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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, April 24,2009

. ALONG THE ·RivER

LIVING

'

Celebrating the
.
Week of the Young Child, Cl

..
...

Reusable shopping bags
CO!lle of age, Dl

'.
.. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gast~nia, NC 28053

fl ?:)' \1
f4.A 1·•• \ll

Splint Cup

Aaron's 499,
1 p.m., SUnday

Nationwide Series
• Aaron's 312,
2:30 p.m., Saturday

Truck Series
O'~llly Auto Parts
250, 5:30p.m.,

Nationwide

Calllpln~ Wtlrld'IMks

for the ~ad on the 256th of 312
laps. He was mere than four secspeedway [2.66 mi.),188
onds ahead of runner-up Too; Stewlaps/ 500.08 miles . .
art when Earnhardt and Casey
• When: Sunday, April 26.
Mears tangled on lap 301. Stew• Last year's wmer:Kyle Busch,
art's teammate, Ryan Newman,
Toyota.
, took a gamble - he didn't pit under
·~~: BiiiEIIiott,
caution.- that gave him the lead,
.ford. 212.809 mph, April 30,
but it was short1ived. Martin re- •
1987.
•
•
claimed the lead on the f•st greena Race IIICOid: Mark Martin, Ford, flag lap and was .734 of a second
188.354 niph, May 10, 1997.
ahead of Stewart at the finish. Sada Last Mel&lt;: Mark Martin
dled with old tires, Newman faded
the third oldest &lt;tiver eo.er to win at to a 16th-place flnlsh. Also finishing·
the Sprint Cup leo.el, dominating the in the top five, behind Martin and
Subway Fresh Rt 500 at Phoenix In- Stewart were Kurt Busch, Jimmie
ternational Raceway. The 36th v~­
Johnson and Greg Biffle. ·nmeans
tory of Martin's career came at the just as much as getting that,first
age of 50, making him.the sport's
[~ctory) to me; said Martin. The
oldest winner since Morgan Shepend of the race was costly lo Kyle
herd tr1umped at "Atlanta on March
Busch, who left the pits ahead of
20,1993. The victory was Martin's Stewart on lap 302 but was penaf
flrsl since Oct. 9, 2005 at Kansas. ized for speeding on prt road. He
Martin passed Dale Earnhardt Jr.
wound up finishing 17th.

• Race: Aaron's 312 ,
al'lllele: Tal lad~ (Ala.)
SuperspeedWay (2.66 ·
mi.), 117 laps/311.22
miles.
• When: Saturday
aiJist yean wilw. Tony
Stewart, Toyota.
• Qualll}oc AICOid:
Joe Nemecnek, Chevrolet, 193.517 mph, Ajlril
24,1997.
.
a Race I8COIII: Mark
Martin, Ford, 168.937
mph, April 26" 1997.
alai week: ureg Biffle
gave oWn!ir lack Roush his
100th victory In the
Nationwide Series. The
Ford driver' crossed the finIsh lihe .338 of a second
ahead of Jason Leffler in
the Bashas' Supermar1&lt;e1S
200 at Phoenix International Raceway. K~e Busch
took the series points
lead, over Carl Edwards,
with a 1Dttt»lace finish.

• Race:6'Aeil~ Auto
Parts 250
• Where: Karisas (City,
Kan.) SpeedWay (1.5
mi.), 167 laps/250.5
miles.
·
• When: Saturday
• Last rear'S whler: Ron

• Race: Aaron's 499

• Where: Talladega (Ala.) Super-

"

,1

1

'I

"
:,

Satur&lt;lay. Aprtl 25

'"~In~d I~11
t . L:"
~tr~
~G:~
~&lt;:-'
1&gt; A lesser man would've been
crushed 1:¥ the slow start e~
enced 1:¥ Mark Maron. Martin's reSpOnse at 50 was the same it
WCII,!I;IM.e been at 25. He j!Jst
i&lt;epl~fll away, and a Phoen~
W;tmy continued a dramatic rise
.. In the Sprint Cup points standings.
•. ~ llale Earnhardt Jr.'s slump
could end at Talladega, his best
track. FiVe times Earnhardt has
won at the sprawling Alabama
superspeedway.
· 1&gt; Tony Stewart could also pull
· Qit a b~kthrough at Talladega.
••Stewarts perfonnance at the
· -team that now catiies his name
has beeil impressive, and unlike
Earnhardt, SteWart arriVes at
Talladega ~ding a streak of
three straight top-IIW finishes.
1&gt; Talladega is where Jeff Gordon
surpassed the late Dale Eanr
harllt's victory total. He also
won career race No. 80 at Talladega. A victory In this one
could him with Cale Yarborough for fifth place all-time.
1&gt; The season is eight races old
- Talladega marks the end of
the season's first quarterand David Aeutlmann is ninth in
the Sprint Cup standings. It's
starting to look like Reutimann
has staying power in his bid to
make the Chase.
1&gt; Greg Biffle's Nationwide Series
victory at Phoenix was the
100th for owner Jack Roush.
11&gt; With a fourth-place PhOeniKfin. ish, Jimmie Johnson halved
teammate Jeff Gordon's Sprint
Cup points lead. ·
• The current top 12 in Points in. elude five Chevy drivers [Gordon, Johnson, Stewart, Clint
Bowyer and Jeff Burton), three
(Denny Hamlin, Kyle Busch and
Reutimann) in Toyotas, two [Carl
Edwarlls and Matt Kenseth) in
Fords and two (Kurt Busch and
" Kasey Kahne) In Dodges.
. • ThOugh Dale Earnhardt Jr. cOil.. tlnues to struggle, it should be
f)Oied that he's improved from
29th to 19th In the standings
over the.last five races.
·
' .,. During that same span, Martin
: has improved from 34th to 13th
: afld Is the on~ driver with more
: than one pole so far. Martin has

Sprint Cup

became

•

·'

JEFF BURTON

SPRINT CuP

Hometo\Vn News
~ llnu \ :dll'\ l'lthli ... h ing (

H=··

. : Lady Marauders
-ouUast Warren.
; See Page Bl .

Chevr()I~L
a
.~:Bill
Lester, Toyota, 173.833
mph, July 1. 2005.
a Race NICOIII: Ricky Hendrick, Chevrolet, 125.094 ·
mph, July 7, 2001.
a last raw. 1\!Mn Hari.ick
passed 1\y&lt;l Buscll to win
at Martinsville [Va.) SpeedWitf on Matt130. The pass
occurred with nine laps rernanifll, and Hari.ick
weathered one more late
restart in a race rnal'red I¥·
rain del¥ and caution
fl&lt;€5. tt was the fourth career win In the selies fur

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSEAGENToMYOoia.vseNnNELCOM

c F$b1 ~ft'JJJt~1U;t

·II&gt; Who's not -

Jell Gordon finished outside
the top 10
(25th) fo! the
first time.since
the~ona

, 500. ... Kevin ·.
Harviell, typically
strongai
·· ~ix,

•;-:trn~sheil30th. this time.

•
•

•••
•

l :-

v
.E

No. 31 CATERPILLER CHEVROLET

R

s
u

s

EIIManlt Jr.
Men
Dele IEiriiiBdt ....
vt.~_,M...

. .OBITUARIES
.
-

. An incident involving the two for- .
mer teammates cost Earnhardt a respectable cfinish at PhOenix. After the
race ended, Earnhardt registereq his
disapproval.by turning Mears' car
around on the cool-down lap, ' I didn't '
mean to get together with Dale Jr.;"
· said Mears. ··1 think he was trying to
. save fuel and make ~ to the end wfthout stopping, and I 'whee~hopped'
the car getting into the comer and
ended up making contact wfth him. 1
guess he was a little bent out of
· shape about it because he spun me
out aner the checkered ftag.•
· NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton fllves hla take: ·Forgive
. Junior if. he.thin~s to himself, ft's
always something. Talladega offln
fresh hope of a turnaround.'

:.!h. :.! OOt)

:.;

'•

:·PageAS ·.

24-ho~
deadline granted to them
United States Coast Guard. .

OOOT would be the agency fmed 1f
fines were deemed appropriate.
.
· According to · David Rose, . Wiebusch, who's . located in St.
POMEROY -There's a famous . spokesperSon for the Ohio.DepJirtment I:ouis; Mo., .said the main concern
pop culture saying that states after a - of Transportation's District 10, sal· -nght now 1s to get the .steel removed
nuclear holocaust all that will be Jei't .• vage crews will be working in 12-hour .frOm the Ohio River so that ves&amp;els
will be cockroaches and Cher. ·· • . :~ ·shifts . this weekend to '&gt;;clear ·. the have safe clearance and depth to move
· Could the Pomeroy Mason Bridge remaining steel and debris left in the through the cha~el.
be added to this list?
. . _ river from the cente~ span , In between , ODOT has sa1d when the center
The old bri!lge (what's left of 1t)· · sa.lvage efforts, workers will open the. span ~etonated and br~ke, apart:_ frol;ll
continl)es to make i~ presence known channel to allow batge ~aJ?c to~- the· bndg~ , the West Vu:gm1a s1de of
da)'s after the. demobt1on of 1ts center
ODOT could face CIVIl penalties the span lagge~ be\rind and twisted th.e
span. The span .was detonated _with from the U.S. Coast Gmin\lfordelayed s~cture, causmg 1t to buclde when 1t
explosives ·on Tuesday and cleanup salvage efforts which ·have now gone . hll !he ~ater. Th~ ~~&lt;~lure then .rolled
~orts were ongoing over tbe week- ,well past the 24-,hour deadline.
. , o~ lis side resul_tmg \n several smaller
end though the Ohio Department of . On Friday, Roger Wiebusch, lhe · P•eces of debns t~ be collected as
Transportation was ?nly·penniited 24 . Coast.Guard's ~ri~ge adininistratotfor . ~~~~~~nl~e~p~~ebftsih~~~r ~h~
hours to clear the nver channel after ·th~ IDidwe~t, said II has n~t l;Jeen d,eter- 10 trusses would be sticking up·.
the blast.
~n~ yet If an~ fines or .c•vll penalties alfowing uick identification of the
. In fact, ODOT had ho~ to _have w1ll be apl!ropnate m ~case. . , sections w?rich were then to be cut and
the debn~ out of the Ohlo .R1ver m 12 . "That Will be detenruned later on,
.
hours and had not planned to go over .Wiebusch said, thou~ he added
PI•H- Brtclp. Al '
•

the .

.by -the

.•

:;. R8mona Kay compton
: :-James F. Br:owo.
· ·~ Larry Delapo Halley ·
,• Wayne 'Aridy'Ward

..•Larry Dean Kent

NAS&lt;;Afl This Week-welcomes
to the editor, !lut please be
aware that we have room tor only e
few each week. We'll do our best to se- •
lect the best, but individual replies are •
le~ers

Jolin Clark I NASCAR This Week

At 41, Jeff Burton's gm the sldlls to compete with the Silrlnt Cup pack. He c~ sits In 1,1th In the Cup points standlnp.

.

.

By Monte Dutton

the final laps of races.
"It depends on the kind of race," he
NASCAR This Week
said. "Talladega has the potential of
No driver in the NASCA~ Sprint being a 20-car pack, with 23 others in
Cup Series understands the obliga- the garage, or a 35-car pack. The big·
tions of his job more than Richard ger the pack, the more the danger.
"If something happens with three
Childress Racing~s Jeff Burton.
laps
to go, and the first four break
Burton, 41, is cool under pressure.
He is .analytical and articulate. He away, then being in th,e front is not as
doesn't often speak without gauging dangerous. Being in the front is dan·
the effect and significance of his gerous when the guys behind you can
words. This isn't just handy in the me- · get momentum and come get you.... I
dia center. It's beneficial to the team. do believe, in the old car, you were
Burton isn't just a team player by na· more protected up front than you are
· ture. It's something he considers im· in the new car. With the new car (once
. portant. He's right.
known by the acronym COT), you
Just as canny on the track, Burton seem to be a little more of a sitting
was asked at Phoenix about the knack duck than you were in the old car."
of formulating competent strategy for
In 2008, all three RCR entries made

.

seePageAl
• Gallia County business
'wins regional
··competition. See Page A6
.. HMC offers balance
. clinic. See Page A6
• Rio slates health fair
.for April3Q. See Page A6
•

Because of rain, Matt Ken seth
didn't win it fair and square. They
should have run the rest of the race
the next day, so we will _never knqw
who would have won the race ~~ ' ·
Tony Stewart would have won it. ,.. ·

BellySWMt
Coopera'lllle, Mich.

the Chase for the Sprint Cup, but the
NASCAR went by the rules. If the ·
tea111 won only three races, .two of
race had been ~nished the next day, II
would've violated the rules. Should
them courtesy of Burton.
the rules be changed? Thats a sepa·"I would stack our team up against
rate debate.
anybody," said Burton, a native of
South Boston, Va. "I feel really, really
I _F.;._}j 'flfo&amp; I
good about the way our cars go downt~e straights. I think we make a lot of · · P*lllto flonor awaits
wll•* of bla11100
power. What we have struggled with is
Dartington Raceway has renamed
'deep speed.' If you go back and look_
th~
trophy forth~ Southern 500 winat most of the races that we've won,
ner In_honQI of itS fir~t wiimer, Johnny
they've been long-run races, they've ·
Mantz. The new trophy replaces a
been races that had adverse condi·
crystal palmetto tree - South Carolina
is the Palmetto State ~ used
lions, slick tracks and those kind of
since.
the tra&gt;k began hosting races
things.
on Mother's Day weekend in 2005.
"For us to achieve all the goals that
The new, four-tiered trophy stands approximately 3 feet tali, weighs nearly
we want to achieve, we've got to firi~ a
40
pounds and features engraved
way to win races no matter what the ,
likenesses of all43 past
conditions are."
Darlington Raceway winners .

.

Bv ELIZABETH RIGEL
ERIGeLOMYDAILYTRII!ONE.COM

GALLIPOI,IS . :_
new projects were chosen ·to
top Gallia 's Hst durinphe
· o.talta on Page AS
Ohio Valley Reg10naj
Development
Commission's (OVRDC)
second round caucus ·meet.
ing held at the colllJhouse
on Tllursdliy,
.
Holzer
Consolidated
Health Systems submitted a
•
project to obtain a regional
Ceiebrations
·
. .
medical imaging system
that
was DIQVed to the top of ·
¢1assifieds
D Section the list.
·
'
•
The
system
would
allow
insert
Comics
•
the Holzer Medical Center
•
to send radiology ima¥e8
Editorials
such ·as MR!s to specialists
'•
Qbituaries
anywhere in the world. It is
.'
supposed t() cut down the
B Section time it takes for images to
Sports
be read as they could be.
Weather
As quickly sent to a specialist
in Columbus or California
!0 11009 Ohio Valley l'llbllsllln!l Co.
on vacation.
The project is estimated
to cost $4,262,242 and
Pl·ve- PtoJeds, Al

JNDEX
.

.

oGIWfOUS •llllfiiBOII' .pf, MMIMT•IDii!Y &gt;RI-100111

.wt!a

157 Walnut Street, Middleport, OH • 741).882-2131

residents
BY. KEVIN KELLY ·

Mi&gt;T~ewsoMYQAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS,- A minor
earthlJIIake that momentarily ·shook most of. Gallia
County and was felt in Point
Pleasant, W.Va., on Friday
moming also rattled a number of people who swamped .
911 with calls seeking information.
;(be U.S. Geolog_ical
Survey reported soon after
the 9:42 am. incident that the
quake had a magnitude of 3.4
and its epicenter appeared to
he in southern Jackson
County near Oak Hill. ·· .
Authoritie$ confinned the
quake, lasting for only sec•
onds, was felt more strongly
from Oak Hill over to
Vinton, and as far east in
Gallia . as Cheshire and
Gallipolis. ·No damage
reports had been received in
Gallia or Jackson counties.
One of the glass doors at
the· entrance to the Mason
·Countr Courtho~e in ,Ppint
Pleasant ··s~attered, according to one teport .
The . USGS said the
quake's distance was measured within 30 miles of .
Portsmouth, Ironton and
Chillicothe,
PIHH 1M Quake, Al

· . POMEROY - Nearly $5
million for water and sewer
improvements 'in Meigs
County are included (n the
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency's priority
list for federal stimulus
funding.
The Ohio EPA submitted
a list of projects it hopes to
.
.
.
fund through the American
Recovery and Reinvest~ent
Act. That recommendallons
list includes two projects in
Middleport, one in the
Tuppers Plains Regional
Sewer District, one in the
Tuppers
Plains-Chester
Water District and one in .
Pomeroy.
.
.
Stale
Rep . Debbte·
Phillips, D-Athens, said the
list of priority projects for
the state's share of ARRA
funding for water and water
'pollution control projects
mcludes the following:
• $2 .8 million principal
forgiveness and $700,000 ·
loan for a new water well ,
and replacement .of water
lines·in Middleport.
.
' •$195 ,000 for a waste- .
water treatment lagoon
solar stirring sys_tem.
• $358 ,898 principal forgiveness and the same o;
amount in loan fun&lt;ling for · ·
Photo courtesy ot Jim Crall
the TP-CWD 's phase eight ·
Washington Elementary School students are seen outside their building following passage distribution
project. ,
of the ~005 bond issue that will help finance renovations to the Gallipolis landmark open~
• $20 I .600 in principal
.in 1930. A groundbreaking ceremony for the renovations ~as been set by Galhpohs ~1ty forgiveness and $86,400 for ·
$ch0ols officials lor Friday, May 8 at 1:30 p.m. The public 1s InVIted to attend and the f1rst
PIMSeSMEPA.Al .
300 individuals In attendance will -get a commemorative shovel.

-· Ana

u~re 'invitecl

1\vo .

I

r~gton,

Bv BRIAN J. REED

New projects
.top ·caucus list

.

•

,B~EEOO MYDAILYSENTINEL:COM ,

WEATimR ·,

!..

J·

in-Meigs
projects
on EPA
priority list

-. Local Briefs.

Dear NASCAR This Week,
The big'day came !Or the first bl!
race, Daytona 500, being the first big
one to start the season off and running.

1-.J-

$5 million

~PageAi

P.O. Box 1538
.
Gastonia, N.C. 28053

·

Jeff Burton feeling confident with RCR team this season

· • Raising funds lor Relay.
SeePageA2
;;. LSS opens n&amp;w
•.di$1ributipn facility,

. impossible due. to the bulk of ma/l'recel'led. Please do not _
send stamped
and se~-addressed envelopes with your
letters, whfc/i should be addressed to:
NASCAI! This Week
. The Gaston Gazette

1..)0 • \ ol. -.1. : ~ . '\u

. Minor

Dlttoi•SOO left a IIIII ta1te ·

..
- - hoiFi~r-old

•·

\ Jiddh · pt~l'l • t ••dlipulh • \pt il

O\ •

..

Harvick. .

" . tht'ee.

•

,_

..·River .cleanup

SPORTS

tie

Mark Martin has
already won a
· race and tllnee
poles....Toily
Stewart ha~
· finished thilo,
fourth and second in the last
three rates.

Poi\H'I

(J,

for Gsllia&amp; Meigs counties

'

·---- -

--.-~---

•

•• ·· .-.,..

- ...-- .....-

••

... -··-- -· -

-

--

·-~­

·-T - ·-·- -------····-

�•

PageA2

REGIONAL

iunba, lim" -6tntinel

Sunday, April26, 2009

Local Briefs

RAISING FUNDS FOR RELAY

Heart and Run
Walk May 2

Anita Coleman,
left, and Zach
Watson were
two of the members of the
Gallipolis
Gophers team
that conducted
a jail-and-bail
lundraiser for
Gallia Coun~
Relay For Life ·
on Friday. The
team set up its
"jail' at O'Dell
True Value
Lumber in
Gallipolis and
.sweated out the
day's highs in
the 80s lor a
good cause.
Relay For Life
will be held at
the Gallipolis
City Park
June 5-6.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Cardiovascular Institute is
sponsoring Holzer's Hean
· Run &amp; Walk on Saturday,
May 2, ih Gallipolis.
The run will feature a 5K
run/walk, IOK run and kids
fun run. Registration is $15
before April 21 and can be
completed
.
at
www.active .com or by contacting Karen Deel at (740)
446-5964. .
Prizes will be awarded to
the top male and female in
each category. Door P.rizes
and refreshments will be
available.

Red Cross.
· collecting items

Kevin Kelly/photo

LSS opens new distribution facility
McARTHUR- A second
Lutheran Social Services
(LSS i distribution center
has been established in
Vinton County as another
resource in the battle
against poverty. .
·Located
at
31860
Claypool Hollow Road in
McArthur. the recentlyopened Vinton County
Distribution Center will
help county residents meet
their basic needs while
working to sustain self-sufficiency.
"LSS will reach many
low-income. families who
-currently do not have
:access to services that can

help them . and we will
strjve to help our clients set
and attain certain goals,"
said Mary Woodward.
director
of Outreach
Ministries. "Simply giving
· a client some items · will
only take care of their
shon-tenn needs. Our mission is.to work with clients
to not only meet those
immediate needs, but to
provide services that wi II
help them set and attain
certain goals."
To help clients· reach
those goals, Outreach
Ministries' staff and volunteers provide case management services
, while provid-

ing necessities, including
clothing, household items,
bedding, appliances and furniture and school supplies.
Case management services. assist each person
served with developing a
plan to.gain self-sufficiency.
·The new distribution center will allow Outreach
Ministries to help an additiona! 12 Ohio counties:
Fairfield, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Lawrence, Gallia,
Meigs, Athens, Jackson,
Vinton, Hocking
and
Pickaway.
The building was made
possible through Southeast
Te.stament,. another .non-

Gallia 911 Director Steve
Wilson said the impact was
·over as soon as it began.
"It's like someone hit the
building and it shook," he
said. "If you look at our
tower camera, you can see it
jog when it hit, but that was
it.''

The emergency communications center then, within
a 30-minute period, handled
about 167 calls from all

'

over the county, mostly
from the northern and westem sections, seeking infQrmation about the incident,
Wilson said. ·
The volume of calls had
trickled down by 11 a.m., he
added.
Paul Harrison, chief operating officer for the
University of Rio Grande ,
said one report .o f the campus being evacuated after

GALLIPOLIS j - The
Gallia County American
· Red Cross is currently collecting items for an upcom.jng yard sale being hosted
to assist fire victims.
The Red Cross is asking

profit organization . in the
area that collects items for
families in need. The organization built the facility
and is sharing the space
with Outreach Ministries.
The distribution center is
open Monday through
Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Families may sign up for
services by visiting the
office or scheduling an
appointment. Volunteers are
also needed in the distribution center.
To schedule an appoint·ment ·or volunteer; contact
. Mary Woodward at (740)
732;6700 or mwoodward@lssco.org . .

I

'

· GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County . Local Board of
Education will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the admin• ·
istrative
offices, 230
ShaWnee Lane; Gallipolis.

pulled out of the water, but . brought down with explor
sives. Last week Rose said
that didn't happen.
On Friday, Rose said · this would likely happen in
when ODOT is ready to dis- the next two weeks.
On the Ohio side, it's
mantle the remaining segments of the old bridge, he · anticipated that Ohio 833 ·
would alert The Daily will be closed briefly for
Sentinel. The two piers and additional demolition o( the ·
segments will also be Ohio segment and pillar.

confmmid by authoii"
pes.
· · ·'
·
Such earthquakes, and
sounds, are not uncommon-'
in Ohio, but occur infre"
quently. For e~tample, a
booming sound was heard
from Rio Grande to Vinton
in . late January following
the ice stor'm that struck the
area that week, although the
cause remained unex'
plained.

LI·TST\RIFI&gt;TOI&gt;\\ :
&lt;'IH'd..oul our Ill''' \ll'ho..,ilt':

~Flowers-

Mother'sDay

PhaSe · two would serve
490 homes in the'Centenary
atea and . upgrade . the
.Meildowlook plant. The
estimated COSt IS $9.2 million and $250,000 in ARC
funding is being sought.
The telehealth . project
would connect a small
device into patient's home
phone line that asks 'questions .such as whether or not
they have taken their medication that day. The idea
behind this project is to
keep patients proactive in
their own care, which in
turn is supposed to reduce
unnecessary hospital visits.
An estimated 75 patients· in
the area are already being

looked at for a program like
this, according to a Holzer
representative.
. •
The projects total cost is ·
projected as $226,450 IIJid
Holzer. is . , askillg for .
$158.51~ frqm the ARC. ·
The · Farm Rba!\ project
was the only access road
project submitted. The cost .
1s estimated at $5 million'
and $500,000, the maximum allowable for access
road . projects, is being
requested from the ARC.
· The Dan Evans Industrial
Park rail study was the only
project ·subrmtted fqr EDA
technical assistance, though
the study is currently on
hold .
·
·

...

..

'

' ~

~

'

15Tulips,

Chocolates

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

Sunday,Aprila6,2009

Galli~ County calendar

She won't let go of
-computer fantasy

Community
events

Sunday,Apri126
GALLIPOLIS
AND MARCY SUGAR
Gallipolis Federal Army
·
9 a.m.,
Homecommg,
Dear Annie: I am experiencing fli'Sthand how damaging Gallipolis City Park.
.
!=ertain social networking websites can be. My wife and I
THURMAN _ Calvin
have been ..arried for 18 years. Six months ago, I found . and Alice Sprouse will be
out she was paving inappropriate contact with a man· celebrating their 67th wed.through one of these websites. Since then, there have been ding anniversary from I to4
~everal other men, and she has been communicating with p.m. with an open house at
the la!est one for nearly three months.
· .
their home, 61 Broad St.,
When I approached her about what was gomg on, I was Thunnan.
·
JICCused 'of spying and invading her privacy, both of which
Monday, Aprll27
are true. Since I found out what she 1s doing, it has become
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
all-consuming. I have developed insecurities I didn"t have County Ohio Township
before.
·
·
Association meeting, 7
We have three children whom I Jove dearly. I want to p.m., Gallia County Senior
i'eep our family intact, but my world has been shattered. Resource Center, 1167 State
i
The girl I loved has turned into someone I do not know; I Route 160. ·
am· willing to go for llQUnseling, but she is not, What help
1\Jesday, April 28
i
.Is there for 1me?- Crlilh the Internet
EWINGTON
Dear Cr~h: Your wife is living a fantasy over the com; .American Legion Post 161
Puler, and she doesn't want to let it go . She hasn't quite pJeets at 7:30 p.m., preced grasped what she risks losing in the process - her mar- . d b
h
h
at 6·30
'
e
y·
a·
appy
·
our
·
If
G
riage. her husband, her children and her se -respect. o •or . p.m ., at EwingtonAcademy.
1
~:ounseling without her. It will help you decide what your All members ·are urged to
I.
next step will be and how to protect your children. You can- attend.
not force your wife to face reality, but it certainly sounds
Saturday, May 2
.like she could use a major wake-up call.
GALLIPOLIS _ Second
. Dear Annie: I am 35 years old and single. My mother Chance Yard Sale, 8 a.m . to
passed away a year ago, and I am not in contact with my 4-p.m.atWoodlandCenters,
father. I don't have a lot of family. My older sister Jives in 3086 State Route 160.
another state·with my teenage mece. I do not have a will Donations for the yard sale
because there's no real propeny or valuables to speak of. I will be accepted at
have a $50,000 life insurance policy, and my niece and a w dl d c
enters on
close friend are the beneficiaries.
F oo
'd an
M. 1 All
d
' If something were to happen to me, who would take care of will
n ay,
ay · meeting·
proceethes
go towards
mx ·hurial an'angements and memorial service? Do I create a needs of homeless children
w1ll for this P!lfl'Ose only and designate my friend to use his and. families in Gallia,
sl)are of the life_msurance policy to pay for my burial expe!JS· Jackson, and . Meigs counes? Or do 1 des1gnate a mortuary as the benefic1ary?
ties. .
·
• 1 am sure I cannot be the only young person wondering
1\Jesday, May 5
what happens to me after I am gone. I know my sister and·
GALLIPOLIS _ Holzer
'Jl
,
niece cannot afford to take care of these expenses, nor do I cl· · R ·
1
1mc
ettrees
WI
meet
want them to. - Still Single In Call.ornia
1 h
t th G0 ld.or
·
· the WI·11 cunc 1• R
noon, a e
en
. Dear California: Putting funeral ·mstructtons
m
1.
•
.
11
.
d
.
·n
b
I
orra
estauran
· Is pointless. By the time your wi 1s rea , 1t WI e too ate.
saturday, May 23
'MERCERVILLE
rnstead,
consider a prepaid funeral where you se.1eel and
pay for the arrangements in advance. (Make sure you use a Annual Brush College onereputable funeral• home and keep cop1es of your receipts room school reunion for
..
and
contracts.) Put your wishes for a memorial service in ·
f· d
d 1 ·
1
· co111es
· to your attorney,
·
· d and . family,
s30
an p m
a umQt,
·wnung,
··
and ·g1ve
your f nen
poll k nen
12
The
1
~·our sister, along w1th the .details of __the prepaid funeral
h ucl ·a 1 : d · 11
•
~
sc oo IS ocate on eens
)l,rrangements. Rest easy.
. . . · ·
Run Road near Providence
: Dear Annie: This is in respQDse to "30-year Alcoholic," Missionary Baptist Church.
who can't seem to stay sober. I, too, had a problem With For information, call (614)
alcohol. I cleaned up my act briefly whe_n I. was pre~ant,
2
but shortly after, I wanted to drink agam. I aIso su · ere d 657-803 ·
from postpartum depression.
·
S
At the lime, I had no insurance, so I went to a local coun"
·
seling center where my care was based on my .i~ome . Tpe
doctor' -prescribed medication to ' gt;t me through the postGALLIPOLIS
.
partum depression. It helped me so much that f started se~- Grieving Parents Support
mg a therapist. She told me alcohol was masking my anxt- Group meets 7 p.m. second
ety and depression. Further therapy uncovered adult Monday of each month at
ADHD. The therapist put me on an antidepressant and a Holzer Medical Center.
nonstimulant ADHD medication. I no longer have the · People · attending should
desire to drink at all. You gave her great advice.! hope this meet in the general lobby.
Jetter gives her hope. - 10-Year Alcobollc.
.
For· information, call
Dear Alcoholic: Thanks so much for shanng your story. Jackie Keatley ·at 446You can be sure it will help many others. ·
2700 or Nancy Childs at
Annie's Mrlilbox is written by Kathy MitcheU and Marcy 446-5446.
· Sug~ longtime editors of the Ann l..imders column; Please
ATHENS .- Survival of
·e-mail your (/,uestions lo anniesmailbox@comcost.net, or Suicide support group
,write to: Anme's Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL meets 7 p.m ., fourth
60611. To find out more about.Annie's Mailbox, and read Thursday of each month at
features by other. Creators Syndicau writers and cartoonists, Athens Church of Christ,
· ·visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. . 785 W. Union St., Athens.

By KATHY MITCHELL

I

upport groups

www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu

'

water and sewer grant due
June 1.
Green Sewer phase one
, was placed third ·on the list.
The purpose of this project is to provide 414 homes
.in the Rodney area with
sewer and upgrade . the
expansion of existing lines.
Estimated project cost is
$7,850,450 and $250,000 in
ARC funding is being
requested.
.
Gallia members ranked the
top three area development
projects · out of six total,
wh1ch also included Green
Sewer phase two, the Guyan
Township water project, and
another Holzer project, telehealth for home car,e.

Board to meet :

'

no~

Projects rrom Page At
$250.000 in Appalachian
Regional
Commission
(ARC) funding, the maximum available for area
development projects ,
Ranked number two on
the list was another new
project, the Lake Drive
sewer upgrade.
Six•inch pipes currently
service the area and due to
the new Rio Gran\le
Elementary being built at
the end of Lake Drive.
Eight-inch pipes are needer;l
to handle sewage.
The project is estimated
to cost $152,100; ARC
funding is beinll sought and
the village Will probably
:also apply for a CDBG

for contributions of good
saleable
merchandise
(excluding
clothing).
Residents with it,:ms to
donate are encouraged to
contact the Red Cross as
soon as possible so they will
have time to sort and price
the merchandise.
The yard sale is to be held
on Friday, May I from 7:3B
a-.m: to4 p.m. and Saturda:,:.
May 2 from 7:30 am. to
' noon at ihe fanner China..
One location on Eastern
Avenue.
·'
All proceeds fn&gt;m thi~
sale will go to the orgaruzations local disaster fund to
be used to assist Gallia
County fire victims.
.
The
Gallia
County
American Red Cross can be
contacted at 740-446-8555:

.

the tremor was false.
Some people did exit
Allen Hall, an administration · building
where
Harrison's office is located,
and concerns were . aired
about a crack in the sll'\lcture. A maintenance check
showed the crack has existed for decades.
Some individuals report- ·
.ed a loud sound after the
quake, jllthough that was

I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.

Quake from Page:At

.I.
.iunbap limt~ •iltntinel

For infonnation, call 593GALLIPOLIS - NAMI Room 114. 380 Colonial
7414.
(National Alliance on Drive, Bidwell. Ohio
GALLIPOLIS - Look Mental Illness) meetin'gs 45614.
Good Feel Better cancer Will take place the first
BIDWELL - Pauline
program, third Monday of Tuesday of each month at 6 Shaver . will celebrate her
the month at 6 p.m ., p.m. at the Gallia County 94th birthday on April 29.
Holzer Center .for Cancer Senior Resource Center. Cards can be sent to her at
Care.
· with a general membership Holzer Senior Care Center.
GALLJI;'OUS
.meeting . at 7 p.m . Room IIi, 380 Colo.nial
Alcoholics
Anonymous Informational meetings are Drive, Bidwell , ·Ohio
Wednesday book study at 7 . held th1 t~ird Thursday of 45614.
MIAMISBURG
p.m . and Thursday open every month at 6:30p.m. at
meeting at noon at St. Woodland Centers. For Delories Whitley is in rehaPeter's Episcopal Church , information. contact Jill bilitation. ·cards can be sent
541 Second Ave. Tuesday Simpkins at (740) 339- to h!lr at Sycamore Glen
· closed. meeting is at.~ p.m. 0603 . Ever~one is wel- Health Center, Room 214,
2'17 5
Lehpr
Drive,
at St. Peter's Episcopal come.
'
Miamsburg. Ohio 45342.
Church.
·
·
I
. E-mail community calen·
GALLIPOLIS
showel1
dar
items
· ta
Narcotics
Anonymous
m·dr
news
®mydai
lytriMiracles in Recovery meets
THURMAN - Calvin .
· every
Monday
and and Alice Sprouse will be bune.com. Fax announce. Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at St. celebrating their 67th wed- ments to 446-3008. Mail
Peter's Episcopal Church.
ding anniversary on April items to 825 Third Ave.,
POINT
PLEASANT, 26 from I to 4 p.m . with an Gallipolis, Ohio · 45631.
W.Va .
Narcotics open house and card shower .lnnouncements may also
Anonymous Living Free at
their
home
in be dropped off at the
G
·
roup
meets
every Thurman. Cards may be Tribune offu:e.
"...1ednesday M
and. Fr1'day
at
·7
S
sent to 61 Broad St.,
· p.m. at 305. am t. .
Thurman , Ohio 45685.
, VINTON - . Celebrate
BIDWELL - .Charlotte
Recovery at Vinton Baptist French will celebrate ner
Church. Small groups lpok- 61 st birthday on April 28 ~
ing for freedom from addle- Cards can be sent to her at
tions, hurts, habits and Holzer Senior Care Center,
hangups every. Wednesday
at 7 p.m. For tnformallon,
ca11388-8454. · ·
POINT
·PLEASANT,
W.Va. _ "Let Go and Let
• fU! Ml1 TMtWIICIJ SUpport
God" Nar-Anon1 Family
• t&amp; Hllll *-"with. w.bmiMI
Group meeting, every
• CoiDn s.., P!to41 • niiWI, WllfW I morel
Monday at 7 p.m.-, Krodel
Park recreational build in~· ·
lrt$1W'Jl
The group helps. families
.
~·3~~
and friends o( drug addicts
&amp;it• 11)1 Oollnol J¥W111.Uicllllol.eom
or users to attain serenity,
. regardless of whether
he/she has· stopped us 1·ng.
The group respects all
members' anonym•"ty.
VINTON
Vinton
Baptist Church will operate a food pantry ·every
Monday from 5 to 6:30
~.m. Fo_r infonnation, call
88,8454.
·GALLIPOLIS _ Galli a
Let Me Show You How To
MS (M 1 · 1 s l
·)
u lip e c eros1s
. l.ncrease The Size Of Your
Suppon Group meets the
Retirement
Account By 10%
second Monday of each
mo'nth at Holze.r Med•"cal
l to l _'"-o .. olld\ll
l •d l l l \t
1 11•11 1 •·"11
I
(.,1111'•11
Oil
J ,\-' !~ f l __' \1 \\
I o!1
j
Center. For information ,
1
141' 11• ~~~; \
II
II
'
contact Amber Barnes at
f\
\ \ \ \ \ \ ( ) Ill,, ( '.1.111 !•I .Ill l_ll l lt'"'••ll t ll• 'lb ''&gt;Ill
"
I
(740) 339-0291.

Card

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(M::6X

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&amp;Free

GlassVase
For mon ,irifcmttat,itm rontacr.·
...... ·f'lltr&lt;T.ilm

"

(140) w1:1880or
.\iirGh Bcoth
1800!·282-7201• .,,; W6
eiaoil.'

brrf11P~•io.ed,;..t thcorAit rio.ri&amp;
&amp; ...,.........

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•

EPA from Page Al
new water meters .
• $151 ;500 ARRA (stimulus program) and $50,500
loan funding for improve·ments to the TPRSD's treatment plant, to address . erosion problems.
•
Economic Development'
Director Perry Varnadoe
said the sheer dollar amount
of the Meigs Cou11ty project
list is impressive. Other
counties in the sd\itheastem
Ohio region are expected to
receive much less from the
funding program.
He said the announcement is important, not only

because of the jobs the projects will create, but also
because of the permanent
improvements to local
infrastructure the award
represents.
.
The EPA's priority list
includes 69 dnnking water
projects in 52 communities
and 255 water .pollution
control projects in 164 communities . Ohio EPA has
iJsued draft Intended Use
Plans (!UPs), and will hold
a public meeting to take
comments on th.e plans on
May 7 in Columbus.
U.S. EPA must also

tiiiiFa ,.,.,

~-:;:::.:·
AJk 10 yard twu 441 yard dumpa•r
ldHI for COIIIWC11on or home cll1n up.

740-812.$504

Bulinell Hours: 11m-4:30pm M.f
34178 Roell Springl ROid, ~roy, Ohio 45768

approve the IUPs for the
Ohio EPA wlll ·ll)llkc 100
projects before funding is percent of stimulus funds
awarded.
available as i!lbaidies. The
Stimulus money will be . Recovery Act require$ just.
combined with the state's SO percent. Non-kecovery
existing assistance funds to Act funds will also . be·
spread economic recovery "mixed and matched" with
and improvements to as Recovery Act funds to
many Ol)io communities as increase the ' number of
possible,
an
EPA . communities able to receive
spokesman.said.
infrastructQre funding.

' '··.

