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                  <text>7:

.Health agency·staff
cuts beg1n Monday

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&gt;'t.
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-Myths about manufactured housing ·
Warrant out for third suspect
~al~s*ftd~
~WAT) team, •s well as

:Sheriff's '0~ ..tetoecti~s
and: ~al ~ hln the
~lklUII
&lt;of Crimli'tal
h\\'e$\laattllft
and
ldentiRc.t\M out of
~.

Ohio, met at
Bidwell~ Elementacy
M Friday afternoon ro 1ft·
pm tG Serve the \Vamllts.

They .WOOred

~t

ro
:secure the ~ and briq
Ma• . . Ansa\,M

Local fiddler makes music and instruments
Uslln•IU...

Cllendtll

A8

c~.~~

t2

Claulfitds .

Comla

DtltAbby
Edltoritls
Obltutrlu
Rqlon

D'i-1

lnsttt
(l

A4

AI
AJ

sports

,,..

WH\htf
~

A2
~

*' Ollill-.....

"ln: troctlor~al booklets we~n 't
awilable rat the time fur me ro look
llt." White said, ''so I obtained advi~
~ ctafters."
''The materi•l ~ to build 111
Instrument can be em~ 111\d some of
the wood Is hard to find, but I ei\IOY
11\Bldng them.'' said White.
Wbeil •sktd fur the first time to
:speilt lt 111 Athens $Cl\ool, Whlre was
~. E\oer since bls first visit to a
local $1:1\ool, he has continued to
lnlbnn d\lldren about why be txm·

slt\lcts his own n~uslcallnstruments-

White eltplains what the different

·parts of the instrument are, the hisroey
of how each instrument was buill, the

.origin of each musical Instrument, lind
111 eltpla~~ation of how he constructs
them.
,
Various srudents ask White to play
silly sonas and he enjoys \1,
.
White taught himself how ro play
each musical instrument by ear, ani! he
tells studentll he isn't much of a singer,
but they don't mind,
"Playing a musical instrument is a
~~ ~nh;y to

influence kids,"

He also ~ the srudenl's ro White wd. "Any child who is fortu.
nate to play can accomplish some·
play Ill\ Instrument.
When speaking at local scllools, thing."

MEDICAL CENTER

Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

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:-t
lk'\.'WI'td Rto..ft \lt\lnl In nnl
~- TruSsdl ~ "ftllntllt~ ~ Cool\l) lt..l niM h:a' ~
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\.'OO'IIl\Unity pOO._-..
ill ~ sdlools." .

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::~.Blackwell backs voting
.t:system change
.
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ball.

A.m¥t" change in the schedule will be

~
IeS!.

Ibis ye.- in the festi\'11 que.en's con-

u.....Jru one o( the event's apenin&amp;

embraced.
Blackwdl, who visited the
•· •Gallia County Board of
•·· Elections Thursday, said he
.,. ·doesn't bact any new system
• ..J.O replace the ~ncli-wd
.methOd, but thinks safe..
., • .guards should be in pllice.
.
· ·. · Ohio and other states mak·

·=

· "We wan1 oor queen to panici · 1e an
lhrough the festival," Back said. pll .
The compecilion has also been opcnc:d
up to high school juniors. Neal said,
'"The contest WliS open to senian, buJ by
the time the festival oomres ll'OWid, they'~e
essentially freshmen in oollege," she said.
"We didn '1 feel the title meant as mud\

West Virginia weather·
SUNII1. .lin ' '

;-

Farmers Market opens in Gallia June 28
"We
because

~ht of K·Mart
II IS impOI'Illnt fur lt\e

fanners to sell !heir

within 24 hours and liastem
Avenue provides an excellent
tt1ffic flOw," said An.Rel. "I'm
very grateful to K-Mart fur
making the decision to allow
our fanners to sell in their parte.
. lot"
I~
.
· 'We ncxl to support our family farmers in the area because
theY're villll to our economics,"
ackled can. "We're happ}' to
support this IIL'Iion and we hOpe
to actuaUy build a permanent

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proc~uc:e

"'"

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Fltrmers Marltel in the t'uture." · ticipating in the market, ~t
The Fanners Market, locnmd show up and talk to me on the
in the ftont of the GalliJ)Oiis K· morning of June 28 or aive nie 11
Man paddng lot, will have its call at home 256-1202," Said
opening day Aiday, June 28, at Angel, "II is free fur the fannin,
8 a.m. and operate until it sells but they do have tO sian a liabil·
out. Regular hours will remain ity waiver fur K·Mut"
,
the same and the lllllfket will be
"We all hope eYei)'OIIe axnes
open for business Wednesdays, out to support our local c.nn\na
Fridays and Saturdays.
community," illddlld , r#af.
"If anyone is lnteresled in par~~~~~~--~~

Jones

p

Mostly dry, but cool on Sunday
Sund~

IV M AIIOCIA'm 111111&amp;

nlaht... Panly

Point
Point

1'111 National Weather cloud)'. Lowa In the lower
s.vl.c:re .aya the weather will 50..
.
be dry, bUt cool far the next

fe~.~·

,
Hlah• Sunday will ranp
tron\ the upper 60s 10 the mtd

'70s. ·
The chance for showers

will continue into Monday
with dry weather expec~
TUesday as hiRh p~essure
builds Into the Ohio valley.
Sunrise Sunday will be at
6:02 a.m.
1
Weather forecast:
Sunday...A mix of clouds
and sunshine with scattered
showers and perhaps a thun·
derstorm. Highs in the mid
70s. West winds 10 to 13
mph. Chance of rain 30 perCent.

Monda)'... Panly cloudy.
Hlahaln the upper 70..
Monday
nlaht... Panty
cloud)' with a chance of
showen. Lows In the upper
50..·Chance of rain 30 percent.
Extended tarKUt:
Tllesday... Partly cloudy,
Hi&amp;hs in the upper 70s.
Wednesday...Mostly clear,
Lows in the upper 50s and
highs in the upper 70s.
Thursday... Partly cloudy.
Lows In the upper 50s and .
hlahs near 80.
Friday... Mostly
cloudy
with a chance of showers.
LOws in the mid SOs and
highs in the lower 80s.

for Information

Play with the but...Learn

PMttiRI MAfttiiT IITI Gallla Coun~ Commissioner
Shirley Ariel, along wtth Lorie .

Neet. dllfletor of the Getlla
Commerce,
Tracy Call, director of the Gellle
Coun~
Community
~ Chamber.of

Mary Ewti'C, assistant mana&amp;er
of the Gallipolis K-Mert, are
seen In front of what Will be the
new F8n'Tle!1 Market In Galllll
001$01'1)

HMC receives
$15,000 grant
OALLIPOLIS - · Holzer
Medical Center was recently
awarded a $15,000 p t to assist
individuals with chronic obstruc·
live pullllOIIary disel!t &lt;COPO),
The pt was given by The
Foundation
fur
Healthy
Communities, a chliritable ann of
the Ohio Hospillll Association,
fi'om funds received through the
Ohio Public Health Priorities
Trust Fund, crellled out of the
nalionali:Obacco settlement
Grant money will be used to
teach proper breathing tech·
nlques, nutrition and modified ·
exercises to increase lung capacl·
ty, with lhe soat of improving the
patient's health status and quality

'

Medicare Education Session
Come and get answers to your questions about Medicare
. ~.

The educational seminar will cover:

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• Medicare eligibility
• Original Medica'• Part A, Part B
..
• Medicare suppltmtntllllnsuranc.
'.
• Medicare + Choice options ·
• Medicare rights and prot.ctlons
•
• Assistance for low-Income 'J)Itltnts · .
.
• Resources available to help mike tdUctttd choices,
. ·
' li'.·
• Question and answer session
••

the cost, he added.
·, - "I'm ltyi~ to make sure I
•, couch base w1th the people on
•..lhc front lines," said
Blackwell, the state's c:hief
elections officer. "There will
be an upgrade of eleoloral
· tecllnolol)', and it's anticipat·
·~ lhat by the end of the year
·the president will sign le&amp;is·
lation authorizing $3 billlon
to improve voting technology"
.
:. :: Blackwell said he wants to
. ' see protection qainst over~ "]Voting, or when a 'Yotet mis, Jakenly votes for more than
.. tlne candidate in a race,
' teSultlna in a disqualification
of the ballot; volin&amp; tabula, • \ion on the local level; and a
~· ..~trail to detect problems
t· wiih ballots.
·
Blackwell is floatina those
. - proposals with le&amp;islators and
: boards of elections.
Two systems are In play to
replace punch"Cii'd voting .,...
the electronic touc:h pad now
used in some states, and opti·
cal ICII!nina of ballots.
The push to chanp arose
, out of the closeness of the
: 2000 presidential election
and the dispute over Florida's
· role in deciding the outcome.
I The Sunshine State's punch·
: card system was widely held
• at fault.
: Blackwell said the proba: bility of Obioil or any of Its
1 counties, aot na cauaht In
: lhe same situation Is nllalven
: procedurea now In pliiCCI.
: , But he advocates the pro,POSed standards due to the
:: ~ntroduclion of new technolo:iY. which he envisioned will
• ~ effective In four to sht
:years. Tho aoalon the federal
: Jovel Is for c:han~ in place
, ; by the next White House race
:.1n 2004.
.
"Thoae standards will
· emerp as Ohio'a standards,"
he oridicted. .
, "l don't make tho case that
• Ollila County will become
: lhe next Florida," Blackwell
: said. "But If we don't buy
t into those uplfl!le:a, we will
• find ourselvea left behind."
An Ohio bualneaa, Canton·
based Diebold, Ia an Industry
leader In marketina new vot·
1~na technolol)', Blackwell
• said.
·
: "I don't advocate Diebold,
: but as an old free marketauy,
· : Ohio will become a bl&amp; slice
• of the market If other manu•
facturers don't cede the pie to

I

:•
I

lrnpi'OIJitl11lllt qQrporatlon, and

COun~. (Krl$

Read your 'Local Briefs'
. on~geA7

..

Boys&amp; Girts

c:on~ion
~ld
~t
asststance m
beuiaa

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GALLIPOLIS - Oallla
Department
immunlza·
June 20,
ofllces at

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around."

Blackwell has testified on
.election process refonn lhut 's
mulled in separate legislation providing funding for
stateS 10 make the conversion.
A bill introduced by Sen.
Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.,
proposes full funding, while
another by Rep. Bob Ney, ROhio, advocates 90 pen:ent
wilh a local matc:h. Bhickwell
said he expecls something
closer to ~ey's proposal to
emerae for a vote before
. year's end.
Blackwell, a former
Cincinnati ~or. is seeking
reelection th1s fall. He's
opposed by Bryan Flannery, a
Democ:rsbc state repmentl·
tive from Lakewood, also an
advocate of voting process
chanae.
As elections overseer,
Blackwell projects voter
turnout, based on estimates
from county boards of elec·
tion. His prediction for the
May 7 primary was low, and
wu boine out in some cases.
Blackwell doesn't attach
vital importance to the projections, but is worried the
J!rocess is turning off
Ohioans.
"[ try to set people to
understand statistical guesti·
mates are just that,'' he said,
"I'm concerned people lie
not paying attention.
"Primaries lie nominatina
processes for political parlies," Blackwell said. "The
parties have more and m!)re
decided they don't want acri·
mony . between candidates in
their ranks, that the~e isn't
enouah lime to mind fences.
So you see more and mo~e
races whe~e the~e's fewer
people runnina.
"We're aolng to have to
address this," he added. "The
other issue, I believe, is that
we willaet full disclosure on
campaian tlnanclna. A lot of
people believe bigger entities
have an unfair a~vantage.
Full disclosure of every dol·
lar that Influences 1he process ·
will be helpful."

Additional services, such
.as blood prtssure checks and
preanancy tests, will be
otrered durin&amp; the evening
houn at the health depart·

'

. of Ufe. The home·based program

......_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.__ _

Diebold," he said. "I look for
the price of the tec:hnoloi!Y to
drop a bii.
"I've argued that counties
like Gallia should look at all
systems that would be avail·
able." Blackwell said. "l
think smaller counties will
benefit ·from shopping

will be admlniste!!!d locally
tiJrouah Holt.er Home Care with
cooperation from Holzer
Medicill F4ulpment, Inc.
If you are an early to mld·staae
COPD patient with the ability 10
t'oUow a mild extreise proaram
ilnd would like to participate in
· Todd
thls free
program,
p1ease contact
Tucker
at 740-446-9560.

p~t

or

a cumnt
record with

the WIC office will
by appointment
evefllnj houn.

PROUD TO BE
APART OF
YOUR LIFE.
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schedules, representatives of
ta.ch senator have clec:lined
to be interViewed.
Byrd's staff did send. viti
e-mail, some quotes from
· Byrd. So that readers are
aware of lhe thoughts of
their representatives. the fol.
lowi~ are Byrd's thooghts,
in their entirety:
"While lhere is no question that I have been successful in securing fedtnl
dollars for highwaf construction in our slate.. It is the
West Virginia Department of
Transportation that adminis-

"During Senule ~te 00
~tl)l CMtted
hithway
bill,
the
Trail ponation Equity Act
for the 2Ist Century. I chantpiorl'td tlll a.mendment to
ensure thai fedenal hi~w~~~·
fundi~ II.IIOCII.tiOM to the
stutes flnall ate~ to the level of the llllnUII.I receipts of
the Highw~ lNst Fllnd. s
a mull or tM.se etlom. the
state of W~t Virginia will
n:cei~e an historienlly hi.Rh
level of federnl formUla
funding from the Fed~!
Aid Highway prosrnm.
"Beeuuse of my wmli:. for
lhis liscul }'ltnr, the state will
rtteivo::: $308 million for
rond 11nd highw:t • c:oostruction. Holl't'~'ltr. 1.~ runtinued
the nlUII

S..Rolletta,.d

lcrs these fullds lind nmkes
determinnlions on whidl
road projects are to be
undertaken. I do 1101 develop
the stale's highWlly priorities. believing that urn deci-

hl-lllth tlfllw llmui~ - lll'lll
1.'00 '11'11\:tion at'
r()llds III,~C l!.. ~ ~ i in
j~nty ~:I.U$0::: of proposed ~"" l'u~ from ~
t~ftw

whidl I

do oot.

.. asked submit to an interview
about U.S. 35.
In each ease. citina busy

I • .

competition.

~ e,"~;pertt~.

For more than 11 month, Sell.
Jay Rockefeller and Sen.
Robert Byrd htve eoc:h been

. ~. but WIDts three SliD•· 'duds established before new
n • qe
ballot-castina
is

night ~ organims silled the competition fur Saturd11.Y, J\ftl 29 at 7 p.m. in
the Arid Theat~e, lollOwing the quem's
l'l:lp:lnadede
. starting at 6 p.m.
.
Selection of the queen is being done
early to allow the queen to be pilt o( all
evenJS, said Jamie Back, who dlairs the
q~~ee~~ competition tommiltlx:. In the paSt,
several activities had been held tlefoft: the

sioos VIi btst klll to h~h\\'ll}'

tn~intm who~ t~

WASHINGTON, D.C. -

lh ICIWIIICiu.Y

· " ·· GAWPOUS - Ohio
" : SeaetlrY of State J. Kamelb
Bladtwtu supports cblnaiD&amp;
• ·-the state's current method of

Neal said.

Itt IIIMil H•u••n

Mill''' •n-•l'fllMJtiBJIStER.&lt;DI
101£\.l.~Y'IRIIUIE.COM

"We will also have cnflers on hand,"

u.s. 35

· Bush udmini:strnrim.
"The Bush ~ \'i M
\.'\It llllll\ ·t ~.t ~ t){ ~
ro:ld 1..'\&gt;nstrut:tit&gt;n ~~­
drtlppi~

W~C$1

th~hool

\\'est \'lf@il'llll. I

-.

Vi"'imt~'~

fundinl! h\ n milli&lt;..lfl. ltl
ooter ttl ~~~-~ul\' thut fund;; lll\'
ll\'lilllbl!! ltlf . ll..&gt;&lt;td pro.jl:l.'lll

am '''\'rti~ to tc\'C!Se th:lt
eut :tnd restore the flllldil\il.
Thnt wuy. otl~:-t the We~t
i"'inht Dep:~,nmen1 llf

'lniiJ.~portlltioo i~ l'tltdy 1o
lllO\'It fot'll'\utl with (OIIStM:-

Iion of U. . • ~, th\'re will h.~ 1\'liubkl stlUI'\.'e of ~ml
t'\lnds U\'Uiltlbl!! 10 l'\)lllple~~1 st.lll' I..'OOStm.:tion tl..&gt;l·
~~.n

United Way decides fund allocations for 2002
GALLIPOLIS - With
the help · of the 2002
Campaian Comminee and
the support und c:ontribu·
tions of the community,
United Way of Galha
County (UWGC) was able
to surpass its goal of
$125,000.

Following the campaign
and
the
recent
celebration/ap.preciation
b~enkfast, the allocations
commiuee met to determine
campaign fund allocations
to best serve the needs of
the community.
These meetings took
place at the Holiday Inn on
May 29 and 30.
.
"We truly appreciate all
of the contributions and
pledges made during the
campai.n," said Jim Craft,
allocations
committee
chairman.
"However,
because agency requests for
funds usually exceed the
total raised, determinina the
amounts to be allocated to
each of the 12 human ser·
vice agencies is not an easy
task."
Craft pointed out that the
obligation to manage · and
allocate
committed
~esources as effectively and
efficiently as possible is 11
sobering task, and one that
is taken very seriously by
the members of the
Allocations Committee and
the United Way board of
directors, who provide final
approval of the committee's
~ecommendations ,

"The needs within our
community are always
greater than the supply,"
said Craft. "Nevertheless,
we lie truly thankful for
each and every contributor
and contribution to .the
United Way . of Oallia
County.
"Despite the seriousness
of these respons.lbilities,"
Craft continued, "the com·
mlttee 's tasks were begun
with enthusiasm, and s1ep
one of the allocations
process was completed at
our first mcetina on April
30. This included a rev1ew
and necessary revisions of
the allocation policies and
procedures, as well as 11
simplification
of . the
required
information
forms."
The allocations commit·
tee met again on May 7 to
determine final verification
of the total funda for dlt
United Way Bmeraency

Fund nnd funding for lhe 12
agencies. The United Way
Emergency Fund is allocateel to muke emergency con·
tribulions to uny of the 12
~e~cics during ll time of
cns1s.
Craf\ said the United
Way Emergenc1 Fund which has been m existence
since the or$unizu.tion's
beginning - 1S separute
from the Tornado Disaster
Emergency Fund overseen
by a long-range disaster
planning committee, and for
which United Way serves as
fiscal agent.
On May 29 and 30, mem· FUND ALLOCATION _ United way of Galllo count ·s
bers of the allocalion committee met with the direc· Allocation Committee Is shown reviewlnl the reports, 2002·
tors or their designees of the 03 toels end monetary requests from representatives of 12
12 non-profit agencies agencies that receive funding, In part, from · United way.
approved 1o receive fund· Members Included In the photo are Lance Clifford, Suzanne
ing, in pnrt, from the United Durst, Dane Pelle&amp;rlnon, and Committee Chairman James
· Way of O.allia County,
Craft. Not shown ere member Or. Bernard Nlehm and UWGC
During the 12 individual . Executive Dlreetor Jean Houck,
half-hour meetings, ~ep~e·
sentatlves from each of the vidual telephone . requests Pellegri non und Chris
12 agencies provided the · made to its oftice. UWOC Purdum.
allocations committee with learns more about lhe type
The 12 ug.:ncics funded in
a writhln es1ima1e of the of services thut are needed purl by UWOC ure
funds needed to provide by, nnd uvailnble to, the Americun Red Cross. Gulliu
their proposed serv1ces for community.
(\ounty Clmpto:::r: Arthritis
the community.
"The important wor~ of Foundution, Ohio River
Each ngency director or the allocations commlltec Volley Chapter: Boy Scou1s,
~epresentati ve also made u und the dedication of its Tri·Stllle Areu Counci l:
supportive verbal prcsentn· volunteer members ure very Oulliu Counly Cou nci l on
tion, The commlltee than much npprecinted," suid Aging;
GuiHn·Meigs
met again on June 6 to UWOC Executive Director Community Action Agency:
deterMine each allocution Jeun Houck.
Fnmily
Addiclion
for the ·12 human service
"Whnl I leurned from lust Community
Trcntmcnt
agencies. .
·.
year's meetings with lhe ll Services (FACTS); Girl
Based on the information agency represenlulives, n.nd Scouts, ·ohio Council Inc:.;
provided . at the meetings from visits to the agenc1es Holzer Hospice: Outreach
and the quarterly reports to see their work hns greutly . Center; R i!tir~d Senior
from the previous year, the broadened my understund· Volunteer Progrum (RSVP):
final amounts will be rec· ing of the tremendous Screnily
House:
und
om mended 10 the UWGC amount of need 1hroughou1 Woodland Centl!rs,
board for approval at its
County," Craft suid.
Additional information
nejll meeting, Agenc~ direc: Oallia
Members of the ullocu· muy be obtnined by cnlling
tors will then be not1fied of .tions
committee include th~ United Wuy office nt
th~ total amounts nlloc111ed
Chnirmun
Jim Crult Lunce 446·2442 or by viewing its
for their respective agen·
cies, and 1he funds will be Clifford, Suzanne Durst, Dr, website ut www.unitedwuy·
disbursed qunrterly, bused . Bernard Niehm, Dene . gulliu@voyager.nol,
on the amount uvuilable at
that time (amounts received
versus amounts pledged).
Throughout the year,
111 wao ..ry ptuscd with the !molter
each agency is required to
tlossu. II enabled Ilia lnstrutlurs 10
provide quarterly reports
apund more lln1e whh uch sludenl,
pnwtcltna • bttlor tduutlon, I fttl nlltrt
that document their actual
lhon ready fur a Juh In the Reid lblt
usage of the funds within
l trained lor. I was extrenldy pleased
the community, UWGC is
wllh nl)' lnslructul'l ond lhe sehoul sluff.
also required to document
Any http or tKplonillltln was gt•en riRhl
its use of all fUnds. In nddi·
awiJI. Thanks m;c."
lion, all federal, state und
Sara Morris
city tax reports and puy·
Medlul nan~trlpllolllU
Dr. Robl'l'l M.CII'llry, 00
mcnts ure mode by United
Way and the 12 agencies, us
requi~ed of all SOI(c)3 non·
profit oraanlzations,
Tbrouah the combination
of qency ~eports, and indi·

&amp;ands
Pllln- Peelgnld
Dllmond

Sprtna v.ney Plua • G.Uipolla

446-4367 or
1-800-214-0452

........... ...
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WIIIITI
www.golll.pollocorwtrcolltp,com

......11

gecOatlllpollacorwareolltge.com

........

