rate 1une.
So, the WVSSAC permitted state tournament bound team• to achedule each other, In
different clauei of course, during the delay
so the learns Involved·wouldn't get to rusty.

...

••

Two Michigan football players shot
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) ~ Two
Mlchlllan football players were shot early
Snturdny after n fig~tllt nn off·eampus plll'ty.
Sophomore defensive back Mlltkus Curry
was hit in the bll~k, nnd junior linebacker C11tl
Olglls, of Wlltl'en, Ohio, was shot In the leg
Ann Arbor Pollee Department Sgt. Mlchllel
Ltll!l!he said. The shooter eseaped.
·
· Ofggs was treated and released Saturday
rn~rrilng, li Unl verslty of Mlehlgan Hospital
otflcial said. Curry was schedulell for surgery
Snturdny. 8()th nre 2 L
Pollee responded to reports or alight at the
pnny late Friday. The flght was over when
officers arrived, but they broke up the p11r1y

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Meigs Middle wins
MVC golf toumey

·.-

• CIULlA AUTO SALES • GALLI AAUTO SALES • GALLI AAUTO SALES •

'OOSEBRING
CONVERTIBLE

Wltlmlll 1UM - The Melp Middle Sc:hool Swln&amp;ef$,
llb&lt;Ne, clinched tile 2002 tetm chempionstlip wM II\
..,epte seen of 369 strokes, end plated four IOifer
atop the -'1-confel'enl::e list

'

••

A LOOK lAcK - Gel'lld Goodson, executiWI direc:tol' of the Jack Nicklaus Museum, explains the concept and layout of the
museum that shoWcases the life end aolf career of Jack Nicklaus Friday In·Columbus. The Nlcklaus Museum ts scheduled to
Open next lllesday In conjunction with the week ton&amp; events of tile Memorial Tournament. (AP)

:Golden Bear eager to see
.museum devoted to his life
· •· COLUMBUS (AP) - The Jack ttl can't tl1inle of a bt.tter place know. For example, when each or his
Nicklaus Museum doesn't open until fo i 1l11 111Ia
I · fro
five children were born, Jack passed out.
Tuesday but its namesake is already
r t "'
ere came. "'• The joke was that his recovery time
.pleased. He was able to find a place for
where my roots are and the
might have been longer for each birth
tons of memorabilia without having a
school I went to. u
than Barbara's.
garage sale.
There are also rooms devoted to his
Asked how many of the remnants of
Golfwr .IMik Nlaldlue
course-desi~n business with him
his legendary career have been donated hi
describing hts thoughts on each layout
..to the museum, Nicklaus smiled and story of golf are all detailed at the - along with separate displays about
said, "Oh, essentially 90 percent at this 24 •000·square-foot brick building on the Memorial Tournament and ench of ·
· Olen
· I' ve probably got 10 percent In
potnt.
A tangy
tour ofRiver
the Road.
museum opens in the the Grand Slam events.
·volume at home -junk. But anything foyer, with visiton greeted by a large There are trophies, medallions, clubs,
of any significance is there."
bronze statue of the Golden Bear. His bags, scorecards, scrapbooks and books
· The $14-milliod museum is located on career is broken down by decade, with spread throughout the display cases.
.
the Ohio State campus, a counle of 1- hundreds offam·l h t
d d. 1
The museum was built with nrivato
irons "away from the unt·verst't'y's~ basket• showing how aI chubby
y p O OStowhead
an tSpfiays1 donations
' an
. d Oh•to State offered I"n long·ball arena on...one
""UBI
~ side
balland an. -,
~ .dis. · learned the game at the urginl' of tn
his term 1ease on the 1an d. Executive
lance fro m u•e •OOt
practice .act1tty pharmacist father, became 1 soltd player Director Gerald Goodson said the fucil·on the other.
·
under the tutelage of pro Jack Grout at . ity should be a popular stop on football
· It sits a few miles from Nicklaus' boy- Scioto Country Club and then built an Saturd&amp;,YS and for those who visit the
' !food home in Upper Arlington and not unparalleled career that included 18 un.iventty for academic and athletic purfar from where he played his collegiate major professional championships.
sutts.
golf at Ohio State's Scarlet Course.
A video presentation in the museum's "He has connected with us," Ohio
~ "I can't think of a better place for it theater features actor Sean Connery in State athletic director Andy Geiger said.
than where I came from, where my roots full Scottish brogue asking visitors to "It's very impressive."
: '~and the scltooll went to," Ntcklaus "look outside the ropes" to get to know ·Admission ranges from $6 to $9,.The
'said Friday before playing a practice Nicklaus "beyond the final round."
museum includes a gift shop, traveling
round ·in the rain at nearby Muirfield There are interactive displays, rooms displays, an art gallery and 11 room with
· ' Villalle Golf Club.
·
devoted to Nicklaus' long list of victo- biographies of some or the greatest prac• Nicklaus is the host, course designer · ries - and even a comfy TV room that tltioners of the game's six centuries.
and two-time champion of the Memorial mirrors the family's life out of the spot· Nicklaus hasn't been throush the
Tournament, which tees off Thursday at light, a large couch surrounded by pic- museum since taking a quick tour last
' Muirfield Village. The museum's grand tures of kids and grandkids smihng in fall.
opening is being held in conjunction candid shots.
"It's kind of new and different and
with the tournament.
·
ln many ways the museum shows a neat," he said. "I'm kind of anxious to
, Nicklaus' career, his family and the side of Nicklaus that many millht not see how we've finished It off."

BY hAl« CAPIMMT
REGISTER COIIIIESf'Oti)El

POlNT PLEASANT Middle school golfer&amp; closed
WIOther fine season with the
1111-day Middle Valley
Conference Thunmment
Thursdlly at Hidden 'Ailley
Country Club.
The arand finale toornll·
ment l'lnished much the
same os regular season
matches with the talented
Meigs Middle School
swinaers well out in front to
clinclt the 2002 team chwnpionship and place four
golfers atop the all-conference list.
In the eighteen-hole final
round, Meijs won the crown
with an aggregate of 369
strokes, Wahama cwne in
second at 430. while Point
Pleasant Middle School wos
third with 452.
The all-tourney tewn wos
headed by four Meigs lruls.

Jake 'knoy ltlJlped me Hstat
116, Eric 'AmMeter shot 93,
Dun Booknmn pt)!l!ed 94,
and Chris Vanreath hlld 96.
Othm on the select list
Included Brenton Cltll'k or
Wuhwna (I 00). C.J. Pic:noo
rrom PPMS (I 0 I), plus
Mike Tllylor (I 09) nnd
Garrett Kaylor (II 0) of
Wuhwntl Middle.
Special award wlnnm
listed Cody .Sparks of
Wahwnn for Longest Drive;
Nick Stnlntllrer from PPMS
for Longest Putt mllde, and
Dustin Vnn lnwugen of
Meigs for Closest Chip
Shot.
In nddition to those listed,
other purticipnnts Included
Josh Venoy of Meigs, plus
Wnllwnans Colton Gilman,
Ethan Greene, nnd Scott
Riggs, along with PPMS
players Justin Cullen,
Andrew Moreum und Todd
Burris.

AWARD WINNERS - Pictured above are Cody Sparks of
Wahama, Nick Stalnaker of Point Pleasant Middle School
and Dustin Van lnwaaen of Matas. special award winners
of thls year's Middle valley Conference Tournament.

. ~
, ~---------------------

·\:70-yea·r-olds have a
~= league of their own
WORTHINGTON {AP) He recruited players and a
:rhey may .be 70 yean old, but board of directors, Nearly half
they can still tum two.
of the players had given up on
. Well, they can try to tum a the same and were delighted to
: double ptar, anyway. That's the have a chance to get back onto
:· point behind a new softball the field.
. league for those who want to. Christine Rittenhouse signed
~ play bal_llong after most fo~ up her father, 77-year-old Chris
: _h~~e ~tired to the lounge c~. Zigler of Westerville, when she
:
We re the fastest-~ttlft learned of the league. He hadn't
, se~ment ~f the _population, played in about 4S years, but
: SB!d Charlie Colllits, 71, who wound up as the shortstop on
· fonned the Cen.~ Ohio 70s his new team, the Slammers.
· ~ftballLeague. A lot of us are ''They're ~ role models
· ttl pretty good shape. and we for children Rittenhouse said
. ~ don't want to vegetate."
''The kids don't need to watch
The ~ opened play last Y&lt;lWII guys who are playing for
, wee~ Wtdi stx teams. The only all tllai money when they've
, teqwrement: playm must be at got Jt'lllldpu who are young at
; least 7~. The average age on the · heart."
;, rosters IS 73.
.
The oldest player in the
;: There ~ ple~ty of I~ league is Larry Johnson, 79, of
··for players ttl thetr 40s, SOs and Gahanna, who batted leadoff
'· 60s; but it's unusual for a cold- for Plank's Cafe and got the
weather state to have a 70-and· fii'SI hit in the new league's hisover league.
torv
.
. "Ybu can probably coum the ..iti•m tickled to find a i
. nwnbet of !{)-and-over teaauea where I can hit the ball~
in the Uruted Statea on one move as fast as I want to" he
~·" said TerrY, Hennessy, said, "You ao at your 'own
:preatdent of Seruor Softball · pace,"
.
: US~ based in Sacramen~,
Robert Applebawn, aaaociate
.,Calif. "The ones that exiat.are ttl director of the Scripps
Fl~da,., California
and Gerontologr Center at Miami
,Arizona.
UIJ!venity m Oxford, predicted
· Collina played in a 60-and-. a irowth in activities like the
:qver league ttl the Columbus 7Q;.and-over league because
:~ !'W saw his playing dine older people are healthier and
;diminiah as he sot older and more active.
·•lowed down a bit. There had
"In another 20 years you
'been talk of fdnnina a 70-and· won't be writing abOut 70-yearover league, and Collinl decid· old aoftbell pli~ as some&amp; to IUe the lead in maldna it thina unu.ull, • Applebaum
lwloen.
llid. "There will be a lot of
: "f was playing for them."
~orthlnllton's 60s team last
The main c:oncesalon to age is
summer, and I found out I was that teamt can field 12 players
going to be sitting on the bench instead of the customary 10 for
~tuite a bit," COllins said ''I a aoflball game. Speed and
JIIOught, 'I'll form a league reactiou times slow with age,
~I don't have to sl~ on the 1111klng an impact on the
bench."'
de'.ense.
II

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Ponwroy • Middleport • G•mpolla, Ohio • Point PIHunt, wv

••au, G:t~ttt~-at•ttul • P• as

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gllllpolls, Ohio • Point Plaasant. WV
•

NASCAR
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College ads joins beer, motor oil stickers on race cars
DAYTON (AP)- A traditional·
ly ~lue-eollar sport is advertising
the 1vory towers,

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Screaming for attention on the
. rear ~nder or 11 NASCAR·win·
nina race cu lllst year, in bil! ~
letters, was a lol() for Wittenberg
University 11 mall, private,
Lutheran-afnliated school til west·
ern Ohio.
College loaos hnve joined ads
for a•soline tompanies, oil filters,
soft drinks nnd beer as schools
seek students amofti radng fans,
"When yoo do something like
thnt, you know you're going to get
IJOod PR," Eugene · Miller, · a
Wittenberg grndunte, sttid of his
car's win at Watkins Olen, N.Y.
"A Watkins Glen victory on
national television has a hUIJe
effect,"
Clemson University was nble to
establish a s.:holnrship from the
sale of merchandise spurred by
use of the s.:hool's logo In
NASCAR races,
"Clemson nnd n number of other
institutions huve beguti to look at
NASCAR us more thun u Sunday
afternoon event," ·said Greg
Pickett, chairman of the mnrketl11g
department lit the South Carolina
schooL "It r11ises the profile of
those institutions to be involved
·with n sport that is hot.''
Herb Branhum, NASCAR's
communkntlons director, called it
another example of the in~reasing
variety of people who have
become NASCAR funs,
"There ure a lot of rnce funs in
tho colleges," Branhnm said,
Miller ulso ruces u car that
sports nothing but · Wittenberg
stickers. HI's two cars promoting
the school huve run in 24
NASCAR races since. l999,
Lnst year, one of the cars won
NASCAR's Busch North Series
Little Trees ISO nt WtUkins Olen.
It is one of NASCAR's lowerlevel races, below the high -profile
· Winston Cup.
Miller, head of 11 flnandnl·con·
suiting firm in Rochester, N.Y.,
mudc his vehicles avallnble to dis·
11lay the school's logo at no cost.
Once persuaded, Wfuenberg offl·

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ClmiNQ IN THIIUSINISS- Wittenberg University Crew Chief Tony Vecchio poses with his team's NASCAR Busch
Grano National North Sarles race car In Syracuse, N.Y. May 8. TWo of race car owner Eugene Miller's cars have
Wlttenbul1! University logos ad¥ertlslna the school, College loaos have joined ads for gasoline companies, oil filters, soft drinks and beer es schools seek students among racing fans, (AP)

clnls liked the Idea.
"The key benefit is name recog·
nit ion in n part of the countrx that
is pam of our prospect pool, snld
Ous .Oeil, vice president for universit~ relations,
CuriOsity about the logo could
lend potentlnl students to research
the school, he said, "Otherwise,
they might' not have done It
because the name doesn't menn
llnythlng to them.''
The 2,000-studcmt school in
Sprlngfield previously coflflned

Its marketing to direct mail und an
occnsional locnl radio ud to pro·
mote one of the school's colleges.
AndY' Snntarre, who was crew
chief of the Wittenberg cur thut
won at Wntklns Glen, said funs
asked about the logo,
"They'd say, 'Where is that and
whut is that'l,' and we'd explain it
to them," Suntarre suid,
Roland Rust, chairman of the
marketing department at the
University of Maryland, suld universlties arc increasingly tnrgetiniJ

specialized audiences -to increase
enrollment.
But he questioned whether there
is u Iurge uudience of potential
college students among people
who wntch NASCAR rnces nnd
whether it is wise for some
schools to associate themselves
with NASCAR racing.
.. It has kind of u ~ritty, no-nonsense sort of imnge, Rust snid, "I
Imagine that would be good for
some schools und not so good for
others,"

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Canseco claims 85 percent of players taking steroidS
TAMPA, Fin. (AP) - Jose Cunseco clnlms
85 percent of major leugue basebull pluyers ult's completeure taking steroids.
·
ly restructured
"There would be no busebull left if they
drug-tested everyone toduy," he suid flriduy tiJe game as we
during nn Interview with Fox Sports Net, ·
Canseco, who announced hls retirement krao1v it. Tltat's
earlier in the week, refused to soy lf he took
rvlty guys .art" ·
steroids,
"It's completely restructured the game as
ltittin..~ 50 or
we know it," he suid, "That's why guys ure
hitting SO or 60 or 75 home runs,"
60 or 75 ltome
During. un Interview with The Associated
Press ·on Frldny, Canseco refused to onswer
ruras."
questions about steroid use, suying.he would
~ormtr mtjor ltlguer
give details In the book he Is writlnl!,
JottCtn-o
· "Baslcnlly what it's going to be Is .the true,
story of my life -good and bud, the ups and Thut includes fust curs, Madonno foiled
downs," Canseoo suid. ''I'll nume names and murriuges, and his suspicion that he wus
discuss baslcully everything and everybody "exiled" from busebull.
Involved in it There ure n mllllon thlngs .~ Canseco unnounced his . retirement
could talk about."
Monday, leaving the 11ome with 462 home

.

runs, 1.407 RBh and n .266 batting uvera~e pluyers might think of the way they're porIn 1,887 games with seven teams. He wns hit· traxed in the book.
'It's just going to be part of my life,"
tlng , 172 with live homers und nine RBis in
18 games for Tripla·A Charlotte when he Cunseco said. "In u lot of wuys, my life was·
n't perfect, either, I made u lot of mistakes,
qll it
I'm
going to talk about that also,"
"I've hud u lot of athletes in dtO:erent sports
He
says he hasn't spent much time thinking
and I know a lot of people In the acting field
thut ull told me I've been eKiled, basically about whether he deserves to make the Han
of Fume.
,
blnckbulled," Canseco sold,
"That's
not
for
me
to
judge,"
he
said.
"~
The 37-yeur-old Cunseco wns one of the
l!ume's most colorful figures, on und off the know I was injured a lot, and I know if I
field . He assured co-author Bill Chastain thut would huve been given the opportunity .to
no aspect of his private life will be off· limits, piny baseball more, I would have easily hit
Chastain hus started interviewing Cunseco 500 home runs, mnybe even 600."
for the book und plans to meet with prospec·
tive publishers neKl week.
"Jose hus led u very Interesting life, und he
hns a story to tell," sulci Chastain, u former
Thmpu Tribune sports writer,
·
"People huve alwnys been fascinuted by ·
Subscribe todqy.
him,"
.
Cunseco isn't concerned about whut other
446-2342

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS. ·

Pioneer of baseball integration dies of cancer
PHOENIX (AP) - Joe and saving IS others for the The next spring uncr the curve. He tried but lbst control
Black, the Brooklyn Dodsen' Notional League chnmplons, World Series, Dressen urged of hinwo bnsic pitches in the
"f.!llht•hunder who becume the He hud u 2. 15 ERA but, with Bluck to udd Nome pitches to process und didn't regnin his
· first black pitcher to win a 142 innings pitched! fell eight his strong fustbull und tight dominunce until 1955,
World Series gume, died Innings short of w nning the
Pricl'!fl of prostnte cuncer. He title,
· WIIJ 8,
·
Strnpped for pitchina,
Black, in fniling health for Dodgers mannger Chuck
months, died ut tlie Life Cnre Dressen brought Biook out of
Center of Scotl8dale,
the bullpen und started him
"He loved the game und he three times in seven days in the
loved to talk the game," snid 19~2 World Series a11ailnst the
Montreal mnn1111er Frunk New York Yankees, He won
Robinson, who was friends the opener with a .slx·hitter
with Black nnd visited him this over Allie Reynoids, 4·2, then
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Pononol E·m•ll Ateaulll
"He was a great ftUY, a Jolly "His legaoy is the thought
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Black 8pent a season In the I of the World Series," sold Vln
minors before the Dodgers pro· Scully, the Dod4en' play-by·
mated him to the ml\lor lea11ues play announcer smce 1951.
In 1952, five years after team- Robinson snid: "The lmpres·
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Hal Fulmer, executive director
of
the
Sou~hern
States
Communication
Association,
ucknowledged that some profes·
sors and alumni might be uncomfortable seeing their schools associated with NASCAR; whose
races are sponsored by a tobacco
company and a brewer and in the
past bave had a largely' blue-collatap~al.
:
'"The image of the ivory tower:
and the imuge of NASCAR are not:
in the same mental plane. They'~ ·
kind of on opposite ends,'' he said,
"There nre probably going to be
soine who say that's over the
line,"
Still, the visibility is good, he:
said,
·
,
•·on a NASCAR cur, you cun:
hardly see anything but the logos,''
said Fulmer, communications pro•
fessor at Georgia Southerii
University, His association repre~
sents 1,000 communications professors uround the country.
.
Rick VanBrimmer, Ohio State:
University's director of trademark:
and licensing services, agreed:. ·
Severul yeurs ago, the university
ull()wed its lo~o I() be placed on
NASCAR vehacles to promote iU
engineering school nnd Center for
Automotive Research,
'"Those cars ure all over the.
country," VanBrimmer said,
"There is an advertising aspect to
this thut can't be discounted.''
The cars were owned by three
Ohio State ulumni. Unfortunately,
he suid, financinl reasons forced ·
them out of racing ufter a few
years.
Munhew Smith, an assistant
professor of communication at
Wittenberg, said he at first though!
. the NASCAR audience an unusua
targe~. But he said it makes sense .
because competition among pri· ·
vute colleges for students has :
intensified and the appeal of rae· ·
ing hus been growing among col~
lege-bound fans,
:
"I don't know that I have any
obJections or concerns." ·Smith
satd. "rt's probably a fairly savvy
marketing ploy on Wittenberg's
part."

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

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O.ytanll IIMd\, Fla. (WW

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March
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MalCh 10- MBNA Amlril:ol
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Mardi 17 - caiOiiN llodQe
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(~Marlin)

MalCh 24 - Foci! City 500.
Bristol, Tenn. (Kurt Busch)
April •
8

AQI FACTOR - Ricky Rudd, left, waves during driver Introductions before the start of the NAPA 500 at the California Speedway In Fontana, Calif., April 28, In
which he finished third. Rudd Is upset where the sport Is headed through the marketlo&amp; and constant exposure of the young drivers that he has hinted It could
drive him Into retirement. The 45-year-Qld Rudd Is·set to break Terry Labonte's record of 655 consecutive starts next week at Lowe's Motor Speedway, Driver
Sterlln&amp; Marlin, right, exits his oar on Pit Road after his qualifying run at Daytona International Speedway In Daytona Beach, Aa.. Friday, July 6, 2001. With the
focus In NASCAR shifting toward the twentysomethlng drivers and the MTV crowd they appeal to, the veterans have found themselves on the outside looking ln.
, Some, such as the 44-year-Qid Marlin, don't mind the focus on the ""Young Guns.". (AP file)
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The first sign Sterling
Marlin got that something
might be amiss came during a
drive through his 1\:nnesse~
hometown. Everywhere he
went, people stopped him to
complain that they couldn't
get enough information on
!tim;
. "I'd get home after a race,
und all through town, people
would ask why TV didn't talk
about me,'' said Marlin, the
Winston Cup points leader.
''They say, 'It seems like
you ain't even .leading the
points or won two races. All
they want to ·talk about is
them young drivers.'"
With the focus in NASCAR
shifting toward the twen·
tysomething drivers and the
MTV crowd they appeal to,
the veterans have found them·
telves on the outside looking
In
• Some, such as the 44-year·
eld Marlin, don't mind the
focus on the "Youn~ Guns.''
" If you're runnmg good,
you deserve to be talked
about," Marlin said. "What
l've seen is a bunch of kids
running llood this season."
: And tliey are running well.
five of the drivers in the top
10 in points are 30 or younger
and have combined to win siK
of the fint 11 races this sea7
son. Dale Earnhardt 1r., at 2 '
also
has a victory.
Jimmie Johnson
: Rookl'es
'and Ryan Newman
· have
k
th
d
quickly rna e eu mar '
combining to win three polee
before Johnson earned his
flnt career victory last month
jn California,
· So there's legitimate intereat in the new breed of driver,
· But, Ricky Rudd wonders,
at what ~rice?
· Rudd 11 so UJ)set where the
•pon is headed through the
:marketing and constant expo:aure of the youn11 driven that
·he has hinted it could drive
'him into retirement.
The 45-year-old Rudd is set

to break Terry Labonte's network is simply trying to Washington Wizards· over the
record of 655 consecutive enlighten viewers on the new toP. teams in the NBA.
starts next week at Lowe's drivers,
'I remember watching races
Motor Speedway,
"What Ricky is feeling is when Dale Earnhardt was
"I have no problem with the very symptomatic of veteran running 18th and they chose
youth movement, I really athletes in all sports," Hill to talk to him instead of some
don't," Rucld said, "But I've sold. "A veterun is expected to of the front-runners," Burton
seen with this TV deal older do well, so the media has a said, "When Michael Jordan
guys getting ij!nored. I see tendency to focus on the rook- is playing, they will show a
some of the thmgs that have ies.
team that is 25-40 playing a
chunged with the TV deal and
"Veterans have been there team that is 30·30, Jordan
it makes me think NASCAR awhile and there is now new draws. the attention and the
has sold its soul.
blood that the viewers ru'e ratings, that's a fact.
"They are massaging this looking for 'information on.
"There are times when I
thing to target a certain cro~d Veterans in all sports go feel I have been slighted and
and before you know 11, through this, it applies right thought I deserved more
they'll have us up there fleK- across the board."
attention but .that's just the
ing and in bathing suits like But with ratings up 28 per- · way It is,"
we're professional wrestlers." cent in the coveted fS-34 age
NASCAR scoffed at Rudd's demographic - and 32 per·
assessment, saying uny shift cent overall - why would
in the sport's focus is a sign of TV talk to the graybeards like
changing times.
Rudd?
"I totally disagree that we That's what Rudd sll\d hapsold our soul und the MTV pened when Johnson earned
stuff," said NASCAR vice his first victory at the
president Jim Hunter "Look California Speedway. After .
life goes on - the 'Ed coming from the baclt of the
Sullivan Show' was popular field to finish third, . Rudd
at one time and things change. drove to pit road as the top· "I . think NASCAR has five finishers are instructed to
changed, but in a ,good ~~Y· and waited to be interviewed.
It's much more com~llttve But no one ever came. he
than its ever been and there's said, claiming the same thing
a lot more pre&amp;sure to perform happened the next week when
than there's ever been and dif- veterans Jeff Burton and
ferent ~pte handle that pres- Mark Martin were -ignored
sure d1fferent ways,"
after finishing in the top five.
And Fox, which broadcasts "l' m just saying give credit
the first half of the season where credit is d11e," Rudd
before turning the riahts over said.
to NBC in a multlnetwork · Bunon, not ~uite an aging
· veteran at 34 , c al"~"
deal, denied there•sa consptr...,.. It up to
to Ignore the Veterans· · favoritism and likened it to
acyJ
Instead,
Fox
Sports broadcasts of games involvChairman David Hill said the lng Michael Jordan and the

Bill Elliott, 46, has seen the
changing 6f the guurd once or
twice before and doesn't let
the current youth movement.
bother him. Before they know
it, the twentysomethi ngs wi II
be replaced by a new crop of
excitmg, marketable drivers.
"When I first came up,
David Pearson, Ihe Pettys, the
Allisons, they all looked at me
like 'Who the heck is this
kid?"' Elliott said. "It comes
in cycles and we're in the
middle of one right now. But
they'll be another one after
this, so there's no use worrying about it."

