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~~- ----- -----=-------"--:"~----------"!"1"""-------------------~

AI 0. TG THE RIVER

I IV1NG

Black Knight Revue:
2010 marks 40th Anniversary, Cl

• Easter entertaining with
whole grain recipes, Dl

-

unbR!'

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ allt·y t•uhlishin~ Cu.

Page AS

• Dora Janis Bare
• Minnie McKenzie
• Beulah Belle Mitchell
• Connie Sue Rees
• Thomas H. Runyon
• Olivelle Uber
• Wesley U. Weikle

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MD'rNEWSOMYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

CHESHIRE TWP. - A
Gallia County man wa~ hospitaliLed following a shootmg Friday evening in
Cheshire Township.
Sheriff Joe Browning
reponed that Jo~eph Lewis,
23, wa~ shot during an
apparem domestic dispute
at a residence located on
Poplar Ridge Road west of
the" Village of Cheshire.
Deputies responded to the

Commission
mecial meeting
-

$t.50 • Vol. 44, No.

21, 2010

The

~~~~!iHon;::.~~eu~i~~

af~er recci~·ing

s:ene
the
J1spatch fr&lt;;&gt;~1 Galha 911 at
5:55p.m. f•nday.
Browning said Lewis suffered a wound to his lower
abdomen and wa~ transporteel via MedFiight Helicopter
to
Cabell
Huntington
Hospital in ~untington,
W.Va. The nursmg supervisor on duty Saturday afternoon at Cabell Huntington
said Lewis was listed in :;table condition and had been
moved to a regular room.
Prcliminar) information

deputi~s ·a~

gathered by
th.e
scene of the shootmg mdicated that the alleged
domestic dispute involved
Lewis and other persons at
the ' residence. Witnesses
also indicated t~at ~ewis
may have been rntox1cated
at the time of the incident..
Det. Chad Wallace smd
Saturday that investigators
were consulting with the
Gallia County Prosecutor's
Office concerning what
charges will be filed in the
case. Wallace said that no

one had been arrested as of
Saturday. aftern.oon .
Brownmg said he wanted
to assure area residents that
all parties involved in the
incident have been identified by Ia\\: enf?rc~me':lt
and that the mvest1gat10n IS
contmuing. . .
.
Anyone With mformahon
regarding this incident or
other criminal activity in
Gallia County can call the
sheriff's tip line at (740)
446-6555. Callers may
remain anonymous.

Gallia-Meigs Airport facing financial crisis

p.m., Tuesday, March 23,
BY MICHELLE MILLER
at the Municipal Building. MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNECOM
518
Sel:ond
A\e.,
Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - While
Agenda items include an ! officials with the Gallia~mergency ordinance that, 1 ~1eigs Regional Airport has
1f approved, would allow been able to secure fundino
the city to enter into an . from the Federal A' iatio~
agreement with the Galli a Administration. (FAA) for
Count~ .
Board
. of safety upgrades, they ha\ e
CommisSioners to provide been unable to get help with
sewage !reatment f?r 9reen a project, that if not comTownship. Comnms10ners pleted. could eventually
are also scheduled to hear lead to the demise of the airthe first rea.di,ng or ?rdi- port.
nances pertauung to tund- • Both the Gallia County
ing for street pavmg and I Commissioners
and
rules and regulations for Gallipolis
City
yard sales.
Commissioners have voiced
their support of the GaHiaMeigs Regional Airport
(GAS) Authority's effor1 to
obtain funding for the
replacement and relocation
of the airport fuel fam1. The
. one pump that is still operaPOMEROY
The tional is over 25-years old
Meigs
County
Health and finding replacement
Department wJII conduct a part&lt;. is becoming nearly
childhood immunization impossible. A second pump
t:llnic from 9-11 a.m. and 1- is now being used for parts
3 p.m. on Tuesday. March for the primary pump.
23. Bring child's shot
Fuel sales make up
records, medical card if approximately 50 percent
applicable. $10 donation of the GAS revenue: the
appreciated
but
not other half comes from
required.
hangar rentals. Should the
pump fail, it would not
only leave the airport in
financial distress. but it
would also take awav a
needed service for both
LETART FALLS
local pilots and visitors.
Anyone wishing to save j "Mo~t lo~al airl:raft ownflowers or decorations ; ers would likely rc~ocate to
from Letart Township an a~rpor!. that ~rov1de&gt; fuel
sa~?
A1rport
Cemeteries should do so serv1ces,
before March 3J.
Authorit) Pres1dent Brett
Little in a recent letter of
support. Should that happen, the airport would. Jose
the other half of its revenue.
The airport sells approximately $70.000-$80,000 a
year in fuel.
According to Airport
Authority Vice President
Randy Shcidler, the FAA's
priority is safety.
' "Ours is to stay alive,"
• said Sheidler. "We need a
1 new fuel pump."
The airport has made several safet) related upgrades
over recent years induding
new lighting a~d an on.site
weather
report 111g stat10n,
High: Mid 60s.
but all those upgrades will
Low: Mid 40s.
mean very little if the airport is forced to close due to
an outdak!d fuel ~ystem.
In addition, the fuel sys! tem is considered a probable safety issue in the fact
that
it is positioned inside
4 SECTIOSS - 24 PAGES
the J&lt;f\A's recommended
A 3 safety zone.
Around Town

r----------------------------------,

1

I

Meigs County
. munization
,
clinic

National Right to Life,
other groups call on
lawmakers to oppose bill
BY ANDREW CARTER

1

1

Please see Wilson, Al..

Costanzo
named interim
super at Trimble

Left: Should the Gallia·Melgs
Aeg1onal Airport fail to obtain
funding to replace its aging
fuel farm, the airport could
face serious financial hardship
if the pump fails.

BY BRIAN

Above and left: The weather reporting
station allows pilots to check the weather
before attempting to fly into or out of
Gallia County.

Celebrations
sifieds

Comics

D2-4

Ds

Boardwalk Completed at MuIberry POnd
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Editorials

A4
POMEROY

Sports

B Section Completion of a 175-foot

©

Publishing Co.

a010 Ohio Valley

. llii[I!IJIJI~! I!I!I!Ill IIll .

handicap-accessible boardwalk on the cemetery side.
of the Mulberry Pond in
Pomeroy last week m,arks
another improvement in an
overall project geared to

rehabilitate the pond and
impnn e the area around it.
The new boardwalk complements a shor1er one built
on the other si(lc of the pond
last summer. Both boardv.•alks have been built with
Nature Works grants lh1fn the
Ohio Dcpa11ment of Natural
Rcsourl:cs suppkmcnted hy
Pomeroy Village funds.

'
To .continue work on the
project, Pomeroy ~1ayor
John l\1usscr ad\ ises that
the village has applied for
$50,000 through the Capital
budget program this year.
''We need that to continue
the progn:ss out there and
I'm hopeful we'll get it" he
commented.
Musser said he em isions

connecting the two boardv. alks with a gra\ el pathway to two hridges across
the pond at the far end
\\here there is a cave and
waterfall from Beech Grove
Cemcterv.
His plim is to begin the
next phase of the site
improYemcnt soon. That

Please see Pond, Al

REED

GLOlJSTER
John
Costanzo, supenntendent of
the
Athens-Meigs
Educational Sen ice Center,
will step in as interim superintendent of the Trimble
Local School District until a
nev. superintendent is hired
or, possibl~, the last superintendent returns.
The Trimble Local board
of education appointed
Costanzo late last week, to
take the place of Cindy
Johnston. The board voted
unanimously in Februruy to
not rene'' Johnston's contract
in Juh. She was placed on
leave ·earlier this month but
could retum to complete her
contract tem1 if an investi!!ation dears her of misconduct.
Costan10 and Johnston
are both familiar faces to
Meigs Countv. In addition
to his cun·ent duties as the
countv's superintendent of
schooh. he has sened in
other administrative posts,
including as a temporar)
superintendent at Southern
Local and other districts.
John~ton ''as once principal at Pomero) Elementruy
School. The ESC's attorney.
Garn• Hunter. told the
Athei1s ~lessenger Johnston

' INDEX

.

J.

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Michelle Miller/photos

Please see Airport, Al

MDTNEWSCMYDAILYTRIBUNf'COM

WASHINGTON - U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson. DOhio. said Friday that he
will vote "yes" on a sweep! ing health care bill currently
l before Congress.
According to Wilson. his
review of the Congressional
Budget Office's (CBO)
analysis of the Senatepassed health care bill (H.R.
· 3590) and the final reconciliation bill (H.R. 4872) led
him to make the decision to
support the measure being
1 pushed by President Barack
Obama.
Wilson said the CBO
report indicates that the
health care bill along with
amendments in H.R. 4872
could lead to a $138 billion
reduction of the federal
deficit over a 10-year span.
He also said the report indicates that the bill could cut
I the deficit b) S1.2 trillion
during the second 10-year
period. If that turns out to be
the case. it would be the
largest deficit reduction
measure in the past 17 years .
'This bill is not perfect,
but it is a strong step for\vard," Wilson said in a
press release issued Friday.
"I have seen the CBO score

Above: The runway marker and
lighting upgrades were part of
the safety upgrades funded
through the FAA.

Cemetery
cleanup

12

Wils~n w~ll
vote yes
on health
care b.lll

Gallia Co. man wounded in shooting

0BfiUARIES

~LLIPOLIS

Sunday, Man·h

mightreturnto~thesuperin-

I

tendcnt's post if an investigation now underway clears
her of any '' rongdoing.
Costanzo has insisted his
service to the Trimble Local
district is temporary. He will
not be paid for his work as
the interim superintendent,
and will remain in place as
the supenntendent of the
two-count) ESC That board
granted co~tanzo permis
sion to sene in both posts

I'

--

�REG

6unba~ t!times -j,entinel

PageA2
Sunday, March

21, 2010

Local Briefs
Gallia Local BOE
meeting

the event schoob arc closet! due to
inclement weath~r. cliniL' will he
canceled.

Evans open
door meeting

GALLIPOLIS
The Gallia County
Local School District Board of
Ed ucation will meet at 7 p.m .•
Monday,
.March
22
at
the
Admini~trative Office, 230 Shawn~:e
Lane, Gallipolis.

GIB meeti.ng
March 25

RIO GRANDE - State Rep . Clyde
fwans, R-Rio Grande , will host an
open door meeting at 4 p.m .. Thursday.
April I at Rio Grande Village Hall. The
public 1s invited to attend.

Gallia health
district meeting
GALLIPOLIS The Di~trict
Advisory Council of the Gallia County
Health District "ill meet at 7 p.m ..
Monday, March 22 in the conference
room of the Gallia County Sen·1ce
Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

Clerk of Courts
closed March 24
GALLIPOLIS -The Gallia County
Common Pleas Clerk of Courts Legal
Department, located on the third floor
of the Gallia County Courthouse, "ill
be c losed to the public on Wednesday,
M arch 24 . No filings 'Will be accepted
o n that date. The office will reopen to
the p~blic on Thursday, March 25.

French 500 free clinic
GALLIPOLIS - The French 500
Free Clinic b scheduled from 1-4
p.m .. Thursday, March 25 at 258
Pinecrest Drive off Jackson Pike. In

GALLIPOLIS Gallipoli&lt;i In
Bloom will hold it~ monthly meeting
at 5:15 p.m .• Thursday, March 25 in
the downstairs cmffercncc room at the
Gallipolis Municipal Building, 518
Second Ave. Gallipolis.

'Meet the candidates'
March 29
A "meet the can7 p.m.
on Mondav, March 29 at the DAY
Building, (OR Liberty St. in Kanauga.
All candidates running for local, state
and national office~ in 20 I 0 have
been invited to the event. Cand1dates
arc scheduled to arrive at 6 p.m. to
mingle with gue~h. The event is open
to the public.
GALLIPOLIS

didate~;· night is scheduled for

Free self-defense
class
MERCERVILLE - A free selfdefense clas~ for adulb will be offered
from 5:30-7:30 p.m. on Monday, April
5 at South Gallia High School in
Mercerville. The clas~ will be instructeo by Roger Brandeberry.
The class i~ open to resident~ who
live in the Gallw County Local School
District in collaboration with the GalliaVinton Educational Service Center.
To regi~ter. call Connie Bradbury at
(740) 245-059.3 or e-mail YO cbradbury@ seovec .org. The registration
deadline is March 31.

SWCD tree sale

Family and Children
First meeting

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil
and Water Conservation District tree
sale cominues through ~1arch .31.
Buyers can pick up their trees April
1-2 at the SWCD office, 1 II Jackson
Pike, Gallipoli'i. SWCD officials said
se\eral pa~:kets are ~till available for
purchase. For information, call 4466173.

GALLIPOLIS- The Gallia County
Family and Children Hrst Council has
changed the date of its April planning
meeting to Friday. April 9. The meeting is liCheduled for 9 a.m. at the
Gallia-Jackson-~1eigs
Board
of
Alcot¥&gt;1. Drug Addiction and tvlental
Health Sen ices, located at 53
Shawnee Lane, Gallipolis.

Wilson from Page AI
and
the
reconciliation
changes for myself. This
bill \\ill not add a dime to
the deficit. I am confident
that the Senate bill will bl!
amended b) the reconciliation language and that special deab for certain state~.
like Nebra~ka. have been
taken out, that affordability
for middle class families
has been improved and that
the hamtful excise tax on
high cost health plans has
been adjusted. For the~e
reasons and for the benefits
that thio;; bill will bring to
my constituents, I will support the Senate bill with the
announced reconciliation
changes."
Wilson said according to
estimates from the House
Energy and Commerce
Committee, the health care
bil) could benefit Ohio's
Sixth Congres~ional Di~trict
in the following \\ays:
• Improve co,erage for
365,000 residents with
health insurance.
• Give tax credits and
other assistance to up to
174,000
families and
I I ,300 small bu&lt;;inesses to
help them afford coverage.
• Improve Medicare for
116.000
beneficiarie~.
including closing the donut
hole.
• Extend CO\erage to
40.000 uninsured residents.
• Guarantee that 9 ..300
residents with pre-existing
conditions can obtain coverage.
• Protect I .300 families
from bankruptcy due to
unaffordable health care
costs.

• Allow 51,000 voung vote against the legislation
adults to obtain coverage on becau~e of the lack of iantheir
parentli' insurance guage in man) parts of the
plans.
bill that would specifically
• Provide milhons of dol- prohibit federal funds
Iars in new funding for 15 from beirig used to pay for
community health center~.
abortion.
• Reduce the cost of
"The bill is riddled with
uncompensated care for provisions that predictably
hospitals and other health will result in federal ::.ubsicare providers by $49 mil- dies for private insurance
lion annually.
plans that cover abortion
Wilson met with pro-life (some of which will be
advocates U.S. Rep. Dale administered directly by
Kildee, D-Michigan, and the federal government).
Francis Xavier Doyle. the direct federal funding of
former Associate General abortion
through
Secretary of the U.S. Community Health Centers
Conference of Catholic and pro-abortion federal
Bishops. via conference call adminbtrative mandates."
on Thursday to discuss read the letter. which was
whether federal funding signed by NRLC Executive
would be u-.cd to pay for Director David N. O'Sheen
abortion under term~ of the and Legislative Director
legislation.
Douglas Johnson. "The
··r am confident that the sum of thc~e provisions
language in the Senate bill make'-' H.R. 3590 the most
ensures that there will be no abortion-expan~ive piece
federal funding for abor- of le!!islation ever to reach
tions.'' Wibon said. "It is the ffoor of the House of
important to remember that Representatives.''
according to a Harvard • According to NRLC, the
Medical School study, an, bill directly appropriates $7
estimated 45.000 people die billion for Community
each year that's one Health Centers, money
American every 12 minutes which is not connected to
-in part because they lack an) restriction regarding
health insurance and access the use of the funds for
to qualitv health rare. We abortion . .:--:RLC said the
must vafue their live~ as bill also contain~ other
well . At this point, I am con- pools of direct I) approprifident that th~ Senate Ian- ateu funds \'vith no stated
guage upholds all of my limitation~ rc~arding the
pro-life value~."
use of funds lor abortion.
However.
National One pool amounh to $5
Right to Life Committee, billion for a tempnrar~
Inc. (NRLC) . sent a Jetter high-risk health insurance
to every member of the prograo1. \\ hile the other is
House of Repre . . cntatiYe~ $6 billion in grants and
on Friday urging them to loans for health co-ops.

Pond from Page At
will be to level out the land
so that paths can be completed connecting the two
boardwalks providing Vl~l­
tors a walkway around the
pond. The construction of
the two bridges arc contingent on the Capital budget
money and will have to
wait , accord ing to Musser.
He also is hopeful of
blacktopping the parking lot
and possibly developing. a
picnic a rea along w1th
mstall ing restrooms, but
adm its everything is contingent on receiving more
money.
Plans are also moving forward toward having the
pond dredged and O DNR
Division of Wildlife has
been consulted about stocking it with fish , Mus!'&gt;er said.
T he mayor is quick to
credit J im Smith with
" keeping the project moving." S m ith was named
c hairman of the pond
resto ration project some
time ago a nd has hccn pers iste nt in seeking lundi ng.
"Jim has been instrumental in this, constantly con~
tacting sta te officials trying

to get more money. and has
gorten lots of attention
from the state. He's been a
work horse and de~ervcs a
lot of credit," tvlusser commented.
Over the years Smith has
written letters to elected
ofliciab ranging from the
governor to legislative representath es. has contacted
numerous agencies and
foundations for possible
grants, and carried out a
local campaign asking for
donations from businesse~
and organizations.
As a child growing up in
Poml!rny, Smith and h1s
father &lt;.pent many happy
days fishing at the Mulberry
Pond. After years of working in Columbus, Smith
retired to Meigs County and
resumed fishing at the pnnd.
He was quick to recognize
its potential and the need for
improvement and just as
quick to initiate a conversation with village officials
about his vision.
For him restoration of the
pond has became a project
of the heart. and persistence
with patience is hi~ style.

Submitted photo

This illegal trash dump site is located on Shoal Creek Ridge
in Guyan Township. The Gallia County Sheriff's Office has
secured grant funding to clean up illegal dump shes.

Gallia sheriff's
office
•

c!~!~~~~.~Pg~.~~~ 0~!!1

from the Gallia-JacksonMeigs- Vinron Solid Waste
GALLIPOLIS - Acting Management District. In
upon a report from a con- 2009. the) receh ed a total of
cerned citizen, the Gallia S 12.000 from the grant.
I County Sheriff's Office is The funds an! used to
working to clean up a trash cleanup and investigate illedump site along Shoal gal dumping sites around
NRLC wasn't the only Creek Ridge 1n Guyan the coullt). Browning -;aid
Township.
the funding is hmited, but
group lobbying Ia\\ makers
The caller reported the the goal for 20 l 0 1s to make
Friday to oppose the bilL site to the Gallia County It to~all 15 town~hips.
The Council for Citizens 911 Center on March II and
Brownmg also encourAgainst GO\ emment Waste
(CCAGW) and i'\ational said approximate!; 25-30 age~ all residents to take
Retail Federation (NRF) trash bags had been illegall) a(h antage of the free scrap
each bsued statements and disposed of at the foot of an tire collection day being
letters to Congre~smen ask- embankment adjacent to the held from 1-4 p.m .. March
20 at 'the Gallia County
ing them to vote ''no'' on the roadwa) · . ,
The s~enff s office recent- Health Department on
legislation.
r.Undcr the Senate-passed ly recel\ ed a first quarter Jack~on Pike.
healthcare bill, Americans! _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
will be forced to shoulder 1
the burden of new taxes. 1
penalt1es and higher insurfrom Page Al
ance premiums. Small businesses will be hindered by
According to Little\ let- sales , e'?J?Ioyees and •
stringent regulations and 1 ter of support. there are an nes~ acti\ 1t1es.
taxes that will ultimately j estimated 20.000 op~:ration~
With the airport auth
force them to slash jobs," per year at the airp01 t. t) 's pu~h to revitalize the
read part of the letter sent to which include pm ate. busi- airport and the addtuon of
House
memberli
b)
ness. !W\ ernment and mili- !-&gt;Cn icc~ like a courte~) car
CCAGW.
mry flTghts.
and the '' eather reporting
"We are lli!-&gt;appointed by
Those flights &lt;tre:
station which can be
the direction of the con• Air Taxi - 1500
checked by any one at (740)
gressional debate. particu• General Aviation (local) 446-2149.
the
aJTport
larly its punitive focu~ - ·t2.870
authoritv is &lt;otrivin!! to make
against employers," said
• General A\ iation (busi- sure the airp011 remams a
Steve Pfister. .NRF senior nesslpri\ ate Itinerant) prot Hable count) entit).
\icc president for govern- 5.230
Ho\\ e,·er, without fuel
ment relation~. "It b an
• i\lilitary - 200
.,ervice. all efforts could be
economic certainty that if
Local busines~es that w. e in 'ain .
labor co~t significantly the airport include Holzer
increa ...e. retailers - \\ ho Hospital.
Air
operate on razor-thin profit Ambulance ,\ted
E\ac,
margin~ \Viii have no 1 Ohio Valle) Bank. Walmait,
choice but to reduce the I American Electric Power
size of their workforces. and Holida) Inn .
I
•
This is an outright tax on · Shetdler ... atd many bu~i­
jobs. a dangerous !'&gt;trat~g) ness location scouh use the
when our econom) so airport to ...cout location' in
clearly need~ to grO\\ Gallla and surrounding
through
job
creation. counties.
Health care reform in it~
There are current!~ 22
current ft)rm will hccome ba ed am:raft at GAS and
the big!!cst anti-stimulus plans arc in the \\OrKs to
legislation imaginable."
: obtain fundmg for etght
The vote on the bill 1~ new T hangars. '' l11ch \\ill
:-.chcduled for Sunday.
bring the n~umber of ba~ed
aircraft to 30.
The airport reportedly
I add" approximate!) S I million to the local econom)
I through hang.tr rental, fuel
MDTNEWSCMYOAILYTAIBL..NE COM

Airport

:l~nternet

HONDA
mARinE

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Total Construction workers, left to right, Eddie Warren, Eric
Runyon and Tom Wolfe, finish up a 275 foot boardwalk constructed on the nght side of the Mulberry Pond m Pomeroy.

Always Wear APersonal
Rotation Oevlce While
Boating And Read Your
Owner's Manual.

HONDA
mr.mine
Quiet +stroke Technology
Unsurpassed Fuel Economy

www.thegre&lt;~lot.:ao~rsmarine.com

•

�-----------~--------- -~-·~-------------------------------------------.,

PageA:3
Sunday, March

AAA7 offers support for caregivers,
grandparents raising
grandChildren
.

•

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

MDTNEWSOMYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

RIO G RANDI•
Arc&lt;~ Agc nc) on
A ging Dl~t rkt 7. Inc. (i\A A7).
through fund i ng from the Ol der
Amencans Act, 1S p rov~th ng a
C.~regne1 Support Program that is
deo;igned to prO\ ide caregivers w1th
services that can help reduce stress,
in addition to rc&lt;&gt;ources that can aid
'' ith pro"iding better care for not
onl) the lo\ed one. but the indhidual caregtvcr as \\ell.
A caregi,er I'&gt; an)one \\ho i carmg for someone \\ ho cannot complete e\Cr)da) functions such as
dressing. fecdtng or usmg the
restroom. Although caregJ\ mg is a
·10\ mg and gn ing act, it often brings
'"ith 1t h.ud ''ork. stress. and question for the Jo,ed one provid111g the
care
"What our Caregi' er Support
Program offers is an m cnue for education and rcsoUJ cec; thnt can help
cnrcgi,ers with the cme they provide
to their loved one,'' o;aid Vickv
•
,della.
RN.
Director
of

Commumty Services at AAA 7 .
"An) one who provides care nnd i"
!onking for a needed support system
1~ encouraged to gi\e our office u
call. Through a comcrsation with
the caregiver over 1hc phone. we cln
determine what services mtght best
help their situation dlld fnctlitate tl1s
process in order to assist the caregiver in their needs."
Sen ices provided through the
('AA 7 Caregiver Support Program
mclude asse sments, tr&lt;tining. information, assistance. counselmg, and
answers to e\eryday problems. Am
caregi \ er in AAA 7's I 0-county sc(\ ICC area WhO WIShes IO receiVe
these sen ices 1s able to with no cligibilit) requirements. Additional
sen ices include respite and suppl..!mental "erviccs th.tt could include a
resource or product that 1s needed to
complement the care provided, c;uch
as 1.nedical supplies, home safety
eqUipment. legal services, and mo1e.
All services arc offered by the AAA 7
at no charge to the caregiver.
Grandparents or rel.ttivcs \\ ho arc
raio;ing a child can also take ad\ an-

rage of the services provided through
the Caregiver Support Program.
Thc"e "kinship careg1vcr5'' mclude •
individuals who provide full~tunc
c;~re for a relative or non-relative's
chiiJ [tlld/or &lt;:hildren in their home.
Through the Support Program.
kw~htp caregi' ers can
utilize
resource:. and sen ices surrounding
daycure, financial ass1stance, parcntmg the second time around. and
much more. To be eligible, kinship
c.tregi\ ers must be 55 years of age
or older and caring for someone 18 ·
) can.. ot age or younger. or an adult
chtld from age 19 to 59 \\ho ha~ d
disability.
The Area Agency on Aging
D1-.trict 7, Inc . senes 10 counties Ill
Ohio including Adams. Bro" n,
Gallia,
Highland.
Jnchon,
La\\ I~JlCC, Pike, Ross. Scioto and
VintolT. Ser\Jccs dre provided on a
non-dic;criminatory ba~is. For more
information about the Caregn•er
Support Program ror caregivers nr
grandparenh and relatives who arc
r:us111g a child, call the At\A7 tollrree ell (800) 582-7277.

Meigs County calendar
Church events
Thursday, M!JrCh 25
POMEROY - Rev. Bnan Dunham
to speak at Grace Church, 7 p.m .. as
part of Me1gs Mmisterial Association's
commun1ty lenten program continues.
Satu rday, March 27
POMEROY Giveaway of g1ft
cards to Dollar General for needy children, noon-2 p.m., Grace Episcopal
Church, East Marn Street, child must
be present to receive card, refreshments, hot dogs available.
Sunday, March 28
POMEROY
Revival,
Mt.
Hermon Church, located off Route 7
on Texas Road, turn at 36411
Wickham Road Clifford B. Coleman,
evangelist, Meet1ngs Sunday. 10:30
. and 7 p.m. through March 31, 7
each evenmg. More mformaton
•
985-4220.
Rev1val, Hope
MIDDLEPORT Bapt1st Church, 570 Grant St..
Mtddleport, Rev. Gary Ell s, pastor;
Rev. Gary Bowlin, evangelist. Sunday,
March 28. ·11 a.m. and 6 p.m.; March
29 through March 31, 7 p.m. each

evemng. Nursery provtded. More Information, call 992-5334.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, March 22
HARRISONVILLE
The
Harrisonville Senior Citizens will meet
at 11 a.m. at the Presbyterian Church.
Blood pressures will be taken followed
by a potluck dinner.
Tuesday, March 23
CHESTER Past Councilors of
Chester Council, Daughters of
America, will meet 7 p.m. at the hall.
Thurs day, March 25
POMEROY - The me1gs County
Retired Teachers Association, noon
adt the W1ld Horse Cafe. Speacker w1ll
be the director of commumcat1on service, State Teachers Retirement
Systems.
POMEROY Ewings Chapter,
Sons of the Amencan Revolution,
6:30 p.m. at Meigs Museum, 144
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Dmner followed by speaker Tom Romine of
Athens, member of the Bngade of the

American Revolution. Romme to present wBefore They Were Sold ers.
Matenal Culture an Everyday l1fe m
the 18th Century." Invited Return
Jonathan Me1gs Chapter, DAR members,
ancestors
of
American
Revolution sold1ers.

Public meetings
Monday, March 22
RACINE- Southern Local Board of
Education, regular meeting, 8 p.m.,
high school media room.
POMEROY- Meigs County Library
Board, regular meeting, 3:30 p.m.,
Pomeroy Library.
Tuesday, March 23
POMEROY - f3egular meeting of
local
Emergency
Planmng
Comm1ttee. 11 :30 a.m., senior center.
2010 reqwred exercise, water
resource survey problems to be dis~
cussed.
Thursday, March 25
POMEROY - The Meigs Soli and
Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors. 11 :30 a.m. at d1stnct
off1ce. 33101 Hiland Road, Pomeroy.

Gallia County calendar
Meetings-Events
Sunday, March 21
GALLIPOLIS- American
l egion Birthday Dinner, 1
p.m. at American Legion
Post 27 on McCormick
Road
Monday, March 22
GALLIPOLIS District
Adv1sory Council of the
Gallia County Health Distnct
meet1ng, 7 p.m., conference
m of the Gallia County
NICS
Center,
499
ckson P1ke.
GALLIPOLIS Galha
County
Veterans
Association regular monthly
meeting, 7 p.m., d1nner
served at 6 p m.
Tuesday, March 23
EWINGTON - American
Legion Post 161 regular
monthly meetmg, 7:30 p.m.
Happy Hour, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday, March 24
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Common Pleas
Clerk of Courts Legal Dept.
closed . No filings accepted.
Thursday, March 25
GALLIPOLIS - French
500 Free Cllmc, 1-4 p.m.,
258 Pmecrest Drive off
Jackson Pike. In the event
schools are closed due to
inclement weather, clinic w111
be canceled.
GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis
In Bloom monthly meeting,
5:15 p.m., downstairs conence
room
at the
llipolis
Mumc1pal
Building, 518 Second Ave.
Gallipolis.
•
Sat urday, March 27
GALLIPOLIS
Community Easter Egg
: Hunt. 2 p.m., Canaday Park.
Sponsored by Gallipolis
Church of Christ in Chnstlan
Union. Info: 446-7119.
GALLIPOLIS -American
Red Cross covered d1sh
d1nner for volunteers and
donors. 6 p.m • New life
900
Lutheran
Church,

Jackson Pike, Gallipolis.
Monday, March 29
KANAUGA - "Meet the
Candtdates" night, 7 p m.,
Disabled
American
108
Veterans building,
l1berty St., Kanauga.
Tuesday, April 6
BIDWELL - Breast and
cervical cancer screenings,
9 a.m.-3 p.m., Scenic Hills
Nursing and Rehabilitation
Center, 311 Buck Ridge
Rd., Bidwell. Prov1ded by
Ohio University College of
Osteopathlc
Medicine
Community
Health
Programs.
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Clinic Retirees lunch, noon,
Down Under Restaurant
Friday, April 9
GALLIPOLIS 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District regular board meeting, 11 a.m ,
Park District Office, Gallia
County Courthouse. 12
Locust St., Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS Gallla •
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District board
meeting, 1:30 p.m., C.H.
Mckenz1e Ag Center, 111
Jackson P1ke, Suite 1569,
Gallipolis.
JACKSON - SEOEMS
District Board of Trustees
meeting, 6 p.m., Holzer
Medical Center-Jackson.
Info: 446-9840.
Monday, April 12
GALLIPOLIS - Week of
the Young Child Spring
Carnival, 9 a.m.-2 p m ,
First
Church
of
the
Nazarene, 1110 First Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Info:
Paula
Williams 441 -1370.
RIO G RANDE Rio
Grande Elementary School
kindergarten registration.
Call for appomtment, 2455333.
Tuesday, April13
RIO GRAN DE Rio
Grande Elementary School
k indergarten registration.
Call for appointment, 2455333.

Thursday, Aprll1 5
CENTENARY - Green
Elementary School kindergarten registration. Call for
appointment, 446-3236
Frid ay, Aprll16
CENTENARY - Green
Elementary School kmdergarten registration. Call for
appomtment. 446-3236.
Mond ay, May 3
GALLIPOLIS
Washmgton
Elementary
School kmdergarten regrstratiOn. Call for appomtment, 446-3213.
Tu esd ay, May 4
GALLIPOLIS
Wash1ngton
Elementary
School kindergarten registration. Call for appointment, 446-3213.
Friday, May 14
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
Soli
and
Water
Conservation D1strict board
meeting, 1:30 p.m., C.H.
Mckenzie Ag Center. 111
Jackson Pike, SUite 1569,
Gallipolis.
Saturday, May 29
GALLIPOLIS- River Valley
HlQh School Class of 2000 1oyear reunion, 7-11 p.m., Elks
Fann, Ohio 588, Gallipolis.
RSVP by May 1. Info:
rvhs2000reunion@yahoocom.

Card Shower
Emily louise Fulks will
celebrate her 90th birthday
on Apnl 8. Cards may be
sent to 2207 State Route
218, Scottown. OH 45678

of each month at New Life
Lutheran Church, Jackson
P1ke. Info: Jackie Keatley at
446-2700 or John Jackson
at 446-7339.
ATHENS - Survival of
Suicide support group
meets 7 p.m., fourth
Thursday of each month at
Athens Church of Chnst,
785 W. Union St., Athens.
Info: (740) 593-7414.
GALLIPOLIS
Gnef
Support Group meets second
Tuesday of each month, 8
p.m.. at New Ufe Lutheran
Church Faalitators: Sharon
Cannichael and John Jackson.
GALLIPOLIS - Serenity
House support group for
domestic violence victims
meets Mondays at 2 p.m. For
more information, call the
Serenity House at 446-6752.
GALLIPOLIS Look
Good Feel Better cancer
program, third Monday of
the month at 6 p.m .• Holzer
Center for Cancer Care.
GALLIPOLIS -Alcoholics
Anonymous
Wednesday
book study at 7 p.m. and
Thursday open meeting at
noon at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church, 541 Second Ave
Tuesday closed meeting is at
8 p.m. at St. Peter's
Episcopal Church,
GALLIPOLIS -Narcotics
Anonymous Miracles in
Recovery meets every
Monday and Saturday, 7:30
p.m.,
at
St.
Peter's
Episcopal Church.

21, 2010

ASK DR.. BH.C) I HER.S

Bad thoughts
about ill dad
Bv DR. JOYCE B ROTHERS

Dcm· Dr. Brothers: :\1) 91-year-old dad has had a
rough yc~u. Hc'c; be~n in and out of the hospital \\llh
cancer. which he ha&lt;. been battling for '&gt;C\erul years.
He's been ternbly s1ck. and .1101 of the tune I'&gt; m a $rcat
deal of pain. It breaks my heart e\ery t1me J "ee h1m. I
nc.,er thought I \\Ould be thinkmg such hornl1c
thought~. but I'' e found myself hoping recent!) that he
"ould just pa-,~ on 1lo\\ do I deal \\ ith the gu11t of thlllk
ing like th1s?- K.~.
Dear K.~.: Older people often ~a) that there 1 somethmg \\rang \\ ith the 1dca of a ch1ld pas&lt;.ing a" a) before
a parent
tt is not uppw.ed to happen. That's true . but
seldom doc~ the child reCt!l\e ac; much S) mpath) \\-hen
he muc;t watch .t belo\ed parent go do\\nhill. That can
ba' c JUSt as much of a tri:lumauc effect an its O\\ n \\d)',
C\ en though rt 1s the "proper" order of thmgs. In ~hort
illness. suffc1 ing. pam und death al\\ ays h&lt;n e the poten
tial to cruo;h ,IJl) sunl\or When the parent i" \Cf) old.
ond his or her care ic; expen'it\e, tlmt!-consumlllg. soul
cmshing .md prolonged, 1.1 can't help but engender "ome
feelmgs that \\C don't u~uall)' like to ackno\\]edge. 'lou
somcho\\ w1osh the whole exhnusting orde.tl could be
O\ e1. I hat docsn 't tuke a\\ ay from the fact that you don't
w,mt your dad to !!lifTer any longer. It\ all tied up to,gcther.
This 1~ pertcctl) natural. and a normal reuction to the
stress of whc~t )Oll ha\Z been going through. but I cer·
tamly underst.md hm\ it could cause you to feel guilt) I
.belie\ e &gt;ou \\ ould tee! better if) ou "ere to get 111 touch
\\ 1th u support group· of "&gt;Ome sort - unles you ha"e a
famil) you can lean on to dn 1de liP &lt;some of the responSibilities of caring for ~our father. Both of these mo\e"
would be \Cf) helpful m .tlle\lating some of the guilt
) ou ure feel mg. fh"' l'i a 'ery io;olatmg e\pericnce. and
to share tt \\ 1th others "ho are in the s.Jme boat \\Ould
help.

•••
) ear for the past 22. In)
friends und I ha\C gone on a fio;;hing trip. It's ul\\-.t)s
been a thing \\e all look fornard to that' mcluded onl)
the fi,e of us Th1s )Carone ofm) friends \\ants to bnng
hie; 14-)ear~olcl daughter'Jiong becau-;e -.he lme" to fi..,h
What i'&gt; he thmking? This ts the one time \\e can all get
together ,md not h.\\C to mind our manners. and he
\\an to; to bring his daughter') Ho\\ can 1 tell him ho''
\Hong\leaded thb iden is? - C.C.
Dear· (·.C.: Presumably, this group of old fishing bud
d1cs hns scver.1l ch1ldren. not just the 14-\ear-old. So
this could happen agam. \\ tth 'anous children bemg
proposed as fi..,hing co1npamons. It is best to settle the
1ssue now. \\ it~out hurting anyone's feeling' - just to
fom1 some pohctes for future reference. Let'., con,tder
this rather .. trangc concept of a 14~year~old girl actual!)
\\,mung to spend t1me fi.,hing \dth a bunch of old mule
budd1es of her dad'c;, Are vou &lt;.ure 1t 1 n't entlreh fie