Summer Term 2009
'

Summer I• Jrme I -July 2 (First Five Weeks)
Summer II• July 6 -August 7 (Second Five Weeks)
MAY bt • Open face Jutkey w/mi!Sb&lt;d iXDIO&lt;! II. gravy
Broc&lt;:oli w/ch«i&lt; • f.anhqual;c c:akc
MAY 8tb -l'ulh:d porit BBQ sandwich
Talol toe• • P.oiSII sal lid • Cako w(ICC ,....,n
MAY 15dt- Chictcn fojillL'i • s...th.....t cgc roll
Sal&amp;a w/chips • Ume d1 mol;e
·
~fAY n.l - 8 8Q cbi&lt;len • Baked beans
Colcsaw •l!ananuplit c:akc
·
MAV M - 1\:pperstcak w/ria:
~.gg rolls • Moolc)

In the
1\'.&lt;ncl\1) &amp;-Middl&lt;pM area C'hefsalads .will also b.

·Order ONLY at

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All dinnc" are $6.$0 and""" b. deli•ered

. ,- The Holzer Center £or Cancer Care is about more than just canci:t.
It's · about advanced technology, such as image.guid,cd rad~•ti1on;:,.
therapy. It's ~o about expert care. And ·h~ And partnerships. ,· '
like the one we .have. with Ohio State's James Cancer Hospilltl and
Solove Re&amp;eatch Institute.

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PageA2

REGIONAL

iunba, lim" -6tntinel

Sunday, April26, 2009

Local Briefs

RAISING FUNDS FOR RELAY

Heart and Run
Walk May 2

Anita Coleman,
left, and Zach
Watson were
two of the members of the
Gallipolis
Gophers team
that conducted
a jail-and-bail
lundraiser for
Gallia Coun~
Relay For Life ·
on Friday. The
team set up its
"jail' at O'Dell
True Value
Lumber in
Gallipolis and
.sweated out the
day's highs in
the 80s lor a
good cause.
Relay For Life
will be held at
the Gallipolis
City Park
June 5-6.

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Cardiovascular Institute is
sponsoring Holzer's Hean
· Run &amp; Walk on Saturday,
May 2, ih Gallipolis.
The run will feature a 5K
run/walk, IOK run and kids
fun run. Registration is $15
before April 21 and can be
completed
.
at
www.active .com or by contacting Karen Deel at (740)
446-5964. .
Prizes will be awarded to
the top male and female in
each category. Door P.rizes
and refreshments will be
available.

Red Cross.
· collecting items

Kevin Kelly/photo

LSS opens new distribution facility
McARTHUR- A second
Lutheran Social Services
(LSS i distribution center
has been established in
Vinton County as another
resource in the battle
against poverty. .
·Located
at
31860
Claypool Hollow Road in
McArthur. the recentlyopened Vinton County
Distribution Center will
help county residents meet
their basic needs while
working to sustain self-sufficiency.
"LSS will reach many
low-income. families who
-currently do not have
:access to services that can

help them . and we will
strjve to help our clients set
and attain certain goals,"
said Mary Woodward.
director
of Outreach
Ministries. "Simply giving
· a client some items · will
only take care of their
shon-tenn needs. Our mission is.to work with clients
to not only meet those
immediate needs, but to
provide services that wi II
help them set and attain
certain goals."
To help clients· reach
those goals, Outreach
Ministries' staff and volunteers provide case management services
, while provid-

ing necessities, including
clothing, household items,
bedding, appliances and furniture and school supplies.
Case management services. assist each person
served with developing a
plan to.gain self-sufficiency.
·The new distribution center will allow Outreach
Ministries to help an additiona! 12 Ohio counties:
Fairfield, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Lawrence, Gallia,
Meigs, Athens, Jackson,
Vinton, Hocking
and
Pickaway.
The building was made
possible through Southeast
Te.stament,. another .non-

Gallia 911 Director Steve
Wilson said the impact was
·over as soon as it began.
"It's like someone hit the
building and it shook," he
said. "If you look at our
tower camera, you can see it
jog when it hit, but that was
it.''

The emergency communications center then, within
a 30-minute period, handled
about 167 calls from all

'

over the county, mostly
from the northern and westem sections, seeking infQrmation about the incident,
Wilson said. ·
The volume of calls had
trickled down by 11 a.m., he
added.
Paul Harrison, chief operating officer for the
University of Rio Grande ,
said one report .o f the campus being evacuated after

GALLIPOLIS j - The
Gallia County American
· Red Cross is currently collecting items for an upcom.jng yard sale being hosted
to assist fire victims.
The Red Cross is asking

profit organization . in the
area that collects items for
families in need. The organization built the facility
and is sharing the space
with Outreach Ministries.
The distribution center is
open Monday through
Friday, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Families may sign up for
services by visiting the
office or scheduling an
appointment. Volunteers are
also needed in the distribution center.
To schedule an appoint·ment ·or volunteer; contact
. Mary Woodward at (740)
732;6700 or mwoodward@lssco.org . .

I

'

· GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County . Local Board of
Education will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the admin• ·
istrative
offices, 230
ShaWnee Lane; Gallipolis.

pulled out of the water, but . brought down with explor
sives. Last week Rose said
that didn't happen.
On Friday, Rose said · this would likely happen in
when ODOT is ready to dis- the next two weeks.
On the Ohio side, it's
mantle the remaining segments of the old bridge, he · anticipated that Ohio 833 ·
would alert The Daily will be closed briefly for
Sentinel. The two piers and additional demolition o( the ·
segments will also be Ohio segment and pillar.

confmmid by authoii"
pes.
· · ·'
·
Such earthquakes, and
sounds, are not uncommon-'
in Ohio, but occur infre"
quently. For e~tample, a
booming sound was heard
from Rio Grande to Vinton
in . late January following
the ice stor'm that struck the
area that week, although the
cause remained unex'
plained.

LI·TST\RIFI&gt;TOI&gt;\\ :
&lt;'IH'd..oul our Ill''' \ll'ho..,ilt':

~Flowers-

Mother'sDay

PhaSe · two would serve
490 homes in the'Centenary
atea and . upgrade . the
.Meildowlook plant. The
estimated COSt IS $9.2 million and $250,000 in ARC
funding is being sought.
The telehealth . project
would connect a small
device into patient's home
phone line that asks 'questions .such as whether or not
they have taken their medication that day. The idea
behind this project is to
keep patients proactive in
their own care, which in
turn is supposed to reduce
unnecessary hospital visits.
An estimated 75 patients· in
the area are already being

looked at for a program like
this, according to a Holzer
representative.
. •
The projects total cost is ·
projected as $226,450 IIJid
Holzer. is . , askillg for .
$158.51~ frqm the ARC. ·
The · Farm Rba!\ project
was the only access road
project submitted. The cost .
1s estimated at $5 million'
and $500,000, the maximum allowable for access
road . projects, is being
requested from the ARC.
· The Dan Evans Industrial
Park rail study was the only
project ·subrmtted fqr EDA
technical assistance, though
the study is currently on
hold .
·
·

...

..

'

' ~

~

'

15Tulips,

Chocolates

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

Sunday,Aprila6,2009

Galli~ County calendar

She won't let go of
-computer fantasy

Community
events

Sunday,Apri126
GALLIPOLIS
AND MARCY SUGAR
Gallipolis Federal Army
·
9 a.m.,
Homecommg,
Dear Annie: I am experiencing fli'Sthand how damaging Gallipolis City Park.
.
!=ertain social networking websites can be. My wife and I
THURMAN _ Calvin
have been ..arried for 18 years. Six months ago, I found . and Alice Sprouse will be
out she was paving inappropriate contact with a man· celebrating their 67th wed.through one of these websites. Since then, there have been ding anniversary from I to4
~everal other men, and she has been communicating with p.m. with an open house at
the la!est one for nearly three months.
· .
their home, 61 Broad St.,
When I approached her about what was gomg on, I was Thunnan.
·
JICCused 'of spying and invading her privacy, both of which
Monday, Aprll27
are true. Since I found out what she 1s doing, it has become
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
all-consuming. I have developed insecurities I didn"t have County Ohio Township
before.
·
·
Association meeting, 7
We have three children whom I Jove dearly. I want to p.m., Gallia County Senior
i'eep our family intact, but my world has been shattered. Resource Center, 1167 State
i
The girl I loved has turned into someone I do not know; I Route 160. ·
am· willing to go for llQUnseling, but she is not, What help
1\Jesday, April 28
i
.Is there for 1me?- Crlilh the Internet
EWINGTON
Dear Cr~h: Your wife is living a fantasy over the com; .American Legion Post 161
Puler, and she doesn't want to let it go . She hasn't quite pJeets at 7:30 p.m., preced grasped what she risks losing in the process - her mar- . d b
h
h
at 6·30
'
e
y·
a·
appy
·
our
·
If
G
riage. her husband, her children and her se -respect. o •or . p.m ., at EwingtonAcademy.
1
~:ounseling without her. It will help you decide what your All members ·are urged to
I.
next step will be and how to protect your children. You can- attend.
not force your wife to face reality, but it certainly sounds
Saturday, May 2
.like she could use a major wake-up call.
GALLIPOLIS _ Second
. Dear Annie: I am 35 years old and single. My mother Chance Yard Sale, 8 a.m . to
passed away a year ago, and I am not in contact with my 4-p.m.atWoodlandCenters,
father. I don't have a lot of family. My older sister Jives in 3086 State Route 160.
another state·with my teenage mece. I do not have a will Donations for the yard sale
because there's no real propeny or valuables to speak of. I will be accepted at
have a $50,000 life insurance policy, and my niece and a w dl d c
enters on
close friend are the beneficiaries.
F oo
'd an
M. 1 All
d
' If something were to happen to me, who would take care of will
n ay,
ay · meeting·
proceethes
go towards
mx ·hurial an'angements and memorial service? Do I create a needs of homeless children
w1ll for this P!lfl'Ose only and designate my friend to use his and. families in Gallia,
sl)are of the life_msurance policy to pay for my burial expe!JS· Jackson, and . Meigs counes? Or do 1 des1gnate a mortuary as the benefic1ary?
ties. .
·
• 1 am sure I cannot be the only young person wondering
1\Jesday, May 5
what happens to me after I am gone. I know my sister and·
GALLIPOLIS _ Holzer
'Jl
,
niece cannot afford to take care of these expenses, nor do I cl· · R ·
1
1mc
ettrees
WI
meet
want them to. - Still Single In Call.ornia
1 h
t th G0 ld.or
·
· the WI·11 cunc 1• R
noon, a e
en
. Dear California: Putting funeral ·mstructtons
m
1.
•
.
11
.
d
.
·n
b
I
orra
estauran
· Is pointless. By the time your wi 1s rea , 1t WI e too ate.
saturday, May 23
'MERCERVILLE
rnstead,
consider a prepaid funeral where you se.1eel and
pay for the arrangements in advance. (Make sure you use a Annual Brush College onereputable funeral• home and keep cop1es of your receipts room school reunion for
..
and
contracts.) Put your wishes for a memorial service in ·
f· d
d 1 ·
1
· co111es
· to your attorney,
·
· d and . family,
s30
an p m
a umQt,
·wnung,
··
and ·g1ve
your f nen
poll k nen
12
The
1
~·our sister, along w1th the .details of __the prepaid funeral
h ucl ·a 1 : d · 11
•
~
sc oo IS ocate on eens
)l,rrangements. Rest easy.
. . . · ·
Run Road near Providence
: Dear Annie: This is in respQDse to "30-year Alcoholic," Missionary Baptist Church.
who can't seem to stay sober. I, too, had a problem With For information, call (614)
alcohol. I cleaned up my act briefly whe_n I. was pre~ant,
2
but shortly after, I wanted to drink agam. I aIso su · ere d 657-803 ·
from postpartum depression.
·
S
At the lime, I had no insurance, so I went to a local coun"
·
seling center where my care was based on my .i~ome . Tpe
doctor' -prescribed medication to ' gt;t me through the postGALLIPOLIS
.
partum depression. It helped me so much that f started se~- Grieving Parents Support
mg a therapist. She told me alcohol was masking my anxt- Group meets 7 p.m. second
ety and depression. Further therapy uncovered adult Monday of each month at
ADHD. The therapist put me on an antidepressant and a Holzer Medical Center.
nonstimulant ADHD medication. I no longer have the · People · attending should
desire to drink at all. You gave her great advice.! hope this meet in the general lobby.
Jetter gives her hope. - 10-Year Alcobollc.
.
For· information, call
Dear Alcoholic: Thanks so much for shanng your story. Jackie Keatley ·at 446You can be sure it will help many others. ·
2700 or Nancy Childs at
Annie's Mrlilbox is written by Kathy MitcheU and Marcy 446-5446.
· Sug~ longtime editors of the Ann l..imders column; Please
ATHENS .- Survival of
·e-mail your (/,uestions lo anniesmailbox@comcost.net, or Suicide support group
,write to: Anme's Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190, Chicago, IL meets 7 p.m ., fourth
60611. To find out more about.Annie's Mailbox, and read Thursday of each month at
features by other. Creators Syndicau writers and cartoonists, Athens Church of Christ,
· ·visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. . 785 W. Union St., Athens.

By KATHY MITCHELL

I

upport groups

www.gallipoliscareercollege.edu

'

water and sewer grant due
June 1.
Green Sewer phase one
, was placed third ·on the list.
The purpose of this project is to provide 414 homes
.in the Rodney area with
sewer and upgrade . the
expansion of existing lines.
Estimated project cost is
$7,850,450 and $250,000 in
ARC funding is being
requested.
.
Gallia members ranked the
top three area development
projects · out of six total,
wh1ch also included Green
Sewer phase two, the Guyan
Township water project, and
another Holzer project, telehealth for home car,e.

Board to meet :

'

no~

Projects rrom Page At
$250.000 in Appalachian
Regional
Commission
(ARC) funding, the maximum available for area
development projects ,
Ranked number two on
the list was another new
project, the Lake Drive
sewer upgrade.
Six•inch pipes currently
service the area and due to
the new Rio Gran\le
Elementary being built at
the end of Lake Drive.
Eight-inch pipes are needer;l
to handle sewage.
The project is estimated
to cost $152,100; ARC
funding is beinll sought and
the village Will probably
:also apply for a CDBG

for contributions of good
saleable
merchandise
(excluding
clothing).
Residents with it,:ms to
donate are encouraged to
contact the Red Cross as
soon as possible so they will
have time to sort and price
the merchandise.
The yard sale is to be held
on Friday, May I from 7:3B
a-.m: to4 p.m. and Saturda:,:.
May 2 from 7:30 am. to
' noon at ihe fanner China..
One location on Eastern
Avenue.
·'
All proceeds fn&gt;m thi~
sale will go to the orgaruzations local disaster fund to
be used to assist Gallia
County fire victims.
.
The
Gallia
County
American Red Cross can be
contacted at 740-446-8555:

.

the tremor was false.
Some people did exit
Allen Hall, an administration · building
where
Harrison's office is located,
and concerns were . aired
about a crack in the sll'\lcture. A maintenance check
showed the crack has existed for decades.
Some individuals report- ·
.ed a loud sound after the
quake, jllthough that was

I

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

.

Quake from Page:At

.I.
.iunbap limt~ •iltntinel

For infonnation, call 593GALLIPOLIS - NAMI Room 114. 380 Colonial
7414.
(National Alliance on Drive, Bidwell. Ohio
GALLIPOLIS - Look Mental Illness) meetin'gs 45614.
Good Feel Better cancer Will take place the first
BIDWELL - Pauline
program, third Monday of Tuesday of each month at 6 Shaver . will celebrate her
the month at 6 p.m ., p.m. at the Gallia County 94th birthday on April 29.
Holzer Center .for Cancer Senior Resource Center. Cards can be sent to her at
Care.
· with a general membership Holzer Senior Care Center.
GALLJI;'OUS
.meeting . at 7 p.m . Room IIi, 380 Colo.nial
Alcoholics
Anonymous Informational meetings are Drive, Bidwell , ·Ohio
Wednesday book study at 7 . held th1 t~ird Thursday of 45614.
MIAMISBURG
p.m . and Thursday open every month at 6:30p.m. at
meeting at noon at St. Woodland Centers. For Delories Whitley is in rehaPeter's Episcopal Church , information. contact Jill bilitation. ·cards can be sent
541 Second Ave. Tuesday Simpkins at (740) 339- to h!lr at Sycamore Glen
· closed. meeting is at.~ p.m. 0603 . Ever~one is wel- Health Center, Room 214,
2'17 5
Lehpr
Drive,
at St. Peter's Episcopal come.
'
Miamsburg. Ohio 45342.
Church.
·
·
I
. E-mail community calen·
GALLIPOLIS
showel1
dar
items
· ta
Narcotics
Anonymous
m·dr
news
®mydai
lytriMiracles in Recovery meets
THURMAN - Calvin .
· every
Monday
and and Alice Sprouse will be bune.com. Fax announce. Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at St. celebrating their 67th wed- ments to 446-3008. Mail
Peter's Episcopal Church.
ding anniversary on April items to 825 Third Ave.,
POINT
PLEASANT, 26 from I to 4 p.m . with an Gallipolis, Ohio · 45631.
W.Va .
Narcotics open house and card shower .lnnouncements may also
Anonymous Living Free at
their
home
in be dropped off at the
G
·
roup
meets
every Thurman. Cards may be Tribune offu:e.
"...1ednesday M
and. Fr1'day
at
·7
S
sent to 61 Broad St.,
· p.m. at 305. am t. .
Thurman , Ohio 45685.
, VINTON - . Celebrate
BIDWELL - .Charlotte
Recovery at Vinton Baptist French will celebrate ner
Church. Small groups lpok- 61 st birthday on April 28 ~
ing for freedom from addle- Cards can be sent to her at
tions, hurts, habits and Holzer Senior Care Center,
hangups every. Wednesday
at 7 p.m. For tnformallon,
ca11388-8454. · ·
POINT
·PLEASANT,
W.Va. _ "Let Go and Let
• fU! Ml1 TMtWIICIJ SUpport
God" Nar-Anon1 Family
• t&amp; Hllll *-"with. w.bmiMI
Group meeting, every
• CoiDn s.., P!to41 • niiWI, WllfW I morel
Monday at 7 p.m.-, Krodel
Park recreational build in~· ·
lrt$1W'Jl
The group helps. families
.
~·3~~
and friends o( drug addicts
&amp;it• 11)1 Oollnol J¥W111.Uicllllol.eom
or users to attain serenity,
. regardless of whether
he/she has· stopped us 1·ng.
The group respects all
members' anonym•"ty.
VINTON
Vinton
Baptist Church will operate a food pantry ·every
Monday from 5 to 6:30
~.m. Fo_r infonnation, call
88,8454.
·GALLIPOLIS _ Galli a
Let Me Show You How To
MS (M 1 · 1 s l
·)
u lip e c eros1s
. l.ncrease The Size Of Your
Suppon Group meets the
Retirement
Account By 10%
second Monday of each
mo'nth at Holze.r Med•"cal
l to l _'"-o .. olld\ll
l •d l l l \t
1 11•11 1 •·"11
I
(.,1111'•11
Oil
J ,\-' !~ f l __' \1 \\
I o!1
j
Center. For information ,
1
141' 11• ~~~; \
II
II
'
contact Amber Barnes at
f\
\ \ \ \ \ \ ( ) Ill,, ( '.1.111 !•I .Ill l_ll l lt'"'••ll t ll• 'lb ''&gt;Ill
"
I
(740) 339-0291.

Card

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(M::6X

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q

&amp;Free

GlassVase
For mon ,irifcmttat,itm rontacr.·
...... ·f'lltr&lt;T.ilm

"

(140) w1:1880or
.\iirGh Bcoth
1800!·282-7201• .,,; W6
eiaoil.'

brrf11P~•io.ed,;..t thcorAit rio.ri&amp;
&amp; ...,.........

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•

EPA from Page Al
new water meters .
• $151 ;500 ARRA (stimulus program) and $50,500
loan funding for improve·ments to the TPRSD's treatment plant, to address . erosion problems.
•
Economic Development'
Director Perry Varnadoe
said the sheer dollar amount
of the Meigs Cou11ty project
list is impressive. Other
counties in the sd\itheastem
Ohio region are expected to
receive much less from the
funding program.
He said the announcement is important, not only

because of the jobs the projects will create, but also
because of the permanent
improvements to local
infrastructure the award
represents.
.
The EPA's priority list
includes 69 dnnking water
projects in 52 communities
and 255 water .pollution
control projects in 164 communities . Ohio EPA has
iJsued draft Intended Use
Plans (!UPs), and will hold
a public meeting to take
comments on th.e plans on
May 7 in Columbus.
U.S. EPA must also

tiiiiFa ,.,.,

~-:;:::.:·
AJk 10 yard twu 441 yard dumpa•r
ldHI for COIIIWC11on or home cll1n up.

740-812.$504

Bulinell Hours: 11m-4:30pm M.f
34178 Roell Springl ROid, ~roy, Ohio 45768

approve the IUPs for the
Ohio EPA wlll ·ll)llkc 100
projects before funding is percent of stimulus funds
awarded.
available as i!lbaidies. The
Stimulus money will be . Recovery Act require$ just.
combined with the state's SO percent. Non-kecovery
existing assistance funds to Act funds will also . be·
spread economic recovery "mixed and matched" with
and improvements to as Recovery Act funds to
many Ol)io communities as increase the ' number of
possible,
an
EPA . communities able to receive
spokesman.said.
infrastructQre funding.

' '··.

Summer Term 2009
'

Summer I• Jrme I -July 2 (First Five Weeks)
Summer II• July 6 -August 7 (Second Five Weeks)
MAY bt • Open face Jutkey w/mi!Sb&lt;d iXDIO&lt;! II. gravy
Broc&lt;:oli w/ch«i&lt; • f.anhqual;c c:akc
MAY 8tb -l'ulh:d porit BBQ sandwich
Talol toe• • P.oiSII sal lid • Cako w(ICC ,....,n
MAY 15dt- Chictcn fojillL'i • s...th.....t cgc roll
Sal&amp;a w/chips • Ume d1 mol;e
·
~fAY n.l - 8 8Q cbi&lt;len • Baked beans
Colcsaw •l!ananuplit c:akc
·
MAV M - 1\:pperstcak w/ria:
~.gg rolls • Moolc)

In the
1\'.&lt;ncl\1) &amp;-Middl&lt;pM area C'hefsalads .will also b.

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. ,- The Holzer Center £or Cancer Care is about more than just canci:t.
It's · about advanced technology, such as image.guid,cd rad~•ti1on;:,.
therapy. It's ~o about expert care. And ·h~ And partnerships. ,· '
like the one we .have. with Ohio State's James Cancer Hospilltl and
Solove Re&amp;eatch Institute.

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�OPINION

6unbap lime• ·6tntinel
1 &amp;unbap · ~tmH -6tntintl·
·

825 Third Avenue • Gatllpolta1 !Jhlo

(740) 446-2342 ·FAX (740) 446·3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com
I

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

Leiters to the editor are wflcome . They should be less
than 300 words. All letter• are subject to editing (lnd must
be signed and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday.April26, the I 16th day of2009. There
are 249 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On April 26, 1865, John
Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln,
was surrounded.by federal troops near Bowling Green, Va.,
and killed.
On this date: In 1607, English colonists went ashore at pre·
sent-day Cape Henry, Va., on an expedition to establish the fli'St
permanent English seitlement in the Western Hemisphere. . ~
In. 1909, Abdul Hamid II was deposed as sultan o( the
Ottoman Empire.
·
In 1937, planes frorri Nazi Germany raided the Basque
town of Guemica during the Spanish Civil War.
In 1945, Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, the head of France's
Vichy government during World War II, was arrested.
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika and Zanzibar
merged to form Tanzania. .
: ·
In 1968 , the United States exploded beneath the Nevada
desert a 1.3 megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
In 1970, the Stephen Sondheim musical "Company"
opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York.
.
In 1986, the world's worst nuclear accident occurred at
the Chernob.yl plant in the Soviet Union.
In 1989, actress-comedian Lucille Ball died at CedarsSinai Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 77.
In 2000, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean signed the nation's
first bill allowing same-sex couples to form civil unions.
Ten years ago: The head of the International Committee
of the Red Cross, Cornelio Sommaruga, met with three
U.S. soldiers held captive by Yugoslavia, BBC anchorwomanJill Dando, host of a crime•fighting ptogram;was
fatally shot on the steps of her London home. (Barry
George was convicted in July 2001 ofkilling Dando; how·
ever, he was acquitted in a retrial.)
·
Five years a~o: Following conservative criticism of his
anti-war actiVIties during the Vietnam era, Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry accused President
George W. Bush of failing to prove whether he'd fulfilled .
his commitment to the National Guard during the same
period. The government unv.eiled its new, colorized $50
bilL Author Hubert Selby Jr. died in Los Angeles at age 75.
One year ago: Police in Austria arrested Josef Fritzi, free'ing his daughter "Elisabeth and ·her six children, whom he
had fathered while holding her captive in a cellar for 24
years. (Fritzi was later sentenced to life in a psychiatric
ward.) Yossi Harel, the ship commander whose attempt to
bring Holocaust survivors to Palestine aboard the Exodus
1947 built support for Israel's ·rounding, died in Tel Aviv at
age 90. Avant-garde composer Henry Brant died in Santa
Barbara, Calif., at age·94.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 76.
R&amp;B singer Maurice Williams is 71. Actor Giancarlo
Esposito is 51. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran Duran)
is 49. Actress Joan Chen is 48. Actor Jet Li is 46. Rock
musician Jimmy Stafford (Train) is 45. Actor-comedian
Kevjn James is 44. Actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste is 42.
RapperT-Boz (TLC) is 39. Country musician Jay DeMarcus
(Rascal Flats) is 38. Rock musician Jose Pasillas (Incubus)
is 33. Actor Jason Earles ("Hannah Montana'') is 32. Actor
:Tom Welling is 32. Actress Jordana Brewster is 29. Actress
Marnette Patterson is 29. Actor Channing Tatum is 29.
, Thought for Today: "Friends may come and go, butene·
mies accumulate." - Dr. Thomas F. Jones Jr., American·
·
college offi~ial (1916-1981).

: Sunday, April26, 2009

PageA4
Sunday, April26, 2009

a

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Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Sunday~.Sunny. Highs in showers. Lows in the mid AEP (NYSE) - 21.18 .
DAD)21.55
Abo
(NASDAQ)
42.55
the upper 80s. Southwest 50s. Chance of rain 40 per· Alhlond Inc. {NYSE) - 19.05
BBT (NYSE) - 23.42
winds 10 to 15 mph.
cent.
Peoplll (NASDAQ) - 15.88
Big Loti (NYSE) - 26.81
·· Ramona Kay Compton of
Pepolco (NYSE) - 48.82
-Sunday night •• .Mostly
Wednesday ••• Mostly Bob Evono {NASDAQ) - 2U7
Sedonia, Ariz., formerly of
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5
BorgWar(NYSE)
28.33
clear. Lows in the mid 50s. cloudy in the morning ...Then
Pomeroy, died April 20,
Centuoy Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rocltwoll {NYSE) - 31.31
South winds 5 to 10 mph becoming partly sunny. A -3.78
Rockr Booll (NASDAQ) - 4.31
~009, in Sedona.
up
to
20
mph.
chance
of
showers
and
scatwith.
gusts
Chomplon
(NASDAQ)
1.
73
Roya Dutch Sholl - 45.61
t She was the daughter of
Chormlng Shope (NASDAQ) SUra Holding (NASDAQ) Monday
••
.Sunny.
Highs
tered
thunderstorms.
Highs
!he late Dr. Norbert W. and
3.22
60.91
in the upper 80s. South in the lower 70s. Chance of Cl1y
Hertha (Jesse) Compton,
Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.31
WII·Mirt (NYSE) - 47.~7
rain 30 percent.
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Colllno (NYSE) - 36.54
Wandy'o (!\lYSE) - 5.50
tu1d at one time worked in
Monday
oight
..
.Mostly
Wednesday
night
DuPont
(NYSE)
28.78
WaoBinco (NYSE) - 19.94
the' family-owned Goesslet
US
Bank
(NYSE)
18.97
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.33
Thursda)'
clear. Lows in the upper through
1ewelry on Court Street,
Gannett (NYSE) - 3.45
IIOCk reports ore the 4
50s.
·
oigbt...Mostly cloudy with Ganerat EIK!rlc (NYSE) - 12.11 Dally
Pomeroy.
p.m. ET cloolng quoteo ol Iran•
Tuesday...Partly sunny. · a 30 percent chance of Harley.O.VId~n (NYSE) - 20.44 actlono .for April 24, 2009, proatterided
Ohio
• Sl)e
vided by Edward Jones llnan·
Highs
in the upper 70s.
.· showers, Lows in the lower JP Moogan (NYSE) - 33.38
· University and graduated with
Krogor
(NYSE)
21.42
clol
advloors Isaac Mills In
Tuesday oigbt ••.Mostly 50s. Highs in the mid 70s.
. ll BS in biological science and
Umlled Brandl {NYSE) - 11.05
Galllpollo at (740) 441-9441 and
.
lin. g.
Friday...Partly · sunny. Norfolk Soulhorn (NYSE) a master •smcounse
, · . · · .. ·. cloudy with scattered !hun~
Lilley Marrero In Point Ple11ant
derstorms
with
a
chance
of
Highs
in
the
mid
70s.
37.79
at (304) 874.fl174. Mambor SIPC.
·.She held certificates in
Ramona "-"·Compton ·
..
fouch for Health, Massage,
. . . .· . . ·
Applied Physiology, Human.Ecology, VeterlMry
hnOiogy,
Herbology, Pas,t ·Life Regression and .Polarity ~· · She .
WJght at Hocking College and supported Wellness·Alliance,
Athens, and owned Heart Song in ei':iipse Village,·
.
WASHINGTON (AP) international lending insti,. She was preceded in death by her husband, Rpbert Lee World finance officiads ·are tutions. That was a goal that
Jacobs, and both parents (1979).
· ·
. ·.
. bickering over the best way President Barack Obama
~ She had a zest for life and lived ncar the Ohio River most to get the International and other leaders set at the
of her life. Her enjoyments included snow and water skiing Monetary ·.Fund . n:tore ~roup of 20 nations summit
and entertaining friends. . ..
·
money for Its rev1tabzed m London on Apnl 2.
.. When she relocated to Sedona, Ariz.,. she practiced role m helping shore up
Geithner said major
f;hamanic Energy Medicine · under the name of Keriia capital-starVed countries.
p1:0gress toward increasmg
Greywolfe.
.
While Treasury Secretary the IMP's resources "must
Timothy Geithner and fefc be an important outcome of
low finance ministers held these meetings. The intematalkS Saturday at the IMP's tlonal community should
· Janies F. .Brown, 71, of Bidwell, passed away Thursday, headquarters near the White act quickly." He said the
'April 23 , 2009, at the Holzer Medical Center.
House, about 100 protesters U.S. has committed to seek: : He. was born April 1, 1938, in Logan County, W.Va., son clashed with roiice outside. ing congressional apl'roval
APphoto
f th 1 t Ch r
d M 'Jd F 1 B
Several activists · were for up to $lq&lt;l bllhon,
0
e a e ar Je an
ali a ar ey rown.
·
pushed to. the ground by matchmg commitments for Protesters clash with law enforcement officers as they try to
.. James was retired from Buckeye Steel.
.
• .Survivingaretwosons,RichardWestofBidwell,andJameSI policeh after bth eyk.tdried to thJe same damohuntEmade. by push them ba~ on the sidewalk during a protest against
f. VanMeter of Fairborn, Ohio; five grandchildren; four great- ' marc onto a 1oc e street. · apan an t e uropean the International Monetary Fund in Washington, Saturday..
~dchildren; and one sis~, Wanda sue Brpwn of Ashville. . Police used pepper spray on Union, respectively.
also tied up in arguments
· d h b h'
d h
·. the protesters. One protester
There seems to be a grow· meetings.
· J.ames was preceded 10 eat Y IS parents; a aug ter, had blood on his hands, and · ing divide .within the 185But those countries· are · the emerging economies are
Patricia VanMeter; a grandson, James Leroy Hammon Jr.; a ·
brother, Ernest c. Brown; and a sister, Hazel Mavfield.
an officer had blood on the nation IMF. Emerging eco- insisting the IMF consider making about a ·greater say
"'"
u·
·
"11 be h ld back of his shirt.
nomic powers such as China, . issuing bonds as a way to at the IMF - at the expense
. There will....; no ca tog hours and .services WI
e
The . demonstrators, Russia, Brazil and India are raise the support. The coun- of the current power strucat a later date at the convenience of the family.
· Willis Funeral Home is serving the family.
·
.·
angered by world leaders' insisting that th~ United tries would buy the IMF ture that favors the U.S. and
·
· Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail handlmg of the econom1c States, France, Bntam and bonds rather than extending Europe,
the
suppoq
in
loans;
The
.Condolences.
crisis, held signs that read other old~Iine powers listen
"Ca!'italism do not resusci- · to their ideas on different IMF has never issued bonds
before, although the . idea
tate and chanted, "Pump funding approaches.
IMF: www.imf.org
'
up the people power."
. Tbe nch nation~ had was explored in the 1980s. · World Bank: www.worldOn the agenda at the IMF .hoped to get China and the Both the bonds and lo.ans
bank.org
Larry Delano Halley, 67, of Bidwell, died Friday meeting is how to supP.IY a other nations to commit to would require the IMF to
portion of the $1.1 tnllion billions of dollars of support pay interest.
evening, Apri\24, 2009, arhi~ residence.
·
The debate, however, is
· Born Jan. 29, 1942, in·Galli&amp; County, he was the son of 'increase in resources for for !heir effort at these
the late Victor imd Edith Slater Hruley. ·
·
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by four broth·
ers, Virgil, Tom, Bob and Bill ijalley, and by two sisters,
Ruth Ward and Audrey Holley.
·
.
Latry was ·a retired laborer, having worked for 37 ·years in
combined service. Sunday
road construction. He attended the Good News Baptist Church.
Sunday,AprtJ u
School is. at 9:30 a.m. with ·
He is survived by· his wife; Jewell Frances Waugh Halley,
Monda);, April 27
. ·. ;,P0M~ROY · _.:... Regular worship at 11 a.m. There 1--...;,______-,~
whom he married Oct. II , 1972; five stepchild(en, Lea (Andy)
"
morit\lly meeting of Father will be a carry-in dinner.
POMEROY
· Hout of Gallipolis, Rick (Lori) Joy ofOro:Wn City, Jim (Linda)
·
· - veterans Jos.~ph · ·Jessing Council Brian Dunham is pastor of
Thevenir of Bidwell, Chuck Thevenir of Crowli•City, and Service · Commission, 9,, . f6M, J(nlgbts of~lun\bus, both churches.
·
Anita Hoffman of St. Petersburg, Fla.; eight stepgtandchild~n a.m.; 117. Memorial Drive, 6 30 . . . S
d H
: . . p.m.,. . ac~~
eart
and one step--great-granddaughter; a brOther, lake (Hattie) Pomeroy.
insurance p~otection 11.
POINT ROCK - Revival
Gburch
HaiL
·
·
Halley of Tennessee; and two sis\(!~}, BettY (Ivan) Lane of
services at Point Rock
competitive: pritcl: We: t'cpre!lent
Crown City, and Patricia (Paul) Oark of Columbus.
POMEROY . ...;. Meigs
Church
·
of.
the
Nazarene
,
'
,
·.
•
·
Sjlt~y, May 2
Services will be l p.m. Tuesday, Apri.l: .28, ,2009, at the County Library Board, 3:30
only the fin•n Ill---.
.MIDPtEPORT :- Job's Stitte Route 689, Albany;
Waugh·Halley-Wood funeral Home, with ' Pasl&lt;lr Cliff p.m., at the library.
. .Daughters Bethel 62, ll April 26-29. Sunday morn- , insurance
Curry officiating. Burial will. follow a.t Ohio Valley
RAciNE
_Southern · a.m., · 50th anniversary ing service, II a.m. ,
oompanie.•.
Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Monday, April 27,2009, ftom 6 to 8 p.m. ·
·. · .Local School Board, regular dinner; 2 p.m., open meet, evening services, 7 p.m .
including
Evangelist Fred Bales, also
· 8 p.m., high·sc hoo1· ing H
with majority
ceremoIn lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the meetmg,
dQ
H 1
Auto-Owners
media room:'·
ny. onore . ueen : ar ey singing w,ith w,ife, Ida.
Shriners Hospitals.
·
· .
.·
· ·
· Eolt presiding and recepAn onli.ne. guest registry is avail$1e at waugh·halley- . ·
Insurance
RACINE ·
The
'POMEROY' .; State Rep. tion honoring Kristen
wood.com.
&lt;;ompany,
Debbie Phillips, D-Athens, Davis, Grand Bethel Antiquity , Baptis! Church
on
,
Ohio
124,
located
will host open constituent Hon&lt;?red·Queen, to follow
· whieh hu truly e-Arned the
Racine, will have a music.
hours
3-5
p.tn.,
meeting.
·
·
office
reputation as Th.e ~No Problem"
.• .
ministry of Southern Gospel
with
recording arttst,
Wayne" Andy" Ward, 71, ofPOrtland; passed away at .6:25 Pomeroy Library. Meigs · .
Pcopk~. Al:k u.\ :abom. thr
Dennis Benton of Denver,
a.m. Wednesday,April 22, 2009; in the Arbors at Marietta. County residents will have
many other .;~dv.:mrages of doing
N.C., 6 p.m., at the church.
Botn May 18, 1937, in Ja~n County; W.Va., he was the opportunity to share their
Sunday,
Aprlll6
concerns
or
suggestiorts
about
Benton appeared with The
the son of the late Charles Edgar and Effie Miller Ward. ·
husines., wi[h an independent 1
SYRACUSE
,
The
state
policy
with
Phillips.
He retired in 1999 from the Imperial Electric Corp. as a
Greenes, Quinton Mills.•
insurance agrn(,:y.
video, .''The Greatest Gift," The Hoppers and other
.
.·
·
.
set-up operator. .
by
Steve
and
Annie
Tuesday,
April
28
gospel artists over the years.
He mamed Lmda L\le Cozart on Jan. 10, 1959, m
Chapman,.
will
be
shown
at
POMEROY
Meigs
fior more informatbn conStiversville, ·and she preceded him in death on Ma&gt;' 29,2008.
Emergency 10 a.m. Sunday at the tact Don Walker, pastor,
He was also preceded by his daughter, Shelly DeruseWatd, in County
Cl)mmunity (204) 273-9277.
.
August 1981; a sister in infancy, Lula Belle Watd; sisters,Josie Planning Committee, II :30 Syracuse
Church.
Friends
and Family
a.m.,
Meigs
Senior
Center.
Jackson, Goldie Anthony, Albinia Gluesencarnp and Mary
Lunch will be available , . Round-up Day will be
Schoonover; and brothers, Ray G. Watd and Paul J: Ward.
ol:)served. The public is
. Surviving are his grandson, Zlicb (Lindsey) Ward. of
invited.
Portland; great·g~and.d~ughter, Sophia Lynn Ward; bf?ther,
Sunday, Apri126
Gene Ward of StJversv1lle; a nephew who was r81sed m the
RACINE
- Free lunCARPENTER
home, Frankie Ward of Texas; special friends, Dale
.
cheon,
.
12:30
p.m., in the
"Sanctified'' in concert,
Lawson, Keith Fitch, and John and Edith Henderson; and
6:30 p.m .• Mount Union Carmel kitchen sponsored
·
Tuesday, April Z8
numerous nieces and nephews. ·
.
POMEROY - The Oh- Church, 39091 Carpenter by the Friendship Circle of
·: Services will be 1 p.m. Monday, April 27, 2009, in the
the Carmel-Sutton United
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine. Officiating will be KAN Coin Club will have a Hill Road, Pomeroy.
Methodi~t Church.
Pastor Ryan Eaton. Interment will be in the Browning dinner meeting at 7 p.m. at
RACINE - Free lunCemetery at Portland. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. the Pomeroy Library. ·A
cheon,
12:30 p.m., for the
meeting
and
auction
will
Sunday, April26, 2009, at the funei'al home.
Carmel-Suttton
Ullited
follow.
Public
invited.
·
·, Expressions of sympathy may he sent to the family by
Methodist
Church,
spon·
'Visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
.
sored
by
the
Friendship
Wednesday, Aprill!J
..
. .
POMEROY
The Circle.
Middleport · Literary Club
POMEROY - Members
will meet at 2 p.m., at the
of
the New Beginnings
Pomeroy Library. Pam
:-. .
O'B.rien
will
review United Methodist Church
will join the congregation at
Auditions
by
Barbara
'
U .M. Church at the
Heath
be
Walters.
Hostess
will
'
Middleport
church for a
Gay
Perrin.
.. ·Larry DeM McCarty Kent, 56, Galiipolis, died Friday,
April 24, 2009, at his residence.
·
.
Services will be l p.m. Wednesday, April 29, 2009, at the
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with Pastor Randy
Cllfnes officiating. Burial will be in Vmton Memorial Park.
~riends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
AU current &amp; retired GCS teachers
' A complete obituary will appear in Monday's Gallip&lt;&gt;hs ·
Daily Tribune.

critical factors have coa- on the kind of grass-roots
lesced at the same time.
democracy that is neces:
• Politics. The generation sary to move CUba to a betof "historic" exiles that was ter future." There are nQ
born in Cuba and kept the guarantees here. But the
anti-Castro flame boming more Cubans learn abouj
in Florida is fading from !1\e outside world, the more
the scene. Their children like!~ they are to demaruol
and grandchildren · hold polittcal change at home. ,
much more flexible views.
• Diplomacy. Washingtol)
Obama received almost broke off diplomatic rela·
half of the Cuban- tions with · Havana after
American voie in Florida, Castro took, power, but Sen:.
and a new poll shows that Richard Lugar, rankinr
64 percent of that group Republican on the ForeigR
suppq'rts the president's Rel&lt;!iions
Commiuee,
new palicies. Says Femand argues that policy is noW
Amandi ~ vice president of counterproductive. By isoMiami-based Bendixen &amp; Iating America from world
Associates, which conduct· opinion, it diminishes ow
ed the survey:·"We're at the credibility , and "under•
end of a 50-year stalemate mines our broader security
period. calling for a new and pOlitical interests."
dawn on U.S .-Cuba rela• History. Communist
tions."
expansionism has receded
• Economics . . With II as a threat to American
. million people, Cuba is the · interests. The Cuban misbiggest market in the site crisis took place almost
Caribbean, and American 47 years ago. So it is far
business interests ~ from . easier for a rriodem presi·
the Chamber of Commerce dent to withstand the antito the farm lobby - are Communist
tirades
pushing hard for liberalized . launched by Castro's die·
trade, A Florida State ·hard foes. As Secretary of
University study estimates State Hill~ Clinton put it·,
that resum'ing commerce "Let's put ideology aside;
with Cuba would bring . tbat is so yesterday." ·
·
between $ t' billion and $2
The same could be said
billion worth of business to of America's entire policy
Florida alone .
toward Cuba. Ronal4
• Democracy. The admin· Reagan once faniousll
istration argues that freer said, "Cuba si, Castro no,.'
trade and travel would have Obama is saying, "Realit)'
political implications as . si, fantasy no."
well. As Dan RestrepO, a
(CokieRoberts'liltestbook
senior adviser on Western .is ."Ladies of Uberty: ·'!'he
Hemisphere Affairs at the Women Who Shaped Our
National Security Council, Nation" (William Morrow,
put it, "It's very important 2008). Steve and Cokie
to help open up. space so Roberts can be reached at
the Cuban people can work ' stevecokie@gmail.com).