5ams!JflgtRadioShaclt 500.
Fort Warth, Texas. (Mill
Kenseth)
April 14 - VIrginia 500,
Martlns\11116. (Bobby Llbol1-)
April 21 - Aaron's 499,
Tallacrega,
Ala.
(Dale
Earnhardt Jr.)
April 28 - NAPA Auto Parts
500, Fontana, Calif. (Jimmie
Johnson)
May 4 - Pontiac Exc"ement
400,
Richmond.
(Tony
Stewart)
May 26 - Coce-Cola 600,
Concord, N.C.
June 2 - MBNA Plttinurn
400, eo-. Del.
June 9 - Pocono !100, Long
Pond, Pa.
.
· June 16 - Michigan 400.
Brooklyn, Mich.
June 23 - DodgeJSave Mart
350, Sonoma. Calli.
July 6 - Pepsi 400, Daytona
Beech, Fla.
July 14 - Troplcana 400,
Cicero, Ill.
July 21 - New England 300,
Loudon, N.H.
July 28 - Pennsylvania 500,
Long Pond.
Aug. 4 - Brickyard 400,
Indianapolis.
Aug. 11 - Slrlus Satellite
Radio at The Glen, Watkins
Glen, N.Y.
·
..-·Aug. 18 - Pepsi 400,
.Brooklyn, Mich.
Aug. 24 - Sharpie 500.
Brlstol, Tenn.
Sept I - Southern 500,
Darlington, S.C.
Sept. 7 - Chevy Monte
Carlo 400, Richmond, Va.
Sept 15 - New Hampshire .
300, Loudon, N.H.
Sept. 22 - MBNA America
400, Dover, Del.
Sept. 29 - Protection One
400, Kansas City, Kan.
Oct. 6 - EA Sports 500,
Talladega, Ala.
·
Oct. 13 - UAW-GM Quality
500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 20 - Martinsville 500,
Martinsville, Va.
Oct. 27 NAPA 500,
Hamp!on, Ga .
Nov. 3 - Pop Sectel 400,
Rockingham, N.C ..
Nov, 10 - Checker Auto
- Parts 500K. Avondale, Arlz .
Nov. 17 - Homestead 400,
Homestead, Fla.

Driver Standlngt

1. Sterling Marlin . . . 1,645.
2. Matt Kensath . ...
3. Kurt Busch. . . . . .
4. Mark MMin . . . . .
5. Rusty Wallace . . .
6. Jeff Gordon . . . . .
7. Jimmie Johnson. .
8: Tony Siewert . . . .
9. Jeff Burton . . . . . .
10. Ricky Rudd . . . .
11. Bill Elliott ., ....
12. Dale Earnhardt Jr..
13. Ryan Newman . .
14. Ward Burton. ,,.
15. Dale Jarratt ....
16. Ricky Craven ...
17. Terry Labonte ...
18. Michael Waltrip .
19. Jeremy Mayfield .
20. Jimmy Spencer .

1,513.
1,454.

1,452.
1,442.
1,429.
1,422.
1.394.
1,343.
1,330.

1,299.
1,288.
1,206.
1, 196.
1, 177.
1,164.
1,153.
1,147.
1,130.
1,129.

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Call it a river, creek or rnn, a stream
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o

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OHIO fiSHING REPORT
COL\JMIUS (API - The ~
lllhlnfl ropott provided by the
I l l - d Wlldllfa o1 the Ohio
llq:a:\tM~ ·ofMauW "'""""""·
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Nolm C...... lea.. (DeleMI'I
Counlyl- Alii lor~
tnCI ,..,.,_ In Ill tlooded
iof IN 19CIIII d llllb&amp;~
tnCI ai'Oulld ~ co- In the
Uill* tnCI ol.,.lakl. of11a11 meeeure I to I 2 lnchet: and
ollie! ek'Cellent llpting filhing oppt&gt;r·

"':',e

1\lnltiel. UH minnowa, jiga. and
..,... apiow,.,. In the upptll' end of

hleke -'11 of HoweR! Road ""'""
aoeldng ~ball . Troll large mnk
bolla at ~ of 6 to 8 r..t In the
.,.. - r 1M dam for mull&lt;lllunge.
Alum CIMI&lt; 18 . . - 01110'* No.~
flileM ~ lal:a and of!enl
angl6fa 'ihe opportunity 10 catch tro·

jlhiM 11p to 50 . lnchet:. The a:ee
Mlove HoweR! Rood has good num·
bon ol channel ce111ah arid large
'll'll·
Deer CNelc Lalce (Fayette &amp;
l'icbMy llOUntiet) - In the eraek
tbo.. the 111&lt;1 Jut\ north of Cooka·
Road, use emeW jlgl
·Mid • - · or li'llall lnltne spin·

y.,.._

l'tett,

.men

·• eeldng White baas.

Me&gt;*~ ol ~ fteh wilt meeaure 8 to
~~ """-· Saugeye are taken when

~.Nng below the ~!em ~· arid

lwi~ . A lo!mlr 111te

aaug·
•
Weighing 9 pounda wae taken
M!'lln I Mt. A*e around the lake
'Mth downed treat and IUbmerged
bNIIl p!11i 61'1 top locations for
,...,..,..

NORTHW!IT OttO
l.net C - ReaeM&gt;Ir (Allen Countyl
- ~ al'llaldng aaugeye In the
hourw on jlga ftehed olf the
South bank . Survaye lndlcota fair
popuialtone of 12· to 20·1nch aaug·
eye ar. avaHable. Crappie, ranging
l!()m 7 to 10 ln¢1111, a,. being talceti
oloiig the Ent bilhk neat the cat·
·tall&amp;. Mlnnowe fished at 2· to 3·foot
deptllallioll&lt; beet. SOme largemouth
ballll CiliDhee have also been report·
ed a!Qng lie South bank by anglera
uling tnlnk balta. Eloctrlc molonl
only; no bOat ramp.
Su An (WIIIIaml County) lltlf1!1Q IUMye indlcalllht number
ol big llluegtll (8·11 lnchee) has
alnloal doubled over last year's fig·
uret. Ahghtra are taking limits of 10
fteh. E.......,t populations of pumpklnaeed aunfttlh · (8 ' lnch-plual are
alto baing reported. A ffee pennh
Mutt ba ob!OIIned 10 ftah here. Call
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Wtdtieillaye. Thirteen lmal lakes
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NORTHEAST OHIO
Lhlllllle lake (Tulcarawu County)
- Crappltt In the 8· ·to 12-lnch
taltQI ate being ceught on live beft,
malnty lnlnnowe fial1ed under allp
bobbare anyv.hera there iutructura.
Atwood Ulke (Tuocarawu arid
Cttroll countilil) - A good lake for
largemouth boos with oucce11ful
anglare ualng plugs and ftehlng
along tlno llllorellne. The. aaugeY41

.-a

...-.La

. QUACKI.O UP-~ Ctnldaaooae and pnder lead \heir aoannp throuRh e piickea parkin&amp; lot
: In \1\la May 11, 2001, photo In ColllmDua. ln. lncreaae In \he tanaila OM~ I)Opolatlon lu
: 10011 llluatartlon of wtldlll't on•nat• In Ohio CMt the peat few dtcMiea. (AP IIIII)

'

;once near extinction,

. I

Belmont man still fired up about guns
WHEELING. W.W•. (AP) - The wood to metal .work wus ulways a good has been cut, and It has to be consls·
specialized talent of 11 Belmont, Ohio, fit and people began taking note.
tent."
.
man has earned him praise throuahout About 18 years ago, Parker said he Parker wcars 2 112 power tense~
the country.
wanted to try his hand at engraving. He while worklna. Holdlna the chisel at ll
Larry A. Parker, 59, is u humble man found a aun smith school advertised in constant an;fe Is critlcul to keep It
who· has lived in Belmont all of his . a National Rifle Association American from waverln; . . This creates a line
life. Many around the country would Rifleman Muauine which had a which aoes frOm narrow to wide and
refer to him us a "master" firearms course offered under the late Neil back.
·
enaraver. However. Parker says, "I'm Hartliep, 11 master engraver, 111 the Accordlna to Parker, "11 aood .
just an engraver. Maybe I'll consider Rochester Institute of Technoloay enaraver hiS to practice between three
myself 11 'master' later."
College of Fino Arts. ·
to five yean before he puts out his first
The nationally known artist hus hud He amended three consecutive ses· piece of work because you can't afford
examples of his work shown on the sions, becoming good friends with to put o·llt a bad piece. •: He draws
cover of well known rifle und gun Hurtliep. Only about 10 people started everything he Intends to en;rave.
magazines. He has been featured in the beglnnina. class with the numbers "Whon you draw 1 deslan on metal,
numerous articles about his craft. He falling ,off throuah the Intermediate if It doesn't look good- don't cut lt.
has given demonstrations and spoken class and advanced class, on gold and It won't look any better 11fter you cut
around the country on the to~lc of silver inlaying of steel.
it."
·
·
engraving and has his work hangmg on Next, Parker took courses In He explained llll his · work Is done
walls and in the ca.ses of interest col· Montgomery Community Collogo in with a carbide tip chisel and hammer.
lectors around the country.
Troy, N.C., under two master "If the tip Is chipped, the only way to
One of his works, a BB gun, whkh en§ravers.
iharpen It Is wiffi 11 diamond wheel."
belonged to his son Arik. is in the • Engraving can't be learned from a He bas ~n ualna the 111me tip for
Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, video tape or a book," Parker emf.h•· yean. Working at a table with 1 rotat·
Wyo., a national firearms museum.
sized, noting like il) the old days, 'old Ina viae, he controls with hls feet. "Jt
Parker started making guns and rifles master engravers had to show their works ·on the potters wheel principle,"
in his Belmont High School shop class secrets to their students. It was a secre· he noted aaylna It was a technique
in 1958.
tiv.e form of art."
taught to him by H11rtllep.
·
"Can you imagine trying to do that He continued to explain how Durlna hit lifetime, Parker hat made
today?" he quipped.
· engravers In ma.lor gun companies about 40 complete rifles and done
He began by muklng biuck powder such u Purdey'a, liollund and Holland enaravina work on more guns, knlvea,
muzzle loading rifles from scratch, or Wesley Richards, would cover their tom11hawk heads, and other placer
cuttina the wood and assembling the work even when a mall man would , such as jewelry and belt bucklea, than
.weapon all by hand. "Just like they did come in so they wouldn't dlvulae what he. can count, althouah he doea keep
· in old Bnaland." he said, "using files, they were doing to acompetitor.
recorda of hit work. He eald he alao
: handsaws, . hammers · and chisels. No He said all his enaravina work Ia slana and datea all hit work.
kits. Today you can buy a kit, back done by hand w.lth hammer andtlchiao!, In addition to the engr11vlng work,
then you couldn't."
which is becoming a dylna ar. Bach Parker aaya, "I alao do a lot of aold
His father was also a craftsman, artist develops his own style. and allver Inlay WQrk."
builder and cabinet maker, helping him According to Parker, today there are Becaute of the value of the weapon•
whh his gun - makln~ projects and only ·about 330 membera of the and collectable hemt he dealt with, he
; Introducing him to hun.una.
American Enaravera Oulld.
·also haa gone Into the safe and vault
: The craftsman expliuned his Interest Parker added he utually takes on 11 bualneu.
· In hunting arew, and It led to him student or two each aprlngand juat had "I don't have to advertlae,'' Parker
"'loina out west In 1966. At that time, one from New York atate who wanta to continued, "people uok me out. lt'a
lie beaan makins hlgb·powered rines, come back and continue hit train ina. "J all word ·df mouth. J do one or two
buylna the barrel and action then mal. · owe these people a lot," Parker said, maJor joba a year. It taket aeven to
Ina the stock and doina all the work referrlna to hit lnat~uctora, etpeclally elgbt montha to complete a major
· himself. Next he expanded into mak· Nell.
,
piece of work. Right now I'm about·
: ina atocka for trap ahootera on their "BnJravlng Ia fruatratlnai" Parker aeven to eight yeart behind with peo·
; ahotauns such as the Wincheater aaid. It takea a lot of concentration. pie wanting me to make complete
· Model 12. At that point he ~aid his You can't glue metal back on once It flrearma."

•
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•

•

•

•

•
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RUTLAND
BOTTLE
CiAS
YIWJ

GeneraUud Aullt)' Dllorder
Thla atudy will evaluate the tafety 1nd etrectlveneu of an
inveatiaatlonal medication for the treatment of
Oenerallud An~lety Dlaorder In adultt.
If you are a male or female II yean of age or older, and
have auffored with peralttent WOIT)', anxiety, and tentlon
for at leaat tl" montha, you may be lntere1ted In learning
·
more about thla reaearch atudy.
For more information and preacreenlna, call:
Lori Arnott, RN
Unlvtl'llty Oallopathlc Medical C•ntar
(740) 5P3·Z410
1100 Lm. • !1100
I

nit•-•

I

I,
I

I

I

and·prol:ilemattc . . The Choice Is
~

1

OIDtptnrlqhle Slf'llit;t
Wtmt Rtliqblllty I Stntfcel

0111tSO

OAK HARBOR. (AP) - Giant Canada Unlvenlty where more than :200 of the
:geese have made a11trona eomeblck In Ohio geeaellve. ''They eat the grass dtlwn to the
1- a bit too strona from many pera~tlvea. point of damaglna h, they make li big liless
: The ~aareulve and nercery territorial all over the ralrwtys and the areen5, and
t migratory bini! hne aone from near elttlnt· tod!Y we had another one attack a golfer.
1tlon to nulllllntt &amp;tatus In leu than 50 yem. "They nest near the tees and areens, and
•They now inhabit and often haunt the reaer- they defend tho&amp;e ne~ts - they won't hesl·
I voir&amp;, rolf tour&amp;eil parka and flower aar- tlte to go after II person who gets too
; dens o Ohlo, and tney present ~_particular· close."
'
: ly sth:ky problem for wildlife offilllals.
The iltnt tanada geese stand almost 4
By 1950, the alant Canada aeese were feet tatr, weigh about llpounda and have a
I thought to be gone. However, a atnall popu· wlngBpan or elose to 3 feet. Their life
hulim of not more than 400 were found ln elt~etancy Is up to lO yt~m .
southern Mlnn•1ota, and from that group a • Slnee there Is no hunting allowed In
: number of state8 were able to re-Introduce urblin areu, these gee~e that are nesting In
:the aeese.
parka and golf r:ourses and around ponds at
: Ohio did so in 1955, and for more than 30 apartment compleltei are ufe," Batty said.
ebrl the giant Canadas were atrlctiY. pro· "And they're sm11rt - they aeem to know
ected and 1lowly lnereued their numtxita. juat where to go."
"Then all of a auddtn - poofl - and the Barry uld more than 70 pel'llent of the
, po~ulallon of Canadaaeeae juat akyrocket• complaint calla state wildlife officials
,ed,' &amp;lllte waterfowl bloloalat Steve ·Barry reeelve about geese come from urb~n area11,
1,aald.
and the volume of calla has spiked recently.
: In m9, the flru year Ohio wildlife om- ''Documented
goose
complaints ··
:clala did a 1tatewlde count, there were aome Increased more than 400 pereent between
•18 000 aeeae. Lut year's cenaua revealed 1990 and :moo, llveraglna more than 400
iabOut I:ZO,&lt;Xl&lt;J aeeae were neatlng through· . annually," he l!ld. "Liiat yeat that number
:out the alate.
. jum~d to 732.
.
The problema come not from the aize of Tl\0 alate provldea technical aulitance
:the population but the location a .of the for non-lethal mean&amp; bf dealing with the
aeete, Barry aald. · .
Canada 11eeae,.such aa the uae of fencing,
Olant Canada_geeae uaed to mlarate from nolae-makerl and renectl ve materials.
Mlchlaan and Cmada, pm through Ohio, Doaa alto have been uaed but the geese
and winter In Tenneaaee and Alabama. Now often return after they are thiaed away..
many more are wlnterina In Ohio, and they In extreme caaei where dam11ge Ia slgnif·
build their neata and ralae their youna In lcant and hu been documented to ilatlsfy
hablllllthat provldea them with foOd, water the state and federal permit r~qulrementa,
and protect,on from predatora.
additional meaauru mlght be taken.
1 They flncllt in parka and aolt couraea.
"People have tried .lu~tlibout ev11rythln~,
"Ther, ara 11 bla problem 1\ere and a lot of . but unleaa you can hunt them, It doesn t
P.lacea,' aald Oary Wl1111er, who rnanaae• look there [i a aolutlon," Wlnaer &amp;Ill~; "It
the golf courae at Bowling Oreen Slate aeema like they all want to come here.

• Heating and Water Heating
• Lift Truck G~s Delivery
• Grain Drying and Cooking
• Construction Heating

HURRYI
DFFER
IDDNI

I
!

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For more

~

OPPIR GOOD NOW THROUGH AUGUIT II, 2002

RUTLAND .
BOTTLE CAS

ATTENTION!!!
To get your outdoors news in
the 6unbap ~tmd ·6mttnd,
then e-mail it to
sports@mydailytribune.com,
fax it to 446-3008, or drop it
off at our Gallipolis, Pomeroy
or Point Pleasant offices.

EARLY BIRD SPECIAl

.

.

IMing ceught hele are ahowiog no AEP ReCreation Landa (Morgan
,.I pt olsreuc.•. as ongters have· Co.) - Water temperature ranges
aua:eulul uling night from 63 to 65 ~"'· Catches of
.,......_,
and INd.-ed largemouth bau up to 19 Inches
jlga. Cn:pplol here are hitting on have been reported. Succeaalul
n:On.,.. In the bact&lt;watef1 right lures il\clude blacl&lt; pig n' jig,
now.
Jittetl&gt;ugs, ~gs witll tubes (blacl&lt; or
TIPP*n Lake {TUico:rawaa CounM purple), and apinner baits . Sunfleh
- AngleR flehlng along the shore· from 4 to 9 lnchU are being caught
line In alllltow wat.r are p1cl&lt;lng up on waK worms and ameli . ( 1116aaugeye and largemouth bass . ounce) whl«&lt;lwlstenalla or grubs on
Cranl&lt; baita and plugs are the lures jigs.
of choice.
,
LAKE ERIE
Nlmioila Lake (Summit County) Western Basin - Lake Erie water
Thla Ia a good lake ·right now for · temperature is 52 degrees otl Toledo
nlce-oized largemouth bass. Anglers and 50 degr""' otl Cleveland. Wirid
ahoutd 11)1 the area along the bridge and rain ev.ents have hampered fieh·
neer the bait ehop. Rattletraps are ing activity on Lake Eno. tile pas1
being Ulld to caldl tht basa.
week, but some fish are being
·
IOUTHWEST OHIO
caught when angler&amp; can get oui on
Cowt:n Lake (C~nton County~ the lako . The best spots for wa~
Channel ca111ah ara being caught fiehing have been the north side of
along the pier arid shoreline . Use Kelleys lslarid , Niagara Reef, otl
chiCken llvera, cut bait or earth· Davis Bosso, arid tile "Triangle," (the
wormo on a No.1/0 to a No.4 bait ·aiM from tho Toledo Harbor Ught to
holding hoolc. Cast Into water 9-feet the outer buoys of tho Toledo
deep or :leePer. Fleh keeping the Shipping Channel to West Sisler .
ball oil of the boltom .
Island.) Anglers are catching walleye
Acton Lake (Preble COUnty) - Good In tile t 6· to 18.jnch range and larg·
crawl• fiahlng Ia occurring at Acton er drlHing bo«om bouncers with
Lake, located In Hueston Woods crawler harnesses and trolling deep
State Park. Fish • small live minnow diving lures. The legal bag limit for
on a No.I! ball holding hook under a walleye for Lake Erie and its trlbu·
bobber. Keep the minnow about 3 to tarle~ Is siK fish fiom May I~ rough
4 feet deep and fish near the pier.
Fobruaoy.
· $0UlltEA8T OHIO
Perch fiehlng .remains e&gt;&lt;eellent with
Lake Whlta (Pike County) hot spots reponed off the
Channel calfleh ara being caught In Malblehead Lighthouse, south of
good humbera on shalloW muddy GrHn Island, and the north side of
ftata In the 11pper end of the lake Kelleys Island. Perch anglers are
(near the SR 220 &amp; SR 552 Inter· catching · many limits of nlce·alzed
section). Moat anglers are using perch in the 9- to ~ 3-lnch range
night crawlers fished on the bonom using perch spreaders or crappie
or by slip bobbaro. Moat caldlea rigs lipped with minnows. The yellow
consist of 2 to 3 fleh In tile 16· to 22· perch bag . limit Is 30 perch per
Inch range. The lake Is muddy with a angler per day. Smallmouth bass
au~ace water temperature of 62 flshlng Ia good around tho Islands,
degraea. Outlook 11 good. Saugeye ospaclally Kelleys Island. Baas
are also being ceught on shallow anglers should also eKpect e&gt;cellent
fiataln the upper and of the lake and fishing In the westem basin reef
below the 11'111way after water oompleK, Sandusky Bay, Ruggles
releases. They are being caught on Reef, artificial reefs In the
lead head jlgo with wjolte lwlstel8. Lorain/Cleveland area and harbor
Anglers an. catching aeugeye In the broakwalls from Cleveland . to
t 5· to 2~-lnch range. The oudook Ia Conneaut. Most catches will mea·
· good. A feW crappiee are also being sure 14 to 181nches. Thelegalllmlt
caught on jlgl tipped with wu for smell mouth bass Is 5 fish per
worme. All crappie choclced have angler with a minimum length
baet11eu than 10 Inches.
requirement ol141nchea.
Pike Lake (Pika County) - Bluegill
OHIO RIVER
are bek1g caught on wax wonns In Jefferson County - Anglers are
the arN near the paoi&lt;lng lot and using jigs, jigs lipped with minnows
along Pike Lake Aoad. Moat or crank .bait~ to catch smallmouth
bluegllll are running 6 to 7 Inches. baas just
below the
New
Surtace water temperature Ia 62 Cumbe~and lock and dam. Most of
degrees.
.
·
the baoa being caught are averaging
Walhonding
River (Coshocton t21nchesln length and a few aauger
County) -Water temperature Ia 80 are being picked up here as well.
degreeo. Ou~ng otable flowa , small• Washington County - Water tern·
mouth baao are being caught on perature Ia 81 degrees arid aflll high
minnow lyt)e lurea such at ft.oating a.nd turbid . Boat angle11 flahlng the
Aapalll.
.
·,
shoreline have caught largemouth
WMit Creak Reltr\'Oir (Coshocton baas trom 3 to 5 pounds. Succeseful
County) -Water temperaiUre Ia 81 lures Include brown and black
degraea. Good catchel of channel worms and various crank baits.
caftleh and nathoad catfish are Meigs County (Belleville Tallwaterl
occurrlngatthlelake. Moatarebalng - Sauger (10 to t7 lnchoe) are
caught on night crawlora and chick· baing caught on jigs tipped with min·
en llvere . Crappie ore aloo being nowa by shore fishermen fishing
caught Qn wu worma and inlnnowa behind the lock wall. The water Ia
ftahed undar a bobllei.
high and muddy.

"Ft1ml/y Owned"
Rutland • 742·2111 or 1·100•117·1217
St.llt. 124

Tht 'Plain• • 717·4012 or I•IOD-312·1117
.
.
.