ment of the d.td's unagmation'? In other \\Ords.ls th1 for
real?
Ac;sumrn£! it 1s, )OU rcall) ha'e t\\O chm..:es \\hen 1t
comes to hootmg dO\\ n this inappropnate 1deJ. One
\\ ould be to ju~t . a) no. That could offend ) our budd).
and ) ou probabl) don't \\ant to do that. The second
option is to add another fishmg tnp during the ) ear that
"ould be open to an) tam II) membe~ \\ ho \\ant to
attend
\\ i\ e-;. daughters. cousm,, "hate" cr. But 1f
)OU don't \\ant the dd~~.:ate balance of the old~buddtc~
ltshing tnp to,be upset.) ou -;hould tell the c.uy. Don't oct
roped mto a S.1tuc~t1on that'' ill end up nti1iln~ )OUr tunc
together. Ma)bC the Wl\es could get together ill home
\\ith the children and do something fun \\hile )OU gu)s
arc a\\ a)
there arc man) different '' .t) s. to include
e\Cr)one \\ ithout fishmg together! It's dit11cult to cope
'' ith tnm'iiLIOn"' ~ometllllCf&gt;. but handling thi-, thoughtful~
ly \\Ould be beo;t.
fc) 2010 b\' Km~ Featwt \ S\lldicare

Dear Dr. Brother : E' ef)

ODNR survey to gauge
deer hunters' preferences
COLL' ~1B US - The Oh10 Department ot
tural
Resources (ODNR). Di' 1:-.1011 of\\ tldlife encour.w:e' all
Oh1o \\hue-tat led deer hunters and those "ith an i~ten:"t
111 deer hunting to take .1 ~Uf\C) a \\lldoh1o com. The
sun C) \\ 1ll be 3\ atlnble through mi -Apnl.
1 he Di' 1sion of Wlldlife is consid ring some changes
to the current deer fireanns sea,olh.An)One \\hO \\Ould
like to comment on this top1c ts encouraged to take .1 fe\\
minutes to pro' ide omc information and an \\era fe\\
4uestions regarding preferences of possible nc\\ opportumtics Rc~ponsc:-. to the "ur'e) arc confidential.
In fom1ntion pro\ ickd b) hunters through sun C)' b Js
'ita I to the succes•Sul munngl'mcnt of Ohio "ildlife
and the dh ision encourages all hunters to participate.
Wildlife biolog1sts use 'iUf\C) data in combm.tllon with
biological d.1tc1 from wildlifc populauon to identit)
\\a)s of impro,mg hunting in Ohio.
The Ohio De1&gt;&lt;~rtment of Natural Resources en UI'C" .1
bal.utcc bet\\ CCII \\ 1se the and protection of our n tturo.~l
re"ourccs for the benefit of .111. \ 1sit the OD:-I:R \\eb "&gt;tie
at \\\\\\ .oh1odnr com.

Support groups
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va
- Pleasant Valley AA group
meets at 7 30 p.m. each
Monday and Thursday, 8
p.m. each Saturday at the
Presbytenan Church, 8th
and Main streets, Point
Pleasant.
GALLIPOLIS - Gnevmg
Parents Support Group
meets 8 p m., f1rst Tuesday

20r ( Otf Sele~t. \Vindm, Trentmenb
cunaim, &amp; th .tpe~ • 'alnnl..'e" • beddm•
• cut }:mltge • upholst~r) f.tbn . .·

Custom made &amp; Profes~wnally
151 Su:ond •c.

FURf\ll TURE
GAI..~l..~ERIJ~S

Gal/ipoll\, 011
740--146-0 Ul

1

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825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis Ohio

(740) 446-2342 ·FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydailyt ribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
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The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

T()f)AY IN HI STC)RY
Today IS Sunday, March 21, the 80th day of 201 0.
There are 285 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History·
On March 21st 1960, about 70 people were killed in
Sharpev1lle, South Africa, when police fired on black protesters; the shoot~ng drew international condemnation.
(On th1s date in 1985, police 1n Langa, South Africa,
opened fire on blacks marching to mark the 25th
anniversary of Sharpsville; the reported death toll varies
between 29 and 43.)
On th1s date:
In 1685 composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born
in E1senach, Germany.
In 1804, the French c1vil code, or the "Code Napoleon"
as tt was later called. was adopted.
In 1806, Mexican statesman Benito Juarez was born
in Oaxaca.
In 1907, U.S Mannes arrived 1n Honduras to protect
American lives and interests in the wake of political violence.
In 1940. a new government was formed in France by
Paul Reynaud, who became pnme mimster, succeeding
Edouard Daladier.
In 1957, President Dw1ght D. Eisenhower and Bntish
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan began a four-day conference in Bermuda.
In 1963, the Alcatraz federal prison island in San
Francisco Bay was emptied of 1ts last 1nmates at the
order of Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.
In 1965, more than 3.000 civil rights demonstrators led
by the Rev. Mart1n Luther King Jr. began their march
from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama.
In 1972, the Supreme Court. in Dunn v. Blumstein,
ruled that states may not require at least a year's residency for voting eligibility.
In 1990, Namibia became an independent nat1on as
the former colony marked the end of 75 years of South
African rule
Ten years ago: Pope John Paul II began the first official visit by a Roman Catholic pontiff to Israel. A divided
Supreme Court ruled the government lacked authority to
regulate tobacco as an addictive drug, throwing out the
Clinton administration's main anti-smoking initiative.
Five years ago: A high school student on the Red Lake
Indian reservation in M~nnesota killed five schoolmates,
a teacher and an unarmed guard before taking his own
life, Jeff Weise had earlier killed his grandfather and his
grandfather's companion. Armed with a new law rushed
through Congress and signed by President George W.
Bush, the attorney for Terri Schiavo's parents pleaded
with a judge to order the brain-damaged woman's feedmg tube re-inserted. (The judge ended up refusing.)
Ailing Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist returned to the
Supreme Court bench to hear arguments despite his
thyroid cancer. Cabaret singer Bobby Short dted in New
York C1ty at age 80.

Thought for Today : "Among individuals, as among
nations, peace is the respect of others' rights." Benito Juarez, Mexican statesman (1806-1872).

LETTERS T O T H E E DI T OR
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number No uns1gned letters Will be published. Letters should be in
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w1ll not be atcepted for pubhcataon.

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12 Weeks
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12 Weeks

Sunday, March 2 1,

2010

Bill ~ll help teens in abusive relationships ·
I n June 2005, Shynerru Grant, a 17
year-old high school graduate from
was headed to
Toledo
who
Wilberforce University on a :-.~.:holar­
ship. was shot and killed by her exboyfriend. Antonio Bryant Rogers.
For more than a year before th1s tragic shooting, Antonio stalked and
abused Shyncrra. including an inct dent in May 2004 when he l)roke into
her home and put her in the hospital
with a broken jaw.
Nearly two years later. in March
2007, Johanna Orotco , a high school
student from Cleveland, was shot in
the face by her ex-boyfriend , Juan
Ruit,, days after he was released from
juvenile prison for raping her. He
later turned the gun on himself. She
survived. Juan had repeatedly hit.
pushed and kicked Johanna during
their relationship.
Unfortunately, the abuse that
Shynerra and Johanna endured is
only a glimpse into what has become
a haunting reality for many teens in
dating relationships. According to au
investigative series in the Columbus
Dispatch last November called
Domestic Silence, young Ohioans
ages 15 to 19 are twice as likely to
experience dating 'iolcnce as they

John
Carey

arc to be injured in a car crash .
However, unhke adults who are targets. _of threa~~ and abuse by a
boytncnd. gtrlfncnd ~)r spouse. Ohio
teenagers in violent relationships
have been unable to get protection
orders from a cou1t in an attempt to
keep their attackers away. This law
will soon chan!!e.
This past ~week. the General
Asl&gt;embly passed House Bill tO. legislation that gives juvenile courts in
Ohio the same authority as common
pleas courts to issue protection
orders . While the bill is not a
"panacea." as one of my colleagues
explained. it is designed to provide
greater protection for teens in abusive
relationship~. Offenders can be
arre-.ted immediately if they go to a

victim's home or office, call them on
the telephone or damage their proper-.,
ty. The bill, which was named
Shynerra's Law in memory of
Shynerra Grant, has been sent to
Governor Strickland for his sign'
ture.
The stories of Shynerra an
Johanna and the many other young
people in Ohio who have experienced
abuse at the hands of a boyfriend or
girlfriend are heartbreaking. While
HB I 0 will not prevent every violent
relatiOnship. hopefully it will provide
a stronger defense for some teens in
these situations and save young lives.
For more information on HB 10.
please visit the Ohio General
Assembly website at www.legislature .state.oh.us.
I f you have any questions. thoughts
or concerns about a state issue. or if
you need assistance working with a
state government agency. please write
to me: Senator John A. Carey, Ohio
Senate, Statehouse. Columbus. Ohio
43215 or call my office at (614) 4668156. I also encourage you to visit
my page on the Ohio Senate web!-&gt;ite
at www.ohiosenate.gov/john-care).

Could school bus ads save scl~ool budgets?
B Y D ONNA G ORDON B LANKINSHIP
PSSOCIATED PRESS

School d,istricts have imposed all
sorts of dra-;tic cuts to sa\"C monev
during the dovm econom). canceling
field trips and making parent-. pay for
everything from tissues to sporb
transportation.
And some have nmv resorted to
placing advertisements on sehool
buses.
School districts say it's practically
free money. and advertisers 10\e the
capthe audience that school buses
provide.
That's the problem. say opponents:
Children arc being forcl.!d to travel to
school on moving media kiosb. and
the tactic isn't much different .than
dressing teachers in sponsor-embl.a;oned uniforms.
"Parents who are concerned abollt
commercial messages ''ill ha' e no
choice:· said Josh~ Golin. associate
director of Campaign
for a
Commercial
free
Childhood .
"Parents \Von't be given the option to
send their kids on the ad-free bus."
Washington lawmaker-. considered
the idea of school bus advertising thi~
year. and the concept is also heing
tossed around in Ohio. Ne\\ Jersey
and Utah. About half a do;en states
already allO\V bus advertising
including Colorado, Ari10na. Florida,
Minnesota. Tennessee and Texas .
The idea can be traced back about
15 years, but budgl.!t v. oes hm e led to
a recent resurgence
"This i~-.LK' comes up on a regular
basis when funding gets tight and
people arc looking for altcrnatiw
ways to fuml school transportation."
said John Green. supc.:rvtsor for
school transportation at the California

Department of Education.
Green has a long list of rt:asons
California hm. not~ sold ads on its
school buses. despite the regular
onslaught of · creati\ e parents and
hm makers who sugge-.t the idea to
htm and other state officials.
He ~ays bus &lt;ids are rarely as lucrative as the school district expects.
they may distract drivers and lead to
ac~idents. and keeping unwanted ads
oft buses may not be as eas) a~ people think.
A high\Hl\' authoritv in Southern
Califor~1ia recent!) lo;t a court case
O\ cr its attempt to prevent the
f\linutemen mili'tia group from
"adopting a highway" and putting a
sign on the freeway. The judge decided the case on First Amendment
tssues.
. 'Tm thinking that logic would hold
tor school transportation:· Green
'-&lt;lid .
Jim O'Connell. president of MediaAim of Scottsdale. Ari1 .. sa)s school
bus advertlstng can be lucrative and
in li' e years of selling the ads for
mort.! than JO districts m Colorado
and Aritona. he's never once heard of
accident tied to bus adve1t1smg
Jefferson Count) Schoof..,. the
largest district in Colorado \\ 1th more
than 84.000 :-.tudenh in 150 schools
co,ering more than 777 square miles.
has a three-) ear contract with First
Bank of Colorado that is worth about
$500.000 0\er four years, said district
-.pokes\\ omat \lei i -.sa Rce\'es.
That transLlte-. tnto about $7 a day
per bus for the length of. the contract.
still a fraction of the district's total
$959 million budget but impoJt&lt;lnt at
a time when en·ry dollar counts.
In addition to having its logo on

100 of the distnct's 350 school buses.
First Bank also will be prominently
displa) ed in eve f) high school g) m.
on t~e district Web page. m di~tri.
stadtums and companv announc
ments v. ill be made during most varsit) sporting eYents .
·'It"s not as large a revenue generator a!-&gt; you might think." said Mike
Griffith. a polic) analyst for the
Education Commission of the States .
Paying a consultant to sell the ads
usuall) cuts the profits enough to discourage districts. he said.
School bus advertismg has been
getting some traction in the past two
vears. as it d1d dunng the 2001 economic downturn. said Griffith. His
organizatton does not keep track of
which states allO\\ school bus advertising, but he noted that fe\\ states
ha\'e legislation or rules that specifically disaliO\\ it.
Washington state Sen. Paull Shm. a
Democrat who represents a district
north of Seattle. raised the tdea during the Legislature this year because
the state's $2.8 billion budget deficit
v.. as literally keeping him ~a,\ake at
night w1th concern about its affect on
schools and students. he said.
The bill failed.
"We thought this would brino a few
shekels to the school boards."
-.aid.
In staff meetings \\hen the idea of
bus adverttsing comes up, Green sa) ..,
he quashes the tdea b) suggesting
other school marketing opportunities.
"\\h) not JUst have the teachers
\\ear a uniform similar to NASC\R
drivers?" Green wants to knO\\.
"Even though that's kind of a joke.
my point 1s. why do the) smdc out
the school bus? Wh) not pamt a billboard alongs1de the school?"

he

�·-:--..-..----------:-----.......Sunday, March

21, 2010

Obituaries
Connie Sue Maynard Rees
Con me Sue Ma) nard Rec" . .------::---...----.
55. Rio Gmnde, left us unex-

pectedly dunng the earl)
morning hours on Fndn).
March 19. 2010. at Jlolzer
Medical Center. Gulhpoli'&gt;,
th her famil) b) hc1 s1dc.
v.as born Jul) 25, 1954,
Log.tn, W.Vu., the fifth
dnu~hter ol' Richard £1nd
Lilltnn l3utchcr t-.ta~nrud,
who sun 1\'e and re:.1de in
B1dwcll
She marncd l)wune Rees ..._...__..__ _.......__..:......,...;:....:...::J
39 ) ears ago on March 19.
1971, und he sunive~ with tv.o children, Kellie (Matt
Ma) nard) Rees. Rio Grande. and Douglas (Jenmfer)
Rees. Bidwell: three grnndo;ons. Dmtiel Reec;, Chase
!'l~nce and Morgan Gibson. AJ&lt;.o survh ing are ~i!!ters,
Lmda (Larry) Sturgall, Stout, Ohio, Mar) (Ralph)
Young, Gallipolis, Chris (Russ) Cook. Martrnsburg.
W.Va .. Nanca (Jame-;) LeMaster, Decatur: Ill.. and
Patricta (Bryan) Jones, R10 Grnnde; brothers. D.tnny
(BernieJ Mayn.1rd. Lebanon. Ohio. Gregory (MaT) belle)
Ma) nard. Galhpolts; father in- Ia\\. Da' ad Lincoln
(Bett)) Ree~;. Galhpolis; brothers m-lav.. Dean (Amee)
Rees. Bidv.ell. 1),, aght (Chrio;ti) Rees, Rio Grande, and
Da\ id (Sharon) Rces. Gallapoll:.. 22 meces and
nephe\\ s; nine great niece'&gt; and nephev.- an'd lifelong
friends. Brendn. Roger and Brct Keeter, Point Pleuo;;ant.
W.Va • Linda Lester. G,illipoh-;. and Pat and BetS\
•
Canaduv, Rio Grnnde.
Conn(e wa~ a Wal-Mart manager who v.orked in man)
departments . She will truly be missed b)' her lo\ed ones.
neighbors, friends and b) everyone who met her. She
alv.ays had a smile on her face e\en when she v.as feel, poorl&gt;: alwa) s had an encouraging word for
ome\ er she met.
•
Funeral Sen ace will be held at I p m.. Tue..,d.ty. at
McCoy-~1oore l·uneml Home. Vinton, "Wlth Pastor Jad.
Be~ officrating Burial v.tll foliO\\.
Fnends rna)' call from 4 8 p.m Monda) at the funeral
home.
In lreu of flo\\ers. memonal ~ifts are requested for the
ScholarshiP. found for ~mndchtldren. Danrel Rees and
Mor~an G1bson, co Ohao \ulley Bank. 420 11urd A\e..
Galhpohs Ohio 45631.
Condolences rna) be sent to v. \\\\ .mcco) moore com.

--

......

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

___
~unbav

l'mnc1·oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

U:imes-iPrntincl • Page As

Deaths
Condolences may be
v. w" mc.coymoore .com.

Dora
Janis Bare

Minnie Elizabeth
Waters McKenzie

Dora Jams B,u-c, 76, Gallipoli-.. dred
Saturday, March 20, 2010, at Holzer
!\1edical Center. Arrangements will be
announced bf. McCo) -Moore Funeral
Home.
\\etherholt.
Galhpoli.,
Condolences mt~y be sent to
\\ \vw.mccoyrnoore.c.om.

'Mmnie l!lilabeth Waters McKeruie.
85. Gallipolis, died Saturday. March
20. 2010, at We'itlc) Ridge C.1re
Center,
Rc) no)d..,burg
Ohro.
Arran •cment-; v. til be announced h)'
!\1cCoy-\1uorc
f·unerul
Home,
Wctherholt
Chapel.
Gullq,olto;.

Thomas H. Runyon
Thomas H. Runvon, former minister at Bradbul) Church of ('hrist.
\11ddlepon. Ohio, died Tue..,dny.
Murch 16.2010, in Bar~tow. Calif. A
memorral ~ervice is planned for a
later date.

Bv BETH ,PERGENT
BSERGENTOMVOALYSENTINEI. COM

Beulah Belle (Houck) Mitchell

Above: "COSI On Wheels"
rolled into Southern
Elementary in an attempt to
engage and inspire students to explore the budding scientist within.
Left: Students from
Southern Elementary create their own super-slime at
one of the popular handson chemistry stations
brought to the school via
the WCOSI On Wheels" program which sat up shop tn
the gymnasium Friday.
Beth Sergent/photos

Elementar)
tte~ that rna) ha\e parked Chaunce)
interest m a scientaf1c career I Athens I.
H) bnds
Diagnostic
Studentc; in kinderganen
through eighth grade \\ere de,elops. manufacture" and
able to take;t turn at the' ar- sells in no\ ath e dangnoMic
ious science &lt;;t.ttion~ set up products for a v. tde range of
in the gymnaslllm. Parent 'Jral and thyroid diseases
volunteers and teachers, from its headquarters 111
v. ho were trained the night Athen.-;. As a re~ional combefore. manned the o;tation ... munit) foundauon sen ing
:n countreo:; of
Two more schools will the
Appalachhm
Oh10, the
recel\e "COS! On Wheels"
'isit" this spnng as a result
9f the FAO and DHI paltnership. includmg Central
Elemental)' (Hocking) and

Foundation '' orks to ensure
growing up in Appalachian
Ohio means ha' ing access
to opportunit)
For more informatwn
abour FAO. DH and COSJ or
how 10 partner with the
Fowzdatwn to increase
access to educational opportwuty. visit HWH'.appalaclzianolzio.orr: or call FAO at
740-753-11 J.J.

McCoy-~ore

Punera{ tfomes

Video: Parkinson's patient

Sett•iug Om Communities for Over 100 Years

chided on health vote

Olivelle Uber

to

'COSI On Wheels' rolls south

RACIN£·
Findmg
funds for students to take
field tnps can be trick) and
dov. nright impossible in
this economv but what
about bnngmg the field trip
to c;tudentc;'1
The latter option strll
costs money but th.mks to
the
f·oundation
for
Appalachian Ohto (l·AO)
and J)iagnostiC H) brids
(DH I) in Athens, around
500 students at Southern
F.lemcntar)' expenenced
"COS I On Wheels" v. ithout
traveling to Columbus.
1
''The big tha'lg we v.anted
to accomplish \HI" in~piling
kids and gettiug them cxcited about science und ha'&gt;'mg
fun with it,'' Christine
Barnett. outreach educator
with COSI &lt;;aid.
l ast ye.tr. the onl) fteld
tnp chtldren at Southern
v. ere able to take "as a tnp
to COSJ in Columbus
though 1t ''as only for chil
dren 111 an after o;,chool mentonng program .1nd e\ en
then tho e kids had to meet
o;;trrct gllldelrnes to qual if),
according to Vacki ~orthup.
Beulah Belle (Houck) Mitchell. 87. Gallipoli&lt;;. Ohio. parent rec;ourcc coordinator
v.ent to be 10 the pre encc of her Lord. on Frida) morning. at Southern Elernentol').
March 19. 2010. at the Holzer A~sisted Lhmg, in
"We appreciate thts eduGnlltJ?Olis She \\J&lt;, .t member of the First Church of God. cational opportuntt)' provid
in Po tnt Pleasant and she and her husband John O\\ ned and ed for the students of
operated Mitchell\ Grocer) and Sen ice Station, m Southern
Llementan ,"
Rodnc). lor man) year ....
Northup s.ud. "The d) nmntc
Born 0 tober 5, Jef22. m Galhpolr&lt;&gt;. 'he v.as a dauj!h- aCtl\ lttes prO\ lded by
ter '- f the 1 te '\1ason unJ \ema (Walla~el Houck. In COSI On Whecl'i' \\ere
dd ton o her p rent~;, he v. J' al&lt;,o preceded 111 death IT'Ottvt~tlon I and re t uph)
r h 'ib nd John l\1ttchell: her son. Stephen plemenh to our st~~enh
M1t1.:hdl. her duu hter. Rebcc~a M1tchell .md &lt;;C\cral learn n xpenence
er .
"COS I On \\ heelo;" as n
I'&gt; &lt;&gt;un t\ ed b) two brother and src;ters-m-la''. oah
traveling outre,tch progrnm
nd Marcella Houck. of G.tllrpohs and Ben and of Columbus' Center of
Houck. of Ironton. und o;;pecml triend-;. whom -;he Scaence and lndu tl') and is
lou·d s her ov.n chaldren. Pastor Carl and Y\onne meant to en •a e students m
Sv.tc;her. ot Po10t Pie. &lt;,ant
a d) namK openmg a em
Beulah Belle\ hfe '"'11 be celebrated at 3 p m. Sunday. bl) and mt\.:TJCit\e s...aence
March 21 . 20 I 0 t the foJI'&lt;;t Churl:h of God m Po tnt a...tJ\ tt e aligned v.llh the
Plea nt w rth P tor Carl Sv. 1 her nd Pac;tor Bob Oh10 Acndem1c Content
Paner on offic.atm Bunal w rll folio'' m R1dgela'' n Standard5 md the ~at10nal
Cemetel') m l\1~.;rcen aile. \ ,.,ttat10n v.-ill be held at the Sctcncc
Educ.Hion
church une hoar pnor to the ~crv1cc on Sunday. ln lieu of Standards.
Southern
flov.-ers, memort.~l contnbutiOn rna)" be made to the Farst I~lcmental') students \\ere
Church of God Burlding l·und. c o fotn.t Church ot God. encour:..ged to tum mto bud2401 Jefterson A-..c., Point Pleasant, \\t\, 25550.
ding chcmic;ts, JOimng the
Beulah Belle's care has been entruc;ted to Cro" Huc;scll chemistr) dctectrve to sohe
Funeral Home. An online guest registr) is a\ arlable at mysteries by identifying
\\ ww.cro\\ husscllfh.com.
adds and bases, detenmning
unknown substances. and
dccod111g ,m invisrble me
c;agc. Students \\ere also
Wesley t:. \\eaklc. 92. Letart. W.Va. passed away on able to create endothermic
Frida) March 19. 2010. at the Arbor~ of Gallipolis. He and exothermic reaction:&gt;,
v. a.., born Augu~t 12. 1917, rn \\a) side.\\ .\'a .. a &lt;&gt;on to the make a container of superlate S. Anderson and Nellie Tu~lor Weikle. He \\US an slime to take home n v.ell
U.S. !'Ia' y Veteran sen ing 1n \\\\II as an mspector and as a 'arict) of other nell\ av. .trehouo;,eman.
Preceded 10 death b) on~.: ..on, Bruce Weikle: brotherc;.
I.e lie. Tomm) and Hn~ \\eikle; ~ister. Hatel Cox • .md
-m-lav., \\ 1lham "Bill ' Has.,,
'ned b&gt;, one c;on ,md daughter m-la\\. Phillip \\.
d "Jeannie· We1kle of Pomt PleL~&lt;,.tnt: daughters and
sons tn-la\\, Vtcki Ha.,~ of Galllpoh&lt;;. Ramona and
COLUMBUS &lt;AP) - A
"Terr)" Gr&lt;t) ot Let.trt und \'alarie and "Charlie"
McKmne) of Point Plea~ant: 14 grandchildren: 16 great man ,., ith Parkmson's disea....e
grandchildren; one great r,rcut grandchild; sister-in-lav.. who wa'&gt; ham~scd ,tt a rnll) b)
Armmta We1kle; and specta) c~re giver~. Thelm.1 opponents of Pre:.ident
Workman, Ruth Gra), Kam L1tchlleld. Angie George, Burnck Ohama's health care
O\Crhaul smd h·iday that
Jean Rice and Kim llarri~ton.
Funcral &lt;;ervice will he held at I p.m .• Sunday Marc~ 2.1. Amelicans h~,vc lost the- abili2010. at Deal Funeral Home v.tth Rc\ . I're,ar McQurston t) to engage inch il discourse.
officiating Burial will be nt Forest Htlls Cemetery. Flat
Robert Leh.:hcr. 60, was
Rock. W.Va. hacndo; rna) call from II a.m.- I p.m. Sunda)' sittmg out~ide the office of
U.S. Rep. :'v1ary Jo Kilru)
at the t u ncr,tl horne.
E-mail condolences to dealfunera)(wsuddenlinkmail.com. on Tucsda) "hen he v. as
admonished b) an Obam&lt;~
nittc and accu-.ed of looking for ,1 handout to pa) ht
blils. 111e episode
OJi,elle t •ber, 88, Gallipnlis, Ohao (Che"hare medic.11
\\as
captured
\ideo &lt;~nd
Communi!)). passed uv.a) pencefull) -;urrounded b) .her posted on the on
Web
famil) on Thursda). March 8, 2010, at H?lzcr ~~cd1cal Columbus Dispatch. b) The
Center. Jackson. She was born June 6, 1921. an Harnsburg.
"Nothing for free 0\cr
Ore., daughter of the late !·rank and Ka.te ~math Bee~. She here.
\OU have to \\Ork for
\\as a g1&lt;1duate of Biola School of M1sstonat) !\1edicme.
c'
cr)
thmg
}ou get," ,111
and v.orkcd as a Missional') \\ ith the Amencan ~un~ay
unidentified
man
le,ms over
School Union and nl'&gt;o ,ts ,1 LPN. She \\as a hfettme
,md
tells
Let1..her
Deaconess at the Cheshire Baptist Church and a helpmate
Another m:m emerges from
to her hu~band Rc\. Wtlham Ube1 \\hO scned .1s pa!&gt;tor
the
cro\\ d and thro\\ s t \\ o
re for thirteen )e.us.
.
dollm
bills rn Letcher's In~.
n addition to her husband. she 1s surVI\Cd by thr:ee
•
shoutmg.
" I'll pay for th1s
d,wghtero;, I· ranees (Allen 1 McCox. Dayt~n. Ohw:
Shirley (.Jamec;) Walker. Wellston, Oluo: and Katy llbt:r, gu). St:u1 a pot." Someone
Ciallipoli::., Oh10. Also survivmg arc f1vc grandson~. then ~houts. "Go 10 Canada!"
''OIH iously. thl.! whok'
Ja111es Walker. Belpre. Oluo; Ch~1d Wa.lker, Jacksl)n,
thing
was
insulting,"
Ohio; BI inn Walker. Ctncinnatl, Oh1o; ,llld .l&lt;~hn
l.ctchcr
snid
l·ndn).
Thacker dnd Steve Thackct. Dayton. Oh1o: also nrne
Letcher o;aid he doesn't
great-grandchildren.
\Htnt
to he the center of
Funerul Services v. ill be held nt II a rn .. Monday. M.1rch
•
ltlention
ami v.ould prefer
22. 20 10. t~t the McC'oy-Moorc Func.ral Ho~1~. ~etherh~lt
Chapel. Gallipolis.'" ith Re'. Ste\C La ttl~ ofhctatmg. Bunal to keep the debate focused
on what
will follow m Grmel Hill Cemeter) I ncnd!! may call from - nnd Cl\ ilued
fed~.:r,tl
gO\
crnmcnt
~.. •• n
the
2 4 p.m. Sunda) at the lunrrnl home
do to help people ~truggling
Condolence~ may be sent to wwv..mcco) moore.com.

Wesley U. Weikle

sent

\\ ithout health msurance.
He said he owe~ hb hfe to
Med1care. the go' emment
plan that co\ers his medical
bills and paid for brain
surgery se\ eraI ) ear&lt;, ago.
"I'm afraid tor our countrv," said Letcher. a former
crigmcer and uni\ er~ll) lee
tmer '" ho wn'&gt; diagno,cd
"ith Parkinson's in 2000
"Democracies arc built on
citizens ha\111!! con,er&lt;,ations. \Ve can ·t seem to do
that &lt;Ill) more."
Rebecca Heimlich . "tate
d1rcctor of the con sen .1ti \'C
group
Americans
for
Prosperit). w h1ch oppuo:;c~
Obama's leeblauon ,md
helped orgm1aze the t.lll).
..,,,id the treatment of
Letcher "as itMppropriatc.
for
· American~
Prosperit) does not cnco.ur
age or cotldone haras::.u1g
bchav10r." Heimlich said.
Kilrov. a Democrat" ho~e
disu ict" em c1" Columhu~
and lh suhurbs. cited the
\ l(ko Thursda) dunng "
I Jou~l' flpor speech

S1:'ANLEY SAl NJ)ERS

MONUMENTS

Custom de~igmtl &amp; ldtt•mlfor your lm·rd ones. ManJ samples on Di~pluy.

446-6352

After Jumn ami for appt.
•
Call Llm·d Danner 740-446-J999 or Da1id Ta-..•nr.\ 740446-1615
-

\

C;Al I IP&lt;U I S. C:')l ..

�i&gt;unba~

PageA6

mhne5 ·i&gt;enttnel

Gallipolis City
School Board
approv
personnel

Sunday, March

21, 2010

Gallia County sets qualifications
for rescue truck operators
Bv MICHELLE MILLER
MDTNEWSCMYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

GALLIPOLIS

1 he

I Galha Count) Bo.tni of

Commisswnc1 s passed a
resolution authori.wtg five
emergency per~onncl not
employed by the county to
operate the county rescue
truck during the regular
meeting on 'I hursda).
Over the pa.,t several
)Car&lt;;, the number of county
emergency personnel living
in close proximity to the
Gallia Count) I~MS statton.
which houses the rescue
truck,
has
d\\ indled.
Though the truck is msured .
the count) v.ould have to
pa) workers compensation
on an) non-employee.
I "'hich hmtted the number of
authorized dnver:;.
According to the rcsolu-

1

BY ANDREW CARTER
MDTNE'vVS@MYDAILVTRIBUNE COM

C'I~NT ENAR't
The Galhpohs Cit) School Distnct
Board of l!ducatiOll appiO'&lt;ed a \Unet) ofper&lt;&gt;onnel moves
during tts mcctm• Wcdne.,da).
n1e board renc\\Cd contracts lor the following administrati\e personnel at their current adnunistratlve salary step:
• Michael Br,1ce. dtstnct tcchnolog) coordmator; 3-)ear
contract. 222 \\Ork da)s pcqc,lr, effecti\e Jul) I. 2010.
• M.lrsha Huner. food sef\ tees supef\ isor: 3-year contral.1. 212 \\Ork da)&lt;. per )ear. cffectne Jul) I. 2010.
• \nd) Hout, mnmtcnancc supef\ 1 or; 3 ) ear contract.
261 \\Oik. d&lt;~ys pt'r )C,tr. etfectt\e Jul) I, 2010
• \\'tllwm Foster, ,, Sistant district technology coordinator: 3-)ear contr,tct. 222 \\Ork da)s per )ear. effectne July
I. 2010.
The board uJ...o appro\ cd Supenntcndent Jack Payton's
recommendation to allo\'. sc\cral &lt;~dministr&lt;~tors to have
addit1onal summer "'ork &lt;lays during summer 2010 at each
indi' idual\ per diem rate. Puyton s.lid the extra \\ork days
wJII be neces&lt;.ar) to complete work at the three new elementar) schools. The following administrator&lt;; were
appro,ed for extr,l \\Ork da)': •
up to 20 additional \\ork. days
• Michael Brace
• Marsha Haner
up to 20 ,lddttJonal work days
• And) Hout reimbursement for up to 20 \ acation d&lt;~ys
• \\ illiam Foster up to 20 addttional \\Ork da)S
Supplemcnt.tl contract \'.ere apprO\ed for the following
md1\ Jdu,tl&lt;&gt; for the 2009-2010 school vear:
• Paul Clo~e
bO)'&gt; \aNt) tmck. coach
• 1om S.aunders - se\ enth ,md eighth grade assi~tant
tmck coach (w-ed)
The board appro' ed the foliO\\ ing mdi' 1duaJ.~ a&lt;; substitute personnel for the 2009-2010 school )'Car:
• K) le Burnett
teacher
• Mark Watson
cook
• SheeJM \\ healdon
attendance officer, secretaf)
• Cly&lt;.tal \\ hite-Hetcher - cook, cuo;todian, o;ecretar)
Demck Barnes ,md Cheryl Greenlee "'ere approved as
volunteer track conche~ for,thc 2009-20JO school year.
The bo.trd approved p.tymg intenention specialists at 2
l/2 umes the tutorial rate to "'rite each assigned and com'Pieted 11· P on an as-needed basis. due to the apprm cd
absence/medical lea\ e of an in ten cntion specialist.
P.1yment will be made through IDEA funds.
The bo,1rd a]&lt;;o appro,cd re\ i.;;mg l\\O separate policies in
regard to hating and bull) ing.

"Hopefu)ly this WJII gi\e
t1on. five qualified emergency M!I' 1ce work_er&lt;&gt; who us a qmckcr re~ponse time,"
l1\C or work "'ithin fi\e !&gt;aid Bo)CI.
miles o1 the L~IS .,tat1on
For mo1c mformatJOn
and arc not county employ- contact Boyer at 040) 446ees will be .mthorited to 1659.
operate the rescue truck in
In other action, the coman emergency Situation. To mission upproved u contract
be con-.idered qualified, the with Oh1o Valley Plastering,
person must have at least Inc., to repair the wnllii; and
five years tenure as an the ccihng on the second
emergency service worker.
lloor of the Gallia County
The reo;cue truck driver CoUJ1house annex area.
applications ~for the five
Later in the meeting.
positions will need to be County Auditor Larry Betz
submitted by feb. I of each and County Recorder Roger
year to EMS Director Larry Walker. along with conBoyer at the Gallia County cemed cit1zens, approached
EMS station on Ohio 160
the commi'Ssioners about
Boyer said the resolution repairs. The~ were informed
will help to alleviate some of the dec1sion about the
of the problems currently second floor and commisfaced by emergency ser- sioners asked the officials to
VICes in regards to having make a list of needed
people on hand to respond repairs to their respective
offices.
to rescue emergencies.

Keeping Gallia &amp;
Meigs informed
$1unbap O:t mrs -~rntmel
Gall1a • 44&amp;2342
Me gs • 992·2155

•

Fundamentals of rain
barrels, rain gardens
GALLIPOL IS
The Gallia and Athens Soil and Water
Consef\ au on D1o;tncts are co sponsoring a seminar about
the benefits of ram barre h. and ram gardens.
The .,emmar 1s scheduled for 6:30p.m • Monday, March
22 at the ('.H. McKenzie Ag Center Meeting Room. 111
J.tck.son Pike. Gnllipo]i&lt;;.
Information"' Ill be pre~entcd on these t\'.o types of conSef\ at ion methods co\ ering topics such as the purchase and
design of the barrels and gardens. how water quality can be
Improved w1th them and how much water can be saved
using them '' ith each ram event.
Admission io; free, but registration is required. Call (740)
446 6173. Light refreshments \\ill be served.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 34.52
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 56.20
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 50.91
Big Lots (NYSE) - 36.70
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)- 31.17
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 36.54
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
- 14.32
Champion (NASDAQ) - 1.33
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 6.54
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 33.76
Collins (NYSE) - 62.97
DuPont (NYSE) - "36.86
US Bank (NYSE) - 26.14
Geneml Electric (NYSE)- 18.07
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 28.31
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 43.45
Kroger (NYSE)- 21.64
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 24.67
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 55.33

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NA50AQ)- 24.83
BBT (NYSE) - 31.85
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 17.34
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.56
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.00
Rockwell (NYSE) - 55.37
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) - 9.20
Royal Dutch Shell - 58.50
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 103.62
Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 55.34
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.71
WesBanco (NVSE) - 17.09
Worthington (NYSE) - 16.66
Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans·
actions for March 19, 2010, pro·
vlded by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis
at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero In Point Pleasant at
(304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

FREE SHIPPING

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
Sunduy...\1ostl) cloud)'.
A slight chance of c;ho,,ers
in the morning... Then a
chance of :o.ho"' ers \\ ith a
shght cha nce ot thundctstorms 111 the afternoon.
Highs in the 1md 60s.
Northeast \\ incb ,1round 5
mph .. Becoming south in
th.e afternoon. Chance of
rain 50 percent.
Sunday night ...Showe rs
hkely With n slight chance
of thtm&lt;.ler'&gt;torms. Lows in
the mid 40o;. Southec~sl
winds 5 to 10 mph. Chance
of r,tin 70 percent.
Monda) ...Sho .... er-. hkel).
Cooler \'&lt;Jlh highs in the
lower 50s Chance• ot 1mn
nO pe• cent.
Monda) night ...Cloudy

ith a 50 percent chance of
-.ho"' ers. Cooler '' tth lo"' s
in the mid 30s.
Tucsda~ ...Mo&lt;;tly cloud).
Htghs in the mid 50s.
Tuesday night and
Wcdnl'.sda~ ...Pa11l) cloudy.
Lo\\ o; in the mid 30~. Highs
in the mid 60s.

1.866.MOBILITY

ATT CO

, AT&amp;T Is the official wireless sponsor of Ohio State Athlf'tlcs.
Text OSU to 94253 fOf brealling llEWS, special offers. end exd:.JS~Ve Buckeye content delivered to yoor wlreless pllone1

\\i

Wcdnc s da~

night ...Partly cloudy. Lm\ s
in the lower 40s.
Thm·sda~ ... P:trtl) sunny.
A chance of shower~ in the
afternoon. Highs in the mid
60'1. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Thursday night and
Friday... Mostl)
cloudy
\\ ith a 40 percent chance of
~ho\\ ers. LO\\ s in the lo\\ er
40s. Highs 111 the upper 50s.

+ladson The z.o:.e 1 EH\JO!l 5!.. ..40 186-%98
+ (ommunK4::nrnConnectoon 111 EMa• St ~ 6
-4 288·1808

Middleport I gels Ell'Ctroruc.s I06 ),; hl ~M
'4() 2 282 ,

•Opm&lt;.t..:-tday
+ H1gh o;peed tntt&gt;ml.'l ')old Here

'AT&amp;T lmpo5es: a Regulatory Cost RtcOvtry Charge of up to S1.25 to help defray costs Incurred In complying with obligations and charges Imposed by State and Fedtral
teltcom rtglllatlons, State and Ftdtral Universal Semce oargts, and surcharges for government assessments on AT&amp;T. These fees are not taxes Of
government·rtqulred charges.

•

�Inside

Bl

GAHS \\inter Sports Banquet, Page 82

rc \A Tournament action, Page 84
OHSAA Gh~ls Stall~ Tournament, Pngc U6

u nt
A ICiledulo of ~lg &lt;XJI.
acllOol vnrslly IPOrtii1Q --.11
lllanla from Gallia all&lt;J Moi{IS oountl~

M.o.n.d.ay•.Mmm..22
Softball
Calhoun County at Wnt'arna, 4 30 p m
Girls Tonnla
Pomt Pleasant ot Poca 4 30 p.m
Boys Tennis
Potnt Pleasant at Poca 4 30 p m
~~~~~.March..23