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Still cookin' after
all these years

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NATIONAL VIEW

lellt _ . . IM*' HaiJ

IU'nbet;" Pfcluled . . Ulpn ~
BnNn Clbst. teael\6 linda ~
....~. Sill~ and Ste!;lherlie ~

Fair.
"1'he studtllts explained to and

'

sllo•ect thtir paRRIS wt.t llley.lwntd,
~isbed

US. can't allow distracted
Pakistan to shelter terrorists

rr • -

o.a-

cl ...."s
dollcltown
Ge/'fii"J~ . ·. .-s .. CMdlr
by telephone Ttusdaf
lliOIUii!C, fAiidliew tel'tfll)

Pnic:Uit, -

care

rn

-

"Bloodmobile visit set Thursday

OUR READERS, VIEWS
No mo~ delays
(&amp;illtW ~ -.~ Tltis l~r "~s ~il·

ltdro Dc!tt ~mM, ptfblislwrfi'Oitio

lilllt~:y l'nlblislli~ C~~n M~rs.l

r':n~riun:!:.:'~

,..,., for the
-~l'lnblisher's Vnew football analoa.Y tnti·
tloed "Get Ready, Fulks - It's Time to
Kick Oft" tftat appeaml in the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune on Ma,y 30,
~an administnltor in the Gallipolis
City Sthool District who will be Cligi·
ble for retirement after JuiCi. The fiict
· ·
·
·
that our school distrttt ns
PI&amp; a 8 '~nificant turnover of pemlllnel during
the next five to seven years is of con·
sidtnlble ~ to me. The ability of
our school district to recruit quality staff
requires facilities that nunure and
enhance positive learning environ·
ments.
'When it comes 10 competing wilh S\11':
rounding &amp;ehool districts fur new teach·
and ad · ·
ers
we are
le·- 1 pi 'mmtstrators,
fi ld I tod
• not ontia
· ...,. aytna te .. n ay s compe '
tlve
society,
maintaining and
the status
lsolatts
our community
Is notquo
an
acceptable option. Our community can·
not afford to delay buildlna new school
· fuellities. 1b do so will only result in
stagnation 1 decline and decaoo of lost
opponunities for our yoolh.
We live in a world economy that
requires
a much different kind of build·
BY M ASSOCIA'IUl PMSS
ing
than
when 1 went to school.
'lOdly is Sunday, June 16, the I67th dal' of 2002. 'There are
ltehnology has ·ch,anged all academic
198 days left In the year, T\lis is Father's o.y,
disciplines
and the gllme plan. It Is II
'IOdly's Highlight in History:
mud\
different
world than it wasjustlO
On June 16, 18S8, in a speech in Sprinaftetd, Ill., Senate canyean ~· To ignore this fact is to be
didate Abraham Lincoln said the slavery issue had to be
left belimd - way behind. No more
resolved, deelarina, "A house divided against itself cannot
excuses.
Action Is required. We cannot
stand."
afford
to
have benchwarmers. Our com·
On this date:
munity cannot suffer any more delay of
In 1567, M~, Queen of Scots, was imprisoned in
game
penalties.
.
Lochleven Castle m Scotland.
.
Do
I
want
to
pay
lldditlonaltaJtes
durIn 1897, the government signed a treaty of an~atlon wilh
ing my retirement when I'm on a fixed
. Hawaii.
.
.
Income? No, but I realize that without
· ln 1903, Ford Motor Co. was iooorporated.
new school facilities the quality of life
. In 1932, President Hoover and Vice President Charles CUnls
In Gallipolis will continue to decline. It
were renominated at the Republican n11tional convention in
will Impact ·each and everyone of us
from tlie quality of health care we
the National Industrial Recovery Act became law.
receive to the grow\h of business and
(It was lalllr struck down by the Supreme Court.)
Industry.
In 19SS, Pope Plus XII excommunicated Afaentine President
No one who lives here will be
: Juan Domingo hron - a ban lhat was lifled eiaht years later.
Immune. Our school district Is now see·
· In 1961, Soviet ballet dancer RudolfNilftlyev ilefec:tedto the
Ina the consequences of such "delays of
West while his troupe was In Paris.
game." Quality business and education
In 1963, the world's tint femllle space traveler, Valentina
recruits ao not want to move or live
Ttreshkova, was launched into orbit by the Soviet Union
here. The clock Is ticking and our com.
aboard \bstok 6.
munlty .had better wake ap before the
In 1977, Soviet Communist Piny General Secretary Leonid
1111me ls over. We are already in sudden
Brezhnev was named president, becoming the first person to
death and another period Is no longer a
hold both pOsts simultaneously.
option.
In 1995, Salt ~ City was awarded the 2002 Winter
My son will grllduatc from hl~h
Olympic Oames.
·
school next year, and new facUlties wtth
Ttn years ago: President Oeorae H. w. Bush ·and Russian · quality science labs .will not help him.
President Boris Yeltsln cappoa the first day of their
Rowever, any chance of him returning
to OaiUpolls after college will be ellml·
Washlnaton summit by announclna lheir countries had agreed
nated without quality facilities. The
to slas6 lhelr lona·ranae nuclear arsenals by two·tfilrds.
children of this community. will not
Former Defense Secretary caspar Welnberaer was Indicted on
return to raise their own children In subfelony charaes In lhe lran·Con~ affair (however, he was later
standanlleamlng environments.
pardoned by Bush.)
·
Thank you for the courase and wisFive yean aao: The British aovemment broke off contacts It
dom
to speak out on this Issue. We need
had just renewed with Sinn Fein after the Irish Republican
11 lot of team ~layers to be successful. I
Army killed two Protestant policemen In Luraan. Northern
hope your arttcle Is the beginning of a
Ireland.
touchdown
drive.
One year aao: Face to face for the first time, President Bush
Lance 11:. Clifford
and Russian President Vladimir Putl.n pledged during a meet·
Patriot
Ina In Slovenia to deepen their .nations' boil
. ds and tQ explore
. the possibility of compromise on U.S. missile defense plans.
City lawmakers electea Klaus Wowerelt Berlin's first openly
gay mayor.
.
·
Dear Editor:
Today's Birthdays: Aulhor Erich Seaal Is 65. Aulhot Joyce
I
refer to lhe June 4 National View
Carol Oates Is 64. Country singer Billy "Crash" Craddock Is
column
"Pointless: Debatina the 'what
· 63. Sonawrlter Lamont DOzier Is 61. Rhythm-and-blues singer
ifs' of Sept. II serve no purpose," This
: Eddie l.A!vert Is 60. Acms loan Van Ark is S9. Rhythm-and·
editorial,
originally presented In the
: blues singer James Smith (The Styllstlcs) Is 52. Boxer Roberto
Moml~~&amp; Call of Allentown, Pa., states
: Duran Is 51. Pop singer Oino Vannelli Is 50. Actress Laurie
that "Dwelling on 'what ifs' only feed
' Metealf Is 47. Model-actress Jenny Shimizu Is 35. Actor Eddie
the active and misdirected Imaginations
· , Clbrian (''Thjrd Watch") Is 29. Actress Olivia Haok Is 19.
of consrlracy theorists. Delving into a
, Thought for Thday: "We seldom stop to think how many
polltica blame game will only lead to
:· people's lives are entwined with our own. It Is a form of self·
iilvlslvencss, acting as yet another acid
: ishness to Imagine that every Individual can oper~~te on his own
after effect of what terrorists have done
· or can pull out of the general stream and not be missed." -Ivy
to us already,"
·
'. Baker Priest, former .U.S. treasurer (190.5·1975).
Au contrlilrel rt is the media's duty to

TODAY IN HISTORY

~3.

Media protects elite

"

CML

Billinp.
TtadltR at bodl sdtools wunt to
remilld kids about llle Flmily l.itency
niaMs .. the City Paol., 1(30. They will be
lneld from 6:30 to ~30 p.m. June lO, and

/\1/ll

\I /1

uti t:amplcted.'" aid

debate the "what its." Jt is not the
!Mdia's duty to pllY the role of littler
or soodne ·the IIOiiul,ation. Media pro~:sioniJs should J)iesent the ro1d flcts m
.,., obiective r.st.ion. 1b the utent that
they do not do this and they doll 't do it,
they c.use to be c:nediblejournalists and
assume the role of ~sts.
The ~.., media orofessional is not
'"~
,...
a sleuth or trulh seeker. His or her duty

=

~! t';:=tru~

~i~~~

will not pmtnt the full truth unless
there is no ~ to avoid it and in that
case, they will soft peddle and whitewash ~ ll is a case in point.
Revelations that the government had
!:'or known...~ue pourinD
-~
..., forth and
media is in damage control moclen
The revelations are frimed in terms of
"failures to communicate," ·~ing
the ball" and "bureaucratic snafus.
'truth seekers - snidely impugned as
"conspiracy theorists" - cannot even
point out facts contrary to the official
line because their letters are canned. It
.ns II very dangerous ...
· w,..,.,
.. ~-' ed'ntors
ull318
reject letters that present unpalatable
trulhs simp'"
thev• dislike the
v "-ause
""""
sentiments expressed. It Is contrary to
the very spirit of journalism. Those at
the Morning Call and elsewhere must
- In the Words of the old Scripps·
Howard motto - present the ll&amp;ht and
let the people tind their own way.
Jell' F1tlcl!
·
Middleport

'h b

71
.ll

l .
e .est So ut&amp;on

Dear Editor:
In response 10 the several letters concemlng the ~'Cheshire Buyout," as vii·
lage residents we believe that this is
best for the heallh and welfare of our
fammes, as we live In the village and
under the plume dally.
Some of your readers own ·property
here in the village but live outside the
village. Allhough It is very difficult fur
us to leave our homes and neighbors,
whom we feel are family, we ~!eve
th•t Mayor Reese and the village offi·
clals did what they thought was !lest for
all concerned.
We have been informed of possible
health hazards from the plant emissions
that are released dally. As we live closesl'to the fallout, we don't feel that we
were "sold down the river." We feel that
unless you live it every day; you may
not realize the potential danger of cal[.
ing Cheshire home.
After much debate with state and fed·
eral EPA and no real reaulatlons to con·
trol emissions, we believe that this is
the best solution to our heallh concerns.
As for Mr. Douglas J. Wetherholt of
Oallipolls, who IIPpatently owns prop·
erty outside of the village, maylle, if
you would have attended some of th~
vUiage meetlnas (that were opened to
the public) you could have helped with
some or our earlier concerns of anhydrous ammonia and the "blue plume"
before lhe decision to sell our homes
was made. We don't recall your pres·
cnce at any of our village meetinas.
Thanks for your concern now.
Although everyone may not agree or
have the same opinion, there are some
famllles that are on a fixed Income that
think this is the best solution for our
health concerns.
.
·
·
Mary and John Phoenix
Eva and Larry Cochran
Jerry R. Ramsey Sr.
Erica Chllden
Mr. and Mn. Orville Bratton
Cheshire

Not unnoticed
· Dear Editor: ·
I would like. to take this opponunlty
to commend the merchants of
Oalllpolls, many local businesses for
their donations, and the many caring
,I

and rommitted citim~s for their hvd
work in making our downtown loot as
bHutifulllS it doe$.
.
lt is &lt;..'tminly a labor of love and considentlon for the IIIUn I have heard

numerous comments on the snc:cessful
elfurts of so many that have improved
the~ but even nnore imponant·
ly have viven our eommunity customers
.,
r
...:.....
and our out o town customers a ...,....
~~ =~:'! ~:.ti~ ball
rolling and ~ it going." ln fact, it is
·the responsibility ofeiBC1i and every one
of us in this twnty to support our
downtown and ll'Ca rnerthants to secure
the future of our area. Once again, thank
to all of""" ~bout the _,. ....
·-•-your leadership, · edication and
belief in the area. It has not gone unncr

¥::

ticed.

·

Nanq&gt;MwUns
.

Oalllpolis

.

'

'

'

OAWPOUS The
' America~~ Red Cross bloodmobile will be in OelliDOlis
ThUJSday, June 20, trom
.. ll:lO Lm. until 6 ~~nm. at St.
:. hter's Episcopal Churdl,
, 541 Second Aven
• The visit comes IS an tll?tf"
gency appeal for blood
' tlornon hiS lqun due to ''crit·
·:.icalb' low" blood inventories,
:• Rea Cross official said.
• "Currently, we're strug·
'. aling to provide hospi~s
• with 50 percent of their
. ...,cleslred leWis of Rh· neptive
• \ypes," said nm Miller,
:·· senior director of donor ser-. vices with Red Cross' Oreater
AUeattenles ReJion said.
• : "Without Increased dona·
.'

:oo

To be eligible to give blood, individuals
must be at least 17, weigh at least
105 pounds and be in ~rally good
health. Normally, individuals can
give blood fNfKY 56 days.

cellation of suqeries and
other
transfusion-related
treatments~~ I posSibility," he
·added.
While summer is typically a
challenging ·time to recruit
donors, the FDA hu issued
new required auidelines to
protect the blood supply
qainst the theoretical risk of
the human form of Mad Cow
, • lions, postponement or can· Disease for 1111 blood centers,

which makes some donors
inei!Jible to give blood.
Under Ibis new policy, the
Red Cross will defer donors
who' have spent time in the
United Kingdom for 11 cumulative total of three months or
more since 1980, or who have
spent time in any olher
European country for sill
months or more since 1980,
or who have ~ived a blood

tm\Sfll&amp;IM in the UK.

"So far. Ibis deferral bas
IIICCOUnted for less than 1 percent of our pesenling donors,
however, our c:ancem is that
donors may be assuming they
are inel~ible 10 donate blood
and self·deferring." Miller .
said.

Red Cross tiiCOilfllgeS any· one wilh questions to call I·
80().QIVE-LifE to determine
their eligibility, he added.
To be eligible to give blood,
individuals must be at ·least
17 ' we~h at least 105 pounds
and be in generally good
health. Normally. individuals
can give blood every 56 days.

•&amp;GNw-oMIIIIItlf

S.nlall Nllr. fl1r
Ret S1t.IS. SAW
W. a111o cto pan,llrt
pliolloa, kllllllftution pltDU I
ltoclalt PnOCIIIInl an
plioiiM.

1 ..,, ', • • \I., ~

l,lr,'t'

Dispelling fallacies
....._~r Editor·.
.._

.

As governing officials of the ~
County Heallh DeCnt (MCHD '
we would like to spel some cirtulat·
lng fallacies about your Meigs County
Board of Health (BOH).
First, members of local BOHs can be
compensated at $80 for each monthly ·
meeting and for related mileage ell{l:Bn·
ditures (cunently at 30 cents per mtle)
per the Ohio Revised Code (ORC).
Your financially responsible 80H
members aaRec~ to ac:cept only $40 per
monthly meeting. Durlng the May 10,
2002, BOH meeting, the membership
decided to forfeit Its salary/mileage ·
reimbursement lmmedla.tely In
response 10 anticipated financial han!·
ships ussociated wilh voter rejection of
the MCHD's replacement levy on May
7, 2002.
Second, four of lhe five BOH mem·
bers !~~Side in Meigs County and are
appomted by Meigs County trusteeS
and mayors (for five·year terms) dur·
ing the annual District Advisory
Council meetlnas. (Ann Haning lives
in Rutland Township; Jim Clifford Jr.
lives in Salisbury TOwnship; Gene
Jeffers lives In Columbia Thwnship;
JoAnn Crisp lives In Sutton ThwnShip.)
Per the ORC, a physician who lives
or practices wllhin Meigs County must
he a member of lhe BOll. Former
BOH member Scott Smith, D.O., and
cunent BOH member Joseph Freeman,
D.O., practice medicine thiough
Holzer Clinic (Meigs Branch).
Third, the tax levy-funded BOH .
employs nine staff members as of lhis
writing: Three nurses (one also serves
as the health commissloner/adminlstra·
tor), three sanitarians, three olher clerl·
cal personnel. This staff will be
reduced by one nurse, one sanitarian
and two clerical assistants in tho near
future because of eltlstina dire flnan·
clal co. nditlons within lhe county.
Other MCHD employees, which are
compensated.with federal/state/private
grant money, render services and exe·
cute job responsibilities at no additional taxpayer expense. Meanwhile, your
county commissioners/Meigs County
TB Board of Trustees Is charged with
overseeing lhe tax levy·funded
·
Tuberculosis Clinic, not the Meigs
County Board of Health.
Finally, as BOtl members, we have
the' heallh and well·belna of all Meias·
countlans In our hands and hearts.
Please remember this lmponant fact
when you cast your vote on Nov. 5,
2002.
Gene Jeft'en
President, BOH
. Ann Hanlna
Member, BOH
Jim Clifford Jr.
Vice President, BOH
JoAnn CriiJ! ..
Member, BOij

June21
· . OAWPOUS - A sobrl·
ety checkpoint will be con·
' ducted by Oallipolis City
· Police on Friday, · June 21,
Chief Roaer Brandeberry
announced.
.
. . Also particlpatina in this
. effon to promote trlffic safe·
ty will 6e the Oallia-Melgs
Post of the State Highway
Patrol and Oallla County
Sheriff's Office.
• Location of the checkrloint
·. Jwill not be released unti~ j,ust
prior to the acllvlly,
Brandeberry said. In the past,
officials have operated
checkrloints at the intenec·
tlon ot state routes 7 and 141,
Ohio 7 North, and lhe intersection of Ohio 588 and
Fourth Avenue.
Brandeberry said the
checkpoint's purpose is to
, · Increase public awareness of

law enforcement's efforts to
prevent impaired driven
from usln' the · roadways.
Officers wtll also take lhe
opponunlty to encourage
seatbelt use and promote traf.
fie safet~.
. "This ts an opportunity fur
officers from ihe three law
enforcement qencies to
interact with the motoring
public to promote traffic
Safety,... Brandeberry said. "It
Is a very minor inconve·
nience to the public, and in
our view, may very well save
a life."

WHOAI JUST BECAUSE we:RE A BUSINess
[)OESN'TME.AN WC.DON THAVERI&amp;f.l'r.,
IT's TIME TO PICK UP THE PHONE
.AND t..AY DOWN THE LAW. IN MOSi
SES WHEN THE PHONE·COMP.ANY
CAR OUR BUSINESS IS DUE A . .
Misses AN INST.AU.A TION OR REPA~.ANG ON I I'M O_N MY WAY.
~EDIT ON ITS NEXT PHONE BilJ..

I•

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MN TNT. Olrletft NitwM, Oil aa"' r
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- - ONN. - - - " ' " " "

JOHNSON'S
Pomeroy, Ohio

•
•

•

(740) 992·1182

1

·~

~... '
J

tT' S OUR RIGHT
GUARANTEED BY
THEPUCO'S .
MtNIMUM TELEPHONE SERVICE
STANDARDS. SO JUST CALL EM'
NOW AND RAISE A LITTLE H-E·L·L·O.

'

Muon, WMt VIrginia

(304) 773·5305

REMEMBER BUSINESS OYJNERS..•YOJ'VE GOT
RIGHTS. TAKE THE PHCNE RANGER'S ADVI~ ANJ

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PageA7
•'

, ..... 11,2002

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

riefs

. . . . LIIstlll

OlriStillfl Women's Oub of Gallipolis, Will be noon Tuesday
at the Holiday Inn.

Will fearure a Sl)'le presented by The Puq&gt;le
1\irtk':s 'Kven Smith, music by Karen Pok:yn, and Sharon
tx.l\a of West Ctlester With a hlltl\OO)Us look at"Some Things
We Have in Common as Women and lfow We Deal With
Olanges iii Our lives."
· Fot details, oa!l 446-\897 or 388·9098.
The

~vent

HMCnotes
Holftl' Medltal Center
blscbarge Jilne U - Mrs. William l&gt;orter and daughter.

(PObH.-ed with perw1l~)

near Ravenswood.
Refreshments will be furnished. For more infonnation, con·
tac,t Charlie McDowell at 304-273-2729 or Arol Squires at
304·273-2877;

•

Citations Issued
GALLIPOLIS - Cited by Gallipolis City Police was
Thomas L Ball, Vinton, driving under suspension; Ryan K.
Williams, 26, 721 Third Ave., Gallipolis, parole violation;
Roy L. Stiers, 20, 119 Foorth Ave .• Gallipolis. disorderly conduct by fighting; Jeremy W. Conley, 22, 1559 Ohio 7 Nonh,
Gallipolis, disorderly conduct by fighting.
•
Issued citations by the Gallia County Sheriff's Office were
James Edward Gardner, contempt of coun; Don L. Drennen
Jr., Gallipolis, driving under the mfluence, resisting arrest and
possessing drug paraphernalia; Bruce W. McDon-ald,
Gallipolis, driving under suspension; Angela Dawn Bunch.
Thurman, failure to appear. .

Call answered

Tax talk

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Depanment sent
GALUPOUS - State Sen, Michael Shoemaker and Fred 18 firemen and one truck to a car fire on U.S. 35 near mileDeel, Democratic andidate for 87th Dislrict state representa· post 15 at 9:29 p.m. on Thursday.
live, Will be at Smokin' Rob's on Eastern Aven-ue Monday at
9:~ a.m. to discuss the state cigarette tax increase with local
store 'OWllers.
SYRACUSE - . The Hubbard Little League tournament
will be held staning July I in Syracuse.
The tournament, sponsored by the Syracuse Volunteer Fire
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. -. Retirees of United Depanment, has an entry fee of $25. Drawings will be made
Steelworkers l.Jocal5668 and current members are invited to on lune 25. For more infonnation. contact Eber Pickens Jr. at
attend a meeting at \0 a,m, on Wednesday at the union hall 992-5564 or 992-7181.

Hubbard toumament

Meeting set

Bush, pushing voluntarism, urges "culture of service"
talk!~
~le

CIA, FBI chiefs expected to .

.•.

inquiry into Sept 11 attacks

HENDERSON - Edmtd V. HU~hvt, '19, Heaclenoft,
: • died Frid~.tr. June 14.. ~ in PIUW~t Valt.y HO$p!IAI.
• Born Mil)' 10,. 1923. tn H~, lt~~~~~.twha C01111t)',
• W.v-.. soo of the Ia~ fdil Lee and Winnie Odell Heislop
: H11gbut, ~ was 1.t fOI'IllH' emplo,ee of ltaiw Alumlnwn
: COfP.. whm: ~ ~tired as a Welder, and_a membet of the ·
Ch11n:h of Christ in Hudelson.
He was a U.S. Na"f ~ttrm.
He was tlso ~ i.n death by his first wi&amp;_ Della
• Hu~hlalt : a sister, Juanita; and a attnddaqhtv, Shellie
•"'llughut.
.
; Sun&gt;i"i~ ~ his second wife, Wanda (Vester) Huahlalt
· of HetldersoR; two sons,_ Ro~ (Clrol) Hllabart of Point
Plemnt, ud Ralph (Bill'bara) Hughlalt of IGUte~~, '!Uas;
fi"e grandchildren and fi\'0 amt-arandchil~: two
1 brothen. 'lllcron (Sonya) Hqhlalt oF Charleston, W.Va1,
: and Ted Huahart of Elkhart, Ind.: ~.tnd lh~ sisterS,
: Dorothy Thuton, Curie Louise Baldwin · and Betty
• Bailey, 1.tll of Charleston.
1•. Sen&gt;ices will be I p,m1 Monday in Wilcoxen Funeral
:: ~ Home. Point Pleasant, with Oeorae 'IOppiq offidatlna.
: : Burial will be in Forest Hill Cemetery, Letart. Friends may
: : call at the funeral home from 6·9 p.m. Sunday•

Lindsey Kozberg, spokes·
woman for USA Freedom
Coq&gt;.
Senior Terrella Stokes said

;great."
Bush also mentioned U.S.
Anny Spc,
Marc A,
Anderson, all enlisted man
whn died In March in
Atlthanistan with six other
snliliers during a rescue opera.tion.
Alldersoll, or Brandon,
Fla., wa~ born in Geotgia,
S)!ent his early childhood in ·
Westerville ill suburlilln
Columbus, then moved to
Alliance, about 50 miles
southeast of Cleveland. He
g~aduated from _ Alliance
Hagh Schoo.l in 1990. ·
Anderson studied mechanical engineering at Case
Western Reserve University
In Clevelnnd for two years
before leavin~ for Florida
State Universaty, where he
malored in math.
l:!efore he died, Anderson
il!Tanged for part of his life

~at House-Senate

•

about it helps other
get involved, that's

1

her two daughters were so
excited about seeing Bush
that they had t1l hard time
sleeping Thursday night.

..