LOIIh • JID-2131 or I·IOO•JI2·1117

tel. Main'

Stvtn Lo"ltlon1 Jb Strve "'u ••ftttl

(740)

LAKE ERIE FISHING REPORI'

..

OOLUMIUI CA"I - Hilt It the
wtti(IV Llkl lrll tllillnCI report PIC"
'lldld bv lht DlvltiOn ol WHcllllt of the
Ohio Dtpal'tmlnt of Natural
IIHOIJroMI

WMIIr!l ...ln

'1'111 t.akt lrie Wllt.r ttmperilurt 11
II dlgrHI 1111 Tol«&lt;o,

Natu,. II ltill I'IN=I~ 10
oaoparalt with l.akt 1111 1 era.
WlnciiM rain Mntt P\1111
lid
Wlltl'l 1M macll ~ ohlllqlng fer
bolt angilrl to get out. During any
wtndOWt of MGIIIIO opjiOIMifiV, Wll•
MOII!tr

fit angilll hi'lt bHn mott IUCI'
oftlfut norttwtett of Kill~ IIIINI,
011 Cl\111 ...... till ruf 11111110111,
1nd lilt Tollclo HI,_ LIGht, ancllaf'
IIIII Old IIllO N ToledO lhlpplng
Ohlnllll. Anglett lrt dtzwtiOhlforwtll:l eplnne/t1 illll'llll
1 lncl
bottom DoUncal'l wilt! ora
hi,.
1111111 -

· wtll

at

wttll ~lgnt OIVIItrt, 11
lrollliiO dllj) ciiYinQ IUI'II.

..

•

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•

Page 88 • 6unbap 1Eimrs ·6rntinel

Sunday, May 19, 2002"

Pomeroy .• Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Plluant, WV

Celebrations begin on-C2 •

Page Cl
•

,

"From the very
first moment, it
was like we had
always known
each other. But
then in a way
· we had."

•

t

,

t

.

•

2001 CHEVROLET

Penpals meet after 30
years .of exchanging letters

•

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MSRP $32,545

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BY CiwuNI HoBuctt

IDDLEPORT - When Stepbllliie Alexander learned that her
· Norwegian penpal of nearly 30 years was coming to the United
States as palt of ;~4-H cultural exchange progrwn, she said she '
was detennined to do "whatever it takes" to meet her.

t~~ 4/lA ~te

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Anita Maro of lndre
Noroy, Norwa_y, was going
to be in Mmnesota for
two weeks as part of a
Norwegian 4-H delegation to a conference at
the Minnesota Center
for
4-H
Youth
Development.
At first Stephanie
thought she would fly
to Minnesota, and
visit 'Anita at the
home of her host
family. But, as she
put it, that would
have. put both of
them in a "foreign .country"
and what she .
~ wanted ·
to do was ·

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The two exchanged letters on a regular basis, sent pictures,
gifts and caxds over the years and more recently began emailing
each other. They had never spoken on the telephone.
Throuib the years their lives followed similar paths. They were
IIUIITied the same year. In fact their wedding announcements to
each other crossed in the mail as did letters about the births of their
first two children who are the same ~- Stephanie has four children
and' Anita has tlwe. Both are Involved in 4-R and both have Careers.
Stephanie is a preschool teacher; Anita, a geriatric nurse.
Before Anita anived, Stephanie said she was wonied about "running her ragged," but then decided that doing lots of things was alright
because "we run ourselves ragged ~I the time and she is supposed to
get the feel for how things are llere and how we live."
. . Oetting to know Meig_s Count)', where Stephapie grew up, and Gallia
County, where she now lives, meant busy days for the two of them.
There were two visits to the Vmton Elementary School, one to see education in process, 3!1d the other to do a presentation on Norway for the
third grade of Stephanie's daughter, Jessica. Anita found schools to be very
different in the two countries. She said that in Norway there is no competition or recognition for academic achievement.
"We don't1ike losers." she said, "so the emphasis is on each student doing
the best they can.'' She also said lhat there are no lunch programs in the
schools, that students pack their own.
·
The variety of foods at grocery stores, the low cost of eating out, the difference in runrung a dairy fann similar to the one she and her husband operate,
and all the thin~s which can be purchased at a,store like Walmart or Odd Lots
CIIIIIC as a surpni\C to Anita. The extra suitcasulio'.IJrought was filled with souvenit's when she·left here." •
·' ·
, ·.
·
A visit to Canter's Cave 4-H ~at Iac~e. swimming pool and
A.ll}l.'jD'Idcrililit!IS are~
.
.
· . •
, ~JC 11111P II'IN'OIWfY,:dlty,...in tents," she said. ·" ·• -··" • "
. then there was a ViSit to Steph8nie's childhood home in Middlepon and some of
her Meigs County haunts as a teenager.
. The two took rolls and rolls of pictures and got "doubles in an hour" to the amaze'
'ment of the visitor from Norway.
·
Anita returned to Minnesota where she rejoined the Norwegian 4-H delegation for the
trip home.
.
·
The correspondence between the two friends which has gone on for nearly 30 years has
resumed. But now it's·different. There's that added dimension of two women who really
know each other.
.
·

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2000

ENJOYING THE RIVER- Stephanie Alexander,

right, and her 118npal, Anita Maro of ,Norway,
relaxed on a bench In a Pomeroy parking lot
gazebo one sunny afternoon att~r visiting
Stephanie's childhood 110~ In Mkldlel)Oft and
a few o{'her taanl!&amp;a' haunts. ~

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ft.lltll'IWII

nn.en111

had written about in her letters all.those years.
When the extension agent at the Minnesota CeJBI¢
the 4-H delegates from Norway heard Stephanie's
about how they had corresponded since fourth
and always dream«~ of meeting each other, they
so touched that it was decided Anita should fly
Ohio for a week.
"I c6uld hardly believe it when they said she could
come here," said Stephanie.
In preparation for her visit, the Min~sota
Center sent Stephanie a Norwe~an/American
dictionary to help with language difficulties and
some noles on the cialture of the country.
Stephanie provided the ticket for Anita's
flight and her host family in Minnesota got
her to the airport. Arriving in Ohio, she was
met at the Columbus airport by her longtime penpal accompanied by her sister,
Susan Eason, bearing a bouquet of flow·
ers and a patriotic cosiUmed bear holding a small American flag.
Anita carried a Norwegian flag in
her backpack and the two spotted
each. other almost inunediately as
she walked down the corridor.
"From the vecy ftrst moment, it
was like we had always known
each other: But then in a way we
had," quipped Stephanie.
·
She related the story of how she and Anita had
become penpals.
.
"It was through a television show called 'Big
Blue Marble' wruch had a multiculturalism progrwn and encouraged kids to write in and get a
penpal name. I wrote in and got Anita's name
-a girl my own age who lived in Norway.''

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DEAR ABBY: I am a 36-year-old
single man who has boomeranged
between living on my oim and with
my parents during the past three
years. Finally, I'm planninf on movm~ a pennanent place o my own.
proble)ll is my mother appears
li?
re~t !DY leaving. Ever
smce
movmg 1ssue came up, no
matter what I do or say, I cannot do
anything righ~ bheMom. It's brought
out the worst 10 r.
My new apartment is closer to my
job, and it's only 30 miles away, so I
will be able to visit my parents often.
I understand that Mom has health
rv;blems and needs help, but I have
e siblings in the area, and I could
always be at my folks' quickly to
be:fecwith any emergency.
.
ause I am not married nor do I
·have children, I sometimes think this

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PEIIIPALS MEET - Anita Maro of Norway, right, In Minnesota as part of a Norwegian 4-H delegation to a state 4-H conference, spent a weele here with her penpal of 30 years, Stephanie
Alexander, and her family at Vinton.
·

apron strings·are strgngl'
Dear

deeJ:'

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••••lllll!l
phdGiby

Chaif ... Hoalllch

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Abby
ADVICE
makes my famir feel as if it's my job'
to take care o our J:::_ts. I love
them, but these past
years have
created resentment and fruStration on
my part. I feel I would be a healthier
j!,rson living on my own, but I don't
w how to communicate this to
Mom. Please hel/:i Abby. This is tcaiFRUS.
!fLour relalions ~
TEDSON
RIDA

jiLg' -

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DEAR FRUSTRATED SON:
Sometimes relationships need to be
torn apatt before ~ can be successfully rcconstruc . Consider this
mOve a period of growth for
and
your mother. You are a lovmf son
who has the right to a life o yOIIr
own. However, your mother m1;
have greater fears aboUt her heal
than you realize. Speak to your siblinss.and urge them to stay closer in
touCh. She needs reassurance that
someone is nearby to help her if she
needs assistance.
. DEAR ABBY: I have been living
with "Jerry" .for two years. When we
moved in
we both brought
furniture
household items into
our new home. I want us to buy a
new sofa. Jerry insista ~ning his
old one into
itu
of gettin~
rid of iL Should be worried he isn t

rou

:Jether,

storar

fully committed to our relationshi~
GOING NOWHERE
CINCINNATI
DEAR GOING NOWHERE:
No. l suspect the old couch holds
memories for Jeny that he's reluctant
~ with. Thne ::h,:Oive this
!em when he
·
that the
ees for storing the couch add up to
more than the
price.
DEAR AB V: I have lived with
"Fred" on and. o1f for five yean. We
argue all the time. Last week, [
moved out again. Fred gave me an
engagement ring for Christmas two
years ago, and that same week he
asked an old ~ to go on vacation with h1m and his children.
Episodes like this have .happened
more than once since we have been

female he meets, and it drives me
crazy. I go back ·to him because he
. swears he wants only me, y~t we still
argue about women, kids, money ~
you narr. it. I know he will never
chan~aud wonder if I still love him.
A , do you think I should continue counseling, mJIITY Fred, or
leave him for~ood? - 55 AND
CONFUSED TULSA
DEAR 55 AND CONFUSED:
Continue counseling until you figure
out why you kee~ returning to a
ladies man with w om you have so
many serious issues. Once you have
that figured out, the answer to your
question will be obvious.
Pauline Phillips and her dJJughli!r,
Je~ Phi/l~s, shaft! the pseudo·
11ym Abigail wz Burt!n. Write Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
to~ether.
red is very friendly with any Box 69440, Lot Angeles, CA 9ln59.

rv:-chase

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�Pap·a

.Pomeroy • Mlddltiport • G•lllpolla, Ohio Point Plea11nt, WV

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Ll18 C. Turner end Adem L. Perrott

Chrtetopher A. Roettker end Amllnde L. Cermloheel

Mr. enci Mrs. Howerd Allen ·

Turner-Parrott engagement

Cannichael-Roettker engagement

Allen 5Oth .anniversary
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POINT PLEASANT Rev. and Mrs. F. Clyde Turner
of Point Pleasant, are pleased
_to announce the engagement
and forthcoming marriage of
their daughter, Lisa Carol
Thmer, to Adam Lee Parrott
of Ringgold, Ga. Adam is the
son cif Mrs. Mable Parrott of
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Lisa is a 1995 graduate of
Ohio Valley Christian School
in Gallipolis. She is currently
pursuing a degree from
Covington
Theological
Seminary in Rossville,
Georgia, and is employed as
an Administrative Assistant at
Me rastar-Prud entia I
Insurance Company m
Chattanooga, Tennessee.

Adam is a 1995 graduate of
Oglethorpe
High School
in
Ft.
Oglethorpe, Georgia, and is a
graduate of Covington
Theological Seminary. He is
currently employed as
Athletic Director, Head
Basketball and Track Coach
and Bible Teacher at
Lakeview~ Ft.

Christian Heritage School in
Dalton, Georgia.
Lisa and Adam exchanged
wedding vows on Saturday,
May 18, at 1:30 p.m. at the
New Haven Baptist Ch4rch in
Chattanooga, Tennessee. A
reception will follow at the
church. Following a honeymoon in Hawaii, the couple
will reside in Ringgold, Ga.

GALLIPOLIS - John
and Loralee Carmichael of
Gallipolis, announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Amanda Laurette
Carmichael to Christopher
Allen Roettker, son of
Shei Ia Roettker and Jean
· Cassidy of Gallipolis and
Timothy Allen Roettker of
Jackson.
A June 8 wedding will
take
place
at
the
Carmichaels' home in
Gallipolis. The ceremony
will be performed by Harold
Benson.
The maternal grnndpar·
ents of the bride-elect are
Frances Tuc.ker of Addison
and the late James L.
Tucker. Her paternal grand·

parents are the late Charles
and Magdalene Carmichael
of Gallipolis.
The maternal grandparents ·of the prospective
groom 'are Delores Jean
Cassidy of Gallipolis and
the alte Millard Cassidy. His
paternal $randparents are
Eunice G11l of Columbus
and Thomas Roettker of
Columbus.
Both the bride-elect and
prospective groom will be
attendinl!
Marshall
University this ul:'coming
school year. The bnde-elect
· will be starting her undergraduate studie~ in biology.
The prospective groom will
begin a Master's degree in
exercise physiology.

POMEROY - Howard
and Emogene Harris Allen of
New Knoxville will celebrate
their SOUl wedding anriiversary on May 30.
The couple were married
on May 30, 1952, in Racine.
He is a graduate of Pomeroy
High School, and she gradu· ated from Racine High
School.
The couple moved to
Xenia, where Allen managed
a Fairborn lumber company
and his wif~ coordinated the
Xenia Chapter of the
American Red Cross.
In January 1966, they
moved to New Knoxville to
join the staff and live at The
Way International, a Biblical
research, teaching and fel-

lowship ministry. Allen
served as secretary/treasur~
of The Way International fQr
21 years 1977 to 1998. · · Mrs. Allen served as the
coordinator of The W,ay
International Bookstore fOr
32 years, from 1966 to 1998.
The couple has five children, Cindy (Michael) Fort
and Steve Allen
Gf
Indianapolis; Krista (Roger)
Wulber of Versailles, and
Michael (Jenny) Allen and
Daniel (Shelby) Allen of
New Knoxville. They also
have twelve grandchildren:·
Cards of congratulations
can be mailed to P.O. Box
252, New Knoxville, 06io
45871.
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Mr. end Mrs. Qereld R. Thompeon

Mr. end Mrs. Cerl GUillen

Norman- Tipton engagement

Thompson 60th anniversary

Gillilan 60th anniversary

High School in florida. Her
fiance is a 2002 graduate of
Withlacoochee Technical
institute in Florida.
The wedding will take
Jllace at the First Baptist
Church in Middleport on
June IS, 2002, at 2:30p.m.
Friends and family of the
couple are invited to attend.

.

POMEROY - Gerald R.
Thompson and Alice Payne
Thompson of 42370 Gun
Club Road. Pomeroy, will
observe their 60th wedding
anniversary with an open
house on May 26 from 2 to 4
p.m. at the · Chester
Courthouse.
They were married on May

23, 1942, at Bidwell.
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson
have four children, Louella
Roush of Houston, TeKas,
Maryanna Mitchell, San
Antonio, Texas, George .
Thompson of Pomeroy, and
fred
Thompson
of
Hendersonville, N.C. .

;How times have changed regarding discipline
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Vlotorl8 Lynn Normen

RACINE - Anna Norman
of Racine announces the
enga~ement and upcoming
,mama_ge of her daughter,
,yjctona Lynn, to Ian Todd
,Morrison Tipton, son of
-Mctoria and William RJchard
.TiDtonJr.ofCitrusst:mngs,Fia. .
)'he bride-elect IS a 2002
·. ',g~aduate of Crystal River

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BY MAX TAWNIY

have had a happy life, you
bet I did. I couldn't have
had a better father 'or moth·
er ancl brothers and sisters.
I am now 88 and hope to ·
make it to 99. 1 am sure
glad I have lived in Gallia
County all my life, after
seeing how people live in
72 foreign countries in my
world travels around the
world.
.
· Here are just a few lines
about my life. · My dad
made me get up .at S a.m.
. 'every morning to milk
.three or four cows by hand,
· turo the cream separator,
feed the hogs and horses
before I went to school and
then had to walk a mile to

. ,. I was in a restaurant
recently and .I was sitting
next to two boys, who were
jn their early teens. They
were talkin$ about theu
'parents, saymg that their
'Dad was not allowed to
whip them.
- One of the boys had been
-,:aught smoking cigarettes
;41id all his. dad could do
:Wlls to sar. "Don't do that
:aoymore.' The other te~n
!tatd his dad had caught htm
l;nd two other boys drinkllf'lg whiskey and his father
could only say, "You
should not be drinking that
laid took the bottle away
:fd:lm him."
;My dad shook me a little,
ltpt be could not whip me
d I told him 10. I started
king to these boys and
ld them · they should be
'i•thamed of themselves and
cliey just laughed. That eure
•btouaht memories of my
lipyhOod days on the farm.
When my dad told me to do
1ilmethina. I did it.
t·: If I did not do what he
!tdld me I would get a whip:ptng and there was no talk·
•lhg back to dad. Sometimes
:biter he would hug me and
tilly he was sorry for the
f!hippina. but it was for my
.»wn _JoOd. But most of the
time I probably deserved
the whipping. I was not the
on! y son in my family that
was disciplined, I had four
other brothers and when
our dad told us to do lome·
tbing we did it. No questions asked. I tbouaht it
was terrible, but it was the
;best thing that ever hap:pened · to us. What a bl''change todar,. you can t
!whip your .chddren today.
• But I wdl tell you a true
:episode that really hap·
· 1pened when I was in the
seventh grade. I caught a
lbig araashopper and put it
oin my desk. When no one
~was looking, I put the
'l!raashopper down the back
•of Nora, who sat in front of
~e. She let out a scream
1that shook the windows.
IAfter the teacher got Nora
settled do.wn. he got a hold
!of
me and took me up front
lso that everyone could tee
:what he wa• going to do
:and did they get their CY,III
•full. He nve me a whlping I will never forget and
either will they.
I told my sister Ruby not
to tell my dad. I knew if he
lfound out, I would act
:another wbippina. He did· ·
;n' t find out for a month and
:he said to me, "I aue•• tbe
ttucher took care of everylthing, you were taught e
igood le11on and I will not
:have to take cite of you
:again." I agreed with him
:100 percent. So you see, I
!waa not a perfec~ kid by
rany mean•. I will 11y that
;those were hap,PY days of
:my life and I w11l never (or:g~t them. Do you think I

!

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school. I was always happy,
my dad never mistreated
me, but I thought he did
when I got a whipping. He
made something out of me
and I loved him and to this
day I $till get up at S a.m.
My kids used me for their
alarm clocks to get them up
in the mornings when they
were young.
·
I started in the photography business in 1933 and
still work every day, and I

am now 88. But after 70
years in business I am
going to hang it up. I want
to thank every person that
has done business with me
over the years. God Bless
everyone, everywhere.
(Longtime Gallipolis businessman Max Tawney occasionally submits anlcles to
the Sunday Times-Sentinel
about his world travels, and
memories of Gallipolis and
Gall/a County.)

4

BIG

i

DAYS

Roger Gillilan of Dayton,
Linda Frey of Belpre, Joyce
Smith of Lancaster. and
David Gillilan of Coolville.
They have siK grandchildren.

COOLVILLE - Carl and
Frances Gillilan of Coolville
celebrated their 60th wedding
anniversary Saturday at a
family gathering.
They were married May
IS, 1942. at the Methodist
Parsonage in Reedsville by
the Rev. E.L. Miller.
Carl, son of the late Stanley
and Florence Gillilan. is a
retired rural mail carrier and
an ordained United Brethren
minister. His wife is the
daughter of the late Edward
and Fr.eda Blake, and was a
secretary arid time keeper for
L.C. Smith · &amp;. Corona
Typewriters Inc., Syracuse,
N'.Y., during World War II.
They are the parents of

FREE

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Mitchell G. Routh end Erin L.

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P~le L. Wllll11111 end Chrlltopher D. ltr..tmolll

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T#lls-Lester wedding

Krawsczyn-Roush engagement Willzams-Streetman engagement
POMEROY
Betty .
Hobstener and John Krawsczyn
and CeUa McCoy, of POmeroy,
announce the engagement and
approaching maniage of their
daughter, ·. Erin
Leslie
Krawsczyn, to Mitchell Grant
Roush. son of Gary Roush of
Mason, W.Va., and the late
Mary Roush.
The bride-elect is a 1997
graduate of Meigs High School,
and a 200 l graduate of Ohio
University, where she received
'a bachelor's degree in organiza-

I

PATRIOT - Donald Ray riage at I p.m. on May 11, at'
CHESHIRE "- Lynn Church in Middleport. A Wells Jr. and Kimberly Renee Patriot United Methodist
Henry of Cheshire announces reception will be herd in the . Lester were joined m mar- Church. Bill Green officiated,
the engagement and forth- · church social room.
coming wedding of her
da~~hter, Patricia. Lynn
You've
got to feel
it to believe it"
W11liams, to Chnstopher
,
· ·
Daniel Streetman .of Point
the
Pleasant, W.Va. He IS the son
. .
ofBeverlyPettrofPomcroy.
.
Ma~ess
Both the bnde-elect and
.LL1 1
her fiance attended Meigs
·
High School. He is employed
at Merjllat in Jackson.
The wedding will take
place on May 25,. 2002, at
Heath U.nited Methodist

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For Initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
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Sunday
TlfTJes-Sentinel

Our next clinic date Is
Friday, May 31, 2002.

GaUia • 446-2342
Mei&amp;s. 992-2156
MISOn• 675-1333

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The

,Keeping
Gallia,
Meigs&amp;
Mason
informed

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tiona! communication. She is
employed at Riverside Golf
Club. She is the granddaugher
of Billie Jo Krawsczyn of
Middleport, and the late John
Krawsczyn Sr., 'andl the late
George and Bobbie Hobstetter.
Her fiance is a graduate of
Wahama High School, class of
1986, and is also employed at
Riverside Golf aub.
The open church wedding
will take place on June 22, on
the 18th green at Riverside Golf

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for an appointment.

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pay you ac
Don't be fooled by ml.dla reports

associate dearce areduate in Ohio
earns an averaae annual startina
salary of approximately $33.,~000.
Th n we have a return of S21,000
on an lnhitallnvestment of $6,000.
That calculates out to a return of
450 percent tor the nrst year.
Let's think tbout tills fot a
minute. If you knew of an invest·
ment where you could take $6,000
and In two yeats It would grow to
almost $33,000, would you not
rush to get in on this areat Investment deat? Of coune you would I
- You may point out that you
would have to alve up your mlnimum waae job for two years to go
to school and this should be fac·
tored Into the calculation. This
would Indeed reduce the return on
inveatment. Is it still hiahly prof·
liable to go to coneae, if lam glv·
Ina u~ my job for two years?
Let s do the math. Assuming that

you could earn $12,000 each year
t~lus the cost of tuition brinJS the
total Investment to $30,000. Our
starting salary of $33,000, still
gives a return of $3,000. This calculates out to be almost .50 ~rcent
for the first year, which 1s still
more profitable than Investing in
the stock market.
There are other ways to prove
the value of your Investment.
Under the assumption that a job
olit of high school pays $.5 ..50 an
hour, and that you are given raises
totaling 10 percent each year for
four years, or the amount of time
that It would take you to get a
bachelor's degree. At the end of
the four yetirs, you would be earn·
ina about $7.32 an hour or $1 S,SOO
11 year. This is less than half of
wliat a college graduate can expect
to earn In ·their first year of
employment.

