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                  <text>Friday, J.une 7, 2002

www.mydallylenUnel.~

IIUDQE

ACROSS 40 laldnlng

PHILLIP
ALDER

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W.Va. files against

Wrlnkll-

nollddog
2 Pllattcllnd
3 AIVP-.1

BY MARti HAu.aUPN

.it--

MHALI.BURNOMYDAILYREGISTER.COM

ll!l THE LEAD - The Los
Angeles Lakers Robert HOI'ry
. goes up for a basket against .
the New Jers~ Nets In Game
Q of the NBA Rnals. Lakers
lead the series 2.() (AP)
•

·D. eaths
'

'

1da May Richmond, 91
Mildred Smith Hites, 90
Virginia S. Aten, 83
.
Paul A. Thomas, 79 .
•William D. 'Bill' Bibbee, 75
Collin B. Pennington

.

..

-·

Weath•
·
..

High: 80s, Low: 60S

PEANUTS
'(OUR. STUPID D06 liAS
li« BLANKET A&amp;AIN !

I

No~tound

In·Ohio River
STAFF REPORT

I

Warmly • Quell • Jolly • Lawyer • YOU tell ME

I FRIDAY .

JUNE 71

In 1111 ·

CLASSIREDSI·.

"You'll only be charged for the time you actually use
the lawn equipment" the store owner said. "How will
you know how long I've used It?" the man asked . ' Easv..'
the owner said, "YOU tell MEl"

-----------·~~~~-----------

&amp;all•rdlly, June 1, 2002
Conditione ahould
be more pluHnt and
hopeful for you In the
y11r •hwcl than they
might have bHn lor
quill 10rnellm1. Good
thlnga could coma
•bout ·through pitt
favor• you hlv• done
lor othert who now
WlnllO" NCI~.
OI!MINt (M1y 21·
June ZO) • llornelhlng
of • llllltrtlllllllurelor
whloh you had
IIOretly hoped lilly
your Wly tocllly.
·It won't be anyt~
you hlvl to thlre
Olherl; It'll be 1n 111111
me~nt pereonally lor
you. Trying to petoh
· up 1 brol1811 _ ,
Th1

Aetro-Greph

Mttchrnaktr 01n htlp
you underlllnd whit
to do to make the
rtllllonehlp wor1r. Mall

12.71 to Matcllln8Ur,
c/o thle MWiptptf,
P.O. lox 1711, Murry
Hill lllllon, Ntw York,
NY 10111.
CANCER (June 21·
July 22) • llcliuee
you'll
k11p
thoughtlulnllt 1nd
Chlrrn uppermott In
your mind todly, It'll

lplll OVIt' Into 1H your ·· ·very luoky tod•y
c11111nge with othtre.
where alllana.. re
Netdl..l to uy,
oonoernecl. There 11 1
they'll think you're
good chlnot you mey
wonderful 1nd
mMt aomeont who
greoloul.
· will h1v1 1 potltlvt
LI!O (July 23· Aug.
elltot on you 1nd
22· How un11lllth of
become
very
you to put lht ntldl
1moort1nt In your tK..
·lnd oeree ol lrllndt
tAOITTAAtUI (Nov
lnd lltoolllll lbovt . 23· Doc. 21 ) T11kt
your own tod1y. Tht
which you thought
pto!l• lor whom
were 1 bit dltllttelul
you II ahow con01rn
or difficult to do oen
wHI not reldlly lorgll
Htlly be llkln 0111 of
your klndnllt to
todly wHhout 1ny Ill
"-·
lfllcll on you. Cltli'l
VIAOO (Aug. U•
up troubiiiOIIII
llpt. 22) 'toclly may
ohortl .whllt poaltlvt
be • 111111 when 101111
lnllut-lbound.
type of pertontl
CAPIIICOAN (Deo.
hllllftllllnl hi~~·"' for
12· Jln, ' " . . I Jolyou. It may h1v1
todly, 11e01u11 101n1
IOmllhlng to do wHh
of the gre1te1t
tllllfng tOgllhtr with•
be nellie you m1y
1on
who n
exptrltnot todoly lillY
l'llndlhlp you'd llkl
o - tiii'Otlgll llnlllng
to oultl¥lll.
up with thOH whoM
~~A(=-::;. ~~fu'i
ZO
llkltodly WIH win rou
• Fib. ttl Llbott of
th1 rnpeot of your
loft or doing lor your
. oonlilmp Dl'lrlll.
lovld Oftll will give
AlthOugh fOU lillY not
you g.... IIIIIIIGIIon
riiiiD lhlt 11 llrtt,
todly. Nothing ~II bl
lhtlr 11111111 lor you
more lmpoflll'l1 to you
will biDOrnl VIIY oltlr
thin mlklng thlngt
1nd vltlbll -tlml.
piiiHnt lor you 1nd
ICORPIO (OoL 24everybody around
Nov. 22) • You lillY be
you.

r. .,

.

i:t

PIICEI IFtb. 20 •
Mlroh 20) Pl1n to do
101111thfng with'
lrltndl todly, or like
cere of 1 long·•
ttlndlng no111
obllglllon you hive. In
either CIH, you will
be 1 p11111nt pereon
to be •round end will
win thl helltt of
Othtre.
ARII!S (M1rch 21 ~
April It) Don't b1
httltant to 1ootpt ~
11111H gilt today from
1omeone "'ho llklt
you. Thll pereon hit
no hidden 1genda;
tlht 11mp1y lhlnkl you
m1y •nloy It 11 1
greoloue ,_._, •
TAURUS (April ZO •
lily ZO) .,_lillY
11y .-t~tnt ntot to
you lodly llkl "How
well you look" or
"Whht • good pereon
yaou .,,,. Thla
unnpntld
1 oompllrntnl m1y put
.you In 1 hippy lreme
or mind ror tht r111 or
thtdly.

CROWN ·ciTY
Authorities searched in and
around the K.H. ~utler Boat
WAITING FOR FLOOD - Troy Dudding eats lunch at the West VIrginia Department of
Access Area off Ohio 7
Transportation building In Point Pleasant while rain runoff comes In, despite the placement
F iday after receiving a
of sand bags. Employees at the facility said the building floods every time an Inch or more
report of a body being spot·
of rain falls. (Dan Hermes)
·
ttd floating in the Ohio Rtver.
. No body was found and the
search was called off at 5
p:m., authorities said.
Gallia County 911 was
informed at 1:38 p.m. by a
caller that a body was seen in ·
who •ve been here a while new building and they keep
BY DAN HIRMU
tile river about 15 feet awa.}'
OHEAMESOMVOAILYREGISTER.COM
tell me is that it's a couple going round and round," he
from the boat ramp 1 sheriff s
POINT PLEASANT ...:. times a year, on average."
said.
Lt. Joe Browning said ..
Mounds
of
old
tires
aren't
The building was con·
Regarding health issues,
Gallia County Sheriff's
the only problem the West structed in 1940 and is visi· Mason County Department
Office, Guyan Township vol·
Virginia Department . of bly in need 'of repair - or a of Health's Jeff Fowler, a
unteer firefighters and the
Transportation currently has wrecking baiJ, When it rains, registered sanitarian, said
EMS rescue team responded
to deal with. Every time an water starts building up in that "unless the sewers are
to· the area and conducted a
inch
or more of rain falls, .the the parking lot and then it backing up, the rain runoff
search, said Browning. , ·
building floods.
.
Authorities also alerted cit·
starts proceeding into the shouldn't pose a problem.
The
a$ency's
web
site building. On Thursday,
izens living along the river,
"If the sewers are backinft
opens with the following water was running into up, that's a different story,' .
officials in Lawrence and
statement! "The Division of Watterson's office, the Fowler added.
Mason counties, the Robert
. Hi~hways plans, designs, lunchroom, bathroom and
C. Byrd Locks and Dam and
Who is to blame for the
butlds .and maintains the several other areas of the poor conditions? Watterson
towboats on the river about
state highway system. To be building.
the situation, Browning said.
· .
puts in square on the shoul·
sure the more than 34,000
ders
of DOT District I
"We
lose
35
to
40
percent
miles of state roads are safe of the building when it rains Engineer
John Dawson and
and operate at peak.efficien· one inch or more," his assistant,
Dennis King.
cy, the DOH performs many
"I
report
directly
to the
Watterson
said
as
he
surfunctions, such as highway
research, traffic regulation, veyed water literally pouring office in Charleston and
right-of-way acquisition, into his office. "The weather don't get much more than lip
' . • lll:thlll- 12 ......
..
safety and weight enforce· has been· bad recently, but service," Watterson said.
'They don't like me, so we
ment, and dissemination of this is ridiculous."
A7
calendars
·
"It's
nasty,"
said
Kim
don't get anything up here.
highway information."
C2·4
Celebrations
With all of those (unctions Kearns, a three-r,ear craft I've went out on my own
02-7
Classifieds
to ~rform, you'd think worker at the facility. "You looking for another location.
insert
they d be on top of the build· can't get in or out of the · 'The neighbors have been
Comics
ings their employees work building, can't park, can't complaining for years with
Cl
Dear Abby
out of. Not in Point Pleasant. get to equipment. The secre· the dust and the noise. The
A4
~ditorials
"I've only been here about tary sits in there with water tires are only a temporary
A6
Obituaries
10 months now, and it's hap· around her feet with ali that problem but as rou can see,
·
pened
four or five times," electrical stuff around. In the the building IS in poor
Region
A2
said
Mason
County bathroom you have water shape," he added.
Bl·B
~ports
Repeated attempts to conHighway AdminiBttator Bob around your feet, in the
A2
weather
tact Dawson were unsucWatterson about the flood· lunchroom. . · .
ing. "What the employees
"They keep promising us a cessful.
' C&gt; :zov.l Ohio Vlllty Publllhl"' CO.

flooding plagues DOT.workers

I .I _.-

I' I· I 17 I 0

Buy, Stll or Trade

Marchi,
Snowden
slam action

Dttlllls, A2

I

Index
..

,,

LOCKED OUT - The gate at the Hlghlanders Alloys LLC
plent Is locked. The company abruptly closed Thursday
and 160 workers are out of a job. Company officials
said that the closure would only be for a few weeks so
more operating capitol can be raised. (Mark Hallbum)

City offidal~
actions target
of probe

..

I I. I I I .I
I

The normal administrative
process can· take from ~ill:
months to a year.
Highlanders shut down
operations Thursday after·
noon, the day after employees
walked off the job to protest·
bounced payroll checks.
l;arlier this week, owner Dr.
Boris Bannai said he would
make good on the checks and
was working with investors to
keep the company afloat.
On Friday, Bannai, and
Highlanders' Project Manager
Leighton Wolfe, were not in
the office and did not return·
telephone calls for comment.
The plant gates were locked,
and only office staff appeared
to be working.

....: .
.
.•

::

i

NEW HAVEN- The West
Virginia Department of Labor
has taken the unusual step of
filing a complaint for. injunctive relief against Highlanders
Alloys for $250,000 in back
wages for employees. ·
According to the complaint,
"The defendants owe 160 of
their employees in excess of
$250,000 in unpaid wages and
benefits accrued during the
pay periods ending May 26,
200 I, (sic) June 2, 2002, and
June 9, 2002.
"The defendants also owe ·
its employees an undeterminant amount of overtime com· ·
pensation as a result of work
performed. by its employees
over a penod of two 24 hour
shifts."

Under West Virginia law, if
the court determines the
employees are owed the
wages, they will also l:le eligible for damages.
"The problem is that the
employees were owed for two
weeks, plus the damages,"
Commissioner of Labor Jim
Lewis said.
"We took this action instead
of the normal administrative
action for two reasons. I) The
amount of the employees
involved. 2) The amount of
money involved;' he added.
"We really .have a concern
about the financial responsi·
bility of the company. We
wanted to make sure that if
there was an action of bank·
ruptcy, that the employees
were the highest prionty."

Dttalls. A6

1""

I

1.25

1

I ArmbOnl

· Erich
Fromm
M-ol
the . . .
c...-'-"-.:....L.....u......:....t.c...tiiOL.....l......u wrote, "Greed is a
35 Crenny
bottomless pit which ·
ion
exhausts the person in
. 37 Oneol
·~~tholl
an endless effort to
5
H A-t otltter • Oilnl
satisfy the need with·
IT WOVLI&gt; NfVe,
out ever reaching sat·
isfaction."
,..
viOIEIC --- ~·M A
That can apply at
the bridge tabfe too ••
MtrtMAil&gt; ANI&gt;
as in this deal. Would
YOV'IEf A
you prefer to declare
in or defend against
MfiEE MAN.
four heart~?
After South rebids
two hearts. North,
holding a minimum
response, could justify u pass; but with
five trumps, an ace,
and a ruffing value in
. MAY~E TH I •
spades, he squeaks a
CMI KENS
WOUL RAVE
raise.
.
RECOGNIZED
You should opt to
HIM !!
defend. West leads
the club king and
continues the suit.
South ruffs the third
CELEBRITY CIPHER
round, cashes the
by LUll C1mpo1
spade ace, ruffs a
Coiobrlty Clphor oryptograONifl 01111811 loom quototlono by f1mou1
spade in the dummy,
poopie, pooll .... _..,, Eacn - I n tho &lt;tphtoll1andl tor 1nothor.
Todly's clue: fJ equal• V
returns to hand with .a
'YJVHYE
XYCAP
ROT .. .
trump, and rufrs an·
other spade in . the
YGYH
JOH J u I!PJTH
dummy.
.
flf.Mttl\~ WI-leN 1 ~t&gt;..IOYOIJ
Now comes the key
NHJNKH
PPJ OHIHY TOCL
t-ta.D m~n,;c:.r MTINt;. ~
moment of the deal.
If East greedily over·
Tf\lt-IC:&gt; /'I:)~~
XOZCOL
OVJXE
OOMI!PCOO
ruffs, the contract
makes. Suppose East
OOMVJLM.'
shifts to a diamond.
South wins with dum·
v K y E y H M0 J K L T
my's ace; plays a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'II Hitler !nvadld htlll would make
trump to hand (which
11
a favorable relerence lo lhe devil In lht House or
removes East's final
Common~.•- w. Churchill
heart); ruffs a spade, -TIIA_T_D.;.At.;.LY-..;-..~o...;,..;..,:~-:~-:::-::-:::--::---::::-::::trumps a diamond to ,u 11 u 1
return to hand, and - - - - - cashes the queen·
eight of spades. If in· 0 r:::''!:!"mb\~"!o,:,
stead East leads his law to form four olmplo words.
I'L.t;'(ERS.IJast club, conceding a r--:-::-:o-:-:-or:---,
I
1
ruff-and-discard, de-,
0 RL AL C
1
clarer ruffs in hand, h-.,.1..;...,1....;;,_.;;12~1--1
trumps a spade, re·
. .
. .
turns to hand with a :::::;:~~:;:~__,
heart, and finishes the
E X0 0 I
~
spades. .
•
Let East start a diet.
. . . . .
lf he doesn't overruff,
I
·
gotten a perfect
• IWA..JI!l'----'&amp;.J..L..-.Jii!Oi&gt;l South is finished , Pery T RTS
grade
was bragging to the
haps declarer will n:-.,--,!"""'1~-r--f:!. otherc1111mates. My teacher put
cross to hand with a4
15
me In my place by announcing
1'"7'------;~,-C~IIOC-0-~-&gt;1'-E-CII..IP_O_R._P_E_AN_U_T~ trump (West must
. .. that !here Is i big difference be·
I-lOW CAN t 6ET
... ""TER .. NO COCONUT. .. EAC"
throw a diamond) and
tween nearly right and ~ ••••••
IT BACK WITHOUT
"
"" 1
ruff another spade,
Z A R L E B right
A 816 FI611T?
COOKIE DELIVERED DAILV
but again East refuses
Compltio rhe chucklo quoood '
MV
AT FOUR IN
food, discarding. De- 1
. . . . . . 1
.
by lillln' In rhe mtlllne wordl
cJarer can CIISh dum·
you dOYelop rooo ""' No. 3 bolow.
my's diamond •ce
PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
and ruff a diamond,
' but East takes the last
6.
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
two tricks with the
GET ANSWER
heart jack. and a mi·
nor-su1t wmncr.
SCIIAM-LITS ANIWIIS

com""

THE BORN LOSER

47,.....,
10 Wvta or

24 POwiiOII

21 ~tin I

Openlnalead: • K

programs, Al

benefits, 11

PI"

41

"::"
II=.
T11

• A.Qttll
• A K Ql

Fair helps promote

tort refonn

Ql'lnlll

14 w-·1'I'IMICII
II "0111"
11 Pood
telltl
I ,,.
ru'rllnt II lu1lrlnr
17 WIUt.,...
1!18ootumn
14 Orialful
._..
IIArlb

....
•

.._
UAnd,far

INSIDE.

Attorney debates·

Galloping toward
success, C1

11101

1........

MO EY

TEMPO

NIA Croa,worcl Puaale

•

BY KEVIN KIU'I'
KKELLYOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
GALLIPOLIS An
investigation has been con·
ducted .into the actions of
two Gallipolis city commissioners, a probe theX have
labeled · "frivolous and
"childish."
City Solicitor Douglas
Cowles was asked in April
by Commissioners Gary
Fenderbosch,
Richard
Moore und Celestine
Skinner to investigate Bob
Marchi
and
Caroll
Snowden, for alleged viola·
tion of Section 5 of the city
charter by interfering with
the city manager's aminis·
trative authority.
Marchi is also accused of
uttering a . disparaging
remark about one of the
commissioners during an
April 3 visit he and
Snowden made to the city
maintenance garage .
On May 7, folfowing an
executive session at the
commission's
regular
·monthly meeting, a motion
to conduct polygraph inter·
views into "potential misconduct" and employing a
hearing . officer
was
apgroved.
The commission, upon
the presentation of all infor·
mat10n and the recommen·
dation of the hearing offi·
cer, shall within 30 day ~.
under Section S of the charter, make a decision as to
what, if anything, is to be
done with such informa·
·tion," the motion said.
Upon the advice of legal
· counsel, Fenderbosch, who
is the commission president, declined comment on
the investigation, as did

Cowles. who could not
comment on its status.
"It'' all very frivolous
and a waste of taxpayers'
money," said Marchi, now
servin~ a second term as
commissioner. "I've been
going to the garage for 40
years and nobody's ever
said anything about it.
"No one on the commission heard what I said as far
as the union is concerned or
about derogatory remarks."
he added. "ll's all hearsa('
"I think it's very childish
and a lot to do about noth·
in~," said Snowden, who
jomed the commission this
year.
Marchi, who was reelect·
ed last year, and Snowden
have been vocal in their disagreements with the other
commissioners and outgo~
ing City Manager E. V.
Clarke Jr. on several issues.
In the past year, those
issues . have included non·
recognition of the American
Federation of State, County
and Municipal Employees
union local that formerly
represented more than 20
city workers, privileJ!e of
the floor at commission
meetings, the budget and
recently an ordinance pro·
viding supplemental cover·
age for elected officials,
employees and appointees
involved in civil action.
Those disagreements,
.Marchi and Snowden main·
tain, have inspired the
investigation,
which
Marchi called a "witch
hunt" in a written statement
outlining the situation. He
also alle$ed the other three
commissioners are '.'trying
to get rid of' him and
Snowden.
"We have opinions on
what we feel is best for the
city," Marchi said. "If they
don't want to accept our
Pin•• iH Prabe, AI

Med1icare P,artnen

Centers

Medicare &amp; Meclicaid Services

Free and Open to Ohio Senior Citizens in the Community

Tuesday, June 11, 2002 • 1·• 4 pm
in lhe Hospital's Education &amp; Conference Center
Refreshments will be served.
If you plan on attending, please RSVP to lhe HMC Marketing Office
at 1740)

446·5055

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�lllltS'b

..let tm!. ._ !

w. ._. •

Task forte arJorAs

•.

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West' VIrginia weather
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The retlon••

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The National Weather
Service says mostly sunny
weather is forecist for
Sunday with highs in the
upper 80s.
Sunrise Sunday will be It
6:02 a.m.
Partly cloudy skies are In
the forecalt for Monday.
with highs in the upper
80s. The next chance of
rain will not be seen llntil
JWednesday, forecasters
said.
Weather rorecast:
Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs In the upper 80s.
South winds S to 10 mph
becoming west early In the
afternoon.
Sunday night ... Mostly

~leiU'. Low~ in the lower
60s
Monday ... Partly ctoudy.
Ht'~hs ,·n .... up~ 80s
··
•
ondaym~ nig· · t... Mostly
clear. Lowl in the mid .60S.
Elltendttl rorecut:
Tuesday... Putl)' cloudy.
Hlahs In the mid 80s.
Wednesday ... PartlYcloudy with a chance of
showers aDd thllnderstormt. Lows in the mid .
60s and highs In the lower
80s.
Thursday... Mostli clear.
Lows In the mid 60s and
hiahs near 80.
·
Frlday... Mostly .clear.
Lows SS to 60 ud highs in
the upper 70s. ·
·

Priddy seeks
property retum
·read about non A3
Correction Polley

·

Our main concern In 111 atorin Ia
10 be •ccurate. It you know of 1111
error In 11101y, call 1111 newaroom
at 4411-23-42 or 892-21,55.

.

.

Newa Deallrtm•nta
· Ge!!lpol!e

· Departmanl eltlllltlone ere:
Mllnegl"' ecllor
Ntwe editor
Alllgnlng tclllot

Pomeroy

Ext. 18
Ext. 23

Ext. 20
Eld. 21

Depanm.nte~naare:

a.-.r Ml"''lf

,_wa
Newt

Ext. 12
l:xt. 13
Ext. 14

aep.

:rood\·
ine!e~

~ ffllt Slate lllld fedeJ..

Ill fund:iJI&amp; source&amp;.
"lfwec..._ t1WC tol_eiher,
tile chances DR ptlltet fOf
Ibis to beeome a ICU~
· ...
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Commi··'on•• . "'~ ~...o
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MOOte.

Rates ·

Cruise-in to

celebrate .
Father's Day

Are

'

June 14 ·
OAWPOUS - Ole Car
Cl!!b I!K. of Oalllpolls will
observe
Father's
Day,
"Celebrating the Old M.n arid
His Old Car;" with a cruise-in
in the City hrlc 011 Friday. June
14 from S·8 p.m. •
The public is Invited to

'
•

www.mydallyt~IMJne .com

wViw.mydlllylltr1tlnel.com

E·mall

newaOmydallytrliMJne.oom
newaOmy~lynntlnet.oom

,,

'

1Raccoon Creek Celebration Day .

I

attend and see more !han SO
antigue and modified l!thicles

on displ!ly. Admission is flee.
''The collectOMu hobby. hilS
been t1 sia,nilic.nt funily uc:tivity for millions of Anieric1111s
for decades," a club spolcesman
said. "II has tllways been a
•
favorite summertime t1tli ~lty,
'
and Father's Dt1y orten sianals
the unofficitll start of the old·
cu show StilSon."
For the third year.
Hemminas Motor News, the
"bible" of the collector car
•
hobby, is htlpina more than
600 c:u clubs around the coun·
try, Including Ole Car Club
Inc., promote Father's Day
activities with event announce•
ment signs. dash plaq_ues, park·
ing signs and door pnzcs lilona
with a listing on Its web site,
500 3rd Ave. QaUlpolls 446-0315
www.hemmings.com. To date,
•
201 S. Front St. Oek HIU 682·7733
•
more than 87,000 collector cars
tl1't signed up for !hcse events.
More information t1boul the
Ole Car Club Inc. is available
by contacting the oraanlzation
'
at 750 Second Ave., Oalllpolls.
General information on cu col·
lecting can be obtained by call·
Ina Hemmings Motor News at
1·800·227-4373, extension
Alll-~rr.Jtplrnfi· ~~~.s!!!,!."!.,~.Mt~
fC\
SSO,
or
loggln~
onto
their
site
"'~T:,,
-~~":.:'flli,.
Mw
~~~
1
.
- ..:.__J
1 _ _ _ __;__ _ _ _ _ _
J.-_ __..._ _11 _....;._ _ _ _ _ _
.at www.hemnunas . c~m .

111 one of lair 111
IIIICIIIIIti,_IPICiflc

.

·; promotes environmental responsibility ·
'

thdttQ StMhf'M I'IMO t Of l~w~t ~1m
~to~~ ~Ids t~tttl to .19~
~OO~Mt~.

to

OAK HILL

•

_Healthy Start
Healthy Families

''

•••111\t\r ......... 0~ 00~\ ~lth ta~
fof the tmll~ ft'!Mil)1 · pa~tt ~ND

Do~\olvtab

Holp"--CM

BANKS

On the web

"

IllS.

loll C!Ry s. office Ud
liMb' Newl:llaA from the
statl of U.S. Rep. TW

Sunny, warm in area on Sunday . ~~ ~

span.

•

ro.choo·

wendell~ liS'«
Milt
or~

__

Winning lottery nurribers

\,_IIMI StNICM

IMI\tltat.

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Mllfltal Mlltlttl

S\abaltii'M AW..

AMIN\IdiMGMI

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40 992·2217

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: SUndlly. June I, 2CICI2

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aos1ncset

•

PATRIOT

GaRipDIII, Ohio • Pomero), Ohio

Point Plu unt, W.Va.

Ohio v.ttey Publishing Co.

•

Den~

PubiiiMr
~KIIyHIH

Cont10IIel'
Lfttm r. lfW #llliW ~ ~. 7Jt,y

,,_,.,~Ins

,._ JINJ .,....

AU~

aw1IJl!d Iii ~ ffN _ . , , 1lpM dllhtt-Wt ~- Hlq' Mt" 1t...&amp;.!r.
"No njjpllll I~ will 6re ,..lllifll~ UWrs dldlfW lit 1
·• rt*f MM. Mmonlllf

Ohio
~partment
of
Transportation announced
lhat the sectioa of Ohio
115 between Patriot Road
and Smokey Row Road wiU
be closed from 8 a.m. to
2:30 p.m. daily . beginning
Mon~y to allow for slip
repa.tr.
Traffic may use local
roads as a detour. The project is scheduled for completion Friday, June 14.

tin!

Crime Watch

-n.,
-,......lilk'l.
.
ephtiolts npnsml bt dtf rol•""' ,._, •~ 1M ('OftJ"ts•s -fiMlHtio 1Wif,
Ce. "s ftllhoritll ArtNrnf. ••Ins ttdtnwiu .....
,._~

CADMUS Walnut
Township Crime Watch wiU
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at
the Cadmus Community
Center. Everyone· is urged
to attend.

NATIONAL VIEW

Youth talent
show

it
Congress sends message to INS:
Blundering fW longer wlerated
~

ftle San l)iego \Jnioft.'fribune, on rhe irreparable iNS:

... Two new reports, from the independent inspectors general
of the Social Security Administwtion .and the Justice
Oepartrnent, provide fr~h ammunition to INS critics in
Coi1$fess who say the agency is so hopelessly beyond refonn
that 1t must be abolished.
The Social' Security Administration's inspector general,
James Huse, reported that some 100,000 foreigners fraudu·
lently obtained Social Security numbers in 2000, well before
Ziglar took over the INS. The immigration agency issues
many "f the documents which noncitizens use to prove eligi·
bility for Social Security cards- including arrival and depar·
ture fonns, visas and green .cards.
.
.
· And since Sept. II. Huse said, his agency has asked Ziglar's
agency to help verify that the foreign identity &lt;locuments it is
presented are authentic. However, said. Ruse, Social Security
has not gotten the help it needs from .t·he INS.
·
Which is cause for special concern, said liuse, because the
"tragedie~ of Sept. II demonstrate that the misuse of Social
Security numbers and identity theft are 'breeder' offenses
with the ability to facilitate crimes beyond our imagination."
In fact, since Sept 11 federal law enforcement authorities
have apprehended a disquieting number of foreigners who
have used Social Security numbers to obtain airport security
badges, thereby gaining access to airplanes and other restricted areas. In fact, the 'f!ransportation Department's inspector
general recently reponed lllat 367 workers have been atTested
.at 1·6, airports. including '130 working for Washington-area air-

OUR READERS' VIEWS
'

having room for cats, I cannot quali·
early age sterilization.
.
• Female dogs pass bloody fluid for fy her statement. The humane society
Dear Editor:
about 10 days, twice a year, as part of in Gallia County is the Anim'l
1 respond to the May 29 Rusher col- their breedmg cycle. Spaying your Welfare League (AWL). We are .a
small group of volunteers and we do
umn, "As Long as Castro is in power, dog eliminates th1s.
sanctions should continue." Why
• Neutering your male dog or cat not operate shelters. The county does
·
h ld prevents testicular tumors and may not have a cat shelter. A few AWL
does Rus her say sanctions
s ou
prevent prostate problems. Neutering members, using their own resourc~s.
continue?
.·
· ''His (Castro's) regime exhibits all also increases the possibility of peri- do take in kittens and cats from time
the characteristics of tyral\ny at it~ anal tumors and hernias, which are to time. Finding loving, .responsible
worst: Political prisoners.. total denial commonly observed in older, unal- guardians is difficult. f you must giv.e
tered dogs.
up an animal it is vital to sctee}l
of f ree speech, and rigid state control
• Because neutered cats are less prospective homes carefully.
·
of the economy."
If you advertise in the newspaper.
When the Cuban version of likely to roam the threat of abcesses
never
say, "Free to a good home," the
Marxist-Leninism finally collapses, caused by bites and diseases transmitfive favorite words of "bunchers" ·
Cuba will once again fall under the ted by fighting are greatly reduced.
• A neutered male will be less who sell animals to laboratory dealdominion of ruthless imperial capital. tempted to leave your property and ers. Always check for references and
II will become part of a giant hemi- cross that dangerous highway search- visit the prospective home. Don't
spheric free trade bloc in which the
Cuban people will have the privile.,.e ing for a mate. Ninety percent of the hand over the animal until you are
" millions of cats killed on our roads
satisfied, and don't be
of competing against the other work- each year are unsterilized. About 80 co~pletely
afrat.d to say "no"; your animal
ing peoples in the bloc for the lowest percent of the dogs hit by vehicles friend's
life may depend on it. The
each year are unneutered males.
wage.
only
other
option is eutha[\asil,t..
Right-wingers like Rusher blow a • Neutered males are also less like· Contact a local
·j&gt;Ortli. ,..
.
for euthanasia
llhe Ho\lse overwhelmin~ly approved a bill last month that
lot of smoke about freedom, but they ly to mark every one of your (or your costs. And contact vet.
a
member
AWL
possess a skewed view of it. As histo- neighbor's) expensive shrubs with his for financial assistance, since of
would replace the INS W1th two separate bureaus, one of
the
ani·
which would handle services for immisrants, the other the
ry shows, they are quite content with urine as well as inside the house.
,
dictatorships situated on the political
• One plus 1 equals 420,000. One mats were dropped off.
&lt;enfurcement -of immigration laws. A sim•lar measure is pendln
summary,
I
urge
citizens
to
be
ing in the Senate. Clearly, lawmakers mean to send a message
right. The terrible conditions in the unspayed female cat and her mate, responsible for the animals in their
to Ziglar, and to rhe unwieldy bureaucracy he inherited, that
"south" were there long before Castro and theit unaltered offspring results care.
Again, have your pet spayed or
ibus·iness as usual .at the INS will no longer be tolerated.
came to power. Most of the misery in 420,000 kittens in seven years.
neutered.
Make sure your pet ID tags
. has been produced by America's
• One unspayed female dog, her
or
microchip
implants. Take your pet
right-wing military client govern- mate, and their offspring add up to
ments - themselves largely · con- 67,000 puppies in six years.
. to the veterinarian for regular check·
• Approximately 2,500 kittens and ups and vaccinations, and most
trolled by the giant American fruit
and cotl'ec companies.
puppies are born each hour ·in the importantly, pay attention to your pet.
·ev THE ASSOCIATED P~ESS
Ca~tro hasn't produced a•!ything in United States. Only one in nine will F.ood, water, shelter and veterinary
f()(!ay is Sunday, June 9, the I60th day of 2002. There are
ter.ms of tyranny th.al hasn t already find a home. The rest will be killed at care ure vital, but animals ·are social
2{)5 &lt;lays left in the year.
ex1sted, for generations. And as for , a shelter, which is better than being beings who love companiotljhip mote
T'Oday's Highlight in History:
Rusher'S co~ment that :·cu,ba played drowned or dropped off to fend for than anything else. God entrusts us to
On lune 9, A.D. 68, the Roman Emperor Nero committed
a large part m comm.umsm s atte!!lpt themselves. Pets who are dropped off, be compassjonate toward other living
silicide.
to de,stroy the Umted States.. I tragically, the results are cruel treat- beings, an&lt;Pa'nimals are sentient liv·
On this date:
haven t had such a .good laugh smce ment, starvation, disease, freezing, ing beings. They experience fear, disln 1860, the first dime novel - ..Ma!aeska: The Indian Wife
Dan Rather, on field .ass1gnment, highway death, procurement for appointment, excitement, sadness,
of-the White Hunter" - ,was published.
research laboratories, training tools happiness, love and they feel pain.'
dressed up hke Gunga Dm.
In 1870, author 'Charles Dickens died inGodshill. England.
Jeff Fields for fighting dogs, and more unregu- All you have to do is look into their
ln 1940, NorWay suiTCndered to the Naz1s dunng World War
Middleport lated breedmg. So don't use your pets eyes. If you don't take the time to,do
11.
\. '
to explain the birds and bees to your this, then maybe your pet would be
better off with someone who will. ·
~~~ 1~, about I00 people died when a tornado struck
Worcester, Mass.
·
Christine Myers Cozu
Care for your pets children.
• The one-time cost of spaying or
In t'954, Army counsel Joseph N. Wekh asked Sen. Joseph
Gallipolis
.d
neutering is less than the expense
It MCCarthy, "Have you no sense of decency, sirr' during the
Dear E ltor:
involved in raising puppies and kit·
Arnw-McCarthy beruings.
Protect the village
l am writing. this letter in response tens and is far tess than communities
· In 1969. tbe U.S. Senate ronfinne4 Warren Burger to be the
to Donna McGuire's letter that mist pay toward animal control and
new chief ju~tice of the United States, succeeding Earl Warren.
appeared in your paper on May 26. euthanasia. If you . need financial
Dear Editor: . .
. .
lli 1973, Secretariat became horse racing's first Tri.ple Crown
White I appreciate Mrs. McGuire's assistance to pay or neuter your pet, . The sale of the 'VIllage of Cheshtre
Winner in 25 yean; by winning the Belmont Stakes.
··
··
concern about people dropping off contact a member of the Animal . 1s not a done deal.
ln 1978, leaders of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
unwanted kittens, 1 found it very Welfare League. The local veterinari·
As the owner of property whi~h
Saini:S struck down a 148-year-old policy of excluding black
ironic that her own cats had not been ans have a list of volunteer board probably has the largest payroll m
mel! from the Monnon priesthood.
members and their phone numbers.
Ches~ire, I person.ally feel .the mayor
spayed.
ln. 1980, romedian Richard Pry?r suffered almost fa~al bums
The overpopulation of cats and
•. Between 8 and 10 million com· and vtllage counc1l are trymg to sell
at h1s San Fernando Valley, Calif., horne when a m1xture of
dogs in Gallia County is a serious pan ion animals are killed each year in me out to A.EP. I' think AEP should
freebase rocaine exploded.
problem that will not be resolved America due to tack .of homes. They ~lean up t~e•r act, forget. a~ut bU)'·
ln 1985, American educator Thomas Sutherland was kidovernight. But the number of home- are killed either by a painless lethal mg the VIllage, a!Jd eh!Junate tlie
napped In Lebanon - he was released in November 1991
less pets can be decreased sub.stan- injection, or by undesirable methods problems the pJant IS c.ausmg.
·
·along with fellow hostage Ten-y Waite.
. · ·
tially if people would only be respon- like carbon monoxide or decompresBuying the VIllage w11l not alleviate
Tell years ago: Secretary of State James A. Baker Ill con·
sible pet guardians, which means pre- sion chambers, or shot with a gun. tn future lawsuits from pe~ple living in
'0\llded two days of anns talks with Russian Foreign Minister
venting unwanted litters by having many areas where a practice called .the area who are subJected to the .
Andrei Ko~v without an agreement on deep cuts in tong- ·
their pets sterilized - spaying "pound seizure·• is permitted, "blue plume."
· · ' .
nmge missiles. Vice President Dan Quayle, addressing
females .an neutering males.
unclaimed animals can be given or The mayor and the council are SliP.·
Southern Baptists in Indianapolis, condemned the ..11\edia
1 constantly inform people of the sold to laboratories, where their short posed to act for the benefit of the VII·
elite." 'Saying, ..1wear their scorn as a badge of honor."
importance of pet sterilization, and in live·s are far from painless and they la~e, not sell it down the river. I don't
. Five years ago: Air Force Gen. Joseph Ralston ga.ve up his
thmk these officials contacted the
return I get excuses as to why they are eventually euthanized.
ful;ht to become chainnan -of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, his can·
won't spay or neuter their pet. And all
At Galli a County's dog pound, dogs majority of the residents before makdidacy &lt;loomed by the clamor over his admission that he'd had
ate exactly that - excuses. If you . are held for approximately three to ing this offer to AEP. As they own
~n adulterous affair years earlier.
.
truly care and love your pet, you will five days. If dogs are not adopted or major elements in the heart of the viiOne year ago: China and the United States announced an
have her spayed and hun neutered. reclaimed, the dog warden euthanizes !age, of course they and their kin will
68reement 01'1 faro\ subsidies 31\d other remaining issues blockHere are .reasons why:
.
them. According to his June 2, 2002, reap the greatest benefits.
Ing Beijirtg's bid to join the World Trade Otganization. The
• S!)aymg your pet before her fiTst. ·report, out of 512 dogs, 419 have
But those on fixed. incomes, and I
Colorado Avalanche won the Stanley Cop b~ defeating the
breedmg cycle greatly reduces her ·been killed, 29 were reclaimed 63 feel sure there are several cannot
dctendil\g champion New Jersey Devils 3-1 m game seven.
chances of developing breast cancer were adopted, and one was destroyed possibly duplicate their prop~rties for ·
Jenni~tCapriati beat Kim Clijsters 1-6, 6-4,,12-10, to win the
a~d co~pletely ehmmates the threat out in the field. And what is very dis· "twice the county appraised value~·
French Open. Point Given won the Belmont Stakes.
of uten.ne a~d ovar.1an cancer and appointing is the fact that spaying the attorneys are offering.
·
Today's Binhdays: Guitarist Les Paul is 87. Fonner World
utenne mfec,hon, wh1ch are common and neutering of adopted dogs is not The action by the village officials ls
Bank Pte~idel\t and Defense Secretary RobertS. McNamara is
occurrences m unaltered females. The required. So the county is trying to . most certainly taking undue advari86. Movie writer-producer-director George Axelrod is 80.
sooner you spay rour female, the bet- control the animal population by tage of those who can least afford the
Actress Mona Freen\an is 76. Broadcast journalist Marvin
terhe.r h~alth Will be m the future. killing dogs, .and yet sterilization is sellout.
Kalb is 72. Comedian Jackie Mason is 68. Actor Joe Santos i~
The hkehhood of developmg mam- not enforced. (The Gallia County
It would appear it might be a time
66. Author Letty Cottin Pogrcbin is 63. Rock musician Jon
!llary tumors or uterine infections Animal Welfare League is not affili- for a recall vote on the mayor and the
Lord is 61. Actor Michael J. Fox is 41. Writer-producer Aaron
mcreases the longer a female goes ated with the dog pound. The dog village council to replace them with
Sorldn ("The West Wing") is 41. Actor Johnny Depp is 39.
unspayed. As long as a kitten or warden operates the dog pound and people who want to keep and protect
Jazz musician Wayman Tisdale is 38. Actress Gloria Reuben is
puppy weighs more than two pounds his supervisors are the county com- the village, not wipe it off the face of
38. Rock musician Dean Felber (Hoolie &amp; the Blowfish) is 35.
and is two months old, he or she can missioners.)
.
Gallia County.
~ock musician Dean Dinning (Toad the Wet Sprobket) is 35.
be neutered or spayed . Many veteri·
• As far as Mrs. McGuire 's comDouglas J, Wetherholt
Musidlin Ed Simons is 32. Actress Natalie Portman is 21.
narians are practicing perfectly safe ment about the Humane Society not
•Gallipolis

Rethinking Cuba

TODAY IN HISTORY

.