Baseball
B &lt;~-:~oatPontPca nt 530pm
Softball
Point Pleasant at Sissonv e 6 p 1'11
Wayr:~e et Wahama 5 30 p 1'11
Track
HaAnar&gt; Po: 'It Peasant at Pomt
P
ant Quad

10th annual
Bartrum and
Brown camp
set for M~y
B Y DAVE HARRIS
•

CIAL TO THE T MES SENT'NEL

HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
The tenth annual
Bro,,n
Bartrum
and
Football Camp ''ill be held
on Ma) 15, 2010 at
Marshall l:mver it\ 's Joan
C. Edwards Stadium. The
camp will be in two sessions. Grades 1-4 will be
held from 9 am until II
am, and Grades 5-8 "'ill be
held from 1 pm until 3 pm.
Cost of the camp is $30
for earl) registration. and
$40 the day of the camp,
and $20 for each additional
member of the family.
Early registration must be
postmarked by May I,
2010.
The camp "'ill have se\eral
former
Marshall
Umversity stars and coaches, along "'ith se\eral curand former NFL playAmong those schedto attend are former
Chad
Herd standout
of
the
Pennington
Dolphms, Jason Rader of
the Falcons, Ste\e Sciullo
of the Eagles. John Wade
of the Raiders. Chris
Massey of the Rams and
Andre O'Neal of the
Chiefs and Vikings. Along
with former coaches of the
"Young Thundering Herd",
Jack Lengyl and Red
Dawson.
~l o n g
with
former
Patriot great Ted) Bruschi
and former Ohio State All
American Mike Vrabel.
Additional NFL players
will announced at a later
date.
Mike Bartrum and Troy
Brow n were teammates at
Marshall and help lead th.e
Thundenng Herd ~o .the1r
ever
NatiOnal
fi rst

l

.

ease see camp, Bl

1

ORTS

Edwards defends character after Keselowski crash Craig Wright

BR ISTOL, Ten n. (AP)
- Carl Edwards is personable and polite, always
npproachahle. \Vhen he
• talks on camera, he makes
sure to take his ,.;unglasses
off so the audience can sec
him clcarlv.
Ed\\ards attributes it to
bemg raised right.
Others ha\ e doubted his
motives. and Ton) Stewan
once
even
described
Ed"' ards as the Eddie
Ha.;kell of NASCAR.
A deliberate accident
with Brad Keselowski two
weeks ago at Atlanta has
Edwards once again being
scrutinized. For all the talk
about Keselow\)ki being
I

1

too aggrl!ssi\c and making
too many cn\!llliCs, there
are JUst as many accusations thnt bU\\ards is a
phon) who \)Uffers from
anger management issues.
Ed\\ ards.
somewhat
silent since the March 7
inc1dent,
vigorously
delended his character
Friday.
''That's all they can say
about me because 1t's hard
for them to accept that I
am a decent gu) ," Edwards
sa1d
moments
before
climbing into his cur at
Bristol Motor Specdwa).
Ed"' ards found himself
back in the spotlight
because of the Atlanta

Bv

MARK WtLLIAMS
S SfNT Nfl

wri!Ck with Ke&lt;;elowski.
Publicly, Kevin Han ic.:k
c.:allcd Edwards "fake as
hell" th1s week in a radio
irllerview, while others
have privately wondered
about the veteran driver's
ability to control h1s anger.
Han ick feuded with
Edwards two seasons ago
and didn't back off his
"fake" assessment of
Edwards when asked about
it on Friday.
•· As far a~ the fake comment," he began. "you
can't be the nice guy, you
can't be the bad guy, and
you can't be the bully. So,
I mean, that's just how I
feel about that."

Edwards 4uickly fired
hal!k when asked about

llarvick'::; remark.
"I have ahsolutely no
respect
for
Kevin
Harvick," he said. "I think
he's a bad per\)on. That's
my opinion. J've told him
that. We've had our deal
before and his actions
through that interaction
were so dev10us and underhanded and coward!) that,
it's like, I just have no
respect for him.
''When people like that
question me. it makes me
feel better because if those
people were lined up pat-

named Gallia
Academy AD
B Y ANDREW C ARTER
MDTSPORTSOM fOAtLVTRtBUNE COM

CENTENARY
For
many people. that dream job
almost
always
remains
elusive, just
out
of
reach.
Craig
Wright is
no longer
among the
many who
are
still
waiting for
Please see Edwards, Bl
that
b1g
break.
Wright, who has been the
varsity wrestling coach at
Gallia Academy High
School since 200 I , is now
the athletic director at Gallia
Academy High School. His
appointment was a{&gt;proved
on Wednesday dunng the
Gallipolis Citv School
Distnct Board o! Education
meetinc.
Wricbt replaces Bill
Wamsley. "'ho is stepping
down at the end of the 20092010 academic vear followin!! a 31-vear career\\ ith the
city ~chool district, and with
whom Wright shares a family tie.
~
"The AD job has always
kind of been a dream job of
mine,'' Wright said. ''I've
alwavs been involved with
athletic programs in the
county. Mr. Wamsley. being
my uncle. I've observed him
do the AD job for the past 30 •
I
years. and I've always been
1mpressed. Mr. Wamsley's
always been a big influence
in mv life. a role model.
That \vas very important to
me:·
Wri!!ht said he had been
approached by other school
d1stricts about jobs in the
l'ast, but his clo~e tie::; to
GAHS :kept him at home.
"Gallia Acade"'*&gt;· means a
lot to me.'' he said. "It'~
Benny Sleu/Mflwaukee Journal Sentlnei/MCT \\here I went to hi!!h school.
UC Santa Barbara's Sam Phippen, rrght, and Oh1o State's David Ughty battle for a loose ball during game action In the r, e been a resident of this
county for almost 40 year.
Milwaukee reg1onal of the NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Friday.
now and mv heart bleeds
'' hite. and blue. with a little
bit of gold. I'm ju&lt;a excited
to have. the opportunity. It's
MILWAU KEE ~AP) - without much offense from Midwest Regional play Thad Matta, "He's the onl) somethmg 1 ,.e always
Evan Turner took a back their top player. Turner earlier Friday evening.
guy that takes the 24-hour wanted to do and I understand the time it takes for
scat to slick shooter Jon was held to nine points
Orlando Johnson scored flu to 72 hours.''
Diebler and big forward while going 2 of 13 from 20 points for No. 15 seed
The game was expe!lted this ,earticular position."
\\ ri eht graduated from
Dalla::~ Lauderdale. and the field - one of the UC Santa Barbara (20-1 0). to be a showcase for
OhiO State outlasted per- worst shooting perforDiebler'!&gt; performance Turner, the Big Ten pla)er GAHS in 1988. He completsistent UC Santa Barbara mances of his career.
was particularl) impres- of the year and \\ idel) ed his undergraduate degree
Ohio Universitv, earned a
68-51 in the first round of
Turner did have I 0 ~ive. given the fact that he regarded as perhaps the at
master's
from the
the NCAA tournament rebounds, and Wilham spent the week fighting off best player in the country. Universitvdegree·
Rio Grande
Frida) night.
Buford added 16 pointe; for flulike symptoms.
Instead, the most impres- and a pri-ncipal's certificate
Diebler scored 23 pomts the Buckeyes.
"I knew I was going to sive pans of Ohio State's from ~{arshall University.
and Lauderdale blocked a
fine,"
he
said. game were a sampling of
Ohio State ad\ anced to be
Prior to JO ning the facultv
I career-high eight shots and play Sunda) against No. "Yesterday I felt a little swatted shots and a couple at GAHS n 2&lt;Jo3. Wrignt
grabbed 12 rebounds for 10 seed Georgia Tech, better after the practice - of
big
dunks
by taugh anc! coached lor
the
second-seeded which bent se\ enth-seeded after I thre\\ up.''
Lauderdale, and the stellar abo~ut ei!!ht years in the
Joked Buckeyes coach Please see Buckeyes, B4 Gallia Countv Local School
Buckeyes (28-7), who \\On Oklahoma State 64-59 in
District.
·
1

Ohio State outlasts UC Santa Barbara 68-51

of

RedStorm volleyball adds Martin
SPEC~ TO THE liM

Sunday, March 21,2010

0

RIO GRANDE, Oh10 University of Rio Grande
head volleyball
coach
Billina Donaldson continues
to reshape her program dur- during club season," Martin
ing this off-season. The lnt- smd.
est ~i gn ing IS a. playe~ th~t
Martin
played
for
she IS very fam1hnr With Ill • Donaldson in the first two
Jackson High School's years of her h1gh school
Kelsey Martin.
career before Donaldson
In sign in~ . '' ith ~·o was hired at Ri? Grande.
Grande, Martm 1s followmg "Billina was my h1gh school
m the footsteps of her two conch :,o it was a "ef) easy
older sisters &lt;Jessica Veach decisiOn to continue my \Oland Jennilyn MaJ!in). owho Ieyball . caree~ at th~
both played for R1o Grande Universlt) of R1o Grande,
under former coach Patsy Martin said.
Fields. .Martin adm1ts that
Donaldc;on said that there
she is very familiar with Rio is plenty to like about
Grande beciluse of her sis- Martin. "Kclse) is just an
having played and athlete, whatever sport she's
ded
there. " I knew a playing.'' she said. "As far
•
lot about Rio because my as determination and a \\ill
two older sisters played Hl to win , Kelse) 's going to
Rio'' she ~ ard .
bri ng us to that le\'el.
Martin, a 5'7" seller, was We've b~:cn out of the winthe Most V~1 lu uble Playc1 for ning ci rcle so long down at
Jackson tillS past season as Rio that we need to get p~:o­
&lt;;hc earned Playc1· of the pie back in there that kno\\
Year honors ,tlong with All- how to wm and want to Will
SEOAL accolades.
and 1 think that's going to be
"I am very ~xcucd to play Kelsey's strong~st cont~ibu­
especmlly smce I have tion to our team 1s her \\Ill to
played'' 1th some ol the girls \\ in ."

New York City
July 15-18,2010

" I coached her two years
at Jackson and as a young
player she "as doing things
that I would like older pia)crs to do,'' Donaldson
added. "So. I kno\\ commg
in right a\\,1) Kelsey's going
to fit into to our offense rcal1) \\Cll."
Ha,ing
played
in
Donaldson's S)Stem in high
school. Martin belie,es that
she ''ill be able to handle
playing that style at the college level. "I have been a
setter for three ) ears and I
'believe 1 can help bring a
fao:;t tempo game to Rio
Grande," Martin said.
Donald!&gt;on set out this offseason to equip her team
with setters who have grown
up in the po~ition and she
feels she has accomplished
that feat. "l'\c not had n
setter that I've recruited
s1ncc I've been at Rio."
Donaldson said. "] have a

• $450/pcr on (quDd)
• $490/person uripl~)
• 530/person (double)
• $870/per on {§ht~lt!)

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Mrmhnrum mlhe Hotel l~Joon,
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• To mllkc rcwwodan~ p~ ~ou
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fa..rt~ If P~fwt/ll(ali

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•

•

:

�Sunday, MaJ·ch

Jlomcroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

21, 2010

2009-10 GAHS Winter Sports Scholar A hletes

GAHS honors athletes at 201 0 Winter Sports Banque
Bv JAMES R.

CRAFT

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTINEL

CENTENARY, Oh10 Numerous awards were presented at
the
Gallin
Academ) High School 2010
Winter Sports
Awards
Ceremon) recentl) held at
Galli a
Academ)
High
School and spon ored b) the
GAHS Athletic Boosters. In
all, 94 student-athletes were
recognized for their efforts
athletically and academically during the winter season.
GAHS Princtpal Bruce
Wilson,
Master
of
Ceremony. introduced each
of the following coaches
who ~ave season comments
and mtroduced their team
members and assistant
coaches.
Freshman
Cheerleader
Advisor Brittany Wothe
introduced squad members
Brittan) Beaver, Micaela
Bryan, Andrea Edelmann,
Enn Fisher, Jessica Hannan.
Taylor
Lo' eda)
and
Kymberl) tover.
Varsity
Cheerleader
Advisor Christy Randles
introduced Junior Varsity
squad
members
Nikki
Garrett, Victoria Howell.
Kenzie Ne'' berry, Kelsey
Pasquale and Sarah Sydnor.
Advisor Randles then
introduced Varsity squad
members Haley Angel,
Cnrly Atkms, Stephanie
Edelmann. Kayla Sanders,
Caytlyn Tackett. McKenzie
Hood, Amanda Jan is and
Alyssa Kessel.
Varsity Wrestling Coach
Craig Wnght mtroduced
Junior Varsity Wrestling
Coach Brent Simms. Junior
High Coach Todd May and
Volunteer As istant Coach
Tommy Saunders. Coach
Simms then introduced
Junior Varsity team members Mark Allen, Aaron
Morgan
Guisinger.
McKinniss. Harold Porter.
Jacob Shockey and Briggs
Shoemaker.
Coach Wright introduced
the SEOAL Champion
Varsity Wrestling Team
members Ben Bu~h, John
Faro, Eric Gardner, Chris
McDermitt, Scott Warren,
Joel
Craft,
Russell
Dennison, Zack Tackett,
Brandon Taylor, Jonathan
Caldwell, Ben Saunders,
Matt Watts, Jared Gmvely
and Kyle Bays.
Head
Varsity
Girls
Basketball Coach Renee
Barnes mtroduced Asststant
Varstty Coach Jeff Lanham,
Junior Varsity Coach Joe
Justice. Volunteer Assistant
Coach Derrick Barnes,
Eighth Grade Coach Gary
Frazier and Se\ enth Grade
Conch Martha Davis. Coach
Justice then introduced
Junior Varsity team members Halley Bames. Megan
Cochran, Jessicu Dotson,
Kacie Grate,
Michelle
Lassetter, Brittany Lloyd,
Hannah Loveday, Kaitlm
Ruby, Heather Ward, Abby
Wiseman and Tori Trent.
Coach Barnes then intro·
duced Girls Varsity team
members
Brea
Close.
Claudia
Farney, Ciara
Jackson, Karn Jackson,
Mattie Lanham. llale)
Rosier, Morgan Daniels,

•

Tara Young, Samantha
Barnes, Allie Troester and
Amy Noe.
Head
Varsit)
Boys
Basketball
Coach
Jtm
0"-borne
introduced
Assistant Varstt) Coach
Roger Brandeberry. Junior
Varsny Coach Tom Moore,
JV Volunteer Assistant
Coach
Jason
Thomas,
Freshman Coach Greg
Atkins, Eighth Grade Coach
Jim Niday and Seventh
Grade Coach Tom Hopkins.
Coach Atkins introduced
freshman team members
Justin Bailey. Zach Blanton.
Cody Call, Caleb Campbell,
Robert Canady. Jim Clagg.
Nick Clagg. T. Jaye McCalla
and Jeremy Wibon.
Coach ~loore then introduced Junior Varsity team
members Tyler Campbell,
Caleb Craft, Joel Johnston,
Case)
Lawrence. Sean
Long. Nick Saunders. Tim
Warner and Andrew Young.
Coach Osborne then mtroduced \i arsity team members
Bl)ce Amos, Cod) Billings,
Tyler Eastman. Joe Jenkins,
Ben Robinson, Nate Allison.
Chuck Calvert. Jordan
Cornwell, Corey Eberhard,
Nate
Gordon,
Austin
Wilson, Jared Golden, Nick
~1itchell. Ethan Moore and
John Troester
All-SEOAL \Vent to Ben
Bush, Zach Tackett, Ben
Saunders, Matt Watts. Jared
Gra-..ely, Kyle Bays. Allie
Troester and John Troester.
GAHS Scholar Athlete
Awards were presented to
Ben Bush, John Faro. Eric
Gardner, Chris McDermitt.
Scott
Warren,
Russell
Dennbon. Zack Tackett.
Brandon Taylor, Jonathan
Caldwell, Ben Saunders.
Matt Watts, Jared Gravely.
K) le Bays, Mark Allen.
Aaron Guisinger. Jacob
Shocke). Briggs Shoemaker.
Nnte
Allison,
Chuck
Calvert, Jordan Cornwell.
Corey
Eberhard,
Nate
Gordon. Austin Wilson,
Jared
Golden.
Nick
Mitchell, Ethan Moore. John
Troester, Bryce Amos. Cody
Billings, Tyler Eastman. Joe
Jenkins, Ben Robinson,
l'yler Campbell, Caleb
Craft, Joel Johnston. Sean
Long, Tim Warner, Andrew
Young, Justin Bailey. Cod)
Call. Caleb Campbell,
Robert Canady, Jim Clagg.
Nick Clagg, T. Jaye
McCalla. Claudia Farney.
Ciara
Jackson. ' Kara
Jackson, Mattie Lanham,
Haley Rosier,
Morgan
Daniels,
Tara
Youn~.
Samantha Barnes. Alhe
Troester, Amy Noe. Halley
Barnes. Megan Cochran.
Jessica Dotson, Michelle
Lassetter, Brittany Lloyd.
Hannah Loveday, Kaitlin
Ruby, Heather Ward. Abby
Wiseman, Haley Angel.
Carly Atkins. Stephanie
Edelmann. Caytlyn Tackett.
McKenzie Hood, Amanda
Jarvi::., Alyssa Kessel, Kayla
Sanders. Nikki Garrett,
Kenzie Newberry. Sarah
Sydnor, Micaela Bryan,
Andrea Edelmann. Erin
Fisher and Jessica Hannan.
All-SEOAL
Academic
Awards were presented to
Scott Warren. Zack Tackett,
Jonathan Caldwell, Ben

•
2009-10 GAHS AII-SEOAL Aca em1c
Saunders, Kvle Bays. Nate
Allison, Chuck Calvert.
Austin
Wilson.
Jared
Golden. Ethan ~1oore. John
Troester. Claudia Farney.
Cinra
Jackson,
Kara
Jackson. Haley Rosier,
~1organ
Daniels. Tara
Young, Allie Troester. Am)
Noc. Haley Angel. Carty
Atkins.
Stephanie
Edelmann, McKenzie Houd
and Alvssa Kessel.
Most ·valuable Wrestler Jared Gravely. Girls Winter
Sports Scholastic A\\ard Allie Troe ter; Boys Winter
Sports Scholastic Award John Troester: Co-Most
Valuable Basketball Players
(Girls) - Alhe Troc ter and
Amy Noe: Most Valuable
Basketball Player (Boys) John Troester.
Trophy a\\ ard \\ere I?resented b) GAHS Princtpal
Bruce Wilson for GAHS
Principal's Fund, GABS
As tstant Principal Tim
Massie for GAllS Academic
Hoo:.ters Club. GAHS
Athletic
Director
Bill
Wamsley
for
Brown
Brothers Agt:ncy. Inc ..
David Tawncv for Tawnc\
Studios, and Karen Sprague
for Karen
and Patt)
Sprague.
Acknowledgements
Maintenance
Supervbor
Andy
Hout
and
the
Mamtenance and Cu~todial
Staff. Athletic Director Bill
Wamsley. Principal Bruce
Wilson. Assistant Principal
Tim Massie. Superintendent
J&lt;~ck W. Payton and the
of
Education
Board
Members for their effort!\ to
make the athletic and academic progrnms at Gallia
Acadcm) lligh School the
finest in Southeastern Ohio.
In addition, recognition
\\aS givcn lo the GAHS
Athletic Boo~ter~ Club and
Officers Jerry Fr:11ier President. Tom Moon: Vice Pre~idcnt, Rhonda
Neal - Secretary, Karen
~lcGhee - Treasurer.
All photos and information were submitted by
G~11lia
Academy
High
School.