In fact, if we do the math, it will
take approdmately 12 years of 10
percent annual raises to earn what
a college graduate earns. Also, the
average community and technical
college a.raduate can ~xpect to eu:n
at least S2SO,OOO more over thetr
lifetime than individuals with simply a high school diploma. How Is
that for a return on a $6,000
investment? ·
Return on in vestment for college
can be calculated in many ways.
9etting a c~llcge degree is a s~art
•nvestment tn your future earntngs
potential. Call your local community college today and put college
in your fl!ture .
(Luanne Rase Bowman is vice
president for financial and administrative 'l!fairs · at Rio Grande
Community College, P.O. Box 326,
Rio Grande, 0/aio 45674, 245·

the county outside Oalllpolls, was
done In el\un:hes.
·.
1\vo·clrcuses came to town in the
S.Prin~ and early summer of 1876:
Cooli s Circus and the Dan Rice
Circus. Of the first circus the
Bulletin said: "Cook's Circus
arrived in town Thursday near
-----~~n. It had not been advertised
lona and a slim crowd was the
HISTORY
result. Senlor·ah·(we foraet his
. name) performed In a very cred·
discoursing 'Home Sweet Home,' Itable manner on the tlahtrope outand the bOy was playing iii\ accom· · side. The miill with tile revolvina
panlment, on the tambourine."
ponies was there, and the rasping
The spiritualist was Professor voice of the lemonade seller could
John Det.:llle who at one dme lived be heard, but there were no 'big
at Rodney. He traveled the country snakes' to be seen. The bills did not
with his act. He aave seances, reail . He this time. The1sald •no &amp;Oflleous
minds, performed mnalc and lee; outside display, and there wasn't
tured on necromancy.
six muslc!ans-sht horses-and a
Stated the Bulletin: "He allows moderately plain bandwagon con·
himself to be handcuffed behind . stltuted the street parade."
and chal ned to a atatlonary chair,
The Dim Rice Circus had been
and then writes pn 11 alate six feet comlna to Otallipolla since 1853. In
from him." lnterellinalY. enouah, fact, It Wilt that year that thll gircus
DeLille'a act, .when peiformed In gave a free pei'formance to raise

money to build Gallia Academy.
The school had burned down fn
1846. No classes were held between
1846 and 18.53. In the later year,
Academy trustees decided to raise
money 19 begin construction of a
new school. ft was completed that
year and classes resumed then.
In the Dun Rice Cirtus were such
acts as Nellie, the champion leaping
horae of the world, Monsieur Paul's
Troupe of Educated Bears, a herd of
wild broncos, Ozark, the greatest
trick mule in the world, comical
horae riding goats named Sinbad
and Sebastian, ·and the . world
renown blind horse named
Excelsior. Two shows were to be
&amp;IVen on Saturday, June 3, 1876.
Admission was .50 seats for adults
·and 2.5 cents for children. One could
also buy reserved seats for 7.5 cents.
Unfortunately, Dan Rice didn't
&amp;hoW up In curly June. He had given
a lar&amp;e performance In Huntington,
but the boat that was to bring the
circus here took off without Dan. It

seems that the boat had been haul·
ing around the circus for some time
but was not paid for Its work.
Ironically, students at the various
schools wen: to have been given a
big discount by the circus. And the
school officials made arrangements
for some of the out of town students
to stay in t6wn for the circus. The
students had wanted to go to the
earlier circus, the Cook Circus. But
school officials stated that the Dan
Rice Circus was much better.
As it turns out, the students saw
neither circus. The Bulletin noted
that n valuable lesson was learned
nonetheless, "there's many a &amp;lip
'tween the cup and the lip." Dan
Rice eventually did make it to town,
but the out of town students and
there were many in 1876, had all
gone home for the summer.
(James Sa11ds Is a special corre·
spondent for tile Sunday 71mes·
Senti11el. He call· be contacll!d by
writing to .346 Meadow Lane,
Circleville, 0/aio 43/13.)

:Of increase In tho cost of a colleae

Mr. tlld Mrt. Jtmtl C. Mitchell

Mitchell 40th anniversary
. GALUPOLIS - James C.
and Anna Mount Mitchell
celebrated their 40th anniversary May 19. The couple
married May 19, 1962, at the
home of Golda and Charles
Mitchell of Morgan Center.
The couple has three sons,
James Jr. of New Bern. NC,
Aaron C. of Palm Buy, Flu.,

and Aven C. of Gallipolis.
They have four grundchil·
dn:n, Brittany, MuUhew and
Olivia of New Bern, and
Jordan of Gallipolis.
James is retired from Evans
Pocking Co. of Gallipolis.
Annu is employed by Holzer
Medical Center us uRN:

..J

"'"' 1.0111 lnd Rebtccl Tholllll

Rogers-Roach wedding

Thomas~ Long engagement

COTTAGEVILLE
Carla R. Hanley Rogers and
Ronald D. Rouch were united
in marriage Mar, 19. 2001 at
the Cottageville United
Methodist Church. Reverand
Gerald Sayre officiated the
ccremonr.
, The bnde is the daughter of
Rundall nnd Sandra Hartley
of Cottageville. She is the
granddaughter of Edward and
Audrey Hurtle,Y, Bertha and
the lute Olin Mill &amp; of
Cottageville. She is tho moth·
er of five-year-old Ciaro
Luine Rogers.
The groom is the son of
Juck Roach and Judy
Sturgeon of .Letun. He is the
gruni;lson of the lute Ernest
and Virginia Williams and the
late Ira and Leona Roach.
The matron of honor was
Melulnc Hunley Mosser, sis··
tcr of the bride. Bridesmaids
were Tanya Tacketr Bowers,
cousin of th~ bride; and
Cathy Bailes and Jamie
Durst, both friends of the
bride. Guest book attendant
was Tara Barnette, a friend of

Randl Hlrntlton, Dlnltl GhMn lnd ton, Klltb

Hamilton-Gheen .engagement
LONG BOll OM - Rand!
Michelle Hamilton and Daniel
Earl Gheen of Long Bottom are
announcing their en~agement
llld approaching mamage.
The bride-to-be is the
daughter of Lewis Randall
and Diane Hamilton of
Vinton. She is a 1999 gradu·
ate of Gallia Academy High
. School, and a 2000 graduate
of the Surgical Technology
.program at Buckeye Hilfs
-'Career Center. She ia a mem·

Mr. lncl Mrt. Rontld D. ltOIOh

ber of AST and is employed
us a surgical technologist at
Holzer Medical Center.
The bridcsroom i1 the son
of Manuel Earl and .Barbara
Gheen of Long Bottom, and
Geraldine Cleland of Racine.
He is a 1989 araduate of
Southern Hiah School and Ia
employed
by Gheen's
Painting Inc. He ia u member
of the Painter's Union.
An August 2002 wedding
in the Bahamas ia planned.

Keel!_ing
(iof/ia,
Meigs

the brid.o. The flower girl was
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
Cioru RoJicrs, daughter of the Mrs. Ellrl Thomas and Mr.
bride. Ring- bearer wus und Mrs. David Wright
Frederick Roush, 11 friend of would like to announce the
the couple.
cnaaaement and upcomlna
Best man was Andy Rouch, m11rrfoge of their dauahter,
hrother of the groom. · Rebeccu Thomas to Bryan
Groomsmen were Juck Long. son of Mr. and Mrs;
Roach, father of the groom; Curl Long of Mt. Vernon. .
Tim Roach, brother; und
The brlde-to·be Is 11 1995
Tomm)' Hartley, brother of · graduate of Galltn Academy
the brii;le.
High School und a 1999
Soloist and guitarist Am,Y gradunte of the University of
Thornton provided ceremont· Rio Or11nde. She is currently
ul music. The photogrupher
was Craig Morgan.
A wecfding reception was
held at the NYA building In
Ravenswood.
Recej)tion
music was _provided by Tom
Marlow or Music Masters.
The reception cuterina was
AnENTION
provided by E &amp;. J Catering.
KMART
The wedding cake was creal·
SHOPPERS
ed by Aml!er's Specially
Cakes.
On !tilt I Dl 1111 MIV II Llwn I
Glrdtn Ctllllr 'unout or tftl Ill
The couple honeymooned
till luno111 Horllon111
In Cancun, Mexico.
· · olrau111,
111111, lllg. lllll'rtoiiiiiiiH.H,
Both reaistered nurses at
. 11 lnoorreotlv 1dvtrtl11d 11
Charleston Area Medical
HI.H. Thl DOiftot ldVtrtlllll
llll!llltt II •11t.H.
Center, they now reside in
Wt rttNI 1nv lnoonvenllftR 11111
Cotljlgevllle.
miV 11M HUIM OllltUI-.,

Ohio University

employed 111 the district coor·
dlnator for Rio Grande
Community Colleae.
The aroom·tO·be Is tl 1996
graduate of Frederlcktown
High School and . a 2000
graauate of the University of
Rio Orande. He Is currently
employed by the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company.
The couple plans to
exchunJie vows Stllurday,
June 22 ut Trinity Methodist
Churth In Porter.

Tho Bureau tor

Children with
Mtdleal Handteapa'
(BCMH) II mllable
to help fnmiiiO!.

lrruu hnve n ohlld that haa

1peola health cart need1 you may
be ellatble for mlt tllltce .
Call the Oallla County Health
Depanment at 441·203D,
tor more Information.

Call today and 1111 tht 111'111.

)ducation. ' am here to tell you
~hat It Is more expenalve NOT to
tet • colleae eduaatlon. A minlnial
.investment In a colleae educ.tlon
· leads to 11 substantlll return on
:your Investment. Let's take a look
: at the facts.
·• When decldlna how to lnvelt
~our money, mo~l Investors want
1o know \'. hat their return will be.
!!'his basically means that you hope
;-to get a lot more money back than
:whal you originally lnvosted. Por
: Instance, baniCs are currently pay·
· Ina about 11 2 percent annual
: return on a savings account. Let's
':Compnre thnt to wlmt you can enrn
·on 11n Investment in o colleae
·
dearee.
A student's totnl colleae Invest·
mentIs more than just the obvious
economic factors such as books

fn May nnd June of 1876,
Onllipolls residents hud a number of
l nterestlng entertainers como ·to
town, lncludlna two clrtuses, an
orMnn arlnder~. ~ spiritualist and a
lqe snllke. while the first four
show aroups went on to other com·
munllles, the snake gave his last
perfortnance here.
The IIU'IIe snnke IPP!Iared In the
front yonf of the Fred 'Carel family.
He was quite amuslnato 80me of the
children 118 he crawled amona the
: nowers. One younaster was not
: amused and cried out for a different
act. The scre11111s alerted the mother
· who ran out the front door. She seized
: 11 hoe and brought the "curlllln" or
: "curtnlna" d0\1!11 on Mr. Snllke.
: The hand otaan act consisted of
~n old man, a llttle boy and a mon·
; key. Stated the Oalllpolls Bulletin:
"While the monkey was jumplna
' throuah II hoop, ilancina, flnna
: miniature auna, rlnalna bells, and
: aoina throuah sundry evolutions on
· ' the trapeze, the oraan Willi dolefully

Luanne
Bowman
-----·

EDUCATION
and tuition, but It also includes
such Items as time and effort.
While these other factora are
important, rlaht now we will
attempt to calculate our return
based upon our monetary Invest·
ment only.
If we assume that It tllket an
Investment of approdmately
$6,000 . to complete an associ11te
dearee and we also know that the

James
Sands

·.

7236.)

•

College of Bus.iness
(

~m1 1 1 : IIIII j l l ~ ~ 1 1 1

)

I ::II I

Executive.
MBA Progra1n

Fa.r mers ·Bank
Home Equity
· Loans for
as low as

0
0

• Ohio Unlvtnlty's Executive MBA Progrem Is pltlstd to Invite tppllclnts
to our 261h consecutive class. Slnct 1977, Ohio University hes consistently
dtllvtrtd thlslnttnslvt 21 ·month long course of wuktnd ttudy
ludlng to tnt M11ttr of Buslntu Admlnlttratlon dtgrtt . An enduring
and highly acclaimed program, we fttturt en eccompllshtd f1culty
1nd 1n lppllcatlon-orltnttd curriculum d11igned to reduct tllt.rltk
of personet tnd proftulontl obsolllctnct for tnt mld·Cirttr man1g1r
tnd proftsslon1t. Courstwork will btgln In September 2002.
·

. . . TURNSOUT
BOB'S 1Cl.EPHQr\E

.

• Cletsts m11t at Ohio University's Lanctltlr c1mpu1 one Friday tnd thrtt
Saturdays tach month (with 1 flvt·wtlk winter breek), 1nd are s~ructured
to 11tow busy man1gersand proftsslonalt to complete 1n MBA In 21 months
without ctreer Interruption.
• Accredited by AACSB- Tht tnternatlontl Assoclttlon for Mentgtmtnt
Educetlon, the premier accrtdltlng 1gency for bachelor's, master's,
end doctoral degr11 programs In business edmlnlstratlon end
eccountlng. Member, Executive MBA Council.
,

Mr. lnd M11, H1nk Hatten

.

... SO I WAS 11-EREFASTER
'11-fAN A HA~ ~ U' ON A
· 'TB.EMARKE I ER I

Hatten 60th anniversary
• GALLIPOLIS - Hank May 25, 2002 at Good News
:and Olll'ltet Hatten wlll cele· Baptist Church from 2•6 p.m.
The event will be hosted by
brate their 60th weddina
their
family. No atfts.
,.nnivenary .on Saturday,

I

• The Incoming ct111 witt bt IJmlttd to 30 partlclpents, dr1wn from ·
1 variety of organizations and functlonet lrtll. EMBA pertlclpanta
trlvtl from Whitling, Clnclnntti/Diyton, Plrktrsburg/M~rlttte,
and..Akron/Cmon_jo' attend.clauesJn Lancaster.

I

•

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OVCS IN·ACTION

• For details and to requttt a progrem brochure 1bout tht
Onlo Unlvtrtlty Executive MBA Progr~m :

If you own your own home,
you can borrow against the
equity you have already invested!

Call 7.tO.IIU021 or 740.5tJ.20Zt, or
Visit our Web site at www.cob.ohtou.tdli/•tmbtl. or
Sind your nam,1 and milling tddrtst to
DirectOr, lxtcutlvt MBA Program
College of Bu1lnen
Ollio Unlv~rtlty ·
Cjtttll"' Hill 514

(F :•iJ Farmers Bani
~ We're Your Bank jM' Ct.fi111

. .M,

OH 45101.Zt7t
: Mrt. McOanlet't klndtrprttn eta.. trom Ohio VIII~ Chrlttlan
: School. Thl ttudtntl .,, ptcturlld rettln&amp; etttr 1 mornlnJ ~
11rvtce tn tl1f Frtneh Art Cotony'e Yard. Annually, McDinltl t
ctatt comt1 to tn• FAC tor the tchoot'• tervathon.
(Contributed)

REPAIR MAN.MISSE[)
AN APPOINTMENi

REMEMBER 'TS..EPHON: CUSTOMERS.,. YaJ'VE GOT
RIGHTS. TAICE TJoE PHONE RA~· S ADVICE AND ...,......,.

�PqeCI
'h. lilt

llll

from
IY TilE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

.

••
••
••

rs:

lemon zest and vlllilla extrlct.
Knead several times on a Y.f~
ftoured board md roll out to
·
thickness. Cut into 4 circles with a
3-inch cutter and pli.ce oa Ill
ungreased baking sheet. Bake for I0
to .12 minutes or until tiabtly
browned. Let cool. Meanwhile;Deat
cream and sugar to¥ether until soft
peaks form. Melt Jam and kirscll
together in a small saucepaa. Split
each shortcak~ in half lengthw!se
and spoon whtpped cream, Chem.es
and melted jem between the layers.
Serve immediately.
Makes 4 servings.
jam
I · tablespoon Kirsch (cherry
Nutrition information per serving:
liqueur)
'
671 cal .. 8 g pro .. 33 g fat, 82 g
Preheat oven to 425 F.
carbo., 3 g fiber, 11 S mg chol., 426
In a medium bowl, stir together mg sodium.
•u
!lour, sugar, baking powder and salt.
Cut in butter until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Stir in milk,

Blaa Cbei ay Sllartcat•
· (Preparation 23 minutes, cookina
time 13 minutes)
1~ cups ftour
·
~. cup sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
~. teaspoon salt
~. cup butter, softened
S or 6 tablespoons milk
I teaspoon lemon zest
~ teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups pitted Bing cllerries
I cup whipping cream
2 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons melted raspberry

Bina Cherry Shortcakes are easy
to bake, but make a colorful dessert
and 1 sweet flourish with which to
end a meal.
For a s~ial treat, top them with
a scoop of vanilla ice crearrt - it
will look as pretty as a picture. The
Bing cherries lend a rich hue to the
. J:Onfection, as well as natural juicy
•:sweetness. Bing cherries are hard to
miss - they are really large, and
their color can range from a deep
• garnet red to almost black. They are
good for eating out·of·hand, as well
: us for cooking.
. Practic.al note: The shortcakes can
· -be made ahead and stored in the
·. :rreeze. On the day you want to serve
· them. defrost the cakes in the mom: ing and assemble with the rest of the
: ingredients right before you serve
: the dessert.
·

After outrage from
fans, nevv 'Star Wars'
features less Jar Jar Binks

LOW-FAT COOKING

QUICK COOKING

:·Salmon Pinwheel Salad

Spaghetti Puttanesca

.• .
••
•.

BY THE ~SSOCIATEO PRESS

This low-fat salmon salad
!.lwith its fresh orunge touches
· tooks dressed-u~ enough to
. serve when you re entertain. jng. But don 'I assume ' that
means being tied up for hours
' in the kitchen - a convenience of t~e recipe is that you
can make 11 ahead of time.
' It's among recipes in Better
:· Homes and Gardens "MakeAhead Cooking" (Meredith,
. $24.95), a trove or ideas
worked out to make the
.. cook's lite easier when cater- .
· ing for guests. Some of the
.. angles covered: leftover ere.ations,
bonus
batches,
overnight marinades, stressfree holiday meals, casual
entertaining, and simple
~ sweeiS .
.., The make-ahead advice for
' this salad is that you can chill
!he cooked salmon in the
· refrigerator for .the minimum
2 hours as directed, or for up
to 24 hours ..
Salmon Pinwheel Salad
(Preparation 20 minutes,
~king 6 minutes, chilling
~Sin!e 2 hDI;lrs)
~ • One 1/,.pound fresh or
•l'rozen skinless salmon fillet, ~~
:to ~.inch thick
: · ~ cup dry white wine or
:water
:,: ~.teaspoon salt
•• ~. teaspoon pepper
c: I bay leaf
: IO·ounce
· package
: P.uropean-style torn mixed
• salad greens
: 2 medium oranges, peeled
~ and sectioned
; I cup thinly sliced cucum-

' beE .

: 1. cup sliced almonds, toast:ed
: I recipe Fresh Orange

.

~ssina

(recipe follows)
: Thaw salmon, iffrozen. Cut
: Silmon fillet len.sthwise into 6
. even strips. Ltghtly season
: with salt and pepper. Starting
: with the thick end or each
: strip, roll into pinwheels.

A SMART DISH - Salmon Pinwheel Salad Is a smart, low-fat
dish, a refreshing and easy choice for a weekend lunch. ·It can
be made ahead, end takes only half en hour to prepare, plus
chilling time. Add rolls end a simple dessert, end enjoy a cerefree me~:~l. Recipe and photo are from Better Homes end
Gardens "Mak.e-Ahead Cooking." (AP)

Secure each pinwheel with a
wooden toothpick or wooden
skewer.
In a large skillet combine
white wine or water, the ~.tea­
spoon salt, ~. teaspoon pe)1per.
and bay leaf; bring to bollmg . .
Add salmon. Return to boiling; reduce heat. Cover and
simmer for 6 to 8 minutes or
until fish just flakes e!lsily
when tested with a fork; tum
once. Using a slotted spoon.
remove salmon from cooking
liquid. Discard cooking liquid. Cover and chill salmon in
refrigerator at least 2 hours (or
for U!J to 24 hours).
To serve, arrange salad
greens, orange sections,
cucumber slices and almonds
on salad plates or in salad
bowls. Top each salad with a
salmon pinwheel. Spoon
Fresh Orange Dressing over
salads.
Makes 6 servings.
Frail Oranae Dressing

•
•
•
•

·-------~ . RE C'IPE
•

~cup light dairy·sour cream

~ tcasmn finely shredded
orange peel
.
2 tablespoons orange juice
teaspoons sugar
~ teaspoon poppy seed
Additional orange juice as
needed
In a small bowl stir first five ·
ingredients together, adding
additional juice, I teaspoon it
a time, until desired consisten~
cy.
Makes about ~cup.
Nutrition fact$ per serving:
244 cal., 9 g total fat (2 g saturated fat), 66 mg chol., 191
mg sodium, 11 g carbo., 3 g
fiber, 26 g pro.
:

NO MINIMUM IALANGI

lfO MOt,fTHLf Fll

NO 'HAIGU PSI
HOW CAN THAT 81.'1

,

'TIM

TIIAT 811\LLt II FRii

HOW

tfO GA,.CiLLiD CIIICQ

A~lffl

YOU PLWID?

AND IOMI.TIMII WI. IIALI2.1.

YOU 'OULD UIS MOIS,

,our body.

. 50 M'LL GIVI. YOU

ORIDIU\FT ·PII,ILIGI'M
-,,
'

'
'

thyme

-

'

'

.

.

'

"

'

',

~ ,.. .... j,/' '"''"''"".

•

TO. OHIIIUHKID TIMU rou~!
'

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•

FlAIR

•,'" .

Call Your Health Care
Provider Or The Oallla
County Health Dept. At
(740) 441-28&amp;0

tOU WOik HAID
FOil_ tOU~ MOrftt
10 DOtf'T GIVE 1,. AWAt
GiT TO Tlli PNOtft

FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

~

For More Information

AND GALL Ul TODA\'1

CASH·'
IIIII III, .. .,.. ....

zte Upper lllvlr lid.

Jt.MIIl

lttlV

IIOOIIIINilllll

'flt!llll'f 8Melt.!.llt

-,_,._
.. mNt.'fllt.N
IIDWUIIII
·'fll'll•'l'll

At4D "0 IIIDD1t4 . FSSI

• All IIZI e~tra long
for lidded oomton

:: 4ba~ves
·: I tablespoon red wine vinegar.
• 12 ounces button m~llrootm,
~ or halved tf large,

ntw

AfflfOVtfGitfG ""' GHKkltfG

WITH lfO HIDDitf GOITI

VACCINATE!

olive oU
.. 1141taspoon coarsely ground
:2!lick

:; I tablespoon Water
·• Come sea salt, to taste
;: In a small, heavy saucepan
- -comb!M1 tablespoons 6f olive
' oil, the pepper, bay leaves and
: 1/2 tablespoon of vinegar.
:Wann over a very low flame.
:Add the mushrooms and 2
:sptjgs of lhyme. Cover with a
:bght-tittinalid and gently shake
the pan to coal the mushrooms.
, Cook the mushrooms for 10
:minutes, 91' until just changing
:color and stilJ a little firm.
:During cooking, stir once or
·twice and add the water when
the pan gets too d.'¥·
' nansrer everything to a bowl.
·Pour the ranainina olive oil and
:vi.nepr over the mushrooms.
:eover and ret aside for at least 1
:hour. Befon: serving, discard the
thyme lprias and transfer mushroocm to a serving plate.
Sprinkle with salt and the leaves
trom the rcmainina thyme' sprig.

about 8 minutes.
Cook pa.sta until al de.tite.
Dnin. then ~tlum p~~&amp;ta to
pot: add ~. cup reserved
tomato jliiee and toss to
combine.

t

l'

~trimmed
:~ 3 sprig.s fresh

BY THE "SSOCI.'ITEO PRESS
large skillet O\ler . medium
Spaghetti Puttanesea
· heat: cook. stirring frequent·
4 medium garlic cloves, ly. until garlic is fragrant but
minced to paste or pressed not brown. 2 to 3 minutes.
through g~~rlic press (I Stir in tomatoes and simmer
packed tablespoon)
until slightly thickened.
1 p&lt;iund spaghetti
2 tablespoons olive oil
I teaspoon red pepper
flakes
4 teaspoons minced
anchovies (about 8 fillets)
28-ounce can diced tomatoes, drained, ~ cup juice
reserved
3 tablespoons capers,
rinsed
~ cup black olives (such
as Gaeta, Alfonso or ·
Kalamata), pitted . and
chopped coarse (see note)
~. cup minced fresh pars·
Dow You
ley leaves
Bring 4 quarts water to
Con
rolling boil in large Dutch
Buyft
oven
or
stockpot.
Meanwhile, mix garlic with QUEER Size
1 tablespoon water in small Set for ft fuU
bowl; set aside. When water
Size Prlcel
is bolllng, add 1 tablespoon
salt and pasta; stir to' sepa·
rate pasta. Immediately heat
oil. garlic mixture, red pep·
per flakes and anchovies 10 .