.•

•

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Emblem Club
199 will spons6r the annual
youth talent show on
Saturday, July 6 during the
Gallipolis River Recreation
Festival. The event will be
10 a.m. on the main stage at
the parkfront.
All area children are
· in.vited to participate.
Talent is divided into age
categories, and both solo
and ensemble divisions are
··available. There is no fee
:.for e.ntry. Pre-registration is
requued.
·.. The deadline for entry is
··friday, June 28, no excep·
tions.
Registration forms can be
''picked up and dropped off
·at both Empire Furniture
-and the Gallia County
·-Chamber of Commerce on
or before June 28. ·
, First and second place
·"finishers will receive tro·
-phies and each participant
will receive a certificate.
·Out of state judges are
1 used. Talent is evaluated on
the basis of originality,
· stage presence, crowd
I appeal and aptitude. In the
· case of group ensemble
· com{'Ctition, synchroniza:·tion ts also considered.
· · For details, contact Kim
·Canaday days at 446-1875,
or evemngs before 9 at 446. 7538.

..

· ROad closin1
'- GALLIPOLIS
· Mitchell Road will be
' closed for removal and
· replacement of culverts,
\ spot pavement and bern
repairs startin$ Monday at 8
a.m.,
Gallta
Coun'ty

Engineer

Glenn

Smitb

Of Sparri n1 between teSi·
dents of the Gellia CQWily
The road will reopen viilage of Cheshire an.d
Friday, June 21 at 3 p.m., Americu Eleclric Power
Smith said .. Scheduling may (AEP). a deal has appaient·
change, dependinJ on the ly been s.t rud to sel1 the
weather. Motonsts are entire community.
"Clouds of CoECm," a
asked to use local roads as
detours.
half-hour documentary produced by the news. depart·
menl of WOUBJWOllB·
TV. wiil focus on· the:
issues
GALLIPOLIS - City AEPtCheshire
Manager E. V. Clarke Jr_ is Wednesday at 8 p.m.
The · documentary will
reminding citizens that city
provide
a retroSpeclive of
crews will be removing
flowers from the cemeteries · the tug-of-war between the
starting Monday, in acwr- town and the Guin plant,
dance with the following examine tbe posiliOM of the
compan~ and the communi·
ordinance:
decorations shall only be ty, and 10vestigate the hid·
placed in the cemetery on den costs of ensing 1 way;
the following holidays: of life for the residents of
Memorial Day. Father's the middle-class. communiA
Day, Easter and Christmas. ty Cheshire.
.
AEP
says
the
$20
'milliOn
Cut or live flowers shall be
removed 10 days after the purchase is requiled to
holiday or funeral services. secure nearby land fot
Artificial flowers shall be expansion of new barge offremoved at that time with loading facilities and to crethe exception of flowers ate a buffer zone between
that are located on the mon· the Gavin Plant and its
ument and do not create a neighbors.
But families living in the
problem during the maintenance of the cemeterr. town say the buyout is
Flowers shall be removed 1f AEP's way of putting to
rest comm11,nity concerns ·
they become upsightly.
about emissions from the
· Gavin plant.
announced.

Flower retnoval

Plantin1
planned .

GALLIPOLIS .- As the
nation reflects on the events
of Sepl. 11, Veterans of
· Foreign Wars have adopted
a pro~ram called "Freedom
Trees ' to help communities
come together.
VFW posts are planting
the trees, .donated by Wal·
MQJ't, to plant in public cer·
emonies. The trees they will
plant are the direct offspring of a green ash tree
that grows at the birthplace
of Dwight D. Eisenhower in
Denison, Texas.
VFW Post 4464 of
Gallipolis has set a planting
for Thursday, June 14 at 2
p.m. at Arbors of Gallipolis.
The public is welcome to
participate in the event.
"Wai-Mart is proud to be
part of this initiative in
communities all . across
America,'' said Wal-Mart's
Matt Fifer. "We are proud
to be involved in a program
in which the spirit of
America is cherished, and
freedom is recognized as
our ~reatest . natural trea·
·sure.'

Drivers cited
KANAUGA- Cecil K.
Noble 11, 38. 216 Kelley
Drive, Gallipolis, was cited
for assured clear distance
by the Gallia-Meigs Pos.t of
the State Highway Patrol
following a two-vehicle
, accident Thursday on Ohio

7.

ATHENS -

al dam..~.

mHt

~said.

GAlUPOUS
.Gallipolis wQtnan

A

was,

injl!Rd in a IWOrCU acci-

dent Friday on Eastern
Avenue neat · Go- Marti,
Gallipolis Cit~ P0~ice said.
Sheny A. Mayse, 35. 41S
Geo.rges Cteet. Road. was,
transported
Ill
Hoh:er
Medical Cente.r b~ private
vehicle following. the ~::}S
p.m. acc•dent, pol1ce sa.td,
Offi1.-ers said Mayse was,
northbound when she was,
unable to stop in time,lll\d
struck the rear of a car driven by Nathan A. Blaine.
20, Gallipolis, Ferty. Blaine
was Shlpi!Cd in traffic al the
time of tfle crasb, the report
said. .
Pamage to both cars was
disabling. a.nd Mayse was;
cited ro.r. assured cleat dis.·
tanee.
Jeremiah E. Jenkins. 26.
305
Dillon
.Road.
Gallipolis, was cited 'for
assured clear distance by
polic.e followin.g a three-ear
accident later Friday near
1911 Eastern Ave.
Officers said Jenkins was.
nQrthbound al 3:15 p,m.
when he was. unable to stop
in time and struck the reat
or a pickup truck driven by
Joshua G'~ Skidmore, 11,
6865 Ohio 160, Bidwell.
forcing it into the rear of a
car driven by Tommy L.
Moss, 35, 55 Butternut
Drive, Gallipolis.
Skidmore and Moss were
each stopped in traffic at
the time of the crash, the
report said. Damage to
Jenkins ' vehicle was functional, and nonfunctional to
the other vehicles. ·
Also cited by police since
Thursday were Kenny E.
Large. 18. 43 Lincoln Ave..
Gallipolis, disorderly conduct:
Narvel
Howard
Foster, 24, Rio Grande, dis·
orderly conduct. assault,
resisting. ethnic intimidation and menacing; Jeremy
E. Higginbotham, 22. Point
Pleasant, squealing tires;
Micah M. Large, 32, Point
Pleasant, disorderly by
intoxication: Vick1 L.
McBrayer, 26, 2907 Ohio
141, Gallipolis, domestic
violence; and Joshua D.
Saunders, 1680 McCormick
Road, Gallipolis, possession of marijuana.

Trustees meet

tilt

feU~1111shlp
11t

1111in

podud. pkU.:

fridoly
ltWll
a..t
tk
C'o
11.nity
Put.
••
Ch.eshlre. Me ~ ut
as.t.td ID W:.e a. fri6d
wtapped -v.. -te' et
t"~
fOf b.ngu prizes.

vas

InJury l&amp;poitecl

Troopers said Noble was
northbound, 15 feet south
of Gallipolis Township
Road 207 (Burnett) at 4:38
· p:m. when he was unable to
stop in time and struck the
rear . of a car driven by
Donald B. Harden, 55, 1198
Poke Patch Roud, Oak Hill.
Harden had stonped in
traffic to make a left turn
onto Burnett· at the time or
the crash, the report said.
Disabling damage ws listed
to the minivan driven by
Noble, and functional damage was reported to
Harden's car.
Russell 0. Gibson Jr., 17,
952
Starcher
Road,
Gallipolis. was dted for
failure to control by the
patrol following a one-vehi·
cle
accident
earlier
Thursday on Green TR 362
(Pleasant Hill).
Troopers said Gibson was
northbound at 1:30 p.m ..
seven-tenths of a mile south
of Cora Mill Road, when he
CHESTER - Chester
lost control of the. pickup
After years truck he drove, went off the Township Trustees will

Documentary
airs
Wednesday

WidOIIIIS

left side- of the road and
sttud: a tnc.
The pictup had func;tion-.

reaistr..._

SYitACtrSE - 'Val."'~
Bib e S.:~ regi~tr&lt;ltion
wm lake pl~ June 22 and
July 2Q 9:30 ~t..m. to 2:30
p.m., u.nder C"4.1l.OQ.ies. at 'iarIOUS 1\X:ll.li&lt;ms. in S):rac:use.
POMEROY - · B~oo:l
Ftee ice cream, pop. bal- Town;;hip
Trus.t~
will
loon$ and lil!:e paintin~ will
tate pla~. The Bibte meet Tuesday at 7' p.m. at
school will l1e tteld Jl.dy 29 the to-wn ball.
to Aug. 21 with a part~ o.n
Aug. 3.

Board to •eet

GALLIPOLIS - 0 .0 .
1"41rt: District
Board of Commis.s.io.ners
wmmeet ME&gt;udall at 7: p.m.
in th.e part distri~o:t offi«: ill
the
Gallia
C\l.unty

Hubbard
tournament

Mdntll re

SYRACUSE - Hub~d
Little Leag11.e toumill.ment
will be held starting July I · · ('~.
in Syracuse. The tourna.·
The: board will rexiew an
menl which is spons.Qted by ease~nt to American
the Syr&lt;~.cuse Volunteu lin: £1eto:tric Powt&gt;r t(lf ele..-triDepartment has an ~ntry fee cal S.C:f\'tce-,
of $25..
Drawings. will be made: on
Jum: 2S. For more infQI'mation contact Eber Pickens.
RIO GRANDE - Rio
Jr. at 992-5564 or 992·
Grande
Board of Public
118L
Affairs· re~ular mont hill
mte\i~g i~ lU.e-sdaJ&lt;: at (I
p,m ..~ the Rio Grand.Munidpal Building.
.
The meeting i~ t&gt;pe:n to
The the public.
CHESHIRE

Meeting set .

Fellowship .
to meet

HI
lilt •.RIIlllilt IMool

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~lforpl~lt'llo;. Mr!IWI.ItiMI~ f!f'

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~~

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~

ISHII, MlV, TMT,

JOHNSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-1182
Mason, West VIrginia

(304) 773-5305

:Kroger Co. experiments with fingerprint payment
~.

CINCJNNATI (AP) ' Paying for groceries with your ·
· fingerprint? It's a touch of the
future now, at three Kroger
:.Co. supennarkets in Texas.
The Cincinnati-based com·
pany is watching to see how
customers respond to finger·
print checkouts before decid·
mg. whether to expand the
program, spokesman Gary
Rhodes said Thursday. The
. grocery retailer began the
, experiment three months ago
, at three stores in Bryan and
, College Station, Texas.
•. Use of the option at check·
' out cOilllters in the stores is
.,limited so far, but those' who
choose it like the fact that it is
:quick and they don't have to
-bring wallets or purses into
: lhe store, Rhodes said. In
·return, Kroger gets increased
. customer loyalty and reduced
.worries about forged checks.
• "I think it's very conve: nient," shopper Mary Smith,
. 65, of College Station, said
.Thursday. "You C!lll go in
•,thete with nothing but your·
,-self."
· · Smith has been using the
· fingerprint-identification sys·
· : tern for several months at the
: store near her home. It is on
·'the way home from the cam·
pus at Texas A&amp;M University,
where she works in the
employee relations office.
· She said the money for the
groceries she buys ts drawn
out of her checking account so
' she doesn't have to write
~checks anymore.
. "You've just got to remem·
; ber to write il in your check·
''book," she said.
,. Biometric Access Corp.,
based in Austin, Texas, devel·
.;·
,,,

oped the SecureTouch-n-Pay
system that Kroger is using.
Customers who choose that
option provide Kroger with
enrollment
information,
including personal and financial data and.the finger image.
Then, the . shopper mere Iy
needs to pn:Ss an index finger
against the electronic reading
machine to check out gro·
ceries. There's no ink
involved.
About 10 to 15 people sign
up for the system each week, a

P/41Ut,.,,

tiny percentage of Kroger's
customers. The company,
with about 2,400 supennar·
kets nationwide, leads the
nation's supennarket operators in annual sales.
Some
customers
are
uncom{onable with the idea
of bein$ fil'lgerprinted,
Rhodes srud. But others are
willing to do it because .the
system is faster and makes it
unnecessary to bring checks
and forms of identification
into the store, he said.

· /i,.a,.ci4J ·

Great-looking
prices, tool

. fOU4 .

·.

· /J.~~: aJ

ju.aHcitJ (Z;jo;
J.E. Morrison
&amp; Associates

A Registered Investment Advisor
Jim Morrison, Certified Financial Planner

530 Second Avenue

Gallipolis; Ohio

740.446.1986
BUSINESS PLANNING
EDUCAnON PLANNING
RETIREMENT PLANNING

·

·

15!~ 17!~ 18!~
..... ,..
I 4UM,, HUtt N

2"!. ...

Uttlmlte l'lnllll

t" IIIIOitll ar 111111·

lmaoth ltO!IIr COYII'
For superior resulls.
lndoore or 0111.
K131111.1111111

1·1 hre Acrvtlc Lata Interior Palntl
True Value E·Z Ktire 'P8in1s ere highly praised by a ie&amp;d·
ing consumer magazine lor their one·coat coverage
and toughn&amp;ss. and they're so good we guarantee them
tor twenly years. Fasl·drying, IOW·Odor tormula cleans
up easily w1th soap and waler.
.
1·1 ..... lntii'IOr ,,...., ! :1111151,.. , ••• Cit.

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Head Start

SIGMitG UP-: It was sign up time at the Galli a County Health Department Monday fQr the Head Start program.
Pletute&lt;l are Lynne Arms, enrollment and recrultmeht manager for Head Start as she helps mom Tara Pennington
stgn up her 3-year.:old daughter Aurora Nolan. Older sister and former student Au!\(lrta Nolan tries to convince her
sister to wear the new paper hat they made at Monday's Enrollment Fair. (Krts Dotson)

GALLlA COMMUNITY CALENDAR .
f

,,
,;
Suntt~. June 9
... GAI.I.IPOL.IS - Faith
.·• B~tlst Church, 36 1
Jaeli: on Pike, will hold
,,. groundbnJaklng lot new
. raf!lllY center f~llowln'!
~ 10.30 a.m. strvrte. For
Information, tall 14"6·

s

h07.

• 1

CAOWN CITY Relnsed in concert at 6
p.m. Mount Zion 8Qtlst
,, Churoh. For infOtmatlon,
1• all Paatot Todd .Boweft
, at7140·2Stl-1526.

,
•

Probe

•

T

...

,•

.''"

Aalph

Chul'th at 7 p.m.

•

G"li.IPOLIS
~
Singing EthOt$ will be at
Good Ne\Ys Baptist
Churoh, Georg(ls Creek
Road, tOt the n a.m. set•
vice.

e.ftlpiO~

who .hlW boe.t\
intenie\Wd hlw ~ him
up on whitt was S~tid.
·~ I"Yll ~tlt\ld t~t's
ltwPIItA1
nilt whltt smd," ~~e ll.ddl!d. "t
~ :' opinions, thlt's fine, but \W don't moonb« ~ina any·
haw a ~ht to exprm our . thing deroptory,"
· • opinions'
"E~OOdy ~tops by t~
"The chatter's Section s ~~~~: Mt~hl Sllld. "It
soys commissianm 11n1 in &amp;hould ~ that ·w~. They
violation of their duties if know 1' m pro· union. '
they ''i.n "'Y milliner interft~e The AFSCME thllptet's
.: with the city manaaer or pre- contRct with Oallipolls
~nt him from exeielslna his ~plmt hilt Anaust atm the
pwn judament In the ctty ODlM not to recoanln
: -appointment of officen and the un1on, citina Its drop In
• employees In the ldminlslrl· population to vutaae stl\tus
: tl~ service..."
·
ia.ncl ~ttte law that i1ou not
Mardli and Snowden Sllld re&lt;JUtl'e -.mqu .to baf'lllln
they wore at tile city a.~ wl.tlt 1~1 llbor units,
.
Mll'dlt lntroduet&lt;l motions
• on April 3, the diiY alter 11
: commission meotlna. to ask In 2001 and wllw this yev
: questions about the openatloft to renew rteoanltion fur the
: of 11 sewer inspection clmera union, whidi have both
• the city had pun:hllsed lnd to failed.
: &amp;etllll inventory of city vehl·
Snawdl!ll believes his dl~·
Cles, which they had inqulted agreement ovet the tlty.s
about pre\llously,
borrowlna $350,000 from
: Cltina the chut.er, which the slltc Infrastructure bank
: allows
commissioners to balante this yev's budaet
: ·~nqulry" 11bout city matters, has also put him at odds w1th
: Mllichl and SnoWden said the other commlsslonm.
· they were at the aaraae for
He said he didn't -.lew the
Information only, Mu~hl re~n11e as Income slne.e the
said he 11lso likes to -.lslt the IIIII()Unt will have to be paid
: -&amp;III'IIP and provide 11 link back.
.
The lnvestiaatlon, he snld,
: between the employees 11nd
• lldmlnislrtltlon.
"amounts to hlll'llsstntmt."
: "I've known those .uys
Because the charter offers
: since they were ktds," no . provisions ubout disci·
• Morchl SDid. "I can n11me pllne or l'emaval of 11 cotn·
three-quarters of the IIIYS missioner from offie.e, whnt
~ who wOrk for the city,"
will be done with the lnvesti·
"We were inquiring 11bo11t &amp;lltlon's ~'Onc:luslons remains
: the camera for the sewers unclear, Cowles has dtlftld
: and about trucks, since we an ordinance far eommls·
: were elected by the people 10 sloners' re-.lew nddressi na
look after the tllltpllyors' procedure when the lnvestl·
•. money," added Snowden,
111\lion Is complete, but no
: Marehl said that during the action has been htken.
• visit, an employee askecfhim
Mu~hl suid he's ehod:ina
: about a statement Marehl with legal sourees on his
: . made to Skinner at the pre-.1· options, ~but uddld h11 wnnts
· . ous nlaht's commission to avoid lltlantlan becnusc It
meetlna during discussion will distruct from pressing
, about the city's new bod tax. lss1.1es focina Oalllpoli .
: Muchl said he repeated
"I offered to drop It and ao
: the Sllltement: "Celestine, on," he snld. "If they want to
: you did somethina very hake potshots 111 me, thAt's ·
• unsanitary. You put words In flnc.
my mouth,"
"I'm about ready toactm
The remark, he said, a lawyer," Murch I lidded.
' picked up u sexual connotn· "But If I stun this, it'll teur
: tlon In an apparent retelling up th city und we' II end up
: after the visit. Marehl said not aelting unythlng done." ·

•

GAI.I.IPOI.IS -

Workman will bt ~ruth·
lng at Mlna Chap&amp;l

•
•

· $lt." ftii'OIIT

POMEROY - ARutland
ml\n hu been convicted of
several chlf&amp;IIS fottowlna
1\ buratuy incident in
January.
Levi McOrath, 21 wl\5
found auilty of bura\uy,
recelvina stolen property
tnd theft on Thursdl)' 1\ftef
t1 jury deliberated an the
mttter rot over one hour.
McGrath was Indicted on
the Chifllil&amp; In Martb 200l
tas 11 result of Ill) Incldent
which l)(lcurred on 11\n. :ul
2002, at the resldem:e or
Fred McDaniel. MeOrath
was arrested by Mel;s
Ca11nty Sheriff's Deputies
Kevin Duaan and A.dam
Smith, 11lana with Trooper
Robert Jaclis of the State
Hiahwly Pll.trol's Gllllill·
Meigs Post.
No stolen shota11ns
were recovered by pollee.
Buralary, AS eh11raed1 h 11
felony t)f the seeond
do;ree, and tllrrles ll mnlti·
mum possible penlllty of
ei11ht ye1rs In 11 st1te penal
Institution, tmd II fine or up
to SIS,OOO, accordlna to
Meias County Prose~:utor·
Pnt Story.
Both rec:elvin; stolen
property (a firearm) . and
theft (II flreum) 11re

VINTi'uJ
Homtc6m'lng, loolwaah•
lng and communion at
Dtttctetk
Frttwlll
Baotlat Church, atartlnQ
at 10 a.m. lunch at noon,
·· tinging by tht Singing
,. p,.atona.
RIO
GRANDE
Caldwall tamUy ,.union,
atanlng at 9:30 a.m.~.Bob
.· Evant
r arm
Shtlttrhouat.
'•.

G"LL.IPOL.IS - 20th
Haner ttunlon, 10 a.m.·3
p.m., Raccoon Orttk
: county Park, Bobwhltt
..~ ShtlttrhOUit $,
'

l

the
Rev.
Donnie For information, call 740Vacation Bible Schools
Johnson,
llftetnoon 245·7186.
. CROWN CITY - Bible
spaaktt ts lht Rev.
school at Providence
Robert Hersman. Singing
Revivals
Missionary
Baptist
·by the Baldwin Family.
POINT
~LEASANT, Church, June 10-14, 6:30
W.Va. - Carl Chaclband p.m. to 8:30 p.m . Theme ·
· BIDWELL - Prospect of West Virginia State will be "I will call on the
Baptist
thu~h
on Colleg~ will preach at Lord."
lighthouse
Prosf)ttt Roatlln Bldwtrl Gospel
Neal Road,
will "have Sunday ser· Church
KANAUGA Bible
vlett June 9th. Services Point Pieasant.L May 31- school at Silver Memorial
will begin with sunday June 2, 7 p.m. r-ri&lt;tay and Freewill Baptist Church,
Scl\ool lt 10 a.m., dlMet Saturday, and 10:30 a.m. June 10·15, 6 • 8:30 p.m.
to follow. Communion Sunday.
nightly. Theme .will be
and footwaahlng services
GALLIPOLIS FERRY; 'Get online with Jesus.'
will be In the ttltemoon.
Revival at
Rtvtrend Carl Basham W.Va. Card shower
College
Hill
Church
June
wm bt preaehlt:~O·
Mabie M. Halley will be
2~5,
7 nightly, Wilh
celebrating
her birthday
. GAL.I.IPOLIS - Sibling preaching by Teresa
class at Holnr Medical Whitt and singing by lhe on June 10. Cards can
be sent 10 her at 254
· ten..t, 1:30·2:30 p.m.: Whitt Family.
Lanes Branch · Road,
lnfantlehlld CPR class
PATRIOT - Revival Ill Crown City, Ohio 45623.
3:30·5:30 IMn~\ at HMC
Patriot
United Methodist
education ana conf&amp;r·
Sybil French will be eel·
enee tenter. To pre-reg· Church June 5-8, 7 night·
ly,
with
the
Rev.
Cochran
ebraling
her 90th birth·
Isler call ••6·5030.
preaching Wednesday day on June 11. Cards
Monday, June 10
and Friday, and the Rev. can be sent to her at 17
ENO - Eno Grange Durham
preaching Nell Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
2080 regular meeting, · Thursday and Saturday. 45631.
?:SO p.m.
·
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.Community Calendar Is
l'utaday Junt 11
Singing In the Pines, published as a free ser·
GAI.I.iPOI.IS - Gallla June '21·22 at Union vice to nonprofit groups
County Dlatrlt::t Library Campground . In New wishing lo announce
Board of Truattta, 5 !:Iaven. Singing starts meetings and special
p.m., Boaaard Memorial Friday at 6 p.m., and 1 events. The calendar Is
L.lbraey.
p.m, on Saturday. A spe· not designed to promote
cial program commemo·
sales or lund-raisers of
Wtdntacl4)' June 12
rating the 20th annual any
type. Items are print·
ADDISON ' - L.adlta ling ra 7 p.m. Friday, fea·
ed as space permits and
Aid at Acldlaon Frttwlll turing . live groups who cannot
be guaranteed to
Baptlat Church 7 p,m.
were a part of the first
appear.
F=ax Items to
'
sing In 1983. More than
email
70 gospel groups set to 740·446·3008;
Thurad,y, June 13
them
to
ahapkaCmydal·
·ADDISON - Prayer sing.
lytribune.com.
mtttlna · at Addlaon
FtttWIIT Bll:)tltt Church,
7:30 p,m., wlth Sam l.ong
and Matt Smith preach·
lng,
A few weeks have aone by since our "Twist ·or Fate" on May

ADDISON - Sunda~
School
lt "ddlton
F,.twiU Bapllat Chutth,
Sund~y June 16
10 a.m.: preaching Itt"DOlSON
- Sunday
• viet, 6 p.m.L wltl'i Aick
School
at
,t,ddlaon
: Ba~u• preacnlng.
Freewill Baptlat Church,
: CAOWN
CITY - 10 a.m.; prtachlng ser·
: Connort family will aino VIC., 6 p,tn,h Will'\ Flick
"'It
libtrly
Oh~ptl Barcus pteac lng. ·.
Church, , o •~m.
·
S•tutday, June 29
RIO
GRANDE
~
CROWN ClTV ~ HOMtcomlng at Dickey Ptlnet Madog lectures,
p.m.,
Greer
• Ohapti Chutth, aorvlcta 1:30
Archivea,
t atartlno at 1o a,m. Muaeurn
Morttll'lg apeaktr will be Unlvtralty of Rio Grande.
'

I

~QHtf&amp;

I«i£ul .sfiQ~ &amp;Jitt Ecum

.

l'WIII\I)t

Ortitt
'f)pe lit Attl
f.qlllpilltnt 1!8till

hMdiiDI fat B11Lttl•&amp;a' Edd1~. JMDI21a 2002 •
Drvp olt tollipltted fofllll ttt Empire Furniture,
tbe Ch~mbet of Cornmerct. ot alkl tol
K. Ca11aday1Jill Circle Drlve1Galllpollll1 OH ol5631

.

••

CONTli;S'f TO BE H'gLD AT lOAM,
SATURDAY, JULY 6 AT THE l'ARKFRONT
•

•

Syracuse
Village
Council, regular ses·
sion, Monday, 7 p.m. at
the hall.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs
County
Health
Department childhood
immunization clinic,
Tuesday, from 9 to 11
a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. at ·
112 E. Memorial Drive.
Take children's shot ·
records. Children must
be accompanied by
SUNDAY
parent
or
legal
MIDDLEPORT
Revival, Sliver Run guardian. Donations
Baptist
Church, appreciated but not
Sunday
through required.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
CHESTER
each evening. Different
Chester
Township
speaker eacf\ night.
Trustees, Tuesday, 7
p.m. at the Chester
MONDAY
SYRACUSE
Town Hall.

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
HEALTHY START
OHIO'S HEALTH INSURANCE
OPTION FOR CHILDREN

and nelahbon. We wish to oft'er our sincere aratltude tm
Monty and Renea Farley for taking us "to ralseu for se~eral
dllYII
Dn Sherry Queen, Dr. Brian Hendrickson, and the entire
stllft ot lUverbend Animal Clinic for emeraency and extended
can ijf our 11\lured, and moral support tor us;
John and Barbara Shuler for "hlbyslttlna" six of our hones;
Malt Anaet and Brian Unroe tor hone wranallng, and equine
taxi service;
Ronnie Sheers for equine hospital accomodatlons;
Without these people, elaht hones rould have been 11\Jured
further. We are thankful our horses were In safe capable
handllr
.Bob and Bobble Hudson, Ronnie and· Rlsa Hill, Mike and
Marioll Cochran, Amy and Allan Boston, and many others
whnu pnsenee helped us to maintain a small part of our.

Call Today!

nnlly;

Cindy llaaen, and the Red CroM who ierved 3 meals a
day tb whnever was hunary;
The Sheriff's Depllruntnt, Ohio Hlahway Patrol, and all Rnr
rnponden ror handUna tramc and.nl'ety ~nditlo1111 .
ll11ckeye Rural Electric for very quick restoration of services;
Crown txcavatlng for their Immediate and · remarkable
l'l!lponse In rile cleanup elforr;
Wiseman Insurance Aaency and Allstate lnilurance for work·
Ina with and for us;
.Many others have donated time, equipment, and supplies.
Some. we know, but many people we don't know and wish to
remain anonymous, To fhese people we wish to express our
th1111k yollll and now know l)eople In this rommurut)i do care.

Delane &amp; Jerry Gallion

~

. Community Calendar
is published as a free
service · to non-profit
groups wishing .to
announce
meetings
and special events.
The calendar is not
designed to promote
sales or fund-raisers of
any type. Items are
printed only as space
permits and cannot be
guaranteed to be printed a specific number of
days.

8, 2002, and oow that we are really awl!ke lind know that this Is
not a dream, we realize how blessed we are with aoocJ friends

Cenr~r,

~~ -

MEIGS COMMUNITY
CALENDAR

Health,Insurance
For Your Kids
Is Just A Phone Call Away

"Thank You"

New Life Lutheran Church, Putor Jackson, the Outreach

I

.

992-2117
1-800-992-2608
Meigs County Department
of Job and •'amily Services
175 Race Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

�'
•

PapAl
s

Inside:

I r-taul.21ll

Rio sports sign"s• PGI,• B2-4
Lohn win GoJM 2. Pog« B.S
Owtdoors. Pag• B6

GALLIA ·COUNTY COURT NEWS
Tile tello-'- ca 1'11 luiw Nmhull of Bidwell and llustil\ C.
ret: 'If
a '
' 'h• Ia Mill:hdl of Point Pkmnt, W.Va.;

~

llecrft:

Couty CGnrae Pitas
Km1a1 Roush. 23, OlesiWe. and
Oocbtt P. Roush, 2S, ~
a.tryl Diane Wedemyer, 54, 3498
Ohio 141, Oallipolis. and Alden
Walter Vh ~emyer, 49, Oallipolis
. ShcrrieLBarry,43, 'Ilwrmln,and
Gaty Midlael Barry, 48, Oak Hill.
Karolein" A. Webb, 381 Buck
Rdge Ro:i BidweU, and Carl E.
Webb, 118 Mary Road, Bidwell.
Melissa A. Cafdwell, 36. 38 Sidney
Drive, Vinton, 111d Dwayne A.

ofCedarvilleand&lt;llri~Pollard

Pllpll
s 11 ........ l.llll

conducted by tM adult ~ ina t.d c:lw:h, filled SIOO eiiCb
Biwd N. Gee. 20.731 ThildAw.,
ckjMamltdt lllll the lllllU:r
bem 1X1W1t, thirty days ill jilL eiiCb c:ount, Gallipolis. cbqed . widl wtderqe

~~~~'=~c= ~~~7 William\ :r=~~~ ~n~~

of Gallipolis; Linda K. Siders of
Bidwell and Joseph A. Harrington of
Bidwdl; fJiz!!ho:ih Dawn Walker of
Vinton and Ryan Soon Fowble of
Thunnan.
Tbe &amp;raad Jury of Ole Glllla
Couatv C'omrnon Pleas Court Ills
~ tUt It wW a~avene on
Moadu, Juae 10, at h.m.
Tbe fGIIowillc cases bave rteeDI,
lYbeeaJII'K edlnGdiaCouaty

•

SuNDAYS

Hollow Road. Oa!lipolis. his wllh- ~ $102.91, uil Foodllnd. ywsofprollllion.80bounofcomdrawn his lftviously a..,..ed plea of S27t80.
lllllllily _..ice.
~
1101 guilly and now pbs t .RIIiltY 10
Ollrles Daqherly lr. 33,
Brandon F1lnnely, 72S Pine ....,
IJurKlary. a fowth deiiiCC fd.ony. A with OUJ. 6ned SSSO. ~to · Thurman. dwled wilh domestic
presentence investigation wiU be 180 days inja!l, 177 days
~ fintd S2SO. $ISO S"spcind-

::r:!

conducted by the dllt

HIGHUGHIS

-=ndlxl.
lhree yws 01 probltioo.
a 180

2002 STATE TRACK MEET .

trade
Branyan

ed,seatencedtolhreeywsofpmbalion, 30 days in jail~ SIISJ!"'' deii and
must (1111 for and c:oMp1ete 111 18·
week domestic violenc:e ~· ·
lY resolved Ill
Mvaloi:ipel derly condlw:t, fined flOO. stolf:I!Ced
ICenneth D. Collins., 81S1 Ohio
Court:
,
to 3Q days in.jail, vnpended and two 554. Bidwell, c:btq,ed widl domestic
Amy Rupe. 3896 Vqa ROIId, y~~- 5S3 Soc:ond violence, lintel $180, senttneed to
probation

department 1!\d the matternu bem claY liceMe suspemioo,·
.
continued ror stolalcing.
Mvloa K. Jeaninp Jr., 108 Fowtll
Tbe folio~-:..,
wen recnt, Ave., Gallipolis, chqed with dlsqr.