Bickertng,at IMF over new money for lending agency

T
.
e e

. Ja;nes F. Brown

On the Net:

Larry Delano Halley

.·trs TRUE LOVEr

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at Gallipolis.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Raenona Kay Coniptali

LETTERS TO THE
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Cornctlon Polley
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•

Obituaries

Reality si,Jantasy no
President Obama actual·
ly thinks he should talk to
the leaders of a nation only
90 miles from Florida. He
Cokle
also thinks that American
and
citizens who emigrated
Steven
·
from Cuba should ' be able
Roberts
to visit their homeland and
send money to their .relatives. Score one for ratio·
nality and common sense.
. · For decades, American ~rong side of history and
policy . toward Cuba has campaigned for a change in
been frozen in time, dicta!· Cuba policy. Now he has
ed by a small but fervent take.n a few small steps in
b:Wd of exiles who demand- .that direction. Exiles will
. ec! that Washington take the be able to travel more
hardest possible line against freely, and send money and
Havana. No talk, no trade, humanitarian aid more easno travel. Nada.
·.
ily. Telecommunications
The policy was straight · companies would be free to
out of a fa1ry tale. Close · seek business in Cuba as
your eyes, clap your hands, well.
wish very hard. and maybe
The president should not
the island will disappear.
stop there. Let everyone
Think, how truly crazy travel to Cuba, not just
that approach really was. exiles; end trade embargo
President · Nixon went to that mainly impacts ordiChina 37 years ago. · nary citizens; and establish
President Reagan traveled diplomatic relations. ·
to Moscow and saw the
But we also understand
"Evil Empire" for himself Obama's caution. He has
ia .1988. Qnly Cuba was made the first move, now
off-limits, I only Fidel it's ur Cuba to re.;iprocate.
Castro was a nonperson.
Fidel s brother Raul, who
The policy persisted for holds the title of president;
only one reljson . Cuban says he's wiUin~ to discuss
exiles clustered in South "everything" with Obama,
Florida could command including political prison·
· total
loyalty
from ers and human rights. If
Republican presidents on he's serious, he will find a
the one issue they cared .willing pilrtner in the White
about. Bill Clinton wanted House. As the president put
. to improve ties to Cuba, but it, "We'repoing to explore
his efforts ended · in 1996 and see i we can make
after Castro's forces-.. shot some further steps."
down two planes searching
Ending a 50-year-old
for rafters fleeing the fairy tale and restoring
island.
ratiQnality is not easy.
Obama
knew · the Obama's shift is only posRepublicans were on the · sible because a number of

!

.... Ge!lpr+ ~,....,. No

111 moil P«iiilloc:lln-

W'P'IIfW, home &lt;WI'ilf 8I!IMCe ... 1

'"'

M1oll Subecrtptton

w-·-County
.............

12
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52Weol&lt;s ........... '1.0.11
o.n.....eou~~~y

w- .. ..... .... ..

Ohio Valley Publlahlng Co.

12
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Published every Sunday. 825

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Obama follows through·pn promises ·.
With Pres.ident Barack
Obama's fll'St 100 days in
office finally over, it's time
to grade his performance.
It's a time-honored tradition to measure the pulse of
the nation and to get a
sense of how people -view ·
their new president: . his
public performance, policies, cabinet and other ini·
tiatives, both at home and
abroad.
It bears repeating though not for too much
longer - that Obama
inherited a major mess: two
wars, an economy in turmoil with frozen credit
markets, mounting home
foreclosures , flat wages for
individual workers, the
smallest ·rate of job growth
in three-quaners of a century and more Americans living in poverty and without
health msurance. .
I don't think any of us
were quite prepared for the
sheer energy this new president demonstrated in his
first 100 days. The number
of press conferences, policy speeches, cross-country
and international travels on
top of new initiatives to
bolster financial markets
has been mind-boggling.

Donna
Brazile

Obama said he would
close down Guantanamo
Bay, and the process is
under way. He said he.
would extend health care to
children, and he has signed
into law a program that will
provide more than 11 milliol) children with health
·care. He said he would
assess the situation in Iraq
and provide a plan to bring
our troops home safely. He
said he would reverse
many of George W. Bush's
executive orders on stemcell research and did that,
too. One astute political
observer recently told me
that Obama reminds her of
an octopus with eight arms,
all doing different thin~s ,
but each .done with ag1le
efficiency.
• I ~ive him a· B+ on the
Amencan Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, com-

Clubs and

.organizatio:ris

.

monly known as the stimu- poorly. What else can
Ius plan. Signed into.law1ln explam the unprecedented
Feb. 17. the .act is now moye by .a former vice
helping create or save mil- president to be in · attacJi
. lions of jobs across ihe . mode 24n?
.
country for ·teachers, ~w- · Obama is keeping his
enforcement offi&lt;;ers and promises to take this coun.
other essential workers in try in a ne'IV direction. The
areas like health care. If president will move full
this money could be spent steam ahead on health care,
more quickly and reach education ·and energy
people m dire straits faster, reform. Tackling these
th9my issues will J'e9Uire
he'd deserve an.A.
• On the 20 10 fiscal bud- an enormous expenditure
get that will create jobs of Obarna 's political capital
"!ith investments in educa- - an!l most of that will be
tion, health care and clean spent just uying to keep his
energy while cuttiqg taxes allies in line.
for middle-class families, I
Considering that he still
IJave given him an A-. The has 1,360 days to go, I'm .
major concern I continue to fastening my seatbelt. It
have on his overall eco- will be a bumpy ride. But I
nomic plan, which deserves will thoroughlr enjoy
an "incomplete," is how the watching Obama s journey
so-called financial system of restoration and revival.
will be rebuilt in ways that Our 44th president may not
might inspire confidence in be perfect, but he's in the
the future of our capitalist game, scoring wins. for
system. .
America while the opposi• For handling of nation- tion still figures out how to
al. security, foreign affairs play.
.
and our image abroad, 'he
(Donna Brazile is a politgets an A+. Unlike Bush, ica/ commentator on CNN,
who wisely decided to stay ABC and NPR; contribut·
out of the lirrielight, Dick ing columnist to RoU Call,
Cheney appears to be tak- the newspaper of Capitol
ing Obarna's success in this Hill; and former campaign
arena very personally and manager for AI Gore).

Gallipolis City Schools.Annual

Deaths

Larry Dean Kent

WHO:

WffEN:

~Coy-1vtoore

.Punera( t}[omes

·

We wish to thank everyone for their many prayers,
kind words, financial donations and all who were
able to attend the Jaime Ridenour.5K Run/Walk.
Special thanks to Penny, Shelly and numerous
others who planned and worked the Be~it. All
dooations are going toward Jaime's medical

expenses.

Heck. ale!lt!, alqrrr/, Mc/jm &amp; eToe Moorr - D;ncmrs
420 l•t Aveoue, Gatlipolio, OH • (740) 446-e852.
208 Main Stn."et, Vincoa, OH "(740) 388 8U1

Agoi11, your gelll!rosiry is lheply appreciated by the
RidtltOIU' Qlld Wilson jamilin.

MayS, 2009 at 6:00p.m.

WHQ.RE:
Dave's American Grill
RSVP to. Leslie Henry by calling

740-645-1600
Attetuh•(!s u·ill order frcml menrt.
Retiree dimU!n will be fJtlidfM b.v til~
GuJI;fJoli,,· £ducatim1 A.\StJCiat;ou.

•

�OPINION

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I

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Diane Hill
Controller

Leiters to the editor are wflcome . They should be less
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TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday.April26, the I 16th day of2009. There
are 249 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On April 26, 1865, John
Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln,
was surrounded.by federal troops near Bowling Green, Va.,
and killed.
On this date: In 1607, English colonists went ashore at pre·
sent-day Cape Henry, Va., on an expedition to establish the fli'St
permanent English seitlement in the Western Hemisphere. . ~
In. 1909, Abdul Hamid II was deposed as sultan o( the
Ottoman Empire.
·
In 1937, planes frorri Nazi Germany raided the Basque
town of Guemica during the Spanish Civil War.
In 1945, Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, the head of France's
Vichy government during World War II, was arrested.
In 1964, the African nations of Tanganyika and Zanzibar
merged to form Tanzania. .
: ·
In 1968 , the United States exploded beneath the Nevada
desert a 1.3 megaton nuclear device called "Boxcar."
In 1970, the Stephen Sondheim musical "Company"
opened at the Alvin Theatre in New York.
.
In 1986, the world's worst nuclear accident occurred at
the Chernob.yl plant in the Soviet Union.
In 1989, actress-comedian Lucille Ball died at CedarsSinai Medical Center in Los Angeles at age 77.
In 2000, Vermont Gov. Howard Dean signed the nation's
first bill allowing same-sex couples to form civil unions.
Ten years ago: The head of the International Committee
of the Red Cross, Cornelio Sommaruga, met with three
U.S. soldiers held captive by Yugoslavia, BBC anchorwomanJill Dando, host of a crime•fighting ptogram;was
fatally shot on the steps of her London home. (Barry
George was convicted in July 2001 ofkilling Dando; how·
ever, he was acquitted in a retrial.)
·
Five years a~o: Following conservative criticism of his
anti-war actiVIties during the Vietnam era, Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry accused President
George W. Bush of failing to prove whether he'd fulfilled .
his commitment to the National Guard during the same
period. The government unv.eiled its new, colorized $50
bilL Author Hubert Selby Jr. died in Los Angeles at age 75.
One year ago: Police in Austria arrested Josef Fritzi, free'ing his daughter "Elisabeth and ·her six children, whom he
had fathered while holding her captive in a cellar for 24
years. (Fritzi was later sentenced to life in a psychiatric
ward.) Yossi Harel, the ship commander whose attempt to
bring Holocaust survivors to Palestine aboard the Exodus
1947 built support for Israel's ·rounding, died in Tel Aviv at
age 90. Avant-garde composer Henry Brant died in Santa
Barbara, Calif., at age·94.
Today's Birthdays: Actress-comedian Carol Burnett is 76.
R&amp;B singer Maurice Williams is 71. Actor Giancarlo
Esposito is 51. Rock musician Roger Taylor (Duran Duran)
is 49. Actress Joan Chen is 48. Actor Jet Li is 46. Rock
musician Jimmy Stafford (Train) is 45. Actor-comedian
Kevjn James is 44. Actress Marianne Jean-Baptiste is 42.
RapperT-Boz (TLC) is 39. Country musician Jay DeMarcus
(Rascal Flats) is 38. Rock musician Jose Pasillas (Incubus)
is 33. Actor Jason Earles ("Hannah Montana'') is 32. Actor
:Tom Welling is 32. Actress Jordana Brewster is 29. Actress
Marnette Patterson is 29. Actor Channing Tatum is 29.
, Thought for Today: "Friends may come and go, butene·
mies accumulate." - Dr. Thomas F. Jones Jr., American·
·
college offi~ial (1916-1981).

: Sunday, April26, 2009

PageA4
Sunday, April26, 2009

a

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Local Stocks

Local Weather

Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS.
Sunday~.Sunny. Highs in showers. Lows in the mid AEP (NYSE) - 21.18 .
DAD)21.55
Abo
(NASDAQ)
42.55
the upper 80s. Southwest 50s. Chance of rain 40 per· Alhlond Inc. {NYSE) - 19.05
BBT (NYSE) - 23.42
winds 10 to 15 mph.
cent.
Peoplll (NASDAQ) - 15.88
Big Loti (NYSE) - 26.81
·· Ramona Kay Compton of
Pepolco (NYSE) - 48.82
-Sunday night •• .Mostly
Wednesday ••• Mostly Bob Evono {NASDAQ) - 2U7
Sedonia, Ariz., formerly of
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5
BorgWar(NYSE)
28.33
clear. Lows in the mid 50s. cloudy in the morning ...Then
Pomeroy, died April 20,
Centuoy Aluminum (NASDAQ)
Rocltwoll {NYSE) - 31.31
South winds 5 to 10 mph becoming partly sunny. A -3.78
Rockr Booll (NASDAQ) - 4.31
~009, in Sedona.
up
to
20
mph.
chance
of
showers
and
scatwith.
gusts
Chomplon
(NASDAQ)
1.
73
Roya Dutch Sholl - 45.61
t She was the daughter of
Chormlng Shope (NASDAQ) SUra Holding (NASDAQ) Monday
••
.Sunny.
Highs
tered
thunderstorms.
Highs
!he late Dr. Norbert W. and
3.22
60.91
in the upper 80s. South in the lower 70s. Chance of Cl1y
Hertha (Jesse) Compton,
Holding (NASDAQ) - 29.31
WII·Mirt (NYSE) - 47.~7
rain 30 percent.
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Colllno (NYSE) - 36.54
Wandy'o (!\lYSE) - 5.50
tu1d at one time worked in
Monday
oight
..
.Mostly
Wednesday
night
DuPont
(NYSE)
28.78
WaoBinco (NYSE) - 19.94
the' family-owned Goesslet
US
Bank
(NYSE)
18.97
Worthington (NYSE) - 14.33
Thursda)'
clear. Lows in the upper through
1ewelry on Court Street,
Gannett (NYSE) - 3.45
IIOCk reports ore the 4
50s.
·
oigbt...Mostly cloudy with Ganerat EIK!rlc (NYSE) - 12.11 Dally
Pomeroy.
p.m. ET cloolng quoteo ol Iran•
Tuesday...Partly sunny. · a 30 percent chance of Harley.O.VId~n (NYSE) - 20.44 actlono .for April 24, 2009, proatterided
Ohio
• Sl)e
vided by Edward Jones llnan·
Highs
in the upper 70s.
.· showers, Lows in the lower JP Moogan (NYSE) - 33.38
· University and graduated with
Krogor
(NYSE)
21.42
clol
advloors Isaac Mills In
Tuesday oigbt ••.Mostly 50s. Highs in the mid 70s.
. ll BS in biological science and
Umlled Brandl {NYSE) - 11.05
Galllpollo at (740) 441-9441 and
.
lin. g.
Friday...Partly · sunny. Norfolk Soulhorn (NYSE) a master •smcounse
, · . · · .. ·. cloudy with scattered !hun~
Lilley Marrero In Point Ple11ant
derstorms
with
a
chance
of
Highs
in
the
mid
70s.
37.79
at (304) 874.fl174. Mambor SIPC.
·.She held certificates in
Ramona "-"·Compton ·
..
fouch for Health, Massage,
. . . .· . . ·
Applied Physiology, Human.Ecology, VeterlMry
hnOiogy,
Herbology, Pas,t ·Life Regression and .Polarity ~· · She .
WJght at Hocking College and supported Wellness·Alliance,
Athens, and owned Heart Song in ei':iipse Village,·
.
WASHINGTON (AP) international lending insti,. She was preceded in death by her husband, Rpbert Lee World finance officiads ·are tutions. That was a goal that
Jacobs, and both parents (1979).
· ·
. ·.
. bickering over the best way President Barack Obama
~ She had a zest for life and lived ncar the Ohio River most to get the International and other leaders set at the
of her life. Her enjoyments included snow and water skiing Monetary ·.Fund . n:tore ~roup of 20 nations summit
and entertaining friends. . ..
·
money for Its rev1tabzed m London on Apnl 2.
.. When she relocated to Sedona, Ariz.,. she practiced role m helping shore up
Geithner said major
f;hamanic Energy Medicine · under the name of Keriia capital-starVed countries.
p1:0gress toward increasmg
Greywolfe.
.
While Treasury Secretary the IMP's resources "must
Timothy Geithner and fefc be an important outcome of
low finance ministers held these meetings. The intematalkS Saturday at the IMP's tlonal community should
· Janies F. .Brown, 71, of Bidwell, passed away Thursday, headquarters near the White act quickly." He said the
'April 23 , 2009, at the Holzer Medical Center.
House, about 100 protesters U.S. has committed to seek: : He. was born April 1, 1938, in Logan County, W.Va., son clashed with roiice outside. ing congressional apl'roval
APphoto
f th 1 t Ch r
d M 'Jd F 1 B
Several activists · were for up to $lq&lt;l bllhon,
0
e a e ar Je an
ali a ar ey rown.
·
pushed to. the ground by matchmg commitments for Protesters clash with law enforcement officers as they try to
.. James was retired from Buckeye Steel.
.
• .Survivingaretwosons,RichardWestofBidwell,andJameSI policeh after bth eyk.tdried to thJe same damohuntEmade. by push them ba~ on the sidewalk during a protest against
f. VanMeter of Fairborn, Ohio; five grandchildren; four great- ' marc onto a 1oc e street. · apan an t e uropean the International Monetary Fund in Washington, Saturday..
~dchildren; and one sis~, Wanda sue Brpwn of Ashville. . Police used pepper spray on Union, respectively.
also tied up in arguments
· d h b h'
d h
·. the protesters. One protester
There seems to be a grow· meetings.
· J.ames was preceded 10 eat Y IS parents; a aug ter, had blood on his hands, and · ing divide .within the 185But those countries· are · the emerging economies are
Patricia VanMeter; a grandson, James Leroy Hammon Jr.; a ·
brother, Ernest c. Brown; and a sister, Hazel Mavfield.
an officer had blood on the nation IMF. Emerging eco- insisting the IMF consider making about a ·greater say
"'"
u·
·
"11 be h ld back of his shirt.
nomic powers such as China, . issuing bonds as a way to at the IMF - at the expense
. There will....; no ca tog hours and .services WI
e
The . demonstrators, Russia, Brazil and India are raise the support. The coun- of the current power strucat a later date at the convenience of the family.
· Willis Funeral Home is serving the family.
·
.·
angered by world leaders' insisting that th~ United tries would buy the IMF ture that favors the U.S. and
·
· Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail handlmg of the econom1c States, France, Bntam and bonds rather than extending Europe,
the
suppoq
in
loans;
The
.Condolences.
crisis, held signs that read other old~Iine powers listen
"Ca!'italism do not resusci- · to their ideas on different IMF has never issued bonds
before, although the . idea
tate and chanted, "Pump funding approaches.
IMF: www.imf.org
'
up the people power."
. Tbe nch nation~ had was explored in the 1980s. · World Bank: www.worldOn the agenda at the IMF .hoped to get China and the Both the bonds and lo.ans
bank.org
Larry Delano Halley, 67, of Bidwell, died Friday meeting is how to supP.IY a other nations to commit to would require the IMF to
portion of the $1.1 tnllion billions of dollars of support pay interest.
evening, Apri\24, 2009, arhi~ residence.
·
The debate, however, is
· Born Jan. 29, 1942, in·Galli&amp; County, he was the son of 'increase in resources for for !heir effort at these
the late Victor imd Edith Slater Hruley. ·
·
In addition to his parents, he was preceded by four broth·
ers, Virgil, Tom, Bob and Bill ijalley, and by two sisters,
Ruth Ward and Audrey Holley.
·
.
Latry was ·a retired laborer, having worked for 37 ·years in
combined service. Sunday
road construction. He attended the Good News Baptist Church.
Sunday,AprtJ u
School is. at 9:30 a.m. with ·
He is survived by· his wife; Jewell Frances Waugh Halley,
Monda);, April 27
. ·. ;,P0M~ROY · _.:... Regular worship at 11 a.m. There 1--...;,______-,~
whom he married Oct. II , 1972; five stepchild(en, Lea (Andy)
"
morit\lly meeting of Father will be a carry-in dinner.
POMEROY
· Hout of Gallipolis, Rick (Lori) Joy ofOro:Wn City, Jim (Linda)
·
· - veterans Jos.~ph · ·Jessing Council Brian Dunham is pastor of
Thevenir of Bidwell, Chuck Thevenir of Crowli•City, and Service · Commission, 9,, . f6M, J(nlgbts of~lun\bus, both churches.
·
Anita Hoffman of St. Petersburg, Fla.; eight stepgtandchild~n a.m.; 117. Memorial Drive, 6 30 . . . S
d H
: . . p.m.,. . ac~~
eart
and one step--great-granddaughter; a brOther, lake (Hattie) Pomeroy.
insurance p~otection 11.
POINT ROCK - Revival
Gburch
HaiL
·
·
Halley of Tennessee; and two sis\(!~}, BettY (Ivan) Lane of
services at Point Rock
competitive: pritcl: We: t'cpre!lent
Crown City, and Patricia (Paul) Oark of Columbus.
POMEROY . ...;. Meigs
Church
·
of.
the
Nazarene
,
'
,
·.
•
·
Sjlt~y, May 2
Services will be l p.m. Tuesday, Apri.l: .28, ,2009, at the County Library Board, 3:30
only the fin•n Ill---.
.MIDPtEPORT :- Job's Stitte Route 689, Albany;
Waugh·Halley-Wood funeral Home, with ' Pasl&lt;lr Cliff p.m., at the library.
. .Daughters Bethel 62, ll April 26-29. Sunday morn- , insurance
Curry officiating. Burial will. follow a.t Ohio Valley
RAciNE
_Southern · a.m., · 50th anniversary ing service, II a.m. ,
oompanie.•.
Memory Gardens. Friends may call at the funeral home on
Monday, April 27,2009, ftom 6 to 8 p.m. ·
·. · .Local School Board, regular dinner; 2 p.m., open meet, evening services, 7 p.m .
including
Evangelist Fred Bales, also
· 8 p.m., high·sc hoo1· ing H
with majority
ceremoIn lieu of flowers, contributions can be made to the meetmg,
dQ
H 1
Auto-Owners
media room:'·
ny. onore . ueen : ar ey singing w,ith w,ife, Ida.
Shriners Hospitals.
·
· .
.·
· ·
· Eolt presiding and recepAn onli.ne. guest registry is avail$1e at waugh·halley- . ·
Insurance
RACINE ·
The
'POMEROY' .; State Rep. tion honoring Kristen
wood.com.
&lt;;ompany,
Debbie Phillips, D-Athens, Davis, Grand Bethel Antiquity , Baptis! Church
on
,
Ohio
124,
located
will host open constituent Hon&lt;?red·Queen, to follow
· whieh hu truly e-Arned the
Racine, will have a music.
hours
3-5
p.tn.,
meeting.
·
·
office
reputation as Th.e ~No Problem"
.• .
ministry of Southern Gospel
with
recording arttst,
Wayne" Andy" Ward, 71, ofPOrtland; passed away at .6:25 Pomeroy Library. Meigs · .
Pcopk~. Al:k u.\ :abom. thr
Dennis Benton of Denver,
a.m. Wednesday,April 22, 2009; in the Arbors at Marietta. County residents will have
many other .;~dv.:mrages of doing
N.C., 6 p.m., at the church.
Botn May 18, 1937, in Ja~n County; W.Va., he was the opportunity to share their
Sunday,
Aprlll6
concerns
or
suggestiorts
about
Benton appeared with The
the son of the late Charles Edgar and Effie Miller Ward. ·
husines., wi[h an independent 1
SYRACUSE
,
The
state
policy
with
Phillips.
He retired in 1999 from the Imperial Electric Corp. as a
Greenes, Quinton Mills.•
insurance agrn(,:y.
video, .''The Greatest Gift," The Hoppers and other
.
.·
·
.
set-up operator. .
by
Steve
and
Annie
Tuesday,
April
28
gospel artists over the years.
He mamed Lmda L\le Cozart on Jan. 10, 1959, m
Chapman,.
will
be
shown
at
POMEROY
Meigs
fior more informatbn conStiversville, ·and she preceded him in death on Ma&gt;' 29,2008.
Emergency 10 a.m. Sunday at the tact Don Walker, pastor,
He was also preceded by his daughter, Shelly DeruseWatd, in County
Cl)mmunity (204) 273-9277.
.
August 1981; a sister in infancy, Lula Belle Watd; sisters,Josie Planning Committee, II :30 Syracuse
Church.
Friends
and Family
a.m.,
Meigs
Senior
Center.
Jackson, Goldie Anthony, Albinia Gluesencarnp and Mary
Lunch will be available , . Round-up Day will be
Schoonover; and brothers, Ray G. Watd and Paul J: Ward.
ol:)served. The public is
. Surviving are his grandson, Zlicb (Lindsey) Ward. of
invited.
Portland; great·g~and.d~ughter, Sophia Lynn Ward; bf?ther,
Sunday, Apri126
Gene Ward of StJversv1lle; a nephew who was r81sed m the
RACINE
- Free lunCARPENTER
home, Frankie Ward of Texas; special friends, Dale
.
cheon,
.
12:30
p.m., in the
"Sanctified'' in concert,
Lawson, Keith Fitch, and John and Edith Henderson; and
6:30 p.m .• Mount Union Carmel kitchen sponsored
·
Tuesday, April Z8
numerous nieces and nephews. ·
.
POMEROY - The Oh- Church, 39091 Carpenter by the Friendship Circle of
·: Services will be 1 p.m. Monday, April 27, 2009, in the
the Carmel-Sutton United
Cremeens Funeral Home at Racine. Officiating will be KAN Coin Club will have a Hill Road, Pomeroy.
Methodi~t Church.
Pastor Ryan Eaton. Interment will be in the Browning dinner meeting at 7 p.m. at
RACINE - Free lunCemetery at Portland. Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. the Pomeroy Library. ·A
cheon,
12:30 p.m., for the
meeting
and
auction
will
Sunday, April26, 2009, at the funei'al home.
Carmel-Suttton
Ullited
follow.
Public
invited.
·
·, Expressions of sympathy may he sent to the family by
Methodist
Church,
spon·
'Visiting www.cremeensfuneralhomes.com.
.
sored
by
the
Friendship
Wednesday, Aprill!J
..
. .
POMEROY
The Circle.
Middleport · Literary Club
POMEROY - Members
will meet at 2 p.m., at the
of
the New Beginnings
Pomeroy Library. Pam
:-. .
O'B.rien
will
review United Methodist Church
will join the congregation at
Auditions
by
Barbara
'
U .M. Church at the
Heath
be
Walters.
Hostess
will
'
Middleport
church for a
Gay
Perrin.
.. ·Larry DeM McCarty Kent, 56, Galiipolis, died Friday,
April 24, 2009, at his residence.
·
.
Services will be l p.m. Wednesday, April 29, 2009, at the
Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral Home, with Pastor Randy
Cllfnes officiating. Burial will be in Vmton Memorial Park.
~riends may call at the funeral home from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesday.
AU current &amp; retired GCS teachers
' A complete obituary will appear in Monday's Gallip&lt;&gt;hs ·
Daily Tribune.

critical factors have coa- on the kind of grass-roots
lesced at the same time.
democracy that is neces:
• Politics. The generation sary to move CUba to a betof "historic" exiles that was ter future." There are nQ
born in Cuba and kept the guarantees here. But the
anti-Castro flame boming more Cubans learn abouj
in Florida is fading from !1\e outside world, the more
the scene. Their children like!~ they are to demaruol
and grandchildren · hold polittcal change at home. ,
much more flexible views.
• Diplomacy. Washingtol)
Obama received almost broke off diplomatic rela·
half of the Cuban- tions with · Havana after
American voie in Florida, Castro took, power, but Sen:.
and a new poll shows that Richard Lugar, rankinr
64 percent of that group Republican on the ForeigR
suppq'rts the president's Rel&lt;!iions
Commiuee,
new palicies. Says Femand argues that policy is noW
Amandi ~ vice president of counterproductive. By isoMiami-based Bendixen &amp; Iating America from world
Associates, which conduct· opinion, it diminishes ow
ed the survey:·"We're at the credibility , and "under•
end of a 50-year stalemate mines our broader security
period. calling for a new and pOlitical interests."
dawn on U.S .-Cuba rela• History. Communist
tions."
expansionism has receded
• Economics . . With II as a threat to American
. million people, Cuba is the · interests. The Cuban misbiggest market in the site crisis took place almost
Caribbean, and American 47 years ago. So it is far
business interests ~ from . easier for a rriodem presi·
the Chamber of Commerce dent to withstand the antito the farm lobby - are Communist
tirades
pushing hard for liberalized . launched by Castro's die·
trade, A Florida State ·hard foes. As Secretary of
University study estimates State Hill~ Clinton put it·,
that resum'ing commerce "Let's put ideology aside;
with Cuba would bring . tbat is so yesterday." ·
·
between $ t' billion and $2
The same could be said
billion worth of business to of America's entire policy
Florida alone .
toward Cuba. Ronal4
• Democracy. The admin· Reagan once faniousll
istration argues that freer said, "Cuba si, Castro no,.'
trade and travel would have Obama is saying, "Realit)'
political implications as . si, fantasy no."
well. As Dan RestrepO, a
(CokieRoberts'liltestbook
senior adviser on Western .is ."Ladies of Uberty: ·'!'he
Hemisphere Affairs at the Women Who Shaped Our
National Security Council, Nation" (William Morrow,
put it, "It's very important 2008). Steve and Cokie
to help open up. space so Roberts can be reached at
the Cuban people can work ' stevecokie@gmail.com).

Bickertng,at IMF over new money for lending agency

T
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e e

. Ja;nes F. Brown

On the Net:

Larry Delano Halley

.·trs TRUE LOVEr

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Letters to the editor are welcome. -They should be
less than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing,
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should be in good taste, addressing issues, not per·
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at Gallipolis.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Raenona Kay Coniptali

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Cornctlon Polley
Our main conoom ~ an ~ to be
accurilte. lf you la1ow of an error in a
story, please cal OM of our newsrooms.

•

Obituaries

Reality si,Jantasy no
President Obama actual·
ly thinks he should talk to
the leaders of a nation only
90 miles from Florida. He
Cokle
also thinks that American
and
citizens who emigrated
Steven
·
from Cuba should ' be able
Roberts
to visit their homeland and
send money to their .relatives. Score one for ratio·
nality and common sense.
. · For decades, American ~rong side of history and
policy . toward Cuba has campaigned for a change in
been frozen in time, dicta!· Cuba policy. Now he has
ed by a small but fervent take.n a few small steps in
b:Wd of exiles who demand- .that direction. Exiles will
. ec! that Washington take the be able to travel more
hardest possible line against freely, and send money and
Havana. No talk, no trade, humanitarian aid more easno travel. Nada.
·.
ily. Telecommunications
The policy was straight · companies would be free to
out of a fa1ry tale. Close · seek business in Cuba as
your eyes, clap your hands, well.
wish very hard. and maybe
The president should not
the island will disappear.
stop there. Let everyone
Think, how truly crazy travel to Cuba, not just
that approach really was. exiles; end trade embargo
President · Nixon went to that mainly impacts ordiChina 37 years ago. · nary citizens; and establish
President Reagan traveled diplomatic relations. ·
to Moscow and saw the
But we also understand
"Evil Empire" for himself Obama's caution. He has
ia .1988. Qnly Cuba was made the first move, now
off-limits, I only Fidel it's ur Cuba to re.;iprocate.
Castro was a nonperson.
Fidel s brother Raul, who
The policy persisted for holds the title of president;
only one reljson . Cuban says he's wiUin~ to discuss
exiles clustered in South "everything" with Obama,
Florida could command including political prison·
· total
loyalty
from ers and human rights. If
Republican presidents on he's serious, he will find a
the one issue they cared .willing pilrtner in the White
about. Bill Clinton wanted House. As the president put
. to improve ties to Cuba, but it, "We'repoing to explore
his efforts ended · in 1996 and see i we can make
after Castro's forces-.. shot some further steps."
down two planes searching
Ending a 50-year-old
for rafters fleeing the fairy tale and restoring
island.
ratiQnality is not easy.
Obama
knew · the Obama's shift is only posRepublicans were on the · sible because a number of

!

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Obama follows through·pn promises ·.
With Pres.ident Barack
Obama's fll'St 100 days in
office finally over, it's time
to grade his performance.
It's a time-honored tradition to measure the pulse of
the nation and to get a
sense of how people -view ·
their new president: . his
public performance, policies, cabinet and other ini·
tiatives, both at home and
abroad.
It bears repeating though not for too much
longer - that Obama
inherited a major mess: two
wars, an economy in turmoil with frozen credit
markets, mounting home
foreclosures , flat wages for
individual workers, the
smallest ·rate of job growth
in three-quaners of a century and more Americans living in poverty and without
health msurance. .
I don't think any of us
were quite prepared for the
sheer energy this new president demonstrated in his
first 100 days. The number
of press conferences, policy speeches, cross-country
and international travels on
top of new initiatives to
bolster financial markets
has been mind-boggling.

Donna
Brazile

Obama said he would
close down Guantanamo
Bay, and the process is
under way. He said he.
would extend health care to
children, and he has signed
into law a program that will
provide more than 11 milliol) children with health
·care. He said he would
assess the situation in Iraq
and provide a plan to bring
our troops home safely. He
said he would reverse
many of George W. Bush's
executive orders on stemcell research and did that,
too. One astute political
observer recently told me
that Obama reminds her of
an octopus with eight arms,
all doing different thin~s ,
but each .done with ag1le
efficiency.
• I ~ive him a· B+ on the
Amencan Recovery and
Reinvestment Act, com-

Clubs and

.organizatio:ris

.

monly known as the stimu- poorly. What else can
Ius plan. Signed into.law1ln explam the unprecedented
Feb. 17. the .act is now moye by .a former vice
helping create or save mil- president to be in · attacJi
. lions of jobs across ihe . mode 24n?
.
country for ·teachers, ~w- · Obama is keeping his
enforcement offi&lt;;ers and promises to take this coun.
other essential workers in try in a ne'IV direction. The
areas like health care. If president will move full
this money could be spent steam ahead on health care,
more quickly and reach education ·and energy
people m dire straits faster, reform. Tackling these
th9my issues will J'e9Uire
he'd deserve an.A.
• On the 20 10 fiscal bud- an enormous expenditure
get that will create jobs of Obarna 's political capital
"!ith investments in educa- - an!l most of that will be
tion, health care and clean spent just uying to keep his
energy while cuttiqg taxes allies in line.
for middle-class families, I
Considering that he still
IJave given him an A-. The has 1,360 days to go, I'm .
major concern I continue to fastening my seatbelt. It
have on his overall eco- will be a bumpy ride. But I
nomic plan, which deserves will thoroughlr enjoy
an "incomplete," is how the watching Obama s journey
so-called financial system of restoration and revival.
will be rebuilt in ways that Our 44th president may not
might inspire confidence in be perfect, but he's in the
the future of our capitalist game, scoring wins. for
system. .
America while the opposi• For handling of nation- tion still figures out how to
al. security, foreign affairs play.
.
and our image abroad, 'he
(Donna Brazile is a politgets an A+. Unlike Bush, ica/ commentator on CNN,
who wisely decided to stay ABC and NPR; contribut·
out of the lirrielight, Dick ing columnist to RoU Call,
Cheney appears to be tak- the newspaper of Capitol
ing Obarna's success in this Hill; and former campaign
arena very personally and manager for AI Gore).

Gallipolis City Schools.Annual

Deaths

Larry Dean Kent

WHO:

WffEN:

~Coy-1vtoore

.Punera( t}[omes

·

We wish to thank everyone for their many prayers,
kind words, financial donations and all who were
able to attend the Jaime Ridenour.5K Run/Walk.
Special thanks to Penny, Shelly and numerous
others who planned and worked the Be~it. All
dooations are going toward Jaime's medical

expenses.