DON'T WAIT

. : Tt.-.-ljOihliD Mt.•oo•
·~ 4 tablespoons extra-virgin

a

'

OHIO VALLEY
·CHECK CASHING
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"''Mbl\11&gt;11 m

Fans go ape for Yocle, visual wizardry In 'Star Wars'
. LOS ANOELES (AP) Maybe Yodu should get his
own "Stur Wars" spinoff
franchise .
The little guy proved a bl&amp;
hit among crans who were
fintln Uno to catch the latesi
chapter in Oeorg_e .Lucas •
saa•, "Stu Wars: Episode IJ
- Attack of tho Clones."
Dlaitally created by computer Imagery to give him
-more mobfilty than the Yoda
puppet of previous "Star
Wars" flicks, the wizened
Jcdl elder aets to mix it up in
a whirlwind of light-aaber
aymnastlcs durina the film's
cllmaotlo battles.
Steve Anderson, 32, 11 tele·
vision director who went to a
midnlahtscrccnlna Thursday
at Universal CltyWalk in Los
Angeles~ auld Yodu's duel
was his tavorlte scone.
"You moun this whole lime
he could 'unleash the draa·
on?"' Anderson said. "Tile
visual effects were stun·
nina.''
Pans who found fault wlth
the film still ·~plauded Yoda.
. The movie was OK. The
dlaloaue waa pretty bad, but
· Yoda was awesome," said
Andy Ellis. 24, a muAician
from Los Angeles.
Hard-core fans turned Ul'
In "Star Wars'' outfits anCI
staaed mock llaht·aaber bat·
tlea as they waited In line for
acreenlnas that began 11

minute
past
midnight
Thursdoy.
Outside
Grauman's Chinese Theutre
nlona Hollywood 8oulovurd,
people
wore
white
stormtrooper armor and the
bount~·hunter costume of
Janao Fett and son Boba.
At a thcatct In Sawgr11sa
Mills mall In Sunrise, lila.,
16-year-old Jessica Meunier
dressed as Princess Lela, her
hair pulled Into larac rolls
over her can.
"Ocorac Lucus opened up
11n entire aenre," aha auld,
credltlngtlic filmmaker with
ralalna the bar on sound and
special effects. "What J 11lao
love is it just brinas out peo·
pic from nil IIIlO aroups, the

old nnd tho young." ·
With the mldriiaht fervor
of dlehnrd funs bollind them,
thenters brnccd for tho rcnl
onslouaht us aenllful uudi·
enees mussed l'or "Attaek of
the Clones." Show limes
beaan at 10 u.m. at mtmy cln·
em11s, and some thoatcn hod
"Still' WW'S" sereonlnas st11rt·
lqa every half hour.
Mony people took the dny
off from work or school to
sea "Episode II." Retull
snlcsman Robert Bet~umln 1
32, und his friend S11rnt
Zodo. 32, n bonk munnallf,
scheduled tho dny off to sco
. "Attook of th Clones" tit th
firat mornlnascrecnlnaat the
. Orove Stadium thantcr in Los

~

AJ!llelos.
They dellberotcly ovoldod
rcudlna rcvlaws.
· "I dl&lt;ln't wunt to know nn~
detull~ ubout tho st.ory lin , '
Benlun\ln snld. "I Wllntod th
whole thin&amp; to bo 11 surprise
when I SIIW it."

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Ylatt Ql!! W1b 1111 1p II'• 1rM yld!Q; :
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DISH! ·
,......

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ilr IIIII Uta flllllll'lil vil1 Jjl IIIII Plllhlllliii1V ljlllftiiMW IIIIi
IIIIIPIIU ... IIitlmllil ~~- 11111 Thll1•111hll!t, 111111
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C/Qssijied ads, Pages D2-7

T R W RS SAGA

I

· PageD1

her

S•d.,,- It, 2012

THE WEEK IN STOCKS
lltis cltar1 shows ltow local stocks of interPsT ~ifomlft last wuk.
f.adt day~ closill8 jigwres are providtd by Ahst of Gallipolis.

viding tbe same professional job in each production.
When Tim Burton tapped
him fur "Sleepy HolJow,"
he was far from resting on
hts laurels, It's time to celebrate the man's film legacy
by seeing him in ;i megabit.
There are many things to
attract people to see "Attack ·
of the Clones" this summer.
Having Chris\llphet Lee in a
major role is certainly .one
of them.
f Kevin K11lly. whtn nor
Run.''
watching
old movits, is Mws
lie returned to England
shortly •her .and contlllued ~diror for Ohio \.blley
his globeltOttillg ways, pro· Publishing Co.) .

&lt;and tilt "G~mlins" aang in
the \985 sequel - v:ariable
productions ell, hilt lent distinction by his being in
tl\eln, And, believe it or not,
tee hosted a "Saturday
Night Live" back in '78 to
an :*PI)rtdative audience, in
addition to being part of e
l'lotable piece of popular
\\\usic trivia - he'$ one of
the group seen ofi the cover
of hul McCartney'$ first
solo .tbllm, "liand on tbe

AEP

MON.

TUE.

WED.

. 45.19

45.7.1

44.86

THU.

FRI.

·LEARNING FUN- Five-year-old Emily Mayes .ls already "polntlng and cllckln&amp;" at Mason County Early Care, wtiere teach-

ers strive to get children familiar with todey's technology to better equip them for the future. (Pam Williamson photos)

Early care Open for children
BY PAM WIWAMSON
PAMWOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Big Bend • 700 weat M

POINT PLEASANT - With Play·
Doh, painting, and a pinch of love,
Mason County's early childhood
intervention initiative continues with
the opcming of the Mason County
Early Care and Education Center at
2122 Jefferson Ave., Point Pleasant.
Opened April IS and off to a good
start, the new center is still accepting
apP.lications and can accept up to 28
children.
"We have a lot of community support, with in-kind services. Children
at the center will receive dental
Screening~. medical screenin~s, and
developmental screenings,' Jane
Haddox, Early Care's director, said.
"Business leaders realize that early
childhood programs are a community
service and that children will have a
brighter future due to quality programs. We appreciate all of the sup·
port the center has received,'' she
added.
AEP's Gavin plant has donated two
full computers for the children .and
the Point Pleasant Junior Women's
Club contributed learning software.
The staff at Early Care recognize
the importance early childhood education and make learning a pan of the
children's daily activities.
"We try to do more hands on activities, not so much where they're sitting at table with pencil and paper,"
Laura Littleton, Earl~ Care s lead
teacher, explained. ' A lot of our
teachin$S, we try to incorporate that
into their play like making letters with
Plar-Doh, .and we're really bii on
socialization and self-help skills.'
Literacy is a big part of the children's daily routine, whether books
are read to them individually or in

In Street • Pom roy, Ohio • (740) 992·2891

I"'Athor/1 .I"«J.t!IJ.ui I
I

. Ptoplel

38

,....
INVESTING

Not a baby .
•
tnvestment

'.

With the prices of nursery
furniture, sports equipment
and the eventual cost of col·
lege, new parents are faced
with a significant financial
challenge. The birth of a baby
usually makes a big impact on
Mommy
and
Daddy's
lifestyle, and the shortage of
money can rank right up there
with sleep deprivation for.the
unprepared.
·
The expenses of raising a
child from .diapers to college
loom quite large. The U.S.
Del)atlment of Agriculture has
estimated that u family with an
onnual income of around
$54,000 will spend almost
$193,000 to raise a child
through high school gradua·
tion.
Some items that should
become priorities for the new
parents are:
• Budget. This is where. the
scrimping and real savings
take place. Eating in restaurants or traveling or no longer
a big pan of your family's life.

Bv

Jay
Caldwell
GUEST

VIEW
If Mommy returns to work, I0
to 20 percent of your salary
can end up going to child care.
Knowing where your dollars
are spent is half the battle.
•
Health
insurance.
Sufficient coverage is impor·
tant before you become pregnant. Recent figures for deliv·
ory were . $6,SOO-$li,OOO.
according to a MetropOiiran
Life study. An HMO member·
ship can make givin' birth and
going to the pediatncian more
affordable.
• Life insurance. You will
.. ...... ..,, Dl

Give Ul I call 8t (7.0) U ..H42. at. 1:1

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.
· I.UIC SKILLS- Elise Mayes. only 2,
still works to learn basic hand-eye
coordlnetlor) by threading blocks with
thread at Mason County Early Start.
received a ~rant, we were one of the
eight counties selected out of all of
West Virginia to receive the grant,
and it was put toward opening this
center, and it was also to open a family facility in the Ashton area, and it
also helped to open Hartford
· Headstart s Child Care Center,''
Littleton said.
''The grant was also used for parent
and staff training and the preschool
system and the school system, it-goes
to a variety of things," she added.
Early Care is also proud to accept
West Virginia Link. a program
offered to subsidize child care.
For more Information on Early Care
or how to contact the Link program,
call Early Care at 675-6575 .

A quiz, retirement info and a video

Hln 8 buslneu MWIII:MI7

t

. groups. Portfolios ~ also. kept to
show the progress of each ch1ld while
they are at the center.
"Research shows that for every
$1.90 spend in early childhood, we
save $7.16 in future costs of welfare
reform, school remediation, an juve·
nile delinquency,'' Haddox said.
"Children at the cen.ter will continual·
ly be involved in developmentally
appropriate activities which will hel)l
them learn about the world around
them and help them obtain readiness
skills which lire needed to enter
kinderganen."
The center also caters to the needs
of parents when school's summer
vacation rolls around, with II summer
program.
.
"Jn the summer time, our schoolagers and the Children's Village
school-agers go into their summer
proHram, and that is open to the publie, Laura Littleton, lead teacher,
said. "They JO on field trips, they
have swimmmg lessons, they go to
the pool, they go oil all sorts of field
trips."
The center Is·hoping their current
.location is a temporary space until
they are able to get a larger center
where they can offer infant care.
"Early Care is a sister center to
Children's Village and is operated
through River Valley Child
Development Services," Haddox
explained. "The center is sup)llemented by the Mason County Educare
Grant, which is panially funded by
the Governor's Cabinet of Children
and Families."
Littleton explained the Educare
program.
"West Virginia was given a large
sum of money to put in to early child. hood and.so Mason County wrote and

I

DIAN VuJOVICN

NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE
ASSOCIATION

If you've been an
investor for a while, you
know that bond funds are
kind of like the investment
you love to hate. They
aren't sexy, don't often
make the headlines and
usually aren't the main
topic of conversation at
cocktail parties . .But they
are a necessary, if not vital,
component for those wanti·
ng to create a well-diversified portfolio.
Then again, understanding bonds, their pricing and
how funds tally their total
returns can be tricky. At
leut that's what the folks at
American Century funds
have found out.
In a telephone survey of
750 investors, ·her~ are
some of the thin~s that
American Century s poll
revealed:
• While 63 percent of
investors
correctly
described a bond as a debt
security issued by a company, municipality or government agency, very few
understood the relationship

between the direction of
interest rates and bond performance, credit quality
and bond yields, and bond
maturity and interest-rate
sensitivity.
,
• Twenty-nine Jlj=rcent
said that bond prices rise
when interest rates rise,
while only 31 percent correctly answered that bond
prices fall when interest
rates rise.
• Almost 30 per~nt of
investors indicated that
they avoid bonds because
they are difficult to understand.
•Investors seemed misinformed about the benefits
of state-specific municipal
bond mutual funds. For
instance,
II
percent
answered that a municipal
bond fund's portfolio was
invested in "the state's
most successful companies." ·
.
To find out how bond
savvy you are, American
Century has added a Bond
I.Q. Quiz to their Web site.
To find it, go to
http://www.americancentury.com/workshoplgetting-

started.jsp. Once there,
look under '"Bonds" and
click on the last entrv,
"What's Your Bond I.Q.?'f
Good lucid

...

Waddell &amp; Reed has
hopped . on .the selfemployed and owner-only
owned companies' bandwagon by offering a new
40 I(k) specifically for that
audience. It's called the
Exclusive (k) . .
· ''The Economic Growth
and
Tax
Relief
Reconciliation Act of 2001
created increased contribution opportunities with all
40 I(k) plans,'' says Debra
Zipp, assistant vice president, retirement plans and
sales management for
wa&amp;en &amp; Reed. "And due
to the . separation of
employee and employer
contributions, it is now
more advantageous for
owner-only employers to
set up a 40l(k) for themselves."
Zi pp said that the
Excfusive . (k) is simpler,
more flexible and less
expensive to maintain than

a traditional 40l(k). And,
it's designed for owneronly companies, sole proprietors,
self-employed
Individuals, common part·
nerships and employed
spouses. Companies with
common-l~w employees
are not able to J?&amp;rticipate.
For more Information
about Waddell &amp; Reed's
;.Exclusive
(k),
call
(888)WADDELL/(888923-33S5 ), or visit their
Web
site
at
http://www.waddell .com.
Ill

Like videos and COROMs? Strong Capital
Management is now offering a free educational video
titled "'S29 Plans: A less
Taxing Way to Save for
College" to help educate
folks to the benefits of saving for college using S29
plans.
Some ofthe subjects covered in this educational
piece include the rising
costs of tuition, financial
aid and the tlexibility of
529 plans.
The information is availPIIIM ... hllni.H

�A

In One

With Us REACH OVER 181,000 PROSP.CII
'

Your Ad,

Gtribune(740)446·2342 Sentinel (740) 992·2156
Or Fax To (740) 441 31108

Todav•••

~egi_.er (304)

Or FuTo (304) I?MIM

Or Fu TD (740) 112-2157

9"~&amp;,.,

1!/dlftDtte- ~~
Mor~.,'~Y thr:u

a : o o a. m.

to

675-1333

a ..-ree V•rd S•l• Slgnl
15 warda, 3 D•va
Warda 20-$ Per word
Muat Be Prep•ld

Friday

s : 0 o p.m.

HOW

rI A~~ Ir ~~ums I'--"

r

. I'ERsoN.us
Bid Sale
MoooliQho Eacorl
F 11 Maoo·n Counoy Public Ll·
'""'..,.male lnd lt~le .~ b11ry.
.
colla end dancall Prcmpl . ltoma tor aaalad bid ara aa
nd Pllllaoslonll IOd Cool&gt; lcllowo
::O.,tloJ. Wo 1110 do 111111&gt; 1. I Conoo NP 11500 ~~
day. Pn,tll and Bachelol 2. 1 Micro OoaiQn 4010 m&gt;
Parties
8pm· · 81m crolllm raaeltf.
' 3. I 0\lkan mlcrolllm rtodar
17~01 358 . 17119 .
4. I SOli r Od..Cta Inc. Me-Whyw""'
••""
• ?""'S~,.-.,m.-a""'
un- &lt;han"=• 1 Dry Mounting/
Ohio alngloa loniQhl, ooll ~ Lomtnatlng Prati·Commfi.
h . . · 1·800·7tltl·2823 11t ~~~~t 2 ~!
-- ~
1421
;... okono ·-• ~aye&lt;
·
•·~- til
6· 1 Sharp F0-33&amp; Fa•
~NNOUNCI'MEN"I"S 7 Vlrloua CPUa, monlloll,
1..~------P·
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eooyl)olrdo...
t SIUioy ptaotlo oompulor

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aided
,.

11 . t 8 bin .rooelon oablo

In Lovlnlf

Edith E.
King
31/911899 .
511811992
God saw you were
getting tired and a
cure was not to be.
So he put hi s arms
around you and
whispered "Come
Home". With
tearful eyes we
watched you and
suw you pass away.
Although we loved
you dearly, we
cou ld nm make
you stay. A golden
heart slopped
beating, hurd
working hands at
rest. Ood broke
hearts to prove to
us, He only takes
the best.
/.oviiiS alld
ml.ulns you,

1011 Dolllr: U.S. Adnllnla-.. A-te

Sll\laf. Gold Colna, ....,.,_ ~ Elllolant and a r g1ienoaa
1011. Olomonda, Gold -\ra\MI tiiGciele lot
Ringo. U.S. CuiiiiiCy,· Gatlla•VIn\011 Edllcatlolial
M.T.S. CQin ShoD, lSI Sec- c.n111. .,..
ond A......,, (lalllpolla. 74G- oelltnl ~ tl\llle In MI~441·2114a.
~ WQIQ and Ei!Oe4 U
wtll .. OIQWIIlal\onal and
IIUbiiO ltllt!Ont 11&lt;1141. Stnd
Woo no to tlUY' Uf1C1 - . 1tt111 raquttllfiO 1111 ~chilli, 1740)317-1)3011
lion along wt111 10:

Pallett 10 gl•oowoy. Fl11t
como Hilt OONO. Loc:olld II
lho IH&lt; ol lho building II
lhoGalllpcllaOollyTribuno.
Sl• Yallow ond Whlla Kll·
tono 10 Glvuwey. Phone
17401441
.
·
·93ll!

PO llolo 178, Rio Grandi, ·
WoonlaQ to Ill' 001\CIIIIoo 0H 4&amp;874.01 78. Applioalion
Oland, mUll ho.. 3-&lt;llini&lt;a daRina May,., lOQI,

to moot Hao~h Dept, ,..
qul,......ta. (710)2.47~7U

ll"u

YARD SAIJI
YARDS.W.:•

Memory OJ

Arnold P.
Johnson
Have you ever lost
a loved one who is
very dear to you?
One you loved so
very much and
miss him like we
do. Have you ever
had a heartache, or
even felt the pain,
or shed thoae bitter
tean that dropped
like fallina rain?
If you' vc never
had thia feelina,
then pray you
never do. For
when Ood 1ake1
your loved one, He
takct a part of you.
Lov•d and 1adly
mlllld by,
Mom, Dad, &amp;:
Family .

ton oounty .,.., Cll"'dd~

U ACT NOWII W01f1 lrom dalll will prov«&lt;a ornploy·

GAUJI'OI.L'i

·1homo, PTIFT fraa booklet. manllnlo,...tlonllllle. 1·800-25e-2088
www.donlwanyborlch.noo

THANK YOU
VERY MUCH!

For wtllt1tabllshld
LOCIIC9.

W.havt ·
lmmedlat.
full-time
cuatomer
IINICe poaltlon
openlna- In our
main omce.
aucc...rul
lappllc11nt. muat
bt peoplt
orlentld, enjoy
ualng the
phone,
computer
llttrat., and
enjoy working
with numbtra.
Poaltlon offlra
an company
btntfltt
l'n cludlng
htalth and lift
lnauranct, 401k,
paid vacation,
and peraonal
daya. For
employment
conaldtratlon,

Help Wanted

It Is hard 10 put Into words how sraleful wo

arc for those who supported Olivia Pick's
recent benefit. We wore overwhelmed at
the tum out and were thrilled to visit with
all of the people we haven't seen for so
long. We are particularly thankful to our
family for orchcslratlr\i this oven\.
Countless hours of hard work went into
making it so successful. We also appreciate
aU of the businesses thai made such
generous contributions. We sincerely thank
everyone that volunteered their lime to
prepare food, help serve, provide music and
entertainment, and contribute Items In the
auction. We are alad to have como from
such a carina community. We will never
foract your generosity.
.

STATE LICENSED
COSMETOLOGIST NEEDED

Kirk, Lee Ann &amp; Olivia Fick

(411 IIJutU opport1111l1y ""ploy#r)

.._

In Memory
In

Porter

Sortoua Appll...llcall
111\Unl kl1

In ltfellllll"f

'

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Tho Unl¥tt11iy ol M!o CIIIUldo 10001111011 on O!lfnlniiOI
olio P&lt;Jtluon or l'lno Woodworklna ,_.nnlolan In""'"'"''

'

TtohnoiOJY.
RtopooolbllhJ"
'"'"" pooluon
'"''""'· ""'IIIIINOdon,
"' n1o1 Umllld
10,
IOJitdna lhlinoiMtor
Willi OiiHIOOin
lltOf!
domonl!llilottl, mluodono ond malnllinlna 10011 anil
tqulpm.nllind IUbi&amp;II!.IUnJ tar thllniU'\IOWI' rar ahon&amp;lrn'l
atiHncoo. Tho !IGhnlolan lhlll bt nutnl In hand
woudwarkln1 tuul1 and eq_ulpnwnl 1nd 111~nG1d In
mllllna, maonlnory, IIHmbly and ftnlthlltl or ftlnoiiUII
and/or "biMwy.
su"""'"'' oandldooo. mull bt a pooduaoo or , .,rtllltd

01

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"'l'''"'

In lhl ..n•OIII of tht dirk lkJ
•
You 111 • pall otihoIIworld'• hlllolf
And our '"
On litlt vtry optCiol d17
·
1 won Ito ••II
IOU
~
I loft JOU tnd I mlJa IOU
l'lpa, Hippy llrtltdarl

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(tiHIIIrY1f)• ....... -··"'""' """"......""''"""
#Miw/ml/tj;;uMIIif"'#l'
r
~T WB REMBMBBR LMS ON...
. . WB WIU NEVER FORGET.

Help Wanted

NEED MONEY?

'·

'I

I

·Call Us, We Can Halpl
Sign-on bonus
. " • $500
• Up to·$7/hour
• Weekly paychecks
• Paid training
••'
• Higher salary with
•
. experience
'
••

"''"""t and "'Oil' INJO!CIIuono 101
M• Pllrlllo -..:,::•
DINCIOt
UolmtiiJ ollla Gnnlle
P,O, lo1IOO
Ria Orondo,
OH ""''·
· Fa• 740·:141•-IIIN11110ft•Jia,tdu

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BliJIAA llllf'l01f'
W-• •1111 11/nurlll" ,,....,.,d ro Apply

;~~~~~~~~~~=~~=

Ctrd of Thanka

Th1 FtJmlly Of

Dorothy "Dodi"
(Seth) McDaniel
Would ilkt 10 I~PI'fllhtlr 81'ltlllldt 10 Ill
who aent food, nowm, ellfdl, donatiODI, tnd
prtym. Specltt lhtnkt 10 McOonaldt ol
PomttO)' tmployHI tnd CUitomm, C.C.
Caldw.ll tmpiOYHf tnd t'l1tndt: tnd trtu
llld Dei&amp;hbon. AJIO a 1pecllt lhMJu 10
Rocktprtnp Ulllllcl Mllhodtol Womtn 111d
Rtv. Keldl a.dlr. Wt would 1110 llkt to
thtak tltl tlodnil tnd tllft II Melp Hl&amp;h .
Sc:hool roo ablrin&amp; our re~~Una or 101111w. We
would 1110 lib 10 ohow our lfldlud&lt;IIO Mr;
DtnaetiiDd the mtmbm of the Melp HIJ)t
School Bend. Th111k )'01110 tnyone we miJ)tt
h1vo unlnlllldooolly fOIJOitcn . She will be
d&lt;ltrly mJ1Hd by bet ftmlly and frienda.
ThiiiUIO Ill Who C.... 10 lhllt of IOITOW,
Tilt family of Dorothy "Dod/" Mc/)(ln/el
Ann (SIIh) Mc[)(lntll
&lt;'

• Benefit Package
• Compelilive Salary
Boqutrpmqnt•:
• Mu1t enjoy working whh the elderly
• Nunlnaaupervi.Ory expeJience
• Companionate and eKperlence
In holialtle care
· Sond maymo tq;
DII'IICtor of Operatlont
33 N. Third Street, :Zn4 Floor
Columbu1, Oli 43215

r..I'

Pleasant Valley Hospital
PltUIIII Valley Hotpllll Home Heallh
11 ourranlly ICOIPIIng rteumea lor:
Full tlma.
11Cil11UI'e, graduatt of
en tpprovtd 10hool ot PT or graduale
ot aooredllld oolltge ar unlvtrtlty wllh
a otrtiiiCIIte In PT. Current BCLS (CPR)
otrtllloallon. Currtnt WV llotn11.
For more lnlormetlon:
Pteaunt Valley Hoepllll
olo'Human FIIIOUrHe
· 2120 Valley Drive
Point Pl....nt, WV 21110

1711140

i:•

Rt. 3S Wut lo Galllpoiii/VInton txlt,
10 to nd llaht and lllrn rlahl on
Rt. 1.0 North, 10 3-3110 m1• to Kerr
R01d, turn left, JIO 7/10 or a milt to

Entry Legal
Management
Are you looklns for an, eKcltinl and
challon11n1 career? lnfoCIJion Man1Jomenl
Corp. 11 1eoklna Individual• for entry·IIYel
manaaement 10 add 10 our team 11 lht
Ollllpolla'loculon. Rllponllbllltte• Include
maniJins a team or 10 10 20 people, client
an4 prosram knowledao. and 10me report
wrltlnl. Qutllfted ciiKIIdates mutt have a 4·
you dcJrH, 11r0n1 lnterpenonll,
eommunlcatlon 1 and leadership 1ki111.
lnfoCI1Ion o"'" monlhly bonUNI and
excellent beneft11 lneludln1 holllh, 401K,
paid vacation and hollday1.