~~~3, 921 Possum C~tri~:.!t?~~drorJames :~~wi~~

Ave.,

&amp;;jjDOlis. ~

widltwo
'frol R~rpolis, and Marla A. M~el. 39,-of Colum~ an to 180daysinjall,l60dayssuspend: COIIIIts of disorderly Conduct, fined
Rene Si
29, 921 Possum Trot Monday, Au$. 19 at 9 a.m. McDaniel eel. lhree years of probation and a one $100 eiiCb count. suspended. senRoad. Oalli · .
is~ wtdl one June 2001 count year license suspension. Also lenced to 30 days in jail each count,
ToddL. arle~OhloSS4, orrec:e~vingstolcnproperty.
charKed widl no opaator's license. SUSIICilded. two~ of probation
Bidwell, and
L Farley, 27,
A jury trial Will he held for Charles fined S100.
and must tomplele FACI'S.
a.u;9 OhiO SS4, Bidwell.
H. Stover, 33, 1058 Second Ave..
Randy Harold, 11988 Ohio 7
Bobby R. Stewart, 31, 70S3 Ohio
~na ·M. Flinner, 26, 4 Roush Oallipolis. for Wednesday, Aug, 7, 111 Soulh, Gallipolis, charJied wilh reck· ··554, Bidwell, charJied widl disorderRollow Road, Bidwell, and Fnnlc 9 Lm. Stover is charged widl one less operation, fined $5'.50, sentenced ly c:onduc:t. fintd fl00. seatenced,to
Flinner. 33, 2189 Bulaville Pike, February 2002 count of' robbery.
to 72 hours of jail.
·
:fO days in jail, suspended, two years
· Gallipolis.
Barbm Bolden, 2S, Llncastcr, has
William E. Lucas, Wilkesville, ofi'~ &amp;~.lion and must complete
The followi111 couples have withdrawn a previously entered plea charged with reckless operation, '"'
recenUy ftled for divorce Ill Glllla of not guilty and now pleads guilty to fined SSSO, sentenced to 72 hours of
Steven L Mundell, 381 Buck
County CllllllllOD PleiiS Court:
a January 2002 charge of possession jail and two years .of probation.
Ridie ROlli, Bidwell, chuaed widl
. • Mary Stoner, 1696 Cox Road, ·of drugs,~ fiflh,dep ~elonr. A preCharles R. Durfee, Gallipolis disolderly conduct. fined UOO. sen·
trown City, from.Daniel Stoner, 31, sentcn&lt;:e mvesngauon ts being con- Ferry, W.Va., charged widl DUJ, tenced to 10 days in jall, suspended,
1696 Cox Road. Crown City. ·
dueled by the adult probation depart- fined SSSO, sentenced to 180 days in and ~ust . complete an ll!-week
Billy Burdette, 39. 413 Lewis mcnt and the matter has been contin- jail, 177 days suspended, three yem domestic vtolence prognm.
Road, Gallipolis, from Debra J. ued for sentencing.
of probalion and a 180 day license
Paul S. Conner, 36, 36, I~
Burdette, 37, Gallipolis.
.
Juani!D Robinette, 74 Green Road, suspension.
•
County Road 73, Crown City,
: Thomas H. Gardner, · 48, 15337 Crown City, has entered a plea of . EJecta Martin, 88 Locust St., cluqcd widl DUI, fined $650, sen·
Ohio 160~ Vinton, from Marion 0. ~uilty lo community control viola- Gallipolis, charsed widl passing bad .tenced to 180 days in jail, 174 ~
fhoebe Gardner, 50, San Antonio; lions. A pre-sentence investigation is checks, sentenced to 180 days pioba· susDcnded. lhree years of proba~on
texas.
being conducted by lhe adult proba- tion.
and a ' 180 day ,license susl*!'ton.
Mark Spires, 45, 129 Bittersweet lion department and the matter has
Robert W. Martin, 33, 381 Buck Also abaraed wtdl no break lilhts,
Drive, Oallipolis. from Vickie L. beencontinuedforsentencing.
Ridf.e Road, Bidwell, charged widl fined$2S;leftofccnter,fined$25,no
Spires, 39, 466-112 Fourth Ave.,
Andlony. Petty, Orient, has been DU • fined $550. sentencccl to two seat belt. fined $30,
.
Oallipolis.
sentenced to the Orient Correctional years of probation, 180 days in jail,
Mark~· Johnson, Sr., !7713 Ohto
Cody lbdd Boothe, 28,590 Drakes Facility for three years after entering 177 days suspended, six monlh 141 Plbiot, charaed wadi assau!t.
Fork Road, Crown City, from a guilty plea to escape, a dlird degree license suspensaon.
.
~~$ISO, sentenced to 90 days Ill
Caroline Emily Boothe, 36, felony.
·
·John Foley, 34, Middleport, J!lll• suSIICIIded. two years of .proba·
HuntinJ,tOn, W.Va.
.
Brandon Clary, Pedro, has entered charged with DUI, fined $650, sen· a~ an&amp; 40 hoUrs of commuruty ser·
· Jenntfer L. Gardner, 24, 273 a guilty plea to a charge of receiving tenced to 180 days in jail; 174 days vtceRo' - L Hartshorn .,..
Pine
700
Chamberlain Road, Bidwell, from stolen propeny, a fourth degree suspended, lhree years of probation
~ger
, "'"' .... d
Scon Gardner, 26, 273 Chamberlain felony, and was sentenced to the and a 180 day license suspension.
St., Rio~ chiii'Jiod Wl•u un erRoad, Bidwell.
Orient Correctional Institution ror 12
Archie p. Marcum, 24, 7SO age consumption, fined $150, sen·
Lewis Brady, 39, Bidwell, from months.
Rowlesville Road, Vinton, charged tCnced to 180 days in jail, 177 days
Monoka Rose Brady, 46, 426
Kevin Jamison, address unknown, with DUI, fined S7SO, sentenced to suSDended, three years of probation
Evergreen ·Road, Bidwell.
was sentencCd to · the . Orient 180 days in jail, 170 days suspended, and 80 hours of community service.
The followlna couples have filed Correctional Institution ror one year, three years of probation and a one
ChristoPher S. Fraley, 20, 700 Pine
../or marria11e licenses In Gallla suspended. two yean of probation, . year license sus~nsion.
St., Rio Grande, charged with under:
'County Probate Court:
for a May 2001 charge of trafficking
Derek M. Galben, 1354 Possum age consumption, fined $150, sen,
Jessica Parsons of Oallipolis and in drugs.
. Trot Road, Gallipolis, chlll1led widl tenced to 180 days in jail, suspended,
Randy Roach of Gallipolis;
Thelma Cordell Pattenon, address disorderly conduct, fined SfSO, sen· three years of (ICObation, and 80
Jenny lynn Workman . of Letart, unknown, is scheduled for a pre-trial tenced to 30 days in jail, suspended, hours Of comm~ aervice.
W.Va., and Douglas William Bollack hearing on Thunday, Aug. 29, at 9 two years of probation, and must pay
Adam I..Qwry, ISO Edoma Trail,
of Gallipolis; Sitrah Nicole Selmon a.m. fur a charge of pos~sion of for and complete~ 18-week.domes· ; Bidwell, diaraecl with possession of
of G..lipolis and Lawrence Byrdie of drugs. Ajury trial has been scheduled tic viOlence program.
parai!emalia and possession of
Oalllpalis; ' Amy Damroh ' of tbr Tl\utsday, September 12 at9 a.ltl.
Tamara D. Bemall, 609 ~in
una. fined $100 each cdlnt, sen,
Oallipolis and Bruce Young of
Rachel Siden, 25 Smithers St., Chapel Road, Crown City, ch
tenced to 30 days In jail, each count,
Gallipolis; · Patricia Williams of Oallipolis, charged widl complicity, widl DUI, fined $7SO, sentenc to two years of probation and 80 hours
Cheshire and Christopher Streetman entered a not guilty plea, is scheduled 180 days in jail, 170 days suspended, of community service.
of Leon, W.Va.; Abby Ooodnight of for a pre-trial Thunday, Aug. 29. at9 three years of probation and a one
Shane A. Newell, 29, 171 Hcnnan
Oallipolis and Trevor . Ehman of a.m., and a jury trial, Tuesday, Sept. year license suspension.
Road, Oallipolis, charged wilh elisor·
Galli~lis;
Amanda
Laurette 10, at9 a.m.
Thomas Patrick, 62 Chillicothe derly conduct, fined $200, $Cntenced
Canmchael of Huntington, W.Va.,
John L. Siden, 2136 Chatham Road, Oallipolis, chargod with pos· to 30 days in jail, susupended, two
and Christopher Allen Roettker of · Ave., Gallipolis, is scheduled for a session of drug paraphernalia. fined years of probation and must pay for
Huntington, W.Va.; Rosalyn M. pretrial Thursday, Aug. 2 at 9 a.m. $100, sentenced to 90 days in jail, and complete an 18-week domestic
Tucker of Bidwell and Jonadlan D. and a jury trial, Thunday, Sept. 12 at suspended, two years of probation, violence _program.
l-ewis of Bidwell; Sandra S. Kerns of 9 a.m. Siden is charged with three and 80 hours. of community service.
Kory P. Hager, 22, 1961 Jackson
Crown City and Jesse James JoQes of March 2002 charges of trafficking in ~lso charged with possession of mar· Pike, ~idwell, charied widl reckless
O..lipolis; Marie C. Haycook of drugs.
IJUillla, fined $100. .
operation, fined $530, sentenced to
Oallipolis and Michael C. Rochford
Timothy Lambert, 19, SS Oarfield
Sieffon Scott, 200 W. College Ave., 72 hours in jail.
. .
of Gallipolis; Brandy Jo Russell of Ave., Gallipolis, was sentenced to the · Rio Grande, charged wilh domestic
Charles Daughtery Jr., 33, 23S~
Crown City and Jason Rodgers of Orient Co~tional Facility 'for 18 violence, fined $100, sentenced to Scenic Drive, Vinton, charaed widl
Crown City; Prances Ann Knotts of months after entering a guilty plea to two years of probation.
DUI, fined $550, sentcnce3 to 180
Oallipolis and Oregory · Scott assaulting a police officer. Lambert's
Curtis Cheney, 42, 751 Ohio 141, days injall, 177 days suspended, two
Hawthorne of Gallipolis; Lucinda sentence was suspended, and he was Gallipolis, charged widl DUI, fined yean ol' probalion and a two year
Mae Jones of Crown City and placed on community,control for fiye $2,000, sentenced t~ 10 days in jail, license suspension.
J:ranldin Eugene McCune of Crown years. He must also serve 30 days m two years of probataon .and two year
Ronald F. Cochran, 33, Patriot,
City; Mistie D. Pratt of Gallipolis and the Oallia County jail and must license suspension.
·
charged wldl disorderly by lntoxlca·
Kenneth E. BestO of Gallipolis;
·attend 20 meetings of alcoholics
Cherise Jacobs, Charleston, W.Va., lion, fined $100.
·
Teresa Sommerville of Cheshire anonymous.
charged widl DUI, fined S7SO, sen·
Bryan R. Simmons, 23, Wellston,
and Antonio Jeffers of Vinton;
Bobbie J. Roush, Henderson, tenced to 180 days in jail, 170 days charged wldl disorderly by intoxica·
Stephanie Erin Crouse or Gallipolis W.Va., withdrew a previously entered suspended, three years of \'robation, tion, fined $ISO, sentenced to 30 days
and Ronald Lee Tawney; Sheena Rae plea of not guilty and now pleads one year license suspension. Also in ~ail, suspended, two ;ears. of proLeveline of Fairfield and Christopher guilty to theft, a fifth degree felony. A charged with no operator's license, baaon and 40 hours o community
Alan Moore of Gallipolis; Jessica R. presentence investigation will be fined $100, and two counts or pass· service. ·

=

:~~~~~sllSprlllded.

Plullip Howell, 2(, at large,
charged with domestic violenCe.
fined $100. sentenced to 180 days in
jail. 174 .days suspended. and two
yeus of prol)ltion.
William Hatten, 86 Qooch Road,
Bidwell, charaed widl llisocdedy ~y
iniOlticlllion, nned $100.
Kent Rileh, 40, Soudlfleld, Mich.,
charged widl reckless opcralion,
fined $700. sentenced to 72 hours of
school
~ J Wallet 82 Oarfleld Ave.,
Gallipoli~ ~ widl DUI, fined
· ssso; sentenc:edto 3 cllYs in jail, twO
years probation and a 1110 day license
suspensiOn
Mollie A. Ellcins, 19, 381 Buck
Ridge Road, Bidwell chQIIIed widl
disoi'derly conduct, fiMd SlllO.
- Amy E. Willis, 32, 1154 Second
Ave.. Ollllipolis, charaed wilh reck·
less ~tion, fined $5.50, sentenced
to 72
· · 'I one ""A' of rvn.
bation. nmJW,
Jr-:
Christopher s. Fraley, 20, 700 Pine
St., Rio Grande, churaed wilh underage consumption. fined $150, sen·
teltced to 180 days in jail, suspended,
three years of probation and 80 hours
of community service.
R~cr L. Hartshorn, 20•. 100 Pine
St., Rio Grande, charged wadi underA"" consumption fined SISO sen·
.....
..
•
•
tenced to 180 days in Jllll, 177 days
suspend~, and 80 hours•of commu,
nity servace.
•
Mark A. Johnson Sr., 1.771 3 0 hao
141, Patriot, charged wtdl assault,
.~~eel SISO, sentenced 1~ 90 days in .
susr48~ed, tw~ yws of·~!
~n an
oun o commuru.J
vtce.
.
~J E. Momson, 26, 56 Union
St., Ba well, c)uupd wldl DUI! ft~
$1,200, sentenced to 180 days mJail,
I, SO suspended. three years of proba,
lion and a two year license suspe~·
s.ion. Also Chiii'Jied wilh no operator s
li~nse, fined $100, and assured clear
distance, fined SIOO.
The followiiiJ bench warnnts
have been Issued In Gallipolis
Municipal Court:
.
~randon
Adams; · Clayton
WDoallalladmsF;'~ Shawn . McCbrolaskey;
J n W1te; 0 wynne Dam ~~h ;
ason atson; Karen CamJl ....11 ;
Joshua Wingo; .Roy Meade; S~eve
Geo111e; Brian Davis; Will!am
McKinney; Lena Kormamck;
Brinton McGowan; Shane Tilckett;
David Roush; Leon Galliamore;
Brandy Lane; Tony Oeorgc; Daniel
Janes; Leonard N~w; John Clagg;
David Roush; James Raines; Janet
Sullivan; Jus.tin Meade; Maria
Harrison; Cohn Patterson; Brandl
Oee; Amy Fife; Brian Dunlow; Nina
Petroff; Rhonda Phillips; Robert
Walters; Marcus Siders; Lorenza
Siders; Anthony Smith; Charles
Lewis Ill, Tanglla Laudennilt;
Odessa Martin; Tommy Anderson;
Clayton Segebart; Amy Cwnpbell;
Johnathon Darnell.

to Reds ·

' RACINE - The Southern
High School girl ' basketball
team . llnd WendY's of
Pomeroy will be ~n&amp; •
12-te~'ty garls bosket·
ball
,.out on June 22 a1
Soudl
High School and
Southern Elementary build·
logs.
The shootout begins at 8
.:m. lllld auarantees at least
three games. Aiea funs Ctlll see
many of the lll'tiiS top girls
teams competing In 11 toumll·
ment style atmosphere.
Ttwns Include Belpre, South
Point,
Fort
Frye,
Southellstern,Morgan County,
Alexander, Vinton County,
Ripley, Miller, Western
Lidlnm, &amp;stem, Trimble,
Crooksville,lllld Southern.
. For futher information I.'On·
tact Coach Scott Wolfe at 74().
992-1490 or C.T. Chapman 111
992-5270.
•Other infonn11tion may be .
found by contuctlng Wolfe ut
Soulhern High School nt 9492611.
. The team ·I currently seek'
lng donutlons for their trip to
s11mmer cwnp. All donations
111\IY be mallea to Scott Wolle.
SQUtbern Olrls Basketbnll,
Box 872, Racine, Ohio 45771.

CLEVELAND (A P) Russell Branyan ~truck out
widl the Cleveland Indians,

too.

Southam
·. · youth lilts
·

~ : hoops camp
&lt;RACINE - The Southem

~1rls' elementary basketbllll
cnmp will be slated for this
· conling week June I 0-14.
IJ'he camp will run from June
10-14 from 8:30-11:30.
Cost of each camp ls $40 per
student·uthlete unless preregls·
tered. Registrution beg1ns
Monday at i:4S.
Families widl more thlll\ one
child in cnmJl will puy no more
thun $50 totUl.
..
.
The Southern varsity girls
we to help with the crunp and
to report at 8 a.m. each d11y.
Also. varsity/reserve cwnp for
ull Jllayers going to North
Carolina will run from 1·3
June I().14. Ench elementary
camper will be guW'IIIlteed a
crunp ball and t·Shlrt If preregistered. Realstrntion 111 th
door is $40 wiih no gulll'lllltee
of 11 shirt or ball. Crunp fonns
huve already been distributed
at Southern ElementlU')' ·
School, however, anyone m11y
register on Monday. For fur·
ther ·info111111tion contuct Scott
Wolfe at 992~ 1490 or RYan
Lemley at Southern High
Sthoor.
.

outfielde~."

IN THI HUT OF THI ACnON - Gallla Acadamy;s Josh Perry, rtght, and Lima Shawnee's Martel Butler. center. go head·
to-haadln the final lea of the .4x400-meter raley prelims Friday at Dayton's Walcoma Stadium. Butler· won the raca, but
Parry finished third to advance the Blue Davila to the state finals. (Andrew Carter)
•

•

••

ue DeVI sa
state tra

.. River Valley

:: all-cllstrld

.

Jt,ne 10- 14 9 BID tO 5 pm
.

-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-·-···-·-·-·-~-·-·-·-·~·-·-·-·-·-·-·-···-·-·-·-~-·-·-···~, •••• II M1l M_, All~ ,.,,~ IIIII II

i•

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Only
'

s

BY BUTCH Coo'IR
everything he hod in thut 400." ·
BCOOPEROMYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
The 4x4()() squad struggled CUrly on
DAYTON - Josh Perry cnme und the Blue Devils ~~greed, they felt
through in . 11 big wuy for Oailiu they could've dono better.
.
Academy on Friday.
"l' m really excited, but I feel we can
The senior showed his true form at pick It up und do so much better than
the Ohio High · School Athletic we did today," suid Bose. "We knew
I ' .
Association Division n·State Truck the competition wus going to be good."
•.
and Field Meet nt Welcome Stadium.
"I could've done better," udded ·
·~ HESHIRB Three
ln
the
200,mcter
prcllmlnllries,
he
Roush
, "I didn't feel too good toduy. I
klver Valley softball playen
pushed
himself
to
the
extreme
to
win
don't
know
what's wron11. I think my
were named Oll·d\strict
te~ently.
· his heat with a time of 22.U. edging nerves got to me more thnn anything,
out Justin Conway (22.14) oT but I'll be re11dy for (the finuls). 1/'ust
· Junior Nicole Watklns and
Sllndusky Perkins.
wi sh 1 could've helped Josh out u I ttle
sophomore Oeri McFann was
·
Dente
Pennington
of
South
Point
bit more."
n~med first team, while
was third with n time of 22.2S.
f
.
• • •
Aelllor Amy Hood was named
Minutes
Iuter,
ufter
running
one
o
In
the
t'
i
rsl
200-meter
heut, Allan
lteond team.
the best 200 races of his career, he Brown pushed it towurds the end, but
came buck out to anchor the Oailia finished fifth, lust behind Murcus
Academy 4x400-meter reluy squad Slayton (22.30) of Clevclund
with teammates Daniel Roush, Tom Benedictine.
Bose and Ty Simmons.
Eric Burrlson .of Willard won the
At one point, the Devils found them· hent with 0 21.79, followed by Bob
'
MASON
- Keith Woods of
selves In seventh goina into the final Kandell (21.88) of Milan Edison and
Bradbury, has pQtked his !ICml·
400 meters, but Perry picked up a burst Brookfield's Lou Scudere (22.50).
~ck arid It fooks like he Is
of speed and led briefly before hold ina
For Brown, it was his second race of
acrious about aolf once asaln.
on for a third·place finish to advance to the afternoon. He finished seventh In
•·Woods ancf his tewn toOk
the state finals In his second event.
the 400 semifinals.
first place · Tuesday at
Followin11 the race, Perry bud to be "I
'· 11 ore 0 ut from the 400 "
~versldc Golf .Course, thus
· edlo"l person·nel •nd even· said wus
rca
XI Just
w save It alii hod und
'
t·reated by m
Brown
.•
P\IShing him Into the top spot
tu'ally was taken to an life&amp; hospital came In fifth. You just take what you
· with 7S.5 points and a fourafter be was unable to hold down llq· cun ~et."
.
pbint lead over the absent
uids.
"It s really u hurd ruce ut this level. I
Olive JIICoby at 71.S in the
To say Perry gave It his 1111 wus an just gave It all 1 hod. 1 came to repre·
course's Senior Men's League.
understatement.
sent my school and did the best! could.
In third ('lace Is Ralph Sayre
"We're ~ust really pleused with him,'' That's ali 1can do ." ·
~....;.;,:;::;.
of New Haven with 69.5
points.
In the
:sh, Simmons GOOD DAY - Ty Slmmona of Gallla
A total of 48 playen were on
few racee to try and help the team and advanced in a ncar photo-finish.
· Academy qualified for the atata finale In
hand 1\lesday with ·12· poinl8
today I told him, 'l want you to aoina
After a roush start, he huna with the the 100-meter daeh and the 4x400.
available.
for the 200,' and he really went after it.
malar relay Friday at the OHSAA atate
In first place at ·12 (58) wu
I'm real pleased with him. He just aave
IIIMH ... Jtate. 12
meet In Oayton , (Andrew Certar)
die team of Woods, Carroll
Norrlt of · Syracuse, Bill
For results from S•turcl~• •tllte track •nd field action,
McDaniel of Middleport, and
Clark preene of Hunicane.
. . ch•ck out Mond-Y'• Tribune
\ and Sentinel

.. lilts named

i; One Week Only!

Riverside senior
plfplay

A

..

~~m~~~~'H~r.ag:~d ~~~ fr~~

,
' . J'

.

Brnnyan, o m~or disap:
poinunent in his hrst season
us .on everyday player, was
tmded Frida~ by the Indiltns
to die Clncmnati Reds fur
minor le~~gue first baseman
Ben Broussard.
Branynn, 26, had ~C~:t:ived
more playing time this season
us the Indians hoped he
would develop into 11 powerhitting presence in their line· .·
up. .
However, he w11s butting
just .lOS with eight homers
und 17 RBI~ In SO gnmes and
hnd struck out 65 times this
senson. Lllst season, the lefl·
hunded utilitymun struck out
132 times in only 31 S ni·
bats.
"We couldn't wnit anr,
. longer for him to develop, '
snid Indians genernl man~~ger
Mnrk Shapiro. "He needs to
mnke un ndtustment Ill the
plate and he hasn't."
The 2S·yeo_r.old Broussard
wus with the Reds' Triple· A
Louisville affiliate this sea,
son. He wus batting .27 3 with
II homers nnd 30 RBls In S7
gnmes - 45 ut tlrst base .
Shupiro' said the Indians
will give Broussard some
work in the outfield in
But'fnlo.
· Broussnrd became e~pend·
able with the.Reds, who have
Scun Cnsey 111 first bose nnd
occusionully use Adum Dunn
there.
· "It's not like they don't
like Broussard," · Shupiro
suid. "It's just that he's the
third-string first busemnn
and they have 11 multitude of

•

W'·

Indians

,

IOO·m~te~

Broussurd
wus
the
Southern League butting
champion last yeur 111
Double·A Chuuunoogu. He
hit .320 with 23 homers and
69 RBis in 100 gumes.
Broussurd. u left-handed
hitter, wus tuken by the Reds
in the second round of the
June 1999 drun om of
McNeese State.
The Indians optioned
Broussard to Triple·A
Buffalo und, to replace
Branyun on the roster, purchased the ~ontruct of out·
fielder ·Chud Allen from
Buffalo.
Allen, who sil!ned us a
ri1inor lcugue free agent in
Muy, wus butting .359 (23·
for-64) with the Blsons. He
played in S7 gumcs for the
Minnesota Twins In 2001
before tearing his anterior
cruciute ligament while play,
ins right ut Jucobs Field und
undergoing season-ending
surgery,
.
Brunyon hnd become a
recent turget for booing funs
at Jacobs "Field us his strike,
outs piled up.
Indians hitting instructor
Eddit~ Murray hud worked .
with Brunynn since spr.ing
training on shortening his
swing und being more selec·
tive ut the plate.
But Brunynn was still
missing pitches fur too often
for the Indians, whose
offense hns struggled this
season and has sorely needed ·
another big bnt.
"I thou11hi Russ.ell Brunyan.
could hit .250 or .260 and hit
40 homers," · suid lndiuns
manager Churlic Mnnuel. "I
thought he was thut kind of
hitter."
Clevelund didn't wu.nt to
risk troding nwuy Brnnyan
ufter watching former
Indian s Jeromy Burnltz,
Briun Oiles und Richie
Sexson, who ore all nourish· .
inft with new te11ms.
'We're going in with our
eyes open." Reds manager
Bob Boone suid. "Sometimes
I don't cure about a strikeout
when a pinch-hitter comes In
in the sixth, but I really like
the home run ,"
1

'I

�Pap U••••NI' ll1a~ff.6fati11tl

Pomeroy • Mlddt1port • Gellpol... Ohio • Point Pllttent. WV

..:

Gallia.County church league action Redwomen
softball si~ns :;
Fairfield pitcher
FIIOM $TAl'!' REPORtS

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County
Church Softball ~que continued its
season with Week Three on Monday
June 3.
A pair of undefeated's battled, as
Rodney's men took on Middleport's
men, and the Church of God men and
women looked to pick up their first
victories of the season.
At Rodney Methodist's field,
Rodney took on Middleport. In the
women's game, Rodney (1·2) looked
to rebound from last week, s lost to
First Baptist. Middleport (2· 1) looked
to rebound from a loss to the Nazarene
women.
Middleport came -out strong, scoring

6 runs in the first two inninas. to pick
up their second win of the season.
Rodney was led by Abbey Sipple,
who had another great offensive ntght
a1 the plale as she scored all of
Rodney's runs. In the men's game,
Rodney (2·1) looked to continue the
undefeated season, while Middleport
(3-0~ looked to do the same.
Middleport's me" did the same as
their women had done, scoring 7 run,s
ln the first two innings in route to a 144 victory.
Middleport was led by Brian Howard
who was 2-3 with a run scored.
At the Church of God field, Church
of God's men and women. picked up
their first victories of the season. In the

women's game, Church of God (1-1)
won over Vinton Baptist (1-1), and in
tbe men's game, Church of God (1·1)
continued its winning ways over
Vinton (1·1) as well.
. In other ·action, no scores were
reported from the First Baptist and
Nazarene game, and the Fellowship
and Faith Baptist game as well.
Living Water had the' bye.
Next week, the action continues, as
First Baptist and Middleport take on
each other in a usually hot-contested
game.
· Also, Living Water takes on COO,
.Faith takes on Nazarene, and Vinton
takes on Fellowship.
Rodney Methodist has the bye.

DAYTON (AP) - RMu~o hom 1M"'"'
&lt;lOW ol
boyund glrlo lfiCtl
tnd klt!IOU&lt;N"""'t.

~21'01 .!0'; 7. SOonBiuler, W. Wldmopr,Cola, U-Arlfn11105'02.00':
Ato•lndrto lWfn 1/ahy s . 20'08.00'; • • 13, nHony
O.y. Chmlnodo·
Rtlul Monrlqu.,, O.Uonce Ayenovill• Jull...,. 5'02.00'; 15, Allohla Glover,
IOYI
20'08.00'
Cln. Winton Wooda 5'00.00": 10, AlhiiW
41110 _ ,
Slloll'ul
Kllilktr. Tllotnlo Wonhl~ 5'00.00'
DMIION I
DIVIIION I
DMIION Ill
I, Elyria (Jooh 'l'oung, Nld&lt;llrown, Mlko I, Mike D'AndrH, A- Loki 85'0a.so·: · I, Anno Marlo -rdl, - n C•nt.r .
tnv-. Ray Al'mltrong) HUt ; 2, N. tan. 2 . Adam K•llomlow... Plckoringlon WHiom R...rw 5'01.00'; 2, R-..loth
N3.110; 3, ~ 7:45.11 ; I , 81 '01.15'; :1, Jolin~. Huber Hlo. "-nlu•, Strytt., 5'05.00'; ~. Sandy
em. Lls.tlo 7:50.1.; 5, Rt~rg Waynt 51'11 .00"; 4, Rob Slmo, Mopr, Fl. loromlt5'04.00':4, Morlonno
!Se"Oe .so•: s. Soon W\IRktr, Moria SMin Mtrlon Local
7:!0.41 ; 1. C&lt;&gt;tt. St. Cheltot 7.51.15-1; 7. ~ S04tM1 7:53.&lt;10: I. Dublin Collman 7 : ~ .00 PUQII, Huber Hlo. 'Nayn. !Se'OUo•: e, a•i)4 .00~ 5, Mtfl... G,._, IAncelltr
DIVISION M
Call TllcMftpoon. LOQin 51'0t.aa•; 7, Flthtr Colh&gt; 5'03.00'; 5, Brlllony
I, Ptm.,.rvlll• Eulwood (Joml• O.IHI Pribula, SIR&gt;ngO- 55'10.00"; I . SIOM&lt;t, "Wft CrHk WoyMdol•
Kuhlman, Doug Auaoel1, M.n&gt;n lAhman, R,_n K""""· Lak•wood Sl. Ed""rd 1'03.00'; 7, J•n Groyoon, Cortland
Ayon - ) 7;!1&amp;.00; R. MaQo.,... 5&lt;1'03.00'
Mopl•wood 5'03.00'; 8, Amy K"'mtr,
Fltlil 7:5t.t7: 3. van Wtn 7:58.83: 4.
DIVIIIION Ill
Minot.. 5'03.00'
Gttnvlllo 1 :00.05: $, Limo ShtwnH t,S,...K-. Si&gt;tncON!U.aTtt .Ra•; 2,
LOfltiJump
57"07.!0' :
DIVIeiON I
1:00.71; I , U - SlndulltY 1:05.71: 7, ~H Bfrgtr, Anlh
Si;oltlt HION•nd 1:01.21: l. .....,noula 3, Bt&amp;kt Mug. ColuMbut Qf()vt 1, Tltnna IAadiiOII. Elyria 19'00.00": 2,
Wood- 1:01.47
55'08.50'; 4, ROIIOII Cllllt, Mtonla Alnan&lt;lt Salclk, l!acadonll Nordonlo·
DIVIIION Ill
53'01.00": 5, Stov• ~... O.lphot 18'01.00'; 3, Moridoha Thomoo, Sprtno.
1. Cortland MJplotwood (Jolin l'almt&lt; Jttii•IIOR 53'03.00'; I, Nid&lt; Ptnttloh, S. t 8'01,00'; 4, M.hl-v MoCulio&lt;lgh, Doy.
Paul Moatr, Deltk A""otf()ng, O.vld Ntw Middletown Sprlng, S3'0US~ 7, Col. Wttlto 11'00.50'; 5, Aocltof llur10n,
Pyltartl 7:55.74; a. -tltal a:OUI; 3, Rlelt lllrt&gt;ont, llt!tln Cont.. W_, Ntw Phllodolphia 17'0U5': I; Erin
MCDOntl4 I :Ge.74; 4, ~t . Lotamlo . AtHM 152' 11 .50': 8, Gary Sn~. N. Lynch, Strongovlllt 17'01.00; 7,
1:01.27: 5. ElmOit WOOdmort I :OUI: e, Limos. Rangt 152'04.25~
Counnoy l'ondtr, Akr. luchttt 17'00.00';
'"'"'""' St. JoMph 1 :10.01 ; 7, Marlo
l'olt vault
e. Chi9,UI"I Alltn, Hllllord Dart&gt;y
Slllln Marlon local 1:13.01; a.
DIVIIION I
17'01.50; 8, Tamara Ftnntll, Cln.
&amp;p.onc.rvilit 8&lt;14.18
1, Jolin Ruottll, Cln. Princeton Watnul Hlllt 17'07.50': 10. MOIQtn
GIIILI
11'01,00'; I, Jakt Kuhntlr, Plak•rlngton Martin, Kln(ll Millo Klngt 17'04.00"; 11,
4 - -y
15'03.00'; S, 8ront WoiMr, Cln . Mo.llor l&lt;olt Achier, 0rwaon Cloy 17"02.75'; 12,
Dl¥1110111
15'03.00': 4, Mikt Modlll, llrunowlck Amy Wlnt•r, Sunbu.ry Big Walnut
I, Cit. Hto. loaurnont (Knottn Joyner. 1a'OO.OO'; 5. Paul HUQftH, Mt. vamcn IO'Ot.OO•; 1Sc Erica Co,.taphtn, Cio.
Aim.. Dobrowokl, Nort Sonnlllt, Mtgglt 14'08.00": 8, MIMI IIQIIQO. A.mhttlt Otonvlllt 18'07.ao•: 14, Aldan Vandtll,
tnr.ta) 0:03 .81; a. lalt•wood 1:01.32; 3, StMio t~·oe .oo·: r. Johh Ponor. Cln. Otm~ Falla 11'oe.ao•: 11. Rachlltt
Cln. Turpin O: ll.tl; a, Wodowarlh Andtl,.on
14'01.00':
I,
Corey -•:MIIIIIIon Jack101118'05.211": tl.
1:20.15; 5. ¥Qungo. Boardman 1:24H; Ptouynokl,
Holland
Sprlnolltld JoiHnallanko, Hilliard O.rby 18'01.15Cl"
e. Vtndalla Butltr e:auo: 1. Cln. 14'03.00'
lhot Put
COitrtln a:H.i!O: 1. Mt&lt;llna t :H .-10.
DIYIIIION Ill
DIV1110N I
DIYIIIONI
1, Cnad &amp;agy. S~rvlllt1t'OI.OO'; 2. I, Bath Mttlory, Aahlond 48'00.211";, 2,
1, CuyahOga ~olio CVCA (Come Lo-r, Mtcnatl Richmond, MOrrll RldQtdtlt AthltY MU"tl, N. Cln. HOOvtt4R'01.r5":
koto Schwtltrtr, ~IIfton Schuck, Amy 14'03.00"; 3, Ntll Kowaltkl, Cit. 3, Kotol Footer. LOvtllnd 41'11.00"; I,
Amotdl 0:13.41; I, Colo. SchoOl lor Glrlo Cuyahoga Hto. t3'08.00"; 3, Nick Hill, M.hlty Burwell, Plcktrlngton 41'01.7a':
8:17.70: 3. Hun&gt;n 1:37.41 ; 4, Mtllttrll&gt;urv Llboorl'f Cont., 13'00.00': s. Eric Nioely, 5, Llndur Hill, Mt. Vamon 41'01,75"; e.
w. H01mttt:37.12; 5. Pttty 8:41.25; e. Doltaroct j\ylrovHit 13'!le.OO': 8, Kyle Salothl•l Wla•. Trotwood·Madlaon
~Mr. SVSM 1:41 .to: 7, AllllnCt NUIIbauM. Oatton 13'06.00'; 7, Grant 41'04.25': 7, Tltno Wolth•r1 Con.
Morllngton 8:43.82; 8, Con. Coni. Colh. Routh, Vtrotllltt 13100.00'; I. ltt GlonQak 41 '01 ,50': 8, Llndo•y 1\tundll,
1:41.02.
RlrOr. Mt . l;ilload t ~ooL .oo·
Rockr Alvtr Mognlllcot 40'03.28': t.
DIV111DN Ill
n
Jonnt Slroun, Mt, V•mon ~o·oo.ao•; 10.
- 1. Mlnottr (BI&lt;kY Luthman, Jodi
Dloauo Tllrow
Jot Scott, Reynoldtburg 39'04.00"; II,
DIVtaiON I
'
Morla Tallon!, Muolllon ' Jackoon
Wohrman. Jolnno Gru.,.r, Sunnl Otdlngl
1:24 .52: a. Ft. Loramie 0:35.80; 3, t. lltth Mtliory, Athland I 51 '05.00'; 2, 38'01.&amp;0'; 12, Cl&lt;tly Aooltion. Bodlord
Columbuo Grove 1:38.20; 4, fll~land Shanna
DICKtnoon. . Oln. ~lktn 38'01 .25'; I 3,·Shannon l'ootor,lovoland
t :40.21·: 5. Sponcoi\lllltt:4t .l)ol:e.Ciatel 143'10.00':3.JonnaStrouot.Mt. Vtmon 38'I0.2a': 11. TlttraAIIon.Cit. E. 'flch,
Millo Hawk•n 8:47.38 ; 7, Bluttlon 138'08.00"; 4, Morlan SIHit, Voungt. 38'08.00": 15, RoDin JOtoktn, Cln.
t :4U8; 8, Ntwork Coth. 8:51.51
~uottntown·FIIoh 131'00.00"; 5, Klol Coltrain 38'00.00'; 18, Annlt Korg,
IOVI
~oattr, lovelaflil t3T10.00"; a, Bothlnr M•notl .. d 34'07.2!"
D40Gut Throw
Nahm, Madlion I 38'11 .00"; 1 Llridoay
Pot. V.un
DIVIIION I
Polhtmua, Dublin SCioto t38'0?.00'; 8,
DIVIIION I
1. Mlkt D'flflilroa. flvon LlKo 190'05.00': EllOIII MtiiOI\, Day. a.trnont 131 '1 0.00'; 1. Atndl SltPhtno, Hill ford Dovldoon
R, Ryan Franllngot, Cit. St. lgnalluo 9, Llndoty Atun~•l, Rocky Alvtt 11'00.00': 2. Erin Brown, Alohfltld
181'0'.00"; 3, Slho VaiiOa, Youngo. Magnltlott 127'01.00"; 10, Cottnor Rtvtrt 10'01.00"; 3. AMy Gartplo.
Boardman 173'01.00"; '· llob Murphy, Monn, Hilliard Darby t20'0a.oo•: 11, Jonl Brunowlck 10'oe.oo•: 4. lillloon Brager,
Cit. St . lgnatluo 185'09.00"; ! , Bryan Dodd, LanCitltr 118'1t.OO't II, Keto Youngo. Boardm1n 10'01.00"; 5, Marl .. ta
Haruttl)l. Matltlla 165'07.00": 6, Kralg Ry.,.raryk, Cit, St. Jootph 118'11.00'; Brlndo, Elyria ' t0'03.00'; 8, T•rro
Cartoon. HltHard Darby 184'05:00'; 7. 13, Annlt l&lt;orv. Monolltld 118'08.00': Wtlthtr, Can. QlonOok 10'03.00'; 7.
Quinn PllcQQk, Plqui 181'04.00'; 8, E¥an 14, Utl ZlmMtrtnan, Qr..n 118'10.00'; Anna Johnlcn.
Uppor Arlington
llurd, Younga. Boordman I 58'04 .00'
15,
Dorlru
Jonto,
Grtan¥1111 10'00.00': 7, Kim WIIIOH, Wollorvlllt N.
High Jump
100'04.00"; t6, ~manda Mookbu, 10'00.00'; 8, Alyaho Goo.. l, Linoootor
DIVIIION I
Hudoon 108'11 .00'
tO'OO.OO'; tO, Jannlf•r P1&lt;k, Holland
1, Brandol&gt; WoOtloon. Manolttld 8'08.00":
DIVII!ON Ill
Spring. 9'De.OO'; 11, taro Moler, Cln.
2, Ray MOiby. Lyndhurot Brullll 1'08.00': t.
Ohtloton
Ctomaon.
Cortland Col•raln 8'oe.oo•: 12. Karina Murray. ·
t, Erlo Jonoo, tll!. ROQoro e·oe.oo•; 4, Maplewood 157'01.00': 2. Mlohtllo Cln. ~nderoon 8'06.00"; t3, Amanda
Tom H•rtynon, Upptt MlnQion 8'08,00"; Roollo, Witton JFK 144'0t .00'; 3, Janny Loubaugh, Wadaworth 8'06.00"; 14,
5, Carlot Al•nndor, Akr. Buohltl Tlnnoy, Colllno Wtltorn Raoorvo Alloon SChwoda, N. Royalton 1'00.00';
8'08.00'; 8, Sam Stotlll, Cin. NW 135"10.00'; 4, Mirodlth Elliot, Ada 15', Kalla Stll&gt;blno, Clayton Northmont
8'05.00': ?.logon Kttllmonn, Potukalo 131'00.00': i5, Kltlo Butt.,, ~lndlar 9'00.00";
t8, ' Aohtoy
Johnoon. ·
Walklnt Mtmorlal 8'08.00': e , Malt Llbtrtr·Bonton t30'03.00": e. Ktthryn Wilmington e·oo.oo· .
Wamor, Oregon Clay 1'05.00"
Wltllamo. Atwator Wetortoo 120'10.00';
aOYI
Long ~umf
7, Silly Schnalllngor, Norwalk st. Paul
TIAM ICDRII
DIVfiiDN
tau·oe.oo•; 8, Cindy DltCkltn, Mlnilir
DIVIIION I
1. Klwon IAwoon. Cola. Manon·Franklln 128'10.00'
1, ~von IAko 20; 2, Monoftllld 18; 3,
U '0$.78"; 2, 8tondon Woodaon,
High Jump
Plakorlnglon 11; 4, Cto. St. ~tluo t3;
Manlllold 23'02.25": 3. Ma"'\\l Jontt.
DIYIIION I
5. Colo. Marion-Franklin 10: (tit). Cln.
WilMington 22'01.50": 4, Mort&lt; PhHmort. t. All l!cMtnd, fltnt Rooaev•ll a·oe.oo•: Prlnooton 10: 5 (lit). Huber lt. Wayne
ReynoldoDurg 22'01.25": 5, ilcOH 2, Anne Morrow, Spring . .N. 5'07.00": 3. I~; 5 (Ill), Elyria tO; t. Cln. LaSalle 9: I
Hudepohl, Cln, LaSalle 22'08.00•; I, Michelli Suthlt'land, Maumte !'07.oo•; (lie), ·R.•rnoldaburg e: 1t 1 N. Oan.
Brandon Jonll 1 Gahanna Lincoln .t, Ambtr Bland, Vounga. Boardmtn HOover 8; 12, LyndhUI'It Bruth 7; 12
k2'03.1!'; 7, Kondall Smhh, Coplay 5'Ge.OO'; 5, nffony Colvin, Cto, Rhodoo (tlo), Tol. AOQoro 7; ta (Ht), Youngo.
.122'02 .00'; a, Camoron Wldgtl, Youngo. s•oe.OO'; 8, Krtatlno BolloroMin, Boardman 7; 1a, Hudoon 8; 1a (HI),
Chanor 22'01 .60'
MltldltiiUro . Hit. Mldpatlt 5'08.00': 1, Wllmlngtor, e: 15 (lit), Ctn. Motlltt e: 18,
DIVIIION Ill
Nltllll Sako, Pt""l Hit. Vallll' Fotgt Upper Atl ngton 5; I 8 (lit), MaCidonla
1, Mike Wagnar, t.logBdoro 22'0t .SO'; 2, !'08.00': B, Amy Wlnlot, Sunbury Big. NOiaonla 8; t8 (Ill), Bruniwlok 5; 2t,
Tim Wilt, Monrotvlllt .22'Q0.50"i 3, Walnut S'tw.oo•i 0, Shanay Birden, Akr. Akt. Buchtel 4i 21 (tit), Mt. Vernon 4; 21
Jl)fllthan Co•, Day. Sil"ro 2t '0.0 .25'; 4, Gorllold 5'04 .00'; 101 Louloa Stepp, ~''I• Marietta 4; 24, Amhorot S11111 3; 24 .
Shant
Amoo.
Cordlngton•Lincoln Falrlltld 5'02.00"; tO, Erlko Nowell, tit, Qohtnna Lincoln 3; 24 (tit). LOQon
21'01.00'; a, Mall Ototgt, W. Alo•andno Dolawart Hayttt 5'02.00'; 10. Roullnd
; 2t (Itt). Hilliard Darby 3; 24 (lit), Cln.
Twin Yatltr s . 21'01.50': 8. Mlltt Swanoy. Jontt. Wooattt a•02 .00": 13. Juoloa NW 3: 24 (lit), COlo. St. Chariot 3; 30,

-.&amp;.