1:• ------------------------------------------------------------------------

~~~ Lawmake~ disclose. personal All

Meigs County
Kinship
Navigator Program

:::finances, trips and gifts •
•

: WASHINGTON (AP) Lawmakers
m~
not
OBBIU.IN, Ohio (AP) r:ame back. He llld thlt lndk:llt:· : Ohio Sen. Mike DeWine lost required to report bow much Thulrnftlcc:onli'Oloenterlhiit ed the f1laht aew.was IIYina to
: ; thouSI.lftds of clollm in the their
spouses . earned, hill the lat COOIICt with United keeD t0111111unicllina wiih con: : stock market last ~ear. while although some did.
Airlines Ftlaht 93 befool It trollers.
·:· Rep, Bob Ney pwd his wife
Ney, for example, re~ crashed in l'ennsylvania on
"lt~thltthefllahtc:~ew
•. : for working on his campaigft, · that his wife, Elizabeth, Sept. 11 dedlcaled a monument of Ftl&amp;flt 93 COI'IIimeil to do
: KCOrdift&amp; to finllftCial disc:lo- earned $25,200 last ~ · Pridly to the ftlaht's pasaenaers. couraaeouslY
could."
:.,awe reports released Friday. workina as a consultlnt Cor crew end c:ontrollecs.
Keltellllld: "We
~ .ev.
:: . The inventory of elected his ~paign, She coordlnat·
On the Sllllll I!Uiite mon11- era! transmlsalona ftom the .
·~ : officials' personal finances, ed his events ud fund·ralS· ment at the Mtal Aviation ax:kplt to INike us awn all
: : includiq gifts they accepted ers, and wrote thank you Admlnlsntion's CleveiWid Air was not well. We lllo ralwcl
:~: ~d vacations ~id for by notes, Ney spokesman Jim Route Tnfftc Conli'Ol Center rn spondlc-lrii\IIIQIIder transrnls.: · mterest groups, IS an annual Forbes said.
the WOlds: "In honor of lhe men slons with ahftude Information
• requirement desl-ned to pre"She's still worklq for and women of the Cleveland lhatuslstecluslnthetnddnaof
: vent conflicts of antcrcst.
him, but it's not as much Center end those abolrd Fllaht that llrplane. We can only sur.: : DeWine's report showed work this year since he'uun· 93' for their heroic ICdons on ml.e IIOwlnvely they ICCOII\. :· ; the Republican was subject to nlng unopposed," Forbes Seplelnber 11, 2001.'"lbe mon· plllhed that."
· AI
· : : some of the same economic said.. wnent is lllii'OUIIded by a Raa·
Kettell refelred to lhe fllaht
rwtt•
:.: forces that hit thousands of
Lawmakers m~n't required pole.flowersandaranltebencli· pathas''raged."whlchhuild
: · other Ohioans.
to report how much their es.
was evldelice of a struaale on 1the execution to a aate end.
BCI aaenta and sherlff'a
: • The state's senior senator homes m~ worth, but they
The center, about 25 miles the plane.
department
detectives were
• lost $20,000 to $65,000 by must list debts. Rep. Deborah west of Cleveland, auldes
The tenorist attac1ca were dlf.
on
the
scene
at the two real·
: selliq stock in Enron Corp.. Pryce reported mortaaaes on planes" at hlahlltltude as tltey fly flcult.for c:ontrollen who hlld "a
;: the collapsed energy aiant. five houses, and fellow over portions of seven Slate!: ftont row eeat to a nlllion's dencea In .Bwlqton until late
: : He lost another Sf8,703 to Republican Rep. Pat Tiberi Now Yorlt, Pennsylvania, nlahtmate," uld John Carr,
: : $58,500 from his interests in reported mortgages he and his Maryland, West Vlrainia. Chlo. Jrillclent of lhe National Air ~~I :&amp;~~~.:;:,~ce,
"I would just like to thank
': : Global Crossing Ltd., a wife have on lhree homes.
Indiana end Mlchiain. ~
Traffic Conlrollen' A111oclat1on.
:: telecommunications company
Rep. lames A. Traficant Jr.,
The FAA requested: that
At lhe ~. con11'011en eveeyone for all of their hard
:-that went bankrupt.
convicted In April of bribery reporters not aslC controllers. tram lhe Clevelanil Center and wort." uld Sheriff' David L,
: Two of Ohio's public and racketeerlng · charges, questions about their
elsewhete donated about Martin. "Detectives Chad
. :: employee pension funds suf· filedabandwrittcnreportibat enc:es on Sept. 11. because an $14,000tothe1bddM.Beamer Wallace and Mike Smith,
·: fered millions of dollars in listed no debts,
lnvestlgadon Is ongoina. ,
Poundatlon. Beamer was a Pill• BCJ
S~clal
Aaent
losses from the collapse of
His spokesman, Charles
But Rick Kettell, ll'llll\ll&amp;lll' of senaer on Fllabt 93 and Is Supervleor John Perry,~. and
: both companles.
Straub, slid that was an over· the Cleveland Center, IXieRy belie~ to be ~ the PQS• BCI Special Aaenta l'l.atell
·: De Wine bas not been active sight and the Democrat would talked about the
and salil .aenaen who led an usauU on Reborl and Robert Beedy
· :: on pension reform legislation fife iln amended fonn, Straub that althouah Ft•aht 93's terrOrist hijackers before the worked .hundredl of lnvea·
: • and doesn't sit on a commit· said the congressman's only transponder, a beacoii 10 trllbk plane, wlilch was headed tlaatlve man·houn on thla
: ' tee that held hearings on the debt is a mortgage between the aircnd't1 ,was shut off after tOward Washlnaton.~. D.C., v~~ com~lex em.
·
: companies' demise.
· . $15,000 and SSO,OOO,
tho hijacKinJ ~ver Ohio . crashed Into a tteld In · · 'I also want to thank the
:: Members of Congress
Traficant has no legal debts occ:w:red. the sljnalsporadlcally PennsylvaniL
Families of the victims for
·:receive a $145,000 salary.
and no longer owes money to
their patience and aupport, 111
: Some Ohio lawmakers - the Internal Revenue Service,
well as the cltlzena wl\o will·
•·such as De Wine, House Straub said. Traficant hod lost
inated along with the cervical lnaly aave Information that
•: Financial Services Chairman a U.S, Tax Court case over
ao areatly asalated In the
cancer examinations.
•·
;;Mike
Oxley,
House $180,000 In contested taxes,
lnveatlaatlon, and · Oallla
'IOrres emphasized that County
: Education and the Workforce fines and penalties. His con·
Brent A.
proarwn• that m~ paid for SaundenProaec:utor
fRMIPipA1
: Cbainnan John Boehner and gressional paychecks were
and hla tlaff for
with atate and federal funds, leaal advice
:: Rep, Rob Ponman, all gamlshed to meet the debt.
_and aulatance,"
:Republicans - reported lona
The reports also showed the some may be available only like WJC (women, Infanta M"artln added,
: llst1 of stocks and bonds, delegation 'a ~uent travel· by appointment. Several and children), will not be
He said the lnvestl&amp;ll.tlon Is
: ·mutual funds, capital gains ers for 2001: Re_ps. Stephanie medical handicap clinics, like chanaed In any way by the continulna and all possible
.: and dividends.
Tubbs Jones, Tom Sawyer, one for the hearing Impaired, reduction In funds.
aspects of this c11se will be
She alao aaid that if the ' thorou'h
:' Others such as Tony Hall, ·Dennis Kucinich, have already been canceled.
lnveatlaated.
: Republicans Ney · and Rep, all Democrata, and GOP Rep.
Visits from the Ohio State levy does not pua when It Addltlona charaes will be
: . Steve LI'IOurette, and Johri Boehner. Toaether, those University mobile unit to do aoe• back on the ballot Nov. filed on any penons not yet
·; Democratic
Rep,
Ted lawmakers took 35 trips to mammoarams for Metas 5, it will be necessary to Identified whO are found to
:Strickland - reported single su~b places as Bermuda, . County women at no cost o~ 11 make additional reductiona In be culpable In thla matter, he
:.:checking or savings accounts, Turkey and Parla.
minimal chanae will be ellm· . staff and servlcee .
said.

whll.=

Arrest

flam...__

"peri·

I • •

dar

Health

lr

•••

PUttlng the pieces Together''

11

Sheriff's Office Chaplain
Robert Fulton led the vic·
tlms• fwil¥ In _prayer af\ef
th•y aathired rn Martin'•
omce and were told of the

Are you responsible for another
persons child up to the age of eighteen
and providing care for the child in your
home?
If you answered yes, you are defined
as a Kinship Caregiver and may benefit
from the Meigs County Kinship
Program. This Is an Information and
re~erral service available to caregivers
about services available to you. These
services may Include respite care, legal
assistance, medical care, and an
evaluation of your unmet needs. All
calls and contacts will be confidential.

.,
•

'•

'·,,

~111 •
. "" ton sllid that thlt cue
held specjal meanlna to him,
becauae 0\laman anil Vou~
\':~':.~ hla churofi
h:lf.nbmiO
much to the
1
•
o ce and the BCI
and all of the lndlvlduale WhO
have penlated to aee that
whoever did thla to our ohll,~
d'f3
brolla~t to jllltlce, .
f:ancy ~~~~~an • mother, .
Youna'a mother, .Karen
White and hla atepfather
Harold felt relief 111 the newa
"It broufht a lot ot ace ,;
she aald. Jt'a a lot tgecon\.
prehend."
Judd explained that
Gll:&amp;man'a chfldren aaes 19
17, 16 and 15, have'haaaome
rouah times adluatlna, The
yqunaelt three 'have atayed
with Judd 1lnee tho Incident
occlll'l'ld. Youna alao had a
16-ye~~t&gt;old da\llhter
"There have bien courit1e11
prayen, and l think that
Ood'a juatlce Ill aruter Jill•
tlce than anythlna we could
do," Judd added,
"It'• bee~ 1 lona haul, but
It's not over yet," White sllid
"I atlll want to know why " '
· Initial appemncea tor' the.
two aua~tl In Oalllpolla
Municipal Court ,had not yet
been aet.

:=,.

w.g

For More Information
Please Contact Leslie Rayburn,
Kinship Coordinator
at (74p) 992·2681, ext 223
Tna Malgl County l&lt;lnlhlp navigator program 11 funded through the
Mtlga County Otpai'lm•nt 01 Job and ~family Strvleu.

~.

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•

•

J

'

•

..

I

.. ,,

. . ..

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�Plll AI• ••aup .... ·6tntlntl

Pomeroy • Mkldl1pot1• a.lllpolla, Ohio • Point Pin urt, WY

GALLIA CALENDAR
Sunday, June 16
ADDISON
Sunday School at
Addison
Freewill
Baptist Church, 10
a.m.; preaching service, 6 p.m., with Rick
Barcus preaching.

Thursday, June 20
GALLIPOLIS - Red
Cross Bloodmobile,
11:30 a.m. until 6
p.m .,
St.
Peter's
Episcopal Church.

ADDISON
Business meeting and
Bible study at Adtlison
GALLIPOLIS
Baptist
Joseph Woodall will Freewill
preach at Bell Chapel, Church, 7:30 p.m.
.
·6 p.m.
Saturday, June 22
PATRIOT
CROWN CITY Matthew Henry will Homecoming at St .
Lutheran
preach at
Dickey Martin's
German
Chapel Church, 7 Church,
Ridge. Potluck lunch
p.m.
at noon.
Monday, June 17
Sunday, June 23
GALLIPOLIS
ADDISON
Gallia County Animal
Welfare League meet- Sunday School at
ing, 7:30 p.m. at St Addison
Freewill
Peter's ·
Episcopal Baptist Church, 10
a.m.; preaching serChurch.
vice at 6 p.m., with
Rick Barcus preachGALLIPOLIS
Missionary Program ing, 6 p.m.
to be held at Paint
Monday, June 24
Creek Baptist Church
at 2:30 p.m. Speaker
CHESHIRE
will
be . Sister Organizational meetClovadys Scott. There ing of a neighborhood
;.Jwill be a meal after environmental group
· morning service.
to draw attention to
the pollution problem
VINTON
in the Cheshire area,
Legion 7 p.m., Kyger Creek
Americaf!
Auxiliary Unit 161, Middle School.
noon . Officer installation and 20-year tea · . Wednesday, June 26
with potluck lunch.
PORTER Bible
study at Clark Chapel
Church, 7 p.m., with
Tuesday, June 18
GALLIPOLIS
Brother Steve Rollins
Breastfeeding class at teaching.
Holzer
Medical
Center, ·
6:30-8:30
Thursday, June 27
p.m.,
French 500
POINT PLEASANT,
Room . For information W.Va. - Bible study
or to pre-register, call at Gospel Tabernacle,
_446~5030.
7 p.m., with Brother
Kenneth Swain teachPORTER Food ing.
giveaway · at Trinity
United
Methodist
Saturday,~June 29.,
RIO GRANDE Church, 9512 Ohio
160, starting at 1 p.m. Prince .
Madog
Please bring boxes.
lectures,, .1 :30. p.rn,.,
Greer
Museum
VINTON
Archives, University
Huntington
Grange of Rio Grande. For
731 regular meeting, information, call 7407:30 p.m. Potluck 245-7186.
refreshments to follow.
Revivals
NEW HAVEN, W.Va.
GALLIPOLIS
Singing In the
"What Are Little Girls Pines, June 21·22 at
Made Of? Sugar and Union Campground In
Spice and · Everything New Haven. Singing
Nice" luncheon spon- starts Friday al 6
sored by Christian p.m., and 1 p.m. on
Women's Club of Saturday. A special
Gallipolis,
noon, program commemoHoliday Inn. For Infor- rating the 20th annual
mation, call 446·1897 sing Is 7 p.m. Friday,
_pr 388-9098.
featuring five groups
who were a part of the

Sunday. Junll11. 2CICI2

•

MEIGS CALENDAR

first sing in 1983.

Community Calendar is
published as a free service
to non-profit groups wish·
WELLSTON
Pentecostal
Holy ing to announce meetings
special events. The
Ghost tent meeting arid
calendar is not designed to
revival started June promote sales 01' fur\d-rais·
12, Monday through ers of any type. Items are

Saturday at 7 p.m.,
Sunday at 2 p.m .,
Jackson
County
Fairgrounds,
with
Evangelist
James
Hobbs.

printed only as space permits and cannot be guar·
anleed to be printed a specific number of days.

SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Gospel group, "Majesty of
Penn View." will perform at
lhe Middleport Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church on
Sunday al10 a.m.

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Revival at
Gospel
Tabernacle
Church, beside the
Mason
County
MONDAY
library, June 17-23,
MIDDLEPORT
Monday
through
Wesleyan Bible
Saturday at 7 p .m., Middleport
Holiness Church Vacation
Sunday at 6 p.m., with
Evangelist Keith Eblin
and special singing.
Bible
Vacation
Schools
KANAUGA
Bible
school
at
Silver
Memorial
Freewill
Baptist Church, June
10-15, 6 - 8:30 p.m.
nightly. Theme will be
~Get
online
with
Jesus."

County
Health
Department, childhood
immunization
Clinic,
Tuasday9 to 11 am. and 1
to 3 p.m. t.temorial Drive,
Pomeroy. Take child's shot
records. Children to be
accompanied
by
parantllegal
guardian.
LETART
Letart
Township
trustees. Donations appreciated.
Monday, 5 p.m. at the
WEDNESDAY
office building. ·
REEDSVILLE
TUESDAY
Eastern Local School
MIDDLEPORT
Board
meeting
Nighllights, a Christian Wednesday, al6:30p.m. in
support group,
held the administrator's offtee.
Tuesdays, 6 p.m. at the
First Baptist Church of
FRIDAY
Middleport,
6th
and
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Palmer Streets. Public
Church
of Christ free cominvited.
munity cookout Friday, at
Meigs 5:30 to 7 p.m.
POMEROY
Bible School, Monday
through Friday, 6-8 p.m., at
the ctiurch on Pearl Street
For children, ages four to
Games. stories and
sonqs.
Refreshments.
CloSmg program 10 a.m.
on June 23 at the church.

: Ten Commandments
must be removed from schools .

NOTICE

m.

Farmers Bank
Home Equity
•

Loans for
low as

•

I

0
If you own your own home,
you can borrow against the
equity you have already investedl

APR.*

'
16~~ 19~ 20~
••• N

I•MN

IMMN

W..thlrAIIIXht1or Lltlll ,.Inti

For -

Prlllw'

\1ldar cl-bllld or ~paint.

K 1211111111

17• OM.

(F:tJ) Farmers Bank
for Cife,;
'·

SuNDAY's

·HIGilllGHrS

•

•

Meigs Legion wins first of season
lh llulal CQIII:

Gordon~ ··

. for •MiliCI
mile siiDIIe
BROOKLYN, Mich. (AP)
- Jeff Gordon is in a slump
but doesn't need to win this
race to reach anodler mile- .
Slone.
A top: t 0 fmish at Michigan
international Speedway on
Sunday will be the 2fXkh ofbis
career.
"It's bard to imagine that
we've got that many top lOs,"
Said Gordon, who has 199 in
307 Wmston Cup SlaltS.
"It just goes to show how
consistent this team has been
over the years. I think it's a
pretty good testament to how
hard we' &gt;1e work.ed."
Lately, things have not been
going so well for the four-time
Winston Cup champion. He is
winless in 22 events, the worst
slump since the fllSt of his 58
career victories in 1994.
Gordon likes Michigan's 2·
mile d-shaped oval and has
been fairly successful on the
track. Last June, be $ave car
owner Rick Hendrick his
lOOth win.
This season, Gordon has
nine top IOs, including his current streak of four. 1be consis·
tency has him third in the
series standings, 165 points
h!!hind lea(ler Sterling Marlin.
· "I'm happy with our current ·
streak of fimshes, but we need
to tum those into wins and top
fives if we want to stu~ in the
thick of the championship
chase," Gordon snid.

&amp;

.IICOOPEJ\eM'IDAILYf11181H.COM

ROCK SPRINGS - The Logan
Post 78 Americu Leaton team
arri'led a few minutes late at. Meigs
High Sc:bool and with Ollly nine players dressed to play.
It was probably not even WOftb the
trip as Meigs Post 128 defeated
Loau. 9-S. in a game that was c:alled
in ihe bottom of the eighth because of
dw-kness.
For Meigs, it was their first win of
the seiiSOn. .
Michael Wanen bad a pair of hits

Reds
Chen om
Montrea·l
CINCINNATI (APl- Ltft~

Bnate Olen was lmded Fnd1ay from
the Mmtrew &amp;pus ru the CiritiliNtti
Reds, ~113 from tellO\ with Ill
uncerlt\in future IU one looking to !add

I
Slllning pitdling fur IIEl\111.
The Reds gave up ht-hander Jim

Brower, who went 2 with a JJ!9
ERA in 22 relief~ this seasoo..The Reds tried Brower us 9 slllltl:r
ltlSI se&amp;OO, but he struaaled and was
· moved bnck ru the long-iellof role.
Chen, 2S, will loin ba.'ldlall's JOOSt
surprising terun. The Reds hnve led the
NL Omtiul fur 49 t:oose~:utive dnys
und think they CW\ Silly In oontentioo
- if they cnn get more stllrting pitchi~.

. Huntcanes

. win respect In
Cup run

DETROIT (AP) •· Paul
Maurice had no speech
rehearsed for his team.
.
The Carolina coach took a
deep breath and swallowed
hard before opening the dress·
ing room door after the 3·1 loss
to the Detroit Red Wings on
Thursday night in Game 5 of
the Stanley Cup finals. ·
"l certainly didn't do anything to try to make them feel
better," sa1d Maurice, at 35 the
NHL's youngest coach. "I
think they should absolutely
f&lt;:!ll as bad as they can when
you exP&lt;lCt to wm and you
believe.
"We believed that we would
win, that we would get to this
point, and that makes it an
awful painful night."
The Hurricanes, a big underdog, won the hearts of many
hockey fans. But their season
ended with yet another close
game against a team that has
won the tide three of the last
sixyears.
·
: Many arqund .the NHL
mocked the Hurricanes and
their defensive style entering
the Cup finals, but Carolina
threw a scare into this collection of all-stars.
The Red Wings lost Game I
in overtime on home ice, had
to take Gwne 3 into triple overtime before pulling it out and
scored just 14 goats in the
series.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -,..
The Los Angeles Lakers celebrated their third consecutive
NBA tide Friday with a tri·
umphant parade and promises
to thousands of fam that the
team will top its "threepeat"
with a fourth championship
nc!xt year.
- ~'Put the fours up!'' playoff
. MVP Shaquille O'Neal d~­
ed a vast throng outside
Staples Center, holding up that
many ~lftJ: on each hand. •
The
bllttled through a
tough seven-game series with
the Sacramento Kings to win
the Western Conference tide,
then swept the: New Jersey
Nets in the NBA Finals.. In
both series there was clutch
play from O'Neal, Kobe
8~ and 3-point wizard
R
Horry.
.
·

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•

Drain going to Mtuidto. Pag~ B2
NASCAR. Pag~ BJ-4
Outdoors. Page B5. B7

During ~r•de,
Liken pledge
to win a fourth

f'ltll110111 ~ lllpCoet lldhelion. K3110 ..a" 11.M Gal.
Wlati~«AIIIlltMor 01 Ptllll« .

~ We're Your Blllk

J;ll I WI• .z· ••

teens.

PEEBLES (AP) -A fed- 1997 at four public schools said.
era! magistrate says a dis· in the southern Ohio coun·
"Their historical impor· ·
play
of
the
Ten . ty! a~out .60 miles east of tance
is
undeniable.
Commandments on ~tone C1ncmnau.
whether one sees them as a
tablets must be remqved
The ACLU filed its law- religious statement or not,"
from four public scholl]s in suit in 1999 on behalf of
rural
Adams County. . · Peebles resident Berry he said.
CROWN CITY .
In the other · case, a
His 'ruling came the Si¢1e Baker, who objected to the
Vacation Bible School day
Cleveland federal judge
this week that anolher display.
at Victory Baptist federal judge ruled that.the
the
Ten ·
After the ACLU sued; the ruled
Church, June 17-22, Ten Commandments politer school system supplement· Commandments cannot be
· 6:30-8:45 p.m. Theme must be removed from a ed the Teri Commandments .displayed in the Richland
is "From the Manger common pleas courtroom display with other tablets County Common Pleas
in Riahland County.
·
exhibiting the Magna Carta
to the Cross."
Lawyers
for
the and the Bill of Rights, Court in Mansfield. U.S.
American Civil Liberties arguing that they were then District Judge Kathleen
Card shower
Union, which filed lawsuits part of a legally acceptable, O'Malley ruled Judge
Elsie Clagg will eel· to
both disphi,Ys. secular exhibit. The ACLU James DeWeese's poster
ebrate her 80th birth· hadchallenge
argued that displaymg said having the Ten display of the command·
day on June 26. Cards the Ten Commandments in Commandments in the dis· ments in hiscourtroom vio·
may be sent to her at public forums violates the play . was still unconstitu· lates the Constitution.
920 Shoestrin9 RidQe Constitution by appearing tiona!.
DeWeese said that rather
Road, Gallipolis, Oh1o to be government endorse·. Manion said the Ten than take the poster down,
ment of religion. ·
Commandments can also
45631.
"The federal courts are be viewed as a secular text. he will ask 0' Malley not to
Calvin and lenice saying that this crosses the They have been used for enforce her ruling until the
Jeffers Waugh will be line," Raymond VasvarV centuries as a model for . federal appeals court hears
celebrating their SOth legal director for the ACLU . developing secular laws, he his argume\us.
in Ohio, said on Friday.
wed~jng . ~nnlversary .
Frank JyJanipp, a, lawyer·
on June 20. Cards can who is with the American
be sent to them at 156 Center. for Law and Justice
. Mara bel ~oad; Crown and is defending bo~h disCity; Ohio 45623. ' ·• plays, said Friday h'e' will
""
urge the Adams County,
Edwards .Moving
and Rigging, Inc., has
C O m m U n i t y sc~ool board to app~al. He
been contracted to move generators, turCalendar is published sa1d he h~s already ftled an
bines and transformers into the Rolling Hills
.
appeal m the Rtchland
as a free serv1ce to . county case.
,
Power Plant' in Wilkesville. Roads will be
nonprofit groups wishBoth cases would lhen g9
shut down along the following route for the
lng to announce meet- to the 6th u.s. Circu,it'
duration of each move. We will be starting
lngs
and
special C?u~t ~f Appeals m
at the Meigs Rail Sid~ng in Rutland proevents. The calendar Cmcmnat1. .
. ·.t
ceeding to Hwy 124 going west. At
Is not designed to proU.S . . M~gtstrate T!mot)ay
Wilkesville . we will be taking Hwy 160
mote sales or fund· Hogan sa1d the 3-foot·t~ll
must
tie
stone
tablets
north to the Power Plant. We would apprera Isers o f any type. removed unless his ruling
ciate your patience and cooperation. Move
Items are printed as is appealed. The tablets
space permits and have been ori display since
date: June 17, 2002.
cannot be guaranteed
to appear. Fax items
to
740-446-3008;
email them to shapka C mydallytrlbune.co

I

Inside:

'I

EMPI'Y SEATS - Sparse crowds attend a game at Jacobs Field to see the Cleveland Indians battle the Philadelphia
Phlllles Tuesday In Cleveland. Th&amp; Indians have been one of baseball's most unpredloatable teams this ~ar.
Following an 11·1 start, Cleveland want 9-25 and the Indians ware on the verge of a total collapse. Crowds at the
Jake have dwindled as Indians fans swallow the reality that their team Is just not that good. (AP)
CLEVELAND (AP) - Seagulls Bob Wickman.
have invaded Jacobs Field, swoop- Despite winning the Central in
iPg down and landing in the outfield 2001, the Indians were picked by
grass during games to pester players" many to tinish third in the division,
while scavenging for food.
then started the season 11·1, sweep·
The birds are new visitors to the 9· in$ four games from the first-place
year-old Jake, which isn't showing Mmnesota TWins and going 7·0 in
many signs of age and almost looks the division.
as good as the dar, it opened.
But a 9·25 slide follow~d, putting
The same can t be said for the Cleveland manager Charhe Manuel
team that calls 2401 Ontario Street in the firing cross-hairs and the club
its home.
on the verge of total collapse.
The Cleveland Indians are in scri- Rumors have swirled that fenerui
ous decline. Could northeastern manager Mark Shapiro wil trade
·Ohio's famous buzzards be circljpg either ace Bartolo Colon or first
soon?
·
baseman Jim Thome - eligible for
One of baseball's mightiest fran- free agency ~fter this. season chises for most of the past decade, before the tradmg deadhne.
Cleveland is undergoing a strange In the season's first 60.games, the
and disappointing ·2002. An eight- Indians have lost by sc~res o~ 21-2
· year run which included six AL and 23-2; been swept m senes ut
Central titles two World Series trips Kansas City and Detroit; bounced
and 4S~ co~secutive sellouts, has back by sweeping the Chicago White
given way to a season of struggle.
Sox and given away · more games
''This is new territory " said pitch- than Thome cares to .remember.
er Paul Shue)', who has been with the , "It'~ ~isappointing," h~ said.
club since 1994. "Most of us have That a ~md of been our lhmg. We
never been through anything like win three or four games, and th~n we
this."
have a stretch .~nere we're trymg to
The Indians have been one of base- get I~ together. .,
,
ball's most unpredictable teams this Injuries haven t. helped. Sh.uey, HOT IEAT- Cleveland Indians mene&amp;er
year. When they get good starting Travis Fryman, Elhs Burks, Milton Chartle Manuel watches the pne aca1nst
pitching, which has been more often B~adley ~nd Matt L~wton have all the Baltimore Orioles Thursday. Rumore
than not from its young staff, the missed lime, and Pitcher Charl~s have been rampant that manager Chartle
Indians don't hit And when they Nagy. (elbow) may have thrown his Manuel will be nred and that the team's
~
. · b
h . h last pitch for Cleveland.
front ofllce · 111 load. ,.,.,..,., "·~Aio
~av~ an of.ensJve out urst,t e pltc •
Tlie Indians also haven 't been
w un
,... .. ~r ...,w
m* Implodes.
Colon and first baseman Jim Thome, a
'One thing or another," said closer
PIMH ... Ind...., 12
free acant next season, In tradea. (AP)

We're thinking of Chen as a
stnrter." mtmot.&gt;er Bob Boone !lllid.
"Most of the SUI.USS he's hnd Jms been
"'~ n suuter. We've been looking for a
111\h sturter."
Chen began the season with the
New York Mets and made one te\lef
nppeunmce before he was tm&lt;Jed to the ·
Expos nn April 5 ns pnn of u seven·
pluyer deol.
·
The Expt.lS were in Cindnnuti for 11
series when they 1101 Chen, who wus
projected us one of their sturters. It
illdn 't work out thnt wny - he mtlde
five stw und I0 relief uppeanux:es
for Montreul. going 2-3 with u 6.99
ERA.
.
"I'm sorry things didn't work out for
me here in Montn!al," Chen !lllld. "I
dldn 't pitch the wily I wus cupable of
pitching."
·
The tight-budget Reds hnve been
looking to upgnlde their rotlltion since
spring trnining, when nonrt~~ter right·
hunders Jimmy Hnynes nnd Joey
Hamil1on pitched their wuy on1o the

s1all~

"We have n lot of young guys In the
minors who uren't reudy 10 pitch yet,"
Reds ·munuger Jim Bowden suld.
"This wus 1111 opponunity to get u good
. le~·htmderwho s young tmd hus a lot
of upside.'' ·
Hamilton hns been hit htll'd since he
retumed from u tom hamstring, tmd
37-yeur-old Jose Rijo went on the dls·
ublcd list u week ugo with a tired
shoulder. The sltuntlon Wl\S so desper·
ute thut the Reds let reliever Carlos
Almunzar muke his first ml\lor leugue .
stnrt Monday In Texus.
Almanzar tried to catch u ~under
with his bun: hand in the first mnin~ of
the game and broke his finger, putung
him on the disobled list.
Financially, the trw:le won't huve an
Impact. Chen muke~ $300,000 this
seuson, while Brower gets 52~0,000.
Brower, 29,/umiJC(I back and fonl1
between Cleve ana and their farm system In 1999-2000. The Reds got him
as part of a three·player deal that sent
catcher Eddie Thubensee to Indians in
November 2000.
Brower went 7·10 with u 3.97 ERA
In 10 struts and 36 relief appearances
for the Reds lwtt season.
"It was a blessing to come over
here;· Brower sllid. ''When I was with
Cleveland, I was up and down. Here,
~y guve me a cureer. Without the
· Reds, I might be buck (home) in
MIMesota."

Patriots release former Buckeye Katzenmoyer
FOXBORO, 'Mass. (AP) - The
New Epgland . Patriots released
injury-plagued linebacker Andy
Katzenmoyer on Frida)'.