GAHS AII-SEOAL Athlete

MVP and Scholastic Awards
MORE LOCAL NE\VS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe todav.

446-2342 or 992~2155

�-Sunday, March 21,

---~ ~-----,..------~-__,.,.-- ~---:---~~------~-----------""'!"1----_...~.--------~---

2010

~ttnb,w

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

U:::imrs -S&gt;rntmrf • Page B3

~----------------------~~~~~~==~--------~~====~~=

:_Red Storm women sign first recruit for 201 0·11 Hunt is on. for wild boars
Bv

in Meigs County

fitting into the program.
'We're looking at Chelsea to
come in and lenrn our sys~ , RIO GRANDE, Ohio tem, participate in the junior
There arc no wild boars in
he University of Rio
varsity program and 1 Meig:-. County... at least
• Grande RedStonH women's
believe the sky is the limit according to an Ohio
• o.asketball program has
for her in reference to her Department
of Natural
its lirst recruit for the
progression. She has a nice Resources map documcntmg
-II season.
She is
medium range JUmp shot, confirmed wild hoar sightsea Delong or Coal
she's a strong. physical type in!!s in the state of Ohio.
Dawsnn-Brvant High
of player that I think once
~However. I don't hclieve
•
School.
she learns our system she'll it. and I'm willing to bet that
Delong scored over 770
fit in nicely."
people in Meigs County
. points in her high school
Smalley also likes the ver- have already seen boars in
career and pulled down
satility of Delong's game. the county. Wild boars hmc
nearl) 500 rebounds. As a
"That's a big plus." Smalley been documented in every
senior for the Lady Homcts.
said. "Her perimeter ability c0unty surrounding Meig&lt;&gt;
Delong led the team 111 both
to shoot the ball b a plus County. and it's unrealio;,uc
• scoring und rebounding at
and her size will allow her to believe they arcn 't here as
14.5
points
and
8.3
to play inside, too. With well.
rebounds.
She v. as first
I came across this inforSubmitted photo the style and league we're
team
All-Ohio
Valley Chelsea Delong of Coal Grove Dawson Bryant High School playing m, her diversity is a matmn last week at the
•
annual Wildlife Diverliity
Conference us a ~;enior and prepares her national Jetter of intent to play basketball for premium:·
Confcrence in Columbu&lt;&gt;.
'made 2nd team all-district. the University of Rio Grande. Chelsea is flanked by her
Delong\ goals for next
is sponsored
Delong was voted 3rd team parents, Lori Delong and Mike Childers and her brother, season nrc simple - to get The conference
f
· D' ·
,..all-district by the AssociatcJ Cody. Standing from left 1n the back row; Coal Grove Higtl better and be 111 contention by the 0 hJO
tVIston
Wildlife
and
con~ists
of
a
.. Press in 2009-10.
School principal Steve Easterling, Coal Grove assistant for a spot on the varsity series of pn~sentations and
: At 5'11" Delong is a post coach Rick Roach, Coal Grove head coach Nick Miller team. ··I want to get better gue~t speakers talking on a
• -pla)er with the ability to pull Coal Grove athletic director Bryan Mulkey and Rio Grand~ all around," :-.he said. variety of subjects. One
ner opponent away from the head coach David Smalley.
"They have only one senior. speaker. Craig Hick!\ of the
basket with a gootl perimeter Coal Grove team that won
so I'd like to play jayvee u.S.
Department
of
recruit
from
Coal
Grove.
shot. She shot 30 percent
b)' Agncu
· 1ture ' s Anmu1
• 1 an d
16 games. Those numbers "We're excited to have and he "'''Onsidered v:•rsi'ty
·•
from three-point land this
earned her all-conference Chelsea in the program, look the end of my freshman Pl~mt Hea~th Inspection
past season.
Service. cau~ht my attention
honors as well. In 200H-OI.J forward to her learning our Year."
"M) be:-.t assets are my
Delong is cunently unde- when he pomted out .Meigs
system, she comes from a
she
led
the
Lad-,
Home!!\
in
post play and I can shoot,"
great high ~chool back- cided on a major. but left a County as being sun·ounded
Delong said. "I need to field goal percentage (4 7.6 ground, I think Coach hint as to possibly what it by other counties with conpercent).
rk on my foot speed.
"I am very happy, and also (Nick) Miller down at might be. ''I'd like to stay firmed feral w1inc sightings.
1 ner\'OUs but I'm excit1'\ow. with that being said.
very excited (to be signing D&lt;m son-BI') ant has done a 111 sports. ,. I want. to teach l
a."
and coach, she satd.
it \Vould be great j( there
tremendous
job,
over
the
"I need more competi- With Rio Grande).'' Delong years,''
Chelsea i~ the daughter df 1 reall) \\ere no~feral swine in
Smalley
said.
tion," she atlded. ··1 need said. ''I v. as just wanting t~ "We· ve had some of his Mike Childers and Lori Meigs County; seeing wild
• more of a push so I can get play ba:;ketball and wanting players in the past and we Delong of Ironton. ·
1 boars in our woods i' defi
better.''
to go to school after high always get qualit) kids from
Rio Grande finished the t nitelv not a ~ood thing.
Delong posted a strong school.''
that area."
2009-10 campaign with a
Feral swine are gencralh
junior campaign as well,
Rio Grande head coach
Smallev
discussed 16-15 overall record and Eurasian wild boarS:, domesaveraging 12.7 points and David Smalley is pleased to Delong's • best assets as a went 7-7 in the .Mid-South ticated hugs and their offsix rebound1; per game for a be able to secure another player and where he sees her Conference.
· - ~pring that have gone ..,,iJd"
and mixtures of the two.
, Thev m::n be boar~ that
e-.c::(pcd from game farms or
were intentionally released,
or domesticated pigs that
have escaped and leat11ed to
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL
live in the wild on their 0\\ n.
For the most part. the tem1s
RIO GRANDE, Ohio ''feral swine." "boar:· ··wild
The Uni\ersitv of Rio
pigs," etc. are used interGrande
• RedStorm
chatH!eablv.
and I prefer boar
!
because it s ~hm1er and eas)
women\ soccer team has
to -,pell.
signed a second recruit for gram. "I am very excited to and Callum are a main reaBoar' arc, incrediblv
the 20 I0 ~eason in the per- be signing Cassie," Oliver son why I cho~c Rio
de~tructivc animab. the\ are
son of Cassie Kyle of said. "It is always great to Grande. they're great."
not native to our woods and
Waverly H1gh School.
~ign local players. espe- Kyle said. "I chose Rio
in
most plqces throughout
Kyle comes to Rio cially one as talented as became I went down there
the world where they ha\e
ande having pia) ed on a Cassie."
to the camps. They had
been introduced thcv ha\e
dominantly
male
"Cassie
b
a
tenaciou~ what I wanted as a major
proven di~astrous to' nati\l:
•
a\erly team. She helped
habitats and \\ tldlife. Some
player that has the ability and I could play sports
to lead the Tigers to a winanimal and bird specie:-. parand desire to '"in every which I am 1n love\\ ith."
ning season (9-4-3) in
ticular!\ fli~htless birds and
ball and is not afraid of
She plans to rhajor in
2009.
ground"
nester:; (the dodo
Kyle, a 5'2" defender, is contact. Her best asset as pre-medicine.
bird
for
instance).
have been
player
is
her
physical
a
~1orris spoke ahout why
ver) excited to have the
driven
to
c:\tinctton
in part
opportunity to play v. ith style of play and her Rio Grande targeted Kyle
by human introductiOn of
Rio Grande., "It's amazing. speed," Oliver added. "I as a player. "Ivc actually
swine.
.. I feel like I've made a great look forward to seeing coached Cassie for the past
I've seen photograph:- of
great things from Cassie two years," he said. "She's
what boars can do to stand:decision," she said.
been to a number of camp~
ing crops. and it's prett) de\
Head
Coach
Amber during the 2010 season."
Kyle has had some expe- that we Yc held at the
astating from a crop damage
• Oliver and the coaching
'iewpoint: deer damage
with
assistant University of Rio Grande.
·:staff have set out to bolster rience
doesn't even be!!in to comKno\\
ing.
Cassie
for
the
coaches
Chris
Skarratt
and
a program still in the
pare to what hogs can do.
.building proce~s and they Callum Morris. having last couple years I've seen
Thev
are omni\'ores and ''ill
.believe they have a player attended a number of her develop as a player.
Gran
de
,
pretty
much eat an) thing
in Kyle who will breathe camps held at Rio Grande The main reason wh) we're
that can be eaten including
our
prorecruiting
class.
getting
Cassie
for
some new life into the pro- through the years. "Chris
the eoos and VOUO!! of'
•.---...---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - groumf'nestmg birds~ like
' \vild turkey ~and ruffed
"All tho:-e people that frnm Keselowski and oth- grouse. \'Ollll!! animals like
dent showed Edwards
grabbing Han·ick around say \\ hatever they say. ers for NASCAR to swift- \, hitetail deetfawns. insects.
the throat. and the two had know that if I have an ly punish Edwards. The and vou-name-it .
from Page Bl
to
be separated
by issue with them. I go sanctioning bod). which
Fu-rthermore. thev damage
speak to them. I don't r~n is promoting a "boys. 1 the fon:-.t underston I),
Harvick's crew members.
1
It wasn't the first time around behind their hack have at it'' attitude of self- rooting
and destrc)\ ing
• ting me on the back I'd be
this
season. nati\ e \-egetation and pl~mt~.
A ~ the wrong side of Edwards was caught in un and talk hke !IItle girls. policing
~at's right and wrong. unflattering moment. TV That's what a lot of them instead placed Edwards competing with natiH'
cameras were present in do. I learned that \Va~n 't on probation for three wildlife for food. and openAnd I truly believe that."
ing up the soil subjecting it
And just like that. the 2007 when he confronted cool in about fifth grade.'' races.
to
erosion und making it easEdwards
has
his
share
of
He's
~cheduled
to
meet
Matt
Kenseth
after
a
race
.. feud between Edwards
with NASCAR officials. ier t~lr invasi\ ~ plant:-.~ to t11k1.'
and Keselowski became in Martinsville. After brief supponers in the garage.
'Tm not Dr. Phil. I don't Kcselov. ski and their hold and !!row.
:over:-.hadowcd by the words. Edwards raised his
Even ~ orse. boars are
know
\\hat 'ou think respecti\e car O\\ners
fist
as
if
he
was
going
to
=·mutual dislike between
"hi£hlv
mobile disease
Edwards and Harvick. punch his Roush Fenway about Carl.'' ._'nid former Saturday at Bristol. and reservoirs." according £\,) the
Roush teammate Mark declined to discuss the
Their rivalry dates to Racine teammate.
lt 's ~those flashes that Martin. "I think Carl is a accident until after they
:October 2008. when both
-were in the thick of the ha vc created a stir about standup guy and a really. talk.
Edwards' ability to man- really fine young man. I
championship race.
But team owner Jack
think that he sure didn~t Roush is clear!) on
Harvick
criticized age his anger.
Asked if he had an anger mean for that to happen ... Ed wards· side.
:Edwards on national TV
Martin was ref~rring to
issue
Friday, he chuckled
after Edwards triggered an
"I do not condone "hat
Keselo\\
ski's car goir1g
''No.''
and
said
accident at Talladega. and
Carl did. but I do under"It's really :-.implc: I airborne in the Atlanta stand it:· he said. "Brad
Edwards re~ponded by
treat
everyone the best wreck. It was a spectacu- Keselowski wrecked Carl
·1eaving a sarcastic note on
way
I
can possibly treat lar flip that brought a
• Harvi ck's airplane. A
three times if anybody
them,
that's
the way I was crush of attention to what
:week later, Edwards conwa:- watching. If my driotherwise
might
have
been
- fronted llan•ick in the raised, but I stand up for routine
ver
had wrecked somebumping-andmy:-elf." he said. "I am not
garage at Charlotte. and it
bod)
three times. I would
trying to be a good guy or banging between rival dri.quickly turned physical.
had issue with that
have
vers.
a bad guy, that\ just who I
'Photograph~ of the incifrom
my
side.''
Instead.
there
was
a
cry
am.
MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-5ENTINEL

'

:1

°

~

~

...

Edwards

Camp
'from Page B1
Championship in 1992.
Bartrum a resident of
Pomeroy played in the
NFL for 13 seasons with
the
Chiefs,
Packers.
Patriots and Eagles. In his
13 seasons. his teams made
it to the playoffs II times.
Bartrum was regarded as

the NFL'!'. best long snapper and was selected to the
pro bowl in 2006. Bartrum
played in two Super
Bowls. and had II career
receptions for six touchdowns. Only Yn.thcl in
NFL history has as many
touchdowns with fewer
than 15 receptions.
Brown retired in 2008
from the Patriots and is the
first New England player
to record three 80-catch
season. Tro) rank!\ first for

the Patriots in all time
receptions. with 557 catehc~ for 6,366 yards. which
ranks :-.econd all time for
the franchise. He is also
the all time leading punt
returner'. lie \\on three
Super
Bowl
Championships with the
Patriots and also "as an,
All Pro selection.
The tenth annual
Bart rum
and
Bnm n
Football Camp\\ ill he held
on .VIa) 15. 20 I 0 at

.Marshall lJniversitv's Joan
C. Edwards Stadilim. The
calnp will be in two ses
sions. Grades 1-4 \\111 be
held from 9 am until II
am. and Grades 5-g "ill he
held from I pm until 3 pm.
Cost of the camp is $30
for early registration. and
$40 the day of the camp.
and $20 for each adtlitional
member of the family.
Early registration must be
postmarked by Ma) I .
2010.
~)

In the
Open
Jim Freeman
USDA. and can carry up to
30 significant di&lt;&gt;eases and a
minimum of 37 parasites
that can affect people, pets
and livestock. Also, boar
population~ increa::.e qUickly
becau~e they have no natural
predators and SO\\ s can
reproduce year-round \\ ith
numerous piglet~ per litter. ·
So whnt can you do?
FiN, we need to know that
the) arc here, and you can do
that by reporting sightings or
evidence of their existence.
You can do that by calling
me, or b) callmg 1-800WILDLIFE. If more imestigation i~ required we ma) be
able to accommodate that
through
USDA APHIS
which~ is panicipating in a
national feral -.wme disease
suneillancc project. USDA
A PHIS mm also be able to
trap and destroy them. and
take blood and tissue sample~ from the animals.
A confirmed c;;ighting has
to include more than merel&gt;
laying ~yeballs on a boar: 11
include~ e\idence of boars·
acth ity (wallows. tree mbs
and tracks). trail camera or
other photograph~ that can
be \erified as taken local!\
or the pre,ence of an actual
dead animal. Anecdotal
accounts- i.e. from a friendof-a-friend \\ ho said he saw
one - \\ hile mtere'&gt;tin!! and
potentially useful ~can't
count as confirmed sightin!:!s. Hov.e\ler. those anecdotal account~ could ~till
-,erve as pote11tial indicators.
especiall) if there are lob of
them from ciifferent ~ources:
the old sa) mg "Where
there's c;;m9ke. there's fire"
come' to.mind.
Second. }OU can eradicate
them.
The Ohto Divi:-.ion of
Wildlife \\ anh them dead,
and huntml! restrictions are
few: in fact hunters arc
encoura2cd to kil) these
destructive. non-natl\e animab immediate!\. Hunter:-.
need onh a 'a lid ·ohio hunting liceil'-e unless the) are
hunting on their own proper!). The exception 1~ during
the stmewide deer gun season and muzzJeloader season. in which case hunters
must also po~..,e..,., a valid
deer pem1it. carry a fireann
lecal for l1ane:-.ting deer.
w;:ar hunter orance a~1d hunt
only during legal deer huntinc hours .
The Dh is ion ha~ no intentiOns of ''manal!ing'' the boar
herd in the traditional
\\ ildlifc management sense
other than 10 eradicate them
hcfore thev damage the
e1.'0S\ stem: rhe\ dOI1't ''am
an) boars left tor "~eed ...
.lim freeman i.s wildlife
'P&lt;'cialiw for the Meig,, Soil
and \\~1Tcr Com en arion

Di:-.tricr. He cmz he conracted H'ei?f.:.dar at 740-992--1282
or at Jtmireeman@oh .naecl11('{ .net