11 1 1

State

ftomPip81
pack nnd edged past Kandell
for a spot in the finals
Saturday by finishing fourlh.
"Jl m real excited. r m real
worn out,' said Simmons.
."I've been kind of sick today
.(Friday), but I'm excited."
Simmons finished with a
time of I 1.24; while Kandall
came in with 11time of I L2S.
Simmons, though wasn't
completely pleased with his
performance.
"It was one of my worst
races.' said Simmons. "I didn't come out of the blocks
real good and my legs felt a
little wea:L"
And then came the final

involving Oallia County ath· ·
letes, the girls' 4x800-meter
relay team of Brianna
Johnson, Lindsay Caldwell,
Tiffany Sanders and . Sara
Wiseman finished !Sth with a
time of 10:12.17.

50-meters.

"That's when I start thinking, 'Just run smooth and
relax,'" said Simmons.
"That's where I picked it up

at."

·

·

Cuyahoga Valley Christian
Academr. won the girls'
4x800 w1th a time of9:23.41,
while Columbus School for
Girls was second and Huron
was third.

Dl
..
1, SpanotrviU. 21; 2, Vtrulllta 10; 2
Ctt•). Mogodo"' 10: ·2 (Itt), Conlond
Mlj)ltwood 1O: S. Anloa Elll 1:
S (tit). MottrotVillt I; a (lit). Momtl
Rldgt&lt;lalt 1: e. w. Aitlxand~a TWin

Valley S. I; I, Day. StiYIIra I; I,
McDonald I; 1 1 Columbu1 Grove I; 12,

Lt.,.rtr c •• ,.. 5. 5: u Ctl•l· cr •.
Cuyahoga Hto. 5.5: · 14, D•llonc•
Ayttrovlilt a; 1~ (Uti, AniOIIIa a; 14 (tit),
Fon lo""'lt Si,_14 (tltl. C.~lnaton·
LincOln 5: 1a, uolphoo Jttll•"""": 11
(Ut), Elmo"' Woodrnorw 4; 20, Dolton 3:
20 (~t), Ntw Mlddt.town Spring. 3; 20
(tta). "'tltfltlorl 3: 110 (tt.l. ~rornont St.
Jottplt 3: .14, Btrtln Ctn. W. R t - 2;
2~ (lit), Marta Stotn Mo~on looal 2: H.
N. Limo S. Range t; 211 (Ht), Mt. Glltt&lt;l
1
GIIILI
TIAM ICOIIII
DIYIIION I
1. Aohlond 20: 2. Elyrla 14; 2 (Itt),
Voungo. Boardman 14; 4, Hilliard
Oavld..n 10; 4 (II•), t&lt;otnt Roottvelt 10; ·
4 (tt•), Mt. V•man 10; 4 (H•), Cit. Hla . .
IIMumonl 10; 4 (tit), Loveland 10; I, N.
Con. Hoover 8; t (Ita). Sprlng. N. 8; 8
(tit), Cln. Alktn 8: 8 (tlt),laktwood 8:8
Ctt•). Alohtltld Atver• 1: t (tit),
Macldonla Nordonla 8: 1S,.arunawtok 1:
15 (tl•), Cln. Turpin 8; 15 (llo), Moumtt
d; 1! (II•), Spring . S. 8; 18, Doy. Col.
Whitt 5; 18 (H•). Wodtwonh 5; 11 (Ito),
PICkonnglon a: 19ltlt). can. GttnOok 5:
18 (Ito), Vounga. Auatlntown·FIIch 5; 24.
N•w Phlladtlphll 4; 24 (tlo), Cia.
Rhodtlo 4; 2e, SIR&gt;ngl'lill• 3; 2a (tl•).
Modloon 3; 28 (tlo), Trotwood·Madloon 3;
28 (tit), MlddiM&gt;ufO Hlo. Mtdport&lt; 3; 28
(tltl.lilndllll Buller 3:31. Po""' Hto.
Vtilay F - 2: 3t (lit), Dublin SCioto a:
31 (11411, Cln. qolaraln 2; 31 (Itt), Akr.
Buclllo 2: 35, Uppor Arlington 1.~; 35
(tlo), Wootorvlll• N. 1.5; 37, Doy.
B•lmont 1·: 37 (tlo), Aocky Alv•r
Magnltlcot 1 : 37 (tlo). Svnbury Big
Walnut 1: 37 (Cit). Mtdlno 1; 37 (tit).
Hilliard Qartly 1
DIYIIION II
1, CuyohOQa Fallo CVCA 10; 2, Colt.
School tor Glrlo 8; 3, Huron 8; 4,
Mlllt,.bUIQ W. Hotmoo 5; 5, Ptrry 4; 8,
Akr. SYSM 3; 7, lilllonct Mo~lnglon 2; 8,
Con. Ctnt. Calh. I.
·
· · DIVIIION Ill
t, Fort Loraml• II; 2, Mlnaltr12; 2 (tl•),
Cortland Maplewood 12; ~. lltrlln C•nt.r
W••t•m Rtotl"'• 10; a. warrtn JFII 8; a
(lltl, Stryker 6: 7. Columbua Grovt 8; 7
(tlo), Colllno Wollorn Rottrva I; t,
Kirtland 5; 0 (II•), Marlo St•ln Marion '
Loco!; t (111), Ado 5; t2, Findlay UlMrty· .
Btnton 4; 12 (tlo). Sponcorvlll• 4; 14,
Apcltt Crotk warntdllt 3.5: 14 Cttt).
Linoalltr Fiohtr Cath. 3.a; 1a, Gal.,
Millo Howt&lt;on 3; 18 (tit), ~lwat•r
Wot•rtoo 3; 18, Norwalk Sl. Paul 2; t8
(tit), BluHton 2; 20. Newort&lt; C.lh. I

lune 25-28.
The annual camp. now in its sixteenth
1
: · ,year, is open to bOys and girls from 11F5
&amp;17. .
www.gatorzone.com,
·Jones, 35, who has been an assistant
"Jones has played a key
men's baske1ball coach at the University
role in the lJF's recnritof Florida since 1996. was also an assisJoMa
ing and player develop&gt; tant coach at Marshall University from
mcnt thai has led to a
U90-96.. He has served . nine seasons school-record
consecutive NCAA
llllder Coach Billy Donovan overalL
appearances
and
back-to-back
.-·Prior to that, he was an assistant coach Southeastern Conference Chmpion.ships
at Pikeville College from 1988-90 as one in 2000 and 2001.
eC the youngest coaches on the collegiate The son of Dan and Carol Jones of
level
Point Pleasant, he is a 1984 graduate of
:-•A Pikeville graduate. Jones earned a Point Pleasant High School.
scholarship to play at the Kentucky
''This is my 16th summer," Jones said
school, lettered all four years in baske.t- . in a press release, "and I have been fortuball, and still holds the school's record m nate enough to be around a lot great basassists. He .set records for most assists in ketball coaches all across the country. No
a: game, 21. season (276), and career camp do r look forward in coming baclc
(513). He served as the team's captain to and sharing mr experiences lhan in my
during his senior year, finishing second hometown of Pomt Pleasant."
In the nation in the NAIA with I0.7 . Registration for the camp begins on
assists per game. During his four years· June 25, fro01 7:15a.m. to 8:15a.m., for
on the Pikeville squad, Jones played wilh ages 6-10, and ages 11-17 will be able to
two-time NAIA All-American Todd May, register from 9:30 a.m. to 10:45. All reg.: who ave11ged 40.1 points.per game, and istration .will be in the PPMS school gym,
:· helped Pikeville to its first 20-win season with lhe cost per campe
. r set at $70. A $30
: in 11 rears.
deposit is required when the camp appli. Dunng his six years at Marshall, Jones cation is turned.in, with the balance due
· hot only served as a graduate assistant !n wlien the camper arrive,s at camp. The
, 1990, but also earned his Master's m deposit is !!On-refundable. .
· S'pons Management in 1992. He was
Three or more campers from a family
· ~lien promoted to assistant c.oach and was will receive $15 off the total fee.
."involved in all aspects of the basketball
Sessions will run from 8:30 a.m. to
: P!'Ogram, including assisting wilh scout- 11:30 p.m. for ages 6-10, II a.m. to 2:30

four

Softball Coach David Pyles has once again dipped into the
talent pool of southwestern Ohio in his quest to build the
Redwoinen program into an American Mideast
Conference and NAJA powerhouse.
..
Rio Grande has signed Fairfield pitcher Ste~
Broccolo to a P,t-in-aid scholarship to play (or 1M
Redwomen beg~nning in 2003. She will join Fairfield
. teammate Jenny Olding and Hamilton,s Brandi Jones as a
pan of the incoming class.
-·
Broccolo was recently tabbed 1st Team All-Greater
Miami Conference this past season as well as earning 1st
Team All-Southwest Dislrict honors as a pitcher. In addi:
tion to those accolades she was a member of the Hack
Sports All-Tournament squad and was credited
. with . e
GMC Scholar Athlete Award with a 3.434 grade point
average. She is a three-time winner of the schOlar award,
As a junior, Broccolo hadcan 0.81 ERA and was solid at
the plate with a .470 batting average. She earned the
Fairfield High School Offensive Award in 2000 and posted a career-high 17·slrikeout game. .
.:
She possesses seven pitches with her out pitches being
· a change-up and curve ball.
.
She il1so played for the Miami Valley Xpress fall and
summer league team.
:
Broccolo was excited about signing with Rio Orand~
"I was excited io sign and can,t wait to start the season,•:
she said. "I really liked Coach Pyles and Jenny Olding
signing'had a lot to do with it."
·.
..On 11lay!d~ with Olding in college. "It's going to be
fun," She
ed. "I know we, II have an excellent center·
fielder, she's a great player."
Broccolo said there is one adjustment she will have to
mike to the college game, the additional three feet from
the pitching rubber to the plate. "43-feet is something that
I'll have to work hard on, butl,m confident that I can do
~

.

•'

~

~les

is happy Broccolo is in the fold wilh lhe loss
semor hurler Jessica Temple, his club was in need of
another pitcher to_join incoming freshman Andrea Lotycz ·
from Marysville Fairbanks High School.
·
Broccolo has not yet decided on a major.
·,
She is one of eight in 'the 2003 recruiting class. . :
. ~tephanie is the daughter of Steve and Pam Broccolo o~
Furffeld.
·
.. .

NOTICE

.'
'

Edwards Moving and Rigging, Inc., has ..
been contracted to move generators, turbines and transformers into the Rolling Hills:
Power Plant in Wilkesville. Roads will be .
shut down along the following route for the.·
duration of each move. We will be starting ·
at the Meigs Rail Siding in Rutland pro- ·
ceeding to Hwy 124 going west. At ·
Wilkesville we wilJ be taking Hwy 1689 .:
north to the Power Plant. We would appre- ·:
ciate your patience and cooperation. Move
date: June 13, 2002.
·

MORE LOCAL NEWS MO..RE LOCAL FOLKS
.

·

.

•

•

Subscribe today.
446-2342

..

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And afterwards, there was
that short! but grueling wait
for· the v deo scoreboard to
post the final results.
"I was scared for a second,'
said Simmons. "I just looked
1616 Eastern Ave.
up at the monitor and just
Gallipolis, OH
waited for my name to come
CHEVROLET
446-3672
up to aee if~m~it'
740·448•3872
· In the only final Friday I ~;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;:;:::;:____..,.__

' I,.

Ponlnoult~

'01
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Congratulations,
Louie Bush
Gene Johnson Of
Gene Johnson
Chevy.
has announced
that Louie Bush
has earned
Salesman of the
Month for
May

e.

.J

$13,500

GALLIA AUTO SALE

cur-

1

FROM StAfF REPORTS .

Strongavth 2; 30 (II•), Cln. 2;
30 (Ito), Copley 2; .30 (tt.), PttoWatklna Mon1oltltl 2; 30 Ctt.), Piqua 2; 30
(tit). S04tMI 2; 38. Young&amp;. Chtnoy I; 311
(tlo). Holland Sprtnglltld 1; 311 (lit),
OroQon Clay I ; 311 (lie), Liktwood Sl.
Edward I; 311 (tit). Dublin Cotlmon I
DIV1110N H
1, p.,..,.rvnt• Eottwood to: 2,
Mogadore Fltlil 8; 3. Vtn Wort I: 4,
Grtnvlllo a; a. Lima Sill- 4; U S.~ 3: r. Sparto Hlghtond 2: a.

1re

rently underwa)' for the A'ID'IBI Domie
Jones Basketball Caq:, whieh will take
place 1t Point Pleasailt Middle School

RIO GRANDE ~ Uoiversity of Rio Grande Head

1001 OHSAA STATE TRACK AND FIELD RESULtS
!Mil002 .....
a......

ares u-n,

ing. tile conditioning p..m. fa:
and " speci illdiprogram. film ucbllnge;. vichall insl:nlction session is set up from l
oo-floor coaching and to4 p.m. forqa 12-17.
was also the Thundering for the special individUal in'ltructiM
Henl"s Summer C1mp session1 which will run onJune26111111Zl
only. the cost is $30.
COOI'Ciinator.
According to the AWltding to infoonation ruleased by
Gator's official website, Jones, the emph:lsis in the special indi-

FRCIM STAFF IIO'ORTS

POINT PLEASANT - PliiiS

··

vidual sessions will be high intense ~
damentals used in the U ni vers.ity of
Fklrida'1 daily instruction illustrating l!aiJ
handling and shooting drills used a the
next level, as well as how ll!) pmc.tiee and
organize individual worlcouts.
All campers must check in before camp
and ~ under the con&amp;lant supervisioo by

CHEVROlET
740-446-3672
CMIYY

the staff.

~we stress fundamenlals

and discipline.
our camp." Jones said. "Ail we ast is
for eacll and every camper to do. is try
and work bard because we teach much
more than basketball. We also try to
develop people stills lhroughoul the
camp."
This year's guests have not been
announced yet; however, past guest
speakers include Marshall University
Men's Basketball Head Coach Greg
White; former Snlem College, Harlem
Globetrotters, and New Jersey Nets basketball standout Archie Talley; Donovan;
and former Marshall University standout
John Taft, who racked up 2.332 points
from 1987 - 1991 for the Thundering
Herd.
.
Applications muy be picked up at several locations in Mason County, including Dairy Queen, the Point Pleasant Cily
Building, Fruth's, Fox's Pizza and
Village Pizza. For more information on
lhe camp, contact Dan Jones at675-4402.
a1

·2002 Chevy Malibu .

Power WfiNfows. , _ , l.OdS. Rlt
Ctllf#, BQicuta F«tory Wlll'nlllty

2000Buick

REDWOMEN BASKETBALL SIGNEES

Rio Grande hoops signs Rigel, Martin
class that we had last year and Rio Grande. "I'm real happy court.
"I know what she is goin~ to
RIO GRANDE - Rio could possibly equal or surpass and r don't have to
worry,"(about playing colle- do. I feel comfortable play•ng
Grande women's basketball it.n
., coach David Smalley is
Ri~el plans to major in giately) Martin said. ''Coach with her."
Smalley came to me, he
Martin was named Most
' puttint! the finishing touches English and Journalism.
showed me around campus; he Valuable Player of the 2000
on h1s recruiting class for
called alllhe time and showed high school summer league
l ~002-03 and he believes it
RIO GRANDE SIGNS
me that he wanted me."
and has graduated from a tech;..&amp;uld be as good or better than
WOODROW'S MARTIN
Martin
talked
about
her
·
nical school for marketing.
~last year, s class that produced
One area where the 2001-02
ahree freshmen starters. His version of the Rio Grande goals for the nextleveli' "Since C~h ~mal ley belie":es that
I=.Jatest addition is Liz Rigel of women's basketball team was I was at Woodrow, . was a Martin w11l help lhe Rio pro~Springfield Catholic Central lacking was a big, strong play- team leader and hopefully gram in the post. "Am;mdn
er in the post, having lost when I come up to colle$e I'll will see lime in our post posi~High School.
~ Rigel, S-foot-9 post player in Karley Mohler, Mindy Pope be able give out leadership too lion, I l~.e her physical play,
~gh.schOQJ, is,ve111ati.~ enough and Kassie. Kendall following and ~lay good,'play hard, play her ab1hty to bang and
·
rebound ," ·
roug ."
~ play on the penmeter as the 2000-0 l campaign.
She
knows
that
there
will
be
Smalley said, "I think she
~well. She scored 1,356 points,
Head coach David Smalley
~pulled down 823 rebounds and is hopin~ he has shored up that an adjustment period from can improve on her scoring
~gistered ·330 steals
at area w1th the signing of high school to college and pin- ability on lhe inside. She can
pointed what she needs to outlet it (the ball); she's a
~atholic Central, all school Amanda Martin.
~ords. Rigel also holds single
Martin, a six-foot · center, work on. "I think I need lift strong kid, a great person, and
~~am~ records of 40 points, 20 from Beckley, West Virginia weights more; I think if I get a we're looking forward to what
~sand 13 steals. She also comes to Rio Grande after little bit stronger I can play Amanda will bring to our post
position."
~rodu~ five lriple·doubles at playing three years of varsity with them:" ·
Smalley stated that Rio got
hoops for Woodrow Wilson Martin will be reunited with
~e varsity level.
;, She was voted 1st Team All· High School. She led the team former prep teammate .Angel into recruiting Martin late in
~hio Heritage Conference this in total defense as a junior and Allen, who will be entering her the game and feels very fortusecond season on the baniCs of nate to have signed her. "To be
'1\6st season, averaging 23.9 Senior.
points, 14.7 rebounds and 7.0 Martin averaged 8.5 points, Raccoon Creek."J've known on her as late as we were and
12 rebounds, live blocked Angel since we were little; be able to land her; we feel
, tteals per game.
.
She also posted a 3.5 grade shots and 5 steals per game for I've played wilh Angel. I've very fortunate." . .
played against Angel; I know She plans to maJOr m buslpoint average in the classroom. the Lady Eagles.
Rigel is happy to have found She is happy to be a part of every move she makes on the ness.
a college home. "I'm · reallr
.., ...tad to have signed because 11
~~as really stressful for me,"
(-Rigel said. "But, I'm ready to
• IP• ready to get to college and
l11&gt;pefully have a good four .
..
'':;~.Vf'jl,.
~~ ....
Calholic Central head coach
~ Gary Falkenbach spoke highly
t of the newest Rio Grande
· ~. recruit. "Everywhere I' went ·
~ lhis year I talked about how
~ she made us better and how she
::, :was a great team player,"
;&lt;'"'falkenbach said. ''Two years
~ ago, she took the youriger kids
~ and made our program even
~ better and she llad great slats to
•' go along with it."
·
~ ."All around she is a great ·
!;.;athlete, I think her greatC!Jt
~ attribute is tha:t she sees the
• 59 PTO hp* Perkin.® 4 cylinder, 1000 series diesel engines
~ floor so well, she can mala: a
if. great pass, she runs lhe floor
with Fa1tram® combustion for maximum torque,
·
~ really well, she's one of those
smoothnest and low emission •
~,kids that has a knack to find the
• 8F/2R manual transmission with differential lock for maximu_m ·
~ .basketball."
~ • Smailey is thrilled to add a
efficiency.
:• student/athlete · the quality .of
• Advanced Ferguson hydraulic system for precise
~ Rigel to the program. "Liz is a
·
Implement control.
~ 'JI"e&amp;l student. First of all, she is
~; ·Vl:fr athletic, has a great work
t Oil-cooled disc brakes for extra stopping power and long life
~ eth1c, she played, .mostly in the
• Telescopic 2WD axles.
.
~•.post, but she is probably more
t Cat&amp;Qory II 3-polnt hitch with draft-sensing top link for fast draft
:: of win' player.
1
· ~
' She s hard-nosed, she plays
response.·
·
·: extremely hard all the time; s.be
• Fleld·foldlng ROPS for low clearance when you need lt.
~ has the ability to rebound and .
• Power steering and spring-suspension seats with armrests for
,• go coast-to-coast wilh .it and
:: finish. She's very strong, ve~
extra comfort.
~~hysical type of player, '
• Manufacturer's rat9d
\
~ Smalley ' added. "I . think,
~ maybe as a freshmen, lhere,s a
~ very, very good chance of
,! coming in and seeing a lot of
~ playinjl 'time and competing for
~ starUng position.
~: "Liz~~ a W~fX!DlC addition to
FROM STAI'I' REPORTS

•••

PRICE
REDUCED!

*MASSEY FERGUSON~

~our

program. '

.

...;. Smalley thinks the 2002-03
~s may be.' on par or will
:;exceed .last year's excellent
~-Class. "I think this recruiting .
s that wp have is cl~. to .
caliber of the recnnung
'I'
'

••
)

Limited £clition

1997 Olds

Locally OWned, Super Clean, Loaaedl

1995 Chevy Lumina

PRICED RIGHT FOR A QUICK SALEI!

2002 Chevy
Trailblazer LS 4X4

�.,, ......

p

·-~~---~~·

Poli-..oy • MicHl aport • Gl)llipOh, Ohio • Point Pleeunt, WV

-

EES

..unbap tlt1mtt -6rnnnrl • Page 85

NBAFINALS

nowu l-0
to 65·57.
49 in the half, including 0-for·
O'Neal pasSed out of dou· 6 on 3-pointerS, and missed
ble coverage and found four of eight free throws in
Bryant for a 3·pointer, thell(.,. !he second quaner. But the
hit four consecutive free Nets were able to hal]g in by
throws and a 9-foot fadeaway. controlling the off~nsive
A 3-pointer by Brian Shaw off glass, grabbing 15 offensive
an assist (i;nm O'Neal com- rebounds to the Lakers' three.
pleted a J2.-0 run and gave the O'Ne~l reached ~0 points
Lakers a 77-57 lead.
by .dunking and making a free
New Jersey scored the final throw off a perfect pick-andfour points of the third quarter roll pass from Bryant with 6
and made three quick 3-point· 1/2 minutes left in the thirders early in the fourth to pull just before the Lakers' 12-0
within 83-77, but O'Neal went run gave them a lead that was
to the line and scored points too big for the Nets to over39 and 40 with 7: 19 left.
come.
Fisher hit a 3-pointer off an
''I'm not '!'Yin~ to intimiassist from O' ~eal with 5:53 date anyone. I m )USt tryin~ to
left for a 90-79 lead, and the win," O'Neal sa1d. "I'm JUSt
· Lakers turned it into a focusing on number three. I
blowout by closing the game don't get into that intimidawith a 12-0 run.
·
tion."
With Kidd s&lt;:oreless and
A steal and dunk by Bryant
O'Neal all but unstoppable, gave Los Angeles its first
the Nets still found them- double-digit lead, 23-13, and
selves trailing only 49-43 at Raben Horry delivered a
halftime.
beautiful touch pass on . the
New Jersey shot just 15-for· break leading to a dunk by

lit C... II II N1
.