II y011 would llkt 10 contribute 10 our IIIQctlf
a&amp; ln'qCief• lp Q•UnoU• Hnd your rdume
10:

I nfoCielon Manapment Corp,
Attnr Sam Gukll
32! Sprlnplde Dr.
Akron, OH 44333
OrtmtiiiO HIIDinciOr·l~
VIlli OW' will 1111 lllnloCitlon.com

Nua llllmt b tra Oaan?
Sta~ your own 8uolnua1 IO•
dli• WI will PIIWidl you
wllh tho

llllilnolal aaollla,..

you Mod . Callllldlly. I ·888•
.8RQ•OD3e

Tht ion; wlndlno drlvtwav may lead you to 1 diltlflliiOn
that you !1\IV not wan\ to luva. E1plo11 your private
JlllldiU, climb tnt Nil! &amp;roCk diWI aM hliethl Wilcldl.
Canoeing, awlmmlng, lshlng and ~l klng are eome ol
·many aoilvlilao lhl1 property haa to onor. 2homto aaon
with 3 btdroomi and 1 batn bOlo! hllllop YIIWa allOwing
you 10 watch lhe Htlr lnd wildll!a play below. R!
Ttltlll: $3.000 down per h'tlll or • 111111mum ol $10.000
dtlWII. CIOII on 111 bl~iil 7129101. OWerud rrue I"""'.,.
lltn1 &amp; mortgage! pnor to clollng. 011, gaa &amp; mlno111
ngnla lrt lloluded. Salloro: Oal\'l Dnlllng Co., Inc.
Btll\lrd Fulll, AI!Ornty lOr Stllell {740) iHHI Ot ,

(,40~N~S·':3a~~ONI INC.

lor

( j();i) 7'!3·544'1 or 7?.1·57/J$

TBRMS: CaJh or chrr:lr. wllh ID

Publlo 8111 and Auction

OLD ILDRY
IUCftll IOUIB
190 Beech Street
Middleport, Ohio
lvuy ftluradly III:IOPI

lir
OFFICE

992-2259

Mlkt Voehtl • Auotlonttr ·
Jim Taylor • Appranllce

tml

IALI MONDAy, MAY az

Our new sale Is on Memorial Day
at 5:30 p.m. Sale con818tl of all
Publlo 81l11nd Auotlon
-~~~~ .new ltem1: dollli tool8, toya, etc,

10

b~·IIWI

•

1

I

:zu,

IN OTIC It
OHIO VALLIV PUILI&amp;H·
INQ CO. IO&lt;Dmmtndl lnll
you do Dutlntao with 1*1&gt;1•
you know, lM NOT IUIM
manty thmuon 1ne mall unlit
you hlYI ln...IIQI\Id lhl
o"e•lng.

Rick Ptiarson Auction Co. #66

(304) 773·578!1 or 773·5447

I

I

(B00)800e3470

btl!lld, plu• much moNI
Auctltm comlut•ttt/ by:

Ownertt Rlebard It Jeannie Rou
TERMS1 Cuh or eheek with ID

TIM Jil-l prvperty or liN lalt CJIU'a I, ·
• and aulholl&amp;ed b~ tiM Ptrk IOII'd and lit oompliiDCit
Wllllt wW bt olfmd al public auct1011.
whh till Ohio Rtvlltd Code Chapttr 1545. Tht
DIUCTION811Nm loult Am Will of
I Director 11 111pon1iblt lor Admlnlalllllon, Budpl
Allllll, 10 appt'Oilmallb' I miiN, turn rlpl
1
o
Manapmtnl,
lnvtllmtall,
Aocountlna
and
Orsnt
011111dtord
IIDIId, IUrn 11ft on ltll Jlald, 10
I
o Wrltlna, eattbllahina vlaloa and tlnttfl)a plannlna,
10 end ol rold m, wateh lor 111111·
: lmpltmeattdOD and perlodlo revlolona ul Dlatrlol
lf75 Dulak IAIIIII CUOiolttl 4 dOor 1!0,
: M111tr Plant, land acqulaltlon, plannlnJ, dlll&amp;n,
In tiiOIIIolc aoodl~on.
i development and l•penllon of public plnkl and
1 ' faolllllll, Psrk Mtnapmain and operatlont,
1 ' tupe,.lolan of full ·tlm1 oaroer and plrt•tlme
; , IIUOIIII employlll, .DIIlllot 1pon101ed ptOiflntl
1nd apeoitl avantl, Dlractor WOikl CoOptrtiJVtJy
: uld coordlna111 joint lnMIIIIItOY proaramt ·with
i cOunty tiiNitad oMclall, polltlctllubodlvllloru,
community' ltldlnhlt• 1nd OIJIIIIIttlona, lormlnaplriiMitthipl, prOYidlnt llchnloal IIIIIIIIIICI and
IUppotiiO biDiftt and provlda HtYJCII IW"Oallll
Count~ 111ldln11. Requlrtmtnte: Orlduallon from
' ' II acortdlllcl colltp or IUIIVIIIhy wlillllflohllor'l
: dtJHI In Park AdmJnlltrttlon, Nlluoal Rttourco1,
: Hortlcultulf, Portltr)', Public Admlnlstrallon or
' Rtllltd Plold. Minimum ftvt yun of poop11lvaly
I
mponliblt .. perltROI In Park Mtntti111UI,
~~~:=:fu
M1lnttnanco, snd l.ona lllap P11nnlna. Provtn ' ~ !~~~~~iliiliiiti r~
uptriiDOI In community loedorlhlp, i
1
• comrnunlcallont, public rtllliDIII and bulldlnt
: ptrtnerlhlpt. C.rtltltd P11k sad Rtcrellton
' ProfttliOul (CPRP) prtlorr..S. Open unlll Pllltd,
Por oomplott job dalcrlpllon tnd appllcallon
requlmhtntt conllcl 1111 0 .0 . Molnlytt Ptrk
Dtttrlct, Oalllt County CounbouN, II Locun
111111.
Oalllpollt, Ohio ~5631 . (740) &lt;W6-4612,
I

l

11111 btlllo milk alalll, Jl'tnlon, Carnival,
ftJUrlntt, Cou•Cola baa, lamp!l, stone
crock• and Jup, mtal 1rlnden, severel
Iron 1kllllll1, rtmrdl, box load from
Enaland, blue and while pitcher, jewelry,
bronae, ltauatt, plclum, and mort, lar1e
amount .or box loll from •toulle unllll will

Vert llup nmoont of hand 10011, C!al\aman,
l'llw1rCral\, Thorun, and othera, Crtltlman 1100ket
111, wnnchla, Cral\lman oordllll drll111nd othen,
miln bo•, air lmp!ICI Wrtnehll, r11011111, IIYIIII
ltCIW toola, btndor 111d othera, h~llraullejaelu, vlaa,
new tractor mil, 3 lltolor hood! fill wheel hot11,
41on and 10 ton l'tltlll'tlwer, ~·rd tool!,
2 ''' ariila, and moitl

!! :;;::::=:=:::::=:
":::t::::::::===. t*i
Dlrtcllro o.o. lllclnlfl't
[ Pull Dlllrlcl
PUBLIC AUCTION
!•: The Board of Park Comml~tlontn of tht 0.0.
Saturday, May 25
Patk DIIIIIOIII lleldnJ I Dlrtelot IIIVI
Chttl Admtnlllrttlvo Ol!loor to dlrtol tiM total
!O:OOAM
• admlniltntloa, plannlal, mansaemtnt aad
opertllonl of tht oounlywldt Perk Ptatrlol, In
Athens, Ohio
i ICODJdanCt widl IM poiJOJII,
llllblltltfd
1

lablt, chtll, 11111 top corfH table, 1everal

Pint Hill Road, turn rlaht, ftrtl houn
on left, w.a tcb lor •lane. Field p•rklna.
Mr. It Mn, R011 baveaold 11Mir f11rm
and mo¥td to 1malltr quartert and
will be nlllna the lollowln111
1•11P"'M'A" 1
Power Kina lftld til aear drivetraatlll' With
48" mowlnailotk 1 J.D. 210 lawn lriiCtor
1998 141\, PACB ~uao trliltr with lid•

11

INJI'OCISION MANAGEMENT
CORP. -

Round 011k table, wtna b~tk chair, 61idder
hick dlalr~t Mofll, ~kina thall'll, drtilllln1

Located from Galllpolla, Ohio, tllkt

Maaon, Wett VII'Jinla

Help W1nted

MolD~

Located at tl1e auction center on
Rt. 33 in Mason, We.l't Virginia

.Auction conduct1d by
Rlclc P1anon Auction Co. #66

---··----

• •.

Tuesday, May ll
4:30 Outside • 5:30 Inside

Toole epd mle£:!

1•877•483·6247
ext. 1841

t

FARM EQUIP.~
AUCTION .
·Saturday, May 25, 2002
lO:OOAM

AT&amp;T Plytlhonl Rautoa
Prlmll """"' 811111, !IIHI

'A""W'D''

I
,, =~~~=:::::::::
•

~~AUCTION

G1\, !.D. dlto, 5 ft, Ketn Kuuer dl~e,
3 p1. JlOIIholt dluer. l bouom plowt

lnfoCisionl

••
I

Publlo 81lt anct Auction

door • Mill with l'tltrVC

l Dial Up Success With

it"- ....

A Vtrrra11
of WW/1,
Q lo•td4/ltllllodlymlurd
Hulband. ·
P/llhor.
Ortllul//11/u&lt;r
Orr/11 OrorulfiJihor

-~

woodworklni/Qiblnttnklna Pf"'I'IM or h•v• Hvtn )'till
ttachlnllllptlitnol prtftmd.
Poalilon ovollahlo lmmtdlo1111, No btnonoo wlch ilolo
potlclon.
R11wn11 will bl rtVItwtd 11 I'ICliiYtd and will biiQCipttd
unci! lhl PGIIJlon lo nuod. AU oppttoonoo muM oubnllo 1
ltuar or lnlll'llt and muftll lnclludlna dw n11n11 of WH

lllplrltftlill, PltYIOUI

IUb'- otounllaht 111111n thnoup 1111 cloud! '
I knOw lhltll'• 1PU lookln1 ·down
Tho moon attO-n In all ll'a

·

·

'

12·2-3i - 5-22-00
Word1 cannot express how much you
are misled by the ones who love you.
Uvlng without you hal been hArd. We
never forget what you told ut, "We only
have each ~er; and nothing could be
more true · y. l'eelple In our life come
and go. Thins&gt; that you wanted lor us
have been Ill ken away. 8ut what cannot
be taken away t1 our love.
We will alway• ,hAve uch-other and ..,.
will for..-er carry your love within ut. Mlty
your aptrtt be I!Tiillns down at ut knowing
how much you are tru!&gt;' mtiMCI and loved.
We hAve lett you In great handl ... COO'S
HANDS!
Alwayt loved, for- mlated.
Suzie (daughter)
U..J jy Mit Nl&gt;i•, S..U, Mm, JlJW., C.U..

•

FINE WOODWORKING
TECHNICIAN

Tllll we 1n eodllr
t!.ICh brtnch wlth lt'f awn llol')'
1\&gt;U&lt;hod by tht wtnchnd •••r•

'

wtlti t~~~ntal retardation In
County. Hou11 111 achtdultd 11
Rtqulram•nla: High lohool
valid drtvar•a llcenat, thrtt VIlli
driving
tMptrltnot
and
•~dl!~u~t••l
IUtomoblll lniUIInDt COVeiiQio IIT,IIXI/I"Ir,
Send 111um• to:
luoklyt
IINI0t1 .
OH 41140,
P.o. lox 104,
1114101.
Dladlln1 for .

Gene Johnson
Chevrolet, Inc.
1616 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Sell both new &amp; uaed :•
Immediate opening• :
Contact Colin Saunders
or Gene Johnaon

~PUBLIC~

Fltllll

to work

Sand B11um11 To;

I'OSITION ANNOVNCMENT

' Muy /9 1926 . J~ly 1$, 2()(}1
'
·
Klch Ned filii from H•••n
Ttl bt IWtpl rNII ortl dolltnollon to lnoihlt '
UntU h IIndt II~ IIMIMr r- tht otorm
'
Your lltd hu bl.-..1 Into lhlllmllf '"'

'

loving memory

Clyde (Dick)

Bonont pt10kqe on all
aafanrntntl.

QreaiLikll
Employment
lnllrnadonal
765 PhultnUI St.
Qround Floor
Green Bay, WI 54311

I

'

loving caring and'
thoughtful "PaPa"

WANTED
""IJta,

Chlldoa,. WO!ltora IIHdad

Major u.s.Complllti!l
intlllliiWif\1 now for Ill
t1t1. hllh ln1ome paaltlona
• CO!IIINIIIon, Oontptllll
1)101, IICII~I~, ailal"'flll,
AU/AY, ~ammuniCIItlona,
tHGilln, ltlllnttn, on ...
mlllw,, dl ..elmechulca,
weldon, mtdloal, loud
111111ot~ lltld many ...,.,
Worldwide ..._Ilona, Pold

Contact ua At

1·800·821•8138

10 - " with baye IQII 1R·

WORK
OVERSEAS

Advtrtlalng NHdl

1-ID-421·8221

SALESPERSON

......A.

Ro.bert uY\''orley Davl· S

'

of our ever so ~

-

CIU IIW Tlll·FIU

Stnd Rtttlmt to:
Qalllpollt Dilly Tllbu ____.;..:;;;:;..:.;.;:;~;;_--1'11: Ad¥111111118 1
llltel'lep
liS Tlllrd Aftnut
Qllllpolla, Ohio 45131

17 In 1 lllkltntlal
No a•porienco r-qultlil.
Mull ho.. Mlah IIOhool Dl·
pioml, Cell (110)141 0142,
Ilk tor LIM Conley.

Public Slit and Auction

For All Your

..

c,. •,. c,. •;•
·

LlriV.Lirft
LllkMI'I41

From ~ur
Family l Ill'

lrlnlpOitlllon
• Muat hl¥1 ability 10
bll TEAM pllytr

380 Colonial Drive
Bidwell, Ohio 45614

......A.

Happy
Blrthaay
Joey

driYinl NOOid l
PIOYitll own

(920) 489'!20 1araond

In Memory

IIYII

• Mull haw good
Communlctllon tkllle
• Mull hlw good

Holur Smior Ctl~ Cmter

Ad

·we'nPn••·

SERVING THE
TAl-COUNTY
AREA

Travel, V.C.11nri, Bonue,

In addition to beln11t11te licensed,
applicant should be knowleclpable of
the special needs or the elderly,
(I.e. traalle skin, Immobility, etc.).
Jr you are lntere!lledln this posiUon,
please apply In penon all

i=;:====·':::;:; ,.---========-----~ ·
In Loving

IIOIJG, 11 Mil&lt;·

CUI Mt!IIQtt 10
~ ttl clltnla In 1ht Me·

....... aauoatlontl-·
monl ond &lt;Ill manoga.
mont 11~ ot tho
:;,~~ 1 1:.,~..:;.~ Aooaptlng Appllcatlona tor WorUWV Canl11 lltdiol
lltml 'aaby ltaml ltlya Cerponloll and LlbOrarl. doalgnaiiCI aftllllll
E•arciu Equlpmont 821a Cell (710)448-8715
WorUWVIOIIIoollad WOik·
St Rt 7 Soulh. Ga'llipoll1
or Canlall looltld within
.
•
. · Acbln!atretl• 'M'W"I
Atglon IV. Clndlda1H
~-~'dalun~=~ )!~~· ~8~ Compollllvo Solary and E•· ohould- eiiMIS
.
' copllonel Fringe Banetll Dtgraatrom an accriCIIIICI
8:oo:
· 12 ·00
Packaga•Full Tlmo Poolllon: . colllglor unl..lllty, valid
~74
YARD SAI.F.Will prqvldo dl1001 aaala· dn..,'ll..,.nao, and be wll~
PIM:MOVIMioout tanco to the Aaaoolatl !ng to lli'tl. II - r y .
Admlnlatlllor tor Qporlllona thiOUgt\o\11 I nino oounty
lnd will porlorm oradanllol· 1raa.l'toll 11 a lull lime
DOflllt Yard Sola Lonov111: lng
tor
lhll\'l·plrty pOlio
Sllcp It 111\'1 tile prlool. PIO'IIdell, Ataoolot.. Df. lion with iltlttllll. Dtldllno
RoUot lndu&amp;lntl. Albeny • 0111 roqulrld. Mull l,po lor mumt IUbl'niiiiOn II !It
Athona.
740·0e&amp;·8200 70 wpm and tlk1o ollotl· May 2003. Mall ltaUitlll to:
www.lfutllndullrtot.org hand I 00 wpm, Strong W4WV PJOQrtm Cooldlna·
compultr akllil nt&lt;ltllry. tor 113 Ann Slltfl, Perllell·
Olllblae "Pirltnoa pro· byra, WV 2el01
1
lerrecl.
ATTENTIONIII
------Pltlll 11nd lftume' to
81 Your Own aa...
Card of Thanke
Hoi101 CllniO: Human Roll·
P/r-FII
Ilona Ooponmonl: 110 JeOk·
828.·888.11\r.
Potanllll
aon Ptke: Olllloolla, Ohio No E11110r1anct Nloalllrt
48831 ·1542. ,.. 10 814·
Mill 01\'111
«B·5&amp;3a. Equal O!lllonunl·
CIIIToi!Fraa
IV Employ11.
HB lnllmollonal
1·888·471 ·OA&amp;Ii

Your lo"'"S f'amily

In MemO"'

AIIIITANTCAII
MANAGIII
Tho WO!lt4WV c-t Con111.
tundiCI
1tvoua11
1 grant
by lho
RIIIIOn
I'I'Nol\0~

Itn-m
IIIQ a

HJUO WANIUl
·

jn

ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

I. .

Glvt:A'MY

alud~

12 t melll'doli&lt; wllh aldo
attachmont, IO&lt;kl
Alllloma may be 101n 11 tho
Muon County Public Ll·
bllry, 506 Viand ST. Pt.
Pttotlnt , The Llbrery II
open Mon·Thull. lOam·
epm ond Fri.-Sol tOam·
5pm.
All blca 111 ooalad and duo
In tho Llbii'Y no laotr than
tpm May 2t 01.
- - - - - - - rno Library Botl\'l ,,,.,.,..
lhe rlghl oo 11jtol ony bid 11
In M1mory
dHma to be unreaoonablt.
·
·
C·l Boor Carry Oul pormll
lor aolt, C~ollfl Townlhlp,
Molgt CounoY, otnd 1111111
of rn101111 to: The Dolly
Sanllnal, PO Bo• 729-20,
Pomeroy, Qhlo 4!75G.

Memory Of

r

.,,,.
jiti
G.t hidad oompular stand

The t1rat ever Scipio Town· 1o.1 2
thlp Ouoan't Paa-ent All carolldaak

IQII. Each age reoelv&amp;a a
orown, llophy &amp; ouh.
Outtn lave! re&lt;alvtl
$50.00 caoh pr~e. Soour·
day. June 8, 2002. Cell
740·6Y8·508t lor lnlorma·
~ion and antry paokot.
Noll Thll rgeant II nol
a"lllaooo wit lho Scipio
Townsnlp Flremen 'a Fttll·
volin 1ny way.

Loogobergar Bua ltlurl
Dr- and Homtoload
Pr~tol . Brtaktaa\1 Funl
Only 1351 Sao~ng Llmi!ICI.
Call Nowl 7~1H~HU~

••t

)

'

Com• out /rH" a barraln a1 w1/l a1 rood
food and
nur conc,lmil

-

Publlo Salt and Auotlon ·

OLD GLORY
AUCTION HOUSE
HO Beeeh Stnet • ·M lddleport, Ohio
Every Thurtclay AIS1MPM
Mike V01hel• AuetlonHr
Jim Taylor • Apprentice

_Thursday, May l3rd
We will be havlna an antlqueand .
collectlblellale. Thlsule contains
many ilema or Interest:
prlmJII ve cupboard, old wall gablnet,
painted bath cabinet, II'Jelill dentllt ltool,
3 old trunk1, wood aurveyeu tran. sit, ·
keroaene lampa, Penton cranberry light,
oak alx drawer machlnlat toolbox, 2
drawer ollk file cabinet, atore wood
thread box, waterlna can, old tin
windup toy, atone chum, 11oneware
mlxlna bowl a, llonewarc vue
(Zaneavllle), colna, Beltdoa .38 cat.
aun, maaazlne1, bookt, aun cabinet,
wicker lable, metal •Ieiah bed, copper
bolter, 55 pl. wlakey barrel, wood
1•me table, quilt racka, 1mall ox yoke,
hllh back bed, Duncan· Phyfe drop leaf
table with 6 chulrt.
7'111111 ~nl,r •
11111•1" '""" '"'"" IJr MIJJ.

,.,illj
CDIIIf olll•o41/IJIJJ •IIHI4 J.U

1J1 WIU II 1111M1

/11114 /fOIO OMI' tOMIIIIIHII

NaW ~IITINQ • LINCOLN HIIOHTI
malnlllnt~ nome wllh two
btdroomt, bath, laun~t)l lttll,. new
wlndowt, 1211• dtcklna1, FANu plut
H.P. 1nd C.A. ·
AIKinO Ut,OOO

Wtll

that jUit nttdl~ll Tlvo biCiroomt, blllt,
Into a play room or third
rHt, lttlt liomt I1Hdt an
lmrntdlllt I'OIIHilonl
AIKJNO UO.OOO

IIACINI • Htrt't 1 DGZ\1

IIOmt

l hut, 0/A; lull aHio lhll oould tllllly bt tur
gildroom.
"'" butmtnt. Locii..S on • quiet
ownt~

II

11111"1'//\1111 II" VJI 1/llllii',IIIJt.','"
0•11/UU '/JIIIIdl,!fl', l l l
IJIIJ/1',1111 111/11"
r /\II II', lflllf&gt;( Mil• II I !1', ! I l l (fill
II' \'J \II 1 f1ll f,l I yr,rrJ•II' ,lJIJ ·,r11 (J'

Henry 1. Cltllnd ........................... 112·2281
lherrll.. Hlr1 ...................................742·2317
Ann• M. Chlpman ......................... H2·S311

KlthiHn M. Cleland ..................." 812..181

LIH V, Moodllplugh.,. .................. 8t2o05112
Cltlland Alt411tv. Inc. Offloe........

•

�-

Dl

Pomlroy • MlddltpOft • Galllpolll, Qhlo • Point Pltnlnt. WV

Ponwr'Oy • Middleport • Galllpolla. Ohio • Point Pl1111nt. WV

r·

,.

....

CLASSIFIEDS

•

"-lit~ G1nw~l

WOOD 011/ff,
INC
446-1066

llt.OC:WI'SHUT

HOUM:

_
__
....-..............
.
...
--.._....,....,..
- ...
-·
.........
_,..._....
tnMfiJJ f t

.

GAWPOI.IS,011104!101

1m to
pm;
""" to
AIIMI c. Wood. lllolllt· , .. tsn

ltlftllolltW•LioW·--"

....
, '-'llllllloltlloOft. ....1148

.~~,

.

""lclllloM ,..,...,. .

• WE A"£ EXCIT£1) AIOUT OUR NEW WEI Silt"
PICTI.IRES ANb rNFORMATtON AVAD.AaLe
l.OTS •

t1

,....,,

..... -.Aatoi1MI

......... h.....,"'•
lftertiW . . .

.........,

....... 01 ony 111101111on 10

-

..y_

.........
•••rltNnlttoft."

-~.,

lNIMa p

per~nat

Mtveftlellmlftta .... 1'111

-

... ol"" lew. 0\tf
·--·~~~
~

~~~- ""'Ill
-llfttl--111

Modem Rinch ... Optn kltchtn t ltmllif
room. Brtaklul' nook wllh tklfllghta,
Vaulted ceiling In l.lvlng Room.
l.endaetplng lor
Outatandlng Deck
prlvatt out·door enJoyment. Alklng
$198,900
DIRICnONit Tlke SR 180 put lht
hoapltal. Tum [tit onto White Road, jutt
Hallelte Carpet Mill Outlet. Follow

I Hm, ~18 Boi~V llun
Rd.,
Ohio 124, 112 milt
W..t ol Routo 7, wttlll 4
Hjlllo al~ In, $10,000.

a

o"

IKOtllant

building

VACANT LAND
14 Ac:tlll WIU.IIN UO.ooci

1111,

(8371398~9

thll IIIWIPIPIF IN

awaMIIIII on M equll

140,000

tl1 I

I.()TS ·ACR

.17,000

VACANT LAND
MANY DIPFIIII!NT LOCATIONI
tl11
AND PIIICI!I
CALL ,0111 DITAILI

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLilASE CALL. ll·MAIL US OR
STOI' BY THE OFFICI! MON·FIU. 8:30A.M. TO 4:30P.M.
SAT. 8:30A.M. TO NOON

REAL ESTATE

Blind new hOmto lmmldl·
Ill polllllton• 1000 IQ h,.
1 1/R 10,.. on Quit! Rd .. 3

BR. a 1/11 01110', 0111 ottlo
lnltf'l, a 112 bit fl. lg. kllohon
WI Jllnlry. Po~tr I'H•
.118,800. (7401448·48141111
8pm, (?401448 ·3U8 alter
8pm.
Cuolom Bulldtr lllklng o~
dtrt lOr New HOmH 10 Ill
buill, 1200·2200 eq ft. Wt II·
nanoe. Oan(740)448-3570.
fltor Nit by owner.