The Patriots drafted Katzenmoyer
out of Ohio State with tbeir second
pick in the first round of the 1999
draft: He started 11 of 16.1ames as a
rookie and recorded I07 taCkles,
including 3 1/2 sacks, but he dam·

aged a disc in his neck against
Buffalo.
He had surgery in November 2000
and missed the second half of the
season.
· During training camp last July 26,
he left camp for two days without
permission, citing concern about a
feeling in his neck he experienced
the first time he was hit.
f

He later said he had "panicked"
and that he never contemplated
retirement. He was placed on injured
reserve on Aug. 28 and did not play
during the season that ended with
the Patriots winning the Super Bowl.
Katzenmoyer played iP 24 games,
starting 14, for New England and
had 129 tackles.
At Ohio State, he won the Butkus

Award aN the nation's best linebacker after his sophomore year.
Katzenmoycr 18 still Injured,
according to his agent.
"Andy Katzenmoyer is ph~sically
unable to play pro football right
now, and as far as the future Is concerned, we'll just have to wait and
see what happens," Nell Cornrich
said.
· .
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Rose takes-- batting practice, lashes out at Selig Sayre leads Riverside Golf
Senior Men's League
~$1NfREPOIIts

MASON -

the 10p 20
R~ Say~ the seasoo:

point~

"10 Cllidl'tl'latl ·and fans of
Cil'lelnnali, they can't think of tMse
days without tllinki11g of Pete RO$C."
Portune said. "We o\loid it to Pete. who
made those memories, ro ai~ him the
oppo~tUnl~ to be tlliinkea one 111o1e
time."
Rost bristled when asked 'Whethtr he
think&amp; Sella, who$e offlc:'e Is 111
MIIWlUkee, will miild,
"You haYl! to understand one thing
itbout ~ lind baseball: It tloesn 't mat·
let what I do, b:lS\!billl is ~lng to look
upon it ill the wrung way, Rose said,
"The Dtoblem with me and baseball is
this: In 1989, I died - unless they
~ me. Theil they resurm:t me."
with t pair of doubles, while
Stanley went 2·1br-S,
At Athens, Warren Wl!nt 4-for-5 witll a
triple and double, while Rnl\\$butg h~td a
palt of hits and Oibbs connecleil on a
two·run homer. .
.

ror-s

... ,.,. •.

Melp,
With it a two run aame aolna into the
. bottom or the Rfth, Melts tushioned its
lead when Wanen sinalettand silaled on
a Olbbs siliJle. Oibbs tt:ared later In the
inniq,

Indians
from . . . .

helped by the offseason
acquisition of second base·
mlii\ Ricky Outlerre:&amp; or
reliever Mark Wohlers.
Outlemz, atijustlna to a new
leaaue and new poaitlon, hu
been 11 m;ijor bust so far.
Outlem:&amp; who signed a
three-year, SII million con·
tract to replace Roberto
Alomar, entered the weekend
with almost as many errors
(8) as RBls (9) and had
arounded Into 11 leque-letld·
fna II double plays,
Even 'when the former
Cubs shoriatop has 11 big
moment, something ruins it.
On Thursday, Outierrez
sprinted home from first base
on rookie Chris Maaruder's
triple in the lOth lnnlna to
beat the Baltimore Orioles,
only to strain his aroln as he
crossed home plate.
"It's been lllce that all year,
·for the team and for me," he
aaid. "We get somethtna
Tltlolng 11nd then asetback. But
' ft's atlll not too bad. We're
still in the rnce."
Barely,
Heading into n 12·aame
road trip, the Indians were
five aameA behind the Twins .
and about to plunJe into the
touahett part of t~elr sched·
ule. Cleveland's final 12
aamet before the AII·Star
llreak are . aaainst Boaton,
Arlz;ona, the New York
Yankees and the White Sox. ·
"We had better win some
· 1•mes," Manuel eald.
Addina to the team's
. recent woe• have been some
· o~·the·fleld troublel.
La1t month, aecond-year
pitcher C.C. Sabathla wa1
robbed at aunpoint of
$44,000 in caah and jewelry
In a hotel. Pitcher Chuck
Plnley, who haa pitched well
and could be traded to a con·
tender, haa had a meuy,
Hollywood brallcup with hla .
wife, aotreu Tawny Kltaen.
Crowd• at the Jllce have
I

'I

The Indhllis' offenst has rormer OM John Hart In

=

been in a funk since opening November, wnrned in $prinll
dily. Cleveland's .:142 batting training that the club could
avernae entering this week• be entering n two- or threeend's interle~ue series in r,ear perlcid he dubbed as
Colorltdo Is the AL's second 'challenge years.''
lowest, ahead or only 'ntmpn
Alohl! wlth the gulls,
Bay.
· they 'te nere.
And the club seems to
have its own mngic number:
4. When Cleveland scores
that many in a gn;ne, the
Indians are 26·5. Three or ·
fewer, they're 6-29.
Bet11use of injuries,
Mlinuel re~:entl.Y started an
outfield of Bruce Aven,
Chris Magruder and Jolhen
· Ca~rera, who nt the time had
a combined , 143 batting
nveraae. A.nd earlier tills
week, Manuel's lineup
Included bill . Selby, John
· McDonnld and Mnaruder.
Don't upect toffnd nny or
those names when you're
punching out your Ali·Sl~tr
ballot.
·
The lndl11ns just nren't,
well, the Indians anymore.
Cl11vetnnd hnd been brae·
Our highly trained technicians use state·of~the·art equipment to return
Ina for 11 rebuilding year. The
lnCIIItM never renli~ed it
the metal to lt1s original shape wlt_
hout harming the factory paint.
miaht be so extenslv11,
·
. Shtlplro, who took over for

TrY Tom Peden's
Palntless Dent

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caii1·800 .. B22·0417 or 572·2844
for Initial tvaluationa or fOIIOW•Up llilltl, WI Offtr
oftlca houn It Zt15 Jrd Avenue (mou from St.
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Our nellt clinic date I•
'rld1y, June 21, 2002.
call (e14) m-e111

Joint
Implant

Surgeon~.

.

Inc.

for 1n lppolntment. Adolph V. Lornb1rdl, Jr., MD, 'ACS

for

or New Haven bas taken
79.0
-'"al\t&amp;ge of hot 'A'eather t. Ra~ Say~e
78.0
and good aolfina to climb 2. Ktllh Woods
16.5
01\ lOP of 1M 2002 Ri~~ttside S. Daw Jacoby
72.0
Golf 'Senior Men's ~ue. ._ Bob AntteMn
71.5
'He h~U $c:ortd '?9.0 potnts
68.5
tor 11\e ~~~~ !lelSOI'I.
1. aauc~e Piolfitt 66.5
At seCond place is Keith a. Aondat 810wninQ
ss.s
62.o ·
Wo01b with 78.0 points · 9. Dawey Smith
61.5
while Dave Jacob~ takes 10. Hailey Ate.
60.0
third with ?6,S,
t1 - Cu.u Laudenil4lt
$8,5
Will\ 47 plqm on hand 12· Lew Gllllnd
56.0
and 12 points ~sible, tile l~
~m
ss.s
ttam that ta~ tint place 1s, Elnltf Clicll
ss.s
this week will\ .56 (·14) con- 16, Bil Howtld ·
54.0
51.0
sisls or Wts Peterson of 17, Ken Whited
S1
.0
Athens, Bob Andenon of Ia. bon WHaon
50.5
Ripley, Cltu Laudennilt of ~: =-~net 50,5
Pomeroy, and Earl Johnson
ofMason. ·
Play continues in tha Stnlar
At second with 60 HO) is Men's League evety TUesday at
tile team of Dewey Smith of AIYel$lde Golf Club.
Mi~dtepon, 'Itrry Sayre of
Po1nt Pleasant and Elmer
Click of Cottageville.
'There is a tie fur third
place with scores of 62 (-8).
Teams holdina down third
include the team of Don
Wilson of Tll~~i'!l Plll)n~. ·
Buck Hall of Rtj&gt;ley, 'Ilatvey
Bhtin of Point Pleasant, and
Sayre: the oth~r team eon•
$lsts of Jack Maloney of
Glllllpolis, Jim Cunnln&amp;hllm
of Huntington, Harley Rice
t&gt;f lol'ig Bottom 11\d Bill
Howard of New Haven,
'rhls week's closest to the
pin honors were sfiaaged by
Rondall 'Browning of Mason
on No. 7 and Rex Young of
New Havel\ on No, 14. ·
A totlll of 80 different
players have competed for
the season,
The following Is a list of

t ::;: ="

·dwindled, tao, as lndl11ns
fllna have had to &amp;wallow the
reality that their team isn't
quite m11dy to end a 52·yw
drou&amp;ht without a ·World
Series title.
Still, there's hope.
.
"l still lhlnk we can turn
thla IIMUnd," &amp;lild Shuey.
"We'll go somewhere, just
IS lona at we hit."
It Wli&amp;n't lona 1110 that
Cleveland Wtl8 one or the
AL's .most dominant teams,
winnina sht Central erowns
in seven years with atarstudded lineups featurlna
Albert
Belle;
Manny
Ramirez, Kenny Lofton,
Roberto Alomar and Juan
Oanulel,
"They were just menno·
ina," said Mets pitcher AI
Lelter, who faced tlle Indians
last week for the first time
~lnce 1997 when he pitched
aaulnst Cleveland ln the
World Series. "Belle,
(Carlos) B11eraa. all those
i1U)'8. They seared you do
de-th."
Nobody's shaklna when
the lnd.lnns come to the
plate.
Except
maybe
Cleveland fan8.

Hometown

ODNSO

~s !"Mil IItie -.. school ~ in SlSttt.~ IS a IWtilt p:wlh 1*t tlffle -.ub _..,.. ~ cbltftl
a«!~*- htr--~-~"-iRbas· schoohbinshntm-. a • .._ widu*'stlf~'Y·
P11
· .,,..
..a.t'M Sllld- .&lt;of'.........
iiL
L:ttbal-.tt.."ill
. dohou in»-.'0!1'-.i
-.t~~lre:abotlnAl\!l'twli~J..eeaatMaidt-.
QIIIlbtJ I t~----:M-.111 ilhrdl tW: iotbt &gt;&lt;* lillie ~ (to he.-pa~ illliheNl'klnaltto.n- ~·~ in~dl'- DAin :Said* &gt;t.iR
Cit m intmtlilb _. ..tattc: ihli PIMi is...-.~
W slilt •
htsiltlllllt ~ r:.t.c Blili m t,.,..t.rs &lt;at h b
Oldo!tbl&lt;lllw:l Drew sllipthan.itl moreiNrt ti~btdose
..,.._
h$
I W ~ W rioit • \~ ~ Owd in ~ Htk:s. illftCMW •
Uwi\~ 't.i\ilc JQ~*thef-saphta;«W)'al\lhe
Kftlaill
\'lilt'&lt;~ • d!Mtt: \'\qw • •• ~
lllliiltd
21
~
the ·Mid- S1lut&amp;. fie ~ ""11 attcr m i•m•~lifJ ......... 1s ~open liM
fll ac!b .r ShM\1111 Dhill &lt;of' Nil pq ~ .IG ~ dlool."' 0.. sa.l "W OlWo \~~hi -..11 b:MMI tw ~)'elf' a F\w. 11tea.w11 allow b positioos fulda a-v. But
Pknw,•~--todlllb
f*~ w.tiO&amp;l l\lMhna.•H~WI ~to be a liilhSdml
.
Dnln 'said she is~ ~1'i she
• M'4 Marltlilla ~l lids 'DXa 'ad ill sdtool._. I lrla\oe ~be~ \~ &gt;Ad-«Mii&lt;bb ·~ iio.twt.
AMe from W.\a. T«f\, Drain abo 'A'Rs ~ tift on m iftlien\Ship Cit
._. tit M. llllil · ~ :siM ,..kat: r. ~-"'
mating Ilia big Slql.
tooL.~ a \\lltcl\\'8 Jes1llit ~to \lll rig in the middle of the ocean .nd
•lltll•&gt;'\,. . M ~ stilhlil . Mil ~ ~ 111il be, *S she ~ :sht haS 21 ~ ORin td1tt ot *me dtools ha\~ tile ruU may dioo:ie m ~ imm._. tlb ~hit w 1 •Aft• afa&amp;llli pbtls ~I** a qa: ill ~ :said she's :still~ a fi:w ~w;s ~ ar piU!AIIt in ~ teo:h~Klklgy like ship (llltt the~ Irises. ·
t.row . a ,. !Mid 11:~ • ~~ -.;l)h l"ll'O ~ M(lhoto•IOil! ....,..._
Ma'~ If $he &lt;hoot~ 10 to one of .1 am. MnOOS (about c:olk!ge)
•:fo..~&amp;:. lO Marl' 7 Q!a't IN,.\YI$ \:did llli b IOOd ....e ittl ''(Maaicftl) is unalhchool so I'm lhe ot11a- 1idloots., she'd c\'l!ltiU:IIty bec:atR I've neva- had to be .... .m,y
~........._.._ ... _ ...._....,..., ......__ blril~C:~SIIIIilll!illh.
png 10'3.:..mate_~~ m,y ha~IOfinishsa:hetd ·geea•IOitltt own," she said. "My ~lave
•-""""'..... - . .---"'"~-~· l111* ~ 01&amp;11 1\\S' 01&amp;1' . fillll ;)"eet,
·
said"' h« ~ )ur :dlool, she ·
~ t.:.:n ~fur me. and I won't
.&amp; w• b liht 'ffi'l r4 • ~ittlii dll «&lt;hll*l)l
~ ciWd If
..,.d \he S«Ui . - ' ;~m ~ · llnin, v.tlo) 'A-iD ti~ fur M•letta bt ablt 10 just )ldl aaoss the hall.
1bt' lkdt ftW;ft f1r t 'rt ~~tel lwi ~ 'OltW, mwa1ttr roon~ n1te:s.,.. Dian ~ I'll gtt a lot &lt;I pb~,~ lime .-ooM A.~ l6 lind -..\lit'hee illiiCb That~ the SC* lest pt1111t of it all."
• - .....,_ wt

~.c:

Ohio Point Pt..aant. WV

PGI;•oy•MIJdi.Oft•

CHEVROI,ET

but not . s m . nJ

•

~:
•·

~•

740-446-3672

·

.

•·• ·
BY THE ASSOCIATm PRESS
,...--------~------~-------,
.. • Thlly ~wan steps forward, wa~
-· ro the aowd and gets his usuall'ftl·
•. ·ina.
" •' "'Booooooooooooool"
·:·.· It's jult NASCAR fus ftlltl•u• at
bne of their fa\'Orite viUail\s.
·-.
• • B111 1
• ately, Stewart has been beariq
· some cheers, too, &amp;ivi"£ him the Feel·
• ina that lhinas may bt •naina.
.{
=~~:r:t~:.::!.~ ro
, • A·"' ...at's fine wa'o~. S-w·.., ,..._ ___
'"' "'
m
'"' .. , ·w nu=
; ' pext d\ante to how the aowd will be
Suttdlf at Midlipll Speedway.
"I tllil\k if we totall1tose the boos,
• '\hat's aot ro bt a bad StJU," he said. "It
'&lt; :means we'te doina somethina wrona."
: : Fo~r-time Winston Cup champion
Jeff Gordon, who still aeu the big
tllumbs-down from the crowd, shares
11\at feetina.
"Dale Elrnhardt onee told me 11\at
~ · when they stop booing, you better start
wonyina." Gonion hu said.
. Stewart believes his team draws boos
~ .because it's a constant thn:at ro beat
the popular drivers. .
·
7· "That shows that we'n: doiJ\Ithings
. ~ fi&amp;ht," he said.
Few ~ave done better ftoin a retOld·
settina 1999 rookie season through 14
career victories.
• Still, it's been a rouah ride. Stewart
, 'has drawn fines and pro.bation from
· NASCAR for his bellavtor; he out. raged fans with complaints that too
: many of them are in the garage an:a,
··making the teams' jobs mon: difficult;
~ and he had to explain thll he wasn't
· teyil)l to insult Alabama when was
. 'quoted in a British maauine IS saying
: lhat Talladega had' the most obl\oxlous
fans.
·· · He has spent a lot of time apologiz- CHANGING FOR TMIIIII ERt -Tony Stewart smiles as he Is Introduced before the
ina. tepentiq or denyina.
PotOnu 500 at Pocono lntematl&lt;~nal Raceway last Sunday. Stewart steps forward,
\ No more. Orlce the most accessible wews to tl'le crowd and gets ·hiS usual greeting: "Boooooooooooooool" It's just
driver on the Winston Cup cireuit, he NASCAR tans venting at one of their favorite villeins. But lately, Stewart has been hear;. •.has slammed the door on most of the In&amp; some cheers, too, giving him the laellng that things may be changing. (AP)
:!:media.
.
1 fim·
•:: "Now, I'm enjoyina
myself from Stewart rarely has trouble communi- zipadelh· su;'d uft era sevent h-pace
bMonday throuah Thursday instead of catil\g with Zipadelli . . Both . are ish Sunday at Pocono Raceway.
J: :runnina lli'Ound coverina my tracks, obsessed with wmning, and even a Joe Gibbs Racing is weighing the us~
:• ' doin• damaae control because some- minor skid is a concern.
or a n:designed Pontiac against switch·
~1bod:r dldn't• IJM~ wlth' somethlna I ' Earlier this month, they failed to ing next season to a Chevrolet.
•: ~said," he added.
· contend at Dover International Stewart, who feels loyalty to Pontiac,
How long will this continue?
Speedway, one or the cln::ult's most wunts no role in that decision.
:: "Until people show us that things an: dffflcult tracks. Stewart swept the He established himself early us a. rue·
• :different and you can actually seeak races there in 2000 and had never fin· ing talent on the short tracks of the
: your mind wilhout repercussions,.' he ished worse than seventh in six starts. Midwest, became a USAC champion,
1
•: said, speaking softly and in a con- He wound up lith In a car Zipndelll won n title in the IRL and qutckly
:: ·trolled fashion - hardly the loud and thought was far worse than that. But became a ml\ior force in NASCAR.
~~ -.~ di.sorderly image that many have of they didn't congratulate themselves.
Like him or not, his high profile has
h
"I'm not proud of an llth-plnce fin· been good for business. He does com· :
; .. ·:~still loses his temper, but this sea- ish," Zipndelli said. ''I'm ashamed and mercials for The Home Depot, Pontiac
: son, it's been mostly in private.
embarrassed."
and others with racing interests, and ·
l: Frustrations are ain:d to crew chief Still Stewart is sixth In the series says his souvenir sales are the best
:•:Greg Zipadelli, car owner Joe Gibbs or standings and shan:s the lead with two they've been in three years.
t•:others close to him. There, Stewart wins. That's not ~ood enough for · In part, he credits his new book,
. ft:sald, he's "allowed to be a person."
Stewart or Zipndelh, but they realize "True.Speed," for making the ride with
:: "In this day and age, a personality is their aging Pontiac is no match for the funs u httle smoother.
•· a bad thing to have in Winston Cup Chevrolets, Fords or Dodges.
"It gives pco~e un o~portunity to
'•' raclna," he sa!il. "If you have one, ''We're going to Michil!an, and it see who l am, w y I do t e things I do
~· you'n: in trouble."
will be the same dang th1ng again," and say the things I suy," Stewart said.

f-2·3

:•

·be,"!':

2001 CHEVROLET &lt;AVALl
Air, Rtar Spolltr and
Mort I

s...,.
8

10,998

7 Panenger st!aUng, front

;I:
I

•• J
~l

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

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

much morel
MSII~

••l NASCAR gave the lona·

l!:

tqeS on their 7-yenr·old cur,· though Generul Motors Is February; the Fords rcur spoi_l·
• suffering Pontiac Grand Prix but their complaints had been debuting nn updated version er was S 314 inches tall und tn
~.hel~ We&lt;lnesday with the first ignored.
·
of the Grand Prix In 2003.
·April at Tulludegu, Fords
ma or rules change to the Pontiac drivers Tony Also Wednesday, NASCAR measurements were 6 inches
: ,car 5 body In almost two Stewan and Bobby Labonte reduced the SP,Oiler si.ze on the tall. The Chevrolet und Dod!,!e
•: years.
have combined for three vic· Ford Taurus from 6 tnches to teams rear spoiler will rcmam
:• Beginning with this week· torles this season, but their S-7/8 Inches for next month's at 6 1/4 inches tall, while the
1 end's race at Michiaan cars have struggled at tracks race at Duytonu.
Pontiucs will be 6 112 inches
: International · Speedway that require downforce, often During the Daytona 500 in tull.
• Pontiac teams will be allowed causing them to get stuck in
: to extend their front air dams ·packs of traffic.
:: more than one ll\ch forward of Stewart and his team have
•! the bumper - an increase of been particularly vocal about
•! one·halfinch.
.
th.e discrepancies and.feel the .
' The helahtof the rear spoil· car cost them 11 win - and n
i er was also adjusted ancf c11n $1 million bonus - at Las
! now measure 7 1/8 Inches Vegas e11rller this season.
•' hlah by ~7 Inches wide, an Afier dominating most of the
:! Increase of one-quaner inch. race and running nway from
:: The new spoiler helaht w\11 the field In the clean air, ·
•! not apply to Daytona and Stewart came. out In traffic
Talladega.
after a late pit stop and could
· "This Is definitely a step in never get back to the front
: the rlaht direction," said because the Pontiac's air
I ill4 mojar ndlt coni 11'4 i, liP far 12 ....... ~ lootrlcl'• Top Ill
1: James Ince, cn:w chief for the dams strUggled with the "dirty Ifarji10IIIIIIliM*21111*M1,.. IIIII F!&amp; illlllll'l fj1111111MSII' IIIII
~' Oralld Prix driven by Johnny air."
·
.
IIIII
Fill£ IIIII&lt; ~rh I ol Ntolollon (Mill' 1111~ 11!11ul211 VIlli, l\1d I
~; Benson. "It's not as much aa
lnce thinks Wednesdafs
:: we needed to get but anythlna conceasions will help w1th ,.. prin fir
-: Is more than we had. We have that. ·
~. such a bad race car compared
"Hopefully this will move
Amerlaa'a Top 10
: to whei'C the oiher makes are us In the ght direction and in
......................
: that we aren't aoina to com· the dlny alr our cars will be
DIN.
M1Y, TNT,
-.rl. - " "
-Ifill
ClfiGo~""
l'lolt, tlol ... 111!11
: plain too loUdly."
· · better," be said. "An airplane
The last ala6lflcant cbanp fllea a lot better on a sunshiny
tO lilt (M!;d MK ~ ~1t ~ dlq In • tllunde11torm
came •hi July :zooo. wliil lllil whit 'rillave been riiCinl
NASCAR allowed PontliiC to in·all year Ia a thunde11torm.
utilize a new rear bumP.Ct The chanaes may not be
~ cover almllar to what the enouah to convince the Joe
: Chevrolets and Fords were Gibbs Raclna teams to stick
(740) 288-'7413
· : · already ualna.
with the Orand Prix, thouah.
1·866-66CM1600
: · The Pontiac teiml have Gibbs Ia expected to put
lillllllllrl .........
:: been complalnlna for more Stewart ancr Labonte In -....... ~.~~~~..
Ifill . . - .
••
,..............,.
M..... _.IIIIi
~~=! than a year about diaadvan· Chevroleta next season, even
.

1

22,995

8

2002 CHEVROLET SILVERADO
4 DR EXT CAB 4X ~,rn........
VB engine, Auto
trans, Alt, Cruise,

AM/FM

St~reo,

and morel
U?,MI

t-~-1"" ....

22,998

8

2001 CHEVROLET S•10
l'llr, AM!FM Stereo ll morel

Sr..~.e

10998
'

·8

Aim~~

.

DISH!·

:
1

row aeollng. 270 HP
6 cyl engine, Leother
Interior .

8

1~150

REBATE

•i ••u'••l

1

111.115

t-~-~·~

MI~P

rule
change
sin~e 2000
!l~Pontiac
gets
first
••

I

&amp; rtar 1\C, Pwr windows.
Pwr hxka, 1111, crul1e, and

.......

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Ganassi taking NASCAR by storm

'

••

Beatty keynote speaker at upcoming Expo

Nib 8&amp;tty.. • IIOW
..
~ witll ~ -.hl~l

::'· wm bt lhea~~
-()tOO tlullti
. . Tflpp( Expo
.:0. Aq. 1( ill~
Slate NO'mllkr
2000.. the
• name of Mib h~ a rtSid9t of
' Xtllia. 11M ~almost a~
hold MlM amaaa dte- hllnRn• That\ btu , Oft tMI da~•

•~~t"""Si~ ~Ill
· whi~l tMd ia OrttM ~llt1
witll hls ~1\d bo • h boasti
• 1M lqest set of~ white• tail dter utltrs t'ftf ~ by •
'hllllttf tft:t~NI\ue Ia the wodd.
: At the expo, Batty will tell hi

Jim

F~man

adler activities p~lbrouilt0111 the
•~
88 lhll\
shootina. wildiUe ldttltirittt&amp;

field stl'lh. inppina Mid t\u-baft.
dliftl dierooMtmion rdrievtt
cltmOnstratioM. 'tkl aame c;oot.
$lOey abOllt takil\l the warlcl-ret.onl il\l, tuidttm.y, ll\d otllm.
. ~Mad. Yes, the bid will be theft,
The Buebye 8~ Butts Club
, too. .
· ud llldmwm Wtll bt kCiril\1
Did I IMIItiOII tllttt lldmlssiall into dter lllltleft ~t 1M tb)\.1\W
' ,the HUIIhftl lliCl Trappil\l Eltpo is (itt
·
.
r*? So mm swe to inlrl: Aq. 2-t
taUYS.1t ~will be~ at
. Jn
this
. indllde vt~ sellina those .hunting and
.Mtip Ctillnty\ Bill ~ton, •
proclu«s -.-e !ill lo\'C oo
. Hocking Collt~ pro~ who "'-·.
.._._.,
,
.:.will diS&lt;:Ilss q_nUty clet.r
thl~lst ~. :tOll U\10 • wal\t to mm ...~--~~~~~
,ment; Chris De~kl or
The Huntin&amp; lllld '~Rppina ~
Boy Oiimt Calls and Rt~tl. b bmqht to :tOll by toon~ 111
:ArChery, W~ WUI ~llt.iibOlll Sllftl\1 tllllt put of tilt Slll~. the Di tritt 3
tumy liuntt!!J tttettcs. tarry ease s , _.. ....
c
..
pf the West V1 inia r.....~..ment of ~~1 . llnu , w~ttt O!IS~lllOII
'1'latural Res011~ ~ill share Distntt Wtldhfe Spectahsts. As ~====~;~
hl$ fall turkey huntina tKtic.s.
you ~'1 .be •!~•~· tbt ODNR 1
. Other spea\us .wiD he there as Division o( W1ldhfe and m11ny
~n. incluCIIna 'Ibm Bechdcl, • pro- SWCD's in Ollt part of the sto.tt · IIATTY auctc - Mike BiHtt)' Mid his ~ wttitetlllt aw w · be one of til&amp; tttetunK~ att•attloM at this
fesslnnal huntlna advisor far hllve d\1~~ pmntrshl~ that yew'sii\OOtll SootMMten'l Ohio Hull~ Mid~~ in Gtno-. an - · ~ ~tool\ the fMUhe
Johl\ny Sturt u11me Call and hllve resu.l~ in lbt ~.ploymtnt of Ohio butk neer hi&amp; hol1le in ~tern Ohio In I'«Mn'lbef. 2000. ~ to til&amp; eliPO is I'M.
Hunter Specialties, who will cover toonty wtldbft s~ahsts.
werert\ out to mak • profit on the o.nd public rellltions bet\\~n the Ci\'k Ctnl6 in C.mbri~ tri&amp;ht
c:alllng coyote, {Olt, erow and rae- One of the many duties of the event. llun W:l)'. the ~s trom huntus o.nd lt:lppers.
off 1-70 neat the in~~ of I·
' toon witt\ electronic and mouth wildlife spteilllists is to tdueo.~ booth rental. etc. could o.ll be
Expo spollS\l(S iocl!Kk Whitetail 77). At!llin. the event i f~. so )'00
: c:alls, and Jim SltUJhbllUJh, owner landownen and hunttrs of the rei • turnedtowllrd getting better spe:lt· Unlimited, Pheo.sants Fore,~r. tuwe 11o eltC~'C 001 to attend.
Ohio ~dention of Soilo.nd Wta16 far more infunnatioo ~about the
· of SS Outdoors, on scent elimina- lionship that must be developed to om :and lltnll:lion •
tion and proper use of sctnts and in&amp;ure the continulltion of llgritul· The Wildlife Sped :a lists :&gt;till Consen•:atiun Districts. No.tion.al Hunting and Fishing &amp;po. includ·~ures.
ture llld hunting fur )'QrS to come. hllvt three ~Is il\ n\ind: first, to Wild TUrkey Ftdention. Ohio ing "endor registration. eontacl
;. Mike Blld&amp;ik, chief of the Ohio This resulted in the Are.a 3 show the entire furnily the enjoy· Divi~ion or ~ ildlife. tht lu:.k 1&gt;.:1\-e Schott at l-80().367-.5762 or
'bivision of Wildlife. will mttke a Wildlife Specialists holding the ment thllt Clll\ be obto.intd .while 111 Walton LtlgUe, Rutl'td Grouse Jerrod Allison al 1·740-425· 1100.
. return appearance. too. Dave Hunting lllld Tnappi~ &amp;po.
the outdoors: se1:0nd. to educate Slxiety. 01\io F:ann Bureau. 01\io Ji11t ~ut i.t .,.,'ildlift' sp«iai·
• Linthart, president of the Ohio · I attended hast yell's e~nt, and it the huntus and tropprers of south· State lfapprers ·Association. 11 nd istA•-alf:~ ('OotmMt6#' for th
:Federation of Soil and Wa~r w11s de:finittly ·Wdl wurth the trip e~~.stern 01\io on the oppottunities Ducks Unlimited.
M~i.gs Soil altd " "'' C~nwliolt
:Conservation Districts, will serve up 1·77 to C.mbridge. I think one being overlooked in m:.ny pans of . This year's Ellpo will be held Di-11rict. Ht t-mt 6t et~~~Mt'h&gt;d at
:as emcee.
reason the upo was so sutctSSful the nren: third, to tress the ethic Snturd;ay. Au.g. 2-4 from 9 1.m. to 5 ( 740) 992-4282 or at jiM-/rwr, Of course there will be lots of was because the wildlife specialists involved in improving landowner p.n\. nt the Pritch:~td Laughlin 11to11 oll.ltllt"ddtH.61§

=

or

6:!

:::;t':'l

o::f:

'Soft Walls'.ready for ·stock car trial at Indy
BY THE ASSOCIAllO PMSS

1lle new ''-ft·wall"
.......
no).
w
'""''
ogy IIKd successfully in the
Indianapolis SOO will get its fust
NASCAR lllCe test on the same
track, although wide use of the
. system is not oxpectlld for 111

I~! ~.:..,er
at Indy
uoun

WI' II

remain in place for the Aug. 4
Brickyard 400 but will need
exira padding for the heavier
stock cars. NASCAR officials
said 1\iesday. The Indy tars
weiah about 2.000 P.Ounds,
including the driver, while stock
cars are about 3.600 pounds.
The foum pods at all four
turns of tile 2 112-mile

~nmc~~p.~~~

es to about 26 inches.
While development Is proaressing well, thO walls are not
reud~or use at other lriiCks,
said . .Dean Sicking, head of
the research &amp;fOIIP developing
the Steel and Foam EneraY
Reduction (SAFER) bllrrier at
the University of Nebraska.
"It's being pursued agares·
sively, but we want to be pnl·
dent and reasonable so we act
the best results possible for our
competitors," he said.
The SAFER is four steel
tubes welded in 20-foot sections
and boltlld to the concrete walls.

Between the steel Wid the c:onaete. pods of IIW'd. pink fuwn
are placed 10 feet llplllt, allowina the urtt¥:c to bend und
thereby reduce force.
.
1lle still-expcrimcntul CI\Cf&amp;Y
absorbi~cnl Wa\ subjected
to ci&amp;ht
hits ut Indy with·
out serious if\iuries.
Sicking pointed out thllt
Elisco SnlllZIII' hit the wull blidt·
word during testina just bc:fOI'O
the bonier WI!$ instill led unci,
with u peak of nboot II S Q 's,
came uway with n sellSOn-cnd·
ing if\iury.
Robby Mc:Oehee CI'IIShlld at
vinulllly the smne spot on the
tniCk ufter the SAFER bunier

is only the first step in a very k Site."
long process." Pync said. Bob Btthre, owner of New
"We've aone thouali Clttensl\'tl H=m
ire
lnternatiorml
tri11l and error and ~·ve found S
, where Adrun l'tttY
th!lt soft doesn't talways mean lllld Kenny Irwin were bolh

killed in tniShes t\\'0 ~ qo.
has oxpmstd stroll&amp; lnteftSt in .
hiiYill@ the SAFER bllrrier
. instulled at his I.OS8-mile oval
as soon as possible.

:------~-------------------------------~----------~--------------~~
I.
'

'
••

::e i:::~s ~a car~~

••

WEEKLY OHIO FISHING REPORT

I

and Wa\ buck.in
~rying to
qilulify for the .race just over u
week later.

"We believe those ciushes
were ulmost identicnl,'' Sicking
said. "It's very promising in th!lt
the safety perfonnuncc was
very ROOd arK! it helps us under.stand better thc.~e rearward
hits."
Sicking unci Oeor!Je Pyne,
senior vice presiaent of
NASCAR, cmphnsized that
1110111 testing and development
work needs to be done before
other ti'IICk.~ get the "soft walls."
''The lndiwtupolis instllllution

Integrity

$49"
l'n,n01114 81(

P1 HIUAIQIC.......SU.M

....

1'1~1&lt;181C........

..

P1tl/?lliii&lt;IBIC ......SU.M
PIOUI&amp;AIIIIK ......SU.M

PIOII'IOR1SXNW ....... .

-.-01--~-

GOOIIP'u•

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.

~CIIAHIISI

*53"

IIAQLB QA

P1IMOA148K

P225/60R16

GOOIIjhAR
•

.
.,. ..
$74"

F:::c~~-~~.AT

• 58 PTO hp* Ptrklnte 4 cylinder, 1000 aerlea dleHienglnea
with F1atr1mtl combuatlon for maximum torque,
amoothn111 end low emlaalon.
• 8F/2R manual transmission with differential lock fot maximum
efficiency.
·
• Advanced Ferguaon·hydraullc ayatem for preclae
Implement control.
.
• Oll·cooled disc brakes for extra stopping power and long life
• Ttleacoplc 2WD 1xle1.
• Category II 3·polnt hitch with draft-sensing top link for fast draft
response.
• Fltld·foldlng ROPS for low clearance when you netd lt.
• Power steering and spring-suspension seats with armrests for
extra comfort.

r.~~~:;;!\:~:~~~~::.:.:.~::. . . . ..

.....