IISSllCMltO ~

.; LOS ANGE1.ES (AP) ~

&amp;baq_l.,Nd$0.
• Ia III01her displll_ of _his

~~~
·•
thateveehbm,ett.~ow

.jnawas a-q,
Storill&amp; «l points, nlci
Slt!'ftl , prttty passes ~=
tina JUSt aboUt nt!CJuna
~· O'Neal W tile lM

M&amp;eJes t:ab:ft

to· a

l06-83

vittaly over 111re New Jeney
·Nets on~ night
The LW:ts took a 2.0 leltd
in the best-of-seve11 NBA
Finals, toying with their Qllll(lnrents while
IRiliq.-Los
Anaetes led by&amp;$ many u .lO
jloints.let the Nets
batk
' wid\in sil wty in~
'and d\tn quitkly ended any
.):OIIIebatlt thoughts New
JeAty miabt have W.
. The most mtnlOrlble itnaae
·trom thi$ pme may have
been O'Neal stllldingat the
fuulline. his right arm eatttnd·
ed in • lbllow-through .n he
watet.!d free throw al\et he
throw go in. The Nets sent lite
llotoriously poor fool ~
lo the line 14 times, and
O'Neal lmoeftd down a
dozen of them while showing
l surprisingly soft toUCh,
: New Iet:Je)' stuck with sin·
ate-covera&amp;e -aainst O'Ne.l
tn the first half, then fbtally
went to double- and tripleteams in the second half. But
no
what wrinklts they
threw at O'Neal, thetv wu no
itopping the NBA's most
unstoppable furw.
: The 7-foot, 3S().pound ten·
~er had six dunks to 8,0 along
with an anay of short JumpeR
lnd bank shots as he liilislled

never

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

, RALBlGH, N.C. (AP) lbe Stanley
has visited the
f.Op of a 14. · foot peale and
the bottom of Mario ~Amieu~t's
iwimming . pool during its
l!YIIIItfullOO.year ellistence.
The most recogniuble
sports trophy In North
America, it has been touclled
by tens of thousands, coveted
ny millions and won by a
handful.
: Unti I now, though, · the
bright silver bowl nev~r fr!:·
quented North Carolina m
June for anything other than
an airport stopover,
. .
~.Guess what? If the Caro.llna
purricanes keep playing like
they did in sphttmg .the first
iwo games of the Stanley Cup
finals in Detroit, the cup just
Might return for a much
longer visit this summer.
Game 3 was Saturday night
in Raleigh, and the biggest
surprise so far is that regular
~eason champion Detroit has·
't come close to dominating
Carolina. which had the 15th
"best record of the 16 playoff
.
· qualifiers, ·
; The Red Winas were in real
l:tanger of going down two
. aame&amp;- on home ice, no less
r- until Nicklas Lidstrom and
&gt;
Krls Draper scored 13 sec·
onds apart in the third period
:of Thursday's series-e.vening
'3·1 victory.
:. Despite the decisive flurry,
it was the Hurricanes who
dictated the uneven flow and
.~ muck·ilrid·grind pace that
'clearly favors them.
: The Red Wings, of course,
·have three 600-aOal scorers.ln
:Brett Hull, Steve Yzerman
:and Luc Robitaille, and they
:could be only one explosive
:period away from tumlna the
finals into the rout many prefilt
:c!icted.
.
~ But
the lonaer the·
liurric111e1 force tile NHL'a
.:Jnost talented team to play
:t.J!elr e~ttremely patient, climl·
oftate•all·rlaka aame, the
jonaer the series could last.

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just six pomts shy of his
wtet playoff-high,
Kobe Bryant added a quiet
24 points and Derek Fisher
had 12 fur the Lakers, who
can win their third coosecu·
tive championship and ~ive
roach Phif Iaekson his nmth
title in 12 yean by winning
just two more games.
Oame 3 is Sunday night at
New Jersey,tust a few miles
from O'Neal s hometown of
Newark. And unless the Nets
find a way to contain him,
their prospects of brlitging the

FREE*
KINGS
ISLAND.

series back to Los Angeles are
rather slim.
·
O'Neal was 14·for·23 from
the field with team·high totals
of 12 rebounds and eight
assists. He left to a thunderous
standing ovation with just
over a minute remaining.
Kerry Kittles scored 23
points and Jason Kidd added
17 points, nine rebounds and
seven assists for the Nets,
The game got awAy from
New Jersey late in the third
~rter after Kidd made tW()
throws to cut the deficit

comes to Carolina

mere

2il011lodgt Grind
ca.-Sport

SHAQ SWAt - ·The Los Angeles Lakers Shaquille O'Neal .
attempts to block the shot of New Jersey Nets Aaron Williams
In the third quarter in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Friday in
Los ~ngeles. (API

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Ill, 111\0, INIS,

O'Neal dunked off an
inbounds pass and converted
a three-pomt play early in the
second quarter, giving him 21
points and the Lakers a 40-31
lead. O'Neal also mixed in a
little Showtimc of his own,
hitting Shaw' with a no-look
pass for a layup.
By the time he went to the
bench with 56 seconds left in
the half, O'Neal had 23 points
in 22 minutes.
Notes: Bryant was visibly
upset with the officiating at
several times. iQcluding one
instance late in the second
quarter when · his face ·
slammed into Jason Collins'
elbow. ... O'Neal caused · a
blonde starlet in the front row.
to blush whcm he smiled at her
and said hello during a brief
stoppage in play in the third
quarter.... Nets guard Lucious
Harris strug$led again on
offense, shooung 0-for-9 after
going only 1-for-5 in Game L

STANLEY CUP

2002 NISSAN XTERRA XE
A.uto, Vi, pow.r ~»&lt;k. 1pon PRt.
Ditt. Nil. ~

0' Neal that made it 27-17.

"

.

N

. , t'

And, for the next two Griffith's TV show. It was
games, the Hurricanes own modeled after Mount Airy,
the home~ice advantage, too. N.C., but don't go driving the
"lt's going to be wild," back roads .looking for
goalie Arturs lrbe said. "If Floyd's Barber Shop.
people think they saw how • NASCAR? That's much
cra~ty crowds can be in bigger three hours south in
Detroit, they might get an Charlotte. The fast driving
eye-opener."
that most concerns those in
That's why the Red Wings the region called the Triangle
want to fon:e a tempo the occurs as the numerous tech·
Rurricanes aren:t tomfonabie no logy centers empty out durpiaying - one th~t will draw ing rush h!)ur.
them out of the neutral zone
• Don't go looking for the
and into a more up-and-down Outer Banks before Game 3;
game,
Raleigh is inland. Any octo"lf anything, they're proba· pus - or an~ other seafood
bly going to be skating and - on the 1ce likely was
more energized because exponed from Detroit.
they've got their home crowd
• Sure, many neophyte
and their home rink," said hocke~ fans still don't what
Kirk Maltby, who bas two ·icing 1s, but that's why The
.oats in two 8&amp;mes. "We've News and Observer is run·
JUSt got to come out and ning a daily column called
match it and play disciplined Hockey · for Dummies. (A
and smart, If we get the jitters hint: Icing is NOT what
out a little bit and get the legs occurs on Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s
going, we should be OK."
windshield when racing at
Lidstrom agreed, saying, Richmond in late Man: h.)
"We talked a lot about keep· · Friday's subject, by the
lng our composure and not way, was why players grow
getting frustrated, and we '11 beards in the playoffs.
find an opening."
.
Hurrican!'S captain Ron
The first team that does - Francis is glad the finals will
and Dctrplt took a step toward further expose one . of the
it with Its two late goals In . nation's fast-growing regions
Game 2 - may get the to those who seldom see it Stanley c;up as a prize.
even if all the locals stili don't
. Pot now, Raleigh-area resi· know why there are two blue
dents want outsiders to know lines and only one red .line.
they're tired ohllthe Gomer "It's a great place to live
Pyle, NASCAR and moon· and raise a fanilly," Francis
shine , references they've . said. "lt also was intriguing
heard so far during Carolina's for me to come here and try to
flt'St encounter with the Cup: sell our game in a market pre·
• There's no Mayberry, as dominantly known for ACC ·
popularized
by . Andy basketball and NASCAR"

CHRYSLER PT CRUISER
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00 KIA SEPHIA 1104911................................... 8995 139
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�'

87
•

UNITED STATES V. SOUTH KOREA

Marlin tourney carries big purse, small fame
BY EMEII'f P. DM fS!O

"It makes your jaw drop
ASSOCIATED PRESS
open," says Ted Gamer's soa.
MOREHEAD CITY, · N.C.
Jeff. who captains their S6(AP) - A small Ootilla of
foot bolt "Yei!Owfm.~
big-game fishing boats will
Starting Monday, about 200
• chug out or port this week in a
boats will spend four of the
:-hunt for a $1 million prize and
next six days searching lhe
· -a sea creature that's a silveryGulf Sueam off the lllonh
~ blue torpedo of muscle bigger
Carolina coast for marlin
~ than a bear.
heading north as summer:
! The 44th annual Big Rock
approaches and waters warm.
: Blue Matlin Tournament is
Competitors are required to
•.one of the world's oldest and
choose two days to stay dockrichest deep-sea fishing
side.
. ;events. But it renwins largely
The enuy fee per bolt to
: unknown to those outside the
qualify for all prize levels is
: sport.
$8,2.50 and - like cash tossed
; l:lst year, Adrian Holler's
into the pot at a poker game
~· · 61-foot yacht out of Newport.
- the number of lhosc: will, N.C., landed a 515-pound
ing to play detelmines how
huge each year's purse will
. marlin and claimed $942,100,
• a record payout ·for the Big
be.
t
' Rock tourney. Compare that
''There's a hit vari. · to professional golfer Reteif
. ables in fishing than there is
• Goosen,
who received
playing a game of cards.
: $900,000 for winning the U.S.
Basically, I guess, the objec• Open a few days later.
tive is the same -to win the
. Deep-sea fishing events
pot or to catch a winning
. ·certainly are less visible than
fish," says Ted Garner. "I've
golf because the sport is more
never been in a poker game
expensive and harder for the
where you . could win
average person to try. And for
$350,000, $400,000."
. spectators, there's little to see
That's just the' stan of the
: .when the competition is 50
spendin~ that will flow.
: .miles out in the ocean. ·
Organ1zerspstimate that the
:; • Worldwide, there are proba200 o~ so boats entered each
:!!bly ·fewer than 20,000 comyear spend $2.9 million - or
:;:£jietitive offshore anglerS commore than $14,400 per boat
• peting in about 80 events,
on fuel, dock fees, bait,
. : according to the International
motels and meals. The
: Game Fish Association in
Garners spent $800 last week
Dania Beach, Fla.
just to have five reels serviced
, But here and at a handful of
and restrung.
similar events around the
''This is a big deal. You
don't buy hot dogs and those
globe, contestants are willing
premade sandwiches to go': to
to pay dearly for the right to
feed these crews, says Tommy
battle a fish that has inspired
barroom brags, seafarer legBennett, a motel owner and
former county tourism board
" ends and, in literature, Ernest
member who tallied the tour•Hemingway's epic · battle &lt;if
.
.
, ·
man versus nature in ''The BIG MONEY, BIG FISH - Jeff Garner, right, and his fattier, Ted. prepare gear for the Big Rock name.nt's local economic
.Old Man and The Sea."
Blue Marlin Tournament last Tuesday aboaro the. Yellowfin, docked beside the Sanitary impact.
: · ''There's nothing like fight· · Restaurnant in Morehead City, N.C. (AP)
Money from sponsors most selling boatmg gear ing a marlin, to me. It's so
.
'.,exciting. When one of ihose owned
the
Sanitary a monster more than 16 feet pounds be freed.
are used to help local chari· 'fish hit and the line stans Restaurant here for decades. long and weighing over I ,300 When they're booked, they ties. Last year, $115,000 went
·screamin§, it's just hard to "You've got to live it and pounds, though most are may shoot straight up out of to groups that provide free
-describe,' says Ted Gamer. you've got to be ;~ble to afford smaller. Big Rock tournament the water or arc repeatedly
who has entered the past 14 II."
rules require that marlins over the waves trying to get
.·
·
.. contests and whose family has
A blue marlin can grow into under 9 feet long or 400 loose. .

:Former state resident
qualifies for 'ESPN's
.

.I

Pon~

Fish For

'.

.

Great Outdoor Games
BY

ANDY HANSROTH
THE CHARLESTON GAZETfE

CHARLESTON, W.Va. Fonner South Charleston res: ·ident Michae.l Hatfield recent• ly turned h1s love of trout
: fishing into an opportunity to
:_J:ompete in ESPN's Great
: ·Outdoors Games.
~. Hatfield, 42, is a national
:accounts manaller for S&amp;K
• :Sales out of Vtrginia Beach,
: :va. He graduated from South
:&gt;Charleston High School in
•• '•1977 and ·now lives in
· • Richmond.
.
: He finished third in a field
":of 23 anglers in Buffalo,
• :wyo., in the ny fishing com· :petition in mid-April. which
·..~ualified him to compete at
• ake PI act'd , N.y ., ·m the
: finals set for July 10-14.
;. .There are six different prima• :ry sports in the Great
··Outdoors games, including:
:sporting dogs, archery. shot-

"I still come back to fish
quite a bit in Pocahontas' and
Greenbrier counties, and actu~lly split my time about 50-50
between West Virginia and
Virginia," be said.
''The fishing for trout is
very similar between the two
states. I like the small native
streams. I also like to try to
get · back into remote areas
where there's not a lot of foot
travel. The fish aren't always
very big in those areas, but
they are beautiful."
H' ~
· fi h'
ts ravonte IS mg area is
the Cranberry Backcountry.
"I usually take a couple of
trips a year over there,"
Hatfield said. "I try to get out
as often asfi Ih'can, andh in fact
was over ts mg on I e 1ower
Potomac River recently. We
caught quite a few largemouth
bass. We were fly · fishing and
I got into. one bass on a 10-

weight fly rod and it was alii
could do to handle that fish,
which I ended up losing."
The Great Outdoors event
will be aired on ESPN,
ESPN2 and ABC beginning
July 20. In the finals, there
will be 12 anglers from
around the country and
abroad. Those 12 will be
made up of the four qualifiers
from Wyoming, the first-, second- and third-place finishers
from last year's Great
Outdoor Games and five
additional anglers to be
named in advance by .ESPN.
The fly fishing segment of
the competition consists of
two different events, · casting
and actual fishing.
In the fishing portion of the
competition, each angler fishes for three hours on a select·
ed stream and · is allowed to
keep only one fish . .

Of the 20 I boats that
entered the Big Rock last
year, three-fourths wen: from
North Carolina. The resl came
from every East Coast state
from Aorida to Massachusett~
except Rhode Island. plus one
each from Ohip aDd Bmnuclll.
In the past. anglers from
Canada. Mexico. F11111CC and
Japan also battled for pmes.
Tournament ·organizers
don't shy away from telling
contestants that they're hunting for a species that is considered severely overfished.
with populations .in the
Atlantic 40 percent of the
Ieve I needed to maintain
healthy members. Blue marlin
also range aoross the Pacific
.and Indian oceans.
· About 95 percent of the
marlins killed 1111: taken indiscriminately by commercial
fishing ships hunting for tuna
and swordfish, acconling to a
United
Nations-chartered
organization charged with
managing tuna and billfish in
the Atlantic's international
waters. The culprits are the
enormous nets hauled behind
commercial vessels that scoop
up vast acres. of marine life.
With that kind of mortal it~,
some conservationists don 1
want any blue marlin killed
for the sake of a contest.
Tournament
Ol'j!anizers
penalize boats that bring in an ·
undersized marlin by count·
ing the dead fish's weight
against the rest of their catch.
Last year, all but three of
the 47 marlins or sailfish
hooked. in the Big Rock were
released.
·
(On the Net ..., Big Rock
Blue Marlin Toumamenr:
www.thebigrock.com; ·Bil/ji$h
Foundation: www.thebillfishfoundarion.org; Recreational
Fishing Alliance: www.savefish.com.)

Stocking

Dellve_!)' Will Be: Tuesday, June 18

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SEOUL.. South Kara (AP)
- "" lbe Nuth KOfttD barclef, lbe United States and
South KCftll ue allies. WileD
it c:omes to spclltS these clays.
lbe relationShip is tease,.
""'ing even 11101e iDtripe to
their upc:omina World Cup
game.
.
Trouble began Rb.. 20,
when Kim DOna:-sunJ wu
firsl across lbe line m lbe
1,SOO-meter
shon-trad:
speefsbting final at the Sah
Lake Oty Olympics. But lbe
South Korean WIS dl•nualified for .improper~ ~kin
Apolo Antm

~ wi~

ha1f-lap to go. &amp;ivin&amp; the gokl
to the 19-Jar-akl American.
South KCftll threatened to
sue and boYQllt lbe t1osina
ceremonies. Anger ~
.when. Jay LcnO, during his
monologue 011 ''Tbe Thftight
Show," said Kim "'was so
mad he went home lOll ticked
~ cioR. and lben ate him:"
ln alront-paae Sloly.Friday,
The KCftll -nines· said I "the
negative feelinas aaainst
otlno stoked anti-American
sentbrient, aDd this was compounded by wbat locals petceived to be lhe heavy-halicled
approach by Washiligton to
force Seoul to choose a U.S.
compliiiJ for its multibilliOndollar tighter jet acquisitiOD
~·

.

t."

~ere

also is lingering
, anger about Spc. Ouistopher
K. McCarthy of Concotd,
· N.H., who is serving a six·
year tenn in a South Korean
Jail for killing a bar waitress
wbo refused to have sex with
him.
"I think we should defeat
the Americans, whose arrogance we witnessed in lhe
Ohno episode in the Winter
Olympics,'' 16-year-old Lee
SoQk-bee of Oyeongju said
Friday. "So I think this is a
~ood chance to avenge the
mjustice."
South Korea and lhe United

WSU -U.S. players Cellos
Llemou,
left,
Frwlkie
Hejduk,
tenter,
Pablo
Mestroeni, back celebrate
their 3-2 vlc:tory a Portupl's
.lotio Pinto passes by It the
end of their Group D, 2002
Wblld Cup SOCCIII matdl It
the Suwon Wond Cup
Stadium In suwon, South

Korea, on Wldnesclay. (AP)
.
.
.
.
States won their firsl-rouncl
wmct Cup openers. aDd it's
possible the willllef of
Monclay's pme in the southem city of uaeau will clinch a
berth in lhe second round.
Ttns of tho.. sands of South
Koreans ue rallying behind
their team,
• led .shirts
that say, '~eds,'' lOll
pep nUies repeatedly . are
ShOwn on te)evision.
'The a~ should be
IIIIIZin&amp;." SIICI U.S. forward
Joe-Mu. Moen. a veteran of
tough crowds in Central
America. "Fortunate)y for us,
I think the stands are quite a
way back from the field, so
they won't be right on top of
us. But there's no doubt that
it's going to be hard to talk
and hard to communicate
between the players." · ·
ln lhe South Korean c~ital,
the Seoul Metropolitlll POlite
Agency said up to 5,000 offi-

OLE, OLE1 -U.S. socter r.ns celebnlte the U.S. tum's 3-2 victory a&amp;ainst Portupl in the Group Dof the 2002 Woftd Cup It
the Suwon Wond Cup Stadium in Suwon, South KOI'el, on WednesdfiY. U.S. fens hope to t1tlebnlte lftOthef omtory Monday when
the team faces co-host South Korea. (AP) ·

cers will patrol the streets,
where tens of thousands of
people are expeCted to pther
to watch the game on JUmbo
TV screens.
·
The screens are just one
block from the U.S. embassy.
which will close at noon. 3
112 hours before kickoff (2:30
a.m. EDT) to ullow staff to
watch.
On Feb. 9, 15 collc!ge students were det.llined for questioning al\er they attempted to
enter the embllssy to protest a
visit by President Busll.
"We are aware of all the bad
news about rupe and other
crimes committed by somo

U.S. troops. so. yes, we will dogs. Former Prime Minister
have a little tiit of anti- Kim Jong-pil told . South
Arneric111ism when we cheer Korean reporters Leno was 111
for our team," Choi Dae- "ill-man.nered, ugly guy,"
woong, an 18-year-old fill ac:cording to The Kom
from Oyeongju, said Friday. Herald.
· . ·
"But I don't think a lot ofpeoNBC responded that Leno
pie will demonstnlte against didn't intend to offend South
the Americans even if we Ktna, adding that in comedy
lose." ·
"people have different ~?PinThere are about 37,000 U.S. ions about where the hoes
troo~ in the country, and should be drawn."
Pres1dent Kim Dae-jung has • At the 1998 World Cup in
said rising anti-Americanism France, the United States
hurts South Korean interests. played Iran, considered an
Leno's remarks led to wide- American enemy since the
sp~ead condemnation in the Islamic Revolution in 1979.
country, sensitive to criticism The team played down the
about South Koreans who eat political significance of the

game. which Iran won 2-1.
eliminating the Americans.
It's no different this limo
around. Asked about Obno's
controversial medal, U.S.
c011ch Bruce Arena said:
"Wh1t
· was
that?
Snowboarding?"
·
Arena 1nd U.S. players
repeatedly have praised !heir
South Korean hosts, and lhe
coach said he did not perceive
any animosity.
"rve seen no sign of that
anywhere. We're lilies." he
said. "You see soldiers serv·
ing next to each other at the
DMZ. It's hard to imagine
problems."

Wednesday, June 19

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: · 'The .nationals will be four
: days consisting of different
• kinds of competition, Hatfield
·
;said in a recent telephone inter·view from his Virgmia home.·
_: "This was the first tilrie they
· :ever had a qualifying event
;. for this competition," he said.
: "Basically, the Oy fishing end
~ of this was by invitation only
~; to fishing guides_ and other
; ~people iri the fishing industry.
W.R.CAsas &amp;SoleS c~tuaTCo.
•· "Out I'd watched it on TV
~ and thought I could do it, too,
HANO.C-A"ED K"IVUSINCI .....•
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:: later and said they were hav: ing "this qualifying cv7nt (in
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

YOKOHAMA, Iapan (AP)
- David Beckham is back
.-nd canying England's World
Cup hopes forward. ·
After nearly two months
recovering from a brok:en left
foot- ana four years remembering the sorry end to his last
world charnpionsh~ touma·
ment - Beckham s penalty
kick gave EnBland al-0 victory over an:hrival Argentina
on Friday.
In the most-hyped game of
the first round, Beck.hani fortified England's hopes and
dimmed Argentina's.
''We're buzzing," Bee~
said. "As a foottlalling nation
we've ·waited for this for so
long."
.
.
· Spain also has waited along
· time to prove itself. Trying to
'\shake its image as an underachiever; the counuy became
the first team to mch the second . round.
Substitute
Fernando •Morientes scored
two second-half goals in a 3-1
victoty over Paraguay.
·ln the day's Other match,
Sweden beat Nigeria 2-1, eliminating the Africans. That left
Sweden and England tied at
four points each atop Group F.,
Alllentina, amone the
favontes to win the Wcirld
Cup, has three points and
almost cenainly must beat
Sweden on Wednesday to.
advance.
England and Sweden need ties.
Because of his broken foot,
Beckham's availability was in
doubt for the tournament.
After the long layoff, he lasted just 60 minutes in
· . England's 1·1 tie with
Swilden on Sunday, when his
comet Ieick led to a goal.
With his 44th-minute peqalty kick, he &amp;lined a moaaure
qf revenee for 1998. That

year, he was sent off in a tion authorities.
game won on penalty kicks as England erupted in wild
Argentina advanced to the .celebrations over its first tourquarterfinals.
· nament victory · against
'1t's just unbelievable,'' Argentina since 1966. Even
Beckham said. "It's been four the queen savored the win.
years, a long four years. This
Buckingham Palace said the
tops it all off."
.
queen "was pleased with the
After Michael Owen was result."
brought down inside the ' The country came to a virpenalty area, Beckham said tual standstill as lhe game
the Argentines tried to rattle sparkeil"the longest lunch
him before his shot. He hour)n-hlltory" in England.
ignored them.
Milhons of people gathered to
"You know we battled real- watch the gume in city.
ly hard, it's a team game. squares, pubs, factories, the·
That's what it's about," he aters, supermarkets, offices
said. "The team has been bril- -even churches.
liant, really for the whole 92 Thi!I~S weren't so festive in
minutes."
Argentma except · at
Argentine coach Marcelo Gibraltar Pub in Buenos
Bielsa said his squad did not Aires. British expatriates
take advantage of its chances. began applauding wildly as a
"We will have to focus on crowd of about 50 people
advan&lt;:ing in the next match downed beers and BloOdy
and we must distance .our- Marys at an hour most drink
selves from the sadness of this their morning coffee. The
loss," he said.
match began at 8:30 a.m.
England's red and white local time.
.
colors filled at least two- For Spain, which already
thirds of the 42,500-capacity made a mark by winning its
Sapporo Dome. Small pock- World Cup opener (3-1 over
ets of Argentina fans .banged Slovenia) for the first time in
their drums and waved their 52 years, Morientes carne on
blue and white scarves.
in the second half and made
Thousands of police braced the difference.
for trouble, but arrests report· Paraguay took an earl~ lead
ed before the ~arne were not on an own goal. Monentes
connected wtth hooligan scored with a header in the
behavior. Police said eighl 53rd minute, and the got the
English supporters and one winner in the 69th when
Argentine were arrested on Paraguax goalkeeper lose
charges such as theft and Luis Chtlavort failed to break
fraud, while one Briton found up a cross from lavl.
on aliat of potential hooligans
Spanish captain Fernando
was handed over tp lmmlara· Hierro made it 3-1 on a penal,

ty kick in the 83rd.
"We'll go into the last game
with the same motivati'on to
win, but it's good to know
we1ve already qualified for
the second round," M_orientes
said.
.
Fredrik Larsson's two goals
brought Sweden from benind
and left Nigeria with Saudi
Arabia as the only teams
eliminated.
·
Nigeria's Julius Agbahowa
opened the scoring in the 27th
minute, rising above two .
Swedish defenders to head the
ball in from close range on a
cross from Joseph Yobo. He
celebrated with seven consecutive back flips.
.
Larsson tied it in the 35th,
taking a pass from Freddie
Ljungberg, evading one
defender and beating three ·
more with his shot into the
right comer.
.
·
He got the winner on a
penalty shot in the 62nd
minute al\er he wus fouled .in
the am by lfeanyi Udeze.
Nigeria goalkeeper Ike
Shorunmo got a hand on the
ball, but couldn't keep it out
of the net.
·
"We scored two goals (and)
we had a bit of luck with them
hitting the ~st twice,"
Larsson said. 'But over the
whole game, I felt we
deserved to win."
·
So many fans sought firstround game tickets via telephone Friday that they parulyzed the network of NTT
DoCoMo. the nation's biggest
mobile phone operator, for 2
112 hours.
The ·Japanese organizers
(JAWOC) said 750 remaining
seats for Sunday's Japan- · GOOOOOOAL - England's David Beckham celebrates after
Russia match were sold in 20 scorln&amp; from the penalty. spot durin&amp; the 2002 World Cup
minutes. The 1,600 leftover
tickets for the Italy-Croatia Group F soQCer match between En11and and Araentlne at the
aame were snapped up in 4S Sapporo Dome, Japan, on Friday. En&amp;land won·the match 1&lt;0.
The other teams In Group F.ere Sweden and Nllerle. (AP)
minute
·
l
.

�Sat 1r• J wlinel

PageBI
I

I

I

t.211i

J'u•hlt Sa-• l•llarel
Celebrations begin on C2

PlpC1

s •• ,.. • .. 2112

llr Dlr:llW

ua

on the sumoe of the lake in · while celebnti"' his 60th
MSCiiCJmD I'IU'S
'lloy, Ala. Help came l5 birt!IUy on April .t9, two
Jac:k Rwsh's 1111111 we~e minutes later.
days before a n~e at
Jillilll with wattt, llis life
Roush was alive, at least Talladega Superspeedway.
ebbiq away on the bottom for a while, and Hidts was He hit panially obs~u~
of an Alma- late. • ·
the reason.
high-tension wires and
• Ashore.. Lany lfttb had At UAB Hospital in crashed from an altitude of
. _ the rac:e car owner's Binningham, Rousb ~ht 80 ~'eel.
plane ttash and blew there for hiS life. OVercoming I
"J was OUt of the chair
was precious little titne 10 serious head injury, a shat- before he hit the water," the
~toy the ~ and res- teml left leg and brolccn .S2-year:-old Hicks recalled.
cue techniques he had ribs, he beat odds one doctor "I shouted to my wife as I
learned in the Marines.
put at 20-1 against svrvival. ran out the door; 'Call 9ll.
' ·A few minutes later on Six weeks later, Rovsh ... Call 91l."'
'\hat April evening, Hieks hobbled arovnd on crutches
Hicks reached the plane in
'btool:ht the pilot ro the sur- at Dover International about two minutes, dived to
fac:e Out thoqht his herOic Speedway after pilOting a the wreckage, saw nothing
act was in vain.
.
plane from his Micl;ligan in the murky water about
"He wasn't breathiJil. He home, overseeing his fOur- eight feet deep but felt
bad drowned," said Hicks, 1. tar Winston Cup team with around and determined no
«tim! seqeant maAor. his familiar straw hat askew one was in the rear of the
i"''bat was very obvious.'
on his head.
two-seater plane. On his
: He &amp;ripped a wing of the · Hicks, now a state conser- second dive, he round the
light plane protruding from vation officer in Alabama, pilot and on his third heed
the lalcc with one arm and w•s with Roush mvch ofthe the unconscious Roush.
kept Roush's head above time at Dover, and marvels A deeply· religious man,
water with the other. Hic:b at his energy.
· Hicks corrects those who
4leld on, concerned that · 'Th see where he's come say he acted alone.
-spilled aviation fuel sur- from, from the till'le I .got "No, we did a great job,"
trounding the wrecltqe 100 him out of the lake to where he said. "Without the .f.ood
;yards from shore would he's at now, it's an absolute- Lord, Mr. Jack wouldn t be
erupt in names.
ly amazing recovery." Hicks here."
.
"I staned smelling the said.
Roush calls Hicks his
aas. and the right engine Hicks knows all about hero, saying it would have
was smoking;" Hicks said. recoveries. He's completing been understandable had
"I thought it was going to his own speedy comeback Hicks abandoned the rescve
effon to save his own life.
blow uc· I tumed around from cancer.
and yet red to the my ;wife,
"Back in December, they "Diving tepeatedly with
'No matter what happen&amp;:l didn 'I think I was going to all that fuel on .the water?
Donna, I love you."'
'itl make it," he said. "Now, if I He didn't have to do that,"
Then. Hicks propped up were to get cancer back and Roush said. "I'm so lucky."
Roush on a WlJil and per- pass away tomorrow. my How lucky? .
. formed CPR. .·
.
whole life has been blessed Roush crashed ab(lut 6
"He began cou~hing up by this event.
p.m., just a few minutes
water and blood, ' Hicks "It's simply a wonderful after Hicks arrived home
said.
feeling to save another from work.
Unable to risk lifting the hvman being, especially an
Hicks was already prebadly il\.ivred Roush into his individual who touches so pared take his tiny boat out
-,mall boat, Hicks fought many people."
on the lake, but even that
cramps in both arms and the
Roush had been flying might not have been enough
stin11 of spent fvel floating alone in a borrowed plane 'to save Roush had Hicks

been doing anything but
watching as the liJht plane

Rad Hicks lived in a
bouse he tried to purchase at
the other end of half-mile1~ lake at Palos Verdes
Estates, he said be never
would have seen the acc:i •
dent.
When Roush thinks about
his rescue, he still smiles
and shakes his head in disbelief.
"I liken the fact thlt I
crashed into water ratl;ler
than on land, that he was
there and the boat was there
to winning one of these big
stat&lt;&gt; lotteries on three consecutive days with three
separate tickets," he said.
Informed latt:r that he had
rescued one of the most
prominent car owners in
racing, Hicks admitted he'd
never heard of Roush;
"lt.didn't really strike me
how many ~pie this man .
affected vntd a month after
this thing was over," Hicks
said.
Hicks remembers his first
meeting with a coherent
Roush, two days after the
crash. Both broke down and
cried.
.
, "It was extremely emotional," Hicks said. "For the
longest time, we couldn't
talk.
"I was in the war •in
Vietnam; a lot people were
killed around me and [ never
got a scratch, but this was
something totally different.
Your life has a posit~
point, something that
tan look back on and say,
did something super special."'
.

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DEAR ABBY: After a twoyear engagement, my husband and I were married
three years ago. After the
engagement announcement,
my mother surprised me with
the news that she and my
father were going to renew
· . their wedding vows. I was
happy ·for them until my
mother began .plannin$ thetr
ceremony around the time of
our wedding. I felt she was
trying to steal the limelight
from me - and she did.
Two months ago, I
announced that I am two
months' pregnant. Yesterday,
my mother announced that
SHE is pregnant. (She had
me when 1. was 15.) Abby,
now she wants us to have
baby showers on ' the same
·day. Do you think this is my
mother's attempt to stay connected with me? - TRY·
ING TO REMAIN CALM
·IN DENVER
· DEAR TRYlNG: No. I
think that on an unconscious
,level, there is competition
going on. However, since
there is nothing you can do
about it, the best advice I can
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and. spend less time looking ·
over your shoulder to see
what · your mother is doing.
Under no circumstances
should you allow these "coincidences" to lessen your own
happiness.
DEAR ABBY: I am a
freshman at a college located
t,wo hours away from home.
My brother, "Jeff," who is
three years younger, still
Hves at home. I miss him
until he comes to visit then it's a different story.
Jeff shows no respect for
me, my lifestyle or my dorm
. room, He demands that I
entertain him - even though
my schedule is filled to the
max with classes and work.
He makes a mess of my room
(like spilling soda and not ·
c;leaning it up) and makes
rude comments about my
boyfriend behind his back.
My brother has. gone so far as
to make some outrageous
statements like, "Anyone .
who is not Christian is going
to hell!" (My boyfriend is
Jewish.)
: How am I supposed to con·
tinue havin¥ Jeff visit if he
causes nothmg but stress and
embarrassment and leaves
my room trashed? My parents don't see any problem
and think I'm blowmg this
out of proportion. Any sug~estions, Abby? - FED UP
IN NEW YORK STATE
DEAR SIS: There may be
only three years' difference in
your ages, but emotionally
your brother is a rebellious,
self-centered adolescent.
·If I were you, I would limit
Jeff's visits until he's older,
wiser, and willing to show
more respect and tolerance
for you and your friends. .
' DEAR ABBY: I am a
mother of five who has been
married for 18 years. The letters in your column from
brides-to-be and graduates
asking the best way to keep
track of gifts prompts me to
write.
When I was 20 and planning my wedding. my moth·
er-in-law-io-be gave me a
terrific tip: The ·name,
address and phone number of
each guest attending the wedding was written on a 3-by-5incli index card and stored
alphabetically in a recipe
box.
After the wedding, as my
husband and I opened each
gift, we wrote . what the gift
PIHM ... Abby,CI
,,•

.'

DRILL TEAM - HOPE Is made up of 12 riders and four back-up riders from Ohio and West VIrginia who meet every week to practice the Intense,

synchronized movements required of their demanding sport. (Submitted photos)

Local equestrian. .team stresses diversity, understanding
.

BY TONY M.

wei"

TLEACHOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

OMEROY - Diversity
and · understanding is
helping one local equestrian team . gallop their
way to the forefront of

success.
Greated by Debbie -!S&amp;yder o~
Pomeroy in ·1997, Horsemen ·of
Precision Entertainment (HOPE) is
a non-profit, all breed, equine drill
team that travels the country performing unique, choreographed
shows during national competitions
and special parades and festivals.
The drill team is made up of 12
riders and four back-uJ? riders from
Ohio and West Virgima who meet
every week to practice the intense,
synchronized movements required
of their demanding sport.
Some of the shows HOPE has
arranged, and currently performs,
include· a salute to our National
Anthem, a focus on military pride,
musical·acts, an Elvis Presler trib- .
ute, "Indian Love Song' and
"Barrels of Fun.''
However, unlike most profession- .
ai equine drill teams, HOPE incorporates the skills of various breeds
of horses and the riding expertise of
all kinds of people:
·
"[ believe all hors~ breeds are
wonderful and all people are wonderful," said Sn~der. who choreo' graphs the team s movements and
destgns all of their outfits. "Our rid·

NAnONAL ANTHEM - HOPE founder Debbie Snyder, en" her

horse, Jake, lead the equine drill team during a salute to the
National Anthem. ·

en range in age from 12-55 years
old and some of them have physical
ailments that would make it impossible to perform with any other
competitive team."
.
·
"The diversity of our riders is
what makes us so special and our
team so strong and successful," she
added. "HOPE has changed peoplea' lives because those who par·
ticipate have discovered a new
sense of fulfillment and increased
self-esteem," she added.
"It's an excellent way to express
oneself and a wonderful opportunity to spend time with our trail
11
friends.'
Despite the fact that most drill
teams prefer younger, faster hol'$tlS
for competition, Snyder said HOPE
favors somewhat older horses
because of their interesting penonalities.
"I think what makes our shows so
special is the personalities of our
older horses," said Snyder. "Some
competitors think horses over I0
years old are ready for the ~lue fac. tory, however, they can hve any·
where between 40-50 years."
·"They still have quite a lot of life
left in them.'' she added. "A hone
that is somewhat older has already
·formed their own, unique perso~~h­
ty. I truly feel these personahttes
shine through during our performances."
One of the stars of HOPE is
PIHM ... SUCQMI, Cl

Former Racine man authors book
RACINE - Brooks-Grant CamP. keep the Confederates unaware of his
Sons of Union Veterans of the. Civtl association with colored troops due to
War held its regular meeting recently his knowledge of events while servwith James Cline, fonnerly of Racine ing in the 63rd OVI. This saved him
and now of Beverly, as the speaker for from execution as it was a
the.evening. .
. ··
Confederate requirement to execute
Cline has published a new book on all white officen of colored units.
Capt. Reuben S. Mason, who served
Cline said that Mason described the
in Company D, 63rd Ohio Volunteer · · mir~ul~us eruption of l,'tovid~nce
InfantrY, and later as a white officerin Spnng m the Andersonv1!le Prison
the 55th U.S. Colored Troops.
·that saved many Union prisoners
MilSOn was an aVid' writer and kept from the putrified water they had
journals of tiis Civil War experiences ~n drinking.
.. .
planning to publish ihree books on his
He J?Ointed out that probably the
experiences. Mason died before he mOtlt tmportant revelation of the
completed them. The Mason family Mason writings was the true reason
of the Beverly area ~as kept his war for the Union loss of at the Battle of
writings and materials intact and per- Brice's Crossroads, This is in direct
mitted Cline to publish the book with . oppo&amp;ition ofthe "official" records of
their financial backing.
the Union.
.
While in the 63rd OVI, a unit.that
He said that Confederate spies have
included many Meigs countians, p!lfPOsely set vp a party and got
Mason was involved in the Battle of Umon Gen. Sturgess drunk as he
Luka and later the Battle of Corinth. often was. It was this drunkenness
The regiment suffered a 67 percent that resulted in the loss. Gen. Sturgess
casualty rate, one of the highesl'in the was towt-martialed on this charge,
Civil War, including several Meigs but none of his subordinates would
County soldien. Mason contracted ·testify to the true facts. Though he
mumps, measles, and small pox but was ·honorably discharged from the
survived all three deadly diseases dur· service, Gen. Grant would have dising his service.
· honof1ibly discharged him ha4 testi·
As an officer of a colored unit, he mony born out the drunkenness.
was captured and sent to the infamous
In other camp business, Michael
Andersonville prison. He was able to Trowbridge and David North of
i.

Gallipolis reported their work on
locatml! Camp Carrington, a Civil
War traming camp at Gallipolis. They
believe that they have determined the
location the camp's hospital, where
Confederate Private, William Z.
Wickline, ancestor of the Meigs
County Wickline family, died as a
prisoner in the hospital.
A review of another new Civil War
book on ·a local unit was given. It feaIIIIFS a histoty of "Blazer's Scouts."
The book was recommended for read:
ing. ·
.
James Oiler, camp commander,
rej)l?rted on the recent finding of 17
Ctvil War soldiers buried at Temple
University .at Philadelphia Forensic
study is being conducted to determine
the validity of the claim. He also
reported that television penonality,
Ben Stein, donated money to help
save a Tennesse battlefield.
Commander Oiler reported on
attending the I40th annivenary reenactment of the Battle of Shiloh in
southern Tennessee. He was able to
see the original Confederate submarine, the CSS Hunley, and the fabled
gold coin carried by its captain. The
U.S. mint has duplicated the gold coin
in its damaged condition for sale to
Civil War enthusiasts.
·
A report was also given on a recent

•'

assignment of curent cadets from the ·
U.S. Army Military Academy at West
Point to a Civil War re-enactment so
that they could learn the history of the
army. The cadets reported that they
- wete surprised to find it so educational and interesting.
The commander reported a successful Decoration Day c..remon.Y at the
Middleport all-wars memorial with
Judge Steven Story as speaker on ·the
Bill of Rights. Ateport was also made
on the successful Appomattox Day
bean dinner in April hosted by James
Mourning.
The camp passed a resolution ask·
ing that thetr national organization
seek free admission to U.S. Park
Service Civil War parks upon the presentation of a valid membership card. Since the federal government recognizes the Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War as active national guard
· unit. the members felt this request
was proper.
·
.
:fbe camp welcomed several new
members. These include Herbert
Dawson and Ralph Dawson of Crum,
W.Va., Jack Dawson o{ Columbus,
and Charlew Dawson of Huntington
on their common ancestor, Pvt.
Charles Barnell of Company B, 213th .
Pennsylvnia Volunteer Infantry.
, . _ ... look. Cl

'

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�PageD

Celebrations

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••

Mr. and Mrs.

Guy Morris

Morris anniversary
HOIIIef end ~Y Hockmlln

Billy Hockman of Columbus.
They have 10 grandchildren: Tim (Lori) Caldwell of
Middleport, Sarah · (Tim)
Dale of London, Ky., Crystal,
Christopher and Clarissa
Meaige, all of Gallipolis,
Casey and Codl Hockman,
both of Bidwel , and Billi,
and Jacob and Johnnie
Hockman, all of Bidwell,
along with two great-grandchildren, Layne Caldwell of
Middlepon, and Trevor Dale
of London, Ky.
The celebration wi 11 be
held at the old Cheshire High
School on Sunday, June 23,
from 2-4 p.m.
Cards can be sent to Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Hockman at
20444 State Route 93 South,
Lot 24, Logan, Ohio 43138.

POINT PLEASANT Perry and Rose Jeffers and ·
the late Melvin Gillispie
and Alvin and Vickie Kmg
would like to announce the
upcoming marriage ·or their
children, . Crystal Gillispie
and Lew King.
Crystal is a 1999 graduate
of Point Pleasant High
School. She is currently
employ'ed with People's
Bank NA in Point Pleasant.
Lew is a 1995 graduate of
Ripley High School. He is a

Hanson/
McDade ·
engagement

I

Mr. 1111d M11.

Shannon Nlcolllnd Thom• Mllltlld Jr.

Grneser/Davis engagement

,Pasthom/Milstead engagement

.

Hockman 5Oth anniversary · Gillispie IKing engagement
ADDISON - Homer and
Kay Hockman of Logan, forJnerly of Addison, will be celebrating their 50th wedding
anniversary.
They were married July 4,
1952, by the Rev. James
Barnett, pastor of Addison
United Methodist Church.
They were married at the
home of Mrs. Hockman's
grundmother, Lottie Roush,
at Cheshire.
· Homer is the son of the late
Charles
and
Mable
Hockman. Kay is the daughter of Leona Ralph of Vinton,
and the late W. Hollis Whitt.
· . They have four children:
Treva (David) Caldwell of
Gallipolis, Becky (David)
Meaige of Gallipolis, Jim
Hockman of Addison, and

Jeeelu Qn~~~~r 1nd Stephen Devil

Crystal Glllleple end Lew Kine

Gene Hanson and Patty
.Hanson, of Rupert, W.Va.,
would like to announce the
enga!Jement and forthcoming
marnage of their daughter,
Carla Hanson, to Michael
McDade, son of Rosalie
McDade, of Leon, W.Va.. and
the late Frank McDade.
Michael is a 1994 graduate
of Point Pleasant High
. School, and is currently
emplo&gt;'ed as a Computer
Techntcian at Huddleston,
Bolen, Bailey, Porter and
Copen Law Firm in
Huntington, W.Va.
Carla is a 1999 graduate of
Greenbrier West High School
in Charmco, W.Va. She is
currently
J)ursuing
a
Bachelors Degree in Visual
Arts and a Minor in Graphic
Design
at
Marshall
University in Huntington,
W.Va.
.
Michael and Carla will
exchange wedding vows on
Saturday, June 15, 2002 at
7:00 p.m. at the Gazebo in
Krodel Park, at Point
Phiasant, W.Va. The custom
of an open ceremony will be
observed with all welcome.

Jem" Wheeler

member of the West
Virginia National Guard and
is currently employed with
Cabel Tech . in Lewisburg,
W.Va.
The couple will wed on
June 15, 2002 at 4:30 p.m.
The open church ceremony
wi II be held at Harmony
Baptist
Church
Southside. The recepuon
will immediately follow and
will be held at the Moose
Lodge in Point Pleasant.

lJP

..

POMEROY - Gary and
Debra Orueser of Pomeroy,
Ohio announc~ the engagement and upcoming marriage
of their daughter Jessica
Grueser to Stephen Davis,
son of Harold and Evelyn
Davis of Mason.
The bride-elect is a graduate of Eastern High School
and is currently pursuine a
nursing degree at Hockmg
College.
Her fiancl! graduated cum
laude form West Virginia

University at Parkersburg
with a bachelor of science
degree in business administration and is · currently
emplpyed as an assistant
manager at the Athens WalMart.
'
An open church wedd~ng
will beheld at Bellemead
United Methodist Church· in
Point Pleasant on June 15 at
3:30p.m.
A reception will follow the
ceremony in ·the church ··
social room.
•
1

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and
' ·, Mrs. Roger Glassburn are
:;. jlnnouncing the upcoming
marriage of their daughter,
·. i Shannon Nicole, to Thomas
,' ,Milstead Jr.
· : The bridegroom is the son
of Sherry and Walt Saunders
:,of. Gallipolis, and Tom
", Milstead of Charleston,
, W.Va.
The bride-to-be is the man-

Mr.

ager of R&amp;C Packing, while
Milstead is employed by
lnfoCision
Management
Corp. and is currently attending the University of Rio
Grande, majoring in computer science.
·
They plan to have a church
wedding on Saturday, June
22, 2002, at White Oak
Baptist Church, with Pastor
Carl Ward officiating.

Allen-Bush engagement
GROVE CITY - Holly daughter of the late Richard
J. Allen of Grove City and and Rebecca Herktess of
James L. Bush II of Canal Circleville and is currently
Winchester, Ohio, are employed by Bob Evans
announcing their engage- Fams. Inc. as compensation
ment and upcoming mar- administrator.
riage.
·
The prospective bride·
The bride-elect is the 'groom is the son of Cheryl

Salisbury of Grove City a)'ld
James L. Bush of Aurora,
Colo. He is currenJ]y
employed by Bob Evdns
Farms as network manager.
A June 22, 2002, weddipg
is planned in Grove City..

and Mil. J. Tim Evans

Evans wedding
GALLIPOLIS
Wylodene "Deanie" Smith
and J. Tim Evans of
Gallipolis ·were united in
marriage on April 6, 2002, ai
the Hilton Ocean Resort on
Singer Island,. Fla.
Cynthia S. Epling, daughter of the bride, was matron
of honor. ·Judge David T.
Evans was the best man for
his father.
Martha E. Huestis, Esq.,
daughter of the groom, was a
Groomsmen
bridesmaid.
were Gregory V. Smith and
Dr. Oary S. Smith, sons of the
bride.
The ceremon)£ was held on
the beach with the Rev. John
Broden officiating. A dinner
reception followed . on the
outdoor pavilion.
·
Mrs. Evans is vice president of Smith Buick-Pontiac
of Gallipolis. Evans is a

retired director of Bob Evans
Farms and is owner of Sunset
Valley Farm at Rodney. The
couple resides in Gallipolis
and Palm Beach Gardens,
Fla.

POMEROY - Guy and
Donna Mae (Well) Morris of
Goldridge Rd., Pomeroy,
celebrated their golden wedc
ding anniversary with family
and friends.
·
They were married May
22, 1952 at the Federated
C.hurch in Pomeroy. Morris is
the son of the late Guy and
Edith Riggs Morris and his

1:
I

I

·

~

PEOPLE

IN THE
NEWS
Monica Lewinsky

Mr. end M11. Cerl Chlchlater

Chichester anniversary
REEDSVILLE- Carl and
Chic!)ester
of
~~~:;:~~~
celebrated iheir
~
wedding anniversary on
2 at a surprise party
by their three daugh·
and their families.
Mr. and Mrs. Chichester
married on June 15,
;w{lkin~n.the Rev. Charles

Reedsville, Cathy (Jerrr.)
Swain of Coolville, and J11l
(Tim) Smith of Hockingport,
and have four grandchildren,
Bridget · and
Brandon
Browning, Jacob Swain, and
Miranda Smith.
Chichester is employed by
Matheny
Motors
of
Parkersburg, ·W. Va. and his
wife is a homemaker.