�-

-~

--

--

~~~----

........

--- ________

Page 84 • ~unbm&gt; Qrmtes -~rntmrl

,..._.

Pomer oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, March

21, 201 0

Mountaineers beat Crawford scores 28 to lift Xavier over Minnesota
Morgan State 77 50
M ILWAUKilE (;\P) Jordan Crawford finally
mu!'tcred a smile.
After a sour experience in
care of our own business."
The Bears \\ere left to the NCAA tournament two
wonder how their solid start years ugo, he's hack on
got away.
March's biggest stage.
"Those damn 40-minute
Now he wants to stay as
games,"
coach
Todd long as possible.
Bozeman said, \\ ith a sl}
"I'm taking every second
grin, "If \Ve had 12 minutes. in. I'm taking it all in."
we would have won the Crawford said. "I want to be
game."
here as long as I can:·
The Benrs opened by hitCrawford scored 17 of his
ting four of their first ,..,jx 28 points in the second half
attempts to build a I 0-0 lead and Xavier kept its run of
before the game was 5 min- tournament success with a
utes old. And their s\varm- 65-54
victory
over
ing defense did its part by Minnesota in the first round
shutting down Rutkr. who of the West Regional on
finished .,, ith nine points.
Friday.
West Vir~inia trailed 12-3
Xavier (25-8) will be in
hefore sconne, its lirst tield the second round for the
goal with I i'15 left, when foUJ1h st'raight ) car. thi::. time
Ebanks hit a hook ~hot from under first-year coach Chri::.
the paint. Th~ basket Mack.
sparked the ~tountaineer1&gt;
"There are different ways
back into the gnnw, as they to motivate kids and we're
hit eight of their next II really tired of being The
attempt::. and took the lead I Little Engine that Could."
with 5:42 remaining in the , the coach said. "We're a
half.
really good prograr\1 and our
'That's when Joe ivtauulla kids aren't scared to play
went coa~t-to-coast follow- anybody. We don't always
ing Tro) Smith's turnover win. but we're not afraid to
and was fouled while scor- compete.''
ing on a layup. Mauulla
Crawford has embodied
completed the three-point that, playing in his first
pla) to put West Virginia NCAA tournament game in
ahead 22-21. a lead the two years after tran::.fcrring
Mountaineers never rdin- from Indiana. where the proqui..,hed.
grom was rocked bv Kelvin
West Virginia didn't let Sampson's
departure.
up after halftime. e\enlually Crawford ha, had fhe
building a 70-36 lead with 6 coaches in two vears and
minutes left in the game.
endured another switch from
Butler
is
the Sean Miller to .Mack before
Mountaineers' go-to player. the sea....on.
having cored six game"I give him a lot of credit
winning baskets thb season, I for getting ready and being
including a running jumper , hungry over lhe offseason;•
with 4 seconds left that Mack said. ''I give our
sealed a 60-5&amp; win over school and Jordan a lot of
Georgetown in the Big East credit for maturing as a pertitle game Saturday. What son in the past year and a
impre~"ed Butler i::. how his half."
teammates were able to pick
But Xavier was far fmm a
up the slack Friday.
one-man show.
That\. something that didDante Jackson smothered
n't happen last year, wben the Gophers' best shooters
the Mountaineer:-. were on defense, Jamel McLean
bounced from the tourna- had 14 rebounds and
ment in the fl,rst round in a Crawford provided the high6S-60 overtime loss to II th- light plays for the sixthseeded Dayton.
seeded Musketeers.
"\Ve had a good team last
La\\ renee
We:-.tbrook
year. but everybbd) was so "cored 15 of his 19 points
)Oung. J kind of felt I had to for Minnesota (21-14) in the
do a lot more," Butler said.
"But this vcar 1 have a team.
Evcr)bod),·s mature .... It's a
lot easier for me to go out
there and pltn ."
JACKSONVILLE. Fla.
The Bears~ ::.hooting fiL(AP)
- Confident, relaxed
tlcd. and they finished the
and
definite:y on their
game 18-of-61.
~ "We weren't frustrated," game.
Cornell lived up to its
said Smith, .,.., ho scored nine
point~ lor the Bears before· billing as the best team to
fouling out. "The ball was- come out of the lv\ League
n't going in as much as it in more than a decade. and
usuallv coes in for us .... We now £\le senior-heavy Big
just wcren 't hitting 9llr Red have a chance for a
nice run in the East
shots.''
Regional of the NCAA
tournament.
the offensive end. scorin!!
"Everyone was saying
on po\\erful dunks on we were Cinderella or it's
back-to-bad• pos~essions. an upset. Not u~." sophoDa., id Lighty then hit a more Chris Wroblewski
3-pointer. giving Ohio said Friday after the 12thState a 42-27 lead with seeded Big Red dominated
I 5:04 left.
No.5 seed Temple 78-65 in
Still. the Gauchos didn't a game that wasn't e\en
go away. cutting Jhc lead that close .
to 10 on a .3-pointcr by
Down to their last chance
James Powell with II :41 to experience success on
to go.
colleue ba~ketball's biggest
But the Buckeyes gradu- sta!!e~.
st•niors ' R~·an
allv pulled away from
Wittman, Louis Dale and
there. taking a 57-42 lead
on Diebler's 3 with 7:26 Jeff Foote paced the school
to its first win in five
left.
Turner even got back NCAA appearances .
Dale scored 21 points
into the scoring act late.
and
Wittman. the Ivy
hitting a drh ing layup
with 3:42 left - then run- Lcuguc player of the year.
ning back down the court had 20 for the B i!! Red.
who led the nation~ in 3shaking his head.
The Gauchos began the poinl shooting this season
game a miserable I of 9 and have three other clefrom the field and I of 6 ments - strong guard play.
from 3-point range. falling experienced leadcr~hip and
behind 13-3. Then came a a 7-foot center in Foote rally. albeit a short-lived that make them a threat to
play beyond the first weekone.
A J0- J .spurt cut the lead end of the tournament.
to one. T he effort got a
Cornell (28-4) made
rise out of the Gauchos • eight of its first 10 shots
small but vocal cheering and never looked back.
section. along with left- shooting 68 percent in the
over Georgia Tech and opening half and 56 perOklahoma State fans look- cent for the game.
ing for an upset.
Temple (29·6) lost in the
But Ohio State answered first round for the third
with a 13·0 run of its own straight year under coach
ign ited by four blocked Fran Dunphy, whose for5hots by Lauderdale mer
assistant.
Ste\c
including a demoralizing Donahue, has led Cornell
two swats against James to three straight Ivy League
Nunnally on one posses- titles and the winningc~t
sion .
season in school history.
T he Gauchos had one
Juan FernandcL and Ryan
more first-half highlight Broob each had 14 points
left in them - a transition for Temple. La.,.oy ,\lien
a lley-oop
slam
by added II.
Nun nally off a pass by
Having gone through a
Johnson
but
the non-conference schedule
B uckeyes took a 30- I 7 that
included
games
lead into halftime.
against Kansas. Syr1tcuse.
'

BUFFALO. N.Y. (APl -

~ ~ay West Virginia was
rtussmg one shot after
aflother. the thought actually
crossed fomard Kevin
J:ones' mind whether the
!'tfountaineers would ever
hit a basket.
After missing their first II
a'ltempts, the second-seeded
Mountaineers eventuall)
found their range Friday and have Jones to thank fur
leading the •.vay.
The sophomore forward
scored 13 of his game-high
1.7 points in the first half in
lielping We::.t Virginia (286) roll to a 77-50 win O\ er
No. 15 seed Morgan State
and avoid another Big East
flameout in the first round of
the NCAA tournament.
' ··we alwa) s let teams get
off lo tho!;e huge leads and
let them get confidence and
that's \\here it hurts us,"
Jones said ... l'mju"t glad \\c
c;ould come out and stomp
on them and not let them
back into the game:·
Stomp the) did.
Jones went 4-for-4 for
nine points during a decisi\e
21-4 nm O\ er a 6-rmnute
stretch in the fjr,t half.
l)e\ in Ebanks scored 16 and
added 13 rebounds for the
Mountaineers, v.,ho found
another dimension to their
offense nfter the Bears contained :st.u· guard Da ·sean
Butler.
Reggie Holme-.. scored 12
p,oints for Morgan State (27Hl).
the
Mid-Eastern
Athletic Conference champ.
''~1ich foliO\\ ed up its first
tournament appearance last
)ear '' ith another bid this
season. Ke\ in Thompson
hM eight rebounds and three
block;to go.,.., ilh nine points
for the Bears.
The Big Ea::.t champion~
ad\ anced to the second
round of the East Regional
on Sunda). West Virginia.
''ill face the \\ inne~ of the
game between No. 7 seed
Clemson and No.
I0
Missouri. who played later
Frida\.
De~pite the earlv -.care. it
prm ed to be a far 6etter start
to the da) for the Big East.
after the conference\ learns
struggled
Thur~day.
Qeorgeto\\ n. Marqueue and
Notre Dame were all upset,
~ile No. 2 seed Villanova
survived a major challenge.
n6!eding O\ertime to beat
Robert -Morris 73-70.
:··We're our own team.''
Sutler said. \\hen asked to
rc!flcct on the conf.:rence 's
sOdden tournament troubles.
"l just think we came out
and didn't want to leave
e;-,uly. We wanted to take

Buckeyes
from Page Bl
c{utside

shooting
or
who was 7 of 12
fcom 3-point range.
. Turner.
mean\'vhilc.
seemed to have a rough
night against the Gauchos'
matchup zone defen~e.
"Evan, he was strug·
gling a little bit but abo
did a good joh of finding
the open gu~ ," Diehler
said ... We kne\\ coming in
tney (use) unique zones.
We felt there "'ere way-..
we could attack it."
But Turner did leave the
floor with something he
didn't have before: a win
in the NCAA tournament.
•"You can't really get
mad.''
he
said.
·Everybody played well .
it's a good - a great way
to start off a tournament.
We're definitely trying to
njo., e on and get to the
next game.''
'The Buckeyes didn't
make it to the tournament
in hi~ freshman year, then
lost ii1 the fir~t round last
s~ason. Returning to the
t~urnament th is year, Ohio
State vowed it wou ldn't
ceme out flat.
Still. the Buckeyes did
allow the Gauchos a few
glimmers of hope before
l4tuderdale a nd Diebler
e¥entually took over.
~A transition dunk by
&lt;1reg Somogyi cut the
B.l.lckeyes' lead to e ig ht
c;&amp;rly in the second half.
·~But Dicbler hit a 3pt&gt;inter and Lauderdale
briefly asserted himself on
~iebler,

•

Tom Lynn/Milwaukee Journal SentlneVMCT

~avier bench celebrates a three-point. basket in first half action agarnst Minnesota in the

f1rst round of the NCAA tournament, Fnday, at the Bradley Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
first half, and the II th-seedMaybe not, but Crawford Minnesota lost for the fourth
ed Gophers went cold from has found his place as one of straight time in the first
3-pnint range late.
the Atlantic IO's top talents. round to join early exits in
Xavier
will
face
After a 4 of II first half, 1999. 2005 and 2009.
Pittsburgh in the second he came alive with a driving.
The Gophers haven't won
round. The P.mthers beat the off-balance scoop with just an r-\CAA tournament game
Musketeers 60-55 in last over 17 minutes left· and since 1997's Final Four run.
year's East Regional semifi- kept making layup after and those wins have sinc.e
nals.
layup before finding his been vacated . Now there
Crawford ne\'er stopped range from beyond the arc.
questions of whether Smit
shooting despite a sluggish
''It's like watching some- will stay. but he said no
start. B) his la!'.&gt;t attempt. he body playing a video game:· other school has made him
looked like he had no desire teammate Kenny Frea!&gt;e an offer.
to leave the court.
said. ''It's so fun to watch
·-rm looking forward to
With 3H :o.'\!cond-., left and him play. because you don't coming back to Minnesota;·
Blake Hoffarber's hand in ever want to !!ct used to see- Smith said.
Mack, an assistant. took
his face. the sophomore ing somebody do the things
guard hit a 3-poimcr fallin!! he does. He went through over \\hen Miller left for
awa) into the Xavier bench the lane and made that Arizona. In some ways. his
with his teammates jumping scooping Ia) up. and tie starts season has been one of the
Musketeers' most impres- •
up and dO\\ n behind him to hitting 3s.
"It's like you can't stop sive since thev didn't return
ghe Xavier a 63-54 lead.
"I wa:-. thinking about how him. Ever. Nobody can stop a single player who averaged double figures last
lucky I wa" to be here." him.''
Crawford ~aid.
The Musketeers seeming- vear. ·
But he didn't sho\\ much ly had every answer down • Xavier certainly has few
stretch
against· worries with Crawford. who •
emotion. movmg slowly to the
center court to embrace .M innesota.
which
had grabbed brief fame for his 1
played its way into the tour- dunk on LeBron James at a
TcrTcll Holloway.
"(() can smile now namem by winning seven of summer camp in the offseabecause we're happy to win. its previous 10 under Tubbv son and is making a lasting :1
' impression on college's
but I want to win again." he Smith.
Smith was looking for his biggest stage.
s~id. "Whoe\'er ,\·e pia),
··y can relish this right
Pithburgh or Oakland. I 30th ~CAA tournament win
want to go out and win that and first with his fourth pro- no\\," Crawford said. ··But
uame. Tl~cre's comg to be no gram after !&gt;tops at Tulsa. we're trying to win another
smiles again."~ ~
Georgia and Kentucky. but one."

No. 12 seed Cornell dominates Temple 78-65
Temple's Juan
Fernandez (4)
loses his balance while
guarding
Cornell's Louis
Dale (12) during
the second half
in the first round
of the NCAA
tournament,
Friday, at the
Jacksonville
Veterans
Memorial Arena
in Jacksonville, •
Florida. Cornell ,
Big Red defeated Temple Owls,

78-65.
Yong
•
Kim/Philadelphia
Daily News/MCT
\

Seton Hall. St. John\ and
Alabama. Dm1.1huc felt the
Red
was
better
equipped this year to race a
tough. physical openinground opponent such as
Temple. one of the nation's
stingk"t defen~iw teams .
Cornell lost bv 24 to
Stanford in 2008 ,;nd 19 to
Missouri a )ear ago. and
entered this vear's tournament determ1ned to make
the mtbt of the last opportunit)" \Vittman. Foote.
Dale and fellow senior Jon
.Jaques ha\e to cnjo) the
NCAA's.
Duftphy. who·~ ·Oeen at
Temple since 2006. fell to
1-12 in the NCAA tournament and has lost II
straight.
The
Owls
coach
appeared in the tournament
nine times in 17 sea..,ons at
Penn. \\here Donahue \va~
,tn n:--si..,t.lllt under him for
1,0 years The) remain
close. and tht• mentor
freely admitted ht' did not
relish the idea of facing the
pupil on lirida).
''I'm torn right no\\ with

mg

the feeling in my stomach.''
Donahue said after his first
win O\ er his former boss.
Temple trailed 37-29 at
the half and was fortunate
to be that close. The Owls
uncharacteristicallv turned
£he ball over nine times.
with Cornell coming up
with ,..,even steals while
playing tighl man-to-man
defense and occasionally
switching to a 1-3-1 zone
that made it difficult to get
the ball inside.
Cornell·~
lead would
have bicger if its 3-point
shooters~ ~hadn't struggled
from bevond the arc~ ~The
Big RcJ were 13 of 19
from the field at the breat...
und five of those ~ix misses
were 3-pointers that could
ha\'e kft Temple in a deeper hole.
.\ftcr misfiring on its
first two ~-point attempts
ol
the
second
half.
Cornell's shooters caucht
lire. Jon Jacques hit a lt~lg
.1. then Wittman made three
straight during a stretch in
'' hich the Big Red weathered another Temple ~urge

to lead 51-42.
The
closest
Temple
\\Ould get the rest of the
way was seyen.
··Wittman just went crazy
with those 3~. We· re trving
to get back. in the game· and
he·~
not allowing it."
Dunph} said.
~
Dunph) 's lone \'ictory in
the NCAA'~ came in 1994,
when Penn beat Nebraska.
He lost his ne'..t eight tournament games with the
Quaker~ and nO\\ his first
three with Temple. including losses to ~tichigan
State and Anzona State the
past two years
Cornell. which has
16 ot I 7 games ..,111ce a
point road loss at Kansas
on Jan. 6. became the first
hy League team to win an
NCAA tournament game
~ince
fifth-seeded
Princeton took. down No.
12 seed l'NL\' in 1998.
··This is our last chance
to do this," said Foote. who
had 16 points and seven
rebounds. "It ·s nice to see
all our hard '' ork for four
years pa} off."

Wl.

�Sunday. Mart.•h

2 1, 2010

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_____________________________

Pom eroy • Middleport • Ga11ipolis

fS,tmbap ~imcs -$rntmrl • Page Bs

Eastern 5th grade boys complete Eastern 5th grade girls complete
undefeated season, win tourney undefeated season, win tourney·

Submitted photo

The Eastern 5th grade boys finished Its season undefeated, winning the league tournament at Southern . Pictured are (front L to R) Luke Horner, Jacob Weddle. Hunter Kauff,
Clayton Wood, Jon Wolfe, (back) Brodie Woods, Brett Cleland, Philip Hoffman, Corbet
Catlett, Matthew Frank, and Jett Facemyer.

Submitted photo

The 5th grade Eastern Lady Eagles completed an undefeated season. winning their
league tournament. Pictured are (front row) Hannah Sharp, Laura Pullins, Katlyn Barber,
(m1ddle row) Kaytl1n Carl AI a Hayes, Taylynn Rockhold, (back row) coaches Tom Pullins
and Bobby Calaway

____:_____;;,..;._____. l
.O.G.A. girls compete at meet

u..:;..,;____

\tORE

Above: Pictured is the Level 4 Team
which had several first place awards
as well as a 3rd place team award.
Back row: Chloe McCarty, 1st on vault
9.30, Alh Runyon, Alyssa Cremeens,
1st on beam, 9.00; Bailey Jo
Calandros, 2nd place all around 36.80;
Front row: Morgan Montgomery and
Danni Jo Fultz, 1st on bars, 9.00.

·'

Subscribe todaY.
992-2155 or 446-2342
•

_ _ _ . . __ _

Southern Ohio GymnastiCS Academy
competed at the recent Follow Your
Dreams Invitational in Hilliard, OH and
brought back several first place trophies as well as some team awards.
The Level 3 Team won a second place
team award with Taylor Huck. Gabrielle
Adkins and Trinity Eggers taking first
place awards. The Level 4s, 5s. and 7s
also several awards.

"·s. ~10RE LOCALFOLKS.

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Prior sales excluded. Sale ends 3/31 /10

• .

•

S11rvtce

Department

•

Above: Pictured are Level 5s, Andrea Bailes,
2nd on vault 9.2. 1st on bars 9.5;
Maddison Greene, 1st on vault 9.225,
2nd on bars 9 45, 1st on floor
exercise 8.95.

•

Right: Pictured is Level 7 Paxton Roberts
who won a first place on balance beam
with a score of 9.2.
Submitted photos

• Martin
from Page Bl
young lady who's been setting for me and doing a
treme ndous job that was
never trained as a setter. .sn
my goal this year was to go
out and get a trained setter
and f' m bringing ITI five
girls and to start off, Kelsey

wou ld hnve been my num
ber three girl and I wantetl
Kelsey to play some
defense for me, but seeing
Kelsey in the last couple of
workouts. Kclsev is determi ned not to be number
three . .she' ll be playing for
us pretty quickly ..
Kelsey is the daughter of
Jay and Pam ivttrtin. She
is cmTent ly undecided on a
major.
Martin joins Caity and

Cindy Willis of Athens
High-School, Jordan Nolan
of Buckeye Valley High
School and Kavla Landaker
of River View Warsa\v High
School as the cun·ent members of the 20 I 0 Rio Grande
volle\ ball recruiting class.
R it) Grande posted an I R19 overall record in 2009
while finishing in third
place in the Mid-South
Conference "'ith a 9-5
mark.

•

740-592-2497 • 93 Columbus Road
Athens, OH

View
Entire Inventory at www.seimports.com
.
~

I

•

�-

- · --· ----~

~ ·- - --~~~__,_._

Page 86 • ~unbitt' UL'tmrs -~rntmrl

------------.........---------·

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._.._............

Sunday, March

Pomeroy • Mid dleport • Gallipolis

2:1, 2010

OSHAA Girls State Tournament
Stuckey leads Berlin Hiland to semifi,al win

McKnig~ hits winning basket for Harvest Prep

COLl'~IHt:S.Ohio(AP)
Katcl)nStud;c\ ~cor~d-.ixof
her ei~ht pomts in the final four mmutes, inch.iding the ''inner W1th 15 seconds lett to gi\c Ikrlin Hiland a 49-4X win
ove~ ~ i nstl'r in a girls state basketball Division IV st:mitinal
on F•nda".
Hiland II uiled 4R-41 \\ ith 2;45 left before rnl h mg on field
goals b) Stucke\ and Noelle Yoder and t\\O J ~lea Stutzman
free thrO\\ s "1th I :54 left to make it 48 47.
After a Hiland miss. ivlinster (25-2) worked the clock until
St~ckcy n1.1de a Ia) up in trat~c for the go-ahead b;isket.
~mster had a chance for the w1n but Tara Clune's baseline
JU mper \\ent off the rim in the fin al seconds.
H•_lary W~aver led H ilan~ "ith 12 points and Yoder had II.
Manu Duhlmshaus and Eru:a Pullenkamp had 12 apiece for
Minster (18-8).
'
H ila~1d plays either Cfmal Wincht:,ster Harvest Prep or Fort
Laram1e on Saturda) Ill search ot matching titles won in
2000, :!005. 2006 anu 2008. The Hawks were nmncr-up last
year.
·
The score was tied at 41 \\ ith four minute;:. left when
Dclanie Wolf hit a 12-font jumper to put Minster ahead. She
then made two free throws for a 45-41 lead with 3:52 to go.
Dahlinghaus hit a three-poi nter for a 48-41 score at the
2:45 mark before Hiland sta11ed its comeback.
•
Minster carried a four-poi nt lead into the third quaner but
eight minutes later the Wildcats trailed 32-31.
Hiland came with the pressure defense to start the second
half and quickly erased a 23-19 deficit with the aid of two
ste,tb and a 10-sccond violation. McKentie Miller hit consecutne shots .md We~ncr put Hiland ahead 25-23 \\ith two
free thro\\ s.
.
Hiland got ~_bucket from Dahlinghaus and ~ pair of fouls
shots from bnca Fullenkamp before two 1oul shob bv
Stucke) kept Hiland ahead 32-29. Dahlinghaus made a long
jumper. with 45 seconds left in the third quarter to produce a
onc-pomt game.

C'OU.JMBl S. Ohio CAP) - \.J,~.;,..,ea ::Vki\.Jiight scored the
winning basket with 21 seconds left to cap a second-half rally
from 18 /x&gt;ints down as Canal Winchester Harwst Prep defeated F011 ~aramie 4946 in a girb state basketball Division IV
semifinal on Friday.
:vtcKn~ght put in a s~ort jumper to rr:1ake the.score 47-46 after
the WmTtors (26-1) trailed 45-27 late 111 the th1rd qum1er.
F011 Laramie (22-5) immediutcly turned the ball over and
after a timeout McKnight fed Lucia Herndon under the basket
off the inbound!&gt; play for tpree-point lead. Fort Laramie had a
final chance but McKnight blocked a three-point tr)' by Janel
Olberdins, with five se~on'ds left.
.
.
Olberdmg had 18 pomt~ but her free throw w1th 2: II rcmaming ~as the only point for For1 Laramie over the last 10:47.
Sh1cole Watts had 16 pomts for Harvest Prep, who play
Berlin Hiland in11 thc championship. game &lt;?n Saturday.
.
The Wmnors scored the next etght pomts' to end the th1rd,
induding a steal and layup at the buaer by Watt!&gt; to make the
score 45-35. Harvest Prep then opened the fourth with the first
six to pull to within four before Olberding made a free throw for
Fm1 Laramie's fir~t points in 8:22 to give the Rcdskins a 46-41
lead.
Jaren Francis hit a jum~r and Watts, The Associated Press
co- Player of the Year 111 D1vision IV, followed with a shot in the
p~int and the margin was down to one with 47 seconds left.

'·~.,!!

Mark's 5Prine Price

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Natasha Howard scored 22
points despite bcin~ in foul trouble and lead Toledo Waite to 6155 win mer Kettcnng Faim1ont in a Division I girls state semifinal Friday.
Howard. The A~sociated Press Ms. Basketball, had 18 points
when she collected her third and fourth foub within 36 seconds
and exited with a minute to go in the third quarter while Waite
was ahead 40-33.

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Howard leads Toledo Wait to semifinal win

Howard retumed with 2:59 to play and Waite (24-2) up 5451. Fairmont (22-3) got to within 56-55 on a rebound basket by .
Cassie Sant but Howard had four points and Shanice McNeal
one in the final two minutes.
Sant had 25 points. including eight in the fourth quarter.
Wa}tc, in it'&gt; first state toumament. will play either Canton
MeKmlcy or Reynoldsburg on Saturday.
Howard was 5 of 9 from the floor and I for 2 from the free
throw line for II points. Jachon was 3 of 5 from three-point
range for nine points.
_ Kettering, making it-. toumament debut. did not le.~d in ~
the
first quarter but went up 17-15 early into the second oft a thr
pointer by Holly Carey. who picked up three fouls in three sec
ond~ begmning at the 6:31 mark and went the bench the remainder of the half. She had 13 points in 18 minutes.

Penn, Canton McKinley top Reynoldsburg 42·39
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Sydnee Penn made four free
throws in overtime, leading Canton McKinley to a 42-39
victory over Reynoldsburg~in a Division J girls semifinal
game on Friday night.
The Lady Pups (24-3). who reached the state semifinals
last season. will face Toledo Waite on Saturday. Both are
looking for their first state title.
•
The teams traded baskets to open overtime before Penn
made a pair of free throws at the I :43 mark to give
McKinley the lead. Kenyall Goodson was whistled for a
charge at the other end, and McKinley got the ball back and
worked the clock down to 30.3 seconds before Penn hit two
more foul shots.
Goodson made the first of two free throws with 4.5 seconds left to cut the deficit to three points , but the Lady Pups
Surya Gaffney was fouled after the second. Gaffney missed
both free throws, but grabbed her own rebound and ran out
the clock.
Ameryst Alston had 16 points for McKinley.
Goodson's 15 points topped Reynoldsburg (21-6).

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LONG THE

Sunday, March 2 1, 2010

Delyssa Huffman/photos

.

These 13 senrors performed for the last nrght 1n the Black Knight Revue on March 14.

• 2010 mar~ed
~~
Bv

tver ffia ry

DELYSSA HUFFMAN

[lHUFFMAN@MYDAILYAEGISTER COM

POI"iT fJLEASANT. W.Va. - The
.\nnh·ersary of the Black Knight
lh·' ut• took place March 11-14 in Point
l'ka . . ant. The much anticipated annual
t·H·nt. which is performed by members
ol 1Ill' Point Pleasant High School Blat·k
h. night \larching Band, \HI~ held at the
l.illian and Paul Wedge Auditorium.
Thi' nar, 13 seniors hid farewell at
1ht· l'nn.dusion of I he weekend pt•rfnrIIJalll"t's. A total of 44 other students
"l'rt' among the sea of dant·ers. singt•rs
and pt·rformers thai hit the stage for
1\\0 da~ s and thn.-e nights.
\\ hl'lher they were performing to
JH'riod music from the 1960s or
-.iuginJ.! l'tmtcmpor·ar~ hits h) :\lile~
&lt;·., n1s, the audience, consistinJ.! of area
:nulL· st·hool students, fellow classrnall'' and the public, enjo)t•d eHI')
rniuull• of the show.
Tht• first half fcatun·d hits from
Di-.nn classics such as "Cir-cle of
l.ih·.''.I9H0s rock and the Torn \ward
"inninJ.! song, ..In The lll'iJ,!his." One
pl'rformer even showntst·d his ntp
-..kill' to add to the deliJ,!htnll'nt of the
-..ho\\ and mermaids slumt·d up to
l'llll'rtain the audienn•.
I he 'l't'ond half of the show ft•atun·d
tap dant·ers, swing dant·crs. and popu1a r hits h~· Taylor Swift and 1\ Iiie)
( 'rus. \nd at the end. the t·ntirt· l'l'' m·
,·;i-..t nune together to sing a final song
to "llil!h School Musical."
lht· 2010 Ulat·k Knight Rentt' ft·atrrrl'd a tribute to Gan Stt·nart. \\ho
1\;1', tht• first director of the t•n•nt. durirlo;, tht· opt•ning night with a plaqm• for
!1i" c&lt;lmmitment and st•nin· to till'
- iro\\. Path· Fellure also was n•t'oJ.!nizl·d
l or lll'r outstanding senin· to tlw hand
II H'Illht·r' during the e\·ent.
.ldf llilhert is currenth tht· din•dor
,, n.J ha., hccn t'or· the pust si' Yl'ai'S. lit•
,., ;r•..,btNI by Ben Loudin, who al ..o
1·!·' '' the lt•nor sax in tht• hand pit and
• 1ill' ..,laJ.!e lightirll! managt·r. llillll'rt
.d: h to the revue b) pia~ inJ.! trumpl'l
. 111,: -..inging hack-up.
. .
l(l·hl·at·sals for the Blat·k Kmght
I&lt; , , II(' lwj.!an in .Januar~. Sttuh-nts
1, , &gt;J IIl'd h ril's. d~mn· mon·s and l'l"l'ah·d
, ,, ,tllllW~ for lhl• show. Tht• .. lum \HHtld
II' ,r ill' possihll• n ithout all of t lw lwlp
I• , ''" hand parents and tlw hoo-..ll'r...
1 h1· liH· show has ht•t·n around for -'11
, , ;Jr.., and llilhert is looking fon\ ard
, ,, 111Jat tht• future hold-.. for tht• ~t·a•·s
Ruh~

! 11 l'OIIll'.

..'

These two seniors gave an amazing tap dance performance to "Rock This Town." Both Brittany Sayre
and Scott Nibert sang vocals to this popular hit.

"Beauty and the Beast" was just one of the Disney classtcs performed during
the 40th anniversary show of the Black Knight Revue. All cast members are
a part of the Black Knight Marching Band at Point Pleasant High School.

The Ruby Annrversary of the Black Knight Revue featured songs from different genres, movies and popular hits. Pictured from left to right, Jennifer Freeman;
Brittany Sayre, Logan Baisden and Kelsey Roach.

With their fins and sea bubbles, Kelli Hartshorn, Liz
Finley and Kayla Thomas sing "She's in love" during one
of the three performances of the Black Knrght Revue.

Cassie Harper and Ashlee Filkins, both graduating seniors, sing ''Sit Down
You're Rockin' The Boat" during the second half of the variety show.

�PageC2
Sunday, March 21, 2010

el ness
Center hosts
open house

COMMUNITY CORNER
' ·1he sun is shmmg,
the daffodils are blooming, and spring has
arrived, and that, my
friend, should put a
smile on your face after
the long winter of
helow trcc;ing temperaturelt, high heating
hi lls, nnd shoveling
snow.

• ••

. Whtlc changing your clocks to daylight savmg~
trme last weekend. I hope )OU remembered to not
ooly change the batteries in )OUr ~moke al.1rm detec
tors but also those in the carbon monoxade detector
What? You don't ha\e one. Big mistake.
Just ask the Dale Walburn family in Middleport.
Seems they all went to bed one night last week. onl)
to be awakened b) the screeching sound of the detector's alarm alenmg the famil) to carbon monoxrde.
Everyone slcepmg on the second floor was fine. but
Marjone sleeping &lt;'in the first floor and closest to the
source of the trouble. '&gt;'asn't. She was taken b} I..MS
to Pleasant Valley for treatment.
It \\as an experience sl)e never wants to repeat and
a reminder of the importance of taking care of the lrttle things - like putting new batteries in detecto".
Could snve your life.
•••
The peril of potholes is upon u~ .....
With winter came record cold tempcr.1tures and
plenty of snow, not to mention some rain. which created the perfect conduions for potholes - lots of
them. evc11 where.
While drh•in~ along we try our be..,t to avoid hittmg
a pothole. but u's not always possible. And hming a
big one can reo;ult in a damaged tire, alrgnment. and
suspcns_ion problems. and end up costmg lots of
mone) m repam•.
1 ry as the) m1ght, count) and 'iJiage emplo) ees
can't fix them all in a da}. It take:- time. Mean'&gt;' hile
just IO\\ do'&gt;'n, tf) to moid hitting one. and be patient
as "ork continues on making road repaiTh

Submitted photos

Emrly Davres of Gallrpohs, Ohro receives a massage from Pleasant Valley Hosprtal Theraprst Bil
Wray during the wellness center's open house on
Thursday. The open house was held to rntroduce
the center's new Cybex eqwpment and recent renovations

Above: Thrs group of
ladies had a fun time
tryrng out the new
Silver Sneakers aerobrc
program dunng the
PVH Wellness Center's
open house on
Thursday.

•••

Wuh the local econom) as it is ( 17.8 percent unemployment m Meigs Count)) and the number of people
needing food and other essentials.tt's be.coming more
and more difficult for those in the busmess of helprng
the less fortunate to fill the need.
~he Mcrgs &lt;;ooperathe Pari.;h does a great job of
aSSISttng the drsadvantaged but ha\ C Urnes \\hen ll's
dafficult becnuse of a lack of funding. While local
support remams rclathcl) good. despTte the laggrng
economy. it also takes some outside assistance to keep
things going.
Grants are scarce. stimu1us money seems difficult
to get. those ne~ding help keeps increasing. and
domg more with le&lt;~s doesn't work when it comes to
feedrng people.
l st week Shnndell Jamal who b the project manfor the ~ovemor's office of Faith-Based
(
'!'unit} InitratJ\es \HIS m Pomero). She ugge-.ted u mg Good Search instead of Goo!!le or Bin£!
some other search engine.~ a way of rabing mone)
Once at the Good Search sue. ju~t go to charit). and
t)pc in Meigs Cooperati\e Parbh. E'er) time that
earch engine i u ed. a penny i added to the account
of the de ignated chant).\\ ith enough u,er~ this 1m
pie proce s could generate much needed cash for the
Pansh as the)' sturggle to fill the need here.
And for tho e who regular!~ use a computer, but
reall) ha\e no mone) to give, thts j.., a \\a) for them
to indirect!) contribute to the good \\ ork of the Pan h
where right no\\ e\'ef) penny counts.

Left :-Darrr Smrth. wellness center manager,
drscusses the center's
senior rates and Silver
Sneakers program with
Art Gheen and George
Crump of Point
Pleasant.

Project Linus

Four area students win
Ohio Elks Association
Educational Grants
GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipoli Elks Lodge #107
netted four Ohio Elks
As ociation Educational
Grant "inners.
Lon
Clar).
Stacie
Cummons. Miranda Fortner
and Carli \\'allenfel 1. were
a'&gt;'arded $1.000 each to
continue their educatron.
The Ohro Elks a\\ arded
1 48
SI ,000 educational
grants. The grants are a' miable to any1me "ho ha:-.

l
Submitted photo

: Semors at Eastern High School donated handmade blankets to the ProJect Linus project, and earned free tickets to Walt
Disney World as a reward. Partrctpatrng in the "Grve a Day, Get a Disney Day" program, the seniors donated the blankets
to the Fayette County program, a chanty approved for the free ticket promotion 42 members of the class will travel to
Orlando, Fla. for the schools tradJtional senior trip, but even those not participating in the trip helped with the project.

Recession hurting cruise ship builders
MIAMI !AP)
The
cruise industry IS reboundmg. but not for the comp;.~­
nies who build the mcrtas
• ingl) elaborate slup~.
Exec uti .. cs t rom the
major European ship)ards
say the) 're nlH gcttmg
enough orders to keep bus)
and profitable. !'hough
crui&lt;;c book111gs and priceo.;
are up, at lood of llC\\- ships
is crowding the mnrket,
, .. and operators huvc o.;hown
little wi l lingne&lt;~s to buy
more .;hips.
Only one ne\\ order wn-;
pluced in 2009. ami only·
four so far in 2010 I hat's
down from 2 I 111 2006,
before
the
economrc
111
downturn
began

De~.:cmber

2007.
..The crui&lt;&gt;c shrp-burlding
mdustr) has !&gt;IO\\ er react ron
time and &lt;,ufferc; trom deep&lt;.'r dr~tress ;n companson
\\ 1th cruise line.;.'' said
Corrado Antonini, chair man
ot the Italian ~tate~owned
Fmcantieri Canticri 1\a\ al1
ltaliam S.p.A.
If thing!&gt; don't improve,
&lt;~hipbu1lding officiul.; and
obscn ers :-.aid at an indu~­
try conference this \\Cek.
the yard~ could lose key
'&gt;killed \\Orkers. suppliers
and subcontractors
11
they can stay afloat at all.
And that means trouble
"'hen operators do final!)
want ne'&gt;' sh1ps '' ith eH·r
mcreasmg amcnrties like

skatmg nnk&lt;~. bowling
aiiC)l&gt; .md climbing ''ails.
r rncant1cri j., one of JUst
three compamcs in the
world that domrnatc the
-;pcci,tlty 111chc of cruise
c;hip-bmldlllg.
Antonini
'"arned that if nc\\ order&lt;&gt;
don't pick up soon, cruise
&lt;~hip::- will become more
expensive to build and kss
cfhcil:ntl) mack.
"The shipbuilding industry has an int1insic inflcxrbility dcrh ing from plant
a~sets
and specralit.ed