~~~~~~·:.Sau~i~·~;·=~·

ASVOISL.C
AQV08FA
AGV10AO
AGV12AO
ASV11DII

... ~ ....... ''""""""" .......... ""'"""""' "'"""'""' '""'"''..... ""',, 7111 11?1

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*MASSEY FERGUSON.

----

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IIOfiW AT N; TILT CMII'W I'L 4DII XI.T SPAT WH\.1 .......

'13t
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CAll 7 PMI,....................:.......... ,.........,... ,...., ....... ,,.,. 't4tl •1M
00 CHIIYII.IIIIIIMNO .00 , _ CONVIATIILI AT
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ACTILTCNII'WI'L ll'ATWHI.SI'WIISEATS .,,..,,&amp;0011 .71
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Specials

·

GE ROOM AIR CONDITIONER SPECIALS

""'"'"'"'"""'"""'""'"""""""""""""'""""'""'""'"'""'.,
OOI'ONTIAC
IIOIMVIUit10. AT N; TILT CIIU

• Manufacturer'• rated

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Air Con

....... ,.................................................................. ., ......... , ... ,?18 '17'1

DUFF

•aru•

6000
8000
10,000
12,000
18,000

'SAI.E !BICE'
$22$.00
$288.00
$32111.00
$371.00
$483.00
$51111.00

11Svoll
115volt
115volt
115volt
220volt

220V01t

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Inside:
Celebrations begin on C2

CHOO fOOTBALL SCHEDULES

H
~

Sunday, June 18, 2002

' " !'~ ~-.Ohlo•Polnt':'Nitnt,WV

Dear
Abby

"Anyone can
.be~ father,
but my
.girls have
a daddy:'

ADVICE

Credit cards
can bum
holes in ·
students' budgets
· DEAR ABBY: As a senior
in colle¥e, I have learned
many thmgs, but I have one
important lesson to share
with anyone who is just
beginning a college career.
In my freshman year, I was
bOmbarded with credit card
applications promising great
rates and free merchandise
for signing up. I couldn't
resist · accepting,
but
promised myself I would use
credit cards only for emergencies.
Well, here I am about to
graduate and I now owe sev·
eral thousand dollars on my
cards. I calculated that if I
pay only the minimum each
month, it will take me 12
years to pay off what I owe.
The sal! fact is that I have
nothing to show for this debt.
· Much of it was for meals
with friends, going out to
clubs and living beyond my ,
means.
.Some tips I wish I had been
gi·ven to me before signing up
for those cards:
( 1) Live within your
means. College can be about
having fun, but you can do
that without going into debt.
Be creative and expand your
horizons.
' ·
·
(2) If you cannot pay cash
for a meal at a restaurant, do
not eat out. Eat at the school
cafeteria or make a sandwich.
(3) The new CD or DVD
you want will still be around
when you can afford it.
Listen to the radio or rent a
movie instead of buying it on
credit.
(4) Rather than going to a
club or movie with a group of
friends, find inexpensive
activities (like playing cards
or board ¥ames) and spend
your evenmg enjoying them.
You' II be amazed at what you
can save.
(S) If your college offers a
class on managing ere
_ dit and
~redit cards- take It! If you
have already resolved never
to rely on credit, it will only
reinforce that decision.
·
I hope you deem this letter
important enough to print,
Abby. Credit card debt is a
l)uge problem for many college students, r should know.
.;_ COLLEGE SENIOR
WHO LEARNED THE
HARDWAY
DEAR
COLLEGE
SENIO.R: Thank ~ou for
your timely wammg for
(reshmen enterinf college
this fall. And now have one
for you: You have learned an
expensive lesson. Credit
counseling may help you
consolidate your debts and
ensure that you don't destroy
yout credit histocy before you
have even established · one.
Check your phone directory
for ~ list of credit counsel!n~
servtces
or
v:su
www.nfcc.org to locate one
that's a member of the
National Foundation for
Consumer Credit (NFCC).
Good luck, gmd!

DEAR READERS: Today

is Father's Day. I offer good
wishes not only to fathers
everywhere, but also to those
caril)g . individuals who
donate their time mentoring
youngsters whose fathers are
absent or deceased.
Many readers have asked
me for a prayer in memory of
a father who is no longer living. The followins is from
my Hebrew Union Prayer
Book, It is one that is recited
on Yom Kipput, the Day of
Atonement. It is also avail- ·
able in my "Keepers" booklet:
IN MEMORY OF A

FATHER

.........
., Abby,CI

Robin Newman

Lotal family
celebrates bond
on spedal ilay
lOWELL- In the
aster, less than an
her home was d~~~,~~~:
May's tornado, all
Robin Newman ~"''u
about was how Wonderful her
band was, that he was the
father her two little girls could
for and that they were "lucky."
As Robin so eloquently said,
"Anyone can be a father, but my
girls have a daddy."
·
Robin came from a difficult life
which has made her eyen,.more grateful
for what and ~ho she has-now; "a man_:slile-lmdller children will hor!or this Father's
,
"I was forced to accept pUblic assistance and ·
was living alone with my girls," she said. "I had
to work night shift because I couldn't afford a
baby-sitter, I was a single mom, money was
tlfcht and bills were piling up - it was horrib e. ..
.
,.
Then she met Jason through a fri(!lnd.
She said she was apprehensive, scared and
made it clear to Jason that her girls come
first.
·
Not a problem, said Jason, who almost
immediately bonded with then 14-monthoid Tessa and almost 3-year-o~d Savana.
Jason is a young man of only 21, but
according to Robin, he's wise beyond his
years.
·
"For him only being 21, he's mature,
excellent with money and very responsible," she said.
"We've never had it this ~ood," she
added. "He let me stay home w1th my chil&lt;lren for two years. He gave us a home and
m~ children a father- we're blessed."
· 'Just like today, we had no sooner
dropped the girls off at my grandmother's when he said, 'I miss the girls,"'
Robin said.
Jason especially loves being a dad
during holidays and birthdays.
.
"I let him do the Christmas shopping
last year and he came home with toys, a
truck load of nothing but toys," Robin
said, smiling. He was so proud to luive
bought Savana her first bike, and he thinks

'·1··,):1,

"X

.,

ONE OF HIS LOVES
·-Daddy Jason
Newman Is seen with

one of the three .
loves of his life, stepdaughter Tessa
Benner.

.......... Dadctr•.CI

"What should you -do if you have been a victim of a workforce reduction?
You can't pick up the paper or tum
on the news wi!h out hearing that one
of our local businesses is restructurIng, reducing their workforce or
closing all together. At least in the
near future, it appears that the slowdown of the economy will result in a
continued reduction of jobs in our
region. If you arc one of the numerous people affected by these cutbacks, this is an opportune time for
you to consider returning to college
to get b &lt;Iegree. You may not be clear
· about the various options and
sources of assistance that may be
available to you. This is where your
local community college can provide
you with valuable information.
Suddcnly beins among the ranks
of the unemployed Ia a dauntins
experience for most individual•. This
fear becomes even areater when you
realize .that your future job prospects
may be severely limited becauae of
the lack of a college dqree. Here arc
some facts to consider. Accordin1 to
a recent study, only approximately
1S percent of the existing .fbs arc
.....

Luanne
Bowman
I

available to individuals without at
·reast an associate degree or some
form: of advanced trainil)g. This
makes · finding a good, high-paying
job much harder for the avemge
worker. It stands to reason that individuals with some type of college
degree are less likely to become
unemployed. According to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average national unemployment mte for
individuals with less than a big})
sehoul diploma is 7.1 percent, this
percentage decreases to 2.5 percent
with an associate degree and to l .9

percent with a bachelor's degree.
This is an excellent motivation for an
unemployed worker to acquire a college degree.
In our area, displaced coal miners
are eligible for special financial
assistance through a grant from the
Federal government. This funding
will pay for the coal miner's college
tuition, fees, textbooks, and supplies.
ln some instances the grant will even
provide payments to assist with livmg expenses. An additional federal
grant related to the closing of the
coalmines is available to unemployed workers in our area. This
grant is for waders who are not coal
miners, but individuals whose jobs
were eliminated because they were
indirectly related to the closing of the
mines. It also provides financing for
the worker's colle~e tuition, fees and
textbooks. Additional information
related to applying for either of these
grants can be obtained from your
local . Community Action Agency,
which administers the grants.
In additifn to the above-mentioned

grants, unemployed workers can also
apply for all types of financial aid,
including all state and federal grants,
scholarships and loans. Clearly,
being unemployed means that the
individual has a better chance of
qualifying for various types of financial aid that are based upon economic need. In most instances, the worker's unemployment benefits continue
while they are enrolled in school.
This allows for the worker to be able
to pay basic living expenses.
Obvtously, there are enough funding
sources available to finance a college
education for·anyone.
If you are a worker who has been
displaced or fear 1hat you will be displaced in the near future, contact
your local community college to get
on the path to success and put college in your future.
(Luanne Rase Bowman is vice
presiden1 for financial and administrative affairs. at Rio Grande
Community College, P.O. Box 326,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674, plume 2457236.)

..

..

�Mt. llli Mit. htt "~

Rainey 60th anniversary
•

\'

hl!l~ t&lt;~l~~ f'l~ children;
IWfi SOO&amp; ttnd lhte\l d&lt;~\llhOOf'5,
'funy ~tnd l'at5y live in

Ottlllpi)Hs lferry, W. Vtt.;
Timmy resltll\% In Fftltlet's
B~Xrom, WVt~., t~nd Kitty at1tl
toonee llw In Vlenntt, VoL
Thll)' el\ltl)' thl\lr fi'v~
~tttnt.khlltl~n ttntl 1111~11
gre&lt;~t gr~~.ntlehlltlhltl \ ttllm%ltllna In thll gener~~l lociil ttl\\tt.
Tl\elr film1ly wbhes thllm
"'""Y mtlre Y\!~1'5 l)r hi!pl)l~
lies~. Y11ur e11h:b tlr tl}nar&lt;~tu,
lntloll!l tt) 81\rt cmtl tlootlll
wt~uld be llf\pl'\\eilltlltl.

i' .

· Rhondli .M o,Pn •net Kemp Kelly

C.J. Herrlt •net Mlohellt Lewlt

Morgan-Kelly engagement

Lewis-Harris ·engagement

LETART - Mr. and Mrs.
Owies and Juanita Mcxgan of
Letart, aJe proud to announce
.)he forthcoming marriage of ·

their daughter, Rhonda, to
Kemp Kelly.
Kelly is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Samuel and Helen Kelly of
Sherman.
The outdoor wedding, followed by a reception, will be

June 22, 2002, at 1:30 p.m at

Kemp and Rhonda's home in
PORTLAND - Bob and
Portland, Ohio. The gracious Carin Lewis of Berwick, Pa..
custom of an open wedding will announce the en~agementand
be absolVed.
·
·
upeoming mamage of the.ir
Morgan is a graduate of dau~hter Michelle Diane
Marshall University School of Lewts to C.J. (Charles Jeffrey)
Nursing and is employed 111 Harris, son of Jeff and
Jackson General Hospital. Kelly Deborah Harris of Portland.
is a graduate of Glenville State
The bride-elect is currently
College and WVU Graduate employed at Bob Jones
School and is employed at Umvmlty whenl she teaches on
Ravenswood High School.
the history fiiCulty; Her fUlllCe Is

Fulks 25th anniversary
Harris-Gaiser engagement

employed
111 Bob Jones
UmYC!I'Sity Press and is working
on a Pb.D. In church history.
Both h11 ve completed their
bachelors · and masters'
de~;rees
at Bob Jones
Umverslty and both gradual·
ed with honors.
They will be married
December 28, ut Berwick,
Pa., In Berwick Bible
Church.

.PORTLAND - Jeff &amp;nd
Deborah HaiTis of Portland
announce the enaqement
and upcoming mllrriqe of ·
their daughter Hillery Mae
Hurris to Matthew Mllrk
Oaiser, son of Muk and
Darla 011lser of Radcliff.
The bride -elect Is a gradu·
ate of Bob Jones University