Heck. ale!lt!, alqrrr/, Mc/jm &amp; eToe Moorr - D;ncmrs
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•

�I

PageA6

OHIO

:&amp;unba~ Gtimts -ientinel

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Gallia Collllty business wins regional .· competition
----:-----..-.:l

Walker was the first place two-hour tnusic fonnat p:o- - - - -......~·
winner in the BusineSS grams a00 lorig foon spectalty
'
.,
Division. Her business, Silver shows. Each program is
GALUPOUS - Lorraine Bridge Coffee Co., is a spe· . unique in its focus on in&lt;Je,.
Walker, owner of the Silver cialty roasting business she pendent and unsigned artists.
Bridge Coffee Co. in run.~ out of her home. Lorraine
Other finalists in the
Gallipolis, won $5,000 in the highly recommends for other Technology/New Innovation
final competition of the 2009 small businesses to participate Division were: Wyndan
Pitch Your Plan business in the 2010 Pitch Your I'lan Skye-ZOFU, Ross County,
planning competition hosted competition.
and Kelley Alexanderby Ohto State University
You can learn more about Critical First C()lllact, Scioto
South Centers Business Silver Bridge Coffee and County. Finalists in the
Development Network on the products Lorraine offers Business Division were Sue
•.
April 22ln Piketon.
at her website, http://silver· and John Hillger-Hillger
Participants who had bridgecoffee .com/.
Fann LLC, Adams County,
• advanced from four multi·
Winning the $10,000. and Tom Johnson-Two
county area competlttons T.echnologyllnnovation Roasting Joes, Ross County.
tompeted in two divisions Division was the business
For .17Wre information on
for cash prizes. The pre- teatJ1 of Nina Cox and Teresa the Pitch Your Plan competi·
rnier sponsors for the event Altherr 0 f Jackson, with their. tion of the 2010 competition.
were Adena Health Systems pitch for an innovative food contact rhe OSU South
and WesBanco.
·
system. Cox said, ·
Centers ·
Business
. For the competition , parFmncesca Hartop of Yost . Development NetWork at ·
ticipants had to subrrut a Engineering in Portsmouth (800) :860-7232.Businesses
· ~etailed written business placed second and received from
Adams,
Brown,
.
.
. Submla.d photO
plan, and then present their $5,000
in
the Highland, Ross. Pilre, Scioto.
plan before a panel of Technology/Innovation Lawrence, Jackson, Vinton Pictured are: Colleen Griffiths, Francesca Hartop, Nina Cox, Teresa Altherr, and Lorraine ·
· JUdges. There were two Division with a plan for a new and Gallia counlies are eligi· Walker, winners of the 2009 Pitch Your Plan business planning.competition at the Ohio
div1sions of competition: teclmology that will provide ble ro compere.
·
.
·
St4te University Soirth Centers.
T e c h n o I o g y I N e w motion sensing and l!dapting·
. Innovation and Business. . applications in robotics.
· The
Technology/New
Taking home the $2,500
Innovation category was for second prize in the Business
businesses that utilize science Division was Colleen
based know-how as the Griffiths of Ironton.
means and method of producIn college, she earned a
ing goods and services. The master's dejlfCC in coiiUflunibusiness must have intellectu- cation/media and manage!ll property associated with ment and started working with
the concept or illustrate the an · independent rectirq label
potential for intellectual prop- and formed her own company
erty to be associated with the called Undiscoverf:ll Radio
concept. The Business divi· Network lnc. It is a proctuc. sion was open to any start-up lion company specializing in
or early stage business, as syndicated commercial broadwei! as any existing business ' cast radio programs featuring
that is introducing a new . i n d e p e n d e n t
product line or business music. Undiscovered Radio
expansion project.
programs are weekly one- and
STAFF REPORT

MDTNEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

HMCoff~r§

balance clinic .
.GALLIPOLIS - According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). more than one-third of older
Americans, age 65 and up, suffer an unintentional fall each
rear. ·The CDC also reported that some 433,000 senior cit·
1zens were hospitalized in 2005 due to unintentional falls
and another 15,800 died from injuries related to falls.
·
. The Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis physical therapy
department wants to help local residents maintain a safer,
healthier lifestyle by offering a balance clinic from 2 to 5
p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, in Conference Rooms A and
J'l. The clinic is offered at no cost to those who a~nd.
· Experienced,. licensed physical therapists from' HMC·Gallipolis will provide free balance ~creenings as well as
falls nsks scor~s and home. safety educational tips.
Refreshments w1ll also be prov1ded.
·
For information or to register for the balance clinic at
Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis, call (740) 446-5121. ·
: Holzer Medical Center is located at 100 Jackson Pike in
pallipolis. For more information. visit www.holur.org.

. · For more mformanon on the health fair or on the BSN

tJrog~am offered by Rio Grande . call rhe Holzer ~choo/ of
'Nursm~ ar (800) 282-7201. For additional informt,~lion on

upcommg events at Rro Grande. as well as information on
1he ~i~e ran~e of academic programs offered on the uni·
versrry s scemc campus, log onto www.rio.edu.
. .. ,.- ..

-·

'

.

Bl

6unbap Ctmd -6enttnel

Caw take J.O !tad, Page 82
Terry - - ' NBA 8ilth man, Plge BJ

Kiper still talking NFL Draft, Pllle ....
charged with extortioa, ra&amp;e B5
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·.•.WOIIIID

•

.

Sunday,Apri126,2009

•.
•

Prep Basebal.l Roundup

.Prep Softball Ro '""'
•

·Raiders hammer Hannan
STAFF REPORTs
MOTSPORTSeiiiYOAILY'I'RIBUNE.COM

Angels wiii third
~traight SEOAL
South
crown
.
: BY .BRYAN WALTERS
!IWALTERSOMYIJAILVfRIBUNE.COM

; :GALLIPOLIS - For the
third consecutive time in a5
piany
years,
Galli a
~caderny
softball has
~cured a . date in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
t;eague Day of Champions
tiJ!e game after clinching its
third straight SEOAL South
J:fivision crown Friday 11ight
dltring a 7•2 victory over
Visiting Ironton at Memorial
Field.
· The Blue Angels (13-4, 90 SEOAL . South) never
lrai!ed in the contest,d' umplng out to leads of 5- after
tWo and 7-0 ·through five
before cruising on to the .
fmal ·oulCome, GAHS has
tfuee league games remaini!lg and alrea~y owns th~
hebreaker agamst secondplace
· Jackson,
'
.
. which

.

: :,...
. ,-., ..... Anaels.
'

Rio slates health
fair for A1Jril30 ·
RIO GRANDE - A health fair will be held at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
on Thursday, April 3~ from 10 a.m. until 2· p.m.
The Health Fatr wtll be held in Conference Room C in
the J?avis University Center, and is f~ee and open to the
publtc. All area res1dents are invited to.attend.
The. event will feature a wide range of free services for
those m attendance. The services will include the following:
• Bone density testing. .
• Pulmonary function testing.
• Blood pressure screenings.
: · • Glucose screenings.
.
:· • Cholesterol screenings . .
·
: • Body mass indexes.
• Several other services will also be offered during the
health fair for at no cost to those in attendance.
:, The health fair is being coordinated by the senior BSN
students m the Holzer Sc~ool of Nursing at Rio Grande and
the Rio Grande students m the Community Health course
taught by Robert Willey,
: Holzer Medical Center is also assisting with the health fair ..
• Jessica Blair, a senior BSN student from Circleville,
l!:xplame~ that the students are. holding the health fair as a
commumty serv1ce for area residents and for rhose·on campu~ . The health fair also serves as an LA 101 ·event for Rio
Grande students.
"The Health Fair is a great way to raise health awarehess," Blair said.
.
· : .Those who attend the health fair, for exainple, can learn if
they have any problems with their cholesierol or blood pressure,
Jllld can gam mforrnatton about what they can do if there are any
concerns. They can also learn more about their diets aqct if they
are getting the nutrition they need. Those in attenctanee will be
able to learn a great deal about their health and will be able to
receive infolmation about polential health problems:
·
.. ~ :roo many people tn the reg10n do not visit the doctor re~·
\llarly for check-ups,, which makes health fairs such· as th1s
yery imponant.
: The se(Vices provided at the health fair will also benefit
people of all ages. No matter your age or health history, it
· IS 1mportant for everyone to have their blood pressure- and
c~olesterol checked, while also rec~iving the as other serVIces. Early detectton ts a big key tn fighting health problems, and the screenings can provide the early detection.
: The health fair also gives the nursing students the opportlmi.
ty I? le3!fl more about organizing and coordinating events. The
pro_JeCIIS al_so a~~ way for them to learn about~unity
serv1ce, wh1ch ts an Important part of the nursing ~ion. .

Inside

.1

CHESHIRE
The
·Raiders are on a roll. Friday
night they defeated visiting
Hannan tn a stunning 22-0
victory- a game directly
following their Thursday
night 5-4 victory over Rock
IU11. ·
·
Riv~r Valley's thri:e victories marks not miiY their first
league win of the season but.
also matches ·their overall
win total from the past four
years. The Raiders have consistently improved their win- RIVER VALLEY 22. HANNAN 0
ning total over t~ ·past three Hannan 000 0. - 036
years, and their reeent two- ~Valley 09(13) X - .2 2111
game streak ·marks a significant . success .in River E.-oLES POUND SOUTHERN
Valley's campaign history.
Bryan Wotteralphoto
TUPPERS PLAINS The four-inning contest
Meigs Shellie Bailey knocks out· ihe' game-winning hit during the ninth inning of Friday against
Hannan on Friday Eastern .baseball remained
night's non-conference softball game against Warren In Rocksprings:
started off with a scoreless
fJTSt inning, followed by a ...............,.....1

Lady Marau~ers outJa~t Warren
of the season, overcoming a
2·0' deficit after three COrD·
plete with a pair of runs in
ROCKSPRLNGS - There both the fourth. and fifth
was . nothing easy about frames for a 4-2 advantage.
The Lady Warriors (4-3)
Friday night's contest
against Warren for the countered with a run apiece
Meigs softball team. Then in both the sixlh and seventh
agai~, nothing worth having innings, leaving the game
ever 1s.
tied at four through the
The Lady . Marauders seven-inning regulation.
pounded out 13. hits and ralBoth teanis bad scoring
lied back from a .2-0 defi.cit opportunities in the eighth
to claim an impressive 5-4, and nih!h frames, but backnine-inning triumph over the ' to-back two.-out singles by
Lady Warriors during a: non- Taylor Elliott and Shellie
conference matchup in . Bailey in the ninth ultimate·
Meig!! County., · · ·
ly allowed the hosts to score
The Lady Marauders. (7-4) tile winning run, concluding
picked up - by far - their the.54 decision.
· ·.
biggest non-league victory . Bailey ,-: who produced
STAFF REPORTS

MOSSPORTSOMYllAILYSCNTlNEL.COM

TOURING, PKG, LEATHER, LOADEP

I

'

'

the '.gllllle'winning. RBI in
the ninth - joined Tricia
Smith )Vith three hitS apiece
to lead MHS. Micki Barnes
wa~ next with two safeties,
followed by Elliott, Meri
VanMeter, Chandra Stanley,
Nicole Wise and Kelsey
Shuler with · one hit apiece.
Bailey and Stanley both led
the offense with two RBI~.
Warren '- which. produced only six hits in the
setback - was' . led . by
McKenna with two bits,
while Santini, Stauffer,
Leach and Bennett all .added .
a safety each. ·
Bailey .started for MHS. River Valley's Keith ·s k.ldrriore crosses homeptate ·
~"'II, ·BI . ' · qontest against Hannah High School Friday night. River
r-.. '"
""'""""
Valley .wefll on to a 22~0 . victory over. the Wildcats.

....'*••;. ...
·.· ·..

'

2008 CHRYSLER 3oo• ot · ·
,

explosion of nine runs in die
seeond, and a game finishing
13 runs in the fourth. The
devestating
blow
to
Hannan's defense finished
the game f~JT the Raiders,
sealing their 22·0 victory. .
A standout (or the Raiders'
previous win against Rock
Hill was Clayton Curnutte a senior for River Valley who
went 3 for 3, hitting three
doubles, as well as pitching
seven strikeouts to contribute
to the ·Raiders' win. Curnutte
pitched the entire game.

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�I

PageA6

OHIO

:&amp;unba~ Gtimts -ientinel

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Gallia Collllty business wins regional .· competition
----:-----..-.:l

Walker was the first place two-hour tnusic fonnat p:o- - - - -......~·
winner in the BusineSS grams a00 lorig foon spectalty
'
.,
Division. Her business, Silver shows. Each program is
GALUPOUS - Lorraine Bridge Coffee Co., is a spe· . unique in its focus on in&lt;Je,.
Walker, owner of the Silver cialty roasting business she pendent and unsigned artists.
Bridge Coffee Co. in run.~ out of her home. Lorraine
Other finalists in the
Gallipolis, won $5,000 in the highly recommends for other Technology/New Innovation
final competition of the 2009 small businesses to participate Division were: Wyndan
Pitch Your Plan business in the 2010 Pitch Your I'lan Skye-ZOFU, Ross County,
planning competition hosted competition.
and Kelley Alexanderby Ohto State University
You can learn more about Critical First C()lllact, Scioto
South Centers Business Silver Bridge Coffee and County. Finalists in the
Development Network on the products Lorraine offers Business Division were Sue
•.
April 22ln Piketon.
at her website, http://silver· and John Hillger-Hillger
Participants who had bridgecoffee .com/.
Fann LLC, Adams County,
• advanced from four multi·
Winning the $10,000. and Tom Johnson-Two
county area competlttons T.echnologyllnnovation Roasting Joes, Ross County.
tompeted in two divisions Division was the business
For .17Wre information on
for cash prizes. The pre- teatJ1 of Nina Cox and Teresa the Pitch Your Plan competi·
rnier sponsors for the event Altherr 0 f Jackson, with their. tion of the 2010 competition.
were Adena Health Systems pitch for an innovative food contact rhe OSU South
and WesBanco.
·
system. Cox said, ·
Centers ·
Business
. For the competition , parFmncesca Hartop of Yost . Development NetWork at ·
ticipants had to subrrut a Engineering in Portsmouth (800) :860-7232.Businesses
· ~etailed written business placed second and received from
Adams,
Brown,
.
.
. Submla.d photO
plan, and then present their $5,000
in
the Highland, Ross. Pilre, Scioto.
plan before a panel of Technology/Innovation Lawrence, Jackson, Vinton Pictured are: Colleen Griffiths, Francesca Hartop, Nina Cox, Teresa Altherr, and Lorraine ·
· JUdges. There were two Division with a plan for a new and Gallia counlies are eligi· Walker, winners of the 2009 Pitch Your Plan business planning.competition at the Ohio
div1sions of competition: teclmology that will provide ble ro compere.
·
.
·
St4te University Soirth Centers.
T e c h n o I o g y I N e w motion sensing and l!dapting·
. Innovation and Business. . applications in robotics.
· The
Technology/New
Taking home the $2,500
Innovation category was for second prize in the Business
businesses that utilize science Division was Colleen
based know-how as the Griffiths of Ironton.
means and method of producIn college, she earned a
ing goods and services. The master's dejlfCC in coiiUflunibusiness must have intellectu- cation/media and manage!ll property associated with ment and started working with
the concept or illustrate the an · independent rectirq label
potential for intellectual prop- and formed her own company
erty to be associated with the called Undiscoverf:ll Radio
concept. The Business divi· Network lnc. It is a proctuc. sion was open to any start-up lion company specializing in
or early stage business, as syndicated commercial broadwei! as any existing business ' cast radio programs featuring
that is introducing a new . i n d e p e n d e n t
product line or business music. Undiscovered Radio
expansion project.
programs are weekly one- and
STAFF REPORT

MDTNEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

HMCoff~r§

balance clinic .
.GALLIPOLIS - According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC). more than one-third of older
Americans, age 65 and up, suffer an unintentional fall each
rear. ·The CDC also reported that some 433,000 senior cit·
1zens were hospitalized in 2005 due to unintentional falls
and another 15,800 died from injuries related to falls.
·
. The Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis physical therapy
department wants to help local residents maintain a safer,
healthier lifestyle by offering a balance clinic from 2 to 5
p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, in Conference Rooms A and
J'l. The clinic is offered at no cost to those who a~nd.
· Experienced,. licensed physical therapists from' HMC·Gallipolis will provide free balance ~creenings as well as
falls nsks scor~s and home. safety educational tips.
Refreshments w1ll also be prov1ded.
·
For information or to register for the balance clinic at
Holzer Medical Center-Gallipolis, call (740) 446-5121. ·
: Holzer Medical Center is located at 100 Jackson Pike in
pallipolis. For more information. visit www.holur.org.

. · For more mformanon on the health fair or on the BSN

tJrog~am offered by Rio Grande . call rhe Holzer ~choo/ of
'Nursm~ ar (800) 282-7201. For additional informt,~lion on

upcommg events at Rro Grande. as well as information on
1he ~i~e ran~e of academic programs offered on the uni·
versrry s scemc campus, log onto www.rio.edu.
. .. ,.- ..

-·

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Bl

6unbap Ctmd -6enttnel

Caw take J.O !tad, Page 82
Terry - - ' NBA 8ilth man, Plge BJ

Kiper still talking NFL Draft, Pllle ....
charged with extortioa, ra&amp;e B5
.
·.•.WOIIIID

•

.

Sunday,Apri126,2009

•.
•

Prep Basebal.l Roundup

.Prep Softball Ro '""'
•

·Raiders hammer Hannan
STAFF REPORTs
MOTSPORTSeiiiYOAILY'I'RIBUNE.COM

Angels wiii third
~traight SEOAL
South
crown
.
: BY .BRYAN WALTERS
!IWALTERSOMYIJAILVfRIBUNE.COM

; :GALLIPOLIS - For the
third consecutive time in a5
piany
years,
Galli a
~caderny
softball has
~cured a . date in the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
t;eague Day of Champions
tiJ!e game after clinching its
third straight SEOAL South
J:fivision crown Friday 11ight
dltring a 7•2 victory over
Visiting Ironton at Memorial
Field.
· The Blue Angels (13-4, 90 SEOAL . South) never
lrai!ed in the contest,d' umplng out to leads of 5- after
tWo and 7-0 ·through five
before cruising on to the .
fmal ·oulCome, GAHS has
tfuee league games remaini!lg and alrea~y owns th~
hebreaker agamst secondplace
· Jackson,
'
.
. which

.

: :,...
. ,-., ..... Anaels.
'

Rio slates health
fair for A1Jril30 ·
RIO GRANDE - A health fair will be held at the
University of Rio Grande/Rio Grande Community College
on Thursday, April 3~ from 10 a.m. until 2· p.m.
The Health Fatr wtll be held in Conference Room C in
the J?avis University Center, and is f~ee and open to the
publtc. All area res1dents are invited to.attend.
The. event will feature a wide range of free services for
those m attendance. The services will include the following:
• Bone density testing. .
• Pulmonary function testing.
• Blood pressure screenings.
: · • Glucose screenings.
.
:· • Cholesterol screenings . .
·
: • Body mass indexes.
• Several other services will also be offered during the
health fair for at no cost to those in attendance.
:, The health fair is being coordinated by the senior BSN
students m the Holzer Sc~ool of Nursing at Rio Grande and
the Rio Grande students m the Community Health course
taught by Robert Willey,
: Holzer Medical Center is also assisting with the health fair ..
• Jessica Blair, a senior BSN student from Circleville,
l!:xplame~ that the students are. holding the health fair as a
commumty serv1ce for area residents and for rhose·on campu~ . The health fair also serves as an LA 101 ·event for Rio
Grande students.
"The Health Fair is a great way to raise health awarehess," Blair said.
.
· : .Those who attend the health fair, for exainple, can learn if
they have any problems with their cholesierol or blood pressure,
Jllld can gam mforrnatton about what they can do if there are any
concerns. They can also learn more about their diets aqct if they
are getting the nutrition they need. Those in attenctanee will be
able to learn a great deal about their health and will be able to
receive infolmation about polential health problems:
·
.. ~ :roo many people tn the reg10n do not visit the doctor re~·
\llarly for check-ups,, which makes health fairs such· as th1s
yery imponant.
: The se(Vices provided at the health fair will also benefit
people of all ages. No matter your age or health history, it
· IS 1mportant for everyone to have their blood pressure- and
c~olesterol checked, while also rec~iving the as other serVIces. Early detectton ts a big key tn fighting health problems, and the screenings can provide the early detection.
: The health fair also gives the nursing students the opportlmi.
ty I? le3!fl more about organizing and coordinating events. The
pro_JeCIIS al_so a~~ way for them to learn about~unity
serv1ce, wh1ch ts an Important part of the nursing ~ion. .

Inside

.1

CHESHIRE
The
·Raiders are on a roll. Friday
night they defeated visiting
Hannan tn a stunning 22-0
victory- a game directly
following their Thursday
night 5-4 victory over Rock
IU11. ·
·
Riv~r Valley's thri:e victories marks not miiY their first
league win of the season but.
also matches ·their overall
win total from the past four
years. The Raiders have consistently improved their win- RIVER VALLEY 22. HANNAN 0
ning total over t~ ·past three Hannan 000 0. - 036
years, and their reeent two- ~Valley 09(13) X - .2 2111
game streak ·marks a significant . success .in River E.-oLES POUND SOUTHERN
Valley's campaign history.
Bryan Wotteralphoto
TUPPERS PLAINS The four-inning contest
Meigs Shellie Bailey knocks out· ihe' game-winning hit during the ninth inning of Friday against
Hannan on Friday Eastern .baseball remained
night's non-conference softball game against Warren In Rocksprings:
started off with a scoreless
fJTSt inning, followed by a ...............,.....1

Lady Marau~ers outJa~t Warren
of the season, overcoming a
2·0' deficit after three COrD·
plete with a pair of runs in
ROCKSPRLNGS - There both the fourth. and fifth
was . nothing easy about frames for a 4-2 advantage.
The Lady Warriors (4-3)
Friday night's contest
against Warren for the countered with a run apiece
Meigs softball team. Then in both the sixlh and seventh
agai~, nothing worth having innings, leaving the game
ever 1s.
tied at four through the
The Lady . Marauders seven-inning regulation.
pounded out 13. hits and ralBoth teanis bad scoring
lied back from a .2-0 defi.cit opportunities in the eighth
to claim an impressive 5-4, and nih!h frames, but backnine-inning triumph over the ' to-back two.-out singles by
Lady Warriors during a: non- Taylor Elliott and Shellie
conference matchup in . Bailey in the ninth ultimate·
Meig!! County., · · ·
ly allowed the hosts to score
The Lady Marauders. (7-4) tile winning run, concluding
picked up - by far - their the.54 decision.
· ·.
biggest non-league victory . Bailey ,-: who produced
STAFF REPORTS

MOSSPORTSOMYllAILYSCNTlNEL.COM

TOURING, PKG, LEATHER, LOADEP

I

'

'

the '.gllllle'winning. RBI in
the ninth - joined Tricia
Smith )Vith three hitS apiece
to lead MHS. Micki Barnes
wa~ next with two safeties,
followed by Elliott, Meri
VanMeter, Chandra Stanley,
Nicole Wise and Kelsey
Shuler with · one hit apiece.
Bailey and Stanley both led
the offense with two RBI~.
Warren '- which. produced only six hits in the
setback - was' . led . by
McKenna with two bits,
while Santini, Stauffer,
Leach and Bennett all .added .
a safety each. ·
Bailey .started for MHS. River Valley's Keith ·s k.ldrriore crosses homeptate ·
~"'II, ·BI . ' · qontest against Hannah High School Friday night. River
r-.. '"
""'""""
Valley .wefll on to a 22~0 . victory over. the Wildcats.

....'*••;. ...
·.· ·..

'

2008 CHRYSLER 3oo• ot · ·
,

explosion of nine runs in die
seeond, and a game finishing
13 runs in the fourth. The
devestating
blow
to
Hannan's defense finished
the game f~JT the Raiders,
sealing their 22·0 victory. .
A standout (or the Raiders'
previous win against Rock
Hill was Clayton Curnutte a senior for River Valley who
went 3 for 3, hitting three
doubles, as well as pitching
seven strikeouts to contribute
to the ·Raiders' win. Curnutte
pitched the entire game.

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolia

.
It' p •
· Sunday, April a6, 2009

.

I

Sunday, April 26, 2009

.Tarrv

LeBron lifts Cavs to 3-0 series lead

OVP ft.. pt)oto

'Pictured above are members of the Gallia Academy softball team during the 2009 preseason. The Blue Angels won their third straight SEOAL South title on Friday.

Angels
fromPageBl
·secures the Angels' place
atop the SEOA!;. · South
Division .
Gallia Academy knocked
out nine hits in the triumph,
with Kimber Davi s and
Courtney Shriver leadin g
the way with three hits

ap iece. Brittyn Saunders,
Morgan Leslie and Calyssa
Mayes also had a safety
each . in the victory. Davis,
Shriver, Amy Noe and
Heather Ward each drove in
a run apiece .
Noe was the winning
pitcher of record, allowing
only six hits and a walk
over seven innin§s while
·k·
t 10
stn mg ou
. ummers
took the loss for Ironton,
whic!l fell to 3-4 in SEOAL

South play.
Gallia Academy - which
is 0-2 in those previous ·
SEOAL Day of Chatnpions
title games
also
improved it SEOAL South
winning streak to 24
straight decision.
GALLIPOLIS 7, IRONTON 2
Ironton
Gaffipolis

000 001 1
230 110 '

_:. 2 6 3
- 792

WP - Npe: LP - summers.

Baseball
fromPageBl
unbeaten in Tri· Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division play following
Friday night's 14-4, fiveinning victory over visiting .
Southern.
The Eagles ( 11·4, 6-0
TVC Hocking) maintained
their overall lead in the
TVC Hocking standings by
pounding out 13 hits in the ·
decision . The Tornadoes (77, 4-3) did try to make ·
things hard on the hosts
· 'however, ju!Dping out to .a
4-0 advantage through two ·
and a half frames .
EHS responded with two
runs in the bottom of the
third to cut the deficit in
. half, then scored six runs in
.
.
Submitted p11o1o
both the fourth and fifth Gallia . Academy's Beau Whaley delivers a pitch during
:frames to tum a 4-2 deftcit Thursday night's SEOAL South baseball game against
:into a 14-4 mercy-rule deci- Jackson at Halter Field in Jackson.
sion .
Ben Buckley led Eastern outcome. Both teams ·com· and allowe!ljust one earned
with three hits, while TYler mined two errors apiece in run while fanning · seven
Hendrix, Nick Brannon and the contest.
and walking ftve. Buffalo
K~le Connery foiiowed
Kyle Dingess led the touched the junior hurler for
w1th two safeties each. Titus Devils with four hits, fol- a first inning tally before
Pierce, Zach Hendrix, lowed by John Troester with adding another run in the
Andrew Benedum and three safeties and Terry third .
·Christian Amsbal'y also had Smith with two. Chuck · The lone Falcon safeties
Calvert, Caleb Warnimont, on the night came with two
a hit.each in the triumph.
Taylor
Deem,
J.D . Ian Dressel , Tyler Eastman, outs as Zuspan came up
Whittington, Jordon Taylor,- Austin Roush and Beau with a first inning single ·
Chris Holter and Zach Ash Whaley also added a 'hit while. Garrett Underwood
had the lone hits for the · apiece to the winning cause. smacked a two-out double
Tornadoes. Holter - with a Wamimont had a team-high in the third. The White
Falcons only had three base
three-run homer in the third three RBls.
- led SHS with team-highs
Jeff White ~aced Ironton runners
foll!)Wing
of three RBls and two runs with two hilS - both Underwood's extra base hit
scored.
homers - and three RBis.
in the third. Underwood
Pierce was the winning
Calvert was the winning and Zac Warth both walked
pitcher of record, while pitcher of record, while in the sixth with one out
Kyle Cunningham took the Preston took the loss for while Brice Clark reached
loss for .SHS . Neither team Ironton. Calven worked 5.1 . base on an error in the sevcommitted an error in the innings on the mound in enth but Burdette. quickly
contest.
relief of Roush.
pitched his way out of trou. GAHS also left Jackson ble in both frames ;
: ~ASTERN 14, SOUTHERN 4
on Thursday night tied at
Buffalo gained the upper
· Southern 013 oo - 45 o
five through nine innin~s. hand in the opeping inning
Eastern 002 66 · - 14 13 o
although . the Blue Devils after Tucker singled and
wP _ F'len:a: LP -Cunnlngllam. · . . held a 4-1 cushion going moved into scoring position ,
HR: s - Chns Honor (thlro Inning. two
into the bottom of the sev- when Lewis received a free
00 000
· •
out).
enth. That game will be pass. Burdette then chased
completed before next home the only run hi: WQuld
BLUE DEVILS BURN
Wednesday 's
regularly- need with an RBI single to
IRONTON
scpeduled
contest
at left to stake the Bison to an
Jackson.
early J-0 advantage. ·
COAL GROVE - Gallia
Academy baseball started
The hosts tacked on an
GALLIPOLIS 15, IRONTON 6
slow, but picked Up speed as
unearned run in the third
the· night progressed Friday , GaJIIPQiil ooo 833 1 - 15 ts 2 with Tucker once again
igniting tbe .rally witll a
during a 15·6 victory. over 1roncon 211 0 10 1 . - 6 7 2
lead-off · single. Belcher
host
Ironton
in
a wP..:.CliYOrt:i.fi-Piaston.• ·
followed with a base hit and
:southeastern Ohio Athletic
BUFFALO ENDS FALCONS'
Lewis walked to load the
'League South Division
WINNING
SmEAK
:matchup .
,
sacks with no~ody out.
Zuspan got Burdette to pop
The Blue Devils (10-3 , 6,
BUFFALO - Garrett out to right before Reed's
2 St:&lt;:OAL South) trailed 4-0
through three jnnings of Burdette tossed a two-hit grounder was misplayed for
play. then erupted for eight shutout at visiting Wahama an error aHow Tucker to
·scores in the top of the Friday evening to end the score and give the Bison a
:fourth to tum a four-run White Falcons U game 2-0.Iead .
Buffalo had two men get
:deficit into a comfortable winning streak as Buffalo
on
base in the folllth and
four-run edge .
Putnam squeaked past the
GAHS- which pounded Bend Area team by a 2-0 again in the sixth but
Zuspan kept Wahama in the
out 15 ,hits on the evening margin.
- tacked on three more
Burdette struck out I0 game by getting out of eacb
scores· in the fifth for an 11- and allowed just two hits in jam without any further
·4 lead, but the Fighting blanking the White Falcons scoring as Burdette came
·Tigers countered·with a run for the diamond victory to away with the mound victo·
in their half of the fo~~~th to give the sectional rivals a ry.
Tucker paced the Bison
pull to within six at 11-5. split of the two-game, reguoffense
with a pair of sin·
lHS - which produced lar season series. . The
seven hits - never catne Bison improved to 11-9 gles with Belcher, Burde~ .
closer the rest of the way.
with the win while Wahama Winterstein and Call also
coming up with one base
· Gallia Academy added falls to 12-2 on the year.
:three runs in the sixth and
William Zuspan got the knock apiece for Buffalo.
one more in the seventh to call on the mound for WHS
BUFFAt O 2, WAHAMA 0
take a 15-5 edge , and and was equally impressiv.e
Ironton plated one run in during his six inning stint Wahama 000 000 0 - 0 2 2
their final at-bat to conclude for the White Falcons. Buffalo 101 000 ll - 2 6 1
the contest at its nine-run Zuspan scattered six hits WP - Bu-LP-~

AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - LeBron James
huffed and puffed about
being pushed and shoved by
the Detroit Pistons.
Then, he stopped lobbying
for help from the officials and
blew the Pistons down - and
almost out of tbe playoffs.
Jatnes scored JJ. of his 25
points in the fourth quarter,
lifting
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers to a 79-68 victory
Friday night over Detroit and
a 3-0 lead in the ftrst·round
series.
"Once he decided to say,
'Hey, I'm not getting calls.
I'm goin8 to will this team to
a win·; our whole tea.t)l ·
changed," Cavs coach Mike .
.Brown said. "Watching him
Bip that switch, it was very
exciting.
. .
•
"I just get a rush thinking
about it."
The Pistons, whose collective heart was questioned by
one· of their players, played
hard for three-plus quarters
before being rendered helpthe Pistons needed both
less by James ..
Wallace
and
He had an alley-oop slam Rasheed
midway through the fourth Tayshaun Prince to play well
quarter during an 18-2 run to have a chance to. wjn, and
that started after the sixth tie neither did.
The 34-year-old Wallace
of the game. ·
scored
just five points, look"Big-time -players make
plays, and that s what he did," ing past his prime, banged up
Detroit coach Michael Curry and uninterested . Prince
scored seven points in the
said.
James had ll rebounds and first · quarter and was held
nine assists. H.e ·said he scoreless the rest of the game,
learned he was just short of a laboring with a sore back.
triple-double after looking at "Tay is not. going to sar,
anythmg about his back ; '
the stat sheet.
"When I got to tbe locker Curry said. "But I could. tell
room, I blamed Mo as the game went on he, wasn't moving as.well." \
Williams." Jatnes joked.
Hamilton had· 15 points,
James did get some help
eight rebounds and six
from his friends.
·
Rodney
Joe Smith had a career assists , while
playoff-high 19 points and 10 Sruckey contributed 1.2 points
rebounds., and Zydrunas and five assists.
Antonio McDyess. who
Ilgauskas scored 13 points.
had
eight points and eight
The Pistons will host Game
rebounds,
,lamented the faCt
4 on Sunday, needing l\ sur'
that
his
team
went through
prising showing to extend the
series.
·
the motions when it lost the
Detroit has advanced to at first two games of the series
least the Eastern Conference on the road by an average of
finals the previous six sea- 15 points.
Wallace and McDyess
sons - the longest such
stteak in the NBA since the declined comment after the
Los Angeles Lakers' ru.n two game.
.
decades ago - but now it's
The Pistons J?layed with
an eighth-seeded team with pride early, SCOI:JOg the first
virtually no chance .to survive eight points and refusing to
the first round.
· · ·
go away when they fell
"This is killing me," behind by nine in the . fiist
Richard Hamilton said. "I half.
·
.
can't even lie."
.
. Detroit took tutns with the
Curry said before the game lead in an. ugly third quarter

a

.

APphoto·

·- !;Corins 16 points and giving up nme - but had n(l
answer when James chose to ·
take over the game in the
fourth quarter. ·
.
·
"I just wanted to tum up the
aggression in thp fourth quar,ter," he said.
··
James' final points in the
first half came on a sequence
that made the Cavs laugh and
the Pistons pout.
.
ilgauska~ ~ot to a loose b~
near Detro1t s free-throw hne.
The Pistons let him dribble
up the court and make a jumv.
pass in the lane to James as 1f
the 7-foot-3, 260-pound cen:
ter was nimble. ·
.
The Pistons also allowed
Smith to perform like the
player who merited being the
No. l pick of the 1995 NBA
draft:
Smith, whose previous
career playoff high was 17
points, hasscored 13 or more
m a playoff game seven times
- stx against Detroit.
·
"So, what is it about the
Pistons?" James asked Smith
when the fact was relayed to
them. . · .
.
Smith 'sign_ed with the C~vs
last · month . after getti!Jg
bought out his contract w1th
the Oklahoma City Thunder:
. "It was a bi~ signing, espeCially tonight,' Cavs genenil
manager Danny Ferry said.
"He's exactly what we need-

..

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:Air
Conditioner:
I
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Recharge

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· CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff Francoeur hit a solo
homer for one of Atlanta's
four hits .. and the Braves
took advantage of the
wildest performance · in
Edinson Volqtre~' s career
Friday night , walking their
way to a 4-3 victory. over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Javier Vazquez (2- l)
went six innin gs for the
slumping Braves, who had
lost seven of nine heading
into the weekend series.
They emerged from their
rut with a lot of help from ·
Volquez (2-2) , who gave
up only one hit in fi ve
innings • Francoeur 's
homer - but couldn ' t
throw a strike when he
needed .
The right-hander has
struggled with his control
since spring training. and
reached a new low against
Atlanta. He walked a ·
·
AP photp
career-high seven batters Umpire Jeff Nelsdn, center, holds back Cincinnati Reds
and hit another in only five pitcher -Edinson Volquez, right, after he hit Atlanta Braves
innings , helping the Braves batter Yunel Escobar (not shown} With a. pitch and the
·
benches cleared in the third inning of a baseball game on
pull ahead 3-2.
The crowd booed last Friday in Cincinnati. ·
year's All -Star as he for show. Sevenil players hander Mike · Gonzalez
walked the bases loaded laughed as they milled pitched a perfect ninth for
his second save in three
with two outs in the fourth , around the infield .
The Reds were coming chances.
,
then walked Vazquez/ who hasn't had a hits nee off one of their best road
Atlanta's Chipper Jones
2006 - ·and Kelly Johnson trips in the last five years went 0-for-5 on his 37th
to force in a pair of runs. - they won all three series birthday. The third baseThe · 40-pitoh inning was · - but couldn't keep the man had been a .500 career
the wildest by a Red since momentum going because hitter with four homers on
Ryan Dempster walked six they couldn't throw strikes. his birthdays.
in · the second inning at Cincinnati pitchers walked
Notes:
The
Braves
Colorado on April 30, a season-liigh 10 batters.' "placed OF Garret Anderson
2003.
Vazquez has been solid on the 15-day DL retroac·
Volquez 's wildness got since the Braves got him Live to Monday with a
under the Braves ' skin in · from the White Sox in .a strained
left
thigh.
the third. when he hit Yunel six-player
deal
last Anderson had missed the
Escobar in the side. The December. The right-han- liist three game s. . .. OF
shortstop dropped his bat, der has gone six innings in Brandon Jones was called
took a few steps toward the each of his four starts and up from Triple-A. Jones
mound and pointed at . allowed no more than three batted .267 in 41 games
Volquez, · who raised his runs . Joey Votto and. Alex: with Atlanta last season . ...
arms in a puzzled gesture . Gonzalez had RBI singles Atlanta C Brian McCann
Plate umpire Tim Tschida off Vazquez, who struck · was a late. scratch with
· blurriness in his left eye,
stepped in front of Escobar . oui nine.
and blocked his way, preGonzalez hit a sacrifice ·which has bothered him the
venting it from escalating. fly in the eighth, the first last few days . ... Reds 3B
Both benc.hes and bullpens run . allowed by Rafael Edwin
Encarnacion
emptied, but it was mostly Soriano this s.eason . Leftc snapped a~ 0-for-15 slump.

.

·.: } 23.-9 9

R134A

Page 83

BIN6

:I .· $SPECIAL
. . . .· ·...

·

·Terry is the third Dallas
player to wip the sixth man
award, following Antawn
Jamison in 2003-04 and Roy
Tarpley in 1987-88.