skrllcd rcsnun:cs, which
cannot be simply frce7C·d.
11\0\Cd or fired," Antonini
said.
F·inc,lfl!ICJ r ic; the on I) of
the three nr.1jor btuldcrs

\\ ith '' ork on the book
past 20 12 - and· the) d1d·
n't ha\e it until Carni\al
ordered two ne\\ ~hips Ia t
month. That's an uncomfortable prospect in an
industry \\here a single
order requires years of
labor and planning. plus
more than 10.000-gros..,
tons of steel and other
material.
r hl.' other major bui ldcrs
ll\\ IH.'d
arc
privatd)
Mcver Werft
Gmbl l ,
hu-.cd
in
Papenhurg,
Germany,
and
STX
Europe AS. a unit of South
Korean conglomerate STX
Corp. that operates cruise
sh1p yards in France and
l•mland.

completed high school or 1ts
equh alent and not ju~t htgh
school -.eniors. These granto:;
are for full or pa11-time ~tu
dent' of an) age "ho plan to
or currently attend a co 1
lege, uni\er..,it\, and c~
or technolog) in... titution.
Through thi' -.tnte grant
and the nation.tl Elks scholar...hip programs. the Elks
organization collecU\ el)
a\\ards over $3 milhon m
s('holar... hip.., each ),ear.

�---

----~--

---

----~-~-------------------""'!""--------::------------~--.

PageC--~
Sunday, March 21, 2010

The secret life of Salt Lake City hosts 4 genealogy meetings in April
vegetable peelers
If You Go:
Bv JENNIFER DOBNER

genealogist.., C'ons1derecl the
largec;t genealog) collectJOJI
in the world. it!&gt; dat.tbac;e
GENEALOGY WEEK: Four events are scheduled
contains well over a bi lhon
Apnl 26-May 1 at the Salt Palace Convention Center,
n a m e~ drawn from thou100 West Temple, Salt Lake City.
sand::. of origmal records.
lncludmg births. deaths.
• BYU Conference on Computenzed Family H story
marriager;. census data and
and Genealogy, Apnl 26·27, http://ce byu.edu/cw/cwgepatron contributions.
neal/.
The library also has more
• BYU Family History Technology WorKshop, Apnl 28,
than 300.000 volumes of
http.//fht.byu.edu/
data. mcluding publi&lt;&gt;hcd
• FamilySearch Developer's Conference, April 27,
familv hi~torie..;. county and
http://www tarnilysearchdevnet.org/DC/index.html
c1ty
directones and tran
• National Genealogical Society Annual Conference,
..;cnpt)&gt;
or abstracto; of other
April 28-May 1. http://www.ngsgenealogy.org/.
documents
\\-IIh genealogiWORKSHOPS AND EXHIBITS: Workshops cover all
cal c;,ignificance, said Da\ id
aspects of genealogy research and technology. Exhibit
Rencher. the facilit) \ d11ef
hall includes hundreds of vendors a nd product demongenealogical officer. The
strations, Apnl 26-May 1.
records are from the l'mted
SPECIAL EVENTS: Mormon Tabernac.e Choir with
State-., C.mada. the Brit1..,h
author David McCullough. A concert and multirnedta
Isles.
Europe.
Latm
tnbute to family history, April 29 , 7 p.m., LOS
America. Asia. and Afnca
Conference Center 60 West North Temple, Salt Lake
A staff of 80 prnte%ion.tl-.
City. Free ttckets online beginning March 23 at
and 600 volunteers are on
http://www.LDS.org/events.
hand to help individual&lt;,
FAMILY HISTORY LIBRJmY: 33 North West Temp1e,
with their re!-&gt;ewrc.-h.
"You can bnrrg your box •
Salt La~e City. Open Monday, 8 a.rn.-5 p m. Tuesdayof stuff and )OU can lay it
Saturday, 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Closed Sundays. Some extendout and sny 'Help! What do
ed hours during conference week to 11 p.m. Free, open
I do next"'''' ~. rd Rencher
to the publ1c, no appointme1ts necessary.
"And that's the hard part."
REGISTRATION: Fees vary for each conference and
About 700.000 curiou!.
range from $25 for students to $245. Some day rates
lover\
of famil) hi-.tor)
available. Details on conference Web sttes.
from ..round the \\Qrld 'istt
SALT LAKE CITY TOURISM : Salt Lat&lt;e Convention
the li 1Jrary each year. said
and Visitors Bureau, 801·534-4900 or http://www.visitPaul Nauta. manager of
saltlake.com/visit/.
public affairs.
"The) JU"t ha\e this
Dotens of work!.hops \\ill the Mormon Tabernacle yearning to tdenllf) their
be held daily to provide Choir and author Davjd ancestorr; becauc;e it's part of
who t!ley are," Nauta satd
beginners and e.xpens alike McCullou!!h. ~1cCullough \
Another factor dnving
with tip~ on ever)thing books mclude hiographie.,
from basic research and of Han") Tmman and John intere,t 111 the conference
m,l) be SC\ er.tl new tele\ torganizational skills to Adame;;.
locating rt:sourccs . deciRecent a nnual NGS sion programs - includmg
phering records , under- e\ents have dr~mn about PBS' "Face" of America"
standing DNA tc)tmg and 2.000 people , but Alpert and NBC's "Who Do You
writmg and editing fam il) smd early registration for Think You Are?" - that
natTatives. Special technol- thl! Salt Lake City confer- show c.elebri tiC;) cl1sco\ erogy \\ orkshops are also ence is ·•exceeding expecta- ing their family tree-; with
planned to aid in under- tions."
the help of tramed genealostanding and u~ing variou-.
T he rc-.;pon::.e could be giqs. Most of the program.;,
genealogy-specific databas- due m part to Salt Lake ha' e used the sen tces of
es and program:-.
City\ unique resource The the Family History Libral).
The week also includes Family History Libml) of Rencher "aid.
:-cveral special events. The Church of Jesus Chtist
"'These shO\\" ure \\onincluding a genealogy ''kid., of Latter-day Saints, \1. hich, derful becau-.e they are hitcamp" for youth in grades ha:-. been collecti n!:! data tin~ an emotionalnen·e and
four through I:?. and a ~i ncc I894.
~
th,lt'&lt;:. \\hat's getting people
Celebration of Famih
The libran is a \\ell
l:XCiteJ about famil) histoHi&lt;.tory concert feattlrmg kno\\ n destination
for 1)' ... Alpert said.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kitchen gizmos
arc usuallv creat~d and marketed with a sole purpose
's ob' ious f~nm the
arne - \'egctablc peeler.
g&lt;~rlic press. potato ma~hcr.
But as chefs und food
expe11s know. most tools
can be put to use in a multitude of wavs that make )OUr
cooking easter, faster or
more impre-.si,e .
Take the \ egctable peeler
- a kitchen essemial for
• getting tu the heart of carrots and potatoes.
Ann Taylor Pittman. food.
editor of Cooking L1ght
~1agazinc . uses the peeler to
shave hard cheeses like
Parmigiano - Reg g i a no.
pecorino Romano . ami
Asiago .
''The beautiful ~ha,ings
hn' e a bigger flavor Jmpact
(AP)

t~an grated . Nice for toppmg salads, pasta. pizza or

flatbread," savs Pittman.
Kate Merker, associate
food c~1tor &lt;lt Real Simple
magazmc
recommends
using a vegetable peeler for
removing strips of citrus
zest (usually lemons. limes
and oranges) to use for
twbts in cocktails.
And Food Network's
Clair Robinson puts peelers
to uo;e m baking, using them
to shave chocolate. "I have
even used it to shave butter
ribbons for decoration or to
melt frozen butter super
quick!"
So when a recipe calls for
a citrus tester or u chocolate
~haver. you don't need to
reach for your wallet and
car key~. Gr.tb your •eliable
vegetable peeler.

Denim looks to wear today,
tomorrow and together
By
•

SAMANTHA CRITCHELL

ASSOCIATED PRESS

i'\EW YORK - Denim
ne' cr goe:-. out of style, but
there are sca~ons when vour
old. rei iable fi ,·e-po.cket
jeans s1mply uren 't enough .
This is one of those seasons.
The jeans leggi ng - aka
jegging - is still going
strong. and denim designers
arc also talking up the
chambmy 'lhi11. asymmetrical motocross jackets, cutoff shorts and . :-.till. the
boyfriend pant. There arc
trouser styles and wuistcoats for work. and, ••ripand-repair" jeans are a must
for week~nds .
Ralph Lauren had overalls on the rurm ay and
showed jeans under an
evening go\\ n. E\·cn babies
are gettmg premium dcmm.
And a den im-on -denim
outfit. som'etimes considred a fashi on fa us. -pas in
e past. is a bonn fide trend.
"The American denim
look is eve rywhere - it 's in
the air. it'" all over the
\\Orld,"
says
Patrick
• Robinson, creative director
at Gap. ''The workwcar feel
is hot, espl'cially for guys.
and there "s a sexy look for
women . ... It's about cool
Amencans and how they
Ji\e and we ' re trymg to
export that around the
world."
Denim is proving a strong
springtime seller in stores,
says Stephanie Solomon,
'ice president of fashion
direction
at
Bloomingdale's. She is particularlv fond of the ~harts
and legginss paired "ith
striped T-shu1s .
"It probably ha.~ never
had a larger impact on what
we wear every day," agrees
Durand Guion. men 's fashion duector for .\tfacy's.
"We had gotten just about
ts casual as we can f?Ct
• without getting in our paJa·
mas. so we ' re looking to
incorporate demm into our
hves at least fi ve cia) s a
week.
but
not just
Saturdays. We're looking
to step it up. You can wear
a button down denim shirt
with a tie ."
Helmut Lang co-creative
director Nicole Colovos
thinks people like that they
can put their own spin on
denim. And no pair of jeans
looks the same on two di f..
ferent people
''It's "o individual , from
how you wear it in, how you
style it. The tit is molded to
your shape." Colovos says.
"You don't want someone
else wearing )OUr jeans."
Finding the best fit is trial
and eJTor, she adds. but once
consumer&lt;; find a denim
label they like. they tend to
be loyal.
Denim leggings aren't
und baggy, and that
tering. lasting shape is
pan of their appeal, says
You Nguyen. Levi\ senior
vice president of women's
merdmndising and design.
He says he can't overemphasize the importance of
the legging right now. It further evolves the skinny jean,
which has moved from
trendy to staple status. and it
complements the tunic top
and the slouchy blazer that
are being touted for spring.

~

SALT LAKE CITY E-.cn after almost 30 years
of research, Jan Alpert ~till
gets goose bumps when she
discovers a ne\\ branch on
her family tree .
"'The biggest SliilJrise is
how much vou can find
out," said Alpert . who was
bit hy the genealogy bug in
1981 after helping her
father pursue his own interest in family hi storv.
"When )OU know whitt
your
ancc'\lor-.
went
through. you huvc a greater
appreciation for \\hy you
are the person ) ou are ."
Now the chair of the
~.ttional
Genealogical
Societ). Alpert's pursuit has
led her on dcucns of trip~
across the L' .S. to locate
records and pieces of her
family', 'story.
"There are millions of
people like me out there
domg it," she said
Beginning April 26. thousands of fnmily history
buff~ are expected to
descend on Salt Lake City
or
to hone their skills
begm their journeys - during a umque week featuring
I four conkrcnces focused on
gcnenlogical resenrch and
technology.
Anchored bv the 2010
National
denealol!ical
Society's
An~nual
Conference, the week al-.;o
include..,
the
Brigham
Young University'::. annual
Conference
on
Computerized
l·amily
Historv and Gene.tiO~')'
e '
BYU 's.; Family History
Technology Workshop and
the
Fam1lySearch
Developer's Conference for
software de\ elopers .
Becau ~e the four events
take place at the :-ame tim~.
Alpert. a retiree wnh homes.
in Michigan and South
Carolina. said she believes
I it "will be the large-,t
genealog1cal event ever."

"Our leggings ousincss is
on fire , at all price points
and at all retailers," Nguyen
says.
On the !lip side, the
boyfriend skinny jean
with a looser waist and hip
but a narrower leg remains popular.
"I. don't belie' e that
denun has ever really left
the fashion ' trend,' but what
we:re seemg now is .that for
a tew seasons, demm was
' fl t~encmg
·
m
sportswear,
making sportswear rn01:c
~asual. ~ow sportswear 1~
mfluen~mg
demm ,
Nguyen ~ay~ .
Look tor lighter shades of
denim as the we.ath.er
warms, at~d u lot ol cltst~e-.sed fini.shcs, too. som.e·
ttmes With purposeful
patch~s.
.
_ .
G·Star colle~.ti?n styl_Ist
Remco De ~IJs favontc 1
denim fabric right now is
the traditional Japanese selvage out of the brand "s new
Raw Essentials collection.
He ~ays the fabric has a \ery
authentic denim hand.
PORTLAND . Ore. (AP)
which juxtapbses nicely - Spring h&lt;ts sprung and
with modern silhouettes, so have the weddtng ill\ isuch as the company's sig- tations. They 'II be joyous
nature Arc Pant, which has a events , but find in!! the
low-slung top and exagger- perfect gifts to bring-along
ated tapered leg.
can be stre,sful dut:ing
(Selvage denim, De l\'1js these tough economic
explains. stands for the tape times.
•
on the edges of the denim
Here are a few "a\ s to
looms. Traditionally every cope if a crystal sugar ·bo\\ I
brand had its own edge or. a s~tttn" of desioner
That is how the manufactur- chma JUst isn ' t in your
er recognized the brand.)
1 budgeGt~ ET
G-Star also has broadened 1 •
FOCGSED:
its denim color paleue from • Keep your .goal Ill mind .
a dark raw denim to even You are g1v1ng someone a
some fabrics that forgo any g_ift to celebrate thei: marindigo coloring at all.
nage. not atta~h a ~nee tag
Helmut Lane offers some to your relatwn..,htp "1th
denim items that have had them.
the color stripped away and
.~o bu~. "hat. you c~n
then added back for an a I lord , \\ llh thctr taste 111
irregular. imperfect look.
mind. And. f~rget the rule
"Three seasons ago, we that the gtft s value must
were in the cycle ()f ver) equal what your ho . . ts
dark
denim."observe:-. spend on your meal , says
Nguyen. "Now \\C're going Reb~c~a Blac~. euqu;ue
b·tck to true nature of spectaltst at Ettquette Now
d~nim. which is denim in Davis, Calif. There's no
aging down. You love a pair magic amount.
of jeans so much that you
"A gift should be thoughtrefuse ro let it be worn out." ful," Black sa)~ . ··we want
Going forward into fall. them to have this because
though. trend analyst Tom we care about them ."
Julian expects to see colOften there arc afford ored denim a~ well as able items in a Clmple's
patchwork. There will abo rcgistr) , with a wider array
be more players in denim of choices 1f you shop
season:
Proenza early. Even a honeymoon
next
Schouler is collaborating registry can include affordwith J Brand. One style able options. like snorkel will he made of Japanese ing gear rental at the colistretch denim hand·painted pie's destination .
all over to create texture
But it's perfectly accept·
and dimension.
able to give somethmg
"For fall 20 I0 we are that's not on the registry.
exploring ideas closer to and ;ou can use the rl!gistry
home,'' say Proenza design- as a guide to the couple's
ers Lazaro llemandez and preferences and style.
Jack McCollough in a state• GET CRAFTY: If you
mcnt. ''Urban elements are can sew. cook. work with
important as i.s tJ:e idea ~f wood or ha\e othl!r crcumforms . Denun fits the bill ative talent , 'c onsider makas the most ubiquitous item ing . . omcth1ng. Snmeone
in most people's wardrobe." with calligraphy skills
If you go for the all-over could prm ide a handwritdenim look. you'll need to ten love poem. Most couwear a variety of weights pies will cherish n wedding
and washes, and try a pol- quilt made for them oy a
ished bottom with a relaxed friend or an heirloom
top or vice versa. advises handed down to rccognitc
Gap':- Robinson. It C&lt;!uld be the big e\~nl. .
''It's quite appropriate and
different shades of blue,
blue with black - or white. means a lot more. you
For those reluctant to go remember it - and you
heud-to-toc. accents on don't tend to remember that
bags. hats and sneakers beautiful va:-e that got broallows for a more subtle ken," Black savs.
If you're all.thumbs. con set.:ondary denim piece.
I

I

Smart Spending: Wedding gifts on a budget

I

-

-

siper framing the wedding
im·Hation. a special photo or
another memento.
• GET PERSONAL:
Find a "ay to incorpomtc
the couple's ta~ te~ and hob·
bte~ into a gift .
For people who enjo)
an. cons ider a museum
membership or a ~ubsc np­
tion to an art ma!laz.ine . Or
cnnsidl-r donating in the
couple':- names to a charity
that supports a paso.;ion of
thetr; .
Personalizing
something
\\ith
thei'r
names . iltitials or a nC\\
addrcs:-. - anything from a
door mat to an emhoS"er
- makes a memorable
gift.
• GET RESOURCEFUL: A group of friends or
relatives could pitch in for
one significant item . It vou
want to a\·oid shelling ·out
an) cash and you participate
in a credit ~ard re\\ ard pro• gram , usc those poinr.... to
buy a gift: such programs
offer cvcr)thing from
espresso makers to jewelry
and gift cards .
Maybe what the couple
would like best ts an cxperien~c. You could usc vour
frequent -tl)er miles· or
re\\ ard points to buy them a
trip or upgrade th~ir hone) moon flight to first class.
Consider a gift cet1ifkat~

for a rcc;,taurant at their honevmoon de tination or one
near home .
You could assemble a kit
for . say, a home-date night
With a movie DVD. popcorn and cand). Or gh c
them dinner at home - a ·
spec ial recipe "nh a ll the
ke) ingredi ents for them
to try out together. A special bottle o f champagne.
\\ inc or liquor h. a lso pop-

u l.~r
and
a.:ceptc~b l e.
experts say.
Whate\er \OU !me. m.1ke
sure it . . uits the couple's
st\ le.
-..A gift shouldn 't b0
another errand
somethmg the) are gomg to ha\ e
to return or bn 't them," sa\"
.Vlolli Bar'&gt;:-.. owner of
Soirel.'. a spcctal event:-.
planning
bu . . i n e -..~
in
Ponland. Ore.

THE FABRI C SHOP
Thanks to ANN LAMBERT for all the
dedication to her job at the Fabric Shop. We
ha' c been in business since 1959 and A'nn hac;
heen a big part of our success o\·er the~ e.ars.
Ann has alwa~ s bce.n a

wonderful cmplo) c-e. It might
be climbing up our high
ladders to get rid of a cobweb,
or keeping our windo~ s
looking pretty, or cleaning out
MUD after a flood. If an
alteration nct'dcd to be done in
a hurry, or a "tiny chicken''
(Ann you kno\l "hich one)
needed to be made. Ann is the
first to get the job done.
~o-.-.a-..._._.d
Ann "ill be refiring March 31st. ·stop b~ 'I ht:
Fabric Sbop to \\ish her the best in her retirement.
Lo\ c) ou Ann. and ) ou CANNOT be replaced.
Thnnk \Ou "licw" much
Bl&gt;ck) Andrrson

'

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�PageC4

iunba~ ~imes -~entinel

Sunday, March 21, 2010

.

HANSEN-QUEEN
ENGAGEMENT
Photo courtesy of Ashland Times-Gazette/Duane Martin

~shland Un1~ers1ty women's 200-yard freestyle relay team f!lembers stand atop the podium as they fin1sh rn first during
t¥ NCAA D1v1s1on II Sw.mm1ng Champ1onsh1ps at C.T. Bramn Natatonum 1n Canton Team members are left to right, Julie
~1dmann, Je'1 Kmght. Rachael Ausdenmoore and Allison Morgan

•

Ashland swim team wins national title
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
'-'DSNFWS

~YDAILYSE'NTINE'.

COM

ASHLAND
Jen
Knight \\::t!'. on the Ashl,md
l ni\crslt)' \\Omen's ~wlm­
ming team "h1ch took. first
place in the recent NCAA
Di,ision II s\\imming
... hampionships at C.T.

Bran111 Natorium m Canton.
Kmght. a senior ,tt Ashland
llll\erslt). 1s the daughter of
Drt.'&lt;~ma HO\ ,mer Knight.
ltumed) of M1Jdk'port. and
Jamc-.
Knight
ot
Raven~\\OOd, w.\a. and the
grandd,tu,ghter of Richard
Hovattt!r of Middleport.
J·or '\ ... hlam.l Lltmersit) tt

marked the I iro;;t national
title e\ cr "on b\ a swnnming team from th.tt !&gt;Chool.
Knight's 5Wimming competition&lt;; goes b.tck to her high
school )Cars \\hen she \hl'i
a three-) ear st.1te quahfie.placing fourth in the 50 free
and 8th in the 1080 free
swim her senior )ear.

Other
members
of
Ashland University's 200yard free:-.tyle rela) team in
the ~C AA contest were
Juhe Widcmann. Rnchael
Ausdenmoore. and Allison I
Moore The team record
I :32 88 beat dcfcnJmg •
national champion Drury h)
67 hundredth of a ~econd.

Emily Kay Hansen of Marion. Iowa. and Kevin David
Queen of Point Plea~ant. would like to announce their .
engagement.
Han~cn is the daughter of Ken and Anita Hansen of
.\tm·ion, Iowa.
Queen i:-. the son of Paul and Susan Queen of BatesVille,
Ant.
The couple "ill exchange vows on April2. :w 10 at Grace
Baptist Church in ,\farion. Iowa.

Shanty Boat Night set for April 9 ·
Bv
HPOU'&gt;H

HOPE ROUSH
MYDA .Y8f:~l.,-rE.i=l COM

POI:\1
PLEASA~T.
\\ .Va.
) n just .t IC\\ sho11
\h.... k., the Mason Count)
rouri-.m s a...on \\Ill offiCt.lll) kick otf '' tth the
Shant) Boat Ntght e\t;nt
Shant) Boat N1ght 1s
ho ... ted b) tne Pomt Plea...ant
Rl\cr !\1uscum ctnd \\Ill tukc
place on hid.t) \pnl 9.
fhe e\ening. sl.1ted to bcgm
at 6: ~0 p m., "ill feature .t
\ttriety of .tctivitic-. .tnd
ertert.tinmcnt.
Accordmg to Ruth l·out
of the ri\er ,nu..,eum, this 1~
the tou th )ear for the
C\ cnt.
She
dec;cr;bed
SJl.ltH\ Boat N1ght a:-.
IJ)'rca:-.mg 111 popul,,nt).
"It certain!) ha'r rro" n.
\\'~: had .ts n•an) ·'" .2) more
p~oplc at last ) -.&lt;.r ·~ e\ ent
wmpared to the ) ear
be tore." l--out ..aid. "People
he&lt;~r .1bout Sh .nt) Boat
~I" t .md ", nt to come.
Other-. "no came the ye.tr
be tore "~nt to come agui n
.md the-, b"mg thc1r f,Hnil)

and friends."
J'r,mk) Dee. an Eh 1s
nnpcrson.ltor. ·\\ill pro\ ide
thi-. )Car·~ entenainmcnt.
\ccordmg to Fout. while
cac;u.tl dress ic; encouraged.
those 111 attend&lt;tnce Ola\
alc;o drc'is in 1950s and 60~s
attire. The menu tor the
e\ening \\ill consi5t of
beef bmket, scalloped
potatoc~. oreen beans. cole
sla\\. rolls. des~erts and a
be\eragc.
Ticket~ are Si25 ,md can
he pun. hac;ed at the ri\er
rruc;cum I out encouraged
other'i t0 get their tickeh
carl) ~.~ man) hn\e already
been ordered A~...corcling to
l·out. people from as tar
·'"a) uc; Chillicothe, Ohio
and Cha1le~ton are expected
to ,\ttentl.
"I think people \\ill enjo)
Shant) Bm t Night becau~.;e
it \\ill be an enjoyable
e\ening out - it is almost
like the) are going to a dinncr the.1trc :· J'out 'i.lid
For more 111j01mariun.
call the ril'er muH'tllll at
304-674-0J./4.

GEORGE 50TH
ANNIVERSARY
Submitted photo

Franky Dee, an Elvis impersonator, will provide this year's
Shanty Boat Night entertainment. Shanty Boat Night will
take place Fnday, April 9.

Herman M. and !'\yoka L. George celebrated their 50th
\\Cdding anniver~an on Frida\·. i\larch 19. Thcv were marned 111~ 1960 at Bidwell ~iethod1st Church wih Rev.
Donald t-.her~ officiatm!!. The Georges have three children. ~1artin (Dawn) of C~olumbus. :"vtirk of Leersdale. Pa ..
and Deborah of Vinton.

Gallipolis Elks aid local PRIDE Teams
GALl IPOL IS
The
Bene\ olent .mel Protcd1ve
OrJcr of Llks don.lted
'1,000 to PRIDF progrum'i
&lt;~t River \,IIIey Hirh School
, nu (.)outh G.dha ~hgh
S.. hoot to .ts.., 'il then' 111
"ttcnJmr th.: annual PRIDb
tollferencc scheduled tor
M,rLil 'I Apttl '3 111
I

OUI ... \111.!.

.J;

at the 1\'liddh•port Fire.Stcltion
Door."· Open at 5:00
'l'kkcts- $20.00
f.lrl.l Bird Dra~ GOOD HJOD:

K).

The donatiOn \\a-. a combt)led effort trom the Ohio
Llks
A!.soLiauon
and
Gullipoh~.; f-.lks Lodge #107
I his donation \\til ,,IJow the
local PRIDL te.um to par
ti(.;lp.He in three d.1ys of
work..,hop that inctudc train
in
AdvocdC),
tng
Drug
C'ommumcations.
Trends, Health) LJIC~tyl~s.
Leadership.
Succcs..,ful
Pte\ ent10n
Pro~1 rnms.
~~olesccnts ,md Su1cidc,
'J(!Ibacco
Prc\ention.
underagc
rrcat mcnt.
Dhnking. Perlormmg Arb
&lt;llld the 21'&gt;t Stt.tteg) for
Rea~...hing Youth.
!The
PRIDL
Youth
P~oj.!rdtn Guiding Pnnc1plc'i
are ba-;cd on .1 cleat no-u&lt;;e
mc ... sage that 1ncludc..,
tobacco, alcohol, 111h.tlants
.tnd illegal drug~. The~c
p1'inciple" gtlllk member~ to
a healthy hfe1&gt;t) le and pro

BENNETT'S
Heating Cooling
&amp;

1391 Safford School Rd. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-9416 - 1-800-872-5967
Fax 1-740-740-191 1
Submitted photo

Receivmg the donations for River Valley PRIDE and South Gallia PRIDE are, from left to
nght, Tma Johnson, PRIDE advJsor; Jasmie Waugh, South Gallia PRIDE president,
Leading Knight Steve Marxen, Ellie Sanders. R1ver Valley PRIDE president· and Karen
Pol!fyn, PRIDE advisor.
mote a focus on pos1tivc

pre\ cniJ~)n technique~ to
.tddrcss 1s-.ucs of drug ''"c
&lt;1llU \ 1olcncc.
r or further information

PR IDI~
Youth
about
Programs )OU can\ 1'-it their
wehsitc at " ' ' '" .pndcyouthprogr.llll'r.org. [or more
information on the Elks

arcnc ... ~
Edu~atinn.ll program \ 1~1t
\\ ebsttc at \\ ''" .clb.org or
contact \our local Elb
lodge. •
Dru•'

A\\

Reliable • Comfortable
Cleaner Air • High Efficiency
Quiet

~ttu1 Sizu1dttrd
loiEATING

&amp;

Alq,

CONO

) r-1 1 N G

�.........------~----

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

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PageCs
Sunday, March 21, 2010

The Ohio Valley Christian School group heads toward the Smithsonian Castle.

Submitted photos

Students and chaperones from Ohio Valley Christtan School are shown arriv ng in Washington, D.C., for
thetr March tour.

Above: The Ohio
Valley Christian
School group
attends a wreathlaying ceremony
at the Tomb of
the Unknowns at
Arlington
Cemetery.
Left: Ohio Valley

Christian School
students Beth
Martin, Ltndsey
Miller and Laurah
Bush participated
in the wreath
ceremony.

•

students enjoy Washington trip
TIMES-SENnNEL STAFF
~ OA VT

COM

W'\&lt;;HI~G TON
\\ trmto d&lt;i)'S )Ct Chill)
mghb &gt;recner ra \ rum
and more ram .. and
school fte d tnp
all
s1gn~ that sp1 in!! ,., her .
Man) people hJ\e fond
mcmones Jnd -.ouv~.:n1r-.
of a special clus-. trip
taken v.ith their friend-.,
and one local group of student~ recent!) partlctp,ttcd
in this spring nte of passage· on a tour of
Wasni ngton D C.
fenth through I ~th grade
student&lt;, from Oh10 Valle)
Christian
School
in
Gatlipolls reccntl) \\ent on
a
weekend
tour
of
Washmgton .• D.C., in con
junction \\itn their hi:stOf)
nd government d.tc.sec,.
his fast-paced tour of our
•
nation\ capital began as
studcnb rode through the
night on a charter bus to
arrive in D.C. earl\ on a
Fnda) morning.
•
"I really enjO)ed our tnp
to Washmgtor., D.C . OL'r
fir.,t stop on the tour '"as at
the
Cap1tol
Building.
Every stutue and p.tinting
in the Capitol \\as beaull
ful ,md mtricatcl) made,''
satd Kyle Sl-ott. an OVCS
junior.
"I reall) enjo)ed the capi
tol tour," commented Allu.:
Hc~milton . OVCS Jllmor
"Seeing the rotunda \\a~
more amu11ng i1 pen. oil
than any pictures."
After the Capitol. students
went on tours ot the
Holocaust Museum dlld the
Smith&lt;,oman mu-;eums.
"When I ''""ted th(;
Holocaust \llu&lt;;cum, .t \\ r~-.
dl.;turbing to see ,til the

w y-; rh,tt the :\ui... tor
tured the Jew..,h people. It
o.t'll«LC'&gt; n e llo\\ people can
o cruo;; •· .,a.d K,lthlcen
Lon~. JUniOr
"One of nv favonte
mu'&gt;t:U!!ls "WJ~ the \1useum
o Natilral lhstory. I loved
ull o the anunals in it and
c;pe .. i. il) lo' ed the beautt
ful dwnwnd&lt;:: and other
prece&lt;; of JC\\ elry ," smd
Ehcw Irwin, junior
Studenb dined at the
Kcnncd) Center fnda)
vcning before embarking
on a ml!.ht ttme tour of the·
v.:ar mciiwnab. A vctewn of
the Korean ~nd Vietnam
wars led students through
the \\orld War II. lincoln,
Korean .tnd Vietn~pn memonab and ga' e them -;pec1al
msrght into the htstor) of
the memonals.
''The \\orld War II
memorial helped me to
realiLe the respect and
admirattnn we owe to those
who &lt;&gt;ervcJ in the war,"
!'.atd · 0Jntd Irwm, junior.
'At the Vretnam memorial.
11 \\as unre,tl to see all the
n&lt;~mt''i of those '' ho had
~1ven their li\es for our
l.ount1 v in the \\ ar."
"l he me moriah \\ere
touchrPg to thmh. of all th&lt;;
men and \\omen who have
tou •Ill fnr the freedom of
the L nitcJ ~tate :· said
Hc,tther &lt;., .,e, junior.
•·J loved ~ecing all the
mern 1ri. I , t mght. espcll,tll} th"' World War II
~cmorictl. It wa&lt;, re.dl)
IJcauutul .11 n1ght. I al~o
lo\ cd
the
Korean
l'vkn 011&lt;11 and tooh. a lot of
pic tlll cs. of it because my
grandpa tought in the
Km can W.H". .md neither
mv l tel nor m) g1 andpa
ha' c been .tble to sec the

Korean \1emorial :· satd
Ham1lton.
On Saturda) morning,
~tudent~ and chaperone~
bcg.tn the duy ut Arlington
National Cemetery. A ~pe­
cial delegation from 0\'CS
participated in a wreathlaying ceremon) at the
Tomb of the lJnkno\\ n
Soldie1s.
"My favontc part of the
trip was Arlington It was
interesting to \\ atch the
Honor Guard change and
the wreath ceremon1es.'"
commented Aaron Dillard.
JUnior.
"The wreath-laymg ~ere­
man) \\as \cry mo,·lng.
fhe 1wards walked back
and forth and never moved
out of the place the) v.ere
111 C\Cn thou~h it \\as pouring the rain. I \\as m the
ceremony "ith Lmdscy and
Beth,'' said Laurah Bush.
junior. "The guards had lh
walk do\\ n the step!&gt; \\ ith
our left foot first with the
guard m the rain. They told
u~ to place two hands on the
\\ reath ctnd place it m f(ont
of the grave. Let me just sa)
it was very ~old. The guard
wa~ 'e1; nice and sweet
which I thought "as different because I thou!:!ht that
he '' ould be rea II) ~trict. It
wa" very 1110\ ing to :-l'e
ho'' they 'vere so honoring
of the dead unkno\\ n soldiers th&lt;~t lay in the tomb.
The) changt.:d the guards
e\ery hour, but there was
ne,er-a guard not out their
watching over them. I
Lhought thb wa:- ver)
rc~pcetful "
A !so at Arlington, students were able to tour the
horne of Gen. Robett E.
I ee.
· I'he view from I ce -..

. )
J~ (,'
.1

Submit engagement,
wedding and anniversary
announ~ements online at

•t

""""" ,,

·-

,,...

house
' bre.uhtak:ing,''
aid fl c.ta In\ in
Geumg mto the Whtte
House for a tour IS not as
eas) as tt ~as m ) ears past.
To be considered for
approval. you must no\\
subnut your application
through your congre~sman 's
office 4-6 months before tht'
day ) ou plan to 'i-.it.
Limited approvals are
grantt:d only 10-14 days
bet ore the 'bit and are ~ub­
JeCt to availabilit) of the
White
Hou~e.
Those
approved ha\ e about 36
hours to turn in information
for·a background check of
all people h~ted on their
tour. Despite these odds. the
OVCS group \\as granted
penni.,sion for a tour on
Saturda\.
the White
"Tom:ing
House\\ a~ one of the highlights of the trip for me.''
commented Gina Tillis.
tour director and history
teacher. •· After going
through
t\\o
:-ecurit)
checks to get insidc. \\ e
were able to do a 'elf-guided walking tour through the
East Wing. We walked
along the ground floor corridor and were able to look
into the Libr.try and
Vl'rmeil rooms. Prom there.
we \\Hiked up the stairs to
the State floor to tour
through t'lc East, Green.
Blue. Red and State Dining
rooms. ,\ Secret Sen icl'
tour officer \\as stationed
111 each of the rooms to
ans\\ cr quc:-tions. It was a
'er) mm ing experience for
me to '"&lt;Ilk through the
halls of our executne man"ion."
The group then '&gt;topped
outside Ford's Theatre
briet'ly before going to

.,;i~-v

'
1I

l,

l 'I
'

'

;

•

,

~,.1"-1

,

.

-----

~.....,.i

n Station for lunch grade - aD in HistOf)'.''
( lnformmion and photos
o,hoppmg. The "eckend tour ended With a final prO\'lded. by Gma Tilli:~from
':itOp at the Nauonal Ohio Vallev Chnsrian
Archi\e'), the official stor- School.)
age and display location for
our nation's most important
OrH!lllal documents, including~ the
Articles
of
Confederation,
the
Constitution. the B1ll of
Righb, Declaration of
Independence.
the
Louisiana Purch.1~e papers,
the
Emanctpation
Prodamation and other::..
·'There were many intere~ting document.. on dbplay at the National
Archi\ es."
commented
Ttllis
"I found J .F.
Kenned) '!&gt;report card from
Han ard 'ery interc::.ting.
He had all B'.., and C's on
his report card for the four
years there. except for one

l

.m

r-1

$5.00
Coupon off
uxedo Rental
Ex.p May31

The Fabric Shop
&amp; Jim's Formal Wear
Pre.vrnts:
Uuild-A 1usrdu t\li' &amp; Match tuxedos and lU.W 'orie'
to crtatc \"OUR lllimatt 1\nrdo at

"wwjimsformah,ear.com
l-og on nnd choo.;r ~om jacktt, shirt, pan h. tit,
\l'~t nnd 'hocs .

\\e \\ill measure, fit and make sure
you look great on )OUr PROM NIGHT!
Don't drhe out of to\\n.
SaH~ time and money shop local.
ORDER EARLY

The Fabric Shop

www.mydailysentinel.com or
www.mydailytribune.com

110 West Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
Open Mon.- Sat. 9:00 - 5:00

\.

�~unbap

PageC6

\lthnes ·i&gt;entinel

Sunday, March 21, 2010

D ES I GN I NTE R VEN TI ON
'11m week ha.-. brought on
a burst of sales in the accessory catcgoa) for some odd
reason. Don't get me wrong,
I am not complaining but I
am a bit puulcd by it.
II seem&lt;&gt; a), though one
person alter &lt;lllOther has
been looking for something
to &lt;;pruce up their homes. I
am guc~sing that it must he
bcc&lt;~usc Spring is in the air!
I have noticed people picking out pc~le "ih.tJcs or pink
and aqua nnd yellow in
everything from cnndles to
table scnrvc~ and runner&lt;&gt;.
Something about this time
of year makes people want
1 to force the springtime
ms1de'the housc!lt is a good
I time to begin thinking of
1 perkmg up our homes a ht1 tic. There are so many mce
accessories out there to
choose from.
In the stores that I work
m, it just feels brighter and
more cheerful looking at
these items that are for
sale. I can understand completely, wanting to feel that
\HIY nt home. There are a
lot of things that we can
do. Let's begin by replacing some things ...

Carla
Wamsley

It·~ time to put away the
cinnamon and spice fra~runced candles and bring
111 some fresh and clean
smells. Anythmg that says
''l inen''
or
"Clean
L~undry" is a good choice
for the bed and bath areas.
Citrus and green fragrances
are wonderful in the
kitchen, and some light florats will work in the living
and family rooms.
• Another way to bring
some freshness to your
home is to pick up some
new table linens for your
informal eating areas. The
kitchen table or bar area
could usc some new springinspired placemats and napkins and why not add a few
new dishes in the palest
shades of green? (Green
works with about anything!)
Onl! of my favorite looks
in the kitchen is. an apothe-

cary Jar filled ~llh lemons.
There is a lot to choose from
in artificial fruit these days,
and 1t is amazing how realistic it looks!
Other ideas for those large
glass jars mclude artichokes
or limes or rna) he even jelly
beans in layers of color (you
know, lil\e sand art!) Dried
beans, peas, und corn layer
very well abo.
I always have a de~ire to
buy new towels and &lt;;heets
in the spring, and if you
have been reading my column, you may have figured
out that my favorite is white
for this category. I Jove
white because you can
bleach them and they stay
lookmg so mce. I also love
the crisp freshnes of ~hite
sheets! I reahze it may partly just be in my mind, but
let's face it: it's all about
''perception.'' So, do what
''feels'' like fresh and new to
you. It may be pale pastel
toweb and some shabby
chic floral sheets that lift
your spirits.
Speaking of "Shabby
Chic," thi~ time of year al~o
makes me Jon~ for the
"Cottage Look.· I don't

plan to totall) redecorate
but I always gravitate to the
cream colored birdcages
and whitewashed baskets in
the spring.
I'm sure there are certain
things that make you feel
like Spnng. too. Hgurc ou
what they are and i1
rate them into you
home.The next mundane
task of shoppin~ for groceries should mclude a
fresh bouquet of flowers
for your home. Nothing
makes you feel more like
spring than fresh flowers
How about a fresh bouquet
in everv room? Pretty soon
your whole house will feel
like new!
So throw open those windows, let the fresh air in and
oh, one more thing... A
beautiful Spring wreath on
the front door to welcome
you home every day!
(Carla Wamsle} has been
an interior designer for
Tope 's Furniture for ten
rears and is the owner of
Sitting
Prell)
Design
Boutique in Jack5on, Ohw.
Contact Carla by vi~iting