St1~e

1943

e~-~ · ~eaa,
514 Sccmul Ave., Galllpulll, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0000 740-441-llll

001~ •

Flttl !ttltl Gtner•l

,.

bedroom, Qblth, ""' Ma·

aon Walm1rt, larQt lronl

pon&gt;h, H0'1, 304·173-8788.
Houn In MlddiiiPOn: ·3lild·
room. Quiet 11rMI, oorntt
. lot, a Olr Dlrtr• mull IH
to IPPrtOlllt
740·UD2·

cu,.,.,.,. ~ t;/,4
.

at7D

446•6808*~:!c~!.'4

.

In Maton, 'Nil, 3·br. MOuH,

l·oulbulldlngl 1·10•8DII .
mobile hOme. 1 elnglo oar
garago hugo Evergreen
frtn • prlvaoy. on
10•10011. Lot Wllh 100111
on - h end or lot. 1 101 oH
~1 :111-' ~rlold •sa.ooo. oall
a11enpm. (00.)88a·338S

1il

23 LOCUli St.

888 Oltrk Ol'ltptl Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

www.evaiii•IIIOurc.com
,.,,...,Y Blftdt&amp;Nm HHity ••s.m.., .~uutlutm Oll~o f'ur (lt'«r A Quarttr (;PNtury"

·Joe A.. Moor-Broker 441·1818
Sarah L. l!vane-Moore, Broker 441·1818
Patrlola H•v•· 448-3884 Car• Caeey-:248·8430
Cynthia 81olllano- 388•1841
----.-•C·•~ndaoe
1a

GtHipoMI, 01'110

45831

o1n aome
Stoludod and oonvenltnlly
IOOIIId, thll lo,.ly 4 8A 3 8A
home IIIII on 7.8 QOIQIOUI
IOriO ond hll I IIOOkld pond,
24 • 32 mtlol building, 2 oar
1111ohed QlriQI, wrap around
poroh and a boaullfully
landloaptd yard . Wllh otromlo
1111 ..trywav1, Bruoo hardwood
flooring , and lntrloatolv laid brlok
lldtwalkl, lhla ouporb kome h11
IVII'I dlllll OOVIIId. CaiiiOI an
appolnlmtnl lor your drum
homiiOIIIyl UH,OOO

MOBII.I! UOMF.S
MJK SAu:

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IDlO taxa&amp; , Skyline Trailer,
Romacelod. 2
porohn, Storage building ,
heat pump. Call (74012&amp;8·
1818
11111 lpruat Rldgt 14x70,

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HOMI IN Till OOUNTII'I

WITH LOTI 0' LANO. Vtl'l

llvablt homt wllh P01maii.A, all·ln
kill rtl., built In ovona., I lui bllha,
lui dry blnmonl. Lovolv otrpet
through-out, 30 aor11 r!VI of land,
101111 waodod, aomo ololrld, An
Oldlr hOme a blrn on proporty,
Pronllng on 2 rotdl· ChQOH 1
IOhOOI AddlVIIIt, lldwtiiJ Alvtr
Vtlley. You can only IP!l'*l 111111111
nome by making an oppolnlmtnl to
Ml lntldl. O*ntr II anxlout lo
Hll, oa n'&lt;Wt on thll !Ill lind In 1
hurty. Vl.l
, tltll OHIIIfllll AIIIA ofd llrlp
, mlno land. NOO por 10re. tea
aorH, Grtll lor lluntlng 01
• rtOrHIIon, AIIO 14 IOIH rM
comrnorolll on 111 ? ,

I 3

home will tllriOI your
alltnllon trom 1111 beginning.
Rilling on 2.7 woodl&lt;l,
p~valt
IOIH,
wllh
I
wondt~ul vtaw. Will lhoughl
oul floor plan allow• tor formal
LA and DR, lll·ln ; kitchen
wllh broaklaal nco!&lt; open 10
oomlorteblo family 1C19"' wllh
tlrtpiiPI.
.
llttulllully
landaotPid 101 lnvlln you 10
lhl mulll·lovll deckt. 3-&lt;llr
plut otjlbulldlng.

bedroom, 2 blll1, 12x40

porch wlrool,

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Compltlol~

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n)UII bo

fnO\IId,
(7401742-271 3
IH.. mtlllgl.

111tl Aidman Front Klloh·
en, br. Gitll aondlllon.
0111 Harold. 740·:18G·DD48.
11101 Clayton 14x70 2br. 2
IIIII bllha. lxolllent Condl·
lion. Hill pump. On rtnlld
lot In MlddiiP!)M. 100.187&amp;•
U83 or 100.1071·8578
111M UxJO Norrla 11'-ndlr
Mobllo Homo. Ovor and
tort ol lind In POint Pltll·
lftl, 3br. I bath, 01ntral air,
18•8 110111 potoh, 8x8 btOk
_ poroh, _10•12 mttal building,
flllll rail 11111111. MIWing Oul
Ill llalt. (00.)875-7428
Colt't Moblll HolMI
1112e11 Ul 80 E111
All11n1, Ohio
1 only....a Sth whttl ·
oomper, :1.4' lnnlbruol&lt; Su·
, _ by Gulletrtlm. INdo

a

1202

HCIMI LoiUo mil
I ~:,.:M~:~~~~~~~VtlttV
lid. 117,-

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lnlmiOUitllly klpl
11111111
Ill I lA roltod ranoh on 3
p!IVIII 10111 mil lUll mlnu111
lr~ town. Formal living room ,
ramodaled kllohtn, 11rg1
dlnlnQ/Itmlly room oddlllon wllh
workfng llrtpltOI and oorllnld•
In poroh, two oar allaohtd
garage and a ae • 32 two oar
dllaohld g111g1. ~LUS I niOI
32 • 41 mtlal poll building wllh
oltolrlo. All lor only
tUt Groll tlaM homo wllh
110ond dwolllngl Thla homo
Olltrt you lht 1p101 lor 2
lamlllu. lll·ln kllohan. living
room wllh llrflllaot. dining room,
I 112 o1r aiiiOhld garogo, 2 oor
dllaOhtd g111g1. 2nd dwelling
1111 718 IQUiri 1111, I lA, I lA
lnd Ita Mil

OUI room, tlr, ron up awning

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I

IIICI moro. ltlulllullnlkll
IIICI out. A11111 al only
I only....a ...11ono1 hOmo, .
l1m,lOCI.DD.

,OIIIt Park 1W Holly ~Irk

lm~~:

· I bedroom, 2 bllh,
Wllh oentrll olr, only
~. 00 111 on your
-:- lll'Z. lfOn, P11011t teZ•

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lot, Late- .,..,,

DW Will 11'1111 on
lnylhiMI ol aqull YIIUI ,
(11114,.7.._

MNon Countr·I"IIHIInt
llolcl, IIOIIJIOIIf 14JC10 mo-

111" hllnl. 0.1 lllff, 2btd·
-wt bllht, I"IIICI lil10h·
'"· Olk oolrlntlt. 2 porahH,
paved road, ~ loaa·
lion. c- lo HIH!IInglon '
l't. PIN11n1 11 mlnulol lo
Tor..-. (iiOol1H2.eul
..... 200:1 14 wide. Only
1H down on4 only
111.112 ,., lloid, 7oi0-:JIH871 ,· C.ll

l

3:18
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'
thla. hOUII bOIIII I Chtrmlng
formal tnfry, LA
dooto Ieiding 1o formal Dr. 4
IA't, 2 balht. · tnolotiG
porcn. 1 oar oarpon
w/lloriQI. Prleld 1D 1110111 11
Call Cttotyn loday

w"rencn

aeuoo.

IO&lt; I thowlntl· HOI

lllfiiJI. Prlold 11

H11

Before thopplng for your
.

•

Nu Addre11.~. ttop by ourt:

N\AV . . iS~tl1c .

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David Wlnman, GAl, CAS Broker 44H555
rt:1 ~ ·
Carolyn WtiOh, ORI 441•1007 Sonny OtrMa 44&amp;-2707
HJ •
Aober1 Bruct1 448-0821 · Alta Wlnman 44&amp;-8555 . Jennlter Sipple 245-1020

(740) 446• 3644.

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- -

1/ -- --

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�I

Sunday, May 19, 2002

Pomeroy • Middleport • O.lllpolla, Ohio • Point
PIMAnt,.WV
-&lt;

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

.,._

Nasdaq ends week up five sessions in a row .

COMMODITIES REVIEW

Itt LISA SINOHAMIA

Cn1de edges higher on short covering
Russians to end
export restrictions
NEW YORK (Dow Iones
News) - Crude oil futures
at the New York Mercantile
Exchange managed to notch
modest gains Friday as
tmders covered short posi·
. lions hue in the session after
pushing down prices over
the previous two days.
Front-month June crude
futures ended up 23 cents at
$28.18 a barrel after falling
a&amp; low as $27.10 in intraday
trading.
June heating oil futures
rose 44 points to 68.60 cents
a gallon, while June gasoline settled up 80.38 cents a
gallon.
Thete was little news
behind the late recovery,
and uaders and analysts
aHrlbuted it to short cover11 Honde ca no. New
Runa &amp; lOOI&lt;1 Good.
81100
ml111. . St SOO.
(l«&lt;~.uo&amp; .
NOTICI TO IIODIIII
1M1C1t aocn Hontll SMUow ITATI 01' OHIO
OtiUM. Wllt1 b t,.a, 1SOO OIMIITMINT 01'
mllet. s•,ooo. (30-l)l?$· TRAN.POIITATION
11100

tng.

n...,

Public Notice
The tnnutt report
l'orm Ito P!' lor lht
Ktlllllll l'ounCiatton,
lerntrd v. l'ulla,
TrUtllt II IVIIIIblt
tor public lntpectlon
at lernerd v. ,ulta
LIW 011101, 111•1/1
Watt leoond ltrMt,
Pomeroy, OH 4&amp;711,
during
reguler
butlnHt haurt lor 1
periOd Of 110 Cllyl
eubnquent
to
pullllolllon ot 1~11
notloe.

"It's the Friday effect,"
said Phil Flynn, nn llnalyst
at Alaron Trading Corp.,
referring to a rtcent tenden·
cy among traders to bid up

prices ahead of the weekend. '·People don't want to
be short over the weekend."
The eartr. declines came
after Russ a said It would
end its export rtstrictions
within the next two months.
"In the next two months,
(Russia) will return to
export volumes prior to the
l!grted export restrictions,"
Prime Minister ·Mikhail
Kasyanov said, according to
Russian new agencies.
in
Russia
agreed
December to lower its crude
oil exports by 150,000 blil'rels a day during the first
quarter, a decision it later
extended through the sec·
ond quarter.
The Russian export
restriction was meant to
supplement an agreement
by the Organiution of
Exporting
Petroleum
Countries 10 lower its oil
quotas by l.S million bar·
rels a day.
'
Russia Is not 11 member of
OPEC, but · along with
Norway and Me~tico, two
other non-OPEC producers,
lowertd its exports in an

ASSOCIATED PRESS ·

NEW YORK - Wall Street ended a
big week on a quiet but encouraging
note Friday, as modest stock gains lift·
ed the Nasdaq composite indell to its
fits! five-session winni~tg streak in
seven months and biggest weekly gain
in more than a year.
· The Dow Jones industrials also
rtturned to levels not seen in more
than a month, de.spite choppy trading
that caused the major indexes to fluctuaie for most of the session. Analysts
said the market's ability to hold steady,
mther than fall sharply on profit taking
or fears that the week'.s big advance
would fizzle, suggests mvestor confidence is slowly recovering.
"This is a good way to end the we~k .
We've hung on to most of the gams
and the market's overall tone is better
and the news arpears to be improving." said Rafae Tamargo, director of
equity research at Wilmington Trust "I
do think there is a base hert for us to
build on. But is it a straight shot up?
Absolutely not"
··
The Dow closed up 63.87, or 0.6
percent, at 10,353.08. The gauge,
which enjoyed two triple-di~it
advances earlier this week, had 1ts
highest finish since April 10, when it
stood at 10,381.73.
Broader stock indicators also moved .
higher. The tech-focused Nasdaq composite indell gained 10.95, or 0.6 percent, to 1,741.39. Its last five-session
gain was in early October.
.J The Standard &amp; Poor's 500 index
advanced 8. 36, or 0. 8 percent, to
1.106.59. .
.
The index's weekly performances
wert also solid. The Dow gained 4.2
percent, the Nasdaq rose 8.8 percenl
And the S&amp;P climbed 4. 9 percent The

effort to shore up falling earlier this year, analysts
crude oil prices late last said.
year and early t~is year.
"Fundamentals are now
Norway, for its fart, said more of a focus than they
Fridar that it wit make a have been earlier on," said
deciston
in
mid-June Mike Fitzpatrick, an energy
whether to extend its oil analyst at Fimat Futures Inc.
export cuts past the second in New York.
quarter. Mexico hasn't said
The supply-demand fun•
what its production plans dnmentals do not justify
art for the third quarter.
prices at current levels,
OPEC officials say the)' according to Tim Evans, an
see no need to change the1r analyst at IFR Pegasus in
production quotas when New York.
·
they meet next month.
With Iraq pumping oil
Oil prices have risen by again and Russi!! announcabout 40 percent this year, ing it will end its export
partly as a result of the restriclions, "we think the
export restraints by the fro- fundamentals are already
ducers. But a big part o the very much in place for furrecent price increase has ther declt' nes," Evans said.
been due to fears that the
lsraeli·Palestinian violence
But others said that polili·
would lead to a wider war in cal risk, especially the unre·
the Middle East and would solved · Mideast crisis,
disrupt oil supplies from the forced traders to cover short
region.
.
positions ahead of the week·
With the tensions easing · end.
somewhat following Israel's
In London, Brtnt crude
withdrawal from recently- from the North Sea fell 2
·occupied Palestinian terri to· pennies to $26.36 per barrel.
'ries, traders have been Natural gas futures trading
undoing the so-called "war on Nymex fell Ll cent to.
premium" bui.lt into prices $3.598 per 1,000 cubic feet.

Rt.al Eatatt Gtntral

1&amp;11&amp;, 17, tt, It, II,
u, 14, ...... 30, 11

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Public No11ca
LIQAL

olllot.

Tha

liCit

will

be opened at the
monthly Truttll
m"tlnglo bl hillel on
June u, aoaa.
Phont
lor
I'ICIUII'IIIltntl II (740)

HWot1.

garago, 3 bodroom, 2 lull batho,
lirgt 1l1ed living

Private Sites Available
lnttratctlon of US 33 l liM
Juat South of Logan
8:30.1, 811 t-e. Cloltd lun

40) 385·4367

&lt;aj"· :aooa .

Real Eetatt Otnaral

kltct.n

with tilt lloonng &amp; dlohwoohor.
Mult ·- to oppraolott thla bntl
lot Ul ohow It to you. 121 H
LOTI .895 ooro lt1ot hu rood
lrontllQI Along SA 180 tnd
Bul.vlllt. ldlll lor Ataldeotlol or
cornmorotol. ownor oolllng btlow
opprolud volutl 12141 ·
21.11 Aare1 with road lmntaga.
L&lt;llo o1 poorturo lord with omalt
amounl or - ·· Fonolng,
County watt lVIII. Nlot building
liltll. 12111
LOTII LOTII LOTII Sta~lng ot
1.4 acre to U plu1 acre1. Rio

Grandt

(I t, 200 .

room~

arta,

county

PA~M

www.nyse.com
N•daq Stack Mllbt
IIIIVIM'.nasdaq.com

Nasdaq's gain was its bigge. t since lhe
week ended April 20, 200 I, when it
surged 10.3 percent.
Trading Friday was mostly lackluster. Although the market got an upbeat
outlook from Dell Computer and
encouraging consumer sentiment numbers, investors appeared to be taking a
break - a normal occurrence, analysts
said, following four days of mostly
positive momentum.
Dell rose 9 cents to $27.94 on earnings that beat expectations ·despite a
slight drop in first-quarter profits. The
company also r.1ised its forecast for
second-quarter profits.
Other tech stocks were milled.
Microsoft rose 29 cents to $56.03,
while Intel rose 43 cents to $31.20.
Wall Street was pleased with, but not
tnspired by, a Um versity o_f Michigan
report on consumer sentiment The
school's index rose to 96.0 in mid May
from 93.0 in mid April, Dow Jones
News reponed. Consumer spending
accounts for two-thirds of the economy, so any improvement in consumer
sentiment is considered good for business.
Among blue chips. Schering-Plough
rose $1.37 to $26.12 after announcing
it would pay the federal government
$500 milhon to settle quality control
issues at two manufacturing plants.

·BULLETIN BOARD
FOR SALE

II Commercial or Resldentlalll

Excellent corner locallon
4-5 BA house on 1.87 ac.
$116,000
Retiring.
Serious Inquiries please
74Q-245-9448

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FOR ANIMAL LOVERS
Local well established dog
grooming bUSiness lor sale.
Large year round clientele.
. Excellent reputation with all
local veterinarians. All
equipment SUpPlies &amp; training
Included. For more Information
Call
. 740·446-0752

wattr

IVtlloblt. AffOI(Jiblol OWnor lo
reQuHtlng on oftor. 121M

HtW

NIW Yalk 5tlodl Exch1...

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence ~all 446·6752 or
1-800-942·9577

liD NOTICI

llltm Townt~lp
Truttau, Voluntwr
l'lrt Depertmtnt will
bt eootpllng btdt an
1 new Cab end
CheUII IO bt Ulld
1e e lrUih Truck.
Lilt at rtqulrtmlnlt
mty bt obttlntd
from the Cttrkl

On the Net

LilTING! 30.5 f!cr~l

tntt adjoint us govemrnom tand.
Mobiit ttomt and okttr 2 otory
ltomt Included. Lot Ul till )'OU
about thltlltting. U1H
.,tl''

Temporary
Health Insurance

·r~~~

Medical coverage
when.you need it.
• Recently graduated
• Between jobs
Ronnie Lynch

:lltlldtnlltl 01 aommorolal
' oWirlng, ntW MI'Wiot 01 '"'
'·Difre, Malttr Lloltlua 1110·
: lrlolan. Aldtnour l itotrlotl,
' W\1000308, 110&lt;1..71-1781.
'
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Th~

,,'

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Lynch Agency

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

WOODYARD MINI MALL
Mudd Jeans $29.95
Mudd Shirts $11 .95 Levi's $26.95
Levi Shorts $19.95
No Excuse Shorts $13.99
304-675-5928

The annual
Lemley-Ralph
reunion will be held
Sun. May 26 at the
Poplar Ridge Church
Fellowship Building.
Dinner will begin at
12:30 pm.
All family and friends are
invited to attendll

House for Sale

1-800·447·8235
ACNIAQI Li.TINGt f4 112 ecret

rn/1 .with rood lrontagt, lton!Hitt,

•'
'
''

farm land and kltal hunting lolld
that lo ad)....,t to Wov"" Notional
Ponlllt. 12140
LIVIL
LOTI
WATtON

'

fiOAD...oounty water at.tall. over
tl2aort. Bro+~;er ~ &amp; want• an

'•

'

Offtrl

.ILLIII I.OWIIIID THI

.'
I

'

11

PRICI

ON THII QUAUTY IIIICK
IIANCtillll 2 Car at180hld
garoga, Iorge formal living room 1
dining, ramtl)' room. OVtrtlttd
mUtlr IUitl, D!UI 3 lddfttonll
lj)f)IOM, ICittiiOIIha · Wlkllllt bodroomo, U balht, lovtl
pitnllful. AOitd lronltgt. Coil tor 1 apprOK. 2 1ore lot, Must - to
inapl11171
approclaltlhlt Ontl UOIO
IIIMODILID IIANCH lmiAtiD ON COfliNIII LOT Citing IPPfOM, ono aero, vinyl lklad homo wllh loytr, living
room, Nt•ln kltcliiln, 3 bo;jroome, 1 1/2tlftt1t. 2~ X32 d-fltd garage, 11118
•
. . . . . . . . ,,. . . . . . . " ' '

.

'

'

l tl ftl\llllllllltJI\III',fltJC,',/'.INfiiHM/\IIONL/\tl IHI';TOf'flYfllll/\

'

,....' $33,660
.I"
..."
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'
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.............
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I Ill I Willi flY fii&gt;MI SIN ('01 Oil /lOIII&lt; II I'

---

Charyl Lemley

• I"MINNMWAHI

........
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""AlJDJJAN.
~

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1100 'JUO '1"•7'1

514 8.,..,.. A••·• Gollr,.,u., Ohio 45631.o&lt;J!I4
740-446-0008 740-441 -II JJ

-. ...