In Oreenvllle, S.C.
.
Hfll' flllnc:e Is a graduate of
Johnson
and
Wales
Unlvflt'slty In Providem:e,
R.I. Both W'O restaurant !Mil·
IlLer&amp; In Athena.
:
~~~ couple will be mudid
on Oct. 19 at Alba!l.Y In
Christ Community Weslclan
Church.
·:
•
•

POINT PLBASANT Charles IUid C&amp;ra~yn Fulks will
celetnto thclr 25th Wllddlq
annlventry at Main Street
.1\ B11ptlst
Church, Point Plwult.
\.

Russell--Rodgers wedding
OALUiiQUS -

Brandy the bride. and the best lnan

Jn ltus~ell alid J~8tlll Scott
R~eh wete
I il, ~00:2 tit

hlahicd Ma.y

Oood News

llaptlst chuf'Ch 6n Oeotglls
treek Road OilllltJOH8.
· 'rhe btlde h the daughret llf touple.
·Jllt\ltlf lltid flmt lhtMell of
Crowtl ttty, The btlde~roohl
is the soh llf Larry and

Carolyh l'lelluhl of Oalllpolls.
He Is sclf-ehlploycd; iloing

,m

~tllll!ltu~IIM

wotk

The bride was given in
ttiilttli!IW by her untie, Joe
Englei!i. fhe maid o( hoilor
Will! Jamie BeiiVlit, ftlend of

••

was Mark Fulks. friend of the
~tooh1. Flower girl was
Haley Orsbon, daughter of
the bride, and the rhtg bearer
Was Jaron Rodgers, son of the

· .·

A reception \vas held folCCi'ChlOily in the
fellowship hall at the church
With several 1\-iends and famIly in attendance.
/'
the couple will re'side-in
Mercerville with their chil dtetl, Haley, Jaron and Juci
Gail Rodgers.

loWIIig the

·Meigs County: The antiquer's getaway
tn.loday's llu$lness section ... DI

Mr. ancl Mre. Leon lauttre

·Sauters 40th anniversary
Wise., Chrl1tle Hemiley of
McArthur, and Connie

Sautert of Shade.

Ohlflottt Newell ancl William Oook

They !lave 10 lflllldehlldmn,
Jenny, Mlehllel, O~J~TS,IIl!d Jeue
~; Nllhn ShaihanMh, 1111d
SIIVIIMilh Diehl; Kllile And
Wyatt HeiNle)', lllllllfllllo Mol
Alidrewa.
The couple .will be 1pend·
Ina their annlvermy In
Wilton, Colo.
·

•

'

Newell-Cook engagement . .
Linn~

Jellison-Petrie engagement
VINTON - Erica Lynne
Jellison of Van Wert and
· Joseph Bradley ·Petrie of
-'Vinton have announced their
engagement and forthcoming
wedding.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Donald and
Karen Jellison of Van Wen.
She attended Crestview High
School in Convoy, and
recently graduated from
Bluffton College with a
degree in social work.
She is currently employed
at the PSA 3 Area Agency on
Aging in Lima.
The future bridegroom is
the son of Billy and Jean

Petrie of Vinton. He is a graduate of River Valley High
School, and is currently a
senior at Bluffton College.
He will graduate in
December 2002 with a
degree in early childhood
education.
The couple will exchange
vows at 4:30 p.m. on
Saturday, June 29, 2002, at
Calvary Evangelical Church
in Van Wen.

Tlnntnt tnet Jtnnlflr l'lnnlaum

MIDDLEPORT- William
C. Cook and Charlotte
Newell of Middleport
announce their engaaement
and approachlnalllli'rllae.
The couple will be married
Wahama High School and
on
Friday, Aua. 16, at 7 p.m.
West Virginia Univenity of
Parkersbur11 and Ia 11n
employee of Boilermaker
LoCal 667 In Winfield.
An open church wedding
will be held at Father'• Houae
Church in Hanford on July .
20. 2002 at 6:30. p.m. A
reception will follow the cer·
emony at the Bend Area
Community Center in New
Haven .

Finnicum-Tennant engagement
LETART - Mike and
Karen Finnicum of Maso.n
and Lennie . ·and Rhonda
Tennant of Letart announce
the enga~ement and upcom·
ing mamage of their chil·
dren, Jennifer Finnicum and
l-enny Tennant.
· Jcnni fer is a graduate of
Wahama High Scnopl and is
an employee of Ohto Valley
Bank.
. Lenny is a graduate of

•

at the A1h Slrelt Church In
Mlddl~. The Rev. Olfn
Rowe will perform the c.,_.

" '

·:

mony~

Cook
Ia
curren'tl&gt;.:
employed parttlme by Eblilj 1
Tta1b Service of Rutland. •

DON 'T WAIT

VACCINATE!

Meade-Swisher engagement
BIDWBLt. Vlekle
Me11d11 And Tom Me11dt1 of
Bidwell llt'il nllnoutlelng the,
engaaement of their dnuah·
tor; Heather Mude1 to Dustin
Swlihlilr of Point P1emnt.
Tho IJfOOm·oleet Is the son
of Mnrth11 Jone8 iifld Tllrry

Swisher of Point PICA8fitlt.
An tlJli!ll e~hureh weddllll! Is
slnted ftlr Siiturdny, July 13,
2003., Ill 6:30 I'•ftl , Ut thil
W6rld Outfllueh Chureh In
Juc:k8on. A fll~eptlon will fol·
low ut . Sts. Petilr 1111(1 flliul
C:hureh hl Wellston.

Hammond- Ward engagement .
OALLIPOLIS ~ Llu L.
Hommond 11nd Ja8on Wnrd
lifO IIHHOUHCIHg their ongllgll•
ment 11nd . upcoming mAr·
rl&amp;ge.
The couple bee11m11
· enJngid oo June t, 2002,
The brldo·to·be Is 11
teacher'8 aide 111 DuekllYil
Mllls Career Center and 11f1o
wotkl 111 Sunshine VIdeo In
Rio O!'Ande. She 11 1 1981
araduate of Ducke;:e Hill&amp;
Cmer Center, and haa two
1111\1 from 11 pl'llvlout engage·
ment.
:
ft'lr. llld Mrt. Dlllltrt utohfltld
•
Tho aroom·to·h41 Is ttl• ·
'
tlonlld 111 the Nml Aelldemy
In Vlfllnlt Beach, VII. Hell I
1\
. 1996 aradulltt of River
••
'
Valley High School.
: Dilbert and Jna Lllchfteld their 50th weddlna annlver·
WeddlnJ piau will he
'"til Apple Orove, celebraftd ill')' on Juno 19.
eomplehllf once hl1 mHitary

..

ROUD TO BE APART
OF YOUR LIFE.

Duetln lwleher and Heather Mtldl

Is
RICE
-

~~-

--IIIIINIIIIIII
fl',,, '.1 r ntm
f.I\IIII'OIIti

01'1 N 1111111 '•1111
r I rJ',f IJ IIIIJI1 'i ~ S IJt~
!Jiffi Q'ifl1

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SCHOOL

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the River

C4

..

Male, emale communication styles di er

l%man chie once rnled village at Cheshire .
~ !he most famous woman
in Cheshire history was the
Shawnee chief Nonhelema. In her
later yeus, lhe WIS also known IS
!he Grenadier SQuaw, or as the
Grenadier Squaw katy.
Nonhelema WIS probably born in
Oldtown. Md., li'Oilnd 1720. Her
· family was flirt of !he priesdy clan
known IS Meguoc:hakes. The clan
moved to western Pennsylvania and
then about 1728 they settled on the
Oleshire plains in a village called
Kiskimeftltas. The winter village
would most likely have been a few
miles north of Cheshire. closer to
lhe hills.
·
But the summer · village was
recorded in many old journals as
being on the northern bank of the
Ohio River, a distance of eight.
miles north of where the Kanawha
River nows into the Ohio River.
The Shawnees also had a village
near Point Pleasant at this same
time. Nonhelema then probably
lived in Cheshire during her grow· ·
in,g up years as this village of
K1skimenilas stayed in Cheshire

•

But Coqres&amp; never aot
around to actina on it.
Jn 1785, Nanbeleml WM .ccepted back
her own peopllafter
1 treaty was sianed between the
Shawnees and the Kent~ settlers. She lived in ChlefMolliltha's
village. ll was abollt l'786 thd
Non.l\elema w1s st1ndi111 beside
Moluntha when Oen. BenJamin
Loam's men burled an llt 111 the
ctuers skull. Nonhelema was then
taken prisoner and held at Dln\IUie,

es of Ohio like Miuni. this was where Losan htve his
llndot lJid Delaware.
n.ottd speech under that famous
Shawnees eventuai!Y moved Loaan Blm. The Shawnees then
to the mouth of the &amp;ioto River lJid moVed 10 what is now Xenia. But
then 10 the Pid:away Plains. It was Nonhelema must have moved back
at the latter place that Nonhelema to the Oleshire area in the late
WIS given the title thief. she being 1770s at least briefly, becaust it is
in charge of her own town. By this n:c:onled that she gave money to the
time, ~onhelema had grown to be 6 army at Fort Raridolph (lotllted 111
feet. 6 inches tall. She was nic:k• Point Pleasant) quite a number of
named the Grenadiet Squaw horses lind cattle.
because her gait reminded British
During the American Revolution,
soldiers of the famous Grenadier Nonhelema sided with the
guards of England. Her name Katy Americans while most of the rest of
was given her by the Moravian mis· the Shawnees were on the British
sionary Dllvid Zeisberger when she side. During the Revolution, she
was baptized by him in 1772.
acted as an in~ter, messenger
Apparently, Nonhelema was 11 . 11nd intennediary. Because of her
feroe1ous warrior, for from 1759 to involvement with the Americans,
1774, white prisoners were tllken to she became an outc:ast among her
her village and made to run the own people.
gauntlet. Nonhelema was a combat·
After the Revolution ended, ·
ant at the battle of Point Pleasant. lt Nonhelema wandered from one
is believed she was the only woman white settlement to another as an
to fight in that battle. .
impoverished person. George
The signing of the peace that Rogers Clark in 1784 tried to perended Dunmore's War in 1774 was suade Congress to make restitution
signed just three miles from to Nonhelema for all that she had
Nonhelema's village. Of course, suffered on behalf of the American

James

Sands
HISTORY
until 1738. Nonhelema was the sister of Cornstalk and Silverheels.
The Shawnees were probably d111wn
to Cheshi.re because of the fenileness of the soil, the proximity to the
Ohio River and the abundance of
the buffalo and deer who would
swim the river at this point, it being
one ofthe more s.hallow pans.
.
There were also Pennsylvania
t111ders at Letart Falls and Point
Pleasant. Also common in the area
in the 1730s were French fur
traders. In later life, Nonhelema was
an interpreter. she betoming quite
skilled m English and in French.
She also knew the other Indian tan~

t&amp;IISC.

The folfowin&amp; year, Nonhelema
was released. That is all that Is
known of her with any aecuncy.
The Shawnee historian Or. Kelton
once wrote: "Whenever Nonheleliii
passed the evening of her life, it was
aoubtless
her own ~le
once more, honoied for her w1sdom
and tOUI'IIliC, and consoled for htr
misfortunes."
(Jamts Stmds is· a special rornt·
spondtnt for the S11nday 7lmts·
Stntintl. !It Ctln b. CtJttiiiCtl!d by
writin8 to 346 Meadow l.one,
Cirr:levillt, Ohio 4311 3.)

•mona

· One letter opened doors around the world
Max
T&lt;1;wne¥

life than [ have had, I would like to Sept. II, 2001. But I tim thankful to
shake hands with him or her. live In America and it was wonderAlways be good to people when you ful seeing how many people live in
tl'llvel in foreign countries and give other parts of the world and shake
them a United States coin, and be their hands and get to talk to them. I
friendly.
.
would like to stay longer in this old
It is terrible to see what Is going world, but my good friend Chester
or today - young people are on all · Leaper made me a policeman so,I
k1nds of drugs, people killing each would have jlood luck and ~·
other, robbers and burglars are tion on my trips and it worked bea~everywhere. It is really discourag· tifully. ·
,
ing. I am so thankful I came up [n
It Is. wonderful to remember
the
old days.
· friends like Chester. I have several
I JUSt read a few days ago that · true friends, and I try to speak to
India and Pakistan were on the every one of them .;_ I arn not •
ve11e of going to war. If this hap· "high hat." I took several photos of
pens there will be millions o~people . Chester, but 1can't find any now. •
killed. Many other countraes are
I hope I can II ve 9S - I just m~
threatening each other, and it is ter· be able to find those photos, and
· rible. We are so fortunate to live in share them with you.
Ohio in the United States. We do
( Longtlm11 Gallipolis buslnm·
not want war, most everyone wants man MWI Thwney occaslonall:r sub·
peace. ,
·
mils artiCII/S to the Sunday 7lrne!•
That was awful when those for· Stntintl about his world trav•ls and
eian thuas killed all those people In mei110r/es of Gallipolis and Galllp
New York and at the Pentagon on County.)
. · .
.

'ood

French Co~ony Chaf!Rr awards
scholanh1p to Hamson ·
GALLIPOLIS - Megan
Elizabeth Harrison, daughter
of John S. and Jennifer L.
Harrison and recent graduate
of River Valley High School,
, Class of :2002, was awarded a
monetary scholarship during
the regular monthly meeting
..nf French Colony Chapter
DAR. Miss · Hamson wai
chosen because of her stand·
ina with her araduating class
anil community. Her acti vi·
tida Include RV Key Club
President and Secretary, Beta
Club President, French Club
President and Vice-President,
4-H
Club
President,
VkePresident, Treasurer and
News Refoner, served on
Principals a ·
Advisor£.
Comnilttee, Student Counci ,
RV Silver Honor Card,
Academic
Excellence
Foundation Honoree, BPW
February 2002 Girl of the
Month and National Honor

Society Secretary. She was
Valedfctorian of her class,
plans to attend Ohio Nonhern
University and major in law.
The Daujhtera of the
American · Revolution has
many objectives and one Is
education. The National
Society DAR helps with the
maintenance of aix achools in
the United States. They are
Tamanee
school
In
Tamusee, SC, Kate Duncan
Smith, Grant, Alabama,
Berry College in Berry, GA,
Crossnore SChool, Crossnore,
NC,
Hillside
School,
Marlborough, MA and
Hindman Settlement School
in Hindma11, KY.
The chairman of French
Colony Chapter Scholarship
Committee as Mrs. Donalil
"Joyce" Canaday Smith. Her
committee made the ~election
from numerou1 entries. Tbia
award is made annually.

Collins

HOME&amp;FAMILY

Ky,

•

I have been going ihrough some
from Chester as long as I live.
of the letters that I received many
I have other nice letters that I am
years ago. Over the years, I saved
going to sit back and read - some
all my letters from dear friends. One
are from back in the '30s, '40s, 'SOs
of the letters I came across today
and '60s. I will enjoy every one of
was from Chester.Leaper, who was
them, and I am so glad 1 saved
chief of police in Galhp&lt;ilis back in
them.
the 19SOs.
I will never forget when I was in
I always considered him to be my
Australia, the ponce chief found a
friend for many reasons, but the
police uniform that fit me and told
MEMORIES
most important one was that I used
me to come back tomorrow and join
to ride with him in the police car
the parade they were having. Of
where we used to talk about a lot of .
course, I wouldn't miss an opportu·
things in ,general.
which was a sad day for me.
nit,Y like thatl I walked bes1de the
\ One time he asked, "Why don't
But I want to tell you how this let· · chaef of police in my policeman's
·you .loin the police depanment?" I ter he gave me was so wonderful. uniform and carried a gun. What a
'told 'him if my business got bad .1 When I showed it to the policemen haP(l)' day that was for me, one that
""llure would join up with him. He in foreign countries, they let me ride I Will never fo1Jet. Every time I
said, "I hope how soon that hap· with them on their rounds. This ·showe4 this letter to pollee depart·
pens, because you and I would get gave me more insight into the coun· ments m any country I was always
along fine."
try I was visiting.
·
welcomed.:
That letter made many happy
1 I s•ld. "You are one of my beat
So you aee · what a good friend
.friends and we would get alona real days on my world travels. 1 surely Chester W(S to me; with a nice let·
,gOod. Blll I hope mr. business stays · enjoyed the days in Mexico, ter, he made my world travels won·
r&amp;ood. and It did wei ."Chester and I Ireland, Spain, Italy, Australia and derful. If ,nyone besides me has
rerhllined friends until he died, New Zealand. I will keep this letter had a more wonderful and happy

Becq

amooa

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS
Sunday nmes-Senthall

Join us for a

JVSD honors state, national skill competition winners
• fFA (Future Farmers of'
.· (ResolutiotJS of America):
Nichols
(ARDM·II) 2nd Plate
Jndividulll and 9th PIKe iti
Commendations' · the
. State AJt Mechanics
Skills
Tham: Dustin Sexton
presented
(ARDM·U) 9th PlKC in the
Aa Mechanics Skills 'learn:
to
winners
Jonathan
Jones (ARDM-Il)
.J
J~

9th Place in the Ai
RIO
GRANDE
Mechanics Skills Team. .
Commencltitlons were 11ward·
• SPNAO · (Practical
ed to Buckeye Hills Career Nursina): Summer Colem&amp;n
Center students prior to the
3rd Place in the State
·end of the school year by the (PN)
&amp;say
Contest.
Gallia.Jackson· Vinton Joint
oSkills USA·VlCA: David
:VOCational
Board
of Akers
(AST) 2nd Place in the ·
Education.
State
Auto
Service
: The board presented Technology:
Candace
Duty FCCLA RICOQNITION - Buckeye Hill&amp; Career Center stu·~ "Resolutions
of
dents, from left, Liz Abdella, Garrett Puah and LlndsflY
·Commendations" to State (PCT) 1st Place in the Stnte Waatherhead were recoanized ror compettna In the Family,
Naiionul
Skill Community Service Tham, Career and Community Leilders of America competition.
·and
Competition winners at a Sophia Myers (COS· I) lst
reception held on the Place in the St11te Community
Buckeye Hllls campus for the Service Teani; Tll.batho
:atudents, their parents, and Shaffer (pCT) 1st Place in the
State Outstanding Chapter ·
•advisors.
Teum;
Slll'llh Logue (COS·!)
· The following win!ling stu·
lst
Place
In the Stnte
·dents were awarded:
Chapter Tham: .
·• •
BAP
(Business Outstanding
Maria
Coltium
(DHO.A) 1st
""i&gt;rofesslonals of America):
Place
In
the
State
Ooening
Maggie HOOJl!'S (AOA·l) 4th ·
·Place in the State Advanced and Closlns Team: Cryst11l
Word Processing; Lisa Wasch Cox (COS·I) 1st Place in the
· (AOA·ll) 2nd Place In the State Opening and Closing
State
Keyboarding Team: Alysia Davison (COS·
I) I st Place In the State
Production.
'· • FCCLA (Family, Cateer Opening and Closing Team;
. and Comll\unity Leaders of Kendra Delong (COS-I) 1st
America: Noaales Farley Place in the State Opening
(Food Preparation) 3 Star and Closing Team; Janice
Rating In the State Dining Kinneman (DHO·A) 1st
Room Attendant; Liz Abdella Place In the State Open Ina
(Impact) 3.Star Rating in .the and Closinj Team; Nlckl
State Chapter Servicel»roject Ring (COS·I) ht Place in the
Manual; Garrett Puah Staie .Openina and Closing
(Impact) 3 Star Ratin~nthe Team; Erica McGhee (COS·
State Chapter Service ·ect IJ) 1st Place in the State
Manual;
Lin sey Opening and Closing Team; IKILU LIADERI - Buckeye Hilla Caraer Center students
:Weatherhead (Impact) 3 Star Judy Dcmtey (COS·ll) 1st Sophia Myers, left, and Candace Duty were raco&amp;nized by the
Rating In the State Chapter Place in the Opening and Gallie-Jackson·Vinton Joint vocational Board of Education for
flnlshin&amp; in Skills USfi-VICA competition .
.Closing Tham.
.Service Project Manual.

W1NNIRIIN FM - DlspllY\n&amp; their awards limed In FWn
Farmtl'1 of America competition ara Buckeye HUll CIMt

Center students, fl'om left. Jonathan Jones, .lerfOd Nlttlolslnd .
Dustin Sexton.

Buckeye Hilla Caraer Ctnter atudents Sarah Loaue, left, and Tabatha Shaffer wtrt raeotnilld
by the Gallla·Jackson·Vinton Joint Vocational Board of
Education for flnlahln&amp;ln Skills USA·VICA competition.

STUDINTS HDNORID -

..

.
'

:southwestem Elementary
~posts honor roll ·

~~ ·

:.~t~
.,.. Hfii'HIII~- V'

Vacation Bible SChool
June 17 • 21
9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon

..

River Cities Community Health Coalition

Nurse On Call

Meigs&amp;

:: PATRIOT - The fourth
honor roll for
Southwestern Elementary
School Is liS follows:
4·A, Mr. Burnette ;.... Jess
Vat~ahn, Bvie Pennington.
toren Baldwin.
" 4·B, Mrs. Stevens- Clara
Aoatlc ... , Brent Harrison,
:Danlelle Merryn, Justin
Walter, Kerr I Wilson u.
5-A, Mrs. Jeffers - Dane
Brooks, Barron Dummitt,
Janie. Gilbert, Kelcy Gray,
l{achel Merry, Krissy Pelfrey,
ler Ring, Molly Ruff, Billy
anley,_ Samantha Taylor,
aley Waughn.
· S·B, Mn. Woodyard .;_
~achary Balrdn, Mychael
8arker, Amanda Hager, Jeal
•
~lne·week

ot the Middleport Church of Christ
Fifth·4 Moln 51'.
for ages 3 through !5'h grade

Keep_ing·
Gcillia,

All children • 5
through 6th
grade are Invited
to attend Son·
Canyon Adven·
tures to dllcover

Lindsay sr.cnccr, Carmen
Waugh, Just nu Tnylor.
8-A, Mrs. Dunlap - Kuyla
Taylor, K~a Adkins, Josh
Skidmore, ])'ler Porter, Chris
Lester, Tamar Kisor*"',
Tnbltha Arrowood, J.W.
Sheela, Kevin Daines, Carrie
Wauah.
8·0, Mrs. Wilson Miranda Merry, Mutt Elliott, .
Brittany Mowery.
••Denotes all As.

!son'*, Katie Lawrencen,
Ashley Miller, Catie Wolfe,
Evan Wood••, Jacob Dotson.
6-A, Mrs. Meek - Janie
Beuu. Sabra Clark, Margo
Fraleyn, Jereml Harrison,
Jordan Potter •, Sasha
Vaughn, Alison Woolum.
6-B, Mra. Walker - Tyler
Duncan, Elijah Inalefi'*, Ana
Jordan, Ian Lewis, Chelsea
Stowers, 011 via Wallen,
Bryce Wilson.
7·A, Mrs. Baird - James
Wallace, Jonathan Crews,
Jonathan Bailey.
· 7-B Mr. Wriaht - Amanda
Bdae••~ Craig James, T.J.
Klsorn, Chelsea Layton,
Amanda Miller, Elizabeth
Miller, Krista Speln'*,

Sunday Times-Sentinel .

.

Medical professionals provldlns free
health care answers &amp; physician referral

ROY

JONA1'11AN
KDWAMilll

1'1CKK1'8

PnRhOW Oourmtl

.
The Bunau for
Chlldnn with
Medical Jlandlcapl
(IICMH) 11·available
to help famlllo1.

·

Jffou hove a child ti\at ha1 ·
1pecla health earo need• you may
be oll1lblo lor llliltance. ·
Coli tho Oallla Counly Health
Oepllrtmcnlat441 ·2039,
lor more Information.

God1Ssurvival
skills from the
bookofProverba.

KOOK KINilKM
TICKKT 8PKf'141, 110

AVAILAftLU~

•

Tri-counW's source for nevJS

8TKVK
JAMK8

lllnnor A"lloblt
Call Vor 0.11l11

JOliN IIAMMONII
AND PATMir.K
SWKANV
TlrK~'rl Ill
Prt1Mw Gourmtl

DloMr A••llahlt
Ctll ror DttaM1

Fellowahlp Baptllt Church
June 24-28
.

600 McCormick 9AM-12 Noon
Behind Thomas Monday-Friday
Do-lt Center

740·446·6964

Call today and ran the 1tre111.

CARE

John P. McMu~ MD - Obstetrician/GynecokJgist

1-800-462-5255
'

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• 1•111. WIIIIICI~

Suite 214
PVH Medical Office,a,w~~~~

Pinnell Street
Ripley, wv 25'271

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Mondays 8c Wednesdays

Better health for the Tri-State.

FURNITURE&amp;DESION
IU,G Sj.

• . . . P11111•. WIIIIICI:

llllkh 1111: IHU IJHM1
Thcadays, Thursdays 8t Fridays

PLEASANT
VALLEY

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Tht ~ ~u.: ~of &lt;Ill~~~ m~. ~ ball~, et tlieir llltel\1-.gluesday llil'it 'With e plac:QOe of
'lllll@tl~. ~ Nl~ ~ • fl~ of tl1@ ~ ~ 1~ yeer&amp; and &amp;&lt;et\'l!d es ~'SUrer ftlt ln0$t of mat time..She ha!l
. w~ on • Wlt\'t ot ~~. mmt Mtilbty tl1@ ~~~ ~ tll'li1 is 61\ ~!'dent S\IW&lt;ltb!f of tWe Ohio Valley ~y,
• ~ Mel's Nt~t M;Msue. ovs Mltl~s 811! teMUiaf With ~·s ~ 1!1 the utOOt ot \fie l:lelfll\tful P~tetam notes she
PMS b INttl and t~wy tolltiM t (a 0111:)1 ~ n wm OO!Itlfllli!). Mtl bGMU of bin!ctol* !ton\ lei\ to.filht, Jim Ott, lllee Ph!$1lft!flt. ~ ~. li!Met ~. CIMII!illl ~tll@t, ~ Dooit!l ~~ lM 1)1~ iwJm LO!'e Soow, Artist~¢ Director, Riel&lt; St
~. I~ tuiiM Mii Cllllty ltlemtM!, ~~ ~•

.• ·------~----------------------~------------~--~------

\Health Deparbnent
~' joins

SOII8Ielft Olllo or *Mt """"• CrWIII .. •
olltlt 111M elll•lllf. Cll~~a, -~,...,. ro ,...
Trisll ~ Eltwtullw tlltectut, ~ ~ Aflllll'CI
.

In ·literacy push

OAU.tPOt.lS
~un~ of Amerit~t. piart1\erlna with Stoollt~tle lm:.,
lV\}Viiltd l W) ~$ to the
.J.~ttiUtt CUun~ H~alth
~.~tpiartmtl\1 ~~~ part of hs
~ina llflllm"' m prort\\llc
lltct~~ey hi dllltlren.
·
Thu Sehohtstlt: Book
Or~nts
Pro;ram
usus
\\:lluntters of A:n...m~:~ as the
• vchid11 ta dhtrlbull! their
Jk~P~~lar children'%~
· TI~e I'INlth d!!partn~tt~t will
disu~ bmc booh to children
throu~h tll¢ m~n:r pro;mms
olTI!red to the tommunlt~.
• Children who ~iw "11.1:1:1·
: nutlons, pni'tidpat~ in the
: Well Child C'linlt 11111 s~n
•-thnma h th11 Buruu of
Children with Medlul
. Handie11ps (llCMH)~-- par•:tidlltl.te in the WlC rrogflil\\
~ will rete\ve 11 new baok.
• lAst yeu, Vulunt~n of
~merica distributed n\ON
: thun 51,000 books to diSD.d·
: vantapl yauth in 28 Ohio
: rounues. The pm;mm tar;et:ed ora•nlutlans sueh u
•: Head
Stlirt,
MADD,
: preschool ehlldren's pro·
: ar11nls and also provided
• 11udlotapes of p~?pular books
.: ta slaht•lm~~t~lrtd ~:hlldren.
·: Schoht&amp;tlc lne. · rceently
: announted thut hs Scholastic
: Book Or~~nts Proaflim, a eor: por11t11 ln·~ivlna lnltla·
:•tlve, hts F
partnershiP.&amp;
: with ~ny nan-profit oraanl·
: tatlons. Volunteers of
· America distribute more than
:; 500,000 books nfttlonwlde.
• For more lnformnt\on on
: t~ny of the flrnarnms offered
: by the hc11.hh di!pllrtll\IMit, cull
' 4~ 1·:2950. .