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Braves beat wild Volquez, Reds 4-3

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:

ed 531 of his 563 games for
the Hawks and MaverickS
from 2000-07. Terry averaged 15 5 points for Dallas
last season. when he started
34 times bnt was the only
Mavericks player to get into
every game.
Carlisle remembered the
first meeting he had ·/with
Terry after taking over as the
Dallas coach last summer.
"I wasn't even finished
with my first or second sentence and he basically said,
'Hey, whatever you need me
to do, I'll do .... I just want to
win,"' Carlisle said. "This
award is symbolic of who he
is. It's a tremendous tribute to
him, what he's about, and
also his teammates because
these guys have been
eX:tremely supportive of

Softball

.GET DYFOR;
SPRING AND SUMMER DRIVING

:

award

Nil

DALLAS
(AP)
Pallas
Mavericks guard Jason Terry
guard ·
is the best off the bench.
Jason
Terry, mostly a full-time Terry (31)'
starter before taking on a dif· moves the
ferent role the past two sea- ball round
sons. was presented Friday
Utah
with the NBA sixth man
guard
Kyle
award that · goes to the
Korver
league's toP. reserve.
''The abtlity to do it, .but (26) In the
also the willingness . to . first hall of
embrace it, is somethin~ theirNBA
that's got to be part of it, basketball ·
game in
Dallas coOH:h Rick Carlisle
srud . "That's who he is. He . Dallas on
wants to win,and he wan~ to ll)fedneSda
. y.
PBI'I of $omething that's bi~­
ger than himself, and that s .
AP phillo
· really what this is all .about."
While starting only 11 of
his 74 games in the_regular (Uld 4 of the Mavericks' ~t­
season, Terry averaged 19.6 round Western ·Conference
points and 3.4 assists while playoff series against San
playing about 34 minutes a Antonio they lead. 2-1.
game. Only Dirk Nowitzki
"He's been a big part of this
and Jason Kidd played more team ," said Nowitzki, the
minutes for the Mavericks, NBA's MVP two seasons
though Terry usually comes ago. "He's a great guy in the
off the bench shootmg.
locker room, he's one of our
, "No. doubt, I'm a g~~ play- emotional leaders, always firm~ w1th my energy, Terry ·
h
d H •
f
srud. "Instant offense, there .mg up 1 e crow · e 8 one 0
· ·
the best clutch players J've
are no warmup shots . ... ever seen ."
Jum\}ihg into the fire, that's a The only· time terry had a
spectal skill set."
Terry got Ill of 121 frrst- higher scoring average was
b 11 •
2000-0 I, his second NBA
place votes in the a otmg season' when he averaged
and was the clear winner with
576 points. Denver's J.R. 19.7 points for Atlanta. That
Smith finished second with was also. better than .each of
155 points and three frrst- the last 18 sixth-man award
place votes, and New York's winners.
Nate Robinson was third with . Terry scored 20 points or
113 points.
more in40 games th1s season,
: Nowitzki, Kidd and other 33 times when carne off the
teammates attended the news bench. In 26 games , he
conference in which Terry, matched or outscored the
who is known as JET, was opposing bench.
·
presented the 'trophy. It catne
After starting only 27
9n the day between Games 3 games as a rookie, Terry start-

Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron.
James·
dunks
· against
the
Detroit
Pistons in .
tl;le first
quarter of
Game3 .
of a first- ,
round
NBA bas·
ketball ;
playoff .
series in
Auburn ·
Hills,
Mich., Orl'
Friday. :

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

_____

.

~_....___,_,,

MEIGS 11 ; ATHENS 9
'Meigs

140 001 23 -

:AthOIOS

203 012 01 -

·WP -

11 17 3
~ 11 4

Ebersbadl;LP ...; At&gt; Pomontd.

lADY RAIDERS BLAST
HANNAN

· River Valley pitcher Katelyn Birchfield delivers a pitch during Friday night's non-conference softball game against ·
Hannan a:t Cheshire.
to clinch the win.
the rest of the Tri-Valley
River Valley started their Conference
Hocking
campaign early scoring Division Friday night after
three runs in the first inning posting a convincing 11· I,
and holding the Lady 'Cats five-inning victory over
with three strikeouts per- visiting Southern.
formed by 'Lady Ra1der . The Lady Eaghis (8-3, 6pitcher Katelyn B1rcbfield.
0 TVC Hocking) scored at
The raid continued into least once in every inning
the second inning where while leading .the contest
. River Valley racked up wire-to-wit'\!, jumping out
another five runs, agttin to a 2-0 advantage after one
, ·
holding
Hanna
from . full frame .
Both
teams
countered
advancing via three strikew.ith a run in the second for
outs from Birchfield.
The third inning mirrored a 3-1 contest after two
the second ·with the Lady · complete, then EHS scored
Raiders. again adding five eight unanswered runs the
runs to their total, Birchfield rest of the way to wrap up
striking out two Lady 'Cats .the. mercy-rule outcome.
Eastern had seven hits in
· tCil help close Hannan's winthe
triumph, with Brenna
dow of op~rtunity.
Hannan s inner Wildcat Holter leading the way
emerged during the fourth with two safeties. Haylee
inning with Kayla Perry Gillian , Allie Rawson ,
Sami
Turley,
rounding third into home- Kasey
plate, stealing a run from the Cummins and Megan
· Carnahan also added a bit
prot~tion of River Valley.
The Lady Raiders were apiece to the winning
unable to advance during cause. · Holter also had a
the fourth inning, followed team.-best four RBis.
The Lady Tornadoes (3by Hannan's urisuccessfpl
attempts to up their total in 11 , 1-5) had only two hits
the fifth. With that the five- in the contest, which were
inning ~arne was complete provided
by
Kelsey
with R1ver Valley's 13-1 Holsinger and Emma
victory.
Hunter. Hunter had the
Both squads are looking lone RBI with a triple in
forward to competition on the second.
Saturday, Hannan against
Turley was the winning
Hunricane at Hurricane, and pitcher of record, allowing
· River Valley at tile Ernie only two walks over five
Chattin
.Memorial
in
Ashland, Kentucky, starting innmgs ·while striking out
five . Brooke Gabrits•h
at 10 a.m .
walked 12 and fanned six
lADY EAGLES so.\FI PAST in the setback for Sou them .

, CHESHIRE - THe Lady
Raiders held their ground
friday night as they played
Jl successful home· game
~gains! the vJsttmg Lady
.Cats.
.
SoUTHERN
: While both teams gave 1t
their all during the fiveTUPPERS PLAINS ~nning contest, the ladies of
River Valley were able to Eastern softball continued
taid strong and long enough its steady march through

EASTERN 11. SOUTHERN 1
Southern
Eastem

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214 13

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. WP - Turley; LP - Gabnt&amp;ch.

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2147 JACKSON PIKE

446-0724

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolia

.
It' p •
· Sunday, April a6, 2009

.

I

Sunday, April 26, 2009

.Tarrv

LeBron lifts Cavs to 3-0 series lead

OVP ft.. pt)oto

'Pictured above are members of the Gallia Academy softball team during the 2009 preseason. The Blue Angels won their third straight SEOAL South title on Friday.

Angels
fromPageBl
·secures the Angels' place
atop the SEOA!;. · South
Division .
Gallia Academy knocked
out nine hits in the triumph,
with Kimber Davi s and
Courtney Shriver leadin g
the way with three hits

ap iece. Brittyn Saunders,
Morgan Leslie and Calyssa
Mayes also had a safety
each . in the victory. Davis,
Shriver, Amy Noe and
Heather Ward each drove in
a run apiece .
Noe was the winning
pitcher of record, allowing
only six hits and a walk
over seven innin§s while
·k·
t 10
stn mg ou
. ummers
took the loss for Ironton,
whic!l fell to 3-4 in SEOAL

South play.
Gallia Academy - which
is 0-2 in those previous ·
SEOAL Day of Chatnpions
title games
also
improved it SEOAL South
winning streak to 24
straight decision.
GALLIPOLIS 7, IRONTON 2
Ironton
Gaffipolis

000 001 1
230 110 '

_:. 2 6 3
- 792

WP - Npe: LP - summers.

Baseball
fromPageBl
unbeaten in Tri· Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division play following
Friday night's 14-4, fiveinning victory over visiting .
Southern.
The Eagles ( 11·4, 6-0
TVC Hocking) maintained
their overall lead in the
TVC Hocking standings by
pounding out 13 hits in the ·
decision . The Tornadoes (77, 4-3) did try to make ·
things hard on the hosts
· 'however, ju!Dping out to .a
4-0 advantage through two ·
and a half frames .
EHS responded with two
runs in the bottom of the
third to cut the deficit in
. half, then scored six runs in
.
.
Submitted p11o1o
both the fourth and fifth Gallia . Academy's Beau Whaley delivers a pitch during
:frames to tum a 4-2 deftcit Thursday night's SEOAL South baseball game against
:into a 14-4 mercy-rule deci- Jackson at Halter Field in Jackson.
sion .
Ben Buckley led Eastern outcome. Both teams ·com· and allowe!ljust one earned
with three hits, while TYler mined two errors apiece in run while fanning · seven
Hendrix, Nick Brannon and the contest.
and walking ftve. Buffalo
K~le Connery foiiowed
Kyle Dingess led the touched the junior hurler for
w1th two safeties each. Titus Devils with four hits, fol- a first inning tally before
Pierce, Zach Hendrix, lowed by John Troester with adding another run in the
Andrew Benedum and three safeties and Terry third .
·Christian Amsbal'y also had Smith with two. Chuck · The lone Falcon safeties
Calvert, Caleb Warnimont, on the night came with two
a hit.each in the triumph.
Taylor
Deem,
J.D . Ian Dressel , Tyler Eastman, outs as Zuspan came up
Whittington, Jordon Taylor,- Austin Roush and Beau with a first inning single ·
Chris Holter and Zach Ash Whaley also added a 'hit while. Garrett Underwood
had the lone hits for the · apiece to the winning cause. smacked a two-out double
Tornadoes. Holter - with a Wamimont had a team-high in the third. The White
Falcons only had three base
three-run homer in the third three RBls.
- led SHS with team-highs
Jeff White ~aced Ironton runners
foll!)Wing
of three RBls and two runs with two hilS - both Underwood's extra base hit
scored.
homers - and three RBis.
in the third. Underwood
Pierce was the winning
Calvert was the winning and Zac Warth both walked
pitcher of record, while pitcher of record, while in the sixth with one out
Kyle Cunningham took the Preston took the loss for while Brice Clark reached
loss for .SHS . Neither team Ironton. Calven worked 5.1 . base on an error in the sevcommitted an error in the innings on the mound in enth but Burdette. quickly
contest.
relief of Roush.
pitched his way out of trou. GAHS also left Jackson ble in both frames ;
: ~ASTERN 14, SOUTHERN 4
on Thursday night tied at
Buffalo gained the upper
· Southern 013 oo - 45 o
five through nine innin~s. hand in the opeping inning
Eastern 002 66 · - 14 13 o
although . the Blue Devils after Tucker singled and
wP _ F'len:a: LP -Cunnlngllam. · . . held a 4-1 cushion going moved into scoring position ,
HR: s - Chns Honor (thlro Inning. two
into the bottom of the sev- when Lewis received a free
00 000
· •
out).
enth. That game will be pass. Burdette then chased
completed before next home the only run hi: WQuld
BLUE DEVILS BURN
Wednesday 's
regularly- need with an RBI single to
IRONTON
scpeduled
contest
at left to stake the Bison to an
Jackson.
early J-0 advantage. ·
COAL GROVE - Gallia
Academy baseball started
The hosts tacked on an
GALLIPOLIS 15, IRONTON 6
slow, but picked Up speed as
unearned run in the third
the· night progressed Friday , GaJIIPQiil ooo 833 1 - 15 ts 2 with Tucker once again
igniting tbe .rally witll a
during a 15·6 victory. over 1roncon 211 0 10 1 . - 6 7 2
lead-off · single. Belcher
host
Ironton
in
a wP..:.CliYOrt:i.fi-Piaston.• ·
followed with a base hit and
:southeastern Ohio Athletic
BUFFALO ENDS FALCONS'
Lewis walked to load the
'League South Division
WINNING
SmEAK
:matchup .
,
sacks with no~ody out.
Zuspan got Burdette to pop
The Blue Devils (10-3 , 6,
BUFFALO - Garrett out to right before Reed's
2 St:&lt;:OAL South) trailed 4-0
through three jnnings of Burdette tossed a two-hit grounder was misplayed for
play. then erupted for eight shutout at visiting Wahama an error aHow Tucker to
·scores in the top of the Friday evening to end the score and give the Bison a
:fourth to tum a four-run White Falcons U game 2-0.Iead .
Buffalo had two men get
:deficit into a comfortable winning streak as Buffalo
on
base in the folllth and
four-run edge .
Putnam squeaked past the
GAHS- which pounded Bend Area team by a 2-0 again in the sixth but
Zuspan kept Wahama in the
out 15 ,hits on the evening margin.
- tacked on three more
Burdette struck out I0 game by getting out of eacb
scores· in the fifth for an 11- and allowed just two hits in jam without any further
·4 lead, but the Fighting blanking the White Falcons scoring as Burdette came
·Tigers countered·with a run for the diamond victory to away with the mound victo·
in their half of the fo~~~th to give the sectional rivals a ry.
Tucker paced the Bison
pull to within six at 11-5. split of the two-game, reguoffense
with a pair of sin·
lHS - which produced lar season series. . The
seven hits - never catne Bison improved to 11-9 gles with Belcher, Burde~ .
closer the rest of the way.
with the win while Wahama Winterstein and Call also
coming up with one base
· Gallia Academy added falls to 12-2 on the year.
:three runs in the sixth and
William Zuspan got the knock apiece for Buffalo.
one more in the seventh to call on the mound for WHS
BUFFAt O 2, WAHAMA 0
take a 15-5 edge , and and was equally impressiv.e
Ironton plated one run in during his six inning stint Wahama 000 000 0 - 0 2 2
their final at-bat to conclude for the White Falcons. Buffalo 101 000 ll - 2 6 1
the contest at its nine-run Zuspan scattered six hits WP - Bu-LP-~

AUBURN HILLS, Mich.
(AP) - LeBron James
huffed and puffed about
being pushed and shoved by
the Detroit Pistons.
Then, he stopped lobbying
for help from the officials and
blew the Pistons down - and
almost out of tbe playoffs.
Jatnes scored JJ. of his 25
points in the fourth quarter,
lifting
the
Cleveland
Cavaliers to a 79-68 victory
Friday night over Detroit and
a 3-0 lead in the ftrst·round
series.
"Once he decided to say,
'Hey, I'm not getting calls.
I'm goin8 to will this team to
a win·; our whole tea.t)l ·
changed," Cavs coach Mike .
.Brown said. "Watching him
Bip that switch, it was very
exciting.
. .
•
"I just get a rush thinking
about it."
The Pistons, whose collective heart was questioned by
one· of their players, played
hard for three-plus quarters
before being rendered helpthe Pistons needed both
less by James ..
Wallace
and
He had an alley-oop slam Rasheed
midway through the fourth Tayshaun Prince to play well
quarter during an 18-2 run to have a chance to. wjn, and
that started after the sixth tie neither did.
The 34-year-old Wallace
of the game. ·
scored
just five points, look"Big-time -players make
plays, and that s what he did," ing past his prime, banged up
Detroit coach Michael Curry and uninterested . Prince
scored seven points in the
said.
James had ll rebounds and first · quarter and was held
nine assists. H.e ·said he scoreless the rest of the game,
learned he was just short of a laboring with a sore back.
triple-double after looking at "Tay is not. going to sar,
anythmg about his back ; '
the stat sheet.
"When I got to tbe locker Curry said. "But I could. tell
room, I blamed Mo as the game went on he, wasn't moving as.well." \
Williams." Jatnes joked.
Hamilton had· 15 points,
James did get some help
eight rebounds and six
from his friends.
·
Rodney
Joe Smith had a career assists , while
playoff-high 19 points and 10 Sruckey contributed 1.2 points
rebounds., and Zydrunas and five assists.
Antonio McDyess. who
Ilgauskas scored 13 points.
had
eight points and eight
The Pistons will host Game
rebounds,
,lamented the faCt
4 on Sunday, needing l\ sur'
that
his
team
went through
prising showing to extend the
series.
·
the motions when it lost the
Detroit has advanced to at first two games of the series
least the Eastern Conference on the road by an average of
finals the previous six sea- 15 points.
Wallace and McDyess
sons - the longest such
stteak in the NBA since the declined comment after the
Los Angeles Lakers' ru.n two game.
.
decades ago - but now it's
The Pistons J?layed with
an eighth-seeded team with pride early, SCOI:JOg the first
virtually no chance .to survive eight points and refusing to
the first round.
· · ·
go away when they fell
"This is killing me," behind by nine in the . fiist
Richard Hamilton said. "I half.
·
.
can't even lie."
.
. Detroit took tutns with the
Curry said before the game lead in an. ugly third quarter

a

.

APphoto·

·- !;Corins 16 points and giving up nme - but had n(l
answer when James chose to ·
take over the game in the
fourth quarter. ·
.
·
"I just wanted to tum up the
aggression in thp fourth quar,ter," he said.
··
James' final points in the
first half came on a sequence
that made the Cavs laugh and
the Pistons pout.
.
ilgauska~ ~ot to a loose b~
near Detro1t s free-throw hne.
The Pistons let him dribble
up the court and make a jumv.
pass in the lane to James as 1f
the 7-foot-3, 260-pound cen:
ter was nimble. ·
.
The Pistons also allowed
Smith to perform like the
player who merited being the
No. l pick of the 1995 NBA
draft:
Smith, whose previous
career playoff high was 17
points, hasscored 13 or more
m a playoff game seven times
- stx against Detroit.
·
"So, what is it about the
Pistons?" James asked Smith
when the fact was relayed to
them. . · .
.
Smith 'sign_ed with the C~vs
last · month . after getti!Jg
bought out his contract w1th
the Oklahoma City Thunder:
. "It was a bi~ signing, espeCially tonight,' Cavs genenil
manager Danny Ferry said.
"He's exactly what we need-

..

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4130108 1

L--....-.-·----~--

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lET'S

Anne Jo..merlphoto

r ~ · ~- : ~ . ~- . ~- ,

,.

· CINCINNATI (AP) Jeff Francoeur hit a solo
homer for one of Atlanta's
four hits .. and the Braves
took advantage of the
wildest performance · in
Edinson Volqtre~' s career
Friday night , walking their
way to a 4-3 victory. over
the Cincinnati Reds.
Javier Vazquez (2- l)
went six innin gs for the
slumping Braves, who had
lost seven of nine heading
into the weekend series.
They emerged from their
rut with a lot of help from ·
Volquez (2-2) , who gave
up only one hit in fi ve
innings • Francoeur 's
homer - but couldn ' t
throw a strike when he
needed .
The right-hander has
struggled with his control
since spring training. and
reached a new low against
Atlanta. He walked a ·
·
AP photp
career-high seven batters Umpire Jeff Nelsdn, center, holds back Cincinnati Reds
and hit another in only five pitcher -Edinson Volquez, right, after he hit Atlanta Braves
innings , helping the Braves batter Yunel Escobar (not shown} With a. pitch and the
·
benches cleared in the third inning of a baseball game on
pull ahead 3-2.
The crowd booed last Friday in Cincinnati. ·
year's All -Star as he for show. Sevenil players hander Mike · Gonzalez
walked the bases loaded laughed as they milled pitched a perfect ninth for
his second save in three
with two outs in the fourth , around the infield .
The Reds were coming chances.
,
then walked Vazquez/ who hasn't had a hits nee off one of their best road
Atlanta's Chipper Jones
2006 - ·and Kelly Johnson trips in the last five years went 0-for-5 on his 37th
to force in a pair of runs. - they won all three series birthday. The third baseThe · 40-pitoh inning was · - but couldn't keep the man had been a .500 career
the wildest by a Red since momentum going because hitter with four homers on
Ryan Dempster walked six they couldn't throw strikes. his birthdays.
in · the second inning at Cincinnati pitchers walked
Notes:
The
Braves
Colorado on April 30, a season-liigh 10 batters.' "placed OF Garret Anderson
2003.
Vazquez has been solid on the 15-day DL retroac·
Volquez 's wildness got since the Braves got him Live to Monday with a
under the Braves ' skin in · from the White Sox in .a strained
left
thigh.
the third. when he hit Yunel six-player
deal
last Anderson had missed the
Escobar in the side. The December. The right-han- liist three game s. . .. OF
shortstop dropped his bat, der has gone six innings in Brandon Jones was called
took a few steps toward the each of his four starts and up from Triple-A. Jones
mound and pointed at . allowed no more than three batted .267 in 41 games
Volquez, · who raised his runs . Joey Votto and. Alex: with Atlanta last season . ...
arms in a puzzled gesture . Gonzalez had RBI singles Atlanta C Brian McCann
Plate umpire Tim Tschida off Vazquez, who struck · was a late. scratch with
· blurriness in his left eye,
stepped in front of Escobar . oui nine.
and blocked his way, preGonzalez hit a sacrifice ·which has bothered him the
venting it from escalating. fly in the eighth, the first last few days . ... Reds 3B
Both benc.hes and bullpens run . allowed by Rafael Edwin
Encarnacion
emptied, but it was mostly Soriano this s.eason . Leftc snapped a~ 0-for-15 slump.

.

·.: } 23.-9 9

R134A

Page 83

BIN6

:I .· $SPECIAL
. . . .· ·...

·

·Terry is the third Dallas
player to wip the sixth man
award, following Antawn
Jamison in 2003-04 and Roy
Tarpley in 1987-88.

fromPageBl

lciiLCiiANGi·

IL-

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~ QJ:ime9·1lltldintl•

Braves beat wild Volquez, Reds 4-3

ec:j,"

'

:

ed 531 of his 563 games for
the Hawks and MaverickS
from 2000-07. Terry averaged 15 5 points for Dallas
last season. when he started
34 times bnt was the only
Mavericks player to get into
every game.
Carlisle remembered the
first meeting he had ·/with
Terry after taking over as the
Dallas coach last summer.
"I wasn't even finished
with my first or second sentence and he basically said,
'Hey, whatever you need me
to do, I'll do .... I just want to
win,"' Carlisle said. "This
award is symbolic of who he
is. It's a tremendous tribute to
him, what he's about, and
also his teammates because
these guys have been
eX:tremely supportive of

Softball

.GET DYFOR;
SPRING AND SUMMER DRIVING

:

award

Nil

DALLAS
(AP)
Pallas
Mavericks guard Jason Terry
guard ·
is the best off the bench.
Jason
Terry, mostly a full-time Terry (31)'
starter before taking on a dif· moves the
ferent role the past two sea- ball round
sons. was presented Friday
Utah
with the NBA sixth man
guard
Kyle
award that · goes to the
Korver
league's toP. reserve.
''The abtlity to do it, .but (26) In the
also the willingness . to . first hall of
embrace it, is somethin~ theirNBA
that's got to be part of it, basketball ·
game in
Dallas coOH:h Rick Carlisle
srud . "That's who he is. He . Dallas on
wants to win,and he wan~ to ll)fedneSda
. y.
PBI'I of $omething that's bi~­
ger than himself, and that s .
AP phillo
· really what this is all .about."
While starting only 11 of
his 74 games in the_regular (Uld 4 of the Mavericks' ~t­
season, Terry averaged 19.6 round Western ·Conference
points and 3.4 assists while playoff series against San
playing about 34 minutes a Antonio they lead. 2-1.
game. Only Dirk Nowitzki
"He's been a big part of this
and Jason Kidd played more team ," said Nowitzki, the
minutes for the Mavericks, NBA's MVP two seasons
though Terry usually comes ago. "He's a great guy in the
off the bench shootmg.
locker room, he's one of our
, "No. doubt, I'm a g~~ play- emotional leaders, always firm~ w1th my energy, Terry ·
h
d H •
f
srud. "Instant offense, there .mg up 1 e crow · e 8 one 0
· ·
the best clutch players J've
are no warmup shots . ... ever seen ."
Jum\}ihg into the fire, that's a The only· time terry had a
spectal skill set."
Terry got Ill of 121 frrst- higher scoring average was
b 11 •
2000-0 I, his second NBA
place votes in the a otmg season' when he averaged
and was the clear winner with
576 points. Denver's J.R. 19.7 points for Atlanta. That
Smith finished second with was also. better than .each of
155 points and three frrst- the last 18 sixth-man award
place votes, and New York's winners.
Nate Robinson was third with . Terry scored 20 points or
113 points.
more in40 games th1s season,
: Nowitzki, Kidd and other 33 times when carne off the
teammates attended the news bench. In 26 games , he
conference in which Terry, matched or outscored the
who is known as JET, was opposing bench.
·
presented the 'trophy. It catne
After starting only 27
9n the day between Games 3 games as a rookie, Terry start-

Cleveland
Cavaliers'
LeBron.
James·
dunks
· against
the
Detroit
Pistons in .
tl;le first
quarter of
Game3 .
of a first- ,
round
NBA bas·
ketball ;
playoff .
series in
Auburn ·
Hills,
Mich., Orl'
Friday. :

I

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

_____

.

~_....___,_,,

MEIGS 11 ; ATHENS 9
'Meigs

140 001 23 -

:AthOIOS

203 012 01 -

·WP -

11 17 3
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Ebersbadl;LP ...; At&gt; Pomontd.

lADY RAIDERS BLAST
HANNAN

· River Valley pitcher Katelyn Birchfield delivers a pitch during Friday night's non-conference softball game against ·
Hannan a:t Cheshire.
to clinch the win.
the rest of the Tri-Valley
River Valley started their Conference
Hocking
campaign early scoring Division Friday night after
three runs in the first inning posting a convincing 11· I,
and holding the Lady 'Cats five-inning victory over
with three strikeouts per- visiting Southern.
formed by 'Lady Ra1der . The Lady Eaghis (8-3, 6pitcher Katelyn B1rcbfield.
0 TVC Hocking) scored at
The raid continued into least once in every inning
the second inning where while leading .the contest
. River Valley racked up wire-to-wit'\!, jumping out
another five runs, agttin to a 2-0 advantage after one
, ·
holding
Hanna
from . full frame .
Both
teams
countered
advancing via three strikew.ith a run in the second for
outs from Birchfield.
The third inning mirrored a 3-1 contest after two
the second ·with the Lady · complete, then EHS scored
Raiders. again adding five eight unanswered runs the
runs to their total, Birchfield rest of the way to wrap up
striking out two Lady 'Cats .the. mercy-rule outcome.
Eastern had seven hits in
· tCil help close Hannan's winthe
triumph, with Brenna
dow of op~rtunity.
Hannan s inner Wildcat Holter leading the way
emerged during the fourth with two safeties. Haylee
inning with Kayla Perry Gillian , Allie Rawson ,
Sami
Turley,
rounding third into home- Kasey
plate, stealing a run from the Cummins and Megan
· Carnahan also added a bit
prot~tion of River Valley.
The Lady Raiders were apiece to the winning
unable to advance during cause. · Holter also had a
the fourth inning, followed team.-best four RBis.
The Lady Tornadoes (3by Hannan's urisuccessfpl
attempts to up their total in 11 , 1-5) had only two hits
the fifth. With that the five- in the contest, which were
inning ~arne was complete provided
by
Kelsey
with R1ver Valley's 13-1 Holsinger and Emma
victory.
Hunter. Hunter had the
Both squads are looking lone RBI with a triple in
forward to competition on the second.
Saturday, Hannan against
Turley was the winning
Hunricane at Hurricane, and pitcher of record, allowing
· River Valley at tile Ernie only two walks over five
Chattin
.Memorial
in
Ashland, Kentucky, starting innmgs ·while striking out
five . Brooke Gabrits•h
at 10 a.m .
walked 12 and fanned six
lADY EAGLES so.\FI PAST in the setback for Sou them .

, CHESHIRE - THe Lady
Raiders held their ground
friday night as they played
Jl successful home· game
~gains! the vJsttmg Lady
.Cats.
.
SoUTHERN
: While both teams gave 1t
their all during the fiveTUPPERS PLAINS ~nning contest, the ladies of
River Valley were able to Eastern softball continued
taid strong and long enough its steady march through

EASTERN 11. SOUTHERN 1
Southern
Eastem

010 00
214 13

- ·• 1 2 5
- 11 7 0 ,

. WP - Turley; LP - Gabnt&amp;ch.

.

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Auto Salas

2147 JACKSON PIKE

446-0724

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, April26; 2009

25 years later, ·Kiper still talking at draft time
BALTIMORE (AP) - For
a .~Y. who makes a living
cnttqum~ others - created a
cottage mdustry out of it,
even - ~el K!per Jr. sou~s
·a httle thin-skinned when 1t
comes I? how others perce1ved h1m way back when.
Back before he became a
first-name-suffices celebrity.
Before the NFL draft felt
like a made-for-TV event.
: "When I started," Kiper
recatled, w~ tu~blin~ forth
as he rocked m his chmr during an interview with The
Associated Press, "I had
everybody telling me, 'You're
crazy. You're wasting your
~- It will amount to nolhmg.' I waS, like, the point man
OOr the draft to get ripped and about seven, eight years
. ago, I noticed that all !hose
massive critics shut up."
: This weekend marlc.s the 251h
anniversary of Kiper's 1984
~but on ESPN's NFL draft
&lt;:Overage, and while his noarne.to-brealhe delivery, polarizing declarations, and puffy
hair (his wife, .Kim, cuts it)
llaven't changed all !hat much
through the years, his relevance
and popularity sure have.
: The relevance and popuJarity of the. draft itself have
increased, too. The 1984
telecast drew a 0.6 raring;
ESPN has averaged better
than a 4.0 rating for its past
five Day l draft shows. In
1984. there were lO hours of
Jive coverage; this weekend ,
there will be more than 16.
"It's unbelievable to even
falhom that it's become -this
big. And Mel's the 'Founding
Falher"of it all," said Kipe(s
ESPN colleague and on-mr
foil, Todd McShay, one of the
new breed of"draft gurus" who
owe their jobs to lhe original.
"If you're in the NFL in any
way, shape or form, you have
to love what Mel haS done in

terms of publicity for the NFL

draft. Almost single-handedly.
he added two to ~ months
to the attention the NFL gets."
Football fans c~rtainly pay
attennon to K1per. They
probably couldn't avoid him
1f they wanted to on ESPN's
various TV channels, ESPN
Radio and ESPN.com.
"The. draft is the second,
biggest day- or two daysin the calendar y~. next to
the Su~ BowL And Mel had
something to do wuh that,"
said Ernie Accorsi, a former
GM for three NFL teams who
is Kiper's mentor and friend.
"He also was la beneficiary."
ESPN's khack for crossand self-promotion never fWas
more apparent than a linlt)' past
noon on March 12, when the
folloWing scrolled acmss the
bottom of th_e ESPNEWS
screen, tucked m among other
sente~-length items of the
"breaking" variety: "Mel
Kiper Jr. picks Gemgia QB
Matthew Stafford as No. I
pick in NFL mock drnft."
How much do lhe people
picking in the real draft take
Kiper's kibitzing into account?
How about the . players
he's ranking? Or their parents? Or agents?
The quick answers to all of
those questions: None, some,
or a whole Jot, depending on
whom you ask.
"I always say to people,
'I'm not picking.' My opinions, to NFL learns, don't matter. Teams don't care what I
say," said Kiper, who has three
years left on his current ESPN
deal. "If I were an owner, and
I knew my team was wonying
about what Mel Kiper srud, I
wouldn't be happy."
Still, front-office jobs often
hinge on lhe draft, a pressure
lhat leads to a desire to cover
every angle. The last thing
anyone wants is to be asked

by the boss why so-and-so
player from such-and-such
small college never was mentioned in the war room.
Which is why some of _the
In this
thousands of draft preVIew
Tuesday,
books sold annually by Mel
April 7 photo,
Kiper. Enterprises, Inc. - litfootball draft .
erally a Mom-and-Pop opera&amp;lllllyst
Mel
lion, its only full-time employKiper
Jr.
talks
ees are Mel and Kim Kiper about the
are bought by people who
draft during a
worlc. for NFL learns.
taping at the
"Nobody wants. to miss
ESPNZone
anybody or anythmg," said
in Baltimore.
Redskins e~ecutive vice
.
president for football operaAPphoto
tions Vinny Cerrato.
When Cerrato worlc.ed for
the San · Francisco 19ers, he
said, defensive coordinator Ray
Rhodes "would always have
Mel's book, every year. We'd
be sitting in the draft meetings, heed, players clearly believe time AP All-Arnerican.
. for the Super Bowl."
and he'd always look up what his opinions can sway draft
"One day, you're the nextTobin, rwming his first Colts
Mel thought about the ~Y· We decisions and, therefore, the best thing since skim milk. draft, chuckled about Kiper's
called Ray, 'Ray Kiper."
way dollars .are doled out. The next da~, you're s!lpposed . assessment, then Jauncbed into
Others,suchasretiredGreen Consider: The fu:stquartetback to go" low m the first round, a diatribe, 010ving a half-CuD
Bay Packers G~ R~ Wolf, selected in the 2008 draft, Man Joe Laurinaitis said. "What glass up and down for emphadownplayed Kiper's unpact. Ry3Ji\ at No.3 overall, received did he do .to fall off the gridT' sis: ''Well, you know, we've
He remembered taking a look $34J75 million in guaranteed
And then the elder got a guy up there _ who in
at one of Kiper's publications money. The second QB, Joe Laurinaitis, v?!c~ ris!ng, the hell is Mel Kiper. an)":VIIy?
decades ago, when Wolf Aacco, went 15 spots later and trotted out a cn!lc1sm K1per 1 mean here's a guy that criJi.
worlc.ed for the Raiders, "just to was guaranteed $8.75 million. has h_e~d often: "The ques- cizes e;erybody, whoever they
see what it was.':
The third 'QB, Brian Brolun, hon 1s? OK, where has he .take .... And in my knowledge
. /'He just listed .names. lasted until late in the second played. Where has . he of him, he's never, ever put on
Atlybody can list names," round and was guaranteed coached? What makes hun a a k S""'"·.He's never beeri a
Wolf said.
closer to $1.5 million.
so-called 'guru'?"
~..,.,
The people whose inimediNot too shabby for a kid
That stance was most player. ~e s never been a
ate futures might be affected srraighloutofcollege,butasig- famously espoused on live COO::h.Hesneverbeen~~t.
rnostbyKiperdowantloknow nificantdifferencenonelheless. television by Indianapolis Hesneverbeenan~
what he has to say: Those are · Which might explain why Colts director of all football tor.And,allofasudden,be san
the players he's ranking in so many players' relatives operations Bill Tobin during exr,ertM ·1 K'
h
order of expected NFL success take Kiper s analysis so seri- .the 1994 draft. .
e . lper as no men;.
on his "Big Board," and the ously. He's heard complaints . Beforehand,~J: insisted cn:oonttals to do w~at he!
ones he's trying to inatch With from parents and · siblings, Indianapolis n
a quar- domg than my ne1ghbor, ·
actual draft slots.
. · unCles and cousins.
terback After the Colts took Tobin concluded, "And my
Agenl• say some players
"They call me up, give me Marsh~ll ·Faulk at No. 2 neighlior's a postman - and
will lower their expectations a piece of their mind, and overall, Kiper chastised them ~e doesn't even have season
based on what one particular hang up," Kiper said.
for not picking a QB, Heath uckets to the NFL."
48-year-old from. Baltimore
Ohio State linebacker Shuler or Trent Dilfer. When
It took less than a minute
thinks - and other players James Laurinaitis • father, the Colts selected linebacker for Tobin to, essentially, take
get angry if Kiper pegs them Joe, hasn't contacted Kiper. Trev Alberts. at No. 5, Kiper a well-known Kiper and
lower than they figured.
But he thought about doing said, "1hat's wby the Colts help make him famous.
·
Whether or not NFL teams so after Kiper's rating are picking second. every
"We'll be attached forevdo, indeed, pay Kiper much dropped for James, a two- year in the draft, not battling er," Kiper said.
JOC.