'--'~
~,
~~~,,_, MettdtMI tJitlt Itt IJM A {l~tt~fli,

r,,.,,., .

Joe A. Moott-l rok., 441·1111
..,all L. I Yan .. Moorlo........ 441•1111

I l'tllllc'la Hay.. -1114 Carl CHty•J41-M30
Cyn1hll IIOIIIIno- tH-1141
Cenci- ,ope.

.....,.,_,2

\

NIW UlnNOI Ill

1 (Tu_.

Pial.,.) Ar11, ronoh homo Wlih 2
-OOirlt, living room, kllchtn
w1tn -

IPPIIanctH,

$20.00 .
2 Extra Large 18 Inch Pizzas
2Topplng

$20.00

•
2 Fish Dinners

$10.00

2 Lasagna Dinners
$12.00 ..

·245-0088

NIW LIITINOI WONOIIII'UL
QUill, WOODIO IIITTINO
W1TH IIUITIC HOMII Ajlprox,
1.42 ''"" with .... !llory homo,
living room ldtclhtn I 1!1111. Ajlprox.
11140 1q. n. or ruotlo end oozy
living. Tnlt ont 11 )uti - · lo
mill ttlfngl l.oolttd II . Blglly
Aidae
. . Call ~q~ .,.... lfliormatiOril
121le

Stt4114·- ~ ~eatt,

2 T-Bone Steak Dinners

Free DeliverY

742·3171 '

. ....... M'I'IIM

I'Pifllll

,,
.,,.

RIO .GRANDE
SPEEDOS

Ar:tnual Card Party and
salad Luncheon
SaturdaY June 1, 2002
Grace Eplacopal Church.
Pomaroy Ohio.

Call Carol SIMon for Info and
reaervatiO!lJ 992-3887

Vera O'Dell estate,
7 rooms, 2 1/2
bath, ·
'
full basement,
large lot.
10 Bellmont Drive,
.
Gallipolis
446-1360'
.

Graduation time Is almost herel .
American Legion
Don't forget to order
Post 27
your cake from
Nomination &amp; Election
THE BAKE SHOP
7 40-256-1 094
for officers,
Monday, May 20.
Must have 00214 &amp;
MEDICARE
a paid up dues
SUPPLEMENT
receipt.
Are the rates getting too
expensive on your
Plan C or Plan F?
Check out the rates
on our Plan D.
Ronnie Lynch
The Lynch Agency
322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
•

' 1-800-447-8235
NOW OPEN

Carla's Creations
9440 St. Rt.

218

256-8111
Located In Mercerville
Mon-Frl 9-6
Sat 9·3
Fresh &amp; Silk Flowers
Homemade chocolates &amp;
cakee made to order. Memorial
Day and Fathers Day
arrangemente.
Stop by to register lor
Free Father's Day gill.
We Deliver

5th Annual
Lions Club Golf
Scramble
June 20
1:30 Tee-off
Great Food and Prizes
Deadline is June 18.
Contact
Bob Hennesy 446-2631
Chris Homer 441-1679
Mark Dillon 446·2286
MEIGS CO. BIKERS
17th Annual
MEMORIAL RUN
Sunday, May 26th
Pomeroy Parking Lot
Pomeroy, Ohio
Meet at noon • leave 1:00 pm
. End at Lakevii!W Tavern
Albany, Ohio
Uve music, Hot Food, T-Shlrts
Rallies, Rodeo Events
$5.00 per person
Bike ShOw
No entry 1ee, awards given, all
bikes welcome Sign up at 11 :00
am on Court St.
_i740l742·1513

-o•.

tS31tQ. ft., rllltlng on 411\1tllott.

I

DELAWARE (AP) - The Kroger Co. on Friday
broke ground on a distribution center that will employ
more than 600 people.
The 750,000-square-fOOI facility on the city's east side
will house the compants nationwide cookie and soacl:
distribution center. ft will serve grocery stores in central
and southern Ohio, Toledo and northern West Vuginia.
About 230 new workers will be hired. the compan):
said. The rest of the jobs will be filled primarily by
employees transferred from a warehouse in WhitehaU.
The facility will cost $90 million to build and is
expected to open in spring 2003, the company said.
Cincinnati-based Kroger operates 2,418 supermarkets
and multidepartment stores in 32 states under about two
dozen names, including Kroger. Ralphs, Fred Meyer,
Food 4 Less, King Soopers, Smith's, Fry's and Fry's
Marketplace, Dillon, QFC and City Market.
The company also operates 789 convenience stores,
427 jewelry stores, 227 supermarket fuel centers and 41
food processing plants.

Hundreds of fanners apply

for preservation annts

COLUMBUS (AP)- More than 440 farmers applied
for up to $127 million in farmland preservation from 1
state program with onlr $6.3 million available this year,
the \)epartment of.Agnc~ture said.
.
"I would constd!'r thts to be an overwhelmmg
response," Melanie Wilt, an Agriculture Department
spokeswoman, said Friday. "It shows Ohio's farm families want to keep farming ."
.
The state will begin narrowing applications this week,
which are based initially ,on a farm's soil quality, its
proximity to other protected areas, pressure from nearby urban development and local support and planning
for preservation.
The money is a part of the $400 million thlll Ohio voters approved in November 2000 to clean up old industrial sites and protect open spaces along rivers and lakes.
Farmers who receive · preservation grants maintain
ownership of the property but give up development
rights to the state, Wilt said. The state hopes to
announce grant rtcipients in June.

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.
446-2342 OR 992-2155

17th Mercervllle/Hannan Trace
ALUMNI DINNER
· May 25, 2002
For reservations,
Margaret Myers 446·0827

446-8235
'

The stock had fallen sharply earlier in
the week on reports of cnminal investigation by the government, which has
yet to be resolved. Schering-Plough
also reduced its 2002 forecast, citing
the cost of the deal.
But retailer Gap dropped 59 cents to
$16.30 on first~quarter eamirgs that
beat expectations but still showed
weak sales.
Also Friday. the Commerce
Department rtported that the sale of
American goods overseas grew at a
slightly faster rate than imports in
March. The trade deficit fell to $31.6
billion, 0.4 percent better than the
February gap.
Despite the strength of the market
this week, analysts are cautious. They
note that Wall Street has had a recent
~istory of rallying unsustainably as
ulvestors lose confidence that busmess
is Improving. They also say much of
this week's buying came in stocks that ·
had fallen sharply in previous weeks
on disappointing earnings.
.
"The tone of the market in the last
·week or so has changed. We're getting
belter earnings reports from impbrta.nt
companies. There is the potential to'
move higher, but it's going to happen
slowly," said Mike Kayes, chief investment officer at Eastover Capital.
Advancing issues led decliners on
the New York Stock Exchange.
Consolidated volume came to 1.524·
billion shares, compared with 1.521
billion Thursday.
The Russell 2000 index rose 1.54. or
0.3 percent, to 508.94. .
Overseas, Jiipan 's Nikkei stock average rose 0.9 percent. In Europe,
German{s DAX index fell 0.2 percent, Bntain's FTSE 100 lost 0.6 pe,rcent, and France's CAC-40 dropped
0.5 percent.

Krop:r distribution center
to employ more tMn 100

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION

Adorable AKC Golden
Retriever pups. Also one AKC
Miniature poodle pup
Vet Checked- Shots current
740-379-2639

• 65 or over
• Billed to insurance
• Little If no cost
• Free Delivery
• We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
7 40·446· 7283
1·800-458-6844

Ladies
Alice Click of
"Concerned Women of
Am.erica" will be speaking at
Northup Baptist Church
Mon., May 20th at 7:00pm
All Ladles Welcome

Special Weekend
Services
May 31st- June 1st 7:00pm
J!Jne 2nd - 10:30 am
featuring
Carl Chadbond
Special Singing each night
Gospel Lighthouse Church
Neal Road, Pt: Pleasant, WV ·

Wanted: Seeking donation or
purchase ol a mid-size
refrigerator for a Vietnam
Veterans concession trailer:
Call Henry Myers 379·2352

Courts ide
Bar &amp; Grill
All new ladies night
Every Wednesday
Starting May 22nd
Drink Specials for the
Ladies
Draft specials
Entertainment from
Freedom OJ
No Cover Charge!

'

COURTSIDE
BAR &amp; GRILL
"Parrot Head Luau"
Saturday, June 1st
Come dressed in your best
Luau or Parrot Head attire
Leis &amp; party favors
·Freedom OJ
Court Street • Gallipolis

NURSING
HOME
INSURANCE

441-9371
Do you like Jhe
quietness of the
country but close to
town.
A BEAUTIFUL NEW
HOUSE FOR SALE.
3 Bedroom, 2 baths on
1/2 acre lot. 2 miles
from Holzer's Call for
appointment.
Serious inquirer's only

A 10 year rate guarantee Is
available on most policies.
Ronnie·Lynch

The Lynch Agency

446-3243
evenin s.
Wanted:
Experienced construction
workers
·

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235
1-800-447·8235
O'DELL LUMBER
Treated Deck Lumber
Free Deliveryl
81 VIne St. 446·1276
E. Main St. 992·5500

Knowledgeable In carpentry, ahoctrlc,

plumbing helpful.
(740) 9112· 7843, 581-7002, 591-4&amp;41

For More Info ...

446-2342 or 992-

56

�....

··~ ? • •

~

n '

0

•

kQIIo
zen.,

~

1

.BeiiSouth cutting

•

1

up to 5,000 jobs

..l.aMit ..IW!J?fM

Leader of software.piracy ring allegedly
responsible for billions in·lost sales sentenced
BUSINESS BRIEF

ALEXANDRIA. \"&lt;t, tAP) -

A-.~

~ of 1\1\ lntM~I ~'w~ pl~y
~p thtll &lt;lllthoritle~ ~ ~t\.~ ft~\.oU•

Joins company
HARTFORD. W.Vu. Angel Cundiff of Hunford
has joined The .Longubcri:er
Co. as an independent &amp;Ules
associate.
More thun 70.000 n&amp;&amp;ociates market and sell
Longuberger products in ull
SO st11tes through home
shows. Those products
include Longubel'get baskets.
fabric liners. plastic protectors, hardwood di11lders und
lids, an eJCclusive line of pottery. home accessories und
wrought iron products.

Rec:elves

certification
SHADE - Kurrie M.
Smith of Albany recently
pussed the AAMA CMA certificution/recertlflcntion
examination for medlcnl
assistants, earning the
Certified Medical Assistant
credential.
Smith is u ~ruduilte of the
medical asslstmg program at
Hocking College und Is
employed by Albany Family
Medicine.
.

Part of

campallft
RACINE -'- The Pmnperlld

Chef. u direct seller ()f
l:.itchen tools and ~pecinlt)l
food item&amp;. hus partnered
with the American CnnCil1
Society t(l mise lx&gt;th IIWIU'eness 1md funds lOt' breut cun-

cer early detection progmm~.
Thf\lUllh Muy J 1. monty
ruised at "Help Whip
CutK'Ilr" kitchen show fund. rnisers will be don11ted direct·
ly to the ACS. Customm
mny nlso make a cnsh dmmlinn to the ACS by Joundlng ·
their orders up to the nearest
.dnlhtr Ul uny May kitchen
show. Speciuf "Whip Cun~'llr"
products will be offered. with
$1 und $2 being donated
from etich purchuse.
In two yeurs. the Pumpered
Chef hus ruised &lt;wer $1 .1
, million for breu~t cnncer
early detection nnd education
pro~mrm through "Help
Whrp CnnL'Ilr" cumpnign.
Jnnelle Hnrmon l~ n local
independent cnnsultunt l'i.1r
Tho Pulnpered Chef, and cun
be renched ut 949-3114.

.

Tulane University conference
speaker deni.ed visa
NEW ORLEANS (AP) Thlane Univefllity cunceled u
conference on Cuba's environment after the State Deprutment
denied travel visas to eight purticipanl~.

Cuban researchers Md membefll of Cuba's Ministry of
Science, . Technology and
Environment and its Ministry of
Tourism were expected to be
among the punlcrpants in the
conference, which had been set
to begin on Thursday.
The Stllte Department would

not comment on the Cubuns •
cuse exc.:ept to cite u 1985
udministrutive b&lt;Ul on visits by
Cubnn
11overnment · or
Communist Putty otncluls. The
ban cun be wul11ed on a case-by·
CIISC: busls.
Eric Dunnenmuierot'Tulunc's
Institute lor Envlronmcntul Luw
und Pulley, which orgnni2oo the
conference. mtid he wrL~ dismayed ut "lhc lost opport\rnlty ·
for un open dllllogue about envf·
runmcntal policy unci the rule ot'
civil society in Cubu.''

ROM format, cilll Strong's
College Planning Speclullsts
at (800) . 368-8040 und
request it by ti tie.
frumPIIpD1
(Dian Vujovlcil i,v a nation·
'
able in both video and CD-- (11/y .vyndimted mutual jimd
ROM format To view the columnl.vt. author. (md pub·
video, visit Strong's Web site //.viler of WJ educational
a
t mutual jimd Web .vltf.'
http://www.StrongS29pluns.c http :1/www,all(lbiJII ({und.v. ro
&lt;&gt;m. For delivery in a CQ.-., m,)

Retire

•

as soon as possible.
Contribute the muximum
allowable inro tUK·defcrrcd.
cmployer-mutcheu
retire·
fromP1pD1
mcnt vehicles. The consider
need coverage e~ual to at putting more away into un
, 1o 10 t mes your IRA. Consuft a financial
IeasI stx
annual income to provide for p1anner ubout setting up II
our
fomily'il
needs. Hepurute college fund. ·
• WilL Have your will
isubility insurance should updated or draw . up u new
not be overlooked and should one. Name a guardian and an
replace at least 60 percent of alternate. plus someone to
your income in the event you manage your child's assets.
are incapacitated. Remember, · Also, consider piacin&amp; his or
.the bills don't Rtop working her inheritance in trust. This
when you do.
is. a good tool thut iK no
• Savings. It's very dirflcult longer uHed only by the
to start saving early, especial· wealthy,
ly for your child's college,
(Jay Caldwell is a ''l!rl/fled
when under the burden of finimclal
planner
at
current costs. But you need to Raymond Jame.1 Flmmdal
have a short-term emergency Services, 441 Second Ave,,
fund first (enough to cover Ga/llpo/i.r, 446-2125 (Jr I·
your expenses for up to six · H00-487·2129,
member
months) and then get going NASD and SIPC.)

Jay'

b

tile hlf bill""''~ 1.\f 0011\lfS '" 1\).~ 8tl~~
w~~ ~ntt&gt;l\1.'00 tl) t\t&gt;&lt;lrl)' ~"' ~ Ill
prioon fll®y.
John Sanl:.u~ Jr.. 2~. or Pl\il(llliNP,l\ili
wt~s " letlder ot' DrinkOOlt&gt;. de.~ood
t~y llfU..'&gt;el:utors "~
of too '"'10*t·
n"IQ!\t sophl~tkl.ltt\1 ri~s of :~on"'"re
plrute&amp;.
.
His 46-n\\mth ~nl~\1.'\l Is t~ lu~~~t
ever 11\f lmemill piru~y. U.S. Altoo~y­
Puul Mt:Nuhy surd ul u •~w~ ~'Ql\1~

o•"'

et\1.-o.

"This ~ntllll'-'11 senti~ u ~ 1\ltll•
s~~ge to tho....e tht~t thll\k they're hwlsible
bel:1m~Q or thi! t~noo)'mlty of ·thi!
ll\temet. We will fil\d you:· M~NulQ'
s11id. "Yol! will &amp;«lie YQI.IfS In priooo."
Stmkus · 1\tld ph~"ded gulhy In
Febnmry tQ 1111nsplrlng tQ commit
('tlp)'ri!lhllnfrlnj!\\ment ~~~ Jlllrl ufn tklnl
with pro.~eclnllrs.
At his s1mtendn» In U.S. District ·
Cmut. Snnkus npolQ~Iled to the ~'Ompunles "rmd espe;:11111y to m~ t)lmlly 1\lr
dmgj!lng them through this. •
·

a strong message to
those that think tt\ey're

invisible because of the
anonymity of the Internet. ·
We will flnd you/' McNulty
said. "You will serve
years In prison."

to44
Bv TON\' M. LEACH

Autllorit~Q,~ ~lt\'t Dl'ln~()ff)l\1 ~~t

IIMM)

~ACIN~ A large
crowd packed the Charles
W. Haylnal\ Gylt\llasimn in
~acine as 44 members of
the So11thet11 HISh School
Class . of 2002 :graduated
dllrlllg baccalam·eate and
cmmnencelnent exercises

MOMittl = Lilli ~ellsley llelps \latighter nnany with

~lt\e iml~lilllg

b)OOI\e% PliO!' ttl tlill t:lrot:esshll\ of graduates at

te~~r!l ~~ $eii~Yol ~\lllday. ~61\sl!!y was tll\1! t1f 132 to mceiva
IIi~~ ill W\\\!1\lllW:~ml!l\t ll'x\!telses it\ the school ~Ms1-

um . (13MII l . ~e~l

held ut\

• Pfim~roy UMW hlllll~
l\ll!llll\1 dltllU\1\ M
Mllmbtr~hlp l\Wilrtl~
fJI't~imt~d, M

Sut\day. ·

Macy Rees, class president, opened the ceremonl~s by giving the welcollle, fullllWed by "'' Invocation and the Pledge of
Allegiance, led .~Y Lindsey
Smith, \)residellt of student
coli nell.
· Choir members, directed
by tlml~ bll-ectot JMneth!
Oldaker and accompatlied
by Jocelyn Bailey on phmo,
satiS "I'll tle'' and "I Hope
You bailee."
the ~ev. bewayne 0.
Stutler, pastor with the
SllUihern Charge of the
Utlitetl Methodist Church,
delivered his baccalaureate
addre$s to the graduating

Whafs-lnsld

family and
friends looked on from
inside the gymnasium.
"A passage in the Sible
reads, 'Without vision, people perish.'. this is a very
rmportant passage for you
seniors lo remember," said
Stutler.
"People, such as your
parents, teachers and guidat\ce counCilors. have been
helping Jou with your .
vision an goals for some
t\me. and now, you are
ready to graduate," he said.
"Your vision is being
realized today," he added.
"Now, you timst set ltew
goals and have new visions
as you head out into the
world. However, the
responsibility now rests
upon your shoulders," said
Stutler.
Stutler instructed the
~enlots to set measurable,
meaningful and manageable goals, and even though
they must face the world by

set\iors

TLEACHIIPMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

the 11\du~try up to~ bllliOI\ lo ~~~~ ~~e~
end\ yeM'.
Slmklls' ""oo~y. Ht~my- Sem\wht,
ll(lld thut Sankus, wl\t}.W ro~ult~t .100 Wll%
with comput« mtlk« 011t~w~ h~e.,
mude no nmo\\y l'rom hi~ 1\lltiOOii with
Drlnk.OrDIQ, He suid St~l\lm~' 'i,l'tll.lp
soecl11Hlild II\ 11ftlcltlnt 1\ljh~ t~h·
nk11l sonw11re.
''T~y hud no us\\ for thnt sl)nwnf\l,
otllor th(ln to !~how ofl' t~lr crttekl~~i
skHis," he stild.
·
Pro.~ecutor Rooon Wl®OOrl!li sultl

CINCINNATI (AP) Federnted Deportment
Stores Inc. pluns to ereuto
SO next·aonerution .stores
nnd sell more prlvntelubel
. mllrcliundlse,
Foderutlld's top executive
suld Prlduy.
"In order to succeed In
our business. we must
c~perlmcnt," Jumes M.
Zlmmermnn. chuh·mnn
und chief executive ol'l'lcer of the nutlon 's lllfiiOSt
depnrtmllnt store i'lltoflcr,
told _sh11rcholders ut the
oompuny's unnunl meetlnll..
Terry . J. Lundarcn,
Fcder·otcd's chief operotlny nnd chief merchandisIng ol'flccr nnd hclr-oppor·
cnt to Zlmmermun, told
shoreholders thllt the
"store of the future'' l~ one
like the Lu7.nrus in l!uston
Town Center In subu1·bun
Columbus, which opened .
in October.
f'ederuted pluns to open
50 more stores like h
nntlonully this ycm·. either
building now ones or
remodeling
cxistlnll
stores.
·
The hlgh·tech, 240,000· Euston
squnrc-f'uot,
Luzurus - ohout uvcruye
for 11 mull anchor - hu~
21 tcluvislon ·screens thut
promorc store merchandise us well us show news,
weuthcr und entertul nment.
Shoppers eun usc sales·
floor computer kiosk~ to
check c-rnuil, mokc
rcstuurunt rcservutloiu or
buy movie tickets. Luptop
computer hookups are
u.vulfuble in the cu~tomer

C ustomcr-ucceul blc,
price-check still ions urc
located in every depart·
men I.
Pederuted ~Inns to
increuse its prJVutc-lubel
merchundise,
workins
with selected vendors to
develop more cxcluHivc
. lines. Zlmmermuuuld.

C~IS -

Forty·four members of the
Southem High School Class of 2002 graduated during baccalaon!a~ and ·commencement excerslses held sunday
e'Vel\it\g at the ChaHes W. l-1ayman Gymnasium in Racine.
(Tony M. Leach)
'-

"This sentence sends

Retailer
plans more
creative
stores

lounac.

t'RkWlliMI

ne

as

Plu1e IH

SDIIthefll, AJ

•

•......~

• Ohio ntw~ ln brlilf, A2

DTE gets air/water permit for synfuel plant

PATRIOTIC GIFT

IW ltM ltai..v

t~ffice, 140-:!8~-8~0 1, !lnd It
Cill\ be tl\ll)tlaled Within 30

t'HESHIIUi - A combilled tiiWwutcr pcr1tlit lbr
Ol'ftllllot\ i:lf a ~ynthettc t\lel
plillll at the tkn, JO!lles M.
tluvin l'tliWI· Pl,mt ha~ been
llllJ)IU\Ied by the Ohlll
Envtltlt\11ictllal Jlrotection

days to the 1:\nvirot\mental

ki\Elli'®MYo~L\11ii13UNE.l'OM

Wllhi.MI

N w$11,800

A~~;en~y;

lndu
llldlon • 11111111

C1l1nd11r
Cl111lfltd1
Comic•
D11rAbby
Editorial•
Movltl
Obltuarltl
Sport•
Wtlthtr

A!S
BS•!

Be

A!S
A4
A:S
iA:S
ll·S
A2

2001 Ohio V!lll'f l'lll!liiRIHI eu.

The pcnrtit give~ the green
lbtht ltl btl! Elleill)&gt; Servk'e!i
tlFN~~~ ~lei\,, n divlsioh
llr l:klmll Edli11Jn, to pr~
Wllh a llltility lbr the iiillhU·
rnctllrt! or l'Oill briquettes fur·
Use by AmeHtim Electlic
Power, davin's \lwtlet.
MJJA oitldnls 861d lhc !Jef·
1\lll'li wr l.tlmponent will reguhue dust ctrtlsslolls ftultl sevellll Ct:\!Wll)ltlf belli!, il ausher,
. I!Ctel!her Wld bHquette trtllker
ill adtlltioll It) wh11t they t!i!l.t@d

Thll II!Wft !lm11MI!ft\ tl!!p1CIIt1(l l!lltlltillfl lit wtllfth liM@ it Will b@
two liii!Milfl ti\tlfll \hi EIWI!I'd@d 1.6 tlftl! Ill lh!J l'lllfttlt§,
fiMilriOilfl fl11!111!l Gf6Ufld ll!ffl ifl 'fhl! ffltllii!Y reillllfl Will j~CIItlWattl
Now Vofk Olty aiU!r 8@~. u ll~UI~J'It1i the IIUKilllltY'ii lli!W
Will Jlfflil!fltoo to thll b!ldil!!! tri!illlt ffflm which \Iii! momlll!fll
AuxUIIlry of the IMIMl'l Fill! !lllr'lt! ti'll!ir tamoul! .ttlast blliil
Oi!l'f)r\MI!t\1 8\JM~ l!ftllffiOOtl 811flflWitlht!ii Ill ill'tlll falfe efld ·

by Jamoi o. l!lrchflild.
IJimhflold, owt~l!r of l!lmhfillid
RlflllfAI Hllffll! Md tM IMilllltl
OI!Jli!FlMIIfll Stoll!, ll11W tho Alit
10 thl! llUKIIIOry tel bl! U81ld Ill II
lunt:WIIIIIfll J)ftljllC\,
l)ofllltle~n• will llll \11kllfl llfl It
until Rutillfld'l
aflf\U!II .July 4 Cl!i·
.

''\lt)lutll~ oll!unl~ ~~und

etrtl!isiOtts" Troll\ two liqUid
bit1der tallk.~ of :i~,OOJ and

201...000 ~llllons e11ch.

f@etl'lt!il.
Aeel!ptlng ti'lll Rift fl't!m
131rohflilld !lfl bllhillf of the au~ll­
li!tY wt:lll! trom \hi! il!ft, Ol)al

·me wtlter !XJttltll\ pe1111it!l
lnslallntlot\ or 1t11 e~tet1slo11 to
duvtn'il ~i111lll1ty sewer, ns
well il~ ~ollectiot\ sUttlps tor
~ t!tJUipmellt Wll!lh down
water.
.
The perltlit t!ill\.be reviewed
by cotltacilJtg EPA's Ltl~llll

OYI!t, tfl!iliiUtlitl Klmlletly
Willfofd, l!llCII!\j!FY, efltl ~It!\
Ol!vi!l, J'fl!!lldi!Ht. (Charii!HI!
H6tlflltlh)

Review
Appeals
CQilillllssion, 236 E. 1bwn
·St., Columbus, Ohio 4321 ~.
iihtltte
614-466-ll950.
Officials !lllld the appeal must
It\ wtltln~ rtnd a copy
recet lied by lhe EI&gt;A director
wlthlrt lhtet days of tile flllng
with the t:o~nilssioo. .
A public hll!lling on OTE's
i!PI:&gt;IIcatlolllbr the penrtit was
held In Cheshire on Peb. 12,
dtuwltli! ptotests ftolli resideniM alreiuly oon~-erned wilh
the effix.1 t&gt;t emisslotts caused
by ruitl-)'Xllhitlon eqUlpinent at
011vln.
t'wo montlls lilldlbur days
Inter, MIP ill\rl the village of
.Cheshire ill\tlolltlced thli utility
~allmt will buy the villo:ge fur
S2tl miUlotl, jiltrtly to ru;swer
resldenlll' enVIronmehtal coh·
l!t!tl\s l'lll!il!d by a ''blue h~"
that settletl on Cheshln\ after
selective Clltnlytic l'eductitln
(SCtt) techlloli:li!Y . was
,lnund'ol!d llll!t May to reduce

oo

plant.
Citizens were concerned
with the use of latex to bind
the product, citing allergic
teactlons to latex and lhe addition of more chemicals to the
attnosphere slllmundlng the
plill\t alld village.
AEP a11110ltllctd Ill Jill\tiary
It would spend $7 million to
mitigate the haze's effect starting this mooth.
Cel'llllo dedlned to give a
cost estimate on oonstrucilon.
"We would preli:r not ,to get
into cost figures right now," he
said.
l'm:luction wlll stlltt in11ljediateiy after construction ends
and the plant is operable,
Cerullo udded.
OTE opemtes synfuel
plunts In West Virginlu;
Kentucky,
Pennsylvania,
Not1h Curollnn, Alnbartlll wtd ·

Utah.

I

OTE~s
rnove followed
MIP's sale of its Southern
Ohlo Coal Co. dlvlsioll to
COI\sol ~nc~y Inc .. ln 2001.
The Pirt~bu'¥11 t1nn hllll since
tlltn:;getl o~de tlmi~slotls. the closed the mules.
AEP olticials said the purlJTE officials presenlllt
he!trlng ~llred i'e!!ldetttl! Its chase of the village will allow
tmJCess fur maldng coal bri· for expansion of Gavin's
quette!l Wtlllld be limited-to the barge unlooding capabilities.

·all CHINlE
AND FilTER
AHIIIil:

THELIA THIMAI
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•

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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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