~-lftlofllf Ill
,_..Millet

Keeping .
GOIlia,

~Meigs&amp;

Mason

.•.

~ COI'MUIIIy AdiGn ~be .... to hiiJt-=
• Educetton and
.
• Resume ana Jab int&amp;!view
employmlllt traininG
~paratlon
• ~ tlon ~ • TUition asalstanct
wfthin lhe state til Ohio • Tra~ ielrnburtement
• Car twpalt euistance
G11lli-Melgl: .

(740) 441 t018
Pegg~

Tl\1&amp;8611

Annie Saum, Kalsey Nelson. l&lt;arly Atkinson. Mellssa Baird aM Mertal'l GI'Hlll. Ta&amp;llonc~ ._,. Bltl\111¥ 111&lt;1

.

Florid• boy
to1~r

In Potter flick

2·DAY
OUTDOOR

: NAVARRE, Fla. (AP) : Joel Willoughby logged onto
: the Internet in February and
: answered five ttivia quos·
tlons. Now. he's headed for
London to join Hagrid the
. 11iant md Albus Dumbledore
: tn the next "Harry Potter"
· movie.
:i The 11-year-old won a
· walk-on role in "Harry Potter
and the Chamber of Secrets"
as the pnd·prlze winner of
the "Owl Prowl" game.
' It was created oy Warner
Home Video to celebrate the
,: mlease of the ftnt Potter film,
.., "Harry Potter and the
.. Sorcerer's Stone," on DVD
. mdVHS.
: "I was just tryln&amp; to win a
DVD" Joel said Wednesday.
' "l hlci no Idea I would actual·
: ly win a trip."
• Joel111d hla mother, Ttlma
·, Wlllouahby, are flylna to
• London for the fllmlna June
' 24. Later, he and three family
" membera will return for the
movle'a
premiere
In
November.
He doesn't know what part
• he'll fi'X• but he's hoplna
· they'l sort him Into a
: house." .
~
The Hogwarts School of
· Witchcraft and Wizardry,
which Harry and his friends
• .Jittend, has four houses, l'r
dormitories. The Slytherm
• house, for example, is where
: bad students go. Ravenclaw
' students aie intelligent.
• Most of all, Joel is looking
t forward to seeing the "Harry
,, Potter" set and meeting
., Daniel Radcliffe, who plays
the title role.
(On the Net - "Harry
~ Po11er" Web site: harrypot·
ter. wamerbros.com)

.GOSPEL SING
, JtJNB 15, 6 P.M. • ???
AND SArolmAY, J1JNB 16. 1 P.M.- ???
at the Union earnpgiound, New Haven, WV (Rain or Shine)
FREE Admllllon ,. Concelllon Stand .. Wotch for Slgnsll

During .

National Nursing
PROMOTING LITIRACY - AbiQalt Coleman receives a book
from Llaa Burleson, R.N.. of tha Gil IIIII County Health
Dep rtmont afttr rccei'llna h r vaccinations. F"ree ohlldhootl ·
lmmunlllltlons are just one of tha many of the many 11ervleea
the health department pro'lldell to Ohio raaltlenta.

Assistant Wee~
the Residents and Staff at

Wyngote of Gallipolis

••
•

.•'

would like to honor our
dedicated Nursing Assistants

••

••••

to the following businesses lor
supporting our lundmlser:
..•••
•
•
•
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•

Ohrlslrav
KateStona
Angle
BrandvMccov
.Sonva Fischer

•

*Buckeye·Food land*
*Gallipolis Foodland*
·*Floral Fashions*
Pope
.
Ruth Evans
*Pepsi Distributing*
Heather
Mceartv
*Helner•s Bakery*
Rosa Seagraves
*The Movie Station*
Margaret Dennav
•
·KIV Dahon ·
*McDonald•s
of
Gallipolis*
·
..
Zach
•
•
••
••
•

•

•
•
•

•
•

•
•

•

•

••

•
•

WandV

Thanlls II(Jflln,
Ohio Valley Banll
Rllay for Life 1iJtlm

•

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•••
••
•

•

•••

It's Up to You
by: Unknown
One song can spark a moment,
One flower can wake the dream.

: 'dpter security

One lree can start a foNst,
One bird can herald spring .

'

•

Ont\ smile begins a friendship,
One handclasp lifts a soul •
One Stllf llbh aulde il ship at sea,
One word can frame the aDill.
One Vote can chan11e a nation,
One sunbeam lights • room.

fair goody bags In the car, or
plan to spend e~ttru time at
the gate.
Elttru security guards at the
Grandstand will check purses
and concertgoers loaded
down with packages to make
sure they have no tenorist
intentions.
An Blakey, chief of police
for the State Fair, said security is tighter this year, after the
Sept. 11 attacks and govern·
ment warnings that Osllma
bin Laden'saf-Qaidanetwork
is regroupin&amp; ttnd more
attackS are likely.
"We want people to be
safe. We w111t them to come
md eflioy themselves. And
we're puttlna some thinfs
into pnctice that hopefulq:
will keep everybody safe, '
Blakey said.
Blakey also said fair officials ~ beina c~f\11 in their
plannlna. "We don't want
this to look like an anned
camp," he laid.
Tlie Mlnneaotl Stlte Fair,
the nation 'a aecond·laraeat
behind ·Ttlxaa laat ~· runa
Aua. 22-Sept. 2. More than
1.7 ml.lllon people attended
latt year.
(On t/11 ~b- Mlnn11ota
Stall Fair W1b s/11:

library's main branch Oct.
16-Nov. 3 as an curly stop on
a national tour.
"We are delighted" thut the
document will be displa~ed
in Louisville, said library
directOI' Cruig Buthod. .
Buthod suid he's been dis·
cussing the document's
appearance in Louisville for
· more than 11 ye11r with 11 nonprofit ~roup called the
Declarauon of Independence
Road Trip, which Lear set up
to give the c!ocument public
exposure.
Ashley Mowrey, a spokeswoman for the tour, said the
cities that will be included
will be announced July 4, but
Louisville will be the fourth
stop.
On the night of July 4,
1776, about 200 copies of the
newly dnfted Declaration of
Independence were printed
by John Dunlap of
Philadelphia. The copies
were circulated throuahout
the colonies. The document
ailned by _56 foundlna fathen
laln the National Arcllives In
Waahlnaton.
· ·
At on 989, only 24 copies
of the Dunlap broadsides
were known to exist, until a
flea-market shop~r bought a
www.mn&amp;tat~lr.oiJ)
framed Dalntina for $4. The
owner aiscovered a folded
Dunlap broadside behind the
Dtd1r1tlon
painting. Sotheby's authenti·
cated the 2Sth copy_and sold
It at auction in 2000 to Lear
and 11 partner.
Of the surviving Dunlap
broadsides, 21 belong to um·
versitles, historical societies.
. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) libraries and municipalities.
- One of the original 1776 The remaining four are in pri·
copies of the nation's vate hands.
Declaration of Independence
will be In Louisville for 11
public viewing this fall. .
The document, which tele·
vision producer Norman Lear
owns, is one of 2S known
M1..yllnd's
ori~inal copies of our coun·
try s ."birtli certiticiue" still
remaining. It will be on dis·
BALTIMORE (AP)
play for free at tlte public

of
Independence
In BlUIIfiSS
Stlte

Chris Rock film
helps out

economy

"Head of State," a comedy
starring Chris Rock as 11 pres·
identi11l candidate, will heir&gt;
boost the economic impact or
film and television prod~·
tion in Maryhmd to 11 record
$80 million this year. W.d
Jack Oerbes, director of th&amp;
state film commission.
Baltimore will double tar
W11shin(lton in the movie
which wtll be the next feuture
film with its production
based in M~~ry llllld. Oetbes
said in an interview with
Associated Press editors and
reporters.
The effect of this produc:·
tian will mark • rebound
.fr6m the previous fiscal year,
wtlen film produc:lion was
stalled for sevenl months
be€ause of the possibiUty of
strikes by actors lllld screen·
writers, Oerbes said.
The state took in just $34
million fiom film produc:tion
in fiscal year 2001, COI1IDinld
with more than $7S millfon In
each of the previous thJee
):e&amp;n, accordina to data from
the film omce.
Production crews have
become a common si&amp;ht over
lhe p111 few months on the
streets of Baltimore. "The
Wire," a crime series from
lhe co-creator of the lana·
runnina police dnma
"Homicide: Life on the
Street." debuted this morith
on HBO and is in production
for its initial 13-e~isode run. .
Crews for "Red uraaon," a
()tequel to "The Silence of
the Lambs," recently com·

Puruum. ·

One candle wlpea out datkneu,
One laugh will conquer gloom.

Dieted 13 days of filming in
ilowntown Baltimore.
Oerbes' job liS head of the
film office is to lure produc·
tions .to Mllr)llll!ld by SCQUI- .
ing shooting locatioos.
He uses 11 netw«k of Clllltacts in the movie industry to
le11111 IIOOUI

proj~ts

tblll

might be a good tit for
Maryland. After that. "I will
read the script. and it's my
job to ~d of put my visual
take 0011. with tnput from the
production designer and the
ilirec:tor," Getbes said
Monday. ''That's what jell
them here - the look."
(On til• Ntr - MaryiiJIId
Film
Commiui01t:
www.·IIKlrylan4Jilm.o'!1

Over 52 years experience in appliance sales

WE SELL QUAUTY MAJOR BRANDS

..

fOr all the~
with arms Oflove.

n:1m:ed me

't.n llaa.t•
.FRIGIDAIRE'

:,.._...,.--...,

A.....

•

CROSLEY•

'

Gjbspn
IMAY.i'AGI

••

'·

One step must start each journey,
One word must start each prayer•

- --

VIsit Our Newly Expanded Product Lineup

One hope will tal.e our •plrlta,
One touch can ahow you care •

.lilt

lb\1 ofttn )'"' P'*d 1111' up ~~~~~l'lllfd lilt' to your eheelcl. ~~ held me 11'111lmy
...., )'"" ln!t. 1M
to VOIIIc, lllulltljlln~e 111M' tult.o...
tlliP )'"!• J11*1111o pnwldl"«- "'""'"'ad~
'hi f/11\e •lilt. -.u fM me lilt ,....;a •per1011 eoold- )'llltl'lflr.
AI )IIIIWI!td me dott ttl )'Dir heolt, -11.'111)' )'Olin mine, with tlaaulls.

One II fe can make the dl ffetence,

.

1t stlte f1ln
this ye~r

FALCON
·HEIGHTS.
· '"Minn. (AP)- Fans who plan
• to catch Alicia Keys, Bonnie
: Raitt or Doc Severinsen at
the Minnesota State Fair this
year better leave their state

One voice can •peak with wladorn,
One heart can know what'• true .

.

Yoll see, I'f'S UP TO YOUI

.....,. """"' Dljr.

•

Sponsored by
.
.Mtlp County ltlpt To Life

•

"

Kel~

(740)911-2222

19TH ANNUAL

•

..•

PUNT1Ne R.GWERS - Girl Scout Bnlwnle Troop 1463 Pllllted flowers It Arbofis It GIIUCIQIIs C!1n Mer 22. The trQQp, also lllsited t!Mt Special Needs Unit residents end dec:onlted the sidewalks wtth sklfi1tk thalk. Girl Scout&amp; P~Pticlpatlnt lncJude.d ~
CremHns. Klyl1 Purdum, Tori 1/anFossen, Rac:llel Morris, Mecen,CrerMeas. BrQolc.e Mey.. JenntfV Bte..ins. Courtn~ ~

ENTERTAINMENT BRIEFS

•
•

..•
•

MARINI CORPS AWMD- The U.S. Menne COfll$
rwcentty pntsented the Semper Fkleles Awlnl far .musiC:II extellence to Oeldfl ~n Hill of ThUrtnlll. The
awn WI$ presented It the ennual Gellla Acldemy Hl&amp;h
School Bind blnquet held It Buckeye Hills CII'IHII'
C.Oter, llld the pntsentllion WIS mede by SJSCt. Moofe
of the local Marine recruiti~ station. Hill won the awlnl
based on her being the only student In the tfl.county 1re1
to pass the Marine Corps audition on the clarinet. Hall Is
the .dauahter of Jim and Maute Oiler of Thurman.

O.nlae L. Mllrtln

informecJ e

•

•••

.

'

·
Wl OFFER;
Free Delivery • FrH Removal Of Old Appliances
.
Service After The Sale
Member of the

Source Network of dealers with over

billion dollars of

ason Furniture
Style

. V•lue
Selection
Fr- Delivery Setup end Remov•l
-w.m•aon.homa•ppllanoaa.oom
St•

�--·tel

Dl
I

l1IB

J DLIII-

IN

•mu

•~t~lltt
l 1- Sue St&lt;me ol Sue's :5electable:s in Middleport, rigllt, assists Kathy -'mott with her purchase.
~ ~ bne 'Ot ~I IIOMl anl~ue dealers WhO, through the gr&lt;Jwing I)OI)Uiarity of the antiques market and a unique

~lYe

!$11irlt, •tiM ihe'lt*l form ~ ~~etail ITlidhe in Meigs &lt;Oounty. (Brian l

~eed)

getaway
Gertath said their shop .
refers customers not only
to stone~ shop next door,
bJt atso to ~ Heart and
cardeUght and Kay

· Memorial Hospital closed. She be$an
with a booth at the neighbonng
'R.iverbend Antique and Craft Mall,
and opened her own shop last fall.
Mike Gerlach, who along with his
wife, Debbie, owns Riverbend
Antique and Craft Mall, said local
antique dealers worl&lt;: together to see
Oecil~ antique ~ . both· that their customers find what they're
.for.
··
in MlcbePort~ and to . looki!l$
"I thmk all of the antique dealers in
Hartwen Hoose, Riverine the community are of a like mind,"
said . ."The more shops and
Antiqu&amp;S and other shops Gerlach
more selection, the better it is · for

.......

elsewhet'e in the oounty,.
and that their colleagues
do the same.

antiques alol\g wi~h ~her items, craft
Items 'Of gilts, for example, the
antique market in Meigs County
.appears to be strong - bo~h in local
tMde "nd fi'Ont .:lay-trippil\g tourists
al'ld weekend visitors.
Sue Stone, who operates Sue's
Selectable&amp; on MiddleJ)Ott's "T," sees
customers trom the local area. but
als&lt;l from Columbus, Marietta,
Jackson, a'tld Ravenswood and
Huntington W.Va.
·
Antique de:\lil\g is a second career
for Stone, woo 'Opened her shop after
she lo-st her job when Veteran-s

./ 2000 National Percentile Ranks

• Reaclina- 9a
•Matb-97
• Listening- 96
LOving and Fun Atmosphere.

./
./ ·Scripture Memory and Songs '
.I Modern Facilities

Saturday, June 15th and
Sunday June 16th
Dolly 8-6, Sun. 11:30 - S

500

Plants
for

$5.00

•
•

•

•

•
•

• Air Conditioned
.• Carpeted
• Library with Computer Lab
• Planround Equipment

INVESTING

.Stifeguard
your identity ·

.I Call NOW 740-446-0374

Ryan

Kneen

Smith

GUESTVIE.W

GUEST

VIEW

'

Ohio l'llL

Christian School

"Where ChrbtlsThe~=~~~~=~=~:...-~..J
~ltb

Spedal·Discount
25'K orr Tultkm to Kindergartners

tina I
Mt.TJJIIhMl
GM•Icllit(J.-)441UG.ut.U
••
•

•

•

"Antiquers look for so many different things th't it's difficuh for them to
find everythtitg in one place, so we
try to keep a handle on what other
shops carry, and send out customers
in the right direction," Gerlach said.
"If a community offers more choices, the .customer has a much better
chance of finding what they're looking for, and leaving happy," he added.
Gerlach said their shop refers customers not only to Stone's shop next
door, but also to By Heart and
Candlelight and Kay Cecil's antique
shop, both in Mi~dlepon. a~d to
Hartwell House, Rtvenne Anttques
and other shops elsewhere in the
county, and that their colleagues do .
the same.

Blooming flora &lt;?ffers pleasant sight
Hal

./ 25 Years of Teaching Excellence

evezyo~."

held at David Diles Park.
This annual event has drawn lots
of community supJ)Ort a.nd improved
the front yards of many homes. To
be considered, you need to register
at the Middleport Department Store
by S p.m. on July I. For further
details , call the Wise residence at
992-2675.

•••

Are you interested · in native
'
plants? The public is invited for the
.!Ike potatoes and dahlias, additional ~and ottlning of the Wood County ·
potas~iunt will Improve developbl'
lb
A bo t
on J n
ment uf tubers. Fertilize p\atns on
tc
rary r re um
ue
. b 1
~"I
b
:22
from
.10
a.m.
to
2
p.m.
·
romme as s accoiU ng 10 1a e1 This newly-developed arboretum
directions, lhttging baskets and is located at the main Parl&lt;:ersburg,
contaltierized plants need additional W.Va., Library located at 31st and
fertlliur as they dry out faster than Emerson Street. Local resident
in $round phmted flowers and Frank Poiter helped design, recom·
reqUire more water.
f
This additional water leaches uut mend and p~o~i~e many o · the
of the soli many of our nutrients. native West Vtrgtnla plants.
Pnule off or "ilead-head" nower
Frank will be speaking on "The
he"ads .after th~y have bloomed. Design and Construction of Raised
"'
·
1
• h
Beds In Which to Grow Native
water during ear y motntnll ours to Plants.'' Peter Hens, owner of
reduce wet leaves and flowers going
into the night to reduce diseQses, It's Enchanter's Garden in Hinton,
beuer to water heavily twice a week W.Va.,, will be ~peaking on "The
than to water a little every day., This D!v~~IIY,, of Nattve Plants In West
is tllpeciall'v true with established • Vtrgtma. .
.
nowerll\8 pfants,
Following the presentauons, there
·
•••
will be a guided tour of the
Do you have a spectacular front Arboretum, n:freshtnents and native
pon:h or entranceway decorat~d plan~ sale. 'fhts event is open to th.e
with live· plants and live 1n pubhc and ts free . Call 247·4565 tf
Middleport? If · so, the Annual you have any questions.
Middleport Beautification Award is
(Hal Kneen is Meigs C01mty 's
being judged on July 2 for plant-gil\ Exte1tsio11 agent for agricu.ltllre and
certificates to be awarded at ? p.m. natur·al resources, Ohw State
~tlhe Mlddlepott July 4 celebration Vnive•·sity.)

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Junoo 13. 14, 15, 18: . RJo,

Lcx:al Co.THE
SERVING

I would like ro
apologize to you
and ~ur family lor
the lies I've told
and the hurt I've
caused. 1 know
there Is no way I
can take any or It
back, Alii can ask
Is that you believe
me when I say I'm
sorry. I love and
miss you and
Maddison very
much. I would
love one nnal
chance ro prove to·
yuuand your
ramlly that I can be
the man I wae
when I came back
and never again the
man I w8ll when we
parted. I want to
be a part or youre
and Madlll8on's lire
tor the real or mine.

Sincerely,
Jeff

'/OUt',.._ to:

Al1n:

--cor.¥

We will pay a
and"""guaranteed salary ~In'*""'·
until we have you IAIIN INCOIII AT - .
~- a.~a, •••••• ~
trained and -,Ay
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assistconsumers'in 888-801-43541 or vlolt

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or Pal Hill .
Monday thru
satulday
I 0:00 a,m, to
600p ToO......I
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-• n
the: tai'Hr
you
bave
always dreamed or.

In Memory

Haodwo..

G!l

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Clerk.

1; : : 'o':~c~~

825 Thin! Avo, Oolllpolla.
on o15413t

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caring lor

tn.

-Spno,ahlna:
7om-31l!n. 7...,.
3pln·11pn&gt;, 11pn&gt;•

7am. can 740-992-15023.
Local Cloning Company
Soal&lt;lng Someone 1o Help

wllh Laundfy and Ory
Claanlng Procooaalng, Will
Tr.tn. Muat "" o.pondablo.
Sand Rtsumo 10: Spe&lt;lal
Caro Chti!ntng S.rvlca,
1743 cam:;a' Rood, Ool·
1
ipalla. OH •

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out of S ht,
But you are
not out of
mind today ...
We will all be
tog~
aga11n
50
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HAPPY
FATHER'S DA
In Memory of
Robert C.

an OIXlQt\ljnloo
II' ,.,.....,, - . An ty to I n - lor !hit poolOul!&gt;llltnt
ONg lion, by and 1111 out on
ond

from the

Fleshman Family

In Memory
.I• Lovilia MtllltN)I

William L. Cox
1999-2002
Lo¥1.. H..blad
and to.tac Father

Happy Father'l Day
Your:ono Rocer .t Bub • Jeff,
your dauahten Reta • 'l'maa
We love you end miss you
1/oppy Fat~r~ Ooy Poppy
l'our GrQ/1drhlldffn ol
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7111 ,.. all mutarailo

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Soncl mume by Juno aa.
2002 lo: FACTS. 4S 01Mo
Strht, Oollipotlo, Cillo
45831 or FAX 10 (7«1)-

8014, eoe, INFitl

In Merno,Y
1-$-4a . 1. 11-m

I• M•mory Of
Our Dad

Max Hill, Sr.
On Father's Day
Lovtd &amp; Missw/,
A~meor

&amp;: Jtuiitt

BUSINESS IS GREAT

anctM ...o 111 add •

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a truck~

ulae ~to ~~art~~~~, llw IIOIUnte

WE OFFER

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Claire C. Boso
On Falbor'slll)

fol'fvtrloO.rn..,Au,

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In Memory

-::===:::::::;;;::;,

IIEDICAL INSURANCE &amp; A !!A£AT INVIEI+TIJIIY

WE REQUIRE
Q,EAN, HQNES'tSW: STA1'11US, NO
EXI'EFIIENCE NECESSARY. CClMI'lEt£
TIWNING. PIIOO'Wol
FOR ACONfiOENTIIoi.INTEI'tllftW. CON'I'M:oli

Chuck or .~my •t

r

Henry
Hartman
418134 • 12120198
In loving memory
of dad on Father's
Dlly,who went to
be with Jesus.
Carla Kimes

THANK YOU
The family of Fred Thompson wishes to
thank everyone who helped Fred in any
way. If you shed 1 lear. prayed a prayer.
thought of us with love, gave a memorial gift, slmtllowers. food or u beautiful
card;or wen: at visitation, it was greatly
appreciated. We want 10 especially thank
Pastor Fetty for his support and fine
funeral tribute, Reverend Vinson for his
support and song. Marilyn for the oraan
music, Janelle for the wonderful eulogy,
tlte pallbearers John. Paul, Troy, Sam,
Dwight and Steve and the Wood-Holly
Wauah Funeral Home for their help and
friendship during 1his dlfficu11 time. We
appreciate the prayers and support of all.
u., Goff tim,.,..

..

•
•

(740) S8N487
No walk·ln&amp; piMu

SOUTHEAST IMPORTS

SUPERSTORE

~ C9111rnllll&amp; RQIO, A11itne. CK -451111

New Sltu1 F«llralb Qvllli/W
ComMMnity H«1ltlt Cenkr ilt

PUBUC

SoMIII«JSttrn Ollio
Is seeklna applkuts fbr aa ·

Clrd of Thank•

•

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June 22, 2002
: Chester Fire Station
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AUCTIONEER:
LESUE A. LEMLEY

ariBnWCI II
II you, would lib to Jllab a
clONtlon. plane CQI\tact:
'&amp;lnr Ntwellells-mt

!:

• Customer Service Minded • Penonallty Plus!
• Work In An Environment Wben You An Appreciated
• Must Like Parties, Dop &amp; FUn
• Bulc Job Requirement: Have Fun &amp; Laug)J
• Sip On Bonus (Wlll Be Discussed During Interview) • Paid Employee Beneftts
.
• Salary Competitive ~ Ne11otlable

256·7579

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Communlt~

Beaver, WV 25813 or call

AUaiON

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Responsible for administerlna, directlna
and coordinating all activities of the
FQHC. They will answer directly to the
Board of Trustees and will provide managerial oveniaht of tho mcdital director
and medical staff. Qualified applicants
should have a Bachelor's dearee In Heal1h
Care Administration with at lout three
years experience. Competitive aallll) and
benefit packaac. EEO employer. Send
resumes to Federal!, Quallft!Hl

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O'BLENESS MEMORtAl
llenlflll. Full n.,. 1m"*""
HOSPI"~~''AL a.r1 ti
... Oponi, ~ •t .,.,
II
ucaS a pa - me
t~=· t.i'~ :0 Opening With rotating shifts
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t....~ and
hol,.~s care FaoiHty. ~
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Form toonds wonlod 740- countltl, ~:Mr-42112.
aibllltloa lnc:hl&lt;le. bUt not llmFull Time Fumillllt war. !lOCI to: oiCOIIol, ond
~~au ... o..~Yo&lt;y Poalllon
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lt~a g·••·~ _,II. IIC, A minimum ol a
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baby IIOms, 11011 mile,
Call lor Appi./!'xam lnlo,
comes from
; -- - - --.. Fedo10l H110 Full bOI\oll!o,
our heilrts.
1-800:842·2128 e.ti!O
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ADVERTISING
SALES
REPRESENT·&amp;·:nv

Floe to IJOOd holM: L!ib Mik EXPERIENCED CARPEt!- -·~.. " " ' Pupploo, (740~122
TEAS NEECfO- Must ho .. ~In a bonk or CltC!it union.

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Oil (7«l)U~ 41411.
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ONo--~~1011-11&gt; oo•~e~• ~0::,~~=- o:11 1700~1·17~
1 -too-·-·-~ 81 Clilf~-._.q
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IWICIIII&lt;IorCfonL
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mIllS
1111!Sl1

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74N454868 .
~

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I'WI ~~~ ..... ~-

liCK PEARSON AUCTION COMPANY
A\ICtiOMIIIt IlliCit PIAIII&amp;OM •tt
ns-staa oa ns.a.•'
OWMIIIIII llltCII-1110 • PIIVLtta OIL.ttiV '
tUM&amp;1 eMil 0111 tMelt 1110. ·

't«&lt;l tlill*'llllltlllttt. . . .

Ill~

LARGI All DAY &amp;ALit
COMI AND SPINO THI
DAYWlTHUSU

�40695 Park Roadt Shade
$113,000 • A Farmette-Fiaallyl
All set up and ready for your 4-H IIJiimals..
your horses, or your hobbies. 1990 3 bedroom, 2 bath home with new heal pump.
deck and porch to relax on, extra1arae 2
car garage for storage and tinkcrina, and a
four stall barn with hay storaae 1n:1 and .
tack room, electric and water. All fenced
and in great condition just 12 miles on
SR 33 to Athens or to Pomeroy. Could be
financed VA, FHA, or Conventional.
H!lve a look •t ~photos oll26 u
wwwJarryeonrathrulty.com tltH alft
. us a can to set up a tour.

· Real Eatata General

.Etl4114-- ~ ~tate,

lbt. Hud -led apl.al
uti. pold tar~ and
cliO•
E.H.O (304)675«179

514 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-0994
740-446-0008 740-441-1111
broker@evans-moore .com
www.e vans-moore.com
F-•rly BklcU•m Realty ."S.ninr SDIIIhmt Ohio For O..r II Qoarttr Ctltlll'7"

.Joe A. Moore-Broker 441-1818
Sarah L. Evana-Moore, Broker 441-1818
Patricia Haya- 448-3884 Cara Caaey-245·8430
Cynthia Siciliano- 388-1841