Goodell outlines possible lengthened NFL season . Picks, trades and trendsr

N~C~o~~.fon~~~oger

~~ 1 ~0 d~. ~g~:e:. ~!~: ;:s~~b~~ w~~~~·ho will travel to Let the intrigue begin

. ·"'

Goodell can envision a
week on
Super Bowl played in midLabor Day
February if the . .league
·weekend,
't
g
1
f o 11 owe d ·
e Xpands 1 s re u ar-season
schedule to 17 or 18 games. ·
by
the
Team owners are expected
opening
w e e k. .
to get a proposal, perhaps as.
soon as next month, that
There still
would eliminate two presea- . would be a bye for each
son games and add one or team during .the season and
two to the regular schedule. the week off between the
Goodell said Friday _at a conference championships
meetmg with Associated and the Super Bowl. This
Press Sports Editors such a year, that off weekend will
format could push the Super be filled by the Pro Bowl.
Bowl back to President's
"I think there are a lot of
weekend.
positives and opportunities
"The idea has merit, I to it, but-!here are some cauthink," he said Friday, refer- tionary thin~s," Goodell
ring to mQre regular-season said, mentionmg overexpogames. "You are taking. the sure, safety and health issues
quality and improving it, for the players, and agreetaking two · meaningless ments with television and
game~ and making them other media partners.
meanmgful w1thm the 20"We have not found a satgame framework."
uration point for pro foot A Super Bowl that late in ball, which is a good thing . I
February could conflict with don't want to be aroull(l if
such other events as the · we do."
Daytona 500, the NBA AllAfter notin~ the league is
Star game and, every four ''not immune' to the ecoyears, the Winter Olympics. nomic downturn, Goodell
Then again, there is not b.i!;- said he hopes to soon start
ger sporting event r m negotiations with new
America than the NFL's title NFLPA executive director
game. .
DeMaurice Smith on a
Goodell outlined a see- revised collective bargaining
nano that would have two agreement.
"I have met with De severpreseason games in August,

and we intend to do that," Houston, D!!IJas and . New
Goodell said.
Orleans next week to begin a
NEW YORK (AP) ·- ous teams, are teceiver~
. Earlier Friday, Smith said . two-month series o( meet- . Let's forget that Matthew . Chad Ocho Cinco of
·
at a news conference th at the mgs
with players. on every · Stafford · will win"
" u~ in Cincinnati and Roscoe
union needs full and trans- team, also . argued that the .Detroit as the top pic in Parrish of Buffalo; and runparent disclosure of the NFL already has a rookie Saturday's NFL draft. And ning backs· Ronnie Brown
league's finances before any wage scale _ something what team will ·get star of Miami and Edgerrin
Goodell believes does not te&lt;;eiver Michael Crabtree. James of Arizona (who
talks would be productive.
"It will always be the exist, but needs to imple- And where the six offen- 'likely will be released this
same starting point . Gene ment. Smith said less than 4 sive tackles likeJy .to go in spring if he is noi deillt).
talked about for years," percel)t of the monies dedi- the first-round will land.
As for any trading fren•
Smith said of the late Gene cated 10 salaries goes to
Sure, the draft is all about zies, consider the flux the
Upshaw, who held the top rookies, while · Goodell grabbing new talent, plug- NFL is in .these days. With
union post for 25 years pointed out that $600 mil· ging holes 'or beefing up a the possibility of a nonbefore his death last August. lion, including .$400 million . pro team's depth: It's also capped 2010 season staring
"Let's share the information. in guaranteed money, will be about the intrigue beyond teams, players and agents
It's very difficult 10 tell you given to the 32 first-round the actual selections., •
in the face, the rules under
want share of that pie will go picks in Saturday ·s draft.
Such as the trades and the, which business has been
to. the players when r have to
"Something is broken. We :trends.
.
conducted for so long could
guess what the size of the . want the player who has perW1ll Cleveland deal readily change. That might
pie is."
.
formed on the NFL !civet to Brayton Edwards to tlie . impact how the clubs treat
Goodell, however, reiter- be compensated" Goodell Giants or the Eagles or the this draft. ·
.
· ated a point he has made said.
Titans or another receiver:
Will some teams look to
since the owners opted out
"At the end of the day, needy club? Don't expect unload picks to save money
of the CBA last year _ the )earns make decisions about any hints coming out of for bidding wars caused by
contract ends after the 2010 what is good for them," Browns c·a mp, where new the disappearance of the
season, which would be an Smith said. "No decision has coach Eric Mangini is more salary cap - even wjtli
uncapped year.
been made between our secretive than the ·CIA'.
new restrictions on free
''The players know where players and the rookies, our · How about the Cardinals, agency that would be irt
every penny we made in the veterans arid the rookies."
tired of dealing with place? Or might teams that'
league is ... through an indeOne thing the NFL is not . Anquan Boldin's contract often stockpile draft choic~endent audit," he said. doing .is considering a Supe[ demands, sending him to es in future years (Eagles:
They know the cost side, · Bowl in London. Goodell one of those teams? ·
Patriots) by trading down
th11t 60 percent of that goes dismissed a report that "su!J,.
"I didn't say a trade was in the current grab bag opt
. ·
to the players. On the other stantive talks" with officials necessary," . Boldin has to avoid that route?
side, the stadium construe- in London were held.
said. "I just want some- . Consider that both the
"We have never looked at thing to get resolved. It's Patriots and Eagles don't
tions, they participate in
that, so they know that. London or Mexico City as a something that's go.ne on have a lot of holes, but 'do
We've shared information site," he said. ·
long enough."
have a lot of picks this
Both wideouts would weekend.
· :
carry a hefty price, includPatriot~
coach
Bill
ing at least a first-round Belichick said urgency will
selection Saturday.
determine such moveS'
What
about
Julius more _than anything.
NEW YORK (AP) - The final_ists last f!lOnth in a pro-_· explained, kids· pick a t.earn players, then see. which Peppers? Carolina fran"It's much more of let's
sponsored
by either because they like the would win by running a com- ch1sed the standout defen- wait until we are on the
offer J?,OPped into Rainier mohon
"Onyx Herrera's inbox: Monster.com and the NFL to style of play or have relatives puler simulation.
sive end and would get two clock," he said. "l.et's wait
You ve won a trip to New become
the
league's living 'in the city.
Herrera learned about the first-rounder~ as compen- to see what's on the board
York to compete for a chance "Director of Fandemonium."
Well, Herrera doesn't have NFL contest when he saw an sation if ally'one signs him. and then we will decide if
In addition to winning the any family in Minneapolis.
ad during the Super Bowl. But the · Panthers likely we . want to move or not:
to attend the Super Bowl and
receive $100,000!
$100,000, Herrera gets to
"I liked those big hom hel- . He rushed to his computer to would set~le for less in a That's the way 99 percent.~
"I get the notification viae- attend the coin toss at the mets and stuff; I tlioultil.l that fm out an entry, then didn't
mail, which I thoughi was Super Bowl;calla play at the was cool," he sai!l. "When I think much about it until he trade, albel! not less than at That urgency often is
enhanced when a rup on
some kind of crazy scam," he Pro Bowl and participate in was kid, I was like, 'OK, I'm got that e-mail jn early least one first-round spot.
-·
Still,
Panth.
e
rs
general
position occurs. ·
·
recalled. "I was like, you on-field introductions at the going to be a Viking.' Just to March.
Last year, eight offensive
won the Nigerian lottery in London_game: New England be different from everybody
He flew to New York later manager Marty ·Hurney
Malaysia, that sort of thing. I . versus Tampa Bay on Oct. else."
.that month for a twocday recently said: . "We'vll tackles were selected in the
He's never attended a final that' included trivia known Julius for seven first round, including six in
was aboutto dismiss it, then I . 25.
questions, coin-flip contests years, and it has been a a span of lO picks midwa~
started reading a linle bit
But first, he'll announce Vikings game .
good seven years."
in the round, starting witH
.more into 'it: Hey, this seems the seq&gt;nd-round draft pick . "I've never even been and interviews.
·
to be legit."
·
Saturday of h1's ·beloved c Iose to th e wonde
·
rfu1 state
"I think he knows how Ryan Clady of Denver a1
Herrera looked right at
· of Minnesota," Herrera said. home recording a video with we feel, and we feel like No. 12. A similar rush· to
When Herrera went to his Minnesota Vikings.
banker 'In Honolulu to get
One problem: Herrera won "But now that I've won, I Strahan on Friday. In fact, it he's been happy here. And. grab such blockers - lefl
some contest forms nota- this contest because he's such !'~yo' have the money to do was the TV s\3f/forrner play- again,
nothing
has tackle is considered as
rized, she was sure it was a a knowledgeable, v.assionate 11.
er who kept flubbmg his changed. ·we franchised important a position as any
fraud. They spent nearly two football fan. What1f he looks . A self-described failed lines, not the short Homeland him, and when ' we did we other on offense, save quar•
hours researching the compa- .down at the card and imme- kicker, Herrera !ast played Security employee. The ' Bi,~: knew there was a period for terback - could happen
nies involved, even callmg diately thinks, "That's a terri- football as a h1gh school Apple certamly isn't intim1- the process to take place . .this year, dropping the bev~
freshman, when he was cut datmg to Herrera - he When that process goes of solid . wideouts lowe(
the Better Business Bureau. ble pick!"
"I don't want to do that on by the junior varsity after attended
New
York through then he's going to than projeeted.
Finally, the bank's vice presi'
· ·
dent came over with the ver- national TV," he said, aycidentally hitting the quar- University.
be back."
"I'd like us to use all of
diet: It was for real .
~mising to be professional. terback in the bel\(!·. The only · And be already seems
A
smokescreen?
Perhaps
.
our
picks on receivers and
: It was all very real Friday ·'I'll trr to work up as much team he competed with after adept at ·fending off media
of
the
process,
offensive
linemen and hav~
That's
a
part
w'hen the 34-year-old Herrera enthus1asm as possible no that was m the academic inquiries: Asked about his
too.
a
bunch
of weapons,''
sat at a desk in midtown matter who they pick."
bowl.
. job, Herrera mentioned the
Other players considered Bengals
quarterbac~
So how did a guy growing
These days, he takes on a agency, then added, "That's
Manhattan . getting yelled at
available this weekend, Carson Palmer said. "Bui
by retired NFL star Michael up in Hawaii become a · friend in the digital realm. as much as I can sav.''
Strahan in front of a video VIkings fan? With. no local They'll e~~ form~ roster of
~That's as far as I(ll go," he regardless of what camou· obviously, that's a quarter;,
•
crew. He beat out 31 other franchise to root for, he a franchise s all-tune great sa1d. "My boss will kill me." flage is being used by vari- back's fantasy.''

NFL fan from Hawaii gets to announce pick at draft ·

Sunday, April26, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

&amp;uniJap ~tnus I!Jeutmd • Page Bs

. Chase i11ts In mind, Woman charged with trying to extort Pitino
Childress
IIIII wUisvJ~LE, &lt;AP&gt;

Ky.
his team," said Pence.
TALLADEGA, AJa. (AP) Daytona 500.
-An :\uipment manager's
Outside the courthouse,
"We're in a performance estrang wife was -charged Sypher's attorney, Thomas
- Richard Childress headed for the mountains · of business and we've got to with trying to extort Clay, declined to predict
Montana midway through perform," Berrier said. "A Louisville men's basketball what might happen in the
the race at Texas Motor lot of times the obvious coach Rick Pitino, at first case.
Speedway. His cars were things to do for me are dif- demanding cars and tuition
'The criminal complaint
junk, and the team owner ferenl than Richard. He for her children, then later clearly reflects other ~ople
couldn't stomach sticking elected to make changes for asking for $10 million, were involved in this,' Clay
around for .the finish. · · .
~verybody and all the parties according to a federal com- said. "Whether they will be
Childress recogni~ed a mvolved. He's looking after plaint filed Friday,
charged, I donit know."
month into the season that the Uvelihood of 3 lot of dif-.
Karen Cunagin Sypher,
Clay declined to comment
his organization wasn't run- ferent people. We have who also is accused of lying on Sypher's allegation
ning up to par, but he didn't sponsors and it's 8 perfor- to the FBI in the case, did against Pitino. In court, she
know how to fix it. The mance business so you have not enter a ~lea at a court answered only "yes, sir'' to
solut!on came to him during to do what you have to do." appearance riday and was questions · from
U.S.
a qu1et moment alone on a
Gil Martin and his group Roleased on her own recog- Magistrate Judge Dave
mo!lntain: He'd swap the will leave Mears for a nizance.
Whalin, and she woold not
enure crews of drivers ·reunion with · Har\rick:
Sypher's 1 husband, Tim conimentlater.
Kevin Harvick and Casey Martin was previously Sypher, brought Pitino a .According to the cnminal
Mears . .
Harvick's crew chief in wntten list of · demands comJ?lainr written by FBI
The decision goes into 2002. leading him to a win includinj! tuition, two cars of S~1al Agent Steven Wi~ht,
effect next week, and that season at Chicago, but her ch01ce, J)ay_ing off her Pitino received two vo1ceChjldress insisted he won't was repl«i:ed by Berrier the house and $3,000 per month, mail messages from a man
change liis mind - even if next se~n.
according to the complaint. who did not identify himself
one of the drivers wins
Harvick has so far been The demands later escalated on Feb. 26 and a third call on
Sunday's . race at Talladeg~ silent on the swap, but the to $10 million, the com- Feb. 28. Pilino told Wight
fiery driver can't be happy plaint said.
· the fll'SI two concerned perSuperspeedway.
"This sport isn't no differ- with his season to date. He
What sort of information sonal allegations that were
ent ~ . football . or ~ase- opened the season with . a Sypher may have been try- "criminal in nature" and
!!31l, Ch1l_dress sru~ Fn4ay. , v 1ctory in the exhibition ing to use to extort the sue- could harm the coach's repu. When thmgs ~n,t work- Budweiser Shootout, and . cessful coach · was not tation, while the third was a
.'!'g, tough deciSIOns some- was second in the Daytona included in the .complaint; · threiu to make .the allega!lmes have to come from the 500, but has been on a which &lt;?nly said Pitino tions public in two weeks .
\Yight notes in the comcoach or the owner. You've steady slide since. In the believed 11 was related to an
got to do wh~t y~e got.to seven races since the sea- unspec1fied !!ncounter ~1th plamr that the truth abOut the
do to make (It) w . If you .son-opener, he has just one the woman m 2003. Pllmo allegations against Pitino is
s1t there and Jet things sta
. y top-10 and four fimshes of took over Loui~ville's bas- "suspect" and were left out
st11l too long, it will hurt 27th or worse. . . ·
: . k;etball. program m 200 I.
of the criminal complaint.
· your whole organization.''
Childress said both drivers·
The 56-year-old coach
Pitino told Wight he met
The change waS 10ade just were fine with his decision, first brought np the extortion with the Syphers after the
two months mto the season, and Mears said· he 'did not allegations last week, when frrst two ca)ls and asked
but with Harvick and Mears object _ even though he said he had reported them what she wanted and Karen
· sltpping out of contention Berner becomes his seventh· to the FBI last month. Since Sypher talked about a house,
(or the Chase for the Sprint crew chief in seven Sprint then, Karen Sypher .has cars and cash. Pitino told
CuP.
championship. Cup seasons. He'd been g!ven some media inte~- Wight that he played · the
Qui dress said the current hopi~g for continuity and · VIews, mostly saymg shes voicemail for her and she
pomrs structure an!i empba- the 11me to develop a rela' just defending herself. One denied knowing about the
SIS on maki~~ the !~-driver tionship w_ith a crew chief station that did an extensive calls.
fi!!ld made _1t 1mposs1ble for when he s1gned with RCR, i~terview said it chose not to
Kenyon Meyer, Tim
him to wa1t any longer to but will now look to estab- 311' her allega!lons because Sypher's attorney, said his
make a change.
!ish chemistry with Berrier. the~ could not be confl~ed. client is not being targeted in
"I .can't fault anybody for
..'l'IJJl Syp~er, a ~ong~e the _criminal investigation
' Harvick,_ a three·ti~e
C:hase qualifier, has dropPed making , a change," Melli'S · rude_ to Pitmo, VOiced his and 1s cooperating.
&amp;JX spots over the past two said. "If you look at where support for . h1s boss in a
"This whole series of
~eeks to 161~ in_ the stand- we are in tlie poidts right s~tement last week, and events has just been devas-.
mgs. Mears, m h1s first year now, and where (Harvick) is · dtvorce papers for _the· cou- tating," Meyer said.
with R. ichard· Childress at in the points right now pie bas been flied m recent
Wight said Karen Sypher
Racing: is 22n~ . . ·
.
the.team real,lyfelt like they wec:k_s: ,
.
hired an attorney on March
"It Will probably take two ile!'ded to dO something to
Ptllno s attorney, Steve 22 and the attorney mailed a
or. three races to _get this shake it up a linle bil." ,
Pence •. released a statement letter to. Pitino repeating the
thmg really working, !Uld . ''This might just be that · and. satd he has dtrected the allegations made in the
you can't afford to lose 50, spark.&gt; I .wasn't really coach to have no further - voicemail, but in greater
75, 100 points each race," involved in the decision comment .on the case.
detail. In the letter, Sypher
Chil&lt;lrl:ss said. "So that's the' ~ess, it' was more like
"While Coach Pitino takes also accused Pitino of
biggest reason we're doing This is what we're going to no comfort in this prosecu- orchestrating the threatening
it ;w~en wfre ~oin~ i!.'' .
do.' ~ut rm goOd with it,'~ 'lion and remains :astonished calls, Wight s!lid. The .att?r:
' Chnt Bowyer, dnvmg for he sa1d.
.
by '!lese ~vents, 11 mar~ a ney fllelf a d1vorce petillon
RCR's expansion fourth . This is the third time turmng pomt that allows him on .behalf of her .and made
t_eBf!ll~i.s season, is, current, Ch!ldress has ,s":'apped to focus with a clear mind demands of Pitino, including
ly s1xth m the standmgs. Jeff enttte crews. fJe dtd 11 1998 once again on his farnil~ and one for $10 million, Wight
Burton is 11th. Childress .did · when he ·swapPed crews for
not make any changes to Dale . Earnharot and Mike

•

"'"'....,._.o...;._;.;..:;:.:...;"'-i,_ _....;:;.,;...,..:~..;...-..::;;'-...;,;;;J

·

.

AP pllolo _

~renSypher,charg!l9withtryingloextortLoulsville men's
basketball. coach Rick .PHino and of lying to the FGI, leaves

the Gene Snyder Courthouse following a court' appearance
Friday In Louisville, Ky., Sypher did 'riot enter a plea in the
case and was·released on her own recognizance. .
said. An affida'vit coniaining · May 11 - 12 and could hear
the allegations against Pitino the Fase.
and .attached to the petition
The FBI interviewed
has be_en sealed.
Sypher earlier this month
Assostant U.S . Attorney about the calls and said she
John Kuhn asked Whalin to failed a pOlygraph test to her
bar Karen Sypher from hurt- during the second interview.
ing Pitino's reputation while She then gave false inforrnaon bond, and Clay said his .. tion about the caller's identiclie11t ~greed ~ot discuss the ty, · lead_ing to ch~rges of
coach m pubhc.
lymg to the FBI, W1ght said.
Pitino signed a three-year
Agents also interviewed a
contract extension with the man who admitted making
Cardinals in May 2007 that the calls to Pirino.
· ·
could keep him at the school . The man, who was · not
through 2013. The deal pays identified in the c. omplaint,
himanannualsalaryof$2.5 told . Wight that Karen
mil~ion a year if he stays Sypher talked about getting
unt1l the end of the contract. $200,000 to ~ 000. The
He'll receive !oyalty_bonus- man s~id Kare~ Sypher
es of $3 ,6 m1llton m 21)10 asked him to make the callS
and 201~ if he remains~with ''during a critical periOd hi
the school.
the · basketball season ro
. Ku~n said a federal grand i~c.rease _the pressure" on
JUry 1s scheduled to meet Pttmo, W1ght.said . .

Am.
· · ·- ·
,. .
~sS:gl~~~aM~nday,Todd ~~:~e~ ~?~ainpe~:et . ... putee Kyle Maynard to make MMA debut

Berrier and his entire crew
will leave Harvick's team
after six seasons and eight
victories. But the duo is
stuck in a 79"race winless
~treak dating to the 2007
.
.
.
,
·

between Harvtck and Robby
Gordon.
"It's not the fll'St time this
hapl'ened at our place ,"
Berrier said. "History typically repeats itself."
·

lMadden NFL 10' to cover
.S Polamalu·. '.WR
· F
· t"tzg·er·.aJ·d.
.,
.
·
. ·
·
.
.. WASHINGTON (AP) - · nail-biter. Both athletes are
for the first time in its sto· · known for their long, beliied (some say cursed) his- met-defying hair. Steel
tory, the cover of EA City football fans should
Sportf "Madden NFL" be particularly happy,
y1deb game will feature since Fitzgerald played
two
cover · athletes: college
ball
at
the
l;&gt;ittsburgh Steele_rs safety . University of Pittsburgh.
· troy · Polamalu
and (He Wl!S also on the cover
Arizona Cardinals receiver' of EA's "NCAA •Football
~rry Fitzgerald. · ·
· 2005.") .• ·: .. .
. _, The shared cover :or
EA's football franchi~e is
"M dd
NFL
" hi h ,
d , •·
.
10 , w c .eare .or lis mystenous
., a en
~rrives in .stores Aug . 14, "Madden curse": Previous
h_as something for every- CQver models like Donovan
!)ne: Polamalu is a defen- McNabb, Shaun Alexander
siv.e AFC player and and Vince Young have sufFitzgerald · an offensive feted . injuries during theit
. -.
"Madden'' sea~on.
NFC player. ·
., Both played in:. last ilea· ··. The ailnou~ent w.S
son's Super Bowl, which made Friday by Eleo.tronlc ''
t)Ie Steelers 1¥0n in a.:27-23 . Arts Inc.

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - meet in the 103-pound weiglit
Kyle Maynard has won ·class. He spent a year on a
dozens ·'of high scbool club team at the Umversity of
wrestling matches,' competed Georgia.
in seven jiujitsu tournaments . Now Maynard is making
and bench pressed nearly 400 his MMA debut in Alabama
·pounds, all despite beirig born after the Georgia Athletic
with no elbows or knees, Entertainment Commission
· . denied him a license to fight
hands or feet. .
Onsa~y. the ~on!!enital in 2007, fearing he wouldn't
amputee IS venturmg mto a be able to adequately defend
new athletic arena - mixed himself or tap out to end the
martial arts. He is hi:lping to bout if he was in danger.
·
silence critics who wonder if
Alabama has no regulatory
can defend himself against. commissio'! for boxing or
the kicks, knees and punches MMA, freemJ! Maynard and
ofa full-bodied opponent.
promoter Dav1d Oblas to set
''There are a lot of people u_p the match at Auburn
that doubt rn be able to last Cove~ Arena.
·
30 seconds,'' the 23-year-old
The problem has been conMaynard said. "One .of my ·vincing opponents to fight
goals is to go in there and him. Oblas, in an interview
proveJ'm capable ofit, tljere- ~ednesday,'lieclined to idenby ptovmg them wrong.''
llfy Maynard's opponent,
It wouldn't be the first time. ~·ng only that he .1s from
· and has had two
· M aynard_, from suburb.an
1sconsm
Atlanta, went 35-16 in MMA-fjghts.
·
""'
· guys
wrestl'
. mg rnatches as a semor
"e •.ve had fi1ve or SIX
. at ~o!lins High Sc~ool, back out of the fight, nor
advancmg to the na!lonal because theY wanted to back

·
·
out, bui more because of President Barack • Obama
pressure from family and and met such luminaries of
friends: 'What are you doing business arid sports as Bill
fighting a guy with no arms Gates and Bo Jackson.
or legs?'" Oblas said. ~'It's
Then again, Saturday
kind of a no-win situation for nig,h t's fight is supposed to
the other guy.'' ·
.provide the climactic scene
A.nd for Maynard? He of a documentary on
admits the media attention- Maynard
ent itled
"A
and the criticism on MMA Fighting Chance."
fan message boards - puts a
MMA fans on chat boards
little more pressure on his have worried that Maynard
muscular,l35-pound frame. . might get hurt . and wonHe , acknowledges that · dered What he's doing in the
some people think he craves event.
attention, but said publicity
Oblas says he understands
isn't his goal.
the skepticism. but points
· "If I were doing this in a out few fighters around the
back alley somewhere with · same weight pack the power ·
my trainer, a referee and my in their frames that Maynard
opponent, then I'd be satis- has, With broad shoulders
fled;" Maynard said. "It's and a wrestler's thick neck,
just a personal quest to fi~- Maynard pounds out pushUre out what I'm made of. • ups by easily propelling ihe
He hard~ needs · more lower part of bis body into
publicity. e has already the air and uses ctoss-traindelive.red a couple of hun- in~ methods in the suburban
d red speec hes for the At anta gym he opened in
Washington
Se,eakers December, aptly named No
Bureau, shared a stage with Excuses Ath,letics.
.

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, April26; 2009

25 years later, ·Kiper still talking at draft time
BALTIMORE (AP) - For
a .~Y. who makes a living
cnttqum~ others - created a
cottage mdustry out of it,
even - ~el K!per Jr. sou~s
·a httle thin-skinned when 1t
comes I? how others perce1ved h1m way back when.
Back before he became a
first-name-suffices celebrity.
Before the NFL draft felt
like a made-for-TV event.
: "When I started," Kiper
recatled, w~ tu~blin~ forth
as he rocked m his chmr during an interview with The
Associated Press, "I had
everybody telling me, 'You're
crazy. You're wasting your
~- It will amount to nolhmg.' I waS, like, the point man
OOr the draft to get ripped and about seven, eight years
. ago, I noticed that all !hose
massive critics shut up."
: This weekend marlc.s the 251h
anniversary of Kiper's 1984
~but on ESPN's NFL draft
&lt;:Overage, and while his noarne.to-brealhe delivery, polarizing declarations, and puffy
hair (his wife, .Kim, cuts it)
llaven't changed all !hat much
through the years, his relevance
and popularity sure have.
: The relevance and popuJarity of the. draft itself have
increased, too. The 1984
telecast drew a 0.6 raring;
ESPN has averaged better
than a 4.0 rating for its past
five Day l draft shows. In
1984. there were lO hours of
Jive coverage; this weekend ,
there will be more than 16.
"It's unbelievable to even
falhom that it's become -this
big. And Mel's the 'Founding
Falher"of it all," said Kipe(s
ESPN colleague and on-mr
foil, Todd McShay, one of the
new breed of"draft gurus" who
owe their jobs to lhe original.
"If you're in the NFL in any
way, shape or form, you have
to love what Mel haS done in

terms of publicity for the NFL

draft. Almost single-handedly.
he added two to ~ months
to the attention the NFL gets."
Football fans c~rtainly pay
attennon to K1per. They
probably couldn't avoid him
1f they wanted to on ESPN's
various TV channels, ESPN
Radio and ESPN.com.
"The. draft is the second,
biggest day- or two daysin the calendar y~. next to
the Su~ BowL And Mel had
something to do wuh that,"
said Ernie Accorsi, a former
GM for three NFL teams who
is Kiper's mentor and friend.
"He also was la beneficiary."
ESPN's khack for crossand self-promotion never fWas
more apparent than a linlt)' past
noon on March 12, when the
folloWing scrolled acmss the
bottom of th_e ESPNEWS
screen, tucked m among other
sente~-length items of the
"breaking" variety: "Mel
Kiper Jr. picks Gemgia QB
Matthew Stafford as No. I
pick in NFL mock drnft."
How much do lhe people
picking in the real draft take
Kiper's kibitzing into account?
How about the . players
he's ranking? Or their parents? Or agents?
The quick answers to all of
those questions: None, some,
or a whole Jot, depending on
whom you ask.
"I always say to people,
'I'm not picking.' My opinions, to NFL learns, don't matter. Teams don't care what I
say," said Kiper, who has three
years left on his current ESPN
deal. "If I were an owner, and
I knew my team was wonying
about what Mel Kiper srud, I
wouldn't be happy."
Still, front-office jobs often
hinge on lhe draft, a pressure
lhat leads to a desire to cover
every angle. The last thing
anyone wants is to be asked

by the boss why so-and-so
player from such-and-such
small college never was mentioned in the war room.
Which is why some of _the
In this
thousands of draft preVIew
Tuesday,
books sold annually by Mel
April 7 photo,
Kiper. Enterprises, Inc. - litfootball draft .
erally a Mom-and-Pop opera&amp;lllllyst
Mel
lion, its only full-time employKiper
Jr.
talks
ees are Mel and Kim Kiper about the
are bought by people who
draft during a
worlc. for NFL learns.
taping at the
"Nobody wants. to miss
ESPNZone
anybody or anythmg," said
in Baltimore.
Redskins e~ecutive vice
.
president for football operaAPphoto
tions Vinny Cerrato.
When Cerrato worlc.ed for
the San · Francisco 19ers, he
said, defensive coordinator Ray
Rhodes "would always have
Mel's book, every year. We'd
be sitting in the draft meetings, heed, players clearly believe time AP All-Arnerican.
. for the Super Bowl."
and he'd always look up what his opinions can sway draft
"One day, you're the nextTobin, rwming his first Colts
Mel thought about the ~Y· We decisions and, therefore, the best thing since skim milk. draft, chuckled about Kiper's
called Ray, 'Ray Kiper."
way dollars .are doled out. The next da~, you're s!lpposed . assessment, then Jauncbed into
Others,suchasretiredGreen Consider: The fu:stquartetback to go" low m the first round, a diatribe, 010ving a half-CuD
Bay Packers G~ R~ Wolf, selected in the 2008 draft, Man Joe Laurinaitis said. "What glass up and down for emphadownplayed Kiper's unpact. Ry3Ji\ at No.3 overall, received did he do .to fall off the gridT' sis: ''Well, you know, we've
He remembered taking a look $34J75 million in guaranteed
And then the elder got a guy up there _ who in
at one of Kiper's publications money. The second QB, Joe Laurinaitis, v?!c~ ris!ng, the hell is Mel Kiper. an)":VIIy?
decades ago, when Wolf Aacco, went 15 spots later and trotted out a cn!lc1sm K1per 1 mean here's a guy that criJi.
worlc.ed for the Raiders, "just to was guaranteed $8.75 million. has h_e~d often: "The ques- cizes e;erybody, whoever they
see what it was.':
The third 'QB, Brian Brolun, hon 1s? OK, where has he .take .... And in my knowledge
. /'He just listed .names. lasted until late in the second played. Where has . he of him, he's never, ever put on
Atlybody can list names," round and was guaranteed coached? What makes hun a a k S""'"·.He's never beeri a
Wolf said.
closer to $1.5 million.
so-called 'guru'?"
~..,.,
The people whose inimediNot too shabby for a kid
That stance was most player. ~e s never been a
ate futures might be affected srraighloutofcollege,butasig- famously espoused on live COO::h.Hesneverbeen~~t.
rnostbyKiperdowantloknow nificantdifferencenonelheless. television by Indianapolis Hesneverbeenan~
what he has to say: Those are · Which might explain why Colts director of all football tor.And,allofasudden,be san
the players he's ranking in so many players' relatives operations Bill Tobin during exr,ertM ·1 K'
h
order of expected NFL success take Kiper s analysis so seri- .the 1994 draft. .
e . lper as no men;.
on his "Big Board," and the ously. He's heard complaints . Beforehand,~J: insisted cn:oonttals to do w~at he!
ones he's trying to inatch With from parents and · siblings, Indianapolis n
a quar- domg than my ne1ghbor, ·
actual draft slots.
. · unCles and cousins.
terback After the Colts took Tobin concluded, "And my
Agenl• say some players
"They call me up, give me Marsh~ll ·Faulk at No. 2 neighlior's a postman - and
will lower their expectations a piece of their mind, and overall, Kiper chastised them ~e doesn't even have season
based on what one particular hang up," Kiper said.
for not picking a QB, Heath uckets to the NFL."
48-year-old from. Baltimore
Ohio State linebacker Shuler or Trent Dilfer. When
It took less than a minute
thinks - and other players James Laurinaitis • father, the Colts selected linebacker for Tobin to, essentially, take
get angry if Kiper pegs them Joe, hasn't contacted Kiper. Trev Alberts. at No. 5, Kiper a well-known Kiper and
lower than they figured.
But he thought about doing said, "1hat's wby the Colts help make him famous.
·
Whether or not NFL teams so after Kiper's rating are picking second. every
"We'll be attached forevdo, indeed, pay Kiper much dropped for James, a two- year in the draft, not battling er," Kiper said.
JOC.

Goodell outlines possible lengthened NFL season . Picks, trades and trendsr

N~C~o~~.fon~~~oger

~~ 1 ~0 d~. ~g~:e:. ~!~: ;:s~~b~~ w~~~~·ho will travel to Let the intrigue begin

. ·"'

Goodell can envision a
week on
Super Bowl played in midLabor Day
February if the . .league
·weekend,
't
g
1
f o 11 owe d ·
e Xpands 1 s re u ar-season
schedule to 17 or 18 games. ·
by
the
Team owners are expected
opening
w e e k. .
to get a proposal, perhaps as.
soon as next month, that
There still
would eliminate two presea- . would be a bye for each
son games and add one or team during .the season and
two to the regular schedule. the week off between the
Goodell said Friday _at a conference championships
meetmg with Associated and the Super Bowl. This
Press Sports Editors such a year, that off weekend will
format could push the Super be filled by the Pro Bowl.
Bowl back to President's
"I think there are a lot of
weekend.
positives and opportunities
"The idea has merit, I to it, but-!here are some cauthink," he said Friday, refer- tionary thin~s," Goodell
ring to mQre regular-season said, mentionmg overexpogames. "You are taking. the sure, safety and health issues
quality and improving it, for the players, and agreetaking two · meaningless ments with television and
game~ and making them other media partners.
meanmgful w1thm the 20"We have not found a satgame framework."
uration point for pro foot A Super Bowl that late in ball, which is a good thing . I
February could conflict with don't want to be aroull(l if
such other events as the · we do."
Daytona 500, the NBA AllAfter notin~ the league is
Star game and, every four ''not immune' to the ecoyears, the Winter Olympics. nomic downturn, Goodell
Then again, there is not b.i!;- said he hopes to soon start
ger sporting event r m negotiations with new
America than the NFL's title NFLPA executive director
game. .
DeMaurice Smith on a
Goodell outlined a see- revised collective bargaining
nano that would have two agreement.
"I have met with De severpreseason games in August,

and we intend to do that," Houston, D!!IJas and . New
Goodell said.
Orleans next week to begin a
NEW YORK (AP) ·- ous teams, are teceiver~
. Earlier Friday, Smith said . two-month series o( meet- . Let's forget that Matthew . Chad Ocho Cinco of
·
at a news conference th at the mgs
with players. on every · Stafford · will win"
" u~ in Cincinnati and Roscoe
union needs full and trans- team, also . argued that the .Detroit as the top pic in Parrish of Buffalo; and runparent disclosure of the NFL already has a rookie Saturday's NFL draft. And ning backs· Ronnie Brown
league's finances before any wage scale _ something what team will ·get star of Miami and Edgerrin
Goodell believes does not te&lt;;eiver Michael Crabtree. James of Arizona (who
talks would be productive.
"It will always be the exist, but needs to imple- And where the six offen- 'likely will be released this
same starting point . Gene ment. Smith said less than 4 sive tackles likeJy .to go in spring if he is noi deillt).
talked about for years," percel)t of the monies dedi- the first-round will land.
As for any trading fren•
Smith said of the late Gene cated 10 salaries goes to
Sure, the draft is all about zies, consider the flux the
Upshaw, who held the top rookies, while · Goodell grabbing new talent, plug- NFL is in .these days. With
union post for 25 years pointed out that $600 mil· ging holes 'or beefing up a the possibility of a nonbefore his death last August. lion, including .$400 million . pro team's depth: It's also capped 2010 season staring
"Let's share the information. in guaranteed money, will be about the intrigue beyond teams, players and agents
It's very difficult 10 tell you given to the 32 first-round the actual selections., •
in the face, the rules under
want share of that pie will go picks in Saturday ·s draft.
Such as the trades and the, which business has been
to. the players when r have to
"Something is broken. We :trends.
.
conducted for so long could
guess what the size of the . want the player who has perW1ll Cleveland deal readily change. That might
pie is."
.
formed on the NFL !civet to Brayton Edwards to tlie . impact how the clubs treat
Goodell, however, reiter- be compensated" Goodell Giants or the Eagles or the this draft. ·
.
· ated a point he has made said.
Titans or another receiver:
Will some teams look to
since the owners opted out
"At the end of the day, needy club? Don't expect unload picks to save money
of the CBA last year _ the )earns make decisions about any hints coming out of for bidding wars caused by
contract ends after the 2010 what is good for them," Browns c·a mp, where new the disappearance of the
season, which would be an Smith said. "No decision has coach Eric Mangini is more salary cap - even wjtli
uncapped year.
been made between our secretive than the ·CIA'.
new restrictions on free
''The players know where players and the rookies, our · How about the Cardinals, agency that would be irt
every penny we made in the veterans arid the rookies."
tired of dealing with place? Or might teams that'
league is ... through an indeOne thing the NFL is not . Anquan Boldin's contract often stockpile draft choic~endent audit," he said. doing .is considering a Supe[ demands, sending him to es in future years (Eagles:
They know the cost side, · Bowl in London. Goodell one of those teams? ·
Patriots) by trading down
th11t 60 percent of that goes dismissed a report that "su!J,.
"I didn't say a trade was in the current grab bag opt
. ·
to the players. On the other stantive talks" with officials necessary," . Boldin has to avoid that route?
side, the stadium construe- in London were held.
said. "I just want some- . Consider that both the
"We have never looked at thing to get resolved. It's Patriots and Eagles don't
tions, they participate in
that, so they know that. London or Mexico City as a something that's go.ne on have a lot of holes, but 'do
We've shared information site," he said. ·
long enough."
have a lot of picks this
Both wideouts would weekend.
· :
carry a hefty price, includPatriot~
coach
Bill
ing at least a first-round Belichick said urgency will
selection Saturday.
determine such moveS'
What
about
Julius more _than anything.
NEW YORK (AP) - The final_ists last f!lOnth in a pro-_· explained, kids· pick a t.earn players, then see. which Peppers? Carolina fran"It's much more of let's
sponsored
by either because they like the would win by running a com- ch1sed the standout defen- wait until we are on the
offer J?,OPped into Rainier mohon
"Onyx Herrera's inbox: Monster.com and the NFL to style of play or have relatives puler simulation.
sive end and would get two clock," he said. "l.et's wait
You ve won a trip to New become
the
league's living 'in the city.
Herrera learned about the first-rounder~ as compen- to see what's on the board
York to compete for a chance "Director of Fandemonium."
Well, Herrera doesn't have NFL contest when he saw an sation if ally'one signs him. and then we will decide if
In addition to winning the any family in Minneapolis.
ad during the Super Bowl. But the · Panthers likely we . want to move or not:
to attend the Super Bowl and
receive $100,000!
$100,000, Herrera gets to
"I liked those big hom hel- . He rushed to his computer to would set~le for less in a That's the way 99 percent.~
"I get the notification viae- attend the coin toss at the mets and stuff; I tlioultil.l that fm out an entry, then didn't
mail, which I thoughi was Super Bowl;calla play at the was cool," he sai!l. "When I think much about it until he trade, albel! not less than at That urgency often is
enhanced when a rup on
some kind of crazy scam," he Pro Bowl and participate in was kid, I was like, 'OK, I'm got that e-mail jn early least one first-round spot.
-·
Still,
Panth.
e
rs
general
position occurs. ·
·
recalled. "I was like, you on-field introductions at the going to be a Viking.' Just to March.
Last year, eight offensive
won the Nigerian lottery in London_game: New England be different from everybody
He flew to New York later manager Marty ·Hurney
Malaysia, that sort of thing. I . versus Tampa Bay on Oct. else."
.that month for a twocday recently said: . "We'vll tackles were selected in the
He's never attended a final that' included trivia known Julius for seven first round, including six in
was aboutto dismiss it, then I . 25.
questions, coin-flip contests years, and it has been a a span of lO picks midwa~
started reading a linle bit
But first, he'll announce Vikings game .
good seven years."
in the round, starting witH
.more into 'it: Hey, this seems the seq&gt;nd-round draft pick . "I've never even been and interviews.
·
to be legit."
·
Saturday of h1's ·beloved c Iose to th e wonde
·
rfu1 state
"I think he knows how Ryan Clady of Denver a1
Herrera looked right at
· of Minnesota," Herrera said. home recording a video with we feel, and we feel like No. 12. A similar rush· to
When Herrera went to his Minnesota Vikings.
banker 'In Honolulu to get
One problem: Herrera won "But now that I've won, I Strahan on Friday. In fact, it he's been happy here. And. grab such blockers - lefl
some contest forms nota- this contest because he's such !'~yo' have the money to do was the TV s\3f/forrner play- again,
nothing
has tackle is considered as
rized, she was sure it was a a knowledgeable, v.assionate 11.
er who kept flubbmg his changed. ·we franchised important a position as any
fraud. They spent nearly two football fan. What1f he looks . A self-described failed lines, not the short Homeland him, and when ' we did we other on offense, save quar•
hours researching the compa- .down at the card and imme- kicker, Herrera !ast played Security employee. The ' Bi,~: knew there was a period for terback - could happen
nies involved, even callmg diately thinks, "That's a terri- football as a h1gh school Apple certamly isn't intim1- the process to take place . .this year, dropping the bev~
freshman, when he was cut datmg to Herrera - he When that process goes of solid . wideouts lowe(
the Better Business Bureau. ble pick!"
"I don't want to do that on by the junior varsity after attended
New
York through then he's going to than projeeted.
Finally, the bank's vice presi'
· ·
dent came over with the ver- national TV," he said, aycidentally hitting the quar- University.
be back."
"I'd like us to use all of
diet: It was for real .
~mising to be professional. terback in the bel\(!·. The only · And be already seems
A
smokescreen?
Perhaps
.
our
picks on receivers and
: It was all very real Friday ·'I'll trr to work up as much team he competed with after adept at ·fending off media
of
the
process,
offensive
linemen and hav~
That's
a
part
w'hen the 34-year-old Herrera enthus1asm as possible no that was m the academic inquiries: Asked about his
too.
a
bunch
of weapons,''
sat at a desk in midtown matter who they pick."
bowl.
. job, Herrera mentioned the
Other players considered Bengals
quarterbac~
So how did a guy growing
These days, he takes on a agency, then added, "That's
Manhattan . getting yelled at
available this weekend, Carson Palmer said. "Bui
by retired NFL star Michael up in Hawaii become a · friend in the digital realm. as much as I can sav.''
Strahan in front of a video VIkings fan? With. no local They'll e~~ form~ roster of
~That's as far as I(ll go," he regardless of what camou· obviously, that's a quarter;,
•
crew. He beat out 31 other franchise to root for, he a franchise s all-tune great sa1d. "My boss will kill me." flage is being used by vari- back's fantasy.''