her website, "ww.sittingprettydesigm .net.}

Strategize for a speedy
Some options for selling unwanted stuff •
spring cleaning
(l·amil) Features) - Spnng time ushers in wnrmer
\\Cather and the prom1se of outdoor activities. But, for
many. it also bnngs the mcpressible urge to stay inside to
clean a~ a) the dust and d1rt that have collected during the
v. inter months. Whether you like to cour the house for a
top-to-bottom buffing or you prefer to spread shorter cleanmg sess1ons O\er Se\eral weeks, spring cleaning doesn't
ha' e to be a b1g chore.
Cleamng expert Linda Cobb, host of DIY-Do It
Yourself Net\\ ork's "Talking Dirty With the Queen of
Clean:· J...no~s first·hund the struggles of maintaining a
clean home and tackling spring cleaning. Here are some
of her fa\ orite tips to make this endeavor successful and
short:
Don't dean ) our clutter. Spring is a great time to look
through each room and remove things you don't need or
don't use. Your housecleaning will bl! faster and easier w1th
fewer items to scrub. Hold a garage sale to sell umvantcd
items or donate them to a local charity.
Trim )Our prod uct collection. Before diving in, gather all your cle.llling!.roducts together and then get rid of
"hat ) ou don't nee . The cleaning aisle may be teeming
V.ith specialty productl'&gt; that promise to perform miracles.
but you can a\ 01d spcndtng extra cleaning time and
tnoney b) using a mult1-purpose cleaner. Look for versatile products that you can u-.e 111 all the rooms of your
hou'&gt;e and on many appliances and surfaces, like PineSol Cleaner. '' hich can e\ en be used on hardwood floors
and furniture. Addmg a fe\\ capfuls to a spray bottle will
go a long ~a).
Str ategize )Our scru b d on n. Ju5t thinking about tackhog an ent1re home ~ith all of its nooks and crannies can
be O\erwhelmmg. To moth ate yourself, start your ~pring
cleaning in the 10om that requires the least effort. You'll
finish qu1ckly, ~ h1ch w1ll gh e you a c;ense of accomplishment and )Ou'll be read) to tackle another more
challenging room.
Gadgets get grimy. Some of the dirtiest things in your
home arc thing&lt;; that most people never think of cleaning.
Use a multi~purpose ~olutlon to wipe down ) our remote
controls. game controls, docking stations, cell phone,
blackbetT) and iPod5. Wash the globes on overhead light
fixtures and dust light bulbs: it ~ill make the room look
cleaner ctnd brighter. Don't forget to do the same to your
iJUr&lt;&gt;e and bnefcase. ~ hich visit so many dirty places every
day and land on the k1tchen counter. .
.
Spruce up '~ ith a scent. Make cleamng less ted1ous by
using your fa\onte scented cleaners throughout the house.
Tf) lavender to soot.he moods or. u c.itrus sc~nt.like orange
or lemon. to hft spmts nnd energw! 111 the kitchen or rooms
\\here children play.
Stmple strategies like these can help you get your cleanmg
done so you ha\e time to enJOY all that spring ha-, to offer.

Rome to display ancient
Greek silverware
ROME (AP) -A collection ?f an.cient G~eek sil.verware

dating to the third century B.C. 1s go11~g on d1splay 11~ R&lt;!me
after being returned by the t-.letropohtan Museum 111 1\:ew
York, officials srud Fnd•'Y~
.
.
The 16 pieces of s1lverware. With go~d deta_tl \~'ere
returned as part of Italy's aggrcss1~e cnmpa1gn agamst tilegal trafficking in anuquittcs. They mc~ud~ two lar~e bo~ Is,
&lt;I cup w1th t\vo h,!ndles .. plates ~nd dn_nkmg utensils. .
Italian art offic1ah; sa1d the p1eces fOfr!l one of the most
important Hellcmst1c silvenvare collectiOns to have sur' 1ved from Sicily. The pieces are known as ''The
Morgan tina Treasure · after the name of tht: ancJent. Greek
settlement where they ~ere excavated, near \\hat 1s OO\\
the Italian city of Aidone.
.
Angelo Bottini. the archaeology supen!ltendent ~~~Rome.
t;,tid the objects ~ere hkely craftc~ by different artists a!ld
sened different functJOns. Some. hke th~ la~e bo~vls wllh
mask shaped feet. were likely used to nux \~me wnh water
during meals: other'&gt;, like the plates, were hkely used durmg ceremonies, officials smd.
The pieces came bad. a.;; part of a deal With ~he Met that
nlso led to the return of the Euphromos Krater. a 6th-century B.C. painted vuse tiMt io; widely regarded as one of the
finest examples of its ki nd.
, .
They will go on display al the Musco Nazwnale Romano
in the Itnlian capital from Saturday through May 23. The
$.how then moves to Stcily.
.
Italy h.ts been aggres~; i vel ) campaigncJ to rc~ovcr antiquities it says were looted from the country "~1d sold t~
museums world~ ide It has secured th~ return ot ~oLcns ol
Roman. Greek and Etruscan arufa~ts 111 ~!cab "1th m,use:
ums mcluding the Met and Caltfomta s J. Paul Gett)
Mu~um.
.
Jn exchange.ltalian .~rt olficials have agreed to g1\c longterm loan-, of e&lt;Juully significant treasures.

Bv DAN

Kate Finger. general man- children's used clothing
Crowell said the business.
started in 1994. prices con- ager of 15 Plato's and Once enables her to replace them
signment items to sell so that Upon a Child stores in the with used clothing she wouldSpring for many homeown- customers quickly get their Cmcinnati area, said sales at n•t be able to afford ne''·
ers means confronting all the 50 percent take. It also offers the suburban Colerain
"\\'hat they don't buy. then
things that have filled up the pickup and other services to Township store jumped 24 I take it on to Goodw1ll." srud
closets, basement and garage make it easier for sellers.
percent last year after a 32 Kim Patterson, a suburban
O\ er the past ) ear. As the late
Minneapolis-based percent rise in 2008. But mom who had just sold some
comedian George Carlin used Wmmark Corp. has been that means it needs a steady of her two children's jeahs.
to say: "Your house is a P,ile opening dozens of new supply of more good stuff to
Goodwill
Industries
of stuff wtth a CO\ cr on ll. •
resale :stores, including sell, so employees try to International Inc.. the
Getting nd of that stuff Plato's Closet, and outlets make sure eve!')' buyer Salvation Armv. and other
has always been tncky that buy and sell used chil- understands they can also charities prov-ide another
especially if you hope to dren's clothing, sporting bring their own used clothes opt10n: They can help give
come away with some cash. goods and musical items. A - the chain looks for still- vour clothing. furniture,
Today, because of the Hollister ~hirt in nice condi- trendy, new-looking items books and other items
Internet and the reces.-,wn, tion that sold for $30 new ~ for cash on the spot.
appreciative new homes
there are more option&lt;; than might land the owner $5 to
Lena Elam, a regular at the while you support their
ever for trying to sell used $7 from Plato ·s. which then Plato's store in Colerain, said humanitarian efforts - nnd
items. To ne\\ spa per classi- might sell it for $13 to S 15. being able to sell her three can also get a tax deduction.
fied ads, garage sales and
flea marketr., add Facebook,
Craig's List, eBa) and other
online trading sites. To
pa\\ n shops and consignment shops. add an expanding array of re ale stores
that pay cash on the spot.
Laura Deaton Morarity,
~ho ~as preparing to move
recently to a new public
relations job m Seattle. was
n little stunned at how much
she had acquired in her
Cincinnati-area home after
living there just four years.
"It wns just a ton of stuff.
My husband and I just
decided, 'We're selling
ever) thing' c:xcept our
clothing. books und some
keepsakes," ~he recalled.
But in the middle of a bad
winter, how do vou do that
yuickly'?
•
Her solution: a virtual
yard sale on Faccbook. She
posted a photo album on the
social networking ite and
alerted her friends and family, ~ ho also got their
Facebook friends mvolvcd
in the buying.
Jn 24 hours. Mornrity sold
~cnQ-Eiastomeric
everythin~ she listed: couch.
chair. dming room set,
f lmescats,TV stand and more.
"It was really kind of
I shocking how fast it \\Cnt,"
she said, adding that she
priced to sell hut came away
with enough ca:-h and sa\ing~ on moving expenses
for a head start on stocking
a new home.
Tighter household budgets
mean that not only are more
people buyins used. but the)
also are holdmg on to thing~
longer, increasing demand
for good-qualitv resale items.
"We arc nttracting more
and more customers that
never went to resale before,"
:-;aid Renae Blonigen, brand
director for the Plato's Closet
chain. which buys and sells
&amp;
used youth clothing. "We
were doing well before the
recession, and tha1 has really
exploded our business."
Johnny Cro\.\ell. a coo~ ncr
of the
Home
Con-.ignment Center. a 16store chain based in Danville,
Otlif.. abo said lhat sak~ arc
up while lcwer people arc
offering their solas, dining
room sets and other fumiture
for consignment.
" I suppose it'~ because
fewer people £11 c moving or
upsizing," said Crowell. I lis
stores have added to their
inventory through furniture
factories and other steady
sources.
S EWELL

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Dl

Farm • Grtrdcn, t•ng~ D6

Sunday, March 21, 2010

WITH
WHOLE GRAIN RECIPES

·.--~I"~~' )ll,,l_1.t,..

•· ~

Heart-healthy ideas the whole family \Viii enjoy
"ild Rice Prima' era
Prep l1mc 10 m nute
(ookmg f1mc 20 m nute

a.nd" ~

e8 n
rec pc, allo\\ }OU to
celebrate and 'lOt feel b'U lt;y •he n l(! day 1:-ec::u e cac.h 1s hearthealthv and p eked \\ th t t;y ' .. •etables or rnut "
for more rec.1pe 1deas, v1s1t L-nclcBcn..' ~..om.

Sene 6
1 bo1 (6 ounces) l nell' Ben' Long
Gn4n &amp; \\ 1ld Rice Original
Recipe
3 1 2 cup fat-free. reduced odium
chicken broth, dhided
clove garlic. minced
teaspoon Italian seasoning
cup bnb) carrot , cut into small
coins
cup zucchini. cut Into half moons
cup ) ellon squn~h. cut into half
1110011~

Other eas) ideas to get \\hole grains on
the dinner table
Je ra1'1 n(;e to
erol..: d -.hes
11" nn ted gram

• \lix and \latch: M1x TO\\ 1 nd .,.. It terce together to
1ntrodu~.: \\ ho 1.. •ram to k1ds
• \\hole Grnin Uessrrt: Make ~reamy nee puddmg w1th
\\hoi ~m ·n l'h..C for a t 1sty d scrt

cup chen: tomatoes. hahcd
eup asparagus, diced
I. Empt:r the contents (rice and seasoning
packctl of nee box into a saucepan along
.,.. ith 2 I 2 cups chtcken broth and bring
to n bo1l Reduce heat to medmm-low
und s1mmcr, CO\ered, for 20 minutes.
2 Mcarmh1lc, m a separate sk11let, heat
thc.rcm:.llnmg cup of chicken broth O\ er
medmm heat. Add gnrhc und ltahan
seasonmg Once te:~m begms to rise
from the broth. add carrots, 7ucch1m,
quash and tomatoes and reduce heat
shghtly to med1um-lo\\, CO\ cr and heat
for 5 mmute-s
3 Carefully rcmo\e the hd and add asparagus Coven\ nh hd and ~team for another
2 mmutes Remo\e the hd and tum off
the heat
4 Once tht' n~e hu~ cookt'd for 20 mmutes,
pour the nee 'mto the skillet WJth the
vegetables and toss to eombme.
"Jip: Sen c thts heart healthy recipe "1th
ham for a spec1al fnm ly meal

Long Grain &amp; \\ ild Rice, Lentil and Pomegranate Pilaf

Mediterranean Stuffed
Portobello 1ushrooms
Prep T1me: 5 minutC"S
Cooking T1me. 40 minutes
Sen es: 6 to 8, depending on the stze of the
mushrooms
cup Uncll' Ben' i\atural \\hole
Grain Rro\\ n Rkc
1 tablespoon oil
1 cup onion, diced
1/2 cup green peppers, dked
2 cups IO\\·fat, redun•d sodium
chicken broth
1/2 teaspoon dried on•gano
1 can (2.2:' ounce ) sliced htJck olh es.
diced
1/2 cup cherr) tomatoes cut into small
pieces
I rup reduced fat fcta cheese
1/4 cup par)IC)
6 to 8 portobello mushrooms
I. In a "aucepan, add oil O\ er medmm hc:~t
Add onions and green peppers and brown
shghtl) for about 3 mmutes
2. Add brown rice and dned oregano along
\\lth 2 cups of low-fat ch1cken stock to pan
and bnng to a bml. Co\ er nnd 1mmer for
25 minutes.
3. Preheat the O\ en to 400 F LD} 6 to 8 mushrooms on 8 bakmg sheet, top do\\ n Remo' e
the stems (tfthey ha\e them) \\tth u spoon
4. Contiruc to prepare the tillmg by surrmg
in black oli\es. cheiT) tomatoes, fetu cheese
and parsley into the cooked ncc
5. Spoon &lt;.&gt;qual pontons ofnce mixture m)to
the middl~ of each of the portobe) h) mushrooms und bake for 12 to 15 llllllllll'S.
6. R~movc mushrooms \\ nh a spatuht und
"'~Cr\\~·.

Tip: Makes a Mlictoth heart-healthy mc,1lthnt
everyone \\ill enJoy. (m~.tt for cntertnming!

Long Grain &amp; \Vhd Rice.
Lentil and Pomegranate Pilaf
Prep T1me: 30 m.nutc:.
Senes· 8
1 box l 'nde Ben's Long Grain &amp; \\ ild
Rice Herb Roa~ted Chicken
J tablespoon olhe oil
I
1 112
I
314
1/.t
.\14
3
114
J/2

cup chopped onion

tablespoons chopped garlic
ground cumin
teaspoon ground cinnamon
tl·aspoon ground all\pice
cup lentils. rin~ed and picked o'er
cup' )\ ater
cup chopprd par~le)
cup plus 2 tablespoons chopped
drird cherries or fresh
pomegranate ~eeds* from
I pomegranate
1/4 cup toasted pinl' nut~**
1. Heat oh\ e 011 in a saucepan Add onion and
saute O\Cr med1um heat lmlll translucent,
about 3 to 5 mmutes Add garhc, ptce ,
nnd lcnuls. ttmng to e'enl) coatlent1ls.
Add nee, sen!&gt;omng packet and \\ater Bring
to 8 bo1l O\er h1gh heat. Reduce to a nnmer and cook. co,ered, for ~5 mtnutes or
untJIIiqu1d IS absorbed.
2 Fluff" ith a fork, 'tir m pa~k). 1 2 cup
dned chemcs or pomegranate seeds and
pme nuts. Gam1~h \\ ith remainmg 2 tablespoons of dned chem&lt;.'~ or pomegranate
seeds. en c hot.
*lode- ccd a pomegranate. cut off the crown,
tbout I mch. Sl·ore the pomcgranat~ by cuttmg into the skin from lx)ttllrn to top to m&lt;lke
s1x :;Cdton:.. Soak tll~ pomcgran.lt~ 111 '' ater
for 5 mmutc~ . Once soaked, break the fruit
npa11, lcttmg the 'ecds smk to the bottom of
the ho" I. The skin nnd mcmbmnc \\-til llont to
the lop. J1scard. ~tram seed!&gt; from the \\Uter.
**To toast pme nuts. preheat o\en to ~U5°F.
Spread nuts on n cook1c ~heet and bake for 10
nunutcs or unt1l hghtl) bro\\ncd and fragrant.
tea~poon

Rcc pt' en
(.I f1 8Nr

J

\

, 1 h Prrstnn 8atlr1

,

&lt;'\'CIIt dt:nr:n

r nr

�Page 02 • &amp;unllap Ql:im~ -&amp;entfnel
I'

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sunday, March 21 , 2010

\!Cribttlte - Sentinel l\egister
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' . .,t ...
·~·· ~~
~
.,

.

Meigs County, OH

In One Week With Us
mdtclassif~d~;.~~!uytrlmme~om REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
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Call TOday... or Fax To (740) 446-3ooa
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To
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m:

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GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LIKE AD NOTICED
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Borders $3.00/per ad
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Monday thru Friday
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POUCtES· otllo Yall.y Pub 11111~ reM!'Vlla tho ngnt to eel II. re~ «cancel onv IICII1 any tltnt- Error• mum be reponed on lhe nrst day ol pwtb:l011and
TrlbmQ.SIIICinel~latcr Y.1JI be respontlllle rcr no morelllen tno C08t of tno sp.co or:c:upled by the enor and only the nl'lllnserllan. We erv. no1 be I able let
tny 1oM or~ thll resUite from 111e pllbllcatlon or om1101on oltn adve&lt;tloemtm Correction will be madaln the 111'11 arar.:!b e eclll on • Sox nvmbct edt
are olwa~ conlldtmlll • Cwrent rate canl nppuu ·All real
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tiCCOPI• only l'lelp w.~I'Qd alb meet!~ EOE ~~~ancsards. We will not kl10111f'GIY •ocePIIIIY eavertlllng In violatiOn ol tho I:JW W.P I'Wll be retpOnG!biO 101 IllY

"'ate

trrora In 1n 14 taktn ovtr tilt phone

«POLICIES«

Card of Thanks

AMOUncements

Notices
NOTICE OHIO V.ALLE'Y
PUBUSHNG CO

our family and friends
who were so kind during
our recent loss.
special dwnk yout
the Trinity l!nited
Methodist women,
Rer.llob Powell, the
McCoy-Moore Funeral
/lome and Holzer Senior
Care.Also 10 the caregil•ers
Diana Allen and Lisa Kemp
ami the neigllbor watch
~olzmteers.Also, to the pall
bearcn, those who sent
flo'K ers, memorials,food
and other expressions for
Stn)path} and concern.
The Family of
Thelma Barnes Murray

ntlnei-Reg ster wl

,.

Card of Thanks
200

Ohio Valley
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refeet or cancel any
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eported on the firs
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nd the Trlbun
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e than the cost o

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gat·
GUN SHOW GALI.IPO
LIS Ho day Inn Apr I 10
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~ oo 6
TBLS s2s 740.667~12
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have been
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must be picked
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The.•.

CLASS IFl EDS!1
St: pea orange cat to STIHL Sales &amp; SeMc:e
g vea.,-ay to good home NllW A~ able at C
or I :m Good w c!' idren chae
74().446-2412
740-446-3248

700
Wanted to do Lawn
Ce e
Indoor &amp; outdoor
pamling 304 675-7324 o
'304-593-5 I 30
Wanted to Mow Lawns.
1ttle or b g enos. rEl ab c.
reasonable rates
Call
74Q-256· 6251

We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertlsement
I
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Fann Equipment

Pets

Agnculture

Timothy
Hay
rourod
bales S35 00 ea Ca
74()-339·3203
900

Legals ........................................................100
Announcementa ....................................... 200
Birthday/Anniversary ..............................205
Happy Ads... ..... • .... ...............................210
Lost &amp; Found ..........................................215
MemoryfThonk You.. ............................... 220
Notices ....... ._. ................................225
Personals. .... . • ..................................230
Wonted •. ....... .... •. .. ... ... •• _,, ......... 235
Services. ...... ... • ... ... ........ .................. 300
Appliance Service..... •• ............. ... ..••302
Automotive. .... • • ••• • ............................. 304
Building Materials .............................. 306
Business .................................................. 308
Catering.................. ...........................310
Child/Elderly Care ................................... 312
Computers ................................................ 314
Contractors ...........................................316
Domestlcs/Jonltorlal ...................................318
Electrical ................................................... 320
Financial......................................................322
Hoalth ........................................................... 326
Heating &amp; Cooling .................................. 328
Homo Improvements 330
Insurance ................................................... 332
Lawn Service ............................................ 334
Music/Dance/Dramo .................................... 336
Other Scrviccs.............................................338
Plumblng/Eicctrlcal .....................................340
Prolcsslonol Servlcos .................................342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roollng .........................................................346
Sccurlly....................................................... 348
Tax/Accounting ........................................... 350
Travel/Entertainment ..................................352
Financial ....................................................400
Financial Servlces .......................................405
lnsuronce ................................................... 410
Money to Lend .............................................415
Education .................................................500
Business &amp; Trade Schoul ...........................sos
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng .................................510
Lessons ...................................................... 51 5
Personal ...................................................... 520
Anlmola ..................................................... 600
Anlmol Supplle:~ ..................................... 605
Horses ..................................................... 610
Llvestock......................................................61 5
Pets...........................................................620
Want to buy...............................................625
Agriculture ..............................................700
Form Equipment .......................................705
Garden &amp; Produce ....................................,710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain .............................. 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
Want to buy ......................, ..........................725
Merchandise ................................................ 900
Antiques ......................................................905
Appliance ................................................... 910
Auctions ...................................................... 915
Bargain Baaement....................................... 920
Collectlbles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
EqulpmenVSupplles ....................................935
Flea Markets ................, ............................... 940
Fuel 011 Cool/Wood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture ..................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport ....................................955
Kld'e Corncr.................................................960
Mlscelloneoua..............................................965
Want to buy..........................................970
Yard Sole ....... ••• ..... • .. ... ..... ....... ..... . 975

'

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................ 1005
Blcycles......................................................101 0
Boats/Accessories ................................... 101 5
Csmpcr/RVs &amp; Trallers ..............- ............ 1020
Motorcycles ...............................................1025
Other .........................................................1030
Want to buy ..............................................1035
Automotive ....................., ....................... 2000
Auto Renta!ll.ease.....................................2005
Autos ................_. ....................................2010
Classic/Antiques ..................................... 201 5
Commercial/Industrial ........................_ .., 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories .................................2025
Sports Utllity..............................................2030
Trucks.........................................................2035
Utility Trailers ........................................... 2040
Vans ......................................................... 2045
Want to buy ............................................. 2050
Real Estate Sales .................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots ......................................... 3005
Commercial............................................... 30t0
Condominlums .......................................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses 1or Solo.........................................3025
Land (Acreage) ..........................................3030
Lots ............................................................3035
Want to buy ................................................3040
Real Estate Rentals ................................... 3500
ApartmentsfTd'wnhousos ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................35t 0
Condomlnlums .......................................... 35t5
Houses lor Rent ....................................... 3520
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage......................................................3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Housing ............................. 4000
l.ots .............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals .................................................... 4015
Sales ..........................................................4020
Supplles ................................................ 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property ........................................ 5000
Resort Property lor salc ........................... S025
Resort Property for rent... ................... .• 5050
Employment..............................................60[)0
Accounting/Financial ...............................60[)2
Administrative/Professional ....................60[)4
Cashier/Clerk ............................................ 60[)6
Child/Elderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ...................................................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Delivery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ................................... 6018
Employment Agoncles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................ 6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted· General ................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................ 6032
Monagemonl/Supervlsory ........................ 6034
Mcchanlcs ..................................................6036
Mcdlcal .......................................................6038
Muslcal .......................................................6[)40
Part-Time-Temporaries ............................6042
Restaurants .............................................. 6044
Sales...........................................................6048
Technical Trades .......................................6050
Textiles/Factory ........................................ 6052
ft...

Eq_

Merchandise

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Prof.uional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fea Unless We Wr.'
Hl88·582·3345

or

BULLETIN BOARDS
RVHS Class of 2000
10 Year Aeun on
Saturday, May 29 2010
7 00. 11.00
Elks Farm off St At 588 Ga po 1s
Cost S20.persor Catered by The
Wounded Goose Soft drtnks proVKled
Other beverages welcoMe OJ &amp;
Karaoke RSVP by Way 1 2010 Send
$20 I person to Ahson Ter'Y 534
Charolals Lake Or B dwe OH
45614
Send quest1ons or comments to
rvhs2000reunlon@ yahoo com

Luscious Luncheons @

The Merry Wtnery
March 23 11 30 a.m • 2 00 p m
Call The

PARKFRONT DINER
@ 446-1251 Or
The Merry Winery @ 245-9463
Eqr Reservations Or More Info
Gnlled Chtcken Or Gnlled Salmon
Caesar Salad S10 95
Summer Shnmp Capelhm $12.95
Steak on a St1ck $12.95

�+•-

Sunday, March 21 , 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

[n~1mr ~~ntin~l Rr~1~m

&amp;unbap 'O!:im~ -&amp;tntfntl • Page 03

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

.

:l

MARKETPlACE

ClASSifiED
Announcements

,Announcements

:FRANCHISE
OPPORTUNITY
YOUillll) qu.tlil~ to 0\\11

PETLAND GALLIPOLIS
• A Grl'at I oc.ttion (Next to \Valmart)
• Complete 'I ruining
• Exclu~ive Products
• Fmnncing Assistance for Qualified
Crmdtdates

Call (800) 221-5935
for ntore inforrnation
\\ \\\\ .petland .com
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Mlscelloneou'

6

2 1/2 Dollar lnd&lt;an Gold
Co4n 1909 $200, Also
1899 Plain, Morgan 511·
ver
Dollar,
Looks
B U ·$175
74().533·3870

8

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
In stock. Call Ron
Evans 1·800·537-9528
Carpet Safe Free lrstal!allon on spectal orders
O;~ve a little save a lot
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastem Ave, Gall pols
OH (740)446-7444
FREE 12 X 20 metal
bldg
exchange lor
clean up after rerroved
740-446-9490

Sale
Berber
Carpet
5 95yd • Speda on •
rtyl n SIOCk-dnve a I tile
save a lot Molloh n Car·
pc1 2212 f:astem Ave
Ga po IS
OH
(740)
446-7444

Experienced I.I'N needed Full Time

Requirement :
• Current Oh1o I 1cen'e
o Dcpendublc/ Good Ancnduncc Record
• References
o Experience .1s I I'~ &lt;i• least I ) 1,
o Ureal communiL.ttion skills
• Good customer/ P.ttient Relations
o Computer slalls
Mml rcplic~/ resumes to:
Fnmil) &lt;h)gcn and 1\lcdicnl
E&lt;Juipmcnt
70 Pine trect
Gnllipolis, O H 45631
ttn : H.R. Dept
l&gt;cadlinc I March 3 1st, 2010

FIND A JOB OR A iNEW
CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

Swir-lm ng

pool

ground 4 yrs old Very
good cond $750 Call
388-1122 lot rrore Info
WontTo Buy

Absolute Top Dollar - s1l·
vertgold
co1ns,
any
10KI14K/18K gold jew·
elry, dental gold. pre
1935
US
c~.orrency.
proof m n·
sets.
doa·
monds MTS Co n Shop
151 2nd Avenue GalltpoiiS 446-2842

MONDAY TELEV.I SIOIN GU:I DE

BLJYing St hi Cha nsaws
any ldnd IOf parts &amp; ropar
nnrnng or not

•

74().794·'188

Reaeatlonal

1000

Vehicles

ATVa
2008 Artll: Cat 700
seater ' wrenct1
shleld mag Wheel
new $7000 or trade

HI 2
wmdltke
for 4

WDp1ckup
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Call304-882·3121 .
93 4-wheeler Kaw 300
CC 2JI4 WIHIQh &amp; Low
Range-New Tires $1000
firm 74().645-5174

0

MT SECTION HEAD
Pie sant Va ley Hosp1tal currently
openmgs fdr a full-ttme MT Section
Head Three years experience in
M1CIOb1ology. WV license required.
be able to work all shifts, holidays and
weekends.
Please send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dr.. pt_ Pleasant. WV 25550
o r Fax to (304) 675-6975 or
apply on-l ine at www.pvalley.or,

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trollers

RV Servtee
ct13e!

Ca

at

•

Tra ors

74().446-3825

Motorcydes
94 Harley DaVIdson Soft·
tal
446-9585
()(
446-9595

2000

Automotive

Autos
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

~

2000
Ford
Windstar,
Auto A?C runs ooks
good,
askong
$2 100
OBO Call 740-446·4122
or339·0636

Scenic Hills

Director of Nursing
f LDJ
f

stro

I m1 Olm expcneiiC'R
f)C.nl

T)

!:'.pm ('(;

•~s.mry •F.. lltnrflupacbgtw/ 401k
·lnc!ntiYf and llon&amp;u package
• ~ lJC w/ Ccrpomt Support baste! In Olllo
~ilptMt S«nk Hilb, Sallt Mmhaii, LNHA

311 Buck Ridgt Road. BidwelL OH 45614
{)£moll whcjObs,'&amp;VrlblfhWttlart.com (i CkWne llt.

www.vrablehealthcare.com
Equdl&gt;pport

Help Want ed

y E~

Help Wanted

Customer Service
We have an openi ng for a fulltime customer service position.
Successful applicant muMbe
people oriented, pleasant
telephone etiquette. professional
and dependable. Mu t have
experience in com puters. and
enjoy working with numbers.
Position offers all company
benefits including health and life
insurance, 40 l K. paid vacation
and personal day:-;.
For employment consideration,
send resume to:
Pam Caldwell
c/o Gallipolis Dally Tribune
825 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH 45631

HOLZER
CLINIC

Vans
Dodge
Grand
Caravan sl ver 6 cyt
I ke new, to much car for
2008

Grannv 74().949-2202
3000

see
we

Real Estate

Sales

For Sole By Owner
106 Mabelhne Dr. Galli·
polls. 2BR, 1BA. Full
Basement
Remodelod
k11er on. 1 Car Garage.

Looi\lng to p~.orc.hase 20
to 60 acres of good hunt·
ing land w roa lo build
House for salo t 13 41h cab1n &amp; polo bprr Prefer
Ave. Below $30,000 11'1 IOCBliOn Wllhln 20 to 30
med1a1c possession Ph. mil' from Hotzer Hospi(740) 441 ·5165
tal CA11(419)680·3174.

-::
;:_
·;:~,;,_,.
~::: jSHOP CLASSIFIEDSI
446-0390.

.

Help Wanted

.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

OHIO
lt-11\Fit"lf'\

UTILITY \\70RKER

Oh1o t:mversJt} 1s currently ucccplm' pph..auon for the po'1110n of

part-time regular l Tlll1'1 \\ORKER m

Ta~tht1 ~Management

APPLY
0 N
l I N F
AT·
..., \\ w ohiounh ersllyjobs com/npphc.mh Ccntrnl 1qu1\.kl md 'i6561
JOB D UTIES: Performs general lnbo mduor' and outdoor\ 'I;QTE:

fhcrc is no guarantee on the nun•ber of hour; to lx: worked each \\ cck
Applicant' must demPnstr tiC .1 1\ tlllll •nc~~ to 11 or!.. 11 •th dl\ crsc
population' to bc 'Ucl·c..,~tul \ppl 11.:.1n1s nu1q ha1c • n c'tabltshcd
pattern of good work hutl ll ~ 8llU pcrloltnllll~e !l\ 1\dl ll~ llH"l't
Occ u pational
ll ca lth ;-.t edl~.d standurds for pu,tcd

pnsllinnldas\llic,ttwn and lompleto.: ,, l1o1d; •round c.lwck St.1rung

Holzer Clime '" seckmg encr eu.:. hard
\\Orking and dmcn. full time. 11art 11me
or per diem board certified Ph)sil'al
Th~rapists for our Athrns. Jnckson and
L:m renee Count). Ohio lot•attons
Qualification";

Bachcl01. ,\ t a~ter. or D1 'Ctoral Degree
from ,UJ :-~cacducd
Therap).
Re..,pon~ibilitics :

Maintain current OH license
maintain !\landMds e~tabltshed b) the
APlA reg.trdmg treatments procedures
and profe,~lonal ethtc H.l\e kno\\ ltXIge
of disease proce'' 111 the hum. n.
causa! I\ e factor and ' lueo; of ph\ s1c. I
therop) agent~ 111 tt~ rehct Knm' ledgt:
of pnnc1plcs and prt~cttcc' of Ph) "l~al
Therap). Efkcll\ c pral .md '' ntten
communication
kill'&gt;.
Computer
hterac) F. xccllenl mterpcrsonal ~k1ll
Cont.Kt:
Anu l\lnria l\lcndicta
90 ,Jacksnn l'ikc
Gnllipulis, Ohio 45fl.H
Oflin•: 740-446-59-l'J
umcndil•taCit lulllcrdinil' .wm
"" '' .hnl1l't'dink.cnm

houri) rate" $10.~3
\I'PLI&lt;'ATIO:\ HI• \IHI'I\1.: '-I'IUI.4,2010
All appliratlon~ mu ~llw !lluhmittcclct cctronlcnll~ at:
W\1 ' ' .ohiounh cr,it)joh s.com/applil'.llii V( cnlrul ?(JUick1•inll =5651ll
If you hll\C que~llons 11bou1 th1' posllton, please

email sheppard s ohiO cdu or ~· II 7o.IU 593 OJ 12
Oh io t n il crsh ) Is 1111 h tual O pportuml) \ffrmuti H \ &lt;'lion I· m piO)er

FIND A JOB OR A NEW
CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

•

:
I

�Page 04 • &amp;unbap Qt:httt11·&amp;tntlnel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

~rfbune

l\rgister

KETPLACE

CLASSIFIED

Drivers &amp; Delivery

Help Wanted· General

Asphalt Drivers
needed tn Pt Ploasart
er
mu t be 21 yrs old
or old&lt;;• mu haveCia s
A COL wnh Hazmat En·
dor ment
nd
good
MVR foe:: tnps
ca
1..S00.5 8-6122 for
rrore info

Labors lor •oad construe·
uon weeKly trave m·
qu ed transportat on provldod lor some t•eas
Tractor
&amp;
fror&gt;t-end
loader cxp a p us Va d
DL reqUired St:n ng pay
$9 00 hr Sl.lbmlt app tea·
lions at www slurrypav·
ers co Of rra)j to S urry
Pavers Inc 1277 Moun·
tam Ad RIChmond VA
23060 Sl~.&lt;l"'f Pavers
INc s an equal opportu-

Sales

UQIJid

THE
CLASSIFIEDS
aren't only for
buying or selling
items, you can use
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.
For more information, contad your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

~~nlllpolls

AA New 4 B drourrs

6000

Employment

Electrical I Plumbing
Wanted
Journeyman
P us Electrictlln
subm
r
es Mason
Co:.~nty Fa PO Box 334

MAKf
SOMfONf'S
DAY!

Pt Pleasant WV 25550
dead 11"8

04 15110
Food Services

Dath' {Cnbunc
Clerical

The Daily Sentinel

OffiCe M r
eq rr
hav
computer
- - - - - - - - - 441·7295ur645 371

l:llrnsant i:\rg1stcr

(304) 675-1333

Auction

FIND AJOB
OR ANEW
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

Auction

Auction

GU AUCTION

ESTATE

Snturda.}. \larch 27.2010

AUCTION

10:00 am

Accept ng resumes for
exp FT S&lt;Jbway Mgr 0
new lOcatiOn ~ Ga po IS
Forry WV Salary &amp;
Bans @ lr"OMeW Send
r J:'!le to Mgr C 24968
Last&gt; ey Ad Quaker C1ty,
OH 43n3 or apply on
Ouick line
C
WWN parmar·
t have ;'';::ores:;;;co;;!m~====
ski Is
Help Wanted· General

....-- o:=======