NEW YORK (AP) Monica Lewinsky had her day
in court - when · she was
called for jury duty.
Lewinsky, 28, reported for
duty· Thursday to the
Manhattan. state Supreme
Court building with other
prospective jurors. She was
questioned by attorneys choosing a jury for a personal injury
lawsuit against the city, said
Vincent Homenick, chief clerk
of the jury division for
Manhattan eouns.
When asked by an attorney if
she could be fair, the handbag
designer and former White
House intern replied that she
could not serve as a juror,
. Homenick said.
·

Maybe you can
help them now
when they need a
little help.
We administer medications,
provide nursing care when it's
needed and assist residents
with bathing, dressing and other
personal matters. We are a
licensed assisted living community offering care and peace
of mind to many elderly and their
families. We. also serve home
cooked meals from scratch and
~ave fun. Private apartments,
companionship, housekeeping,
. outings, activities.and more. We
are here to serve. Let us show
yqu how we can help you and
yours.

Clark/Wheeler wedding
MIDDLEPORT - Angela birthmother, Glenna Coffey,
Clark, daughter of John and of Richwood on June 8,
Susan Clark of Southside and 2002. Rev. Sam Anderson
sister of Melissa Clark, mar- performed the ceremony at 2
ried James Wheeler, son of p.m. at the Community
Floyd and stepmother, Methodist
Church
in
IDebbie Wheeler of Leon and Middleport, Ohio.

'Sum of All
Fears' ta.kes
No. 1 spot

5 questions
wJth Mickey
. Harton .C7

,.

Dally 8·6, Sun. 11 :30 - 5

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LOS ANGELES (AP) ."The Sum of AU Fears" added ·
up to a victory over "Star Wars;
Episode n - Attack of the
Clones" as the nuclear terrorism
thriller knocked George Lucas'
sci-fi saga to second place at the
weekend box office;
''The Sum of All Fears"
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while "Attack of the Clones"
had $21 million in its third
weekend. "Spider-Man" came
in third with $14.3, having collected a Jotal of $353.6 million
in five weeks.

Friday 7th - Sun. 9th

The
.~~) Grant Medical Center
Specialized Care for Total Knee
and Hip Replacement
For Initial evaluations or follow-up visits, we offer
office hours at 2915 ~rd Avenue (across from St.
Mary's Hospital), Hyntlngton, WV.
Our nelCt clinic date Is
Friday, June 21, 2002.
Call (614) 221-6331

for an appointment.

Joint
Implant
Surgeons, Inc.

wife is the daughter of
Audrey and the late Vern
"Dutch" Well.
They have three children,
Jeff (Jane) Morri s, Jim (Mary
Ann) Morri s, and Bonnie ·
(Dan) Brown, and three
grandchildren,
grandchildren Ainy Morris. and Teddy
and Alison Brown.

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UO UPPI' AI- 114.

Galllpolla, OH

Clalllpolla, OH

!740)44t.oet2
!740l44H300
712J-P111a

*fi

,JDCTA D

11\JI./"'\1\.

,\

FireS. s..1c:e Guonotllld@
.

Galllpolll, OH
(740)441-1:111

Rosebushes &amp; 1rees
25% off
1 gal. Perennial ~ $1.60 each
All Flats $6.99
All10" &amp; 12" baskets $9.99
4" Gerber daisies $1.50 each
4" herbs 99¢

8••all/ofl &amp; /,,J,
...,••rJ

FLAIR
FURNITURE &amp; DESIGN

first name

·last name
street address

WJ'I/flllt'

city .

state

zip

Of GALLIPOUS

Attorney debates tort

..

Reid eboot • on die l!ont PI&amp;' ol
today's Business sedion
t

Please sel'ld me more
Information about your
· community

Rt. 2, Golllpolls FtiT)', WV 67!-137t

reform benefits

Adolph V. Lombardi, Jr., MD, FACS

•

I '

phone number

ITM

300 Briarwood Drive • Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

II

�•

·Celebrations

O:Sundey, June I, 2002

d Y, JuRI t. 2112

S

••

Community college is a great place to start your professiQnal career

~

,.,..,

Do you want lo become a doctor,
. dentisl. pbannacist or engineer?
· You may know that it lakes sever:al years of eduulion to enter inlo
professions, but would it sur: prise you to know that you can
•begin that journey right here at
:your local community college?
:Let's lake a look at what's called
:pre-professional erograms of
•study that are available at your
: local community college.
: ; Most community colleges have
:Specifically designed pre-profes!JIOnal majors in such areas as
Pengineering, pharmacy, medicine,
: aentistry, veterinary medicine and
•law, to name a few. These pro:grams are specifically designed to
: meet the initial course require: ments that are required in the first
i two years of study for each major.
• For eumple, a pre-engineering
:program will contam a heavy con: cenlration in such required courses

:these

Luanne
Bowman
GUEST VIEW
as calculus, physics~ geometry and
algebra. After competition .of the
program, the student will have a
strong foundation to help successfully complete a five-year bachelor's degree in engineering.
While entry into the various
medical schools does not req_uire·a
specific undergraduate maJor, a
strong background in Jllltural sciences is obviously recommended.
A pre-professional program in one

of lhe medical ftelds would give
the student a strong foundation in
biology, chemistry, physics and
mathematics. A pre-law course of
study would provide the student
with a broad background in fields
that would be of particular benefit
in the practice of law. This would
include courses in wilting, communication, literature. political
science and psychology.
Most of the courses required in
pre-professional degrees will take
two years to .complete.
This gives you plenty of time to
stan at your local community college and then transfer to a larger
university of your choice. Given .
the difference in tuition rates and
the chance to eliminate the cost of
room and board by attending your
community college, the average
student can save $l 0,000 to
$12.000 over two years. This can
be very financially beneficial to a

student who will be enrolled in
college for several more years.
The community college staff
will play an imponant role in helping the student determine which
course of study is best suited for
the transfer to their panicular
institution. To take full advantage
of these courses, a student should
review the course catalogue from
the school to which they intend on
transferring. This catalogue will
spell out the specific courses. that
are required to complete the pro·
gram and will help determine in
which courses the student should
enroll.
It is also imponant to communicate with the mstitution where the
student intends on completing
their degree to assure that the
courses will transfer. While statesupported institutions have an
agreement to accept the transfer of
cenain coursework, no such agree·

ment exists between state supported and private institutions. Any
student who intends to transfer
community college credit back to 1
private institution should work
closely with the private college to
assure that the credits transfer.
Most institutions, both private
and state supported, will work
with students to assure that the student takes courses that will sue- ·
cessfully meet the requirements of
their intended major.
Call your local community college today and check out the pteprofessional programs that are
offered and put college in your
future.
( l..uamre Rau Bowman is vice
president for financial and admin- .
istrative affairs at Rio Grande .
Community Colll'ge, P.O. Box 326,
Rio Grande. Ohio 45674. 2457236.)

' .

193Os were the great era for traveling baseball teams in southern Ohio·

Mr. and Mrw. Chrlatopher Brinker

Mr. and Mrw. "-ph W.ter

Marr IBrinker wedding

Huelsman/Mkbster wedding

LETART - Kylie and
Jared Oliver would like to
announce the marriage of
-'their mother Sherry Renae
Marr to Christopher Thomas
Brinker. Sherry 1s the daugh. ter of Chloris Marr of Letart
and the late Glen Marr, and
Chris is the son of Roy and
Rebecca Brinker of Letart.
The couple was united in
marriage May 18 with the
traditional double ring cere·
mony at the Chapel in the
Glen, Gatlinburg, Tenn. The
ceremony was held at 8:30 in
the evemng and was official·
ed by Rev. Mike Simpson.
. The rustic Jog chapel is nes·
tied in the country next to the
Great S~oky Mountains

National .Park.
The bride wore an off-theshoulder, ivory wedding
dress with sequins, pearls,
and trimmed in lace. She carried a cascading bouquet with
ivory, ·navy blue, and burgundy flowers. The groom
wore a black tu1~edo with an
ivory tie an vest, and a
matching rose budded boutonniere.
Wendi Young, friend of the
bride, served as maid of
honor. Shawn Frye, friend .of
the groom, served as best
man.
The couple honeymooned
in Pigeon Forge, Tenn. The
couple resides in Letart.

Mr. and Mrw. Rev. Richard Vlnaon

GALLIPOLIS - Kimberly
Renee Huelsman of Fairfield,
Ohio and Joseph Morris
Webster II also of Fairfield,
were united in marriage April
19, 2002 on the beach at Viva
Fortuna Resort,
Grand
Baham~ Island.
" The bnde IS the daughter of
~ an~ Lee ~uelsman of
Cmcmnau. She IS currently
employed as a sales manager
at Parkers Blue Ash
Restaurant · and Banquet
Facility, Fairfield.
The bridegroom is the son ·
of Joe and Judi Webster of

Vinson anniversary
.

BIDWELL
Rev.
Richard and Juanita Vinson,
956 Pinecrest Drive, Bidwell,
will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary June 12.
The couple was married in
1952 in Detroit, Mich.
They have five children,
Melody (Richard) Eblin of
Vinton, Debra (Paul) Sword
of Vinton, Rosa (Rakph)
Polak, Richard (Donna)
Vinson and David (Kim)

Vinson.
They also have 17 grdndchildren and 20 great grandchildren.
Rev. Vinson has been in
ministry for 38 years includ·
·
. '
mg 16 years. at L1ttl.e Kyger
Church. He 1s also mvolved
in the chapl~incy program at
Holzer Med1cal Center and
previously pastored in
Michigan.

Gallipolis. He is currently
employed as a sales bmker for
Buckeye Food Service SaleS'. .
The bride was given in mar;
riage by her parents; her sister,
Sondra Sucher of Cincinnati,
was the bride's attendant. ·
The· father of the bridegroom, Joe Webster was best
man.
'
Reception was held at the
resort following the ceremony, with several friends and
family members attending.
The couple will reside i11
Fairfield.

That Was the Week That Was

..

Also in 1995, 100,000
In 2000, rapper Eminern
Loni Anderson after five
Entertainment highlights years of mamage, blaming people gathered in New was charged with branduring the week ofJune 9- irreconcilable differences. . York's Central Park to see dishing a gun at a member
15:
In 1995, Jewish leaders a free sneak preview of of the Insane Clowh
In 1965, the Beatles opposed lyrics in Michael "Pocahontas."
Posse. The charges came
were awarded the MBE 'In
1999, · actress just days after he was
"Most Excellent Order of Jackson's song "They
BV THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS .
Actor Stellan Skarsgard is
the British Empire." Some Don't Care About Us," Courteney Cox married arrested for allegedly
Celebrity birthdays for 51. Comedian Tim Allen
medal holders were ·so which contained anti- actor David Arquette in using a gun to hit a man
San Francisco.
kissing his wife.
("Home Improvement") is
the week of June 9-15:
upset .by the choice of Semitic slang.
June 9: Guitarist-inven- 49. Actress Ally Sheedy is
recipients that they .-------------~--------------_;.;;.;;;.,
tor. Les Paul is 87. 40. Singer-guitarist Rivers ' returned theirs.
Comedian Jackie Mason is Cuomo of Weezer is 32.
In 1969, the Rolling
68. Actor Michael J. Fo11 is Singer Raz B of B2K is
Stones · announced that ·
41. Writer-producer Aaron 17. Actresses Ashley and · guitarist Brian Jones, who
Sorkin ("The West Wing") Mary Kate Olsen are 16.
left the band over creative
is 41. Actor Johnny Depp· June 14: Actress Marla
differences, would be
is 39. Actress Gloria Gibbs is 71. Singer Janet
replaced by Mick Taylor.
Reuben ("The Agency," Lennon of The Lennon
Less than a month later,
"ER") is 38. Musician Ed Sisters is 56. Drummer
Jones was found dead at
Simons of the Chemical Alan White of Yes is 53.
his home.
Brothers is 32. Actress Actor
Eddie
Mekka
In 1972, Columbia .
Natalie Portman is 2l. (Carmine on "Laverne and
Records signed Bruce
Actress Mae Whitman Shirley") is 50. Actor Will
Springsteen.
·("Hope Floats") is 14.
Patton is 48. Singer Boy
In 1982, about 1 million
June 10: Singer Shirley George is 41. Actress
people rallied for nuclear
tAlston of The Shirelles is Yasmine Sleeth is 34.
ament in New
-61. Singer Ma1~i Priest is Actress Traylor Howard
Several _&lt;:ele~~ti~s
41. Actress Gina Gershon ("Two Guys And A Girl")
ded, including Linda
is 40. Actress Jeanne
Ronsladt,
Bruce
1
Tripplehom is 39. Actress ~~.£p y· ~jJ~.~) ?sa~. Sahara
Springsteen and James
Elisabeth Shue is 39.
Taylor.
.
" June 15: Sin~er Russell
M odeI -~ctress . Ehzabeth
Hitchcock of Air Supplr is
In 1989, ZsaZsa Gabor
It's true. Our experiences staff of professionals
Hurley ~s 37. Smger.Jo-Jo 53. Actor Jim Belusht is
was arresied after alleged0 ~ K-Ct ~nd Jo-Jo ~s 3 1. 48. Actress Julie Hagerty
ly slapping a Beverly
know how to best serve the individual
Smger Fatth E.vans !.s 29 · is 47. Actress Helen Hunt
Hills police officer who
Actor S~a~e .West ( .Now ("Mad About You") is 39.
pulled her over for having
needs of short and long-term residents.
· and Ajlam ) ts 24· Smger Actress Courteney Cox
expired license tags.
Hok.u 1s _2,1. Actress Leelee Arquette ("F .e ds") . 38
In 1992, a Texas law
We provide a wide continuum of services
Sobteskl ts 20.
n n
IS . •
errforcement
·agency
June 11 : . Actor Gene · Rapper-actor Ice Cube.~~
called for a national boyWilder is 67. Actor Chad 3}· .Actress Leah,R~mlm
including skilled nursing, physical, and
cott of "Cop Killer" by
0
Everett is 65. Actress ( King ~ Quee~s ) ts 3?.
Ice-T. Sales of the song
Barbeau ~.ctor t:~ell Patr1ck Harr.~s
. Adrienne
occupational therapy and speech pathology.
skyrocketed.
•
("Maude")
is
57 . ~ Doogte ~owser, M.D. )
In 1993; Burt Reynolds
.J)tummer Frank Beard of IS. 29. Smger . Dryden
Wha~'s niore, we provide those services in
filed for divorce from
Zz . Top is 53. Singer Mttch~JI of Ahen Ant
Donnie Van Zant af .38 Farm 18 26 ·
an atmosphere that is filled with
Special is 50. Actor Peter . .
Bergman ("The Young and
caring and compassion~ ·
the Restless") is 49. Actor
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

CFJ,EBRITY

BIRTHDAYS

-------T-h_e________

~~o~':son 's Creek!.)i:i~~

June 12: Actress Uta
Hagen is 83. Singer Vic
Damone is · 74. Actorsinger Jim Nabors is 72.
Jazz . musician Chick
Corea is 61. Sports
announcer Marv Albert is
61. Country . singer' guitarist Junior Brown is 50.
Actress Jenilee Harrison
("Dallas,"
"Three's
Company") Is 43. Rapper
Grandmaster Dee of
Whodini is 40, Blues guitarist
Kenny
Wayne
Shepherd is 25. .
.
June 13: TV host Ralph ·
Edwards ("This Is Your
Life") is 89. Actor
Malcolm McDowell is 59.

J0 in t Imp I a n ~ Ce n t er
Specializing in total
hip and knee replacement

Denton True Young, better
known as Cy Young, and
perhaps the greatest pitcher
HI the history of the national
,pastime, pitched a baseball
game in Gallia County on
-May 24, 1935.
At that time, Young was ~8
·yeats old. He pitched one
• whole inning as his team, the
Cy Young Old Timers, beat
the focal Gallipoifs team
1known as the Silver Bridge
Silvers. Young had begun his
famous Major League career
-in 1890 with Cleveland and
ihe ended it in 1911 with
Boston. Young won 30 or
.i111ore games in five different
seasons.
-But in the 1930s, Cy
·Young organized a traveling
, team that had such former
•Major League players as
•Jack Smith (St. Louis
·Cardinals), Sam Dun~an
(Detroit), Paul Zahmser
"'(Washington), Rolla Maple
'(St. Louis Browns), Drck
Cox (Brooklyn), Chet
•Michaels (Pittsburdt), Rube
rBenton (New York Giants)
,!Inc;!
Pat
Duncan
:(Cincinnati). In the 1930s,
' Youn~ had just one of many
'travehng baseball teams that
reame to the area.

I
J

Make the right choice. Call today for a tour.

.

Counting his luck on being able to visit 72 different countries

I

.

I have been asked many times,
!when are you going to write another
!article on your world travels? I
jhaven't traveled for over two years.
•My ~oodness, I am .88 years old and
'I thtnk my fl!ture world tours are
over. I have had wonderful health
until the last couple of years and
you must have good health if you
!want to travel many parts of the
1

~ world.

: I was very fortunate to see and
'*eceive an education by visiting 72
~ ~oreign

countries like I did. Who
have ever thought I would
1accomplish that? But I worked all
I day and night in the photo business
and made some money. I also got
j into the jewelry business and made
1 more money.
I . sold a 5,carat diamond and I
:: spent several hours counting my
1 money. I thought to myself, what I
i am going to do .with all this money?
1 I got to thinking about what my
1 school teacher kept saying, that
when she retires from teaching, she

. Iwould

;_ I
·I

.

friends.
Many times I have asked myself
how a young man like me got to do
what I did. I was just a farm boy. I
told my dad I did not want tQ be a
farmer. He told me, "Ma11, stay on
the farm and I will give you that 10acre field where you and your broth·
er found all those Indian arrowheads
GUEST COLUMNIST that ·you sold and made a lot of
money."
But I said, "No, I want to do some·
intended to walk on the road to thing myself," which I did. I could
Mandalay in Burma. I will never go on and on about my young life.
for~et that and I decided to .go there, What a happy life I have had. I am
wh1ch I did.
writing a large book ·that soon be on
The travel bug bit me and I hit the the market aboui my life and world
road. It has been a wonderful life travels. I hope you like it. I am glad
traveling and seeing how other peo- I traveled when it was safe to tour
ple live throughout different parts of about any country. But it sure isn't
the world. It sure has been an educa- like that today.
.
tion. I have walked around in 72 dif(Longtime Gallipolis businessman
ferent countries and shook hands ·Max Tawney occasionally ·submits
with hundreds of foreign people and articles to the Sunday Timeshave given many of them American · Sentinel about his world travels and
money, which many of them gave memories of Gallipolis a.11d Gallia
me foreign money and we became County.)

Max
Tawney

1~~------~~----------------------~-----,
:: River Cities Community Hea It h ( oa l"t•
A B_lver Cities
1 l,on
~~·.. -"",..
I

.

I
I

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

Nurse On Call

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Medical professionals providing free
health care answers 8c p'hysiclan referral

'
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Rocksprings

For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total jol~t
replacement, we offer office hours at 3554 U.S. Route
60 East, Barboursville, WV.

'•

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REHABILITATION CENTER

14.
llppolntment.

OhioHealth .

Other traveling teams that
came to the area in the 1930s
were the House·or David and
the Zulu Cannibals. The
House of David, based in
Benton Harbor, Mich., w~ a
colony of men who professed lifelong celibacy. The
order was founded in 1903
by Benjamin Purnell. He
taught, besides celibacy, a
disciplined life that forced
adherence to abstain from
alcohol, tobacco and meat.
Individuals in the order
donated all of their worldly
possessions to the order
when they joined. Members
of the order were also not
allowed to cut their hair.
In order to pay the bills to
keep the order going, traveling baseball and basketball
teams were organized. The

•

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

( ) Grant Medical Ce~ter

James
Sands

order also ran an amusement did unusual dances before
park in Benton Harbor. Prior and after the game. One of
to the baseball games, House their players was Goose
of David player like Woods, Tatum, who later starred
Shadowen, O'Grady and . with
the
Harlem
Ramsey did a baseball jug- Globetrotters. After Tatum
gling and passing act that left the Cannibals, he joined
made it very difficult for the .the Indianapolis Clowns
fan to follow the ball.
traveling baseball team.
The sportswriter of the
Also appearing in Gallia
Tribune poked fun at the County in the 1930s were
native origins of some of the such teams as the Pittsburgh
P.layers when he wrote: Crawfords
and
the
'House of David noses out Homestead Grays of the
Bridgemen 4-2." As the Negro Leagues. The Negro
order began to die off, the League schedule did not
House of David began hiring include as many games per
"ringers" to play for them. year as the white league,
One season they even hence teams like the
dressed up Satchel Paige in a Crawfords and the Grays ·
could also play exhibition
long wig and beard.
Appearing in Middlepon games in petween league
in the 1930s was a team games.
known
as
the
Zulu
The Crawfords played
Cannibals. This all-black here in 1933 and 1934, and
team, most of whom were featured five future Hall of
from Chicago, played base- Famers: Satchel Paige, Josh
ball in grass skirts and paint- Gibson, Oscar Charleston,
ed faces, and shouted sup- Cool Papa Bell and Judy
posed African words.
I ohnson. The Homestead
No players were from Grays also had a future Hall
Africa and most of their so- of Farner, Buck Leonard.
Most of these traveling
called African linso was
about as phony as 'the teams did manage to beat the
African words from the . local nine. The Silver Bridge
Tarzan movies, also popular defeated the Columbus
in the 1930s. The team also Redbirds of the American

740-992-6606
36759 Rocksprings Road
Po1ne1rov OH 45769

·•·

~·

,

:~
_,
:

__

•I

Better health for the Tri-State .

r•(tl(ly

boy gear. There were also a
few women's teams that
played in Gallipolis against
the local male champions.
Most of the women's teams
played in . bloomers. The
Nebraska team was all male,
except for a female pitcher,
the famous Maud Nelson.
(James Sands is a special
correspo11dent for
the
Sunday 7imes-Senrinel. He
can be coli/acted by writing
to 346 Meadow Lane,
Circleville. Ohio 43JJ3.)

••

I

I

THE GOOD TIMES JUST KEEP ROLLING
ALONG AS OUR 2002 SCHEDULE IS HALF
OVER AND ALREADY WE ARE MAKING WONDERFUL PLANS
FOR 2003!!! THANK ALL OF YOU FOR YOUR TERRIFIC
RESPONSE TO OUR TRAVEL PROGRAM AS WE CONTINUE TO
WELCOME NEW MEMBERS INTO OUR "TRAVEL FAMILY".
THIS PAST MAY WE TRAVELED TO HOLLAND, MICHIGAN
AND ONCE AGAIN ENJOYED THE BEAUTIFUL
FESTIVAL WITH ACRES OF BLOOMS OF EVERY COLOR.
MANY OF US .ORDERED BULBS TO BE SENT TO US THIS
FALL FOR PLANTING IN OUR AREA. A PARADE FEATURING
THE HIGH SCHOOL BAND MARCHING IN WOODEN SHOES
(WELL -KNOWN THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY). A
FABULOUS PERFORMANCE BY MEMBERS . OF THE
LAWRENCE WELK BAND AND VARIOUS DINNERS WITH
ENTERTAINMENT COMPLETED AGREAT TOUR
THIS MONTH WE WILL BE VISITING THE WORLD-FAMOUS
RESORT, "THE GREENBRIER" IN OUR OWN BEAUTIFUL
STATE. EACH YEAR WE PLAN AT LEAST ONE TOUR TO
PLACES OF INTEREST IN WEsT VIRGINIA. WE WILL ALSO
VISITING TAMARACK.
TWO OUTINGS ARE BEING FINALIZED FOR NEXT MONTH.
JULY 18-!9 WILL BE OUR NINTH ANNUAL GRI\NC•PAFtEN'fS
AND FRIENDS TOUR. THIS YEAR WE WILL BE
TO CINCINNATI FOR AN OVERNIGHT AT AMERISUITES
HOTEL WHERE THE GRANDCHILDREN PRACTICE
CHECKING INTC THE HOTEL, OPERATING THE ELEVATOR,
AND POSSIBLY ORDERING ROOM SERVICE WHEN. NO ONE
IS LOOKING. WE HAVE A WONDERFUL TIME AND IT IS A
GREAT OPPORTUNiTY FOR GRANDCHILDREN TO BE
REWARDED FOR A SUCCESSFUL SCHOOL YEAR. WE WILL
BE SPENDING THE FIRST DAY AT "THE BEACH" WATERPARK
WITH A HAWAIIAN LUAU IN THE EVENING AND THE NEXT
DAY WE'LL TAKE IN KINGS ISLAND. TRAVELING ON THE
MOTORCOACH IS A FAVORITE FOR THE YOUNGSTERS AS
WE ENJOY GAMES, SNACKS AND VIDEOS. COME ALONG
AND JOINS US • WE HAVE SOME NON-GRANDPARENTS
(JUST FRIENDS) WHO ENJOY GOING "WITH THE KIDS"· AND
IT GIVES US ALL ACHANCE TO BE AKID AGAIN.
ALSO ON JULY 25 WE WILL BE MAKING A DAY TRIP TO
XENIA, OHIO TO SEE THE OUTDOOR INDIAN DRAMA "BLUE
JACKET". WE WILL ESPECIALLY BE INTERESTED IN THIS
DRAMA BECAUSE ONE OF THE CHARACTERS WILL BE
"CORNSTALK" AND WE ALL "KNOW" HIM . AFTER A
BACKSTAGE TOUR TO SEE ljOW THE SHOW IS PRODUCED,
WE WILL HAVE A PICNIC AND GUESS WHO'S COMING TO
DtNNER· CORNSTALK'! THIS TRIP IS NOW ON A "WAITING
LIST" STATUS SO IF YOU ARE PLANNING ON ATTENDING,
GIVE MEA CALL RIGHT AWAY.
AUGUST IS ANOTHER DINNER THEATRE DAYTRIPTOTHE
LACOMEDIA NEAR DAYTON, OHIO FOR THE PRODUCTION
OF THE BROADWAY MUSICAL "ANNIE"· THE STORY OF A
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE. A MYSTERY TRIP IS BEING
FINALIZED FOR SEPT. 4·5 AND OCTOBER IS ALSO ON A
WAITING LIST STATUS FOR OUR BRANSON/MEMPHIS TOUR
NOVEMBER 2·3 IS AN OVERNIGHT TRIP TO RENFRO
VALLEY, KY, WITH A BOARDING HOUSE DINNER AND
BREAKFAST. THE SATURDAY NIGHT SHOW FEATURING
CARL HURLEY, GRAND OLE OPRY STAR MIKE SNIDER, AND
ON THE PIANO OUR OWN ALBERT STEVENS!!! WE WILL
ATTEND THE SUNDAY MORNING GOSPEL SERVICE AND
MAKE ASHORT VISIT TO BEREA EN ROUTE HOME .
DECEMBER 2-41S A TWO NIGHT STAY AT WILSON LOIDGI:j
AT OLGEBAY pARK. WHEELING. FOR THE FESTIVAL OF
LIGHTS AND AN ICE SHOW PERFORMANCE ACCOMPANIED
BY THE W. VA. SYMPHONY. DECEMBER 18 IS ANOTHER
MATINEE CHRISTMAS PERFORMANCE "IT'S A WONDERFUL
LIFE AT LACOMEDIA".
MAKE PLANS TO JOIN US WHENEVER YOU CAN AND STOP
IN FOR ACUP OF COFFEE AND INFORMATION ON SOME OF
OUR OUTSTANDING FINANCIAL OPPORTUNITIES· YOU MAY
QUALIFY FOR AFREE GIFT. MANY ARE!! IN THE MEANTIME.
SUMMER IS HERE SO LET'S GET OUT AND ....
... LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL,

.,._,~

Chy NaboO&amp;J ..,.. ot

we.~ w,ntt. M«merFmc.

L1J1~

. Mary Fowler, Director
Peoples Choice Travel ,
·

www.eKtendicare.com

I

'

Let the good tinws roU! ·

•~

_ . C.,.,. ••
.

. ExTENDICARE•
Eq11al Oppommity Pro, iderofSuvim

.

Association and the minor
league Charleston team.
The other great era for
traveling baseball teams to
come to Gallipolis was the
first 15 years of the 20th
century (1900-15) when
teams like the Cherokee
Indians,
the Nebraska
Cowboys and others ·came
here.
In that era, teams played in
costumes. too. The Indians
played in Indian get-up and
the Nebraska team in cow-

National Bank.

I

lI

�•

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•

W&gt;ur last chance for
. afree digital thennometer is close at hand

BEST SELLERS

.

Have you turned in your old mercury
thermometer for a new digital one yel'!
This may be your last chance to make a
free exchange.
• Margie Skidmore at the Meigs
County Health Depanment reports that
the agency still has about 40 of the digital ones which have been provided by .
the Southeast Ohio Mercury Education
and Thermometer Exchange Project.
One digital is given to each family
who turns in at least one of the. mercury
kind. Since mercury is so toltic, the
thermometers need to be placed in two
zip lock bags to transport to the health
department. ·
·
Remember that mercury affects the
brain. spinal cord, kidneys, liver, and
the ability to feel, see, taste and move,
so there's plenty of reason to ·get those
thermometers out of the house.

of OSU, is a pediatrician at Kings
Island, Ga.
While she didn't live to see it,
Sandy's dream of having both daughters get doctorates has been fulfilled.

Charlene
Hoeflich

•••

Being remembered with cards brightens the days of many elderly folks who
- - - - - - - · . don't get around much anymore.
Ruth Stethem of 35840 Swan Road,
COMMUNITY
Long Bottom, will be observing her
99th birthday Friday.
.
Nora Searls, 170 Pinecrest Drive,
George graduated last week and has
been accevted into a residency program . Gallipolis will celebrate her 92nd birthin obstetncs/gynecology at the Metro day on June 27.
'Health Center ansi The Cleveland
Card showers have been planned for
·
Clinic. He's only the second D.O. both of them.
accepted there in the history of the pro•••
gram, so that' s quite a feather in his
Do you have your Ohio Kids.Card?
cap.
- It's modeled after the Golden
While George was a good reporter, I Buckeye Card in that the Kids Card
always felt that he was a "natural" for offers discounts to families with chitmedicine because of his compassionate dren _under 6 at participating businesses
spirit.
now numbering over 2,500 in Ohio.
I remember an elderly·woman here,
The card is ffee and may be obtained
now deceased, who went about town at public libraries.
More than 23,000 families have
collecting aluminum cans which she
sold to support herself. George was already been enrolled in the program,
always concerned about her welfare, . which gives nice discounts. on chitand it w,asn't long until he was right out · dren'_s things ihcluding clothing at
there giving her a hand.
some major department stores.
The· Freemans attended George's
•••
graduation, whose journey of life from
Ifhe hot new fashion trend for the
newspaper reporter to doctor was relat- party scene this summer is body lights
ed during the ceremony.
- bright flickering mini-ones clipped
•••
to your clothing or worn in your ha1r.
And speaking of graduates, the secThey're small and colorful and operond daughter of Roger Luckadoo and ate on a replaceable watch size battery.
the late Sandy Brewington Luckadoo, Just the thmg to put a little fun in your
now has her doctorate.
life.
Lee graduated from the Ohio State
How many sets would you like?
Uni'versity with a Ph.D. in ecology last
(Charlene Hoeflich isfenera/ man·
week. Her sister, Amy, also a graduate age~ of The-Daily Sentine in Pomeroy.)

•••

Many of you will remember George
Abate, who came to Meigs County to
work as a reporter on The Daily
Sentinel in the early '90s after graduating from the Ohio University School of
Journalism.
· In 1995, he decided to leave newspapering and become a physical therapist,
so he again enrolled at Ohio University.
He never lost his love for Meigs
County and returned often to spend
time with a co-reporter, Jim Freeman,
and his family and visit other friends in
the community.
After physical therapy. he decided he
wanted to be a doctor and enrolled at
the OU College of Osteopathic
, -Medicine, all the while holding down
two or three part-time jobs to supJ?Ort
himself. He J'llarried his longume
sweetheart, also now a doctor.

Getting past procrastination
Procrastination, ihat ancient art of
putting off today what you can do
tomorrow, has at one time or another
afflicted everyone. For some people
it's a persistent problem and for others it only happens· in certain areas of
their lives.
The end results are usually .the
same though - wasted time, · missed
opportunities, increased . anxiety,
. poor performance, guilt, and' even
:. avoiding people who depend on us.
Procrastination doesn't feel good and
it eventually catches up with you. It's
:: like living under your own personal
· .cloud.
.
Procrastin&lt;)tion is letting the lowpriority task.s get in the way of the
high-priority ones. It's doing things
like watching TV or reading a book
instead of doing the household
chores. It's talking with friends or
~ colleagues even though that bi~ pro'
ject is due soon. It's also talkmg to
: your partner about non-consequential
: things instead of discussing your
relationship concerns.
People usually do fi11e with the
·things they want and like to do for
• fun, but when tasks are perceived as
: difficult, inconvenient or even scary;
• that's when pro9rastination most
often occurs. People find lots of
excuses to make themselves feel better. Do any of these sound familiar?
I' II start my diet tomorrow after I
eat-this last' piece of pie. I work bet: ter under pressure so I don't need to
:..!start that project yet. I' II wait until
•• I'm in the mood to do it. I need to
• clean up my work area first. I'm too
tired righ~ now. Maybe if I just take a
little n&lt;)p ...
When we talk to ourSelves and use
• these excuses, thlly seem quite con~ vincing, but don't be fooled by how

Becky
Collins
GUEST COLUMNIST
innocent they sound. They are the
cause for postponi-ng important tasks
and responsibilities.
Procrastination is a bad habit that
has two ~e·neral causes. "Crooked
thinking" IS one strate~y used to justify behavior. Perfectionism, inadequacy and discomfort are the foundatiOn of crooked thinking . Those who
believe everything must be perfect
have trouble completing jobs
because they worry abolJl producing
the perfect project, preventing them
from finishing on time. When people
feel incompetent they often believe
they'll fail. They avoid doing the job
so their skills won't be tested. Fear
of discomfort also delays the comph;tion of jobs but the more the
delay, the worse the discomforting
pattern becomes.
.
Behavioral patterns are the second
cause of procrastination. Getting
started on something new or difficuh
may seem impossible. It's like the
physics concept of inertia - a mass
at rest tends to stay at resi. Getting
started with a project is usually the
hardest part. Ask any writer - the
first sentence is normally the most
difficult to write.
But avoiding responsibilities reinforces procrastinahon, which makes
it harder to get things going.