NFL fan from Hawaii gets to announce pick at draft ·

Sunday, April26, 2009

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

&amp;uniJap ~tnus I!Jeutmd • Page Bs

. Chase i11ts In mind, Woman charged with trying to extort Pitino
Childress
IIIII wUisvJ~LE, &lt;AP&gt;

Ky.
his team," said Pence.
TALLADEGA, AJa. (AP) Daytona 500.
-An :\uipment manager's
Outside the courthouse,
"We're in a performance estrang wife was -charged Sypher's attorney, Thomas
- Richard Childress headed for the mountains · of business and we've got to with trying to extort Clay, declined to predict
Montana midway through perform," Berrier said. "A Louisville men's basketball what might happen in the
the race at Texas Motor lot of times the obvious coach Rick Pitino, at first case.
Speedway. His cars were things to do for me are dif- demanding cars and tuition
'The criminal complaint
junk, and the team owner ferenl than Richard. He for her children, then later clearly reflects other ~ople
couldn't stomach sticking elected to make changes for asking for $10 million, were involved in this,' Clay
around for .the finish. · · .
~verybody and all the parties according to a federal com- said. "Whether they will be
Childress recogni~ed a mvolved. He's looking after plaint filed Friday,
charged, I donit know."
month into the season that the Uvelihood of 3 lot of dif-.
Karen Cunagin Sypher,
Clay declined to comment
his organization wasn't run- ferent people. We have who also is accused of lying on Sypher's allegation
ning up to par, but he didn't sponsors and it's 8 perfor- to the FBI in the case, did against Pitino. In court, she
know how to fix it. The mance business so you have not enter a ~lea at a court answered only "yes, sir'' to
solut!on came to him during to do what you have to do." appearance riday and was questions · from
U.S.
a qu1et moment alone on a
Gil Martin and his group Roleased on her own recog- Magistrate Judge Dave
mo!lntain: He'd swap the will leave Mears for a nizance.
Whalin, and she woold not
enure crews of drivers ·reunion with · Har\rick:
Sypher's 1 husband, Tim conimentlater.
Kevin Harvick and Casey Martin was previously Sypher, brought Pitino a .According to the cnminal
Mears . .
Harvick's crew chief in wntten list of · demands comJ?lainr written by FBI
The decision goes into 2002. leading him to a win includinj! tuition, two cars of S~1al Agent Steven Wi~ht,
effect next week, and that season at Chicago, but her ch01ce, J)ay_ing off her Pitino received two vo1ceChjldress insisted he won't was repl«i:ed by Berrier the house and $3,000 per month, mail messages from a man
change liis mind - even if next se~n.
according to the complaint. who did not identify himself
one of the drivers wins
Harvick has so far been The demands later escalated on Feb. 26 and a third call on
Sunday's . race at Talladeg~ silent on the swap, but the to $10 million, the com- Feb. 28. Pilino told Wight
fiery driver can't be happy plaint said.
· the fll'SI two concerned perSuperspeedway.
"This sport isn't no differ- with his season to date. He
What sort of information sonal allegations that were
ent ~ . football . or ~ase- opened the season with . a Sypher may have been try- "criminal in nature" and
!!31l, Ch1l_dress sru~ Fn4ay. , v 1ctory in the exhibition ing to use to extort the sue- could harm the coach's repu. When thmgs ~n,t work- Budweiser Shootout, and . cessful coach · was not tation, while the third was a
.'!'g, tough deciSIOns some- was second in the Daytona included in the .complaint; · threiu to make .the allega!lmes have to come from the 500, but has been on a which &lt;?nly said Pitino tions public in two weeks .
\Yight notes in the comcoach or the owner. You've steady slide since. In the believed 11 was related to an
got to do wh~t y~e got.to seven races since the sea- unspec1fied !!ncounter ~1th plamr that the truth abOut the
do to make (It) w . If you .son-opener, he has just one the woman m 2003. Pllmo allegations against Pitino is
s1t there and Jet things sta
. y top-10 and four fimshes of took over Loui~ville's bas- "suspect" and were left out
st11l too long, it will hurt 27th or worse. . . ·
: . k;etball. program m 200 I.
of the criminal complaint.
· your whole organization.''
Childress said both drivers·
The 56-year-old coach
Pitino told Wight he met
The change waS 10ade just were fine with his decision, first brought np the extortion with the Syphers after the
two months mto the season, and Mears said· he 'did not allegations last week, when frrst two ca)ls and asked
but with Harvick and Mears object _ even though he said he had reported them what she wanted and Karen
· sltpping out of contention Berner becomes his seventh· to the FBI last month. Since Sypher talked about a house,
(or the Chase for the Sprint crew chief in seven Sprint then, Karen Sypher .has cars and cash. Pitino told
CuP.
championship. Cup seasons. He'd been g!ven some media inte~- Wight that he played · the
Qui dress said the current hopi~g for continuity and · VIews, mostly saymg shes voicemail for her and she
pomrs structure an!i empba- the 11me to develop a rela' just defending herself. One denied knowing about the
SIS on maki~~ the !~-driver tionship w_ith a crew chief station that did an extensive calls.
fi!!ld made _1t 1mposs1ble for when he s1gned with RCR, i~terview said it chose not to
Kenyon Meyer, Tim
him to wa1t any longer to but will now look to estab- 311' her allega!lons because Sypher's attorney, said his
make a change.
!ish chemistry with Berrier. the~ could not be confl~ed. client is not being targeted in
"I .can't fault anybody for
..'l'IJJl Syp~er, a ~ong~e the _criminal investigation
' Harvick,_ a three·ti~e
C:hase qualifier, has dropPed making , a change," Melli'S · rude_ to Pitmo, VOiced his and 1s cooperating.
&amp;JX spots over the past two said. "If you look at where support for . h1s boss in a
"This whole series of
~eeks to 161~ in_ the stand- we are in tlie poidts right s~tement last week, and events has just been devas-.
mgs. Mears, m h1s first year now, and where (Harvick) is · dtvorce papers for _the· cou- tating," Meyer said.
with R. ichard· Childress at in the points right now pie bas been flied m recent
Wight said Karen Sypher
Racing: is 22n~ . . ·
.
the.team real,lyfelt like they wec:k_s: ,
.
hired an attorney on March
"It Will probably take two ile!'ded to dO something to
Ptllno s attorney, Steve 22 and the attorney mailed a
or. three races to _get this shake it up a linle bil." ,
Pence •. released a statement letter to. Pitino repeating the
thmg really working, !Uld . ''This might just be that · and. satd he has dtrected the allegations made in the
you can't afford to lose 50, spark.&gt; I .wasn't really coach to have no further - voicemail, but in greater
75, 100 points each race," involved in the decision comment .on the case.
detail. In the letter, Sypher
Chil&lt;lrl:ss said. "So that's the' ~ess, it' was more like
"While Coach Pitino takes also accused Pitino of
biggest reason we're doing This is what we're going to no comfort in this prosecu- orchestrating the threatening
it ;w~en wfre ~oin~ i!.'' .
do.' ~ut rm goOd with it,'~ 'lion and remains :astonished calls, Wight s!lid. The .att?r:
' Chnt Bowyer, dnvmg for he sa1d.
.
by '!lese ~vents, 11 mar~ a ney fllelf a d1vorce petillon
RCR's expansion fourth . This is the third time turmng pomt that allows him on .behalf of her .and made
t_eBf!ll~i.s season, is, current, Ch!ldress has ,s":'apped to focus with a clear mind demands of Pitino, including
ly s1xth m the standmgs. Jeff enttte crews. fJe dtd 11 1998 once again on his farnil~ and one for $10 million, Wight
Burton is 11th. Childress .did · when he ·swapPed crews for
not make any changes to Dale . Earnharot and Mike

•

"'"'....,._.o...;._;.;..:;:.:...;"'-i,_ _....;:;.,;...,..:~..;...-..::;;'-...;,;;;J

·

.

AP pllolo _

~renSypher,charg!l9withtryingloextortLoulsville men's
basketball. coach Rick .PHino and of lying to the FGI, leaves

the Gene Snyder Courthouse following a court' appearance
Friday In Louisville, Ky., Sypher did 'riot enter a plea in the
case and was·released on her own recognizance. .
said. An affida'vit coniaining · May 11 - 12 and could hear
the allegations against Pitino the Fase.
and .attached to the petition
The FBI interviewed
has be_en sealed.
Sypher earlier this month
Assostant U.S . Attorney about the calls and said she
John Kuhn asked Whalin to failed a pOlygraph test to her
bar Karen Sypher from hurt- during the second interview.
ing Pitino's reputation while She then gave false inforrnaon bond, and Clay said his .. tion about the caller's identiclie11t ~greed ~ot discuss the ty, · lead_ing to ch~rges of
coach m pubhc.
lymg to the FBI, W1ght said.
Pitino signed a three-year
Agents also interviewed a
contract extension with the man who admitted making
Cardinals in May 2007 that the calls to Pirino.
· ·
could keep him at the school . The man, who was · not
through 2013. The deal pays identified in the c. omplaint,
himanannualsalaryof$2.5 told . Wight that Karen
mil~ion a year if he stays Sypher talked about getting
unt1l the end of the contract. $200,000 to ~ 000. The
He'll receive !oyalty_bonus- man s~id Kare~ Sypher
es of $3 ,6 m1llton m 21)10 asked him to make the callS
and 201~ if he remains~with ''during a critical periOd hi
the school.
the · basketball season ro
. Ku~n said a federal grand i~c.rease _the pressure" on
JUry 1s scheduled to meet Pttmo, W1ght.said . .

Am.
· · ·- ·
,. .
~sS:gl~~~aM~nday,Todd ~~:~e~ ~?~ainpe~:et . ... putee Kyle Maynard to make MMA debut

Berrier and his entire crew
will leave Harvick's team
after six seasons and eight
victories. But the duo is
stuck in a 79"race winless
~treak dating to the 2007
.
.
.
,
·

between Harvtck and Robby
Gordon.
"It's not the fll'St time this
hapl'ened at our place ,"
Berrier said. "History typically repeats itself."
·

lMadden NFL 10' to cover
.S Polamalu·. '.WR
· F
· t"tzg·er·.aJ·d.
.,
.
·
. ·
·
.
.. WASHINGTON (AP) - · nail-biter. Both athletes are
for the first time in its sto· · known for their long, beliied (some say cursed) his- met-defying hair. Steel
tory, the cover of EA City football fans should
Sportf "Madden NFL" be particularly happy,
y1deb game will feature since Fitzgerald played
two
cover · athletes: college
ball
at
the
l;&gt;ittsburgh Steele_rs safety . University of Pittsburgh.
· troy · Polamalu
and (He Wl!S also on the cover
Arizona Cardinals receiver' of EA's "NCAA •Football
~rry Fitzgerald. · ·
· 2005.") .• ·: .. .
. _, The shared cover :or
EA's football franchi~e is
"M dd
NFL
" hi h ,
d , •·
.
10 , w c .eare .or lis mystenous
., a en
~rrives in .stores Aug . 14, "Madden curse": Previous
h_as something for every- CQver models like Donovan
!)ne: Polamalu is a defen- McNabb, Shaun Alexander
siv.e AFC player and and Vince Young have sufFitzgerald · an offensive feted . injuries during theit
. -.
"Madden'' sea~on.
NFC player. ·
., Both played in:. last ilea· ··. The ailnou~ent w.S
son's Super Bowl, which made Friday by Eleo.tronlc ''
t)Ie Steelers 1¥0n in a.:27-23 . Arts Inc.

AUBURN, Ala. (AP) - meet in the 103-pound weiglit
Kyle Maynard has won ·class. He spent a year on a
dozens ·'of high scbool club team at the Umversity of
wrestling matches,' competed Georgia.
in seven jiujitsu tournaments . Now Maynard is making
and bench pressed nearly 400 his MMA debut in Alabama
·pounds, all despite beirig born after the Georgia Athletic
with no elbows or knees, Entertainment Commission
· . denied him a license to fight
hands or feet. .
Onsa~y. the ~on!!enital in 2007, fearing he wouldn't
amputee IS venturmg mto a be able to adequately defend
new athletic arena - mixed himself or tap out to end the
martial arts. He is hi:lping to bout if he was in danger.
·
silence critics who wonder if
Alabama has no regulatory
can defend himself against. commissio'! for boxing or
the kicks, knees and punches MMA, freemJ! Maynard and
ofa full-bodied opponent.
promoter Dav1d Oblas to set
''There are a lot of people u_p the match at Auburn
that doubt rn be able to last Cove~ Arena.
·
30 seconds,'' the 23-year-old
The problem has been conMaynard said. "One .of my ·vincing opponents to fight
goals is to go in there and him. Oblas, in an interview
proveJ'm capable ofit, tljere- ~ednesday,'lieclined to idenby ptovmg them wrong.''
llfy Maynard's opponent,
It wouldn't be the first time. ~·ng only that he .1s from
· and has had two
· M aynard_, from suburb.an
1sconsm
Atlanta, went 35-16 in MMA-fjghts.
·
""'
· guys
wrestl'
. mg rnatches as a semor
"e •.ve had fi1ve or SIX
. at ~o!lins High Sc~ool, back out of the fight, nor
advancmg to the na!lonal because theY wanted to back

·
·
out, bui more because of President Barack • Obama
pressure from family and and met such luminaries of
friends: 'What are you doing business arid sports as Bill
fighting a guy with no arms Gates and Bo Jackson.
or legs?'" Oblas said. ~'It's
Then again, Saturday
kind of a no-win situation for nig,h t's fight is supposed to
the other guy.'' ·
.provide the climactic scene
A.nd for Maynard? He of a documentary on
admits the media attention- Maynard
ent itled
"A
and the criticism on MMA Fighting Chance."
fan message boards - puts a
MMA fans on chat boards
little more pressure on his have worried that Maynard
muscular,l35-pound frame. . might get hurt . and wonHe , acknowledges that · dered What he's doing in the
some people think he craves event.
attention, but said publicity
Oblas says he understands
isn't his goal.
the skepticism. but points
· "If I were doing this in a out few fighters around the
back alley somewhere with · same weight pack the power ·
my trainer, a referee and my in their frames that Maynard
opponent, then I'd be satis- has, With broad shoulders
fled;" Maynard said. "It's and a wrestler's thick neck,
just a personal quest to fi~- Maynard pounds out pushUre out what I'm made of. • ups by easily propelling ihe
He hard~ needs · more lower part of bis body into
publicity. e has already the air and uses ctoss-traindelive.red a couple of hun- in~ methods in the suburban
d red speec hes for the At anta gym he opened in
Washington
Se,eakers December, aptly named No
Bureau, shared a stage with Excuses Ath,letics.
.

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Sunday, April26, 2009
. ·.4

CREW CAB 4X4
.•~$1,100
.$30,620
••-$1,000
•••-.$ 2,500

SALE
PRICE

·$2
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PRICE

,631

Chrysler llC .

.Chrysler, Jeep® and Dodge

2009

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Model #FA 1659EW

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DIA MM'i' MOIOIJ,

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Mon.· Thur. 8:30am-8pm; Fn. 8:30am-6pm; Sat. 8:30am-5pm; Sun. Closed
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Sunday, April26, 2009
. ·.4

CREW CAB 4X4
.•~$1,100
.$30,620
••-$1,000
•••-.$ 2,500

SALE
PRICE

·$2
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PRICE

,631

Chrysler llC .

.Chrysler, Jeep® and Dodge

2009

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Model #FA 1659EW

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PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN

French Art Colony hosts
'Toledo Exchange' in May

·Reasons to
change course
of childhood
ear infections

.Shawnee
schedules
special . screening~

•

•

19 Makes points
21 - ard ktO&lt;flg
22 Indian ganronl
23 Surrrned
24 Knitted Iabrie
25 Barl&lt;in or Burstyn
26Aqua27 ~d French coin
28 Collision
29 Illegal bumlng
31 Barlor

33 Woody plant
35 Desire
·36 Anti-slip de.;ce

37 Surging
38 ArtiOss
40 Kind of plant
41 lnd~o dye
42 City In Wisconsin
44 Chanenger
·
45 sand hiR

47 Wont qu~ly
51 Felt hal
52 Modes! raslaurant
53 Commix
55 ·High card
56 Love
57 SkiiHul
58 - Alva Edison
60 Express
62 Melody
63 A)!!r's fl!ligue
(2 wds.)
65 Singles
66Coal
· 67 Chern. or b~l., a.g.
66Frtlo - 69 - Stanley Gardlll!f
71 Field or Sttrttors
73 A letter
· 75 According to
76 Verily
77 Aclress - Thurman
78 Clock ntJner~s
81 lncantalion
. 83 Bombs ancr Wlets
84 Federal agenls
(hyph.)
·85 Swab
.
87 Reach
90 Indian of Poru

92 Electrician's
94 Vanish .
95 Boorlsh one
96 Apply oillo

concem·

· DOWN
1 Elaborate rneal ,
2 Passion
·3 Eiccessive
4Fib '
~ Spread 1o dry
6 Harsh noise
7 Balance
8 Chief
9 - -imjllesslonlsm
10 Roman emperor
11 Apportion
f2 Oven lor poltery
f3 Holldaytirne
f4 Guard
f5 Saof61fem in aquiver
f7 Locked book
f9 Endeavored

.98 Peel
99 Authentic
100 Chafe
101 Most recent
103 ct;mp's coosln,

lor short

· 105 Calm
I 06 Acheese ·
lOB Fashion
109 Quarrels
I 10 Few and far beiWeen
111 Fall ~rlllslone

113Aiilllebd

I t4 Yellowish brOW!l
lf5 T~le
118 Kayak
1f 9 State of agilatlon
120 Graceful blrd
124 Beby's toy
f 25 C&amp;le&amp;tial.body
128 Gleam
127 Pub drink
1.28 Eastern servant
·129 Treasure 13f Cli1"9
133 Moisten with )u~s
135 Hardens
136 Slopwaldr'
f 37 More difficuH ·
f38 Chose
f 39 Begley and Sullivan .
140 Shlllll and others
t411nsoots
f 42 Like a tavern

20 Dependallle

22 Acts of falll1"9
28 Porcelain
30FIImepool

32- Boba

34 Repeat performance
38 Inlet
37 Fnnga of hair
39 River In England
40 Ship of 1492
42Lessen

43 Clor!loous guy

·44

,

Car~no

Bv JAMES SANDS

residel)t of Gallip~Jiis, is
said to be doing her utmost
for correct historical presentation. The pageant calls for
a cast of J ,000 persons and
it is quite likely it will be the
subject of several newsreel
features for nation-wide
presentation on the screen."
Indeed, judging' from the
photographs taken by the
late Max Tawney of the costumed participants and the
write-ups in the newspapers, the pageant was quite
something.
Hope Harvey Hammond
was the daughter of "Coin"
and Antia Halliday Harvey.
She was the oldest of the
four Harvey children, she
bein~ born in the late 1870s.
Wilham 'Toin" Harvey
married Gallipolis native
Anna Halliday in 1876 and
the couple lived in the Old
French City off and on for
about a decade. "Coin"
became prominent following the 1894 pul)lishing of
his book, Coin 's· financial
World. Coin was a bit of an
eccentric as in 1900 he
moved to Arkans'!5 to· build

a library to house all of the
world's knowledge necessary to re-start socie ty.
Harvey believed the world
would end soon.
The world did not end soon,
but his relationship ,with his
wife did. After the houSI) 1 in
Arkansas was burned down
by people " nuttier" than
"Coin," Anna moved out. The
remained married until
1929, but they stopped living
together in 1901. In some of
the years in the early part of
the 20th century, Anna tived
in GallijJolis.
.
It was sometime in the
first decade of the 20th century that Hope Harvey married John C. Hammond . The
latter was a writer, publicist,
.newspaper editor and spy,
and perhaps the first
American lobbyist for a foreign country in American
history. Hammond was once
hired by the Mexican president to recognize and send
aid to the newly-formed.
Huerta government. ·
·
Hammond . was
an
American spy during the
World War 1 era and was

Pair

involved in bringin~ to trial
eight German-Americans for
their part in the sinking of the
Lusitania and for their part in
fomenting strikes in American
factories that were making
munitions for Allied troops.
America had not yet entered
the war as a combatant.
Hammond· s most interesting association was with AI
Capone. l-larrunond became
a trusted acquaintance of
Capone. when Hammond
lived in Chicago. AI Capone
was public enemy number
one in the 1920s, he being
responsible for a number of
murders . The Capone gang
. made their money with
bootlegging illegal booze
during Prohibition as well as
"speakeasies"
operating
across the midwest. Capone
also ran gambling and prostitution rings . Capone was
finally arrested on tax evasion charges and sent to
prison in 1931.
It was believed that before
Capone went to prison, he
had entrusted with Hanunond
many secrets of oq~anized
crime . A number of hits were

attempted against Hammond
and his second wife, entertainer
Dorothy
Lee.
Hammond and Hope were
divorced about 1915.
In 1935, Hammond confided to friends that ''gangsters"
had tried to poison him sever-:
al times. They had also turned
the gas on in his room without lighting the pilot.
It was not too long after that
when Hammond and Doroth,r
Lee were found dead .in thetr
penthouse in the Waldorf
Astoria, apparently dying of
asphyxiation from gas.
Hope Harvey lived into the
1950s and was about the only
soUrce of information about
her father, "Coin" Harvey, as
"Coin" did not keep many.
records himself. By the way;
"Coin" Harvey ran far presi-:
dent in 1932 on the Liberty·
Part)' ticket, a party . that
"Com" himself had started.
"Coin" died in 1936:

(James Sands is a special
corresponthnt for . the.

S11nday Times-Sentinel. He. .
can be contacted by writing
to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
43767).

Ways to welcome stmshine

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS .
.
1 Graci&lt; in !he earth
. 6 Bridge . ·
10 Tortes
15 Rocket plartorm
IS Tennessee - Ford ··

Sunday, April26, 2009

Pageant's.author had colorful backgroun(l

It was a classic tale where
a nurse falls in love with her
patient: The nurse was onetime Gallipolis resident
Bv JoANNE ELUOTT, RN
BUREAU FOR CHILDREN
Ho{lC! Harvey and the male
WITH MEDICAL HANDICAPS
pallent was John C.
GAU.IA COUI&gt;/TY HEAtTH OEFWllMENT
Hammond. The couple wed
and hjld two children, one of
: Few people escape child - whom was Richard Halliday,
bood without an episode of who in 1940 would become
acute otitis media (AOM). the husband of stage actress
There are several reasons · Mary Martin .
to change the course of
Both Hope and John C.
recurrent e ar infections. were writers of some note.
from the child's· view- Hope was a very successful
point. the biggest benefit magazine writer based in
of treatment is to decrease New York City. She was so
the days of illness, pain, prominent that she had a
and fev~r. Hearing loss and summer home along the
language delay arc two Atlantic
Ocean
in
additional reasons to treat Connecticut. The couple
AOM . .
were married for about 15
' In order to prevent possi- . years and spent several days
ble hearing loss and lan- in Gallipolis during that time.
guage delay, it is important .
It was .Hope. who wrote
f~r the parent of a child with the pageant that. celebrated
recurrent ear infections to the !50th anniversary of
obtain prompt and proper Gallipolis, the year being
treatment. Two treatments 1940. Early in 1940, the
widely used to decrease the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
repeated episodes of AOM reported about her work.
are: daily prophylactic "Mrs. Hammond, a girlhood
~ntibiotics
and
tympanoplasty 'tubes, commonly called .PE tubes . The
advantages and . disadvantages of these two treatinents are widely debated ,
making it difficult for par- Bv BRENDA BRYAN, RN
ents and physicians to select ClAIJJA COUI&gt;ITYHEALTH OER\RTMENT
the most appropriate treatment. Whenever medical
As spring has come and
treatment with medications .summer is soon to follow,
is indicated , a complete many · of us need to be
eourse of the medication reminded of some safety
should be completed before tips to follow when enjoyPE tubes are considered. ing outdoor activities. Due
Consult your child's pedia- to the excitement that
trician
for
treatment· comes with the improving
weather and longer daylight
options.
· The Gallia County Health hours, it can be so easy to.
Department can help par- neglect the .small amount of
ents involved with recurrent time needed to prepare for
AOM treatment through a daily . sun exposure . This
program called Bureau for neglect can lead to prernaChildren with Medical ture skin wrinkles, burning
Handicaps (BCMH). This and skin ·c ancer, which
program offers finaqcial remains the most common .·
assistance (there is an eligi- cancer in the United States.
More than one million
bility requirement) and
assistance from a public cases of skin canter are diagnosed each year. Skin darnhealth nurse .
: • Please call the Gallia age from exposure to the sun
County Health Department or tanning beds has increased
at (740) 441-2950 for 111ore as .the younger generation
become more interested in
information .

· . . PORTSMOUTH·- A special screening of the four-part
filrn "Appalachia: .A History of Mountains an(! Peep)~" will
be shown in the Flohr Lecture Hall at Shawnee State
University's Clark Memorial Library from 7:30 to 10 p.m.,
on Monday, April27 and Tuesday, April 28. The screening
is free and open to the public as a gift from Will an!i Barb
Burke.
·
:
Parts one and two will be shown on Monday night and
parts three and four will be shown on Tuesday night, Dr.
Barbara Kunkle, SSU profes~or of English and Humani.ties ,
will lead a discussion after the films each night.
"The first film is iorally awesome, I couldn't believe it,':
Kunkle said. "Lots of interesting people are interviewed
and there is a great sound track . It is a new and exciting
way to present Appalachia to the world in a broader and
more positive way than we 've generally seen exposed in
the mass media."
.
In "Part One: Time and Terrain," the series begins wit~)
Earth~s oldest mountains ..:.. the Appalachians . The evolution of the Great Forest \hat blankets the region in green;
fanning a home for a unique mosaic of plant and animal
species is traced. The film shows the frrst humans whq
arrived as early as 12,000 B.C.
:
In "Part 1\vo: New Green World," the Native Americans
and Europeans coUide in a struggle for control of the moun~
· rains. The new inhabitant, the pioneer, carves out a life m'l
the Appalachia frontier creating a new way oflife.
:
"Part Three: Mountain Revolutions" shows the cataclysm
of the Civil War and how coal camps replace villages,
mountain farms are abandoned, missionary schools spring ·
up and how the wildlife and the culture are endangered.
The last movie of the series, "Part Four: Power and.
Place" is a.story of 20th century Appalachia from the union
battles of the 1920s to the celebration of iis rich cultural
heritage
in music, art and literature and the enduring envi:
•.
SubmiHed photo
ronmental
and cultural dilemmas of our own time,
"Greet the Sun," by photographer EUen Loeffler-Kalinoski, is one part of the "Toledo Exchange" exhibit at the French Art
For more information, visit the Web "site at
Colony in May. The exhibit showcases the works of several northwest Ohio artists.
www.appalachiafilm.org .
The abstraction and representa- University, and she currentGALLIPOLIS French Art Colony will fea- tiona! images, derived ly teaches. elementary art
ture an exciting exhibil in from daily experience. The with · the Toledo Public
May
entitled
.;Toledo act of P.ainting and drawing School System. She paints
Exchange."
including is fulftlling."
in her studio at Olive Street
works by a number of
Robin
Schultes · and Studios, located on Ottawa
Toledo artists. according to Patrick Dubreuil live in Street in Toledo.
Carrie Napora. FAC direc- Toledo, .a nd have been
Ivan Kende was just 10
tor.
· ·
working together since ,years old when his family .
This unique show is due 1998.
Robin has been. fled Budapest during the .
in great pan to the eff6rts of working with glass for over Hungarian Revolution in
Marc Folk. the recipient of 15 years, starting in 1991 at 1956, and settled in New
the 2009 Governor's Award the University of Texas at York . He lived and traveled
for the Arts. nominated by Arlington, then moved io .ihroughout the United
Bowli ng
Green
State Ohio to study at Bowling States, dedicating himself to
Un iversity and representing Green . State University, an eji.tensive study of the
the Arts Commission of earning her master's degree history of art and experiGreater Toledo.
· in 2000. ·
menting with many differThe aw.a rd recognized
For. Patrick Dubreuil, ent media.
.
him
in
the
Aris glass has. become another
In the early 1990s, he
Administration Category.
avenue for his artistic developed a style of paint·
The arts in the city of expression. While earning ing in acrylics, using preToledo and northwest Ohio his master's degree in sculp: cisely controlled textures in
have grown in unprecedent- ture at Bowling Green State very sparse compositions,
ed ways as a result of Fulk's University, he met and as well as what became his
visionary
leadership. began worki,ng with fellow signature Conte drawing
Among his numerous pro- student and future wife, series. Later, he began
jects have been Artomatic Robin Schultes. Beginning developing leather as a
419, a community led arts the glass experience nine sculptural medium.
event. now in its third year, years ago as Robin's · assisHe says, . "Oak tanned
providing exhibition and 1 tant, he quickly picked up leather has a look and feel
perfonnance opportunities the craft and began to unlike any other material. It
to 150 artists.
express himself in this new has an inherently archaic
He also pioneered the "medium.
..
quatity 19 it, which I take
~oth. a~ a team and indi- advantage of to explore the
Toledo Art Loop and Toledo
Jazz Loop, both regular ans vidually, Robin and Patrick realm where the raw and
events that open and con- have shown their art ·in primitive transform into the
nect art galleries, studios many exhibitio.ns and have beautiful, the elegant and
and performances spaces to won n4merous awards for modem."
·
artists and the general' pub- their work.
Ellen Loeffler-Kalinoski
Adam Russell , also a is a photographer. Her stulie. He successfully broughi
major funders to the table graduate of Bowlinjl Green dio name, Wmdows to the
and drew on community State University, 1s from . World , defines the fact her
energy to . establish and Toledo. He references the subject matter ranges from
grow these programs. As postmodem aspects of hip · Northern Michigan
to
pointed out by Bowling hop culture to assemble · Europe, Canada, Hawaii
.Green State University, he heartica l
composition s, and the Caribbean Islands,
.has been a tremendously based on a sampling and among ot,her places. Most of
energetic force in the arts mixing of life's imagery.
her images are color prints,
across northwest Ohio and
As he points out, "I ere- with a sampling of black
beyond.
ate artwork as a visual map- and white . prints·. As She
Originally, Toledo artist collageofthetumsandcon- points out, "I lo~e to take a
Sally Thompson contacted nections I experience per- little slice of life and focus
the French Art Colony, to sonally. The work is made on the beauty that would ·
provide a solo show for the of the images and meanings normally be passed by in a ·
FAC galleries. Self taught. from my own human expe- moment's time."
and a painter since J994, rience. translated from mind
As FAC Director Napora
she defines herse lf as u folk through hand to the physical emphasizes, this exhibit
artist. She paints primarily p)ane. I create paintings , will open on Saturday, May
in oil, but also includes a with the intention of adding 2, with a reception that
variety of media. She has whal I've learned into the evening from . 6 to 8 p.m. at
been featured in numerous circulaling winds of our col- Riverby.
exhibits.
lective experience:·
The French Art Colony
However. due to her net·
Paul
Vassar,
from plans to do an exchange
working skills with other Maumee, Ohio, is a veteran with Toledo, showcasing
Toledo artists, she was able of the US. Navy Submarine · Appalachian artisl ~ in the
to organize a group exhi bit , Service and a graduate of Toledo metro area in 2010.
featurin'g a number of out· Ohio State University.
Already on board for thi s
As he states in his bio. "I ·exhibit are Gerry Enrico.
standing Toledo artists. In
fact. she already has a wait- work and make art in the Dave Snyder. Thomas
ing list for a 2010 Toledo area, having moved Suter, Mairyann Wrentmpre .
Exchange.
.
here in 2007. after living in and Larry Rood .
Other artists included in Columbus , Ohio. for 23
Sponsors for the May
the Toledo Exchange exhib- · years. I work in scu lpture exhibit incl11de Dailey
it include Richard K. Reed , with varying forms of Tire. Angell Accounting
Robin Kendra Schultes and relief. collage. painting and Associates,
Cremeens
Patrick Dubreuil. Adam J. drawing. "' well as print- Funeral Home and Thomas
Russell. Paul Michael making. I am a skilled Do-lt Center. The Ohio
Vassar. Jessica Besterman. woodcarver, cabinetmaker Arts Council helped fund
Ivan Kende and Ellen and furniture maker. and this program with state tax
Loeffler-Kalinoski .
have work in numerous dollars to encourage ecoRichard Reed worked collections throughout the nomic growth. educational
professionally for 38 years Midwest .'"
excellence and cultural
as · an illustrator. all the
Jessica Bestennan. origi- enrichment
for
all
while maintaining his per- nally from Indiana. attended Ohioans.
,on a! studio for a more BGSU . graduating in 1997
For any additional inforp~rsonal creative explowith an undergraduate mation, co/llact the Frer1ch
ration. As he states. "My degree in fine art. Her mas- Art Colonv .ar (740) 446painting is a blend of ter's in art is from Findlay 3834 .

.COMMUNI1'Y.

.iunbap ltmts -&amp;entind

.Sunday, April26, 2009

PageC3

88 Dull sound
89 Brass instrurnent
91 Proboscis
93Angry
94 -wheel
96 Coral island
97 Excellent
99 Plurrller's cor1cem
• 102 Almond IKjueur
104Fury · .
105 OuiJlO!lrillQ
.107 .Penods of limo
109 -qua non

n 0 Black eye
.f12Chum

tanning. Spending . a few
minutes prior to sun exposure to apply barriers to the
sun, will reduce chances of
havingskindamagethatmay
lead to skin cancer as we a~e .
'Some of the high nsk
groups for skin cancer include
having fair skin, freckles, a lot
of moles, certain autoimmune
diseases, family history. and
using medications that cause
increased sensitivity to the
sun.
Common types of skin
cancer are basal, squamous
cell, or melanoma. The basal
and squamous cell cancers
rarely spread to other areas in
the body, but left untreated,
can cause scarring, disfiguremeht or loss of function in
some parts of the body.
Melanomas usually · 'occur
less often, but can become
far more serious. Melanomas
left untreated can spread to
other areas in th,e body and

possibly lead to death.
Ultraviolet light rays are .
mo~ intense during the midday hours, so sun exposure
· should be limited during the
hours 10 ' a.m. to 4 p.m.
Babies 6 months and younger
should be kept out of direct
sunligbt. When using sunscreen, follow directions and
reapply as directe~.
The~:e are four key words to
help you · to remember the
steps to protect your skin
from the sun. SLIP! SLOP!
SLAP! And WRAP! Slip on a
shirt, slop on the sunscree.n
(sun protection factor 15 or
higher), slap on a hat, and
wrap on sunglasses that Pfllteet against ultraviolet rays.

Also, do monthly visual
checks, by holding a .mirror
and looking · for any new
groWths. spots, bumps, patch- ·
es, or sores that do not heal. If
you .observe any of the signs

listed contact your physician
as soon as possible . .
:For more information;
call (740)441 -2950.
:
Resources: www.cancer.org

113 Circus pertormers
114 Scelpels
115 Ruboul
116 c~~
117 Numerlcellnformallon,
torshort .
118 Lid

· 1f9Ghost
· t2t Squander
f22 Maka changes In
123 Poor
125 lnson~ble state
128Withored
130 Curved &amp;dge
132 Wortcroom, for shan
133.Move up llld down
f34 Mimic

'

'

.

Jaae II, 2009

45 Sllvorooin
&lt;Ill Modest
&lt;Ill Remunerated .
49- homol
50 Bud&lt;
Sf Waleror Dorrioo
52 Resolved
53 Cash
54Wicl&lt;ed
57 f'11!1181'l1 tram acli~
· ss·emply
Sf S1ooe lor camoios ·•
63 Wl-e'e Sapporo Is

Wha'- ·Yaur
Name Your

64 Be111ner
66 lleil sound

70 Liquor
72 Make better
74 Mark from an injury
76 Implied only
711 Pldures
'
50 An antiseptic
82 Mound

or Choose From the

Community Hero

Blood Voluotttr Hero
Law Enforcement Hero
Blood Donor Hero
Militan. lltro

84Smiles

66. For-'s salcel
87 Land mei!SIW

.I

1

• Education Hero .
• Fire llero
• Pet/Animal Hero
• Youth Hero
• Senior Hero (

Brealzlan 1icltefs • $10.00 Each

·Breaklarl BuH1! Ope,m al1:30 Am •PMgram f3egim aiB:OO Am

·

Senior leloarct Center

For Nomination Forms and/or Tickets to tbe Breakfast Contact:

(740) 446-8555 • galliaredcross@sbcglobal.net
O'Biene:~ Memorialt-ospitill

:;:; Haspiul Dr.• Athem, Ohio 45701 • 17-40! 593

www.obhmess.04g

I·

l .