~~~-~

(740) 992-2155

Auction

Truck Dnv r Wan~
Req 2yrs exp
Clas A·COL
Rcsurr~e wl3 Work Ref
Send to
Driver
PO Box 1145
Ga11 pohs OH 45631

OnlY i44J!10

010 s rgteY.
Inc• d ble $19 995
rry'll dwost'lOfll COil'
1408282750

(740) 446-2342

~)omt

Sunday, March 21, 201 0

SAT. March27, 2010
lO:OOA.M.

located at The Ruction Center on Rt. 62n.
or mason w.u.. Due to lack or parking we
haue moued the estate or margaret
Johnson from Rutland Oh. To the fluctlon
Center to be sold Probate no. 201 01 007.

V • "lrlaly
AsSIStant
Bded El\penence pre' r•ed. but Will tra n
PT FT some weekends
req Ired M mum wage

Sand resume to Frcnct&gt;
Towr Veterinary C II' c
360 SA 160 Gallipolis or
fax 74()..44&amp;4101

T

Auction

Maintenance I
Domettic

========

MeigS lnd '185 Inc
h nng part lime crewleadors for J&amp;n tor'al and lawn
ma ntenanco
poc t :ms
expenenco
JCini!Orta custod al
prllf •red Me gs lnd1.1s
tr cs proVIdes serviCeS
tor adt.r.s with develop!"!ental chsab: • es lA t
!lave a vaHd Ohio drivers
lccnse and h gh sehoo'
d p1oma or GED Send
nlly
employer restme to Meigs nd
1 800-966-1812
tnes Inc. PO. Box 307
Need 5 !adiOs to se 1 Syracuse Ohio 45779
Avon Call 446-3358
MecfiGCII

Now h nng bartenders Overbrook Center s Cur·
PancllOS Mex1can Can·
rently accept ng appfJCaUna
uons
for
SJAI.f
e:llllv wi!h
;.-;~
ST
;;.;N;;.;A-...
CN
_A_H_H_A__ I.fSill NursMg As$.$lar&gt;ts for all Shilts, full
Galha Ccvnty Cuun~;ll uro 1me hours ava lab c InAg ng is seeking aides to terested appliCantS ca
provide Home Care and ptek oJP an application or
Personal Care to SeniOr contact Lucy Goff BSN
Clttzens
AN Stat! Development
Ga aa County Only
Coordinator
0
Paid M eage
74G-992·6472 M·F 9a 5p
0 !forentlal Weekend
at 333 Page St, M !ld e·
Pay-Weekend Workers
port Ot&gt; EOE &amp; a partJCJNeeded
pant of the DruQ·Free
Day sh!ft
Workplace Program
No mghts/No ca 1
Pai&lt;l Holidays
Ptotlebotom st Part· TI!Tle
VISIOn/Dental Plan
"MIIlUTlum 2 Years PhJe.
Retirement Plal'l
botomy ExpiOOC9
Apply Sen10r Reso~.&lt;rce
• Must be Cen lied
Centor
• Must havo own trans··
1165StR' 160 Gal po- portatlon
fls
"Part-tlme pos!tion
3
Mon ·Fr 8-4,
hours per day
74D-446·7000, EOE
·Must be available for
5am start
STNAs
Arbors at Ga !pOlls 170 • Expenence '" a hospiP111ecres1 Dnvo, Gal po- tal or laboratol'Y preferred
liS
resume to
Seeking carng and com· Email
JC!netC adl b '181
Fax
passiOI\a!B providers of
267-525-2488 .lob IS logreat SeMOe
cated n West Columb1a
C~.;rrent STNA license reMason County
q~~
Apply at ce; • ·or emBJI
to
fv1anCextendicare com
wwwextend

Bl f \ 1\S RE \I f S1 \IE &amp; I'F.RSO:\ \L
I'ROI'I R I \ \l ( 110:'1;
I fiClltcd 12 milco; \ f or l'ort-;muuth ,"i; II
miles S\\ or Oak Ifill, nt 15055C l irk Run
I \ra Rd., ~outh \\eb,1er. Ohio, 45682
tbchu•cn Oak Hill &amp; South \\ch~1er).
l-oll " St Rt. 140 to I u:l Run l \ rn Rd. to
UCtl

io1UnAY,AI'RII.2.2010 A'I' 10:30 AM I

l:ollrctihlc~

I Amount Of Antii.JUC Qu1lh. Lmen,,
I onl!ubc •er Ba~li.d o d ( om (,nndc.: • RC'
Coo er Qu11t Frame~. l\l,ttcnal.old 1- ~tung
Rod &amp; Reels, 3 G.1l. Crock, 10 GJI Cro~,;k.
.., Gal Chum !-nut Jars, b.1rbed \\Ire I \\n
Cart&amp; Mt rc.:
1 oob &amp; Gorden 'I jllcr

H p Re.1r T111c Tiller 1\a~c.
Craftsm m 16' St.:r I Sa\\, C'nft~l114lr &lt;it d;,
Tool B 1\.Cs
Crathn1 .:m ) H p
10
Culllvuto1. \\ee&lt;l I 11ter, Sk1l S.m. ll.tlld
fools. II d •e Tnt men;, Step I dder \ard
fools, CIJ 1 man Pu'h MO\\c; &amp; l\lo .:
Cnr Sells At t2:110 l'\oon
999 f-ord rauru~ Se 4 Dr All PO\\ cr
117 M1les sh ht lront c.:nd dam e

1ro)bud

EOE:
Unlimited Earning PoAVONI Al Ar as1 To Buy tentlallll
or Se S
Spears 101 5 Bob FM IS looklng
3(14-675-1429
lor the rtght person to
,om o:.~r sales teaM. A
person that lS Interested
a career that affords
100 opportu!llty to gMI
yoursc f a ra so every
no tt&gt; a career where
)'at. re req ed to actua get o;.• ol
office
and n o the p blic a ca·
rccr n the exelt ng and
lll'erestlng fJeld of radiO
If you thlrk you have
what t takes to succeed
in lhls fun and rewardtng
career then erne a re·
sume b pneaceCcon·
norsseurmedlll.&lt;:or!"
Senous qumes only Ex·
pert nee IS p·eferred but
not req ed CoNIOIS·
sour Med a IS an equal
opportunity employer
lnfoC on offers
Your Cereer Starts
Professton Work EnvtHere'!
ronment
Full nnd Part Time PoExec ant Bene! ts Pack
sitions Available!
age
P&amp;d Tra lllQ
E .JP to $12 25 an
Weekly P y and Bonus
hOu after s x nonths
Opportun t1es
Recru t ng Voluntee:s lor
Ma)Or Nonpro' OrgaruCell and Schedule Your
zauons
Interview:
1·888-IMC·PAYU ext.
Weekly Pay + 8ol't.s1
2331
Complete Benet ts Pack·
http:IJ)obs.lnloclslon.c
age at 90 day:;'
om
On Site PhysiCian
LooK1ng for general con·
tracto· m:.~st be ~&lt;:ensed
Cal TODAY'
and
red
contact
nteMeW TOMORROW
Brent Sang at French
Work NEXT WEEKI
C ty Bwlders o· stop 1n
for
appJteatiOfl
304-675-5888

Auction Conducted BY

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Executor: Oana Johnson
304-713·5447 Or 304-773·5185
www.auctionziP.com
r nd

1

Pre ton '\lushmt Auction t r \ppr ll,cr
79 l'1cn't" ( unctcn Rd. Juck on. OH 410(.40 740·
• 286 5868

t nno; Cush Or Ched;. \\ tth ID Mus! h.\ t: a
111k l etter of cred11 unle'~ knO\\ n
to Auc 10n ( o.

~urrcl'l B

NO MATTER
WHAT YOUR
STYLE. ..

Auction

1-ood Scr\ ed Cnndm·ll'd h) :
\u Sumhl) \ut•tiun'

H ESS AUCTION CO .. L LC
.
2596 St. Rt. 13!\ • Sardinia, Ohio 45171
(ilcnn I less (937) 4-th-2455

Bmd Hess (9.n-'4f•·'*455
www.h~SIIUl"tiom:tl.cnm

\\mnc !\1. \\ il,nn. {'\ I
\\\ \uctiomcr #1844
Bn·nt.J. \\ ilson. CAl

\\ \' \uctium·t•r #11!-B
Toll 1- ret•: 1·866-870-5500
\\ehsite:

4h.

®[B

Donald 1:.. Fender. 1~&lt;.
l'rnl• ''''"~' R .11 F tlllr ~rrviu
O,inn• 1 '14H

... THE
NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!
,~

VETERANS AFFAIRS
WANTS TO LEASE
SPACE
The Department of Vet·
erans Affairs desires to
lease
suff1cient
rentable
square
footage to yield 1500 to
2000 usable square
feet in Gallipolis, Ohio
for use as a Medical
Clinic.
The space
muat be on no more
than one floor and can
be provided by new
construction or mod ill·
cation
of existing
space. On-site park·
lng far 16 vehicles Is
required. A lease for
up to Five· Years and
One Five-year option
will be considered.
Space
within
or
fronting on the follow·
lng boundaries will be
considered:
Site located In the city
limits of Gallipolis,
Ohio. Bounded in the
NE by U.S. Route 135,
SW by Mill Creek Road,
within 2 city blocks of
Ohio State Route #7.
A market survey of
properties offered for
lease will be conducted
by VA. Interested of·
ferors (owners, bro·
kors, or their legal

representatives)
should contact Shlr·
man Thomas by phone,
mail, or a-mall no later
than 3:00 P.M. (CST),
March 26,2010, provld·
lng the address of the
site,
Description,
square foot , contact
and owner information
at the following:
Shlrman Thomas
Service
Acqu isition
Center
Department of Velar·
ans Affairs
Suite 400
Murfreesboro,
Tennessee 37129

E
mali:Shlrman.Thomas
@va.gov
Phone: 615-225-3405
The Government Is limIted by law (40 USC
278a, as Amended 10·
1-81) to pay no more
than the appraised fair
rental value for space.
Please note: This ad·
vertisement Is not a solicitation for offers, nor
Is It a request for pro·
posals. A solicitation
for offers may be Is·
sued by the Depart·
ment
of
Veterans
Affairs at a later date.
March, 17, 18, 19, 21,
23, 2010

�Sunday, March 21 , 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Dents Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

&amp;unbap «tmes ·&amp;tntintl • Page 05

CROSSU?ORD
By THO~AS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Search
1 Gang t r
b nd y
un
6 Boase s
2 Regret
state
3 KE!ats
11 Ti x faler'
poem
worry
4 Lackmg
12 'Separate
any I ght
Tables
5 Mo~al
star
cod
13 Molars
6 Out of tho
and
clements
b1cuspids 7 Game
14 Steel plow
cube
8 Opposato
mventor
15 "See yat"
of "sans
17 "Surv1vor' 9 Tarragon
network
or, thyme
18 Cotton or 1 0 Till b1lls
16 Knack
corn
22 Gung·ho 18 Beer buy
23 Cal'l'lera
19 Stratford s
support
nver
27 Up to
20 M ake
now
hner
29 Tale
30 Catch

Tom Batiuk

21 Bar11 tool
24 Casual
stwt
25 Vacc•ne
type
26 Force un1t
28 Was
bohand
schedule
31 "The
Raven
wr ter
34 VCR
1nserts

m1xer
36 Leave
out
37 Verne
captaan
40 Martan•
base
42 Wnter
Lev n
43 Wo rd of
denaal
44 Uno plus
due

3 2 Large

famaly
33 Board
openang
35 Swmdle
38 Canada
flag
feature
39 Last Greek
letter
41 Pencil
part
45 8ound
46 Blunder
47Make
amends
48 EnJOY the
nnk

THELO CKHORNS
HI &amp; LOIS

William Hoest

Brian and Greg Walker

" BE WARNED. LEROY . . . MARCH MADN E~ -5
BRING-5 APRIL ANGER."

Patrick McDonnell

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane
HAPPY BIRTIIDAY for Mondm M !li\22, 2010:

l11is ~ear, 'iOme unanlinpa ed changt"&gt; rould biOI\
throu6h 'yOUr Jte If the t.ltus quo ISll t workinr,. 'ou
m: ht dL'iCOI er l.h.lt E'\ mts will force 'our h.md. L se
~our -;trong communic.Jlion powers Oth rs ''ill fre
that ou care md are ronrefne\.i for them c\5 weD If \ ou
.rre -,mg;e, you rrught be more th;m re~dv to ttle
dmm Dorl't, wttil you h.lVe known th s person for at

•

''I'll show It to you as s oon as I
find It again."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

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le..N vear If rou c1re att.):hOO, n."'p!'ct nch other s d
i'retlet"&gt; So:TlEOI'It' bom under the "&gt;lbfl ( A\;( [ R ,:.m
~} oo dcm"'
5
Slu. 1t ki d of [Jay)' ll H
5-C&gt;o
4~
'~
ll'&gt;
ARIES (March 21 Apnll9
*"**"" )our abill) to mo\'e &lt;1 ptOJM com l n
r meetmg fomard erne~ Others "ill re-;pond
lC'C'OI'din~ You don t need to push m order to M\'e
\'OU"'' .1) Adapt }our st) le to the pn: l 'hru !'lin gt'!
more Jone b) ron..ser. mg enelb) IOrught Out and
about
TAURUS (April :m-1\Ll) 20)
**'*' \\e1gh ihe proo and rons or an t:xpo.•nti!tun.
Decide 1f tlus purch.Lse IS the be-;t one you c.m mako:: It
f01.11lel there is an element of the fmolou~ Ill\ oh ed
&lt;1dmo" ltc 1t. A bos5 ~~also roncemed "1U1 finances
A talk enJJ&gt; ten~ both of )OU. 1bnight Knu1' th Jt\ uu
are 1\:0T e E,,ergtZer Bunn}
GEML'\'1 (Mm 21 June 20)
***'*'* If pcr.&gt;~ible 1\'\&lt;iltnp \our thinking \ \'h 1t
rrught seem Ul"~1ble could be a problem Dt: I ng
w1th others IS fa\ on:'d Llughter ronteS through "1th
fTit.&gt;nd&lt;&gt;. If someon.: IS on \our rrund n .xi! ou tor tht
person Acluld or loved one could be UJX"Onllort.l' e
lorught Fun and g.unt:
CANCER (June 21 July 22
*** 00 )OU feel out of sorts? A\ d m nP \
:nJ)'lr dfOSIOrlS nght nw (&lt;:nm\ mg th t o;onwthmt&gt; bet
ter hes ahead Be a folio\\ cr mther th.m I ad n!;ht
'10\\
ewo; or ll'lfomubon rouki t m,;: ~" peop 111 o
bz Relax and set down tt&gt; br Si I&lt; k 001~

btraR.mdR
U.O l}uJ} 2.3-Aug. :.!2)
**'*'*"* E.r.lpha'&gt;!zc vour pno "' .md \ ou ''
Aet re-.'Ul Don t ~ " ught up m th
C) the
big p cture )ou rrugh "a.nt to do &lt;(lmetlung ' 1'\ di
terentl) from o:her&gt;, but 1 th t'l'ki re.-ult dl'\' ~ m I U'
.md ao:-ept•lhll' lct othu.., ha~t:!herr '' .n Ionight l ru
Ill on\\ rut \OU \\anl
\ IRGO (Aug 23-5ept 22)

*"*'*''*" A dese partner supports vour endea' ors.
)ou ''.!Ill to under;tand more You want more
ili'IS\\ crs Try working through a prob1em m another
manner Lnd~rstanding e\ ol\·e&lt;; after' ou tn out
:10ther ~r'SOO's thought&lt;;. Your v.riJ!.~ to 11 x
oould dt&gt;fme 'CJur ,;ua:ess. Tonight Pushing till the '' ee
hours.
LIBRA (Sept. 23.Q't
*'*"'*"*'* 'ou wonderho" clnd ''il' \OU ha\e
m :le recent doos10ns. Let go of ,ilJt 1S no looger 1\m('boning. Opm up to ditferent concepts, and the world
suddenlv f:,Jazes anew A~ relabOnsh:p becomes
\"en exotmg. Torught l."se your ~tion when
making plans
SCORPIO &lt;Xt 23-!\;o, 21)
*'*'*'*' A. partner or a&lt;;S&lt;..'Q.'lte make; dear that 1t ~
htS '' \ or the higtm .n Win .rren t } ou bsterung? II
) ou want tins relabonship learn to allow both of} ou to
be a&lt;.tl\-e and dea.~1\e G!\'e'up making someone
wrong 1nrough acceptance vou11 grow dOSI'r e\\
?J'i"ibti lles open up lorught Defer. go m th someone
else 1d as.
SAGrrfARIUS (!':0\ 22-Dec 21)
I
** irY Other-; 1\ilJ dommate, 50) OU nught c1S \\ t'lJ
let lhl:m Amid a po''er pla) or a strume Ytrur SL'ih
sen.se kick" m when \ ou l&amp;St expect it:Remembet vou
don't need to re1 eal e' erything. Some opiTUons nught
bt&gt; be..t left uns;ud Tomght E, pre:,s) our upbeat mood
CAPRICOR." lDec. 22-Jan 19)
'*''*''*" 'xlmeonf co:nt.~ to\' ani vou )ou rrught JUdge
~ \ ou .m: mdulgent to this person Re!nembet sug.lr
\\Or~ better than nnegar. You might ''onder a lot
about a p.utner-;h1p Don t \\onder; act. lorught Relax
Do..m\ wiut~'OU\\anl
AQUARIUS UJn 20-F'eb IS)
"* '*'*'*' ) ur (JeT\ nature .lchie' es strong results.. let
} llUT ~nu
fl)ter through dlferent srtwtlons and
r~ ml ;ht find manv re.\.'iOn~ to smile Others bccomt
highh responsl'., LJSten to what 1S bemg s.ud Torught
In lhl' \\ hir \\ind of If&lt;'
PISCES (Feb lQ.Marcn 20)
'*'** Gc?ttmg omg oould t.lke :l enormous effort.
)ou m1ght wond rho" much ISenough'ln all smcen
l\ wu often push bevond vour norm.ll k\ ds Pl~
, IN:
dke bt&gt; e l7re o ) ourself You are under
&lt;;tanbal p ~ure 'llOre than other.; real!7.e Go for
the moment Onigh Head home

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�~--------------~--------------·-------------

PageD6

i&gt;unbap titnes -~entinel

Sunday, March

Watering Wisely

EXTENSION COR TER
BY HAL K NEEN

Tips to properly maintain your garden

Hme )OU heard the Spnng peeper!&gt; (the Hyla crucifer
fro~sl pec.:pmg .tt du:.k? They hmc emerged from winter
htbcmuttOn from under logs and loose bark to signal the
(l·amily Features)
As
coming ol .,pnng and to find a mate'
Yesterd.t) v..ts the fu'St d.t) of spring and th.: dayhght will you 'rc prepptng for your
Illcrease untJl the summer solstice, Junc 21. Tile days are
gardens tlliS spring and
OO\\ longer than night and no\\ we get to enjoy our gathering your rnuch ncede\cnings outside timshing up the yard chores we forgot to ed supplie::. and tools, keep
do l.tst fall and ::.tart on the spring chores.
in mind that 40 pc.:rccnt of
There is still time to prune the fruit trees, brambles and water used during the spring
other deciduous trees unci shrubs around your yard. Prune and summer io; actually used
umm~r bloommg shrub~ (~osc of Shuron) !low and spring outdoors.
bloommg shrubs (fot'S) thta, It lac and pussy wrllows) just after
In fact, as we enter into
the) bloom. Appl) dotmant oil or horticultural 01 1 sprays the summer months, the
when temperatures will remain t\\enty four hours above 40 increase in water use comes
degree~ Fahrenheit to control adult and egg stage of insects during a time of year when
teuon) mus sc.tlc. nMgnoha scale, spider mites. pear psylla). there is nctunlly less water
Lime .,ulfur sprrt) s can be applied to kill San Jose scale on ava1lable naturall) due to
dormant apple trees. Jt is also an effective fungictde to control increased temperatures and
pple scab. powdcl) milde\\ and rust in the earlv spring before plant demand. For this reakaf out. It is also recommended to use on peach crops for son. it's important to ensure
expert
bro\\n rot, scab. and peach leaJ curl. On brambles lime sulfur that all gnrdeners
spra) will help control anthracnose. cane blight and spur blight. or no' ice - hn"e an under•••
standing of gnrden watering
Plan to attend an extension class ··canng For Perennial best practices.
l&gt;lants," on March 22 at 2 p m. or 7 p.m. Learn about selectWhether you're gardenmg: plantmg. fcrtih~mg, rmd ~aring for your favorite ~renni- ing plant~ that are rooted in
nls mclud.mg roses .. mses, .,pnng bulbs. peonies, dayhlies and the ground, in a garden
more. Thrc; class \\tll be held at the Me1gs County Extension bed, or scattered throughoffice locat~ ~t 117_ bast Memorial D_rive in Pomeroy (next out your back porch or
to Holzer Chmc-~c1gs Branch). Cost rs $10 per fan1ily.
patio
in
decorative
•••
planters, it's essential to
~aster Gardeners in Washmgton County are hosting tend to your plants with
thctr 23rd Garden Part). "Green Goodness" on March 25 at just the right amount of
5:30 p.m. at Washington State Commumty College. Learn water without going under
about "K1tchcn Gardening." "Preserving the Veggies, Fruit, or over their needs.
and Herbs.'' "Controling Wildlife" and "i':ew Annuals and Watenng just the right
Perennials." Cost is $15 per person. Registration available amount will help your garform our office or on the internet at Washington County's den flourish, while conserving as much water as
horticulture \\ebsltc \\\\W washington.osu.edu.
•••
possible.
As you core for your
Do )OU want to gro'' h\estock and crops organically? Plan
to attend "Organics 20 1-Developing An Orgamc S) stem Plan plants this gardenmg seaFor Organic Certification'' on March 24 at the Ohio son, here are a few tips to
Department of Agriculture in Re) noldsburg. The cia. s 1s from consider from Ames True
8:30 u.m to 4 p.m. at Bromfield Administration Buildmg Temper:
T ip #I: Follow J'lant
located at 8995 E Main St. Registration is $35 per person..
•••
instruction!&gt;. Read an folAre you a beef producer? Plan to attend the 23rd Annual low the care instructions
Ohio Beef Expo on March 19-21 at the Ohio Expo Center and needs of each plant you
(fan-grounds) in Columbus.111is event is planned for the entire purchase closely.
fum1l) 's entertainment. Educational sessioQS are held Friday
Tip #2: Weather is a facand Sunda). A trade show IS open daily. Junior Showmanship tor. Check the weather in
ic; held on Saturday at 3 p.m. Breed shows are on Friday and your area on a regular bash
beef sales on Saturday bcginnm~ at 10 a.m. For further details, and take note when it's
going to rain or if the terngo on the1r web s1tc at www.ohtobcefcxpo.com .
The first bouquets of daffodils (Easter !lowers) have been perature rises dramatically,
picked. If you h.tve extra. share a few with the shut-ins. it will and remember to water your
certamly brighten up their spirits after the long" inter months. ' plants nccordingly.
(Hal Kneen H the Meigs Cou11t) Agricultural and I Tip #3: Remain consis1\atural Rewurccs Ed~Jcator, Buckeye Hills EERA, Ohio I tent. Incorporate watering
State Umver5it) Extension.)
into your daily routine so
that you're watering the
garden on a regular basis. If
you miss a day. don't over\\ ater the next to com pen-

Fargo floods turn farm I
fields into sprawling lakes

KRAG!"ES. Minn. (AP) - For farmer Brian Thomas.
ketting to town for errand is no simple matter these days
a floodwaten. CO\er fields and secuons of country roads in
the rural area near Fargo, N.D.
He'' ad~ through shallow rapids cascading across his dri' ewa). then dri\ es a mud-spattered pickup on a narro" dirt
road until o much water blocks his path that he mu::.t hop
into a motorboat and putt-putt over a cornfield resembling a
~prawli ng lake. Finally, uhout four nule!&gt; from home, he gets
into his wa11mg car and drives to the neare::.t town.
"It's kind of a hassle," Thomas, 52, said Thursday as he
jerked the rope to restart the boat motor.
As the citie" of Moorhead, Minn .. and next-door Fargo
pervously \\ait for the Red River's expected crest on
Sunda~ at 19.5 feet above the flood stage. some of the
region s farmland is already under water after smaller
nvers, swollen with melting snow, overflowed. Even fields
that aren't buried in \\ ater are so saturated that the) look
like \ast expanses of squish) black mud.
At this point it's mostly an inconvemence. gro\vers say.
Spring planting 1s a month or more away for crops such as
fOm. so) beans and sugar beets. If the rain ho~d~ off and
unusuall) warm temperature~ don't melt the remammg snowpack too rapidly O\er the next fe,, \\ecks. the waters could
recede, enabling a decent or even good growing . . eru.on.

2 1, 2009

sate, as this will simply
flood the roots.
Tip #4: Steer clear of
midday watering. The best
time to water is in the early
morning or evening - not
tfie middle of the day when
the sun is at its highest.
Tip #5: Water deep. Make
you're
watering
sure
enough so that the excess
runs down into the roots and
does not just sit on the surface. Dig deeper into the
soil and feel with your hand
to check if the water is
reaching the roots.
Tip #6: Water gently. To

ri7&amp;~ Pe
9

--

--

-·

---

----

.

&amp;ot l tl
-

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

Thank you do

't ba

integrates the ho..,e, hose
reel and spray nozzle into a
simple aU-in-one watering
can design.
Once you're equipped
with the right tools and
watering know-how. you'll
be able to create and maintain a beautiful garden,
lawn or patio from spring
through summer. and well
into the fall while conserving water.
For more infonnation on
the Water Genie or other
Ames True Temper outdoor
products and accessories, ·
wwwAmesTrueTemper.com.

protect the integrity of more
delicate plants. be sure to
water with a gentler stream
as opposed to a targeted
force.
Tip #7: Make watering
easv. It's best to have
watering tools that are versatile enough to water your
different type::. of plants
and garden beds. For example. the Ames Water Genie,
the Bottomless Waterin2
Can. includes a gentfe
watering option and works
for potted and hanging
plants alike. Plus. this easy
watering solution fully

·.

- - ----·~·-·

•

-

-

'

•

Begin sav ng for your

a e at nal

With a Roth or Tra t ona

Op

n a ar

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GA I.LIPOUS -

United Producers Inc. livestock

report of sales from March I 7, 2010.

Feeder Cattle-Higher
i

275-415 pounds, Steers. $80-$125. Heifers ..$75$115· 425-525 pounds. Steers, $80-$123. Hetfers,
$75-$110, 550-625 pounds. Steers, $80-$110, Heifers,
$75-$105; 650-725 pounds. Steers, $80-$100.
Heifers. $75 $98; 750-850 pounds, Steers, $75-$90.
Heifers. $75-$88.

e
Racine
740-949-2210
Syracuse
740·992-6333

Co\\'s-Steady
Well Mu cled/Heshed, $45-$52; Medium/Lean. $40$45: Thin/Light, $30-$40; Bulls. $54.50-$65.50.

Back to Farm
Cow Calf Pairs, $540-$790; Bred Cows, $_;350-$935:
Baby Calves, $5-$165: Goats. $23-$ 15.); Lambs
$72.50-$167.50.

~...

---~ NATIONAL BANK
RACINE &amp; SYRACUH

Manure to give away. Will loud for you.

Upconting specials
March 24
Heplacement Bn~od Cow Sale
March 24
Easter Lamb &amp; CJoat Sal~, .1 p.m.
Direct sales and free on-farm vrslts. Contact
De wayne at (740) 339-024 1. Stacy .at (304) 634-~224,
or Mark at (740) 645-5708, or VISit the wcbsrte at
W\\ ' ' .uproduccr-.;.com.

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