Procrastination is a serious problem for many people. It can under"
mine their sense of well being and
prevent them from experiencing the
full potential of their lives. It's
important to find ways to break out
of the cycle of procrastination.
Use positive self-statements. Tell
yourself motivating thoughts such as
"The sooner I get it done, the sooner
I elm play." "There's no time like the
present." Don't turn the situation into
a catastrophe. Jumping to the conclusion that you' II fail or you're no
good at something wi II only create .
fear that will stop you cold. Negative
predictions are not facts, but they can
set you up for failure . Eliminate
those negative thoughts.
Design clear ·gqals. Be specific
about what you want and what needs
to be done. Set a timetable and keep
sights within reason. Goals that are
too big can scare you away from
starting. Set priorities. Write down
the most important things first and
work down your list in that order.
Partialize the tasks. Break projects
down into smaller and more manageable parts. You get more done if you
do it piece by piece. Take· a stand.
Commit yourself to doing a project:
Reward yourself. When you've finished your task. Let yourself enJoy
the completion of even the smallest
tasks.
Get started today on that thing
you've been putting off. Do something daily on this project even if it's
only for five minutes. Once you've
started, it will be so much easier to
.
· ·
keep going.
(Becky Collins i.! Galli a County's
Extension agent for famil~ and consumer sciences/community develop·
ment, Ohio State University.)

~~~~·
Healthy Start
Healthy Families

20021ncome
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IJt lrl',IHI fl ( hllrlrcn (IJr \r, 1\rji• l'n

read about Hon C8

.,
l ' I;

BY S.u Non ·llloClM
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

A naked Inuit hunter runs across a ·
. shimmering landscape of summer ice,
chased by men who want to steal his
··· wife.
He runs, and he stumbles into frigid
puddles. He runs, and his feet bleed on
shards of ice. This goes on for one
minute, five minutes, .1 0 minutes, and
more.
·• He's running for his life, and
Canadian Inuit director Zacharias
·i Kunuk is not going to rush the pursuit or
tum away from the horror.
.
.. Let the brutal hunt end as it may.
Kunuk's directorial debut blends the
·.. lege1_1dary story~elling p~wess of his
, · Arctic people wtth the mbmate camera
work of a documentary filmmaker to
' •' create ' 'The Fast Runner," a film of
' astonishing beauty and power that A NEW F1LM - Atana~uat (Natar Ungalaaq) regains his. balance having,just run fOr
examines how a tiny Inuit community his life across a sea of ice in Zacharias Kunuk's "The Fast Runner (Atanarj_uat). • (~)
,,. deals with evil in its midst.
Unlisted in the credits but a deminat,. Taclding subjects such as- jealousy, younger brother Atanarjuat ("the fast
runner").
ing aspecl of the mnvie is the setting
. -sibling rivalry, mfidelity, rape arid mur. der, "The Fast Runner" bowled over the · Years of animosity break into the open around lgloolik, an island community in
.: · international film community to capture when Atanarjuat wins the lovely Atuat Canada's. oorthern Baftin region•
"The Fast Runner" transports its audi'· the Camera d'Or award at Cannes in for his wife, after she was promised to
2001 and six .Genie awards (Canadian Oki. Oki vows to get even and his rage ence into another time (~:enturies ago,
: Oscars) including best picture and best grows with every passing season, poi- before contact with Europeans) and
another world, with historicaJly ;1£Cu.ratl:o
soning the community.
•' •director.
Natar Ungalaaq, a welt-known Inuit costumes and tools complemenling vast
·" It's no wonder.
Kunuk reveals hot passions in the land sculptor and actor, 'is impishly appealing stretches. of sea and sky. The soundS lilf
· ·of ice and snow, with a slow-paced, as · Atanarjuat, a hunter perhaps too the Arctic resonate th:rougheut, with
,close-up technique that allows tensions besotted with his own talents. In his first gulls sc~hing, ice cracklin~ and tusk
''-'to build. His lnmt characters seethe with acting role, Peter-Henry Arnatsiaq_ is. blades scrapmg the snow as 1g!oos are:
anger, smolder with passion and ache menacing as Oki, an Inuit Mike TYson made.
"The Fast Runner" is the first feature:: with despair as he asks a universal ques- full of boiling emotions. Sylvia lvalu is
tion: Once evil has been ignited, how gently understated as the tattooed Atuat, length movie by lgloolik lsuma
can it be doused?
a woman whose character and kindness Productions, which was founded in
· In the screenP.lay by the Paul Apak are even niore endearing than her beau- 1990 as Canada's first independent Inuit
film company.
An~ilirq, an ev1l _spirit has invaded an ty.
Distributed by Lot 47 films. it is not
lnuu community, dividing its people. On
Madeline lvalu brinl!s a solemn gravione side are the chieftain's three greedy tas to the role of Pamkpak, the ~d­ rated, but there's pl~:nty of nudity and
sons, led by the oldest, Oki; on the other, mother who seeks to heal the sptrit of some violence. In lnuktitut with English
two strapping youths from a poor fami- the broken community even if it means subtitles. Running time: 172 min11tes.
Three and one-half stars out of four.
ly, Amacuuaq ("the strong one"). and his taking action against her own kin.

.

Annually

Monthly

$10.92

/00

r PI

Hourly

Eye Infections and Contacts

1

$8,860

$739

$4.29

It's easy to take good eye health for granted. That's
especially true for long-time contact lens wearers. One fact
that bears repeating, thouJ!h, is this: your risk of an eye
infection is much greater ifyou wear contact lenses.
Eye infections occur when bacteria temporarily oveJcome
the body's defenses. The eye is particularly vulnerable
when a dirty,· poorly cleaned contact lens IS worn. The
c·ontact lens may act as a harbor for bacteria and block
healthy oxygen from reaching the cornea.
· Never take ·an eye infection or ulcer lightly. Left
untreated, permanent vision impairment, though rare, can
occur. If you suspect a problem, remove your contacts
immediately and wear your back,up glasses. Take note of
whether there's discharge from the eye, when the problem
started, and if you've been in contact with others with a
"Jlink eye."
.
Your doctor needs this information to make the best
diagnosis. Follow your doctor 's advice and you'll quickly
be back on the road to good eye health.

2

$11,940

$995

$5.78

3

$15,020 $1,252 $7.28

A Taiwanese kiddie show
with a cross-dressing granny
!I

TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) With his pudgy body, frumpy
dress and soothing voice,
Chao Tse-chiang comes
across as a combi11ation of
"Mrs. Doubtfire" and "Mister
Rogers" on his hit children's
, TV program.
; . Blowing kisses and waving ·
: ·his arms, the cross-dressing
Chao - known as Fruit
Granny - sings the farewell
song to his "Fruit Ice Cream"
, show:
"I wish your smile will be as
, sweet as fruit and your mood
: ·as delicious as ice cream." · .
Before his show begins,
Chao smudges red lipstick on
his lips and slips into a bulkY
red dress. With a sleepy little
farmhouse set, the half-hour
•I show consists of Chao
• singin~, reading stories and
cavortmg with a dozen or so
puppets, including sheep, a
bear and friendly witches.
, The puppets and other char. 1 peters make the show look a
ibit like "Sesame Street" which, like other American
kiddie ·shows such as
"Clifford the Big Red DOg," is
dubbed or subtitled and
shown widely on Taiwanese
cable television. But "Fruit
Ice Cream" -is not about math
or learning to read.
Rather, the show focuses on
simple traditional family values, something greatly treasured but gradually fading in
industrialized Taiwan, where
nuclear families with two
working parents are replacing
I traditional clans with grand1 parents living together with
1 grandchildren. ·
: "Man.Y kids are in the care
t-"Pf nanmes after school and go

i·

'

1

$13,290 $1,108 $6.44

•

·1be Fast Runnef to debut in

PROUD TO BE
APART OF
&gt;YOUR LIFE. ·

1

~

l

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fox Video.
Weekly charts for the
7.
"Behind
Enemy
nation's most popular Lines," FoxVidco.
videos as they appear in
8.
"Domestic
next week's issue of Disturbance," Paramou-nt
Billboard
ma11azine. Home Entertainment.
Reprinted with perrrnssion:
9. "Corky Romano,"
Touchstone Home Video.
Top Kid Video Sales
10.
•·s y Game,"
(Compiled from a nation- Universal trudios Home
Video.
al sample of sales reports)
Copyright 2002, VNU
I . "Spider-Man: The
Nielsen
Soundscan, Inc.
Ultimate
Villain
Showdown," Buena Vista
Top ~ideo Sales
Home Entertainment. Walt
Disney Home Video.
(Compiled from a nation2. "Cinderella II: Dreams al samgle of sales rep,orts)
Come ":rue," Walt Disney
1. • Snow Dogs, ' Walt
Home V1deo.
Disney Home Video.
~- "Sponge_ Buddies,"
2. "Ocean's Eleven,"
Nickelodeon V1deo.
..Warner Home Video.
4. "Scooby-Doo And The
3. "The Fast And The
Werewolf," Furious," Universal Studios
Reluctant
Warner
Family Home Video.
Entertainment.
·
4. "Dragonball Z: Fusion
5. "Nautical Nonsense," Losing
Battle
Nickelodeon Video.
(Unedited) " FUNimation.
6. "Blue's Clues: Reading
5. "Drag~nball Z: Fusion
~ith Blue," . Nickelodeon Play
For Time .
V1deo. ..
. .
·(Unedited)," FUN!mation.
6. "Spider-Man: The
7.
JustJce League,"
Warner
Family Ultimate
Villain
Entertainment.
Showdown," Buena Vista
8. "Barney's Beach Home Entertainment.
Party," Hit Entertainment.
7. "The Many Adventures
9. "Dora Saves The Of Winnie The Pooh: 25th
P~ince,"
Nickelodeon Anniversary Edition," Walt
V1deo.
Disnex Home Video.
!0. "The Hunchback Of
8. • Oliver &amp; Company," ·
Notre Dame II," Walt Walt Disney Home V1deo.
Disney ~orne Video.
.
9. "Star Wars Trilogy,"
Copynght 2002, VNU . FoxVideo.
Nielsen Soundscan, Inc.
10. "Dragon ball Z: Fusion
- Losin$ Battle (Edited),"
Top Video Rentals
FUNimalion.
Copyright 2002, VNU
(Compiled from a nationNielsen
Soundscan, Inc.
al sample of rental reports)
!.
"Vanilla
Sky,"
Home
Paramount
Entertainment.
2. "Ocean's Eleven,"
Wamer Home Video.
3.
"The
Others,"
Dimension Home Video.
4. "Snow Dogs," Walt
Disney Home Video.
•
5. "How High," Universal
Studios Home Video.
6.
"From
Hell,"

to bed with their parents pushing the VCR button to play a
story on video," said Chao,
whose pink apron is sewed
with the pattern of a home.
"So we try to let children feel
the warmth of a home, the
coziness of ordinary life."
In one recent show, Fruit
Granny tries to cheer up her
grandchildren, two puppets
with heads shaped like
bananas. They were going on
a picnic when a small car accident forced them to cancel.
"Let's put oUr food on the
table, and we can have a picnic at home," Fruit tells the
kids. "Everybody ·comes
across an unpleasant event
once in a while, but we can
get together, laugh it off and
be happy again."
Nancy 1)oan, a professor of
National Taipei Teachers
College, said ~'Fruit Ice
Cream" contains lessons long
ignored in an educational system that emphasizes grades
and neglects children's independent thinking.
. "Taiwanese parents often
tell their kids: You do your job
by studying hard a11d I' II take
care of the rest for you," Tyan
said.
"With 'Fruit · Ice Cream,'
children are taught to do their
own chores, get along with
others and develop their
potential," she said.
Two years ago, Chao, who's
also the host of a talk radio
program for children, suggested that the state-owned noncommercial channel produce
a program featuring a loving
grandma.

I
I

'
I
I
I

' I

4

I

$18,100 $1,509 $8.77

''
I
I
''
I

$21,180 $1,765 $10.26

(740) 992·2117
1-800-992-2608

"

llelped bang out 1M beat that
propelled. the: llead:s: etliereal melodies. fur lll:lld.y 1U
years.
music. This is. an ~ampk of
Aftl:f tt:lldl si.qe:t· Iercy different c.ultuJ:es talling6arcia's delllb in. 1995'. the: aOOilt very important and
DeadJ retired! from: w.uring. comple!t issues throllgh
sa.ve fur occasioruil summer music. c.orning" tnget!itt
pafoonances as The Otbtt through. the: groove:o.fm.usic..
Qnes, the: band's, Slll'lilling - · If the: Palestinians: and
members. The grouP' plans fsr.lelis were: pla~in~
just one: sul:b. appearance: t.Qgether right oo.w t · e:
this year; tDI August at East it would lie an. antidl.m Ill
Troy, Wis.
war; t realty dn beli~e: tb.llt..
The album "Mon:dn
4'. Wb.at e.ls.e. is • on:
Heod." released earlier this with your tifec tb.eslt~
year; features the: JapaneseHart Oil. t•m. looltiq at a.
tailo drum group Kocil. llar- klt of iillltl r diln't ~Y
monica virtuosn Charlie bave:a plan, r jUSli sort 00gel.
Mu5se!Wbite. Indian percus.- and took at: tbmgs. fal:t.. t
sionist ZaJili- Hussain, lia.ve no, partic.ulat pian. atall
Cuban~ocali&amp;&amp;
Bobi paughin&amp;). I've ~ l.isllm-Cesped:s, Puerto Ri~:anjazz mgW&gt;a.lutofK~cliant.­
drummer Gio11anni HidalSQJ ing lately. and f 'ltt been.
and the Gyuto. Monks of · finding l~ f.JSciu:alin&amp;&lt; ·- One:
India, the: l!)alai! Lama's per-- thi.ng I can llill ~ou .II wonit
sonal choir.
do is retire. l!)oo ~ 11£0~ m·lll
" [I' s a new cultural stew, a nevet retire oo yo~
new gumbo that point£ the
5. Will the s.w:vi&gt;4~
way," Han said. "I never members of the Grateful
thought of mixing Tibetan. Dead do a full tour this Jieut'?
Japanese and Indian culture
Hart. Nab. ... My bwld is
before."
whali l' m doing this summer-,
!. How did l(OU get togeth- the Mickey Hart Band. That
er with Kodo1
and Kodo, and that's. reaJl)'
Hart: 1 knew them way e-xciting for me. Bob·Hunterback in the ' 70s.. 1 was (the Grateful Deud lyricist)•
always a fan of taika drum- bas writteDJ me a bunch cli
ming, which i&amp; a kind of n:ew songs. and we lt be: tlli:dassical drumming. Ifs. net ing: them out oDJ the: road\ So.
a real B11den1 form. ll's. a it's going to. l!!e- an C!lciting
fwrly modem form. but it summe.ran.df.illefmusidoruses. old Shinto instruments me. And rm wOii:in,ft with
in a kind of classic. way. B.llt National Geographic.l'U be:
I didn't want to dil&gt; thai. l doing differem projec.ts. with
wanted to take them out of them, wood music. proje£ts
the box and make thell'l more of c.ou.rse. I'm wllri:ing on a
improvisational .... 1 thought National Geog111phic book
if l didn'l~:ome up with the with them.
compositions, and we
weren' t thinking too much,
that would be an adventure.
2. Where did you record MourN? •Rgilfnt*•
the album?
-·llfllltl'lo• 1 m~ta~V&lt;IIdb
Han: At my place here. ~•.,rblyotGM
There's no bigger place any- L--.....l!:•=•~RouW=!.t::IO:.._...J
where. It's ve.ry large
because that's wbal drummers need. We'd all get in
one giant room and play,
play, play. II WIIS like clruin
c~p (laughing}. That's theonly way to do SOlllething
organically like this unless

=

FREE VIDEO

DISH!
! jill liM I loW lllljor ... conloool it&gt;" lr II ....... ol .lmlricl'l Till !0
"'1 gNo 11111 Fill llllllill TV l'jlllll (MSIIP Hill
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,..tfil'lcl llrlltiaUijUfliiiitl

1ft MTV,
ClioontloMC* ...............,

Known as ·Fruit Granny,"
: comedian Mr. Chao "[se-&lt;:hiang laughs with puppets during a
: taping of the hit Taiwanese children's show "Fruit tee Cream•
: in Taipei. Competing with the Americaf~,Sesame Street dubbed
'1 1n Chinese, the wacky "Fruit lee Cream" children 's show
appeals to kids, Taiwan experls say, because It,fills a void with
1
: parental warmth and moral guidance that children aren't get·
' ting In the modern, urban Taiwanese family with two working
'· parents. (AP)
.
./
~

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you. write- it all Qllt abe8d of
ti.me: and t;Yeeybod ~
their- part. And that's: no filit.
3. Coosiderinx;tbe:tunnoil
in tbf:. Middle- East, is. thiS. a.
good time: to tiring&gt;~
c.uJtu.res tQge.tli.er: tftmu&amp;h.
music.?
Hart l think this i:s tk best
time Tli.is i:i
lhiiiL iu.st

Amlrlca'• TCip 50
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two-drummer roster kno.wn:
as !be- Rhytbllli lle'llils. Hart

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"MondO Head."'
As. 0111!-lialf of die: Deud's.

S2299

l A CROSS-DRESSING GRANNY? -

~billing,..... ' ' '·"

,,'

Lm AN(;ELES, (AP) Mickey Hart bas gQne from.
the GnateM DeJid1 Ill

111' any Sll.99

•I

5

accounting for 2 percent of
LOS ANGELES (AP) Black characters get more all characters although they
television time than other make up 12.5 percent of the
minorities but they tend to national population.
be relegated to sitco'ms, a
As ian Americans comstudy released Tuesday prised about 3 percent of all
found. ·
characters. and American
"Despite the large num- Indians were "invisible,"
ber of African Americans according to tile report.
on television, they continue
The networks haire been
to be 'ghettoized,'" accord· under pressure from civil
ing to the study from the rights group since 1999,
University of California, when a mostly white li!leup
Los Angeles.
of new shows aired.
Black characters wer.e
But there has been scant
more likely to appear in movement toward real procomedies, with 39 percent gramming di vcrsity, said
of all black characters in .Darnell Hunt, the study's
sitcoms compared to 31 author.
percent for whites, 23 per"Much of the promise of
cent for Hispanics and 21 change on behalf of the netpercent for Asians.
works has been lip service
One of the least-watched to appease people," said
networks, UPN, featured Hunt, director of the UCLA
the most black characters, Center
for
African
the study said. Blacks rep- American Studies. "There's
resent 28 percent of the
· characters on UPN ~eries, been all this anticipation of
change and there has been
compared to about 12 per- very little. Most of the net, cent on other networks.
works have thrown · out a
More than half of all . few symbolic gestures and
black characters who left most of the pro~ram­
appeared on the screen for . ming P.ractices intact.'
·more than 10 minutes per
Wh1le nearly all series
hour of programming were episodes were multiracial,
on UPN and most appeared ethnic characters typically
on two nights, Monday and served as background
Saturday. The latter is the · "props" unimportant to the
.least-watched.TV night.
the study found.
· CBS was the network story,
Hunt,
the autlior of a
with the second-largest per~ 2000 Screen
Actors Guild
centa~e of all African
study
with
similar
findings,
Amencan characters, 17 said diversification
has
percent.
been
stymied
by
white
con. Other minorities have trQI of the entertainment
their own cause for complaint, the study found. in~ustry.
Black and white characters
combined represent 92 percent of all prime-time characters in the study but constitute 82 percent of the
U.S. population, it said.
That left scant room for
other ethnic groups.
Hispanics were the most
underrepresented group in
prime-ume
television,

FIVe Questio s
With Mickey a

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nARtMZIRI
(740) 288-7413
011 . . , • •

1·866-660-5600
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ano. 7.0.949:8M2

Mllrid&lt;hOMt-llv·
~ing rooms, kllchell ,

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laundry, • · 1 1/2
bollls, lull tiniohod bllso·

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wllh - - &amp; 1
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AM rooms are
newly pam*l wllh , _ car·
pot In
Rt·

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bod room. n... Is a largo
laundry room and WOlle

.,.,., l aloo hils many -

-*'·
Pllono (740)4:46·
3522
House ill Middlepoll: 3 1&gt;0&lt;1·
.room, quiel »Net, ton"lef
lot, 2 car gamge, must see
to appreciate! 7.0-99226N

tn Town COuntry Living,
Lorgo Hous., largo LOI, 7
Rooms, 2 112 Bollls, Full

Ba-. Vera o·0e11 Es-

tole. 1 0 - on... Gal-

l&lt;pOiia. (74&lt;1144~H360

Wat&amp;rffont CAbin oo Lake
JAckson. 2 LOIS with &amp;It
$40,000.
Ooct&lt;.
Call
(7oi0124S:5747

Nt-"' NEWSPAPERS

tnrotmt'CttMieM

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Co""' All !he

_.......,_,

_,. Major SUbjecl$1

IValitttt on ""' """'

or ljO&gt;Obo, and ~ k~.

14

Announcement

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PftONPIJY AUCflON

•PMI~

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.. Paid ..a\ions &amp; ~
• tatdbl, dlM1II &amp; ..... ~
• .,,('() ......*It ....

1111 ! . IJetMI ChUrch Rd .

1:00 P.M.

J\TE

• R-.df\ proltl$1~

AUCTION

work~

Thursday, June 13 @ 6:15 p.m.
AM~11s

lillotcltl ........ , ... to ....

...""'...

Cllll \oda1 to .......... ton lhtel'iltW:

~lc:aii1141&amp;11Ma

1-877-463-6247 ext. 1841

*

an-.e

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. tlrl'*t lt«&lt;nnl
1110 ''"' 0'1111
\AMCIOI'IMIIIII

'MimhtM~IO

a R~ -w

~ o.psw 111n~ ...
. . llllbq lois stni« ... llioe.
We_.. tih II) abo ...... doe
•Geollipolis abtl07 ..tlhe VfW,
n-It )'CM to Re'l&gt;. Dl'iol ~ ..tllis
wile. - all die pt;lllle lhalsm~IOOd,
no.--. ens._.~ by..,
~ also "-"'a 1M$ ilhless. Wlhaftb
II) a..ce fi:sm' acl'fulltt I'WitRI no..·
Wonls &lt;* aevrt CXIftSS our lhub to all
d - 'MIIIdeofwlrrittlcls ... liomitiles. 'Bill
- u all, lh:aftk )'001 fur all )'0111' ~·

ae-.:. ..._ •

C01111ty, Ohio
A ~~Qbllt lllldloll ""'' bo boN to ·..n "'"'"'tale
!'of: ltoddnt v.lley CrodltlliiiOII,
LOCAnONt Guy.\'lh, ~Ufil 111....,shtp
ltoad S'7ec (Carib..- Twpl, Route 50 Ea&lt;t of
Mllens, "atth lor

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SELLING Large House
6 bedrooms, 2 baths
w/1 car detached garage

TII:.MS:

STAR QUALITY NURSES NIBDBD

*Aaat.llllugera
• Cuatomer SIIH
• Account Mgra.

.....,.....

• DeliwwY Spaca.llat
• Wood FumltuN &amp;
Upholatwy RePIIIr

~ HOtZER CUNIC

Personnel Assistant
Cell the 24-hour l't-2·· 0
c.,.., Line 1t ...

Holzer Senior
CtuW Center

~lit 'On dell\-~ry

NURSING
OPPORTlJNITIES

OWNER: ?loddlll! Volley Credit Union
SIIAMROCK .AUCTION SERVPCE
Alhms Realty • 891:1 ?~6 .

Web&lt;www,,hamro&lt;k•allctlons,&lt;Oftl

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

• Customer Semce Minded • Personality Plus!
• Work l_n An Environment Where You Are Appreciated
• Bule Job Requirement: Have Fun &amp; Lauah
• Must Like Parties, Doas &amp; Fun
• Sip On Bonus (Will Be Distussed Durlqlntervtew) • Paid Employee Beneftts .
• salary Competitive &amp; Neaotlable

Drive,

WV 25813 or call

111111- '""""''

*****

~t.S.ra\tll, IClJ A £mel aenq botpartmonl
\'IMII' *lllllllll ~ 1ft littllt&lt;l

ANTIQUE &amp;
COLLECTIBLES
AUCTION

Wt ~ ti!IIIP'!IIllwnllrloll

Frlday, June 14, 2002
6:30P.M.

l'm IIIIW .t. t'IIU·tlll\t

tt w. llw IMir patlttlu

Mid ottMtnl bimtftll.
SIGN ON IIONUS MAY ~PPLY
llw more tnformalhln ~ tunllld&lt;

O'BLBNESS MEMORIAL HOSPltAL
!S H01pllal Dr.
Athtn11, Ohio 45'7111
8;2.1)21,

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

SIGN ON BONUS

O'BLBNESS MBMORlAL HOSI&gt;rtAt. hal ~ tUII·tlme
rotati11Jthlrta. Must have valid AJUt.T. Must
have Stat. of Olllo Ucen~~e. MlMmoarapby Certltklatllltlla •
·plun. We ofter a tOmpetltlve I&amp;lacy arid comprehen1l VII benem
packap. For more lnfonnatlon, con~~~:t:
·
~nl~ with

Human R-ums Department
· O'lltnell Memorial Ho1plt11t
SS HOipl&amp;al Drive

Alben., OH ~'101
(140) 591·9U?
BOB

256-7579
'f

59~"'-1lt0oll·800_.t,.9Ul

LICENSED
PRACTICAL .

STAFF RADIOLOGIC
TECHNOLOGIST

. , . No:Tiuoll
• No hll Coati
..... PIIIte,

to htghe!t

NURSES

HtlpW1nttd

i&amp;tloaded*
IOttmpty

stU!~

V•lley Ctedll Unkln

.Emallt shallll'O&lt;kllUctlon@aol.rom

£()£

'

with baill'lce

AUCTION?!:.:RJREALTOR : Pal Sheridan

tAit....., ~~ . .tl,)lfl')

1-800-521-5101
Ext. 111

•~lkm

REGISTERED

NURSES

Is oow ~~~!&amp; appllellloos rot ~h
RN's and LPN's. We art a 10 bed lon&amp;ltmlctn~ nUI\!Ina l'etlllty. The only one In
thla area to ~w a "FI\It:Stu" n.tlna
hom liealtl\an.dt&amp;, tne. HSCC Is • quality
, oriented lltclllty with tn t~t"tlltnt Wll!l and
btneftt paukaae. lf inttrtsted, )'OIIInty
apply In penon betwttn the bou11 of
h .m. and '4 p.m.
·
HOiar Selllof Can Cuter
310 Cololllal D11
Bidwell, Olllo 456l4

,0." dowi\
.t IMoit of
61' dftd. Property

'Mc\ttt" 'Wtl.. CORstnt Of ~lockii'IJ

&amp;

1lle John B. RidenOffr family

Send Resume To: 200 ·

_HtlpW1n*l

bttltMII*vv

"Thanlc You,
olflllt"•MIIJI.~

M . . . . . , .. . . . . .

Sun. June 30th

u. ...... VOia ..........

. L

&amp; """"'"'
o..n..t~etn:

lCif1 POB 1101101 ...
CO?umllllo OH 43UO.OOOt

·--l0$7. . . . ...... _
brMNSPG'IIAIIII

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Emplofihlllt Oppoltunllyf

lilqull

•

~FREEUS111

For•Bdlar

________ _...........................,.,r

---

,,..,.

Tri -County
Auction Center
8580 St. Rt. 588
Galllpolls, Ohio 45631
0

· OoHIIollo

Ant~aut.-cvnwtR

1

dlt.:FumftuN
U Mttcadasolontt._..,.
~
Mthtllr&gt;of*Y
Qll 161' compt... nyer or
, iflfOII'I'IIIIIOnl

Tfttt t1 ont Hte vou

wam•mflll

OwMrl.i, G1r1 I

won,

r....

~"',......,mlf:t\Mtlt.
....... ,..fn.4»,
... I . ~'*" Co.
Jll . ~lt.

Chii~OhiO•ROt

HMR:

lt\at )'Oil may ool wanl lo leave. Ex~""' yoor priliale
paradise, climb lhe hills &amp; rod&lt; dills and hikalt\a woods .
~noeing, swimming, fishing and hiking are some of the
many aclivllies this propeny has 10 oner. 2 homes each
will1 3 bedrooms and 1 balh boasl hllllop views aiiOIMng
~ 10 walch 111e deer and wildlife play
I .
Ttnna: $3,1)00 down per lract or a maxiM\im •• u.tJOO "
down. Close 011 or befme 7129/02. OWered free &amp; dear
liens &amp; mongages prior lo dosing. Oil, gas &amp; mineral
righiS are excluded. Sellers : Gam Drilling Co., Inc.
Stmard FuiiZ, AIIOmey fOI Seleil (740)992:7101 .

STANLEY &amp; SON, INC.

(740) 775-3330

Call for brochure!

www.stanleyandson.com

Htnry M. Slanloy, m,CAI Auclonetr &amp; Roal Ealale Broker
Wm. J. Fannin, .Jr., JOM J. StiwMt, Pe111 HouHt,
A-~&amp;Reo~~

.ntl

Publfc Sale and Auction

OUTSTANDING
ANTIQUE AUCTION

THURSDAY, JUNE 13, .200.2 ..

,,
), ~

lO:OOAM.

.

i

'

Located .at the Ruction Center on Rl. n l.n mason, wu.
fURNITURE
Fancy oak secretary, Viet. Hall seat, tall B$rber shop station , cyl.
roll dough cabinet, Acatus carved chest w/claw feet, .knock down
wardrobe, 9 po, Mah. OR . suite, carved back loveseat, 2 laney
oak $Ide boards, dry sink, VIet. M. T. table, 5 legged oak square
harvest teble carries its own teat, 4 pressed back chairs, 3 pc.
pa~or suite, 3 pc. oak BR sUite wlhighly carved lall head board ,
beautiful press back rocker, oak dressers, super oak bookcase,
round oak table, walnut Mother-Daughter lovesea1, Queen Ann
library table, mah. high boy w/mirror, mantles, carpenters chest,
Chipendale style claw &amp; ball sofa &amp; wing back chair, wicker
stroller, oriental rugs &amp;much more .
GLASSWARE
Candlewick, Fenton, Crown Chesea vase, very. tg. set of
Evesham made In England china, Virginia Rose pieces,
Apothecary jars, compote, American Fost?rle Cream &amp; Sugar
bowl, pitcher w/8 glasses, Hummel figunnes, hanging lamp,
Aladden lamp, Pepsi lamp, 3 pc. sel g irondles, Royal boul1on
t 936 ''This !IItie pig", McCoy, Hull, Weller, Roseville, Rookwood,
Sh~wnee, dome top cut glass lamp, 10·12 marked stone jars,
DoughOugh &amp; Cottageville, WV, stoneware 4 gal. A.P,
Donahougo jar, Parkersburg, WV, 5 gal Brown/white jug &amp;
others.
TOYS

.

Tidily winks wlbox, Pegl1y wlboK, 1949 Caplaln midnight, glass
xylophone wlbox, metal submarine, wind up fire engine w/key,
wooden sail boat, wind up train American Flyer In original box ,
wOOd/metal cannon, 6 toy soldiers, American logs In box,
marbles, farm toys· corn planter· wagon, 2 Allis Chalmers
Calaplller, New Idea mower &amp; more.
COLLECTIBLES
Fancy picture frames &amp; prints, post card book, horse shoe cake
pan, cream can, wooden bucket, wooden planes , Bob Evans
straw hat, cast iron jockey wllight, 2 cast Iron fireplace , fronts,
brass fire screen, Iron ketue, lg. variety of VIntage clolhlng
1900's to 1960'8, long beaded scarf, purses, sev. .old hals In
boKes, dolles, linens, game mounts· Wild Boar· Deer &amp; Mountain
Ram pair signed 1T' bronze wash martele horses, tin measures,
mold: tole tray, braas bell, copper lightening rods w/glass balls,
plus much more.
AUCTIONEER NOTE:Thlt It a partial lfellng. Tha building

will bt tuff •• alway1. Moetllem1 are out ol eatetee .
DON'T _.lSI THIS ONE.

RICK PEARSON AUCTION COMPANY
AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON 11'66
773 -5785 OR 771· 5447
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK W/10, Out of lflft buHrs must haue a bank
leiter of credit,

,,

•

�• Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleassnt, WV

t121 L-tlon, LMetlon, L-*"'1

lffiOD DUff,
INt:
446-ICN6

Finding a Gdpoli&amp; Arst A-localilllt
with a epectacillar riverfranl view Is 1
rarity. The BEST kept ..ct.t ln town!
One of the BEST built I. BEST~ for
~ In the areal Huge IMng 100111 end
maater bedroom oveilooklng the Ohio
River. Thla home Ia a rare find With many
unique features Including beautiful
hardwood floors, trim, ct'Own mold}"!
and pocket doors. Beautifully landvaf*l
lot lhlt . runa all the way to the river.
You've seen the rest, schedule your
appointment now to ne the BEST!
Owner Ollerlng Home Warranty!

.DLOa!SI'm&amp;l

GALIJPOI,B,OIIIOall

ltOUIIS: lllolofd 1:311111ttD 4:30 flllll lSI&amp;. d

.....

AllnC.Woc~G.
..... · •Dilt
·lflllllar............

.

Jufl6111Dcn.·a174S

Mlcll.._ 'l'•t•tta

• WE ARE EXCI'TED AIOUT OUR NEW WEI 5!W
PJ:cnM£5

Evctll4·- L.te ~

514 Seeoool A••·• Collipalio, Oloio 4S6Sl-o9M
74Q.446.0008

7~1-1111

'

REAL ESTATE
Sc•ee 1943
LOl'S·

SR ns a Sflt4t

U

412022

ACRES LOCATION

$27,000

vttn'OM
t2011

·ACREAGE

INDIAN CREEK SUBDMSION

•

ATMOSPHEIIII A lovely 2 atory
home that has loll to onor lnolda
and outl Including plenty of room.
4 Badroomt, 2 remodlled baths,
tlvlng room. family room, formal
dining area, aHached garage, Over
3.93 acrea nicely landtclpod 101
wlllcll lncludea !rootage alOng
Raccoon Creek. A nk:&lt;l quiet place
to Uvo. Groan School dlllrict. huny
end call lor on appointment. ·
Mol:lvate seller wants an offart
$87,500.0012210

Real Estate General
Vlndale · mobile · home,
12x80 w/expando, mostly

tumlahed, very olean, refln·
lthed throughout, mull ...
to
appreciate.
asking
$8,600, (740)742·2978
We haw approximately 10
uled homea lor under
$2,000, COli 1·800·837-32H
tor Into.

Commercial BuUdll')g for
Rent. Cln be uHd lor re•
taurant or office building.
Located on Cedar Street.
Coli (740)256·ee61
For rent· otltct building In
Middleport, 7 o"lceo, 2 con·
terence rooms, kitchen,
(740)992·2459

Ci/~

&lt;?t r/tnitl fl

• *'

446 6806
958 Clark Chapel Rd.
Bidwell, Ohio 45814

~~J&amp;z/A
Branch
Otflce
23 Locust
St.

Gallipolis, Ohln - 45631

(2) 1 /liJro + toto, $10,500
••ch or Both lots for
,, 9,500. (740)44, -7578
1.1 """' Lot, Oulet, Prtvato
Rood. 13,000. 5·acro, 2
Rented Mobllt Homoo. PubIto wotor, nk:&lt;l homo tllto.
At 2142,000.
(304)•58·1593

-

27 /liJr", prtvatt, nlco opot
lor homo, rtll In WOOdland.
wator tap, aftor 1, 740-992·

SLASHED PRICE TD N2,1100.001
Immediate poSMUionl Add ""me
TLC to this 3 bedroom home wllh
large sized
ba~ement
&amp; attached
12117

OUR WEB PAGE IS:www.v4amllhraalestata.com

• ·mall: vlsmlthOcore.com

14001 COMMERCIAL LOT ON Ill
7 NORTH· .77 of on lore. beautiful
oqulppod Clayton mOblto home, 3
BR, 2 b«tho, 2 polo bemo and
trailer atorage. Call for further
Information. IlLS REDUCED
11317 IN THI CITY Huge famMy
home w/4 BAa, 2 baths, kit, LR,
OR, pon;hea, po~lal b«Mmont.
Priced ~ght lor a qulok aalo.
$!10,000 VLS. MAKE OFFEAI

OFFICE

14021
HOME Pretty as a picture. Vary
well planned stone and frame ranch
home oilers 3 bedrooms, walk·ln
closet, 2 lull ballls, charming living
room w!flreplace. New oak cabinets
line the kitchen. Range, refrigerator,
dishwasher, and eompactor all stay.
Utlllty room Is e•tra larpe. 2 tlor
deck In the rear with 36 lnground
pool. Many fruit tree&amp;, llowera, and
shrubs. Sprinklf;lr system In the
rear. .2 car attached garage and a
carport. 2 otory bem building.
Blad&lt;top and cement driveways. A
homo you'll be proud to own. VL
Smith 448-6806
14030Irs
DERIONAUTY
PLUSI
ACRES.
H~~;;
BUILDINGS Old · laahlon c
with modem cOnvenience
BR, 2 story home,
(whl~pool tub) . Lovelyy ~~~::::lj
kltllamlly rrn combo W1
lklora, chorry cabinets.
viewing the country from
window. Formal dining rm
wlbaamed cetllnga. Porch &amp;
72 ACRES of baautllul rolling
~asture, woods &amp; some timber,
pond &amp; mineral rlghto. Large bam
&amp; buildings. Call VLS 446 6808
14033 THIS, HOME FITS THE
HISTORIC • PICTURE
Of
GAI.UPOLIB • Home loatureo 3
BR, and 1 bath wUh cuotom
caDinots In kltchon, very Iorge lot
has potential for 18Vtral
lot us lhoW
11111 home
location

I

THAN IT
SEEMS
I o homo In good
repair lor thlo price o1
$48,900.001 Lovoly quaint 1.5
110111 homo with living room, 3
badrooma, detached garage pluo
Iota morel 12101

HEIIE... nlco level approx. .77
aero lot lor the kida to ploy, o
roomy 4 bedroom 2 bath
brlokMnyt aided raioch lor tho Mrt.
and for the Mr. a 24 x 38 meral
garage with 17 ft. ceiling. All thlo
conveniently tocated ctoee to
grocery, echoola and minute&amp; from
hospital. SUF'ER REDUCTION IN
THE PRICE MAKES IT EVEN
MORE APPEA~IN'Cll 19&lt;1,800
12184

••.

~

•

.

t ,lll'!· ,

.....

FR. $

' 112 batha,
w
QlrtQI and nlc. dtcl&lt;, lind
new
pump. A plaGe lhet
11 rtldy to ba called 'hOme'
by a ntW lamiiY. PRICI
RIDUCID TO tH,IOO, call
today t~lll atart pacltfng.
H17

• I
"toc.likln on
. Klda walk to IChool
I ovor to town. Walk to
ball gam... you gtt the
ldea.../3 BA home w1t1t 1.5
bath&amp;. Large family room, LA.
111 In kltchll\; al on an tlCtra
d"P lot with In ground pool.
1211 '

OWNER WILL GIVE IUYIII
N,OOO For ctoolng COIIol Shl .
moans bu~neoal Needo to Ml
thlt llkt new ranch .(2000)
f~ ··
Protoulonalljl lal)docepOCI tot,
concrete driveway, 2 car aHached
garoga, 3 badroom, 2 lull batha,
large olzed living room. khchon
with Hit flooring &amp; dllhwaahor.
Muot 800 to appreciate lhlo onol
Lot uo llhoW h to you. l21"
A YIIWI 8o the ownor of
NEW
FARM UITINQI 30.5 Acrn
thl1 extentlvel)' remOdeled home
that
adjoins
US government land.
and onjoy tho opectacular view o1
tho mighty Ohio. Ovot 3,000 aq. ft. Mobile homo and oldtr 2 olory
lncludiC. Lll uo tall you
living space. 5 8adroom1, 3 bathJ, homo
about
thlolllllng.
121 N
whlrtpooltuba, ldtohen haa ov•r 32
n. ot new oak cablneta. Fireplace LOlli LOT81 LOTti Starting ot