55~1

Event Media Sponsor: ltall~oH~ lailp

�•'

iunba~ ltmes -~enttntl

PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN

French Art Colony hosts
'Toledo Exchange' in May

·Reasons to
change course
of childhood
ear infections

.Shawnee
schedules
special . screening~

•

•

19 Makes points
21 - ard ktO&lt;flg
22 Indian ganronl
23 Surrrned
24 Knitted Iabrie
25 Barl&lt;in or Burstyn
26Aqua27 ~d French coin
28 Collision
29 Illegal bumlng
31 Barlor

33 Woody plant
35 Desire
·36 Anti-slip de.;ce

37 Surging
38 ArtiOss
40 Kind of plant
41 lnd~o dye
42 City In Wisconsin
44 Chanenger
·
45 sand hiR

47 Wont qu~ly
51 Felt hal
52 Modes! raslaurant
53 Commix
55 ·High card
56 Love
57 SkiiHul
58 - Alva Edison
60 Express
62 Melody
63 A)!!r's fl!ligue
(2 wds.)
65 Singles
66Coal
· 67 Chern. or b~l., a.g.
66Frtlo - 69 - Stanley Gardlll!f
71 Field or Sttrttors
73 A letter
· 75 According to
76 Verily
77 Aclress - Thurman
78 Clock ntJner~s
81 lncantalion
. 83 Bombs ancr Wlets
84 Federal agenls
(hyph.)
·85 Swab
.
87 Reach
90 Indian of Poru

92 Electrician's
94 Vanish .
95 Boorlsh one
96 Apply oillo

concem·

· DOWN
1 Elaborate rneal ,
2 Passion
·3 Eiccessive
4Fib '
~ Spread 1o dry
6 Harsh noise
7 Balance
8 Chief
9 - -imjllesslonlsm
10 Roman emperor
11 Apportion
f2 Oven lor poltery
f3 Holldaytirne
f4 Guard
f5 Saof61fem in aquiver
f7 Locked book
f9 Endeavored

.98 Peel
99 Authentic
100 Chafe
101 Most recent
103 ct;mp's coosln,

lor short

· 105 Calm
I 06 Acheese ·
lOB Fashion
109 Quarrels
I 10 Few and far beiWeen
111 Fall ~rlllslone

113Aiilllebd

I t4 Yellowish brOW!l
lf5 T~le
118 Kayak
1f 9 State of agilatlon
120 Graceful blrd
124 Beby's toy
f 25 C&amp;le&amp;tial.body
128 Gleam
127 Pub drink
1.28 Eastern servant
·129 Treasure 13f Cli1"9
133 Moisten with )u~s
135 Hardens
136 Slopwaldr'
f 37 More difficuH ·
f38 Chose
f 39 Begley and Sullivan .
140 Shlllll and others
t411nsoots
f 42 Like a tavern

20 Dependallle

22 Acts of falll1"9
28 Porcelain
30FIImepool

32- Boba

34 Repeat performance
38 Inlet
37 Fnnga of hair
39 River In England
40 Ship of 1492
42Lessen

43 Clor!loous guy

·44

,

Car~no

Bv JAMES SANDS

residel)t of Gallip~Jiis, is
said to be doing her utmost
for correct historical presentation. The pageant calls for
a cast of J ,000 persons and
it is quite likely it will be the
subject of several newsreel
features for nation-wide
presentation on the screen."
Indeed, judging' from the
photographs taken by the
late Max Tawney of the costumed participants and the
write-ups in the newspapers, the pageant was quite
something.
Hope Harvey Hammond
was the daughter of "Coin"
and Antia Halliday Harvey.
She was the oldest of the
four Harvey children, she
bein~ born in the late 1870s.
Wilham 'Toin" Harvey
married Gallipolis native
Anna Halliday in 1876 and
the couple lived in the Old
French City off and on for
about a decade. "Coin"
became prominent following the 1894 pul)lishing of
his book, Coin 's· financial
World. Coin was a bit of an
eccentric as in 1900 he
moved to Arkans'!5 to· build

a library to house all of the
world's knowledge necessary to re-start socie ty.
Harvey believed the world
would end soon.
The world did not end soon,
but his relationship ,with his
wife did. After the houSI) 1 in
Arkansas was burned down
by people " nuttier" than
"Coin," Anna moved out. The
remained married until
1929, but they stopped living
together in 1901. In some of
the years in the early part of
the 20th century, Anna tived
in GallijJolis.
.
It was sometime in the
first decade of the 20th century that Hope Harvey married John C. Hammond . The
latter was a writer, publicist,
.newspaper editor and spy,
and perhaps the first
American lobbyist for a foreign country in American
history. Hammond was once
hired by the Mexican president to recognize and send
aid to the newly-formed.
Huerta government. ·
·
Hammond . was
an
American spy during the
World War 1 era and was

Pair

involved in bringin~ to trial
eight German-Americans for
their part in the sinking of the
Lusitania and for their part in
fomenting strikes in American
factories that were making
munitions for Allied troops.
America had not yet entered
the war as a combatant.
Hammond· s most interesting association was with AI
Capone. l-larrunond became
a trusted acquaintance of
Capone. when Hammond
lived in Chicago. AI Capone
was public enemy number
one in the 1920s, he being
responsible for a number of
murders . The Capone gang
. made their money with
bootlegging illegal booze
during Prohibition as well as
"speakeasies"
operating
across the midwest. Capone
also ran gambling and prostitution rings . Capone was
finally arrested on tax evasion charges and sent to
prison in 1931.
It was believed that before
Capone went to prison, he
had entrusted with Hanunond
many secrets of oq~anized
crime . A number of hits were

attempted against Hammond
and his second wife, entertainer
Dorothy
Lee.
Hammond and Hope were
divorced about 1915.
In 1935, Hammond confided to friends that ''gangsters"
had tried to poison him sever-:
al times. They had also turned
the gas on in his room without lighting the pilot.
It was not too long after that
when Hammond and Doroth,r
Lee were found dead .in thetr
penthouse in the Waldorf
Astoria, apparently dying of
asphyxiation from gas.
Hope Harvey lived into the
1950s and was about the only
soUrce of information about
her father, "Coin" Harvey, as
"Coin" did not keep many.
records himself. By the way;
"Coin" Harvey ran far presi-:
dent in 1932 on the Liberty·
Part)' ticket, a party . that
"Com" himself had started.
"Coin" died in 1936:

(James Sands is a special
corresponthnt for . the.

S11nday Times-Sentinel. He. .
can be contacted by writing
to Box 92, Norwich, Ohio
43767).

Ways to welcome stmshine

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS .
.
1 Graci&lt; in !he earth
. 6 Bridge . ·
10 Tortes
15 Rocket plartorm
IS Tennessee - Ford ··

Sunday, April26, 2009

Pageant's.author had colorful backgroun(l

It was a classic tale where
a nurse falls in love with her
patient: The nurse was onetime Gallipolis resident
Bv JoANNE ELUOTT, RN
BUREAU FOR CHILDREN
Ho{lC! Harvey and the male
WITH MEDICAL HANDICAPS
pallent was John C.
GAU.IA COUI&gt;/TY HEAtTH OEFWllMENT
Hammond. The couple wed
and hjld two children, one of
: Few people escape child - whom was Richard Halliday,
bood without an episode of who in 1940 would become
acute otitis media (AOM). the husband of stage actress
There are several reasons · Mary Martin .
to change the course of
Both Hope and John C.
recurrent e ar infections. were writers of some note.
from the child's· view- Hope was a very successful
point. the biggest benefit magazine writer based in
of treatment is to decrease New York City. She was so
the days of illness, pain, prominent that she had a
and fev~r. Hearing loss and summer home along the
language delay arc two Atlantic
Ocean
in
additional reasons to treat Connecticut. The couple
AOM . .
were married for about 15
' In order to prevent possi- . years and spent several days
ble hearing loss and lan- in Gallipolis during that time.
guage delay, it is important .
It was .Hope. who wrote
f~r the parent of a child with the pageant that. celebrated
recurrent ear infections to the !50th anniversary of
obtain prompt and proper Gallipolis, the year being
treatment. Two treatments 1940. Early in 1940, the
widely used to decrease the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
repeated episodes of AOM reported about her work.
are: daily prophylactic "Mrs. Hammond, a girlhood
~ntibiotics
and
tympanoplasty 'tubes, commonly called .PE tubes . The
advantages and . disadvantages of these two treatinents are widely debated ,
making it difficult for par- Bv BRENDA BRYAN, RN
ents and physicians to select ClAIJJA COUI&gt;ITYHEALTH OER\RTMENT
the most appropriate treatment. Whenever medical
As spring has come and
treatment with medications .summer is soon to follow,
is indicated , a complete many · of us need to be
eourse of the medication reminded of some safety
should be completed before tips to follow when enjoyPE tubes are considered. ing outdoor activities. Due
Consult your child's pedia- to the excitement that
trician
for
treatment· comes with the improving
weather and longer daylight
options.
· The Gallia County Health hours, it can be so easy to.
Department can help par- neglect the .small amount of
ents involved with recurrent time needed to prepare for
AOM treatment through a daily . sun exposure . This
program called Bureau for neglect can lead to prernaChildren with Medical ture skin wrinkles, burning
Handicaps (BCMH). This and skin ·c ancer, which
program offers finaqcial remains the most common .·
assistance (there is an eligi- cancer in the United States.
More than one million
bility requirement) and
assistance from a public cases of skin canter are diagnosed each year. Skin darnhealth nurse .
: • Please call the Gallia age from exposure to the sun
County Health Department or tanning beds has increased
at (740) 441-2950 for 111ore as .the younger generation
become more interested in
information .

· . . PORTSMOUTH·- A special screening of the four-part
filrn "Appalachia: .A History of Mountains an(! Peep)~" will
be shown in the Flohr Lecture Hall at Shawnee State
University's Clark Memorial Library from 7:30 to 10 p.m.,
on Monday, April27 and Tuesday, April 28. The screening
is free and open to the public as a gift from Will an!i Barb
Burke.
·
:
Parts one and two will be shown on Monday night and
parts three and four will be shown on Tuesday night, Dr.
Barbara Kunkle, SSU profes~or of English and Humani.ties ,
will lead a discussion after the films each night.
"The first film is iorally awesome, I couldn't believe it,':
Kunkle said. "Lots of interesting people are interviewed
and there is a great sound track . It is a new and exciting
way to present Appalachia to the world in a broader and
more positive way than we 've generally seen exposed in
the mass media."
.
In "Part One: Time and Terrain," the series begins wit~)
Earth~s oldest mountains ..:.. the Appalachians . The evolution of the Great Forest \hat blankets the region in green;
fanning a home for a unique mosaic of plant and animal
species is traced. The film shows the frrst humans whq
arrived as early as 12,000 B.C.
:
In "Part 1\vo: New Green World," the Native Americans
and Europeans coUide in a struggle for control of the moun~
· rains. The new inhabitant, the pioneer, carves out a life m'l
the Appalachia frontier creating a new way oflife.
:
"Part Three: Mountain Revolutions" shows the cataclysm
of the Civil War and how coal camps replace villages,
mountain farms are abandoned, missionary schools spring ·
up and how the wildlife and the culture are endangered.
The last movie of the series, "Part Four: Power and.
Place" is a.story of 20th century Appalachia from the union
battles of the 1920s to the celebration of iis rich cultural
heritage
in music, art and literature and the enduring envi:
•.
SubmiHed photo
ronmental
and cultural dilemmas of our own time,
"Greet the Sun," by photographer EUen Loeffler-Kalinoski, is one part of the "Toledo Exchange" exhibit at the French Art
For more information, visit the Web "site at
Colony in May. The exhibit showcases the works of several northwest Ohio artists.
www.appalachiafilm.org .
The abstraction and representa- University, and she currentGALLIPOLIS French Art Colony will fea- tiona! images, derived ly teaches. elementary art
ture an exciting exhibil in from daily experience. The with · the Toledo Public
May
entitled
.;Toledo act of P.ainting and drawing School System. She paints
Exchange."
including is fulftlling."
in her studio at Olive Street
works by a number of
Robin
Schultes · and Studios, located on Ottawa
Toledo artists. according to Patrick Dubreuil live in Street in Toledo.
Carrie Napora. FAC direc- Toledo, .a nd have been
Ivan Kende was just 10
tor.
· ·
working together since ,years old when his family .
This unique show is due 1998.
Robin has been. fled Budapest during the .
in great pan to the eff6rts of working with glass for over Hungarian Revolution in
Marc Folk. the recipient of 15 years, starting in 1991 at 1956, and settled in New
the 2009 Governor's Award the University of Texas at York . He lived and traveled
for the Arts. nominated by Arlington, then moved io .ihroughout the United
Bowli ng
Green
State Ohio to study at Bowling States, dedicating himself to
Un iversity and representing Green . State University, an eji.tensive study of the
the Arts Commission of earning her master's degree history of art and experiGreater Toledo.
· in 2000. ·
menting with many differThe aw.a rd recognized
For. Patrick Dubreuil, ent media.
.
him
in
the
Aris glass has. become another
In the early 1990s, he
Administration Category.
avenue for his artistic developed a style of paint·
The arts in the city of expression. While earning ing in acrylics, using preToledo and northwest Ohio his master's degree in sculp: cisely controlled textures in
have grown in unprecedent- ture at Bowling Green State very sparse compositions,
ed ways as a result of Fulk's University, he met and as well as what became his
visionary
leadership. began worki,ng with fellow signature Conte drawing
Among his numerous pro- student and future wife, series. Later, he began
jects have been Artomatic Robin Schultes. Beginning developing leather as a
419, a community led arts the glass experience nine sculptural medium.
event. now in its third year, years ago as Robin's · assisHe says, . "Oak tanned
providing exhibition and 1 tant, he quickly picked up leather has a look and feel
perfonnance opportunities the craft and began to unlike any other material. It
to 150 artists.
express himself in this new has an inherently archaic
He also pioneered the "medium.
..
quatity 19 it, which I take
~oth. a~ a team and indi- advantage of to explore the
Toledo Art Loop and Toledo
Jazz Loop, both regular ans vidually, Robin and Patrick realm where the raw and
events that open and con- have shown their art ·in primitive transform into the
nect art galleries, studios many exhibitio.ns and have beautiful, the elegant and
and performances spaces to won n4merous awards for modem."
·
artists and the general' pub- their work.
Ellen Loeffler-Kalinoski
Adam Russell , also a is a photographer. Her stulie. He successfully broughi
major funders to the table graduate of Bowlinjl Green dio name, Wmdows to the
and drew on community State University, 1s from . World , defines the fact her
energy to . establish and Toledo. He references the subject matter ranges from
grow these programs. As postmodem aspects of hip · Northern Michigan
to
pointed out by Bowling hop culture to assemble · Europe, Canada, Hawaii
.Green State University, he heartica l
composition s, and the Caribbean Islands,
.has been a tremendously based on a sampling and among ot,her places. Most of
energetic force in the arts mixing of life's imagery.
her images are color prints,
across northwest Ohio and
As he points out, "I ere- with a sampling of black
beyond.
ate artwork as a visual map- and white . prints·. As She
Originally, Toledo artist collageofthetumsandcon- points out, "I lo~e to take a
Sally Thompson contacted nections I experience per- little slice of life and focus
the French Art Colony, to sonally. The work is made on the beauty that would ·
provide a solo show for the of the images and meanings normally be passed by in a ·
FAC galleries. Self taught. from my own human expe- moment's time."
and a painter since J994, rience. translated from mind
As FAC Director Napora
she defines herse lf as u folk through hand to the physical emphasizes, this exhibit
artist. She paints primarily p)ane. I create paintings , will open on Saturday, May
in oil, but also includes a with the intention of adding 2, with a reception that
variety of media. She has whal I've learned into the evening from . 6 to 8 p.m. at
been featured in numerous circulaling winds of our col- Riverby.
exhibits.
lective experience:·
The French Art Colony
However. due to her net·
Paul
Vassar,
from plans to do an exchange
working skills with other Maumee, Ohio, is a veteran with Toledo, showcasing
Toledo artists, she was able of the US. Navy Submarine · Appalachian artisl ~ in the
to organize a group exhi bit , Service and a graduate of Toledo metro area in 2010.
featurin'g a number of out· Ohio State University.
Already on board for thi s
As he states in his bio. "I ·exhibit are Gerry Enrico.
standing Toledo artists. In
fact. she already has a wait- work and make art in the Dave Snyder. Thomas
ing list for a 2010 Toledo area, having moved Suter, Mairyann Wrentmpre .
Exchange.
.
here in 2007. after living in and Larry Rood .
Other artists included in Columbus , Ohio. for 23
Sponsors for the May
the Toledo Exchange exhib- · years. I work in scu lpture exhibit incl11de Dailey
it include Richard K. Reed , with varying forms of Tire. Angell Accounting
Robin Kendra Schultes and relief. collage. painting and Associates,
Cremeens
Patrick Dubreuil. Adam J. drawing. "' well as print- Funeral Home and Thomas
Russell. Paul Michael making. I am a skilled Do-lt Center. The Ohio
Vassar. Jessica Besterman. woodcarver, cabinetmaker Arts Council helped fund
Ivan Kende and Ellen and furniture maker. and this program with state tax
Loeffler-Kalinoski .
have work in numerous dollars to encourage ecoRichard Reed worked collections throughout the nomic growth. educational
professionally for 38 years Midwest .'"
excellence and cultural
as · an illustrator. all the
Jessica Bestennan. origi- enrichment
for
all
while maintaining his per- nally from Indiana. attended Ohioans.
,on a! studio for a more BGSU . graduating in 1997
For any additional inforp~rsonal creative explowith an undergraduate mation, co/llact the Frer1ch
ration. As he states. "My degree in fine art. Her mas- Art Colonv .ar (740) 446painting is a blend of ter's in art is from Findlay 3834 .

.COMMUNI1'Y.

.iunbap ltmts -&amp;entind

.Sunday, April26, 2009

PageC3

88 Dull sound
89 Brass instrurnent
91 Proboscis
93Angry
94 -wheel
96 Coral island
97 Excellent
99 Plurrller's cor1cem
• 102 Almond IKjueur
104Fury · .
105 OuiJlO!lrillQ
.107 .Penods of limo
109 -qua non

n 0 Black eye
.f12Chum

tanning. Spending . a few
minutes prior to sun exposure to apply barriers to the
sun, will reduce chances of
havingskindamagethatmay
lead to skin cancer as we a~e .
'Some of the high nsk
groups for skin cancer include
having fair skin, freckles, a lot
of moles, certain autoimmune
diseases, family history. and
using medications that cause
increased sensitivity to the
sun.
Common types of skin
cancer are basal, squamous
cell, or melanoma. The basal
and squamous cell cancers
rarely spread to other areas in
the body, but left untreated,
can cause scarring, disfiguremeht or loss of function in
some parts of the body.
Melanomas usually · 'occur
less often, but can become
far more serious. Melanomas
left untreated can spread to
other areas in th,e body and

possibly lead to death.
Ultraviolet light rays are .
mo~ intense during the midday hours, so sun exposure
· should be limited during the
hours 10 ' a.m. to 4 p.m.
Babies 6 months and younger
should be kept out of direct
sunligbt. When using sunscreen, follow directions and
reapply as directe~.
The~:e are four key words to
help you · to remember the
steps to protect your skin
from the sun. SLIP! SLOP!
SLAP! And WRAP! Slip on a
shirt, slop on the sunscree.n
(sun protection factor 15 or
higher), slap on a hat, and
wrap on sunglasses that Pfllteet against ultraviolet rays.

Also, do monthly visual
checks, by holding a .mirror
and looking · for any new
groWths. spots, bumps, patch- ·
es, or sores that do not heal. If
you .observe any of the signs

listed contact your physician
as soon as possible . .
:For more information;
call (740)441 -2950.
:
Resources: www.cancer.org

113 Circus pertormers
114 Scelpels
115 Ruboul
116 c~~
117 Numerlcellnformallon,
torshort .
118 Lid

· 1f9Ghost
· t2t Squander
f22 Maka changes In
123 Poor
125 lnson~ble state
128Withored
130 Curved &amp;dge
132 Wortcroom, for shan
133.Move up llld down
f34 Mimic

'

'

.

Jaae II, 2009

45 Sllvorooin
&lt;Ill Modest
&lt;Ill Remunerated .
49- homol
50 Bud&lt;
Sf Waleror Dorrioo
52 Resolved
53 Cash
54Wicl&lt;ed
57 f'11!1181'l1 tram acli~
· ss·emply
Sf S1ooe lor camoios ·•
63 Wl-e'e Sapporo Is

Wha'- ·Yaur
Name Your

64 Be111ner
66 lleil sound

70 Liquor
72 Make better
74 Mark from an injury
76 Implied only
711 Pldures
'
50 An antiseptic
82 Mound

or Choose From the

Community Hero

Blood Voluotttr Hero
Law Enforcement Hero
Blood Donor Hero
Militan. lltro

84Smiles

66. For-'s salcel
87 Land mei!SIW

.I

1

• Education Hero .
• Fire llero
• Pet/Animal Hero
• Youth Hero
• Senior Hero (

Brealzlan 1icltefs • $10.00 Each

·Breaklarl BuH1! Ope,m al1:30 Am •PMgram f3egim aiB:OO Am

·

Senior leloarct Center

For Nomination Forms and/or Tickets to tbe Breakfast Contact:

(740) 446-8555 • galliaredcross@sbcglobal.net
O'Biene:~ Memorialt-ospitill

:;:; Haspiul Dr.• Athem, Ohio 45701 • 17-40! 593

www.obhmess.04g

I·

l .

55~1

Event Media Sponsor: ltall~oH~ lailp

�iunba, itmes -ienttntl

I

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

Sunday, April26, 2009

Arbors STNA named Healthcare Hero
GALLIPOLIS has a husband who requires '24-hour
The Ohio Health
care: Helen hires someone to care for
Care Association, the
him so she can come to work and care
state's largest organifor the residents she dearly loves."
zation representing
Holley has been employed at Arbors
long-term care facilisince 1978, staning work as a night
ties, has honored a
shift nurse aide . She is 1 now senior
Gallipolis state-tested
STNA, responsible for orientation to
nurse rude (STNA) as
all new nurse aides, and does skills
its April 2009 "Hero Helen Holley .training with those just out o( class.
of Long-Term Care."
·
"Her enthusiasm for having a group of
Helen Holley, restorative aide and new employees is wonderful," said Judy
senior mentor at Arbors.of Gallipolis, Ban:us, RN, director of nursing at Arbors.
was selected by the OHCA as its hero "Helen is a true leader in the building."
of long-term care for this month. The
Holley is a certified CPR instructor
organization chooses one long-term for the Red Cross, and teaches CPR to
care employee each month to honor for employees at the facility and in the
their service to the long-term care facil- community. She is a first responder for
ity, its residents and the community.
emergency situations, and is a eeniArbors Administrator Anita Davis fied emergency ·medical . technician
said that Holley is passionate abou't (EMT). Holley also visits the Gallia
-SefVing the residents m the facility.
County Senior Resource Center to
"Helen has worked through two take blood pressures quarterly.
rounds· of c~;mot~erapy ~.nd open
''Whenever a tour of !Jur building is
heart surgery, Davis sa1d. She l!lso . needed, Helen is the one we tum to,"

Barcus said. "Her smile and words of
encouragement are very special. to the
families who are making the difficult
decision to entrust their loved on to a
long-term care· facility.
"Helen is able to relate on a personal
level, as her mother recently passc4
away after being in our facility for 10
years," she added.
. ·
·
"Helen is a true leader in the building,"
Davis said. "I can think of no one \"ho
deserves to be recognized more than
Helen HoUey - she.is a1r11e 'hero!"'
The Ohio Health Care Association is
a non-profit association of nearly 75G .
nursing homes, assisted living resi; I·
deuces and facilities for , people with f
mental retardation and developmental
disabilities, representing 64,000 beds.
Its is the largest long-term care association in the state and the only char;
tered Ohio affiliate ·of the American
Health Care Association, representing
more than 12,000 long-term care facile
ities nationwide .
'
'•

Vinton resident starts.new career path·at Rio:

Bob and Loraine Venoy

VENOY
ANNIVERSARY
POMEROY - Bob and Loraine (Grover) Venoy celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday, April 25,
~009 .

RIO GRANDE - Vinton He continued performing . 2008-09 academic year, and
resident Cory Gillman has gospel music for many is pleased with the program at
been (!erforming music years, and also performed as Rio Grande. He is also adjustsince he was 12 years old, the lead singer in '80s "hair ing to life away from touring.
. and he has toured the coun- bands" and other bands that
"I'm really happy wi.th
try as a singer.
.
played classic rock music it," Gillman said about his
Today. thoujlh. the 36- from the 1970s and 1980s.
decision to attend Rio
year-old is loolung to take his
He is very talented, and Grande. "I've met some
career in a different direc- was even signed by Platinum awesome musicians here."
·rion, and is starting down this West Records. He .has been · He and students Bobby
new path at the University of the lead singer in bands that Sandlin, who plays the drums,
Rio Grande/Rio Grande have opened for some of the Matt West, who plays lead
Community College.
top groups in the cquntry, guitar, Chase Nicely, who
Gillman is a freshman at · and he has performed with. plays lead and rhytlim guitars,
Rio Grande and is studying talented musicians from all and Mail Eichenlaub, who
music business. He also is different backgrounds. .
plays bass, Jmve even formed
continuing to · perform,
After years of performing the new band, Last Call.
though, as he is a member of and touring, though, Gillman · ·'These guys are dedicatthe Rio Grande Rock was ready to do something ed,'' Gillman said about the
Ensemble, which held its different, and he was other students. "Bobby. he
spring performance on Friday. intrigued lly the music busi- plays drums all day long."
He is also a member of a new ness program he had heard
Gillman adi:led · that the
local band, Last Call, that will about at Rio Grande. The students are doing an excelperform at the annual program trains students to lent job in the band ~ and he
"Ruckus In The Weeds" event work _in the music business; is enjoying J&gt;erfO~ing with
at Rio Grande on April 30.
and'G1llman wants to eventu- them. MilsJc 1sn I JUSt a
Gillman began perform- ally get into managing musi- . hobby for the students, it is
. ing when he was ·12, singing cians and finding new talent. something they work very
Ggospel music in church.
Hedecided to enroll for the hard at and are very.good at,

· They were married on April25, 1959, at Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church by the Rev. William Strausbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Venoy are the parents of three children,
Tony (Lisa) Venoy, Mark (Melinda) Venoy and Robyn
(Gary) Howard. all of Pomeroy:
•
They are the grandparents of five grandchildren, Brooke
IZac h) Williams , Alexa, Jacob ·and Joshua Venoy, and
Garrett Howard. ·
This brain damage can lead to
They are the great-grandparents of one great grandchild, Bv RUTH LOYEDAV, LPN
GAWACOUNTYI1EALTHDEFMTh£NT
blindness. epilepsy, behavior
. Cole Williams.
WOMEN, INFANTS A~DCHILDAEN
problems, deafness, cerebral
Yenoy retired f~orn the .Rutland Bottle Gas Co. and his
palsy, learning disabilities,
wife from Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Gallia County WIC poor coordination and deatb.
A family dinner and celebration was held in honor of. the Program is · providmg its
Parents ·and care ·givers
couple hosted by their"childten.
clients.educational materials have a sacred responsibility
about how to prevent·shaken . to children: these materials
baby syndrome (SBS).
will help educate parents on
. These materials are avail- how to meet ·that respotisiable
on · the
Ohio bility by teaching thern why
Department of Health babies cry, how to try to
· (ODH) Web site at: soothe them and how to stay
http://www .odh .o hio .gov calm when frustrated."
and are mandated as prut of
Al'l babies cry and someClaire's Law. Named for times , adults get frustrated
Claire Fishpaw, who, at 11 when they cannot. soothe
months old, was shaken and children in their care. When
injured by a child care you are feeling stressed, put
provider.
Claire's Law the baby on his back in· a
required ODH to establish safe crib or playpen and:
an s~s education program.
Take several deep breaths .
SBS is a brain injury that and count to 100.
·
occurs when an adult violentWash your face or take a
ly shakes a .baby or toddler. . shower.

he added :
.
Gillman is also impres.~
with the Rio Grande facultx,
in particular Dr. Chn~
Kenney, who directs th~
Rock. Ensemble and Jaz:j:
Ensemble and teaches music:
"He makes his classes real;
ly interesting," Gillman sitid;
While he is an experi;.
enced musician, Gillman i~
learning a lot from Kenney
· and the other faculty rnem~
bers, he added .
· Kenney said that Gillma~
brings ·a lot. to the music
program, as he is able tq
share his knowledge and
wisdom with the other stu:
dents , He also serves as &lt;\
good example for then, and
. ·shows them another succeSJI
story that can inspire theni
in their work in music.
'
, For more information on
the Rock Ensemble, or on
the music programs offered
at Rio Grande, call Kenney
at (800) 282-7201. ·
'

·Prevention of Shaken Baby Syndrome . ·
· Exercise. Do sit-ups or
How to apply for WJCt
climb the stairs a few times . - Applicants must meet
Go in another room for a income eligibility guide~
change of scenery. .
lines. For example: a family
Call a friend or relative.
_size of 2, monthly incom~
Check on your baby. Peek cannot exceed $2,247; tarnin on the baby to insure · ily size of 4 - $3,400 famhis/her safety.
·
ily size 5 - $3,976; family
The ODH materials are the size 6 ~ $4,553.
result of work during the last
Please note: A pregnaril
half of 2008 by more than 50 woman counts as more thrul ·
child abuse, parenting, child one family member. A persoo
care, public health and health who currently receives
care experts. Resources Medicaid,
CareSource,
include a teachingtool and Unison or Molina health cov- .
infom1ation about preventing erage; food stamps, or Ohio
SBS. New resources and Works First (OWF) automatmaterials will be, added to the ically meets the income eligiODH Web site as they bility criteria for WIC.
.
become available.
Please call the Gallia
Who can apply for WIC? Counly WIC Office at (74~
-Women who are pregnant, 441-2977 jor funher injorma,
breastfeeding, or just had a ; tionortoschedu/eanappoinl,
baby; infadts up to I year old ment. Evening apJXJintments
and children to age 5,
are available ufxm request. ·

·· Extension offers 'Dining with Diabetes' class:
.

Keith and Dolly Woods

woo·n s
ANNIVERSARY
MIDDLEPORT - Keith and Dolly Woods will observe
their 60th wedding anniversary Monday,April27, 2009.
They were married in Racine in 1949.
.
They have five children , Tom, Mary Lyrin, Brenda, Ted
and Cheryl: II grandchildren ; and 14 great-grandchildren.

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
State University's Gallia
County Extension Office
will offer a "Dining with
· Diabetes" .class beginning
Monday, May 4 from 12:30
to 2 p.m. in the meeting
room of the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
"Dining with Diabetes" is
a one"week class thart runs
for three weeks, with a
three-month
follow-up
class. The class is open to
those with diabetes, their
family members and caretakers. The classes are free;

but space is limited and pre- booklets and handouts will ·
r~gistration . is · r~quired, be given to each panicipant.
.Panicipants .must attend all
Diabeotes is a very ·serious
class sessions.
· and costly ·disease, · but
You will learn how to pre- research has stiown that·
P.are tueals that are healthy, those who learn to manage
easy to prepare and taste their blood glucose (sugar)
good . Recipes will be · leve)s, eat a healthy diet and
demonstrated. and partici- exercise regularly can lower
pants will have the opportu- · their risks of cotuplications
nity · to taste each one. and lead a healthier and
Participants will also learn
up-to-date information on
nutrition, meal planning,
exercise and how to understand common diabetes- ·
related medical tests. Recipe

.

more productive life.
''Dining with Diabetes" is
offered · statewide and is
sponsored
by
OSO
Extension ..
Registration for this pro'
gram can be made by (·all•
ing Amy Corbin at the
Gallia County Extension
Office at (740) 446-7007 by .
Mayl .

.
,tunba~ litntl -6entinel
'

~

What's cooking
@ the library?

..

GALLiPOLIS
- The
.
.
--~·------~------~--~--~~
Gallia
County
·Genealogical Society, OGS ·
Chapter was recently notified it has received the
., Just the other day, I was
Henry Howe Book Award
aiscussing with a library
for best Ohio local history
j)atron about my love for
from
the
Ohio
browsing through cookGenealogical Society for
books, looking for ideas for
their book Year by Year:
new recipes or twists on
The Writings of P.T. WallDebbie
some 1&gt;ld favorites.
books are choTo my surprise, the patron
Saunders senEach year.
by
the · Ohio
•
:r:
replied, ''Why, I dido 't
Genealogical Society in a
\
know the library had cookvariety of categories. This
·'
books available for check•
\
is the second time the local
••
lliut" to which r was
chapter
has
•
)\le~ to respond abOut the
The Everything ·Food won. Previously · they won
diverse selection of cooking Allergy · Cookbook: Prepare the Thomas Edison Book
titles offered by Bossard easy-to-make meals ...
Award for Ohio Residents.
Library.
Cooking Healthy with 1800-1825. OGS is cele. ' I·
: · In recent years, the popu- Splenda:
a
healthy brating its 50th anniver- .
!arity of cooking ,shows exchange cookbook
.
sary this year with its annu· with such personalities as
For some, cooking may al conference · held in
~achael Ray, Paula Oeen, be a form of relaxation. Huron. Ohio. An anniver- ·
Emeril, and Bobby Flay, Others may think they do sary program booklet feaamong others, have.mspired not have time to cook due to tunng the history and phoa, whole nation to try their their , busy · lifestyle. tos of each chapter was disculinary hand in the kitchen. Whatever your situation, we tributed.
Submitted photo
In her artiCle entitled have a book to fit your culi- . This organization has Ann Brown and Henny Evans of the· Gallia County Genealogical Society. OGS Chapter,
"Benefits of Cooking with nary needs. Be sure to check well over 6,500 members look over a .copy of the !\Ward-winning Year by Year: The Writings of PT Wall. Brown and
kids," Charlina Stewart put some of tile following and is considered the top Evans were the volume's editors.
· ·notes that spending time in titles on your next visit to state society in the United
the kitchen with kids can the library:
'I
.
States. Gallia County has
ilpen Ia world of developDon't panic- dinner's in been a chapter for 26 cial to help put it in your about the book and now is Wednesday through Friday
hands.
ihental opportunities for the freezer: great-iasting . years.
the chance to get it at a bar- from 10 a.m. to 4 pm. Or a
"But,
don't
wait
and
miss
· tbem incloding building meals you can make ahead.
gain."
.
different pickup time may
Yeur by Year is a trangood nutrition ·and food
Fresh Food Fast : 250 scription of ihe writings the opportunity altogether,"
·
The book may be pur- be arranged by calling 446,
~owledge, but also math, incredibly flavorfiJ! 5-ingre- of Wan, who was a Galli a she added. "We have had so chased at 57 Court St. 4242. Mailing is also avail~
science;
reading, and dient 15-minute recipes.
hours
are able. ·
County newspaperman many positive comments Office .
(jatience. Bossard Library
The Hfalthy College for over 50 years. He was
offers cookbooks for .our Cookbook.
editor of the Gallipolis
ump
younger patrons, including . The Taste. of Country Journal and also worked
on
the following titles:
Cooking.
'
for the Bulletin and ·
:" The Everything Kids· · Beer-Can Chicken: and Tribune. Wall recorded
SAVINGS
.
·:.
f;ross Cookbook: get your 74 other offbeat recipes for the day-to-day activities
.·· · .
...
Jiands dirty in the kitchen the grill.
of people in the county
!
With these yucky meals!
Cooking with Paula and anY.one readin¥ the
-: The Young Chef's Italian Deen.
,
·..
book w1ll discover hfe as
f;ookbook.
.
Rachael Ray's 30-Minute it was in the late 19th and
U.S.
Htstory Meals.
. _ The
early 20th centuries.
Pit Stop in a · Southern
. tookbook: delicious recipes
It took ,three years to get
Wing Chair
ahd exciting events from the Kitchen.
the handwritten manuscript
Was$299,95 4Drawer
~ast ·
.
Sandra
Lee
Semi- transcribed, typed, proofed
NOW
.. ' Let's Have a Tea Party! ·. Homemade slow cooker and indexed.
Chest
!..' Pretend soup and other recipes ...
5
P.T. Wall )Vas born in
199.95
1'-'al.recipes: a cookbook for
Cookbooks are found in 1853 and became an imporSaveSIOO
preschOolers and up
the library in the nQnfiction tant · pan of · Gallia
Mom .and Me Cookbook: · area (641.5). Visit the Co.u!Jty. Besides being a ·
. Shop th.,
have fun in the kitchen! . · library and use your library . newspaper man, he was
. For . patrons who , have card to checkout a cook- involved in the insurance · C:lassifleds!
special dietary needs, we · book or twp - and see business . and . was very
pffer cookbooks such as:
.what's cooking @ your active in the com~11nity
: Mr. Food's Quick &amp; Easy library!
·.
• . . with such ·things as' the
Vi(Jbetic C 0qkiflg. ·
.
Deb~i~~ Saunders is tile . Agricultural Soeiety and ·the
:.. Healthy . Gluten-free director of the Dr. Samuel Ariel Theater.
. ·. . .
Cooking :150 Recipes for, L: Bossard Memoria]·
On the side; he appeared
Food Lovers. ' .
· L1brary. - .
to be writing a history of
' Passionate Vegetarian.
· For more information· on Gallia County beginning
. Zone Perfect Cooking this article or the programs · with the year 1889 and proMade Easy: quick delicious a.nd services offered by the
lhrough 1928. The
·P.Jeals for your healthy zone ltbrary, please contact the gressing
society
believes
his work to
lifestyle
·
· library at (740) 446-7323. · be factu!ll .as well
as fasci.
nating, and !hat it is an
exceedingly worthWhile
offering to the public, not
just to the genealogist but to
any person . who has ·an
interest in Gallia County in
general.
,
. RIO GRANDE - Arecord coordinatorS for the contest.
Ann
BroWn
and
Hemly
number of &amp;tu~ents from
"Every school that panic'8round the region par!icipated ipated is sending represen- ·Evans . were the editors,
-in the annual History Day tatives to the state cornpeti- readers and ·proofers .of .the
book, with Jinx Farley as
comiJetition at the University tion,"·Brasel said.
The schools represented at the indexer. The main typist
of Rio GritiJde/Rio Grande
Community Oollege recently. the co.mpetltion included was Seleesa Rucker, but
were
In addition, a record num- . River Valley Middle School, also . helping
ber of students from the event Portsmouth·
Elementary· Marguerite CIJ)vin, Kathy
advanced t:O the state com~- School, Western High School, . Swift and Sue Giroux.
tilion, which will be held on Rio Grande Elementary Sandy Bledsoe was ih
Ap~ 25 in Colu!Dbus. .
. . School,
Washington charge of sketches. and
History Day Js a national · Elementary .School, Meigs Barbara Richards and Mary
competition held every year Middle School, River Valley James scanned items for tlw
· for students in grades 6-12. High School, South 'Gallia work . .
Evans bas announced that
Rio Grande serves as the host Junior Hi~jh School, South
for the District Nine contest, Oallia High School, Hannah anyone buying the book
which is open to ~t~den~ trace Elementary School and between now and July 15
from a tO-county reg10n m Portsmouth Junior . High .may do-so at $10 off the
· wuthem Ohio. This year's School. ·
current price.
'
,Cgional competition was held · The . competition also · . She said, "We want as
pn Saturday, March 7 in Bob . attracts several home- many people as possible to
Evans Farms Hall on the Rio schooled students each year, have tliis book and we feel
Grande campus.
.
. and some of these students that with Mother's Day,
.;. More thai1200 studentS reg-, also. advanced to the state Father's Day, the all class
:j$tere4 for the District 9 _com~ competition this year.
reunion and July 4 reunions
!ilion this year, accordin,g to.
For more information on there will he a lot of people
Uen Brasel. assistant protes- .· History Day, call Rio Grande seeking the book. And with
r of history at Rio Grande. history faculty members this award coming to us, we
rase! also serv()s as one of the Brastl at (BOO) 282 •7201, · want to do SOJ!lething spe·
•

.

~

'

$4995

..

!Area History Day contest .
.;, draws over 200 .students .

Excellent Healthcare at a
·price so small it is il HUGE deal!

!

New summer hours to start May 1st.

Prom &amp; Sock Hop

Over6roo f(!R.f,na6i£itation Center

Saturday# May .16 8-12 pm

~rl:~
. .~
~
)"" '

!i

..

·.!
.

'·

~

.L~
{~

'

~

'

NJii.Cefe.bration of.Lift»

Spo,.stirn/ by 'l'm•~ldmr Toun
&amp;: lhr O.ry .S lr-n (Juinut
wit.lr music from tlte .
4tJ's,.50's &amp; 60's

\';

M4lE AND FEMALE

{

..-

QoiiPI• cii'ICI

·oPENI/(GS
NOW AVAILABLE!

Si,.... .

up

aYailabiUty In both male and female rooms for short term, long
term and respite care. ·specialized therapy progranis to treat your physical,
occupational and speech therapy needs. If you are interested in additional
admission information or· to set up a tour, please contact .the. Admissions .
Department by calling 740-992-6472.

EwlillogoffUHI

·.r=t:::-....

Adn.l r'on: S'IS,., IMrton
~a~Snodt

MOOSE LODGE ·
RT. ~ POeNT PI &amp;ASANT, WY

t-o--.. _..,_, •. , _____,. . . . . . . . . ..
•

Gt:r4t"etCI:Im&amp;'

Gtouro

~- ... ~"· "

Pw-W

Money Is tight and bills need to be paid. For small illnesses, why go to~
Emettency Room or an Urgent Care service just to get home and find a
biB WJiting for you1. You need help. you need it now and you need It cheap.

That Is wflere we come in.
For a $39 basic office visit one can be seen by our nurse practitioner
and be on your~·

No bills sent to your house ... no hassle. Ju$1 pay before you leave and
. spend the rest of 1Rf worrying about something other than your heilth.

Ohio Qilickcwe ... Fast. fritnd~ and Allordable Heilthcare.

,Ill:
......,.,_,Ftlliiida-..getu tw.b .

Sunday, Apri126, 