~~~~2;_--.~---~

Candace

•

-comtl lOt 'iNa ''• 'SIIOIY
'holM.
3 bedraoma, 2 baths, ~lng r00111 and
'IQOIII. " ' -. 2 car ·garil~. Al*D
air ilnd . - r gaa .1uf1'18Ci1. Quill a

"*'

A8t&lt;ING -1100.00
hOrilt

""'I ••

,_

jual

being 'finished now.

·t.e 4 litne lllh18 niCe home silting an •

Juit &lt;1«
hll with

Owner hoo addad nice cov.rad

back porch to go along with

{I bed,.,.,. and 2 ballla. There ara 3.43 aawe
Wifl 10111 01 •room tor &lt;ihil&lt;lren. Haa an.., fMI
· WlluUn \lie IMng roolll, dlnlnQ flXInl, and

IPICtiCUIIr

' kiiCheil 'Willi axlra Wide ~. Alii&gt; haa l6ler
celingl lor an txn -dlme'ntlon, A mual - ·

You wtll fall •lll !Oilt.

Dream• can comt trutl
Secluded and conventenUy
locatsd, this lovety 4 BR .3 SA
home rests on 7.5 gorgeous
acres and has a stocked pond,
24 • 32 metal building, 2 car
attached garage, wrap around
porch and a beautifully
landscaped yard. Wllh ceramic
tile entryways, Bruce hardwood
flooring, and Intricately laid brick
sidewalks, this superb horne has
detail covent~. Call ·tor an
dream

MAINTAINED RANCH ON OVER
1 ACRE TREED LOTI Nice family
room, 3 t&gt;edloomo, living room wllt1

liiEOUCt!O to $71,000

river

VIIWI, a

11ctuded wooded tot and
neturt abound thla rtllld
ranch on 3 AC mil . With
hardwood floors, remodeled oak
kitchen and ample living space
enhanced by a finished lower
I 1
. gem awalls you :

ftrtp11108, oat·ln klt&lt;:ht. anacl1ed
garage, loti of updateo wllhln pail
COIJI)Ie yeara. StorHge buldlng.
Muet att tnlo onof 12201

beclroo•m -ovi;liOol,liiti
Fllver. Thl1
1:~:1
many unique fta.tunol lr
beautiful hardwood
crown molding and
Beautifully landiOipod
all the war 10 fho
the r11t,
now Ia
ofttrlng

Hon,.l

.,.,.,

.-

"""""""' home on over t .3 acre lot
with
dabiclled
garage.
3
Bedroomo. 2 balhl, Nice noor
plan: ClWnef raqutlting )'OUr offe~
ASking price $83,000.00 12186

MUCH IIQQER THAN MEETS
THE EYE! O..r 2,100 sq. ft. living
tpace . 5 Ei&lt;ldroom ranch tltuated on
a roomy t .8 aero lot. Living room,
dining troa, kllchen, U balflo. 18 •
20 storage lhed. $83,900.00 12112
NEW FARM LISTING! 30.5 Acrea
lt1at ad)Oina US government land.
Mobile home arid older 2 story
home Included. Lat ua toll you
about thlollatlng. 12111
NEW LilTING! LOTSI • acres up,
mottl\' a" WOOdad owner will
C&lt;MIIIdef Mlilng on land coruoct.

BINGO

oocond dwolllntl Thlo
onero you tht apace lor 2
tamllloo. Elt·ln kitchen, MvlnQ
room with flr~, clnlng room,
1 112 cor a«aclled garage, 2 car
detached goroge. 2nd dwtlllnQ

~~~~~~~~~hal 728
on 2 AC MIL with large family
room, formal living room and
open kitchen all In a private
country Betting. With rolling
meadows as the backdrop, this

quiet senlng offers several out
bulfdlngo, Including a large bam.

a

to

lett, I BR, 1 BA

I

Tycoon Lake! Newly remodeled, 3
BR, 1 1/2 batt!, aHached 2·Cir

garage on 1 acre mil. Relax In the
&amp;hade on your wrop·around porcn.

.71,1100

·~
LOTI!

LOTS! LOTI! Sbirtlng at
U acre lo 3.5 plut acree. Ale
Orlinda
arta,
county
water
IVIIable. Anordabltl Owner II
riqUtttlng an ott«. 12114.
LOTI .885 acre that haa Road
fran- along SR t 110 &amp; Bulavllle

"i;:.ti.i:

AED(tCTIO~N
Tl"liDI.Vit NO
. mottar whll your hobby

lt ... huntlng, 4 wllttlere,

ldttl b Rllliiontlal or common:~~~.
Owner lfling ~
va!Utl til 4t

.h orua, or hlklng..you 1111m1
ll...tlllolond II for you! N - 3
BA home on 42 beautiful acres
on S.R. 160.

LIVIL

LOTI
WATION
IIOAD...county water avai. .,.....
t/2 aora. lltoi!M ownad &amp; wan11 an

• • IQkl

a•AG.Ifl

Land Listin s!

11m

.com- Properly! 145 ""'" mil ,_Rio Grlndt•

UOl1- 8.121 Acm mil in

a.-_,..,.

$58.1100.

·---a

121111-12-14 ICNIIIIII-**Jng Cillo Yllllf.

f.2Qll-10 -~~~~~-Rio Clr8ncla.

WJ- 3 - building 1o1r North 0a111a E~totea. ae.eoo.
WI- PRICI! REDUCED! 8olltudli
71llt-

-··AND
__..
11N1M1Ml
CCWBtkU.

onvtn tn
IOCIIOn ..•country HHing. J\.111
10 mlnutea tro town. thla clattlc
tpllt-tevel ranch otters an open
floor plan, cozy sunroom
overlooking a perennia.l ftDwer
garden. In additltln to the three
t&gt;edrOOIIII, opaclout kitchen and
two car atllchtd garage nolfefl
a newer 20 x 40 m•tal
garoge/lhop. •111,00

lliQQftt OfiUAl

4-._'JI.IIR
tlMl'Al . .

••

l..

l

',)J.

:_.

:_,.1,,1

'..! '!'

IIIII Park! 3lolt loCIIed neiCI fo Trcoon Lake 1 11M lined
dead end road. Total of 1.58 IICfll mil $28,000. Cll ~
IMZ· J!IIUIIIUI building .,,., 5.3. acre• mil 0\'1-ng
picturesque Charolalo Laka.
f.IU-75 acrwo mil ..C.n11111c1. LDia of .........
nice home litel. Jllol outJide ot town. 1200,000

se.... _.,·

IJZZ· 24 ICIMin Morgan Twp. $38,1100
11811- Vtcanl Landi 50 aeroa mil fn Mo&lt;gan Townaltlp. SIIUOO

I

ll'lll\llllllf(HJ/\1 lf',JI/J(,'; ,1, 1 1~1 OIH.lMICll~ Cfll l UH ',101' HY I Oil A
I I,'/ I &lt;! 1'&lt;11 I I ~ /i 1 lr11/ •, IN 1 'I ll l 1/1 I I&lt; I(1 k I I 7 1

Cheryl Lemley

742·3171
WCINDIJII'UL

CIUifl. W-D
Ml ihG WITH RUittC HOMII
~ I A I ! - - OM llory
homl. illlfnll _,. -

I bllh.

. . . .. 10.0 oq. ft. ol ...- and .
oooy illlfnll. Thll one 11 )UII
., .. mill -.gt ~

Ill 111tJi1Y IIIGIIO. c.tl tar ....,
lnlorlnlttonrdiM

.

I
-~

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I

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�•

.
.....,. June1S. 1001

Pomeroy • Mlddlap Drt • o.tllpotta. Ohio • Point Pl•••~~nt. WV

rltiii'IDII

nnr

WALL STREET WATCH

Sunday-Times

Sl«ks mixed ~clay•.but suffer
fourth stral
g week

Cla~tlfle4

A4t
PI• ''" M'*fll

2342.

NEW YORK (AP) Bu1 the Nasdlq ~ite
Caution dominated lhe $totk hidelt rose 7.88, or O.S pe~
market Friday followina a cent, 10 1,504.74, recovering
bombina outside a u.s. aov· rrom 1111 early loss of .51.42.
ernment office in Pakistan.
The market indCJtes also
Stocks ended the session nar- &amp;uffered their fourth con&amp;ecu·
Pubtlo Notlot
ltubtlo Mlltloe
ltubtlo Nottoe
rowly mbued, but fulled to live down week. The Dow
save the market from it&amp; .fen 11.5.46, or 1.2 J)l!rcent,
NOliOI
partiOIIItto In tho '"'t::,~'"
founh straJaht losing week.
the S&amp;P lost 20.26, or 2.0
1111 Galltt COuntv Mttllotra .1 protttlll
COUNTV, OHIO
ln vestors were wary of percent, and the Nasdaq sank
"-' lohool Dlatrlol ~~~~ ~~url'ty' !~~ 11111
holdlna onto stocks tor fear 30.74, or 2.0 pertent.
wm ''"II' ltllttl llfltotlvt .1u1y t, aM
OP
of more attacks over the
"You tan'l blame Investors
111ft until
ti:OO
on
The
tlrttmtnt
lltllllltiCocle.lto.
weekend.
A
spate
of
bad
for
.
being very, very demoral·
1
~~rr.~ • a:,t '\:': =:r.::•n c.~~·••:; 11ot.a-.1t
new• about the health of lted .... The stock market is
Trauurtr tao · V.ttr1ne Mtmort11 TO Al.l. NIIIONI
business - revenue warn· aolna down and their nest
lhawn•• Len-. Hotplttt" enll tht INTIIIIITID IN THI inas l'rom Lucent and Sprint ens are shrlnklna. There are
Galllpolla,
Ohio ltottttry ot Health ;t~.f.~'lt\NDING PCS, . down11radcs
of plenty or reasons to sell 1111
41111,
lht follow- and
Humen
ltrYIHt
telecommunlc:ailons stocks first, to sto~ the bleedino,"
1111 'IIIIIOIItt
will bt
ttrmlnatttl
on IN .THI GAWA.
, .., Ponl lha II .1u1y , , 1001, In COUNTY Pn..and a dl!tline in consumer Johnson sal .
· 1111•~~11• 1110 11 eooonlan" with '"' ~V:'tio~~:~:~ sentiment - also held the
Much of Wall Street's
- n
n · l~:vlelont of tho tUtti an aooount ot market back.
weakness Friday was attrib·
lut II Pllltngar
lllltourtty Aot. · 1111 truat. A htlrlnt "There are so many reasons utable to worries triagered by
:~:J:ttlonll
~"~"
1111 tooount In for investorS to be worried. an auack on the U.S.
10
1 ~1,vltmJ~...0Y·='· on
1• •• ,....
111
••
MOll
Will tntl
bt They were worrte
. d I here consu Iate 1..n Karac hi ,
vn•
ot " •- Homt tt 111111 11....
tha datt
P••••naar
of Vtttttna M-rltl tlmt ehown btlow. would be more terror attacks; Pakistan, where a suicide
'l)t
vthloiM
mey
Ill lltn II lht IIUI Hoaplttl"
tmplortMWillof b•oomt
"Hollar Tht oourt IaI loottttl
C t and there ,has been on.e. They attnc:ker drove a bomb-laden
tooattll •.11 Homo cart of Holnr tt thl Otll • oun v have been worried about the · car Into a ju11rd posl. The
~trtlt
• 11 • Mtdloll Ctnlar, • • 11
Courthouat,
l.ooual, economy and ·cam1ngs, an..d auac k kille II peop Ie an d
troarv Ill• ""
,.11 01111110111
Crown City, Ohio. Por perllolpent In thl Ohio 4iut
there Is very ~ood renson, Injured maM; more, lncludl~
lntormttlon
oelll'loVII
Mtdlo•r•
''oftrem.
~
1 gua rd an
a:=gtelon ?40·111·. Tht 111 n wl 11, lloutttn l.o~en, ....ald Hua h Jo nson, ch'te f · one us
. , arne
I .·
looetttl 1t 111 •••I g:~•01
J~~ investment officer at First five Pakistani employees of
· Tht 11011'11 tlllt'Ytl Mtmor111 Drlva, 11 aooa
the United States.
11 ; 0,00 Albany Corp.
tllarlfthttoa•titallny Pomtrov. OH 41711, ·o'clook 1.m. ·
The Dow ended a heavily
Analysts said the market
tndt l)lclt.
tnd will oont1nu1 to 1111on lltrtlln traded session down 28.5!1, or was able to narrow Its losses
llfYt
Mtlge, Atlitnt, Thomtt Ctat No, 0 3
n 474 21 B
ltntlrt Jloattr
end portlonaof VInton 011014 • 0111 of . ~rcent, at "•
. . ut due lo a tee hnica I ~.actor
~111•,uc~nty· Lootl Counlltt In Ohlo~J:-11 Httrlni• Julv "· the oss was moderate com- called short covering, rather
Mteon Count~ In1
t 1001 1t 10100 o'olook pared whh an enrly drop of than investors suddenly
Junet, 11,1001
~~~~~··::~: ":,:: 1.m.
241.81 and triple-digit becoming less worried about
- - - - - - oert '11rvto 11 tor
llva Holbrook, declines on Tuesday and the economy or develop..._own. CUI
011014,
Thursday.
ltubllo No1101
whi ohI".. ey ttt ....
Htarlng
men Is overseas. 1n short cov·
1 July
0111 01 NO.
_.:..:;;;.;;;..;.;.;;.=- lltul• llohlnger, liN, 11 aooa at 10100 The broader market was erlng, Investors are forted to
.. ~~:~,c:.~~c:.re ~~~~~=~ Cttt . · o'olook e.m.
· mixed. The Standard &amp; buy stock to replace sha"'s
ot Vtttttnl M1111orlal ot Ytltrtnt Mtmortel ~o~NI,
· Poor's 500 Index fell2.29, or that they borrowed earlier
Hotpltal,"
11 Juntll,
Hoeplttl 100.1
~-oua•·:ra
.IUDGI
0.2 percent, to 1,007.27.
and sold on the expectation
111
lilt loottttl
Mtmorltl
..
n
"
Drlvt.t 1tom1ro~\ Ohio
June ,., 1001
41'Pit, will no ongtr

HOUIIS: fllon.ftll:30 am to 4:30pm; 111.1:30 t.m. to II
Alltn C. Wood, lloktr • 441 4111)
Kill UDIII!l.IIOitlf • 44Mtl1
Jtllllltt Moott, •
11ttr1o1t Rota 740-441-tOM

•m• .

• WE ARE
PICTURES

':f.Jbr

AIOUT OUR NEW WEI SITE"
AVAILAILE

-··:ra

:n

'"

.J:::

':a,,::

11007

LOTS ·A(

11011'• 1'

liiiNKINC 01 \Ill IN( , YO lilt
(.lVI II \ i\ lilY'
II I '\ llO 1111 \ INI \'&gt; '

INDIAN CIIIIK IUIDIVIIION
IIIIICII VAIIV
CALL POll MOIII DITAILI
11110
FOR MORe INFORMATION PLBASS CALL, B·MAIL US Olt
STOP BY THE OFPICB MON·PRI. S:30 A.M. TO 4:30P.M.

•
'•

BULLETIN BOARD
Serenity House

Real Eatate General

eerves vlotlma of c;lomeetlc
violence call 448·6752 or
1·800·942·9577

5th Annual
Lions Club Golf
Scramble
June 20
1:30 Tee-off

OFFICE

992-2259
'

OUPL!X WITH A VIIWI Ll\lt

on ont tldt of lhll lovely
duplex &amp; rtnllht Olhtr 10 help
wllh lht mong~gt. Enjoy a
view ol lht ChiC Rlvtr &amp; lht
btaullful down town P1rk. Htlf
cf thll duplex haa bten

Great Food and Prizes

ccmpltltly
rtmodtled,
fealurlng 2 BA, 1 1/2 btt~•" i:!or•iii1i

LA &amp; ttl In kllohtn. 1138,uw

contact
Bob Henne1y 448·2831
Chrla Homer 441·1879
Mark Dillon 448·~06

HOUSE FOR SAl.E
3 SR, 2 etory, new
lneulated window•

448-2422

NEW UITINQ.VJNTON COUNTY •
HAWK STATION IIOAD· 1 ltory
ronch otylo wllh 1 rooma, 4

bedrooma, both. f .30 ocru LIIQt

•

ftmlly rccm, Iorge OI1CIOitd rnr
patio, n1ct llltdllld ., -·ground
pool Nlct ltvot grounij. AtKlNQ

•',
••.

IH,IOO

•••
••
•

••
~

••
..•

t't"'
.

.

••
•..••
••

II

ane

ww w. wi se manreal estote.co m

,.

l

I

FOOD GIVEAWAY
Trinity United
Methodist Church
_9512 State Route 160

June 18, 2002
Starting at 1:00 p.m.

(Dry Qood• and Canned
Goode) now

HOUSE FOR SAl.E
431 L.ake Drive,
Rio Grande, Ohio
Very cioN to Unlvertlty,
oould ~ ultd u rental

property.

:2W
R&lt;~·woot~~nms, 1 112 bath,
garage, buemtnt. $45,000

246-9838

.

CUSTOMER
APPRECIATION DAY

.

..•

nnk

• Billed to lneurance
• Little If no coat
• Free Delivery
• We do all ppper'work
_BOWMAN'S HOMECARE
740·446·7283
1·800·458·8844

Price while eupplleelaeto
4 mllee weat ol Qatllpolll,
Ohio on State Rt. 141

Used Side/Side
refrigerator

TAKE YOURSELF OUT
TO THE BALLGAME

$200.00
call388·0173

Cincinnati Reds
Tickets

REVIVAL

June 20th and 21 at

740·446·6683
Berber Carpet
$5.95 yard

MOLLOHAN
CARPET

·.

448-7444 or 1·877-830·9162
Drlvt·A·Llttll Save ALOT

HELP WANTED
Must be dependable,
have valid drivers license
and tranaportatlon.
Blackburn Tree Service

446·2422
Gravel Hill
Cemetery
A1100lation Trustees will
otfel'for ule at Auction,·
Saturday, June :22, 2002
9:00a.m.
One (1) Satoh Beaver
20 H.P. 4·Wheel Drive
Tractor with blade and
backhoe.
Auction will ~ held at the
Cemttt,Y BuHdlng•
Minimum bid to be $500

SlanHHIOft

NoOoverC!woe
Hllfifrrlotd ~1'1

• 65 or over

OFFERED AT
WHOLESALE

Soul Cagt, Greg Smith,

,..

. NEBULIZER
· MEDICATION

Sponaored by Ray of Hope
Please bring boxes

LIVE MUSIC

740) 446• 36.44

DavldWIHmM,GRI,CRI8roktr U8tlll .
I'D
Carolyn Wllldl, GAl . 441·1007 Sonny O.net · 441-2707
WlJ ~.....
Aoblr18ru~ · 441o0821 Alta Wlaeman ........., Jlnnlttr Slppll
T

All Bulk Food

WtdMtday, June 181tt

Before shopping for your New Address ... stop by ours:

I

WANTED GAS PUMPER
PART·TIME
ROBBIE'S BP
Apply at 87 Vine Strttt
Galllpolll, Ohio

,.•

'

"

Bulk Food Store le relocating.

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

Deadline Is June 18.

1228

,.__

AUNT CLARA'S
KITCHEN

of further declines.
enues. -·
But 1nalyst dill\ 't expect
There were some winners,
the buylna to ac:c:elerate or however. particularly in the
even 10 continue it all.
long·bauered tech sector.
''Unless you act some good Microsoft rose $1.03 to
news neltt week, r don't think S55.25, and Apple Computer
there Is aolna to be any foi· tdvunced S6 cents to $20.10.
low throuali," said Barry
Investors have been
Berman, heid trader for unlooding shares for · four
Robert W. Baird &amp; Co. in weeks amid neguti vc news
Milwaukee.
about earnings and the econ·W•ll Street was disturbed omy, worries about tensions
by a decline In consumer overseas us well as questioneontidenc:e, worried that it able business ethics and cormeans.consumers are c:urbina porate accounting.·
their spending, which
The etTect of the sellina on
aCC:Ounts for two-thirds of the the market's indeKes is
economy. The University of painfully clear. In four
Michigan's mid-month c:on· weeks. the. Dow has plumsumer senllment index for meted 878.87, or 8.5 ~rcenl.
June showed a big drop to The S&amp;P has dropped 99.32,
90.8 from 96.9 in May, or fi,O percent, and the
according to Dow Jones Nasdnq hus lost 236.65, or
News wires.
13.6 percent.
Down.rades of telecom·
The indclles arc also near
municat1on and wireless the September lows thai folstocks by various brokerages, lowed the terrorist nuncks.
including Sulomcm Smith The S&amp;P is closest, stllllding
Barney and Merrill Lynch, lust 41.47 points from its
were another weight on the 'Sept. 21 low or 965.80.
market. Qunlcomm dropped
Dl!tllning issues outnum· ·
$2.49 10 $]9. 91. ..
bered advancers slightly
Sprint PCS plunged 26.5 more than 8 to 7 on the New
percent, down $1.59 at $4.40, York Stock Exchange.
after saying Thursday that it Consolidated volume was
expects to add fewer new heavy ut 1.86 billion shares,
customers than expected this liP from 1.67 billion
year and that annual revenue Thursday.
will also be weaker'thnn had
The Russell 2000 indeK,
been untldpilted.
the barometer of smaller
Lucent relt 7 cents to company stocks. rose 3.09, or
$2. 73,
after
warning 0. 7 percent, to 459.07. For
Thunday of lower-than· the week; the Russell fell
expected third quarter rev- .11.44, or 2.4 percent.

~ForMoreL

at Go1pel Ta~rnacle Church
June 17·23
7 pm nightly Sunday 8 pm
Evang. KeHh Eblin
Special Singing
e11lde Pt. Pl. library
1991 Chev. Caprice claaalc
4 Dr. Sedan·
Excellent condition.

740·446-2082
The Truitees of Gravel Hill
Cemetery wlah to expre11
their thanks and
appreciation to the Boy
Scoute Troop and Pack No.
:200 for their participation In
the Memorial Day Servlcee.
{llelr profeselonallsm and
gentlemanly conduct were
oulllandlng.

Attention Elks

Father's Day
Brunch
June 16th
11:30 am -1 pm
at the lodge

· June 20th 4 Blue Box State
Section 143
June 21at 4 Gr11n Box Seats
Saotlon 228
VIllage Peopll Concert
After Frtday'1 Game
For More Info
Call

304·882-3152 .

. HOLZER MEDICAL
CENTER
. Breastfeedlng Classes
Tuesday, June 18
8:30 • 8:30 pm
HMO French SOO_Room
For more Information or to
pre·regletar lor the olaas,
call

(740) 446·5030
YARD SALE
167 Woodland Dr.
Tuea· Wed. 18th &amp; 19th
9am·5pm
• Lots of Goodies

MEDICARE
SUPPLEMENT
Are the rates getting too
expensive on your
Plan C or Plan F7
Check out the ratee
on our Plan D.
Ronnie Lynch

The Lynch Agency

Star Mill Park Board

322 Saoond Avenue
Galllpolla, Ohio

LONGABERGER
BASKET BINGO

1-80()..447-8235

Tuelday, June 18, 2002
7:00p.m .
Middleport Llglon Hall
$20.00 for 20 Games
50·50 Drawing
2 Raffle Baskets
Door Prizes • Refreshments
Special b&amp;lkel drawing for tlckltl
purch&amp;Hd prtor 10 June 18
' NO SMOKINQ .
Fer ticket Info or Info, call
Jenn at 740-949-2189
Tlll..._\110 flfillllr- .... flf fiOI ,...,...
.,..
,IOidd I
50 01 ftlj)'G._,IOt flit IIMIO IM

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FOR ANIMAL LOVERS
Looal well tltlbllehld dog
grooming bullnt•e for ult.
Large year round clltnltle.
• EXC~Ilent reputation with all
local vtttrtnartane. All
equipment eupplllt &amp; training
Included. For more Information
Call

7o40-44e-0752

446-8235
Gallla County
Convention &amp; Visitors
Bureau
Announces Weekend Houra
Sat.- 10 am til 3 pm
Sun. • Noon til 5
For tourlam related questions

call

446·6882

�•

out
Krna

.

.

MMIIOSS- JaM Gatti's deiJtll* \lld.Otla Gottl Ul\$ ~ Ptpw~ FUMrlt ~

eft.er attelldlnt 1 wake ~ 1\!lr ~. In QueeM, ~ ~~ ot ~til~
1 tlinefll d'lepel overflowlfC ~ltll · flo~ Tllu~ to bid prl\lft flel!ultll ~ 1 111ft
publle mob t11r: Jolin Got\1 , ~ the 11\ClSt powvM Mlft"l boss In the eountr,. tAPl

Du 001 slllnd at fllll ~mve lind cty. tam 001
there. I did 001 die:"
Novelist Vil:lorill Gotti w in the flnt
row in frol\l of her father's closed t:Oftln.
weurit~~ II blllek dress with her ~i\e.d
blond liWr fllllina ~ down her lid:.
Across the sttee~ from the fWienll home,
11 media hon:le stood behind pollee burl·
elldes. watchina the people file in. CllriOII&amp;

.•

Smith

lnwn ..... DI
If a thief acts hold of those,
he or she will ruck up bills
aaalnst your nwne und you
won't even know it. Ol'lllltcd.
your flnunciallhibility with a
credit card company may
only be about $SO, but the
arief and aggravation of aet·
tina the problem sorted out,
and aettina your account and
your credit report cleared, is
well worth some preventive
measures.
Also, ICI a sufe deposit
box, or at least a home strons
box. for your Important
papers, passports, and the
i:redlt cards you are not cur·
~ntly usin11. Speokin11 of

unused credit cards, if you
huve trunslerrcd IIW11nces to 11
card ·with lower Interest,
destroy the old cards and
notify your former cardhold·
ers that you are closina the

phone unless you ~l'lltcd

., ..

the ell I and know tilt person

or entit)t with which you are

de11lin11. Never &amp;ive your
bankclll'd's personil identifi·
CAtion numbe.r (PIN) to 11ny·
~~ecount.
one o~er the _phone no matter
Lenders do not like to see who they clwm to be.
multiple, open · credit Hnes.
Carry only the credit ~:ard
even wit.h zero bulances; or clll'ds you ure. goi111 to
those open accounts cun only need. lf your wllllet or purse
hurt your credit rating.
is stolen, you'll wunt to limit
Keep It to yourself
the number of 11cll0Unts the
In the interest of tllr$et thief can access. And never
marketing, stores are beam· curry your Social Security
ning to ask for your tclc· cllrd unless you plun to use it.
phone number. Don't 11ive it Your Sotial Security number
out unless you ure comfort· is the ticket to ull kinds of
able with how the store will personal 11nd financi11l inforuse the Information. Th11t ·mation In the htmds of 11
goes for uny personal infor- · knowina nafllrio.
mutlon. When dealina with
Whenever po slble, put
telephone sales or charitable your outgoing mall in the
donations, do not give your postlll service's mllilboxcs
credit clll'd number over the r11ther than in your home_

at Bloodmobile

Donors

•

lnda
IIUIIll •II ....

Ctltndlr

AS

Cl1ulfltds
·Comlcl
DtlrAbby
Edltorllls

U·S
II

Obltulrlts
Sportl
Wtlthtr

AJ
ll·S
A2

Movltl

AS
M
A3

. • 3001 Oftlo 'llltl'f I'Utllllliflt Cl.

high qua'lt; home

abl1t, compauionate,
wvicea, ramernber

lt'a Your Health. lt'a Your Home. It's Your Choke.
Choo11 Holnr Homt Carel
Call
•

1·888·225·1135

MEDICAL CENTER
... .Disoooor the llo~r .O~~n~

www.holzer.org

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