In format living rGQm &amp; family 1.4 acre to 3.5 plul acret. Rio
room, formal dining arft. New Grande area, county water
Cletamlc
&amp; · carpeted
floort avallablo. AllordoDiel Owntr to
throughout New furnace and r~uolllng an ollor. t21tM
central air unit. Low maintenance. REMODELED RANCH 81TUAT!D
No one hot lived In homo tlriCII ON CORNEA LOT being approx.
remodeling w" completed. Don't one acre, vinyl 11ded home with
mlso thlo onol Call lor delallo. loyor, living room. aot·ln kitchen, 3
121111
badroomo, f 1/2 batho. 24 x 32
21.11 AcrH with road frontage. dttaohed garage. 121"
Lots of pasture land with Jmall ACIIIAGI LIITINQI 1M 112 IICrM
amount at wooda. F1100lng. mil with rood frontage, llornNito,
County wota ovall. Nk:&lt;l building farm ltnd and 1&lt;1011 hunlilg land
. that II ld]ICont to Wayne Na11ono1
- · 12151
Fomoat. 12140

APPLI GROVI ROAD · Nowor
remodollng, originally 1 1998 mobllo
home, bul you won't btllewe It
Approxlmlltoly 2100 aq. fl. of living
space. Front porch, ahed &amp; an
equipped kltohln. Llko now ocndltlon.
Roady lo mov• Into. 3.87 + aor11.
Publlo wator.

neat

tmii\ICUiate,
low
!NIInhllllnoe ltl'lck I vtnvl
r111ch offering large now
kltchon, DR , LA, 3 or • BRa,
1 112 Ballta, plua partial
baHment. Tha •rh bedroom
haa a flreplace and hu baln
uaed u a don. Now a&lt;kl a
partially OOVIred patiO, ntW
porch and a 2-car garage and
thl convonlont toc:aHon, thta
homo truly to a wlnnor.
PRICE JUST REDUCED TO
$1 Ooi,IMIO. Coli today. t2ot

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Ollvtr
ltrMtJ
Mkldltport•
.Ronta
lnvtatmtntll
lbtally
romodtlld 2 bed'llOm, 1 bath
home lor 131,000. Plut ttl·
pi"
with
1 bed'llOm
IPI~manltlor 135,000. lilt

Thlt R1noh home oHtrt 1 floor plan pa~ectlor tmall
limllltt. 3 BRI, 2 bathl, LA &amp; FA With flrtplaoe. Eat·ln
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oppointment to ... thlo 00111 12171 room, tamDy room, den. kltcNn,
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here lor tha lomlly. (live Cheryl 1 So muoh 10 otrer here, must call for
oppolntinent. 122011
call for more delallt, '2110

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MEIGS COUNTY

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NIW UITINQ. I'OiotiROY· Juot out of
Pomeroy a 2 atory frame home,
e rooma, 3 badroomo, 1.5 acroo of land.
lmmodlolt poaoautanl
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AIICINQ W,IOO

FOR ADDITIONAL LISTING S &amp; INFORMATION CALL Oil 'dOl' IIY 1011 11
FREE OUIIL/1 Y ~IOMFS IN CO t Oil fiOOKI I I t

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VIRGINIA SMITH, IROKIII"............... 44e-eaotl
GAIL IELYILLE.................................. 448·12011
TRISH 8NYDER ...................................441-84S8
JOHNNIE RU8SELL ........................... HNJ323
DAVID SNYDER .................................. 441·8458

c.u vLa • eaoe.

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•

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IONUS TO BUYERS 1985 Skyline .
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SAT. 8:30A.M. TO NOON

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f1l ~
Carolyn Witch, OFU 441·1007 Sonny Oarnea 4411-2707
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Ponafoy •II Mill Oft • Gallpab, Ohio • Point Pleat ant, WV

Families of Columbine Privacy
_shooting victims
vote on
-settle their lawsuits

. .,-., 1':1.-· 6nttnd • P-ve D7

• North Dakotans to

banks can use finandal data

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) - North ing
California,
New
Yort, 8ancoq&gt; of Minneapolis. The bank was
Dakooa wiiiiUe a leading role Tuesday Massachuset1S and Iowa, have debated sued on behalf of more than 32.000
in the debate over financial privacy die issue of customer consent. Alaska, North Dakota checking account and
• DE VER (AP) - The peiiding qainst the sheriff"s
when its YOters become the first in the Conn«ticut, Vermont and Illinois credit card customers for selling infor•families
()(
:sevual office..
nation ro decide whether banks m\ISl get already have laws similar to the one: on mation to telemarlteters.
"'oomnbine shooting vic:Oms
written permission ao sell customer 1\iesday's ballot. But those proteCtions
Seniors Eric H:uris and
"They can jllSt about read your whole
w settled
-..ich the Dylan KkboJd killed 13 proinformation.
were adopted by legislators or regula- life by looking at yoor bank statement,"
1idlool diSbid and sheriff's de and -..wnded about (WI)
"'North Daltot2 really has an opportu- tors, not the voters themselves.
Junken said. ''1lley can tell where you
depachii&lt;ilt. Willi me ltt«'- &amp;zen more before taking
ni!y ro strike a major gain for privacy
North Dak(){a's banks and credit write your checks. You go to church,
'iley ~ng the time has owne their O'W1i lives.
for all Americans here," said Evan unions have said diey are not selling · how much you give. They can tell if r.ou ·
~ "1lrin.g this to a clo&lt;:e."'
Hendricks, who publishes the customer information to outside oompa- gamble. 'They can tell how you live. •
Pmiilies of victims have
The la.-suib ao.::8SOd &lt;lffi- said lhe money was mostly
Washington newsletter Privacy limes. nies. . David Wolsky, president of the
The dispute was born almosc three
~ of railin.g 10 do enoogh symbolic.
"fc would put die wind at the back of the First State Bank of Cando, called the years ago m a congressional overhaul of
to ~t the 1999 sl~ngs
privacy mo~ment.''
~ Wlllted answers, we ·
issue "ooe of the real big mispen:ep- financial services laws that let banks.
at Cohltnbi.ne ffigtl SdiOOl wanted full disclosure of
\tters will decide whether to require lions" of the
insurers, brokerages and other compaancl boll:diing the ~se what the school district and
North Dakota banks and credit unions
But supporters o repeal have Sllid nies sell customer information if they
alb-d.
.
to
get
written
pennission
from
their
CIISbanks
are pres.~ing so han! because they gave notice beforehand. State.~. howevthe sheriff did that day and
The 1idlool diSirkt Will pay prior
tomers
to
sell
account
data
to
other
want
to
profit from the information they er, wen: given the option of enacting
lliat," said Randy
a a~$1S,OOO ~to Graves,to. the
businesses
offering
everything
from
hold.
more stringent privacy rules.
of Sean
tbe families of se\'en stu- Graves, who father
~ges to healch club memberships .
Fonner Gov. Ed Schafer said repealPolitical observers are uncertain
was
wounded
dmts, said Bill Kowalsti, the and left partially paralyzed.
Undtt North Dakota's current law, ing the current law would pul North about how the vote will go.
.·
sdiOOI ~·s atta111ey.
financial
instinnions
must
notify
cusDakota oot of step with banking rules in
Financia1 interests have poured more
think we acComplished
"'ur view is 1ha\ It is sim- "I
tomers that they plan to sell data. If the most Other states. He said that CQUid than $135,000 into promoting the curthat,"
ply lime ro bring this to a
customer does not Object, the. institu- throule the growth of bank service cen- rent law, buying TV ads implying that a
Graves said lhe $30,000 his
dOse," Kowalski, lhe $Chool
tions can take that as a go-ahead.
ters in North Dakota. Three banks main- "no" vote would mean economic isoladisttict's attorney. said son would receive ....:
''1lle
bankers
are
working
on
die
lain
centers in Fargo that employ about lion for a rural stale that already has
Friday. "The plaintiffs S15,000 from lhe school disassumption
ihatlheir
customers'
inforI
,500
people altogether.
problems creating jobs.
·
-expressed the same desire trict and die same amount
mation
is
theirs
to do with as they
"Any
other
financial
institution
that
The
law's
opponents
have
raised
and so it was ooe of the situ· from ~ sheriff's office -·
please," said Charlene Nelson, a leader looks at Nonh Dakota is l!oing to say, $27,4SO, nearly all of it from the
ations where botti sides want- )lrobably won't cover the
of
the eff01t to repeal the current law. 'Why bother?"' Schafer srud.
American Civil Libenies Union.
future costs of his injuries.
ed the same citing,"
"This
infonnation
belongs
to us."
Opponents
of
Nonh
Dakota's
clll'l'enl
Bank executives have sought to por"I'm not sure whaa his
The insui"IIICe rompany for
Norlli
Dakota
required
express
writlaw complain that it exposes their pri- tray Nelson as a political extremist. She
the Jefferson Coon!}' sheriff's future needs are going to be
ten pennission until last year, when vale lives to others.
is chairwoman of the North Dakota
office also offered S15,000 to and that's what I feel my
banks and credit unions l&gt;ushed the curJane
Junkert
of
Mandan,
N.D.,
Constitution
Party, which advocates
lhe families of II victims. responsibili!y is - to help . rent law ihrou~h. .
received
$5,000
last
year
as
~
of
a
U.S.
withdrawal
from military alliances
ix have aocepted and the him for the future," Graves
Lawmakers m several states, includ- $2.9 million settlement wtth U.S. and repeal of the income tax.
ltlthe- five were expected to, said.
•
''
As pan of the senlements,
ooounty attorney spokes. alllenl'lifur Watson said. the school dislrict and sher·
'The two settlements leave iff's office a8reed to drop
no more lawsuits related to their demand for legal fees.
ii\jllries or dealli fn)m the The settlements will likely be
shooting ~ainst the school entered in coun next week,
• dislrict. Two cases are still officials said.
NEW YORK (AP) holding up the best, up 1,353, problems out then:, and what that earnings have not
When
the market plunged pr 16.4 percent, from its low we need is a catalyst to rebounded, and might not do
=
sharply following the Sept. of 8,235.81.
·
change the mood of the so by year's end as investors
II attacks, investors were
Despite the market's pre- · depressed investor," said had hoped. Corporate outconcerned but understand- cipitous drop last September Peter Cardillo, president and looks have improved little,
ing. However, nine ·months - the Dow fell 1,369 points chief strategist of Global and some remain bleak, Intel
later, with stocks seemingly in a week - stocks came Partner Securities .Inc.
said Thursday second-quar- ·
on a retreat back to those lev- back rather quickly. The
But overcoming a string of ter revenues would miss tar·
els, Wall Street is consider- Dow recouped its losses in negative factors is proving to gets, raising fears among
ably more wonied.
seven weeks.. The Nasdaq, be much hanler for the mar- investors that more compa"There is just no moti va- Which fell 272 the week after ket to ·overcome than an nies will warn of lower proftion for people to pull their the attacks; and Standard &amp; unforeseen,
catastrophic . its imd sales throughout June.
I NEW YORK (AP) - To Spitzer l'llkl accused analysts
wallets out of their pocket, Poor's, which dropped 126, event.
"P 1
~~n~'oonfideooeand of lllU '
shires in
· 'es
and say, 'Let's spend some. retraced their losses after
The market had been lookeop e are concerned
~ possible conflicts of so M~ Lynch
money on stocks,"' said three weeks.
ing in vain for an economic about paying for stock with~ Menill ~ said their highly profitable investRichanl A. Dickson, a techWhat's changed since then turnaround
or
profits out knowing what earnings
:Friday it will pa,y its ~ ment banking l.isiness. Analysts
nical analyst for Hilliard is that the market's problems rebound to lift it higher. But will be. At this point, we are
~ . _ . 00 their perlocwould then often benefit ftom
Lyons in Louisville, Ky. are more chronic - dismal with an economic recovery gelling into the (earnings)
•mance.
that business through bonuses.
"There are a lot of things to earnings, ~,&gt;robes in corporate that has been slower than preannouncements for the
: The Mtioo's lea.li- btoJrei..
"Investment banking will not
worry about."
bookkeepmg after Enron's investors anticipated, and second quarter, and that has
p also ~ it will have inp.lt into analyst compenWall Street is. painfully collapse and shattered with earnings still yet to people on ·edge too," said
r.nl[llement a simpler stock mt- Salioo" under the new system, aware of its lack of buyers. investor
confidence. improve, stoc.ks continue to Barry Bennan, head trader
~ system in Sq!tembet.
the finn said in a stall:ment. .
The Nasdaq composite index Tensions overseas, between languish. ·
for Robert W. Baird &amp; Co. in
; . The dlanges come less lhan a
As pan of die settlement.
is just 112 points, or almost 8 India and Pakistan and in the
"The think:inl! is that, yeah, Milwaukee.
~th after Merrill ~ Merrill 1100 alre4d agJeed to
percent, away from its Sept. Middle East, have also given the economy ts recovering,
''The market has been
~ a settlement with stile slllp ~ its ~ analysts
21 low of 1,423. 19. The investors little reason to take but you have all these other struggling, because the mar,_itomey Genmil Eliot Spitz for he~ the finn win investStandanl &amp; Poor's 500 index chances on stocks.
things to worry about," ket is really earnings driven.
~va- d!arges that analysts were· ment banking fees fiJ' lil'i1lllging
stands 61 points, or 6.4 per"What the market is expe- Dickson said.
People pay for stocks ulti'
. .sleOOing ih~tstiliS for pet9Jil· hidgas and new stock offei- . cent, abOve its low of%5.80. riencing is a barrage of nega·
Analysts say Wall Street's mately based on the earnings
~profit
ings.
The Dow Jones industrials is tive news .... We have a lot of . biggest problem is the fact power of companies."

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Market stands to revisit post-attack lows

Sl4 ~.I.' A.'W.., G' ...... OW. -t5~ll.o'!~
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INation's leading brokerage
~announces changes.to
~comply with ·settlement
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BULLETIN BOARD
Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577
DRESDEN BUS TOUR
Monday, June 24, 2002
Price $55
lndudes the Small Catch·AII
13asket eoi\~nentat breakfast,
dinner antt mooh mort.
Tbur the Longaberger®
' Manufacturing_Plant
VIsit the Homeatead and
the Corporate Olltce Shop
In DreSden,
Call 740•446·3427
for more information.
this bus lour 18 sponsored bv
Independent Consultant Becky
GodWin and not tne Longabetgd
Comptny.

Courtside
Bar &amp; Grill
Ladies Night
Every Wed.
No Cover Charge
Drink Specials,
Draft Pitchers

WOODYARD MINI MALL
JUST RECEIVED
a new shipment of Levi's
·
plus take
20% OFF on all furniture I
675·5928
VACATION BIBLE
· sCHOOL
at Mount Zion Missionary
· Baptist Church
Crown City, Ohio
June 7 thru June 10
6:00 p.m. to 8:00p.m.
PUBLIC WELCOME
Gallia County
Conservation Club
Meeting
Wednesday, June 12
Dinner 6:30 PM
Courtside Bar &amp; Grill
CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION DAY
Wednesday, June 19th
LIVE MUSIC
Soul Cage, Greg Smith,
Sean Hesson
No Cover Charge
Half-priced appetizers
Drink Specials
New Late Hours

Huge Rummage Sale
Debbie Drive Chapel
Activity Building
'

1.7 mile from At 7
off At 141

June 13-14-15
1 0:00AM • 4:00 PM
Star Mill Park Board
LONGABERGER
BASKET BINGO
Tuesday, June 18, 2002
7:00p.m.
Middleport Legion Hall
$20.00 for 20 Games
50·50 Drawing
2 Raffle Baskets
Door Prizes Refreshments
Special basket drawing for
tickets purchased prior to
June 18
NO SMOKING
For ticket Info or Info, call
Jenn at 740-992-2169
Tht LanJIIIbofQIIr or lhtlr NIH Atpt art no1
connaott&lt;liO or NllfiO"tlblt for 1111.1 BINGO
Evtnl

For More Info ...

JUIT 0 , HA,I'Y HOLLOW IIIOAD •

A ~ bedroom homa with one bath on a dead
end roed. Haa a newer root1 fret
and alit
on 1 1.here lot.
~UIT

PIZZA PLUS
Formerly Speedo's
21ocations
Rio Grande &amp; Jackson Pike
16 ln. 3 topping of your choice
forMam &amp; Dad
12 ln. Pep &amp; cheese lor kids
&amp; 2 liter of Pepsi
$19.95
2 T-Bone Steak Dinners
with Baked Potato, salad
$19.95
Free delivery for all of Gallla Co.
Jackson Pike 446·0088
Rio Grande 245.0088
I

NEBULIZER
MEDICATION
• 65 or over
• Billed to insurance
• Little if no cost
• Free Delivery
• We do all paperwork
BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740-446-7283
1-800-458-6844

. 5th Annual
Lions Club
Golf Scramble
June 20

r
I

1 :30 Tee-Off
Great food and Prizes
Deadline is June 18
Contact:
Bob Hennesy 446·263
Chris Homer 441-167
Mark Dillon 446-2206

Temporary

I

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Experienced Help Only:
Grill, Cook-Prep, Baker
Call

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

l

•

The Lynch Agency

•

322 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio

446-8235

•

1·800·447-8235 -

Parkfront Diner
446·1251

446-2342 or 992-2156

lroker........Hiollll

llltft It IIIII at llli*l.lll- MIII'I.OIIIR

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'In-county gol tour underway. 81

Pomerov•lllddiiDIIfl• G'Xb Dll Ohio• Point PI 111nt,. WY

SEA1TLE (AP) - A 70-year-old
man has been in jail for more than
three months for refusing to delete
from his Web site addresses and other
personal data of employees at the
retirement home that evicted him.
The jai iing of Paul Trummcl, a
native of England who moved to the
United States in 1985, has drawn fire
from national and international writers
groups that support his First
Amendment claims.
"Our concern is that he's being punished for speech on the Internet that
should be protected," said Lucy
Dalglish, executive director of the
Reporters Committee for Freedom of
the Press in Washington,
D.C.
·• .

Other groups that have questioned
the jailing include the National Union
of Jrnqnalists in London and Reponers
Sans Frontieres of Fr.mce.
Trummel was jailed indefinitely on
Feb. 27 for violating an anti-harassment orde.r by King County Superior ·
Court Judge James A. Doerty. Doerty
ruled in April 200 I that Trummel had
been abusive and stalked residents and
administrators at Council House, a
low-income retirement home in
Seattle.
Doerty ordered Trummel to remove
from his Web site the home phone
numbers, addresses and other personal
data on employees at Council House,
and imposed lines of $100 a day for

failing to comply.
Trummel also was 01'dued to remove
a picture making administntor
Stephen Mitchell resemble Osama bin
Laden.
Council House managers tiiMI :some
residents say Trummel is delusional,
obsessive and inflammatory. He was
evicted last year, partly because of his
Web
site
and
newsletter
Disconnections, a takeoff on the center's official publication, Connections.
Last week Doeny limited Trummel's
phone privileges, saying he was still
harassing residents and staff IIIIIID.bers,
and he was placed in solitary ccWioe.
ment. His incarceration is set for court
review June 17.

Frizzy hair sufferers shelling out $1 ,000
ATLANTA (AP) - Some of the
frizzy and curly haired, tired of spending
long hours with a hair dryer, are turning
to a new straightening treatment that
promises months of silky straight hair.
Getting rid of curls doesn't come
cheap, however, · with some salons
charging $1,000 for a process that will
need a touchup in a few months.
.J Available at just a few dozen salons
nationwide - including a handful in
Atlanta that are drawing customers from
·ttm:iughout the South - the process is
called thermal reconditioning or
Japanese hair straightening. It takes at
least three hours, sometimes a whole
day, as chemical straighteners are
applied to the hair, then ironed through
with a tiny flat iron heated to 350
degrees.
The result, according to those who
have tried it, is permanent silky hair far
straighter than can be had from a drugstore relaxer or a traditional salon treatment.
The process costs about $500 for most
clients, although salons in New York
and Los Angeles charge up to $1 ,000.
Some stylists add manicures and foot
massages to alleviate boredom during
~he long process, driving the price up
even more.
It's a boon to the stylists who offer the
service.
·
"All of a sudden, they're calling every
day," said Mandana Zeimaran, an
Atlanta stylist. "I've never even adver-

tised that I do this, but I'm ,$Citing people from Tennessee and Flonda."
Straight hair is a big deal to people
such as Laura Stallone, a New York City
research manager who used to be "a big
ball of frizz" on humid days. A month
after spending $500 for the treatment at
a Maryland salon, she has no regrets.
"Just the amount of time I save makes
it worth it," said Stallone,.34, who said
· she tried dozens of expensive relaxers
that didn't work. ·
Jessica Farbman, a 31-year-old ~nder­
writer for a New York bank, swd the
process changed her life.
"It's the best thing that ever hap. pened," she said. "I'll do this the rest of
my life. I used to hate going outside
when it was humid, and I really hated
going on vacation to the beach. Now I
can get ready iri 10 minutes and ,$0."
The treatment.starts with a hwr consultation to. make sure the process will
work. (It's not recommended for hair
that's been colored or recently straightened by another process; some stylists
tum away about half of the hopefuls.)
Hairdressers then work a creamy
chemical straightener through the hair,
wait 20 or 30 minutes, and rinse it out.
After drying, the hair is ironed in tiny
sections four or five times over with a
hot iron. A plastic edge prevents scalp
bums.
Clients can't wash their hair for at
least two days - they're encouraged
not to even get it' wet - and I)Jey can

Califomia judge fines ·.
tobacco company $20~
for ads targeting teens ·
SAN DIEGO (AP) -

A

Superior

Court

•

a1 .............,.,...

MllpCount(s

Jud~

Priger
fouiitl
iudae fined RJ. Reynolds Co. Ronald
l2&lt;f million Thursday for vi~ Reynolds violatCd thaC agree;.

llling the terms of the 1998
national tobacw settlement by
. running magazine ads aimed
at teen-qers.
The stall: Attorney General's
office, which filed suit against
the nation's No. 2 tobacco
company last year, asked the
judae to fine Reynolds $25
miiTion and ban it from advertising in SO magazines read by
teens.
''This is the story of a company that refused over a long
period to change its policies
and practices as regards to teen
exposure." Deputy Attorney
Oeneral. Karen Leaf said in
closing arguments last month.
''They have advertised in magazines very popular with teen·
aaers such as Motorcyclist,
Hot Rod, and Spin."
The national tobacoo settlement with 46 states makes no
specific mention of magazine
· advertising but includes a ban
on tobacco companies taking
"any action, directly or ind.im:tly, to target youth."

ment.
Lawyers for Reynolds contended that such a resttictioo
on advertising would viol.ate
the
company's
Fli'Sf
Amendment rights.
•
''They want you to hold us
in contempt and fine us $20
million for exercising a constitutional right," attorney Jeli
Charles Johnson told the judge
last month. "In this country.
that is censorship."
Attorneys for Reynolds
denied that the company deliberately t!';~Jeted teens in its
$200 milhon magazine· ad
campaigns for Camel ciga~
rettes arid other brands follow~
ing the 1998 settkment.
.
Reynolds said its intended
targets are yo':t adults.
Company policy r. ·ds ads in
magazines with youth readership of more than 25 pen;ent.
However, Reynolds lawyerS
conceded that an unintended
consequence of targeting
young adults is that some
teens ane likely to sec its ads.

never curl that hair again.
The straightening is permanent; but
clients have to come back about twice a
year to iron out the roots. In between
treatments, they use a hair dryer to
smooth the frizzy roots.
Hairdressers say the arduous process
isn't turning people off.
·
Not since the 1980s perm craze have
people been so interested in a chemical ·
process, they said.. And because thermal
I
'
hair straightening is still relatively rare,
the assets in the plan exceed
the stylists who do it are booked well in
· $100,000 or a non-ownet
advance by clients who drive hours for
employee · qualifies for the
the treatment.
plan. Therefore, the initial
flam,...DI
The treatment appeared in America
administrative expenses will
about five years ago after stylists noticed
person 40 I (k) plan. For be minimal.
it being done on women in Japan, where
The one-person 40 I (k)
example, the new tax relief
even a slight wave stands out like a
plan
savings strategy is most
act provides small business
cowlick.
suitable
for firms employing
owners with the ability to
"It changes your life. It's really that
take a loan from the one-per- only owners (shareholders,
dramatic," said Yuki Sharoni, a Beverly
son 401(k) plan. Loans are partners and sole proprietors)
Hills, Calif., stylist best known for giv· now available to sharehold· and their spouses. An experiing a hair makeover to Linda Tripp, the
ers, partners and sole propri- enced financial advisor, an
former Pentagon worker whO taped her
etors on a tax and penalty- ERISA attorney, or a retire· conversations with Monica Lewinsky
free basis as long as the loan ment . plan administration
about President Clinton. "We gel clients
amount does not exceed the · firm can analyze the suitabilfrom all over. Every,one thinks it's a
lesser of SO percent of the ity of this strategy for your
waste of money until they see it. Anlf
account balance or $50,000. firm. · .
then they want it no matter what it
(Jay Caldwell is a certified
Finally, there is nq IRS
costs."
financial
planner
at
Form SSOO filing expense
Other stylists dismissed it as a fad.
usociated with the mitial Raymond James Financial
"Unless you're extremely wealthy and
years of the one-person Services, 441 Second Ave.,
have all the moner, in the world, you're
'10 I (k) plan. The one-person Gallipolis, 446-2125 or 1not going to do it, ' said Nicole Marie, a
4-0I(k) plan is not requtred to 800-487-2125,
member
. stylist at Atlanta'.s upscale Studio Oliver.
file an IRS Form 5500 until NASD and SIPC.)

'Jay

Whars Inside

OHIO . PROFICIENCY TEST

Cou

results

BY 8tlwt J. REm

BRE~LYSENTINEL.COM

Lakers up 3-o in series, 81

Deaths
Aorence Sheets, 85
Virginia Aten, 83
.Biondeline Robinson, 80
David Lewis, 58 ·
.,...... AJ

Weather
High: 80s, Low: 60s
Details. A2

RACINE
Meigs
County's fourth and sixthgrade students scored below
the state averages in all but
one section of Fourth and
Fifth Grade Ohio Proficiency
Tests, lldministered in June.
The Ohio Department of
Education released results of
the tests on Friday, which
show the higest scores ever
. achieved statewide by founh~raders in reading. mathemat·
tcs, science and writing.
Meigs County students'
scores were below the state
averages in all but one section: Writing at the fourthgrade level.
Across Ohio, students per-

formed better than last year on
the first of the state's series of
proficiency tests. Results show
an eight-point jump. from 56
to 64 percent, in rending and
science proficiency, a six-point
jump in citizenship scores,
three points in mathematics .
und one point in writing.
Sixth graders jumped ahead
five points in writing, three in
citizenship. and one point in
mathematics.
The
Department
of
the
Education
credits
OhioReuds program, with
more thun 40,000 tutors
statewide, Summer Institutes
for Rending Intervention,
teachers' training and other
efforts with the increase in

average

reading test scores.
Meigs County students
scored as follows:
Melas Local
Grade 4, with 128 s.tudents
tested: Writing, 92 passed (72
percent): Math. 72 passed (56
percent); Citizenship, 83
passed (65 percent); Science,
74 passed (58 percent): All
Thken, with 129 tested, 39
p:tssed (30 percent).
Reading :
3
percent
advanced , 45 percent proficient, 45 percent basic, 9 percent below basic.
Grade 6, with 124 tested:
Writing, 109 passed (88 percent); Rending, 55 passed (44
percent); Math , 65 passed (52
percent): Citizenship, . 92

passed (74 percent); Science, 22 passed (43 percent); All
64 passed (52 percent); All Taken. 14 passed (26 percent).
Thken , 33 passed (27 perSouthern Local
cent).
Grade 4, with 52 tested:
Eastern Local
Writing (50 tested), 48 passed
Grude 4, with 62 tested: (96 pen:."ent): Math, 23 passed
Writing, 57 passed (92 per- · (44 pen:.'ent); Citizenship, 25
cent); Math, 37 passed (60 passed (48 percent); Science,
perct;nt); Citizenship, 27 25 passed (48 percent); All
pussed (60 percent); Science, l'Jken, 10 passed (19 percent).
28 passed (45 pen:.'ent): All
Reading: 0 advanced, 23
Thk~n. 19 pussed (31 percent). percent proficient, 69 percent
Reading: 0 advanced, 33 basic, eight percent below
percent proficient, 41 percent basic. Grade 6. with 60 tested:
basic, 26 percent below basic. Writing. 52 passed (87 perGrade 6, with 51 tested: cent); Rending, 29 passed (48
Writing, 44 passed (86 per- percent): Muth, 27 passed (45
cent); Rending, 25 pussed (49 percent}: Citizenship, 34
percent): Muth. 26 passed (SI passed (57 percent); Science,
percent).; Citizenship, 31 20 .passed (.H percent): All
passed (61 percent); Science, Thken, 10 passed ( 17 percent).

Not

NELSONVILLE

just

Bypass project·
concerns Meigs
County leaders

horsin'
around

BY TONY M. lEAcH

Summer readlna
prop•m.begins

Sentinel photos by Chllrlene HQf!lllch

POMEROY
The
Meigs County District
Public Library will offer a
. summer rending program
for adults. By reading
books, participants will be
eligible to enter weekly
drawings for umbrellas
from the library. A $50 gift
card from Wal-Mart will be
awarded at the end of the
program.
Those who wish to participate should register at
the circulation desk of any
Meigs County District
· Public Library June 3
through Aug. 31, and complete a entry/review sheet
for every book read.

Ohio
Pick s: 8-4-7
Pick 4: 0-7-7-4
SUplltallll!: 15-22·39-40-43-47
Kicker: 1·3·8·8-3-9
Pick s nlaftt: 3·9-1
Pick 4 nlpt: 6-b-8-9
'

WestVIfJinle
D•lly J: 4-4-8
D•lly 4: 3-3-4-9
l'vwlrtJall: 26-37-42-46-48 (38)
C111h l5: 5-6-11·12-17·18

Index
2 Section• - 12 .....

Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
. Movies

83·5
86
AS
A4
A3
A3
B1·3
A2

Obituaries
Sports
Weather
-e 2002 ohio volley Publlshlns co.

'

·Local horsemen take·
part in national event
'

Fun on the
Fairorounds
6
ROCK SPRINGS ·
Competition was keen in the
National
Barrel
Horse
Association open horse show
staged Saturday afternoon at
the
Rock
Springs
Fairgrounds.
There were more than a
hundred entries in the show
staged by the Nickers and

In response to the issues,
ODOT officials said they
POMEROY - A heuted will move the interchange
debate over the fate of the away from the new water
Ohio
Department
of and sewer system in the
Transportation's ~ (ODOT) Dorr Run area and Ohio 78
Nelsonville Bypass Project can remain open by placing
hus officials · in Meigs u bridge over the roadway;
· County concerned about the and connecting it to the
effects the final result will . newly relocated · eastern
have on southeastern Ohio. interchange at Happy
Steve Story, Pomeroy Hollow Road.
.
attorney and chairman of the
ODOT had previously
Southeast Ohio Regional proposed cutting off Ohio
Council (SEORC) commit- 78 at its current location and
tee, recently attended a placing the eastern intermeeting between ODOT change near Burger King.
officials and Nelsonville
However, in .relation to
stakeholders to hear ODOT other issues, ODOT said
present bypass alternatives moving the highway north
m response to issues raised of the correctional facility
during an earlier meeting.
would
impa.ct . Wayne
Groups such lis the National Forest, resulting in
Nelsonville City Council, possible fragmented lands,
Nelsonville Chamber of and additional costs for an
Commerce, Athens County already expensive project.
commissioners, Nelsonville,
The northern option is
York School Board, and outside the existing corridor
would cost ODOT an
Hock.mg C0 11ege have four and
addt'tt'onal
$8 million to
major problems with the
ODOT's · plans for the pro- complete, which, according
posed highway and have to ODOT officials, is not
passed resolutions opposing feasible considering .their
. the bypass.
budget forecasts.
The four issues stakeholdODOT sai!l the placement
ers want ODOT to resolve of a third interchange at ·
before they accept the Ohio 78 is also out the quesbypass plans are as follows: tion, citing costs, lack of
• A proposed interchange substantial traffic and safety
that would run through the concerns associated with
Dorr Run area would wipe placing two interchanges
out several homes and within one mile of each
de~troy half of the city's other as major factors for
·
their decision.
new $I million water and
Officials stressed the
sewer system·
.
• Th~ high~ay, planned to agency\ rules ?n mterrun so th of the Hocking changes do not. allow for
~
··
ld more than ·one mterchange
~~rrecttonal factl!ty, W&lt;?U _. per mile, ' therefore, there
disturb a. restdenual ne1.gh could not.be an interchange
. borhood m the Pleasantvlew at Ohio 78 and then· another
Avenue area a~d should run at 691.
north of th~ pnson ne~ the
They also said the state
W~yne. National Forest, . . could meet all of its. le,\lal
Ohto 78 nee~s to remam requirements by buildmg
open and an mterchange just one interchange for
added;
.
Nelsonville.
• An eastern mterchan~e
After listening to ODOT's
needs to be placed near Ohtq ·presentation Nelsonville
691 and Happy Hollow
'
Road.
Plllll IM U.S. JJ, AJ
TLEACHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Neighs 4-H Club.
Jordan Windland and Lydia
Youth and adults demon- Douglas, Albany, were among
strated their riding skills the many young riders com·
.around poles and barrels com- peting in the barrel racing
peting fpr cash prizes in sepa- where speed is the name of
rate categories of pee wee, the game.
youth, junior and senior.
Year-old Garrett Rees was
Money raised at the show too young to compete, but not
and another one scheduled for to enjoy the action and ride
Sept. 21 will be used by Darla around the fairgrounds with
and Lee Boggs, club advisors, his Grand~a Mike Jones.
to take the 14 4-Hers to the
Garrett ts the son of David
Quaner Horse Conference in and Mica Jones Rees who
Columbus and provide other captured many awards in
educational opportunities horse show events over the
over the summer.
· years.

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

Nursing

Week

is June 6- 13

ffteGreal
Alnencan
Holzer Medical Center salutes and honors all
·of our nursing assistants duri · this
week .
•

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www .holzer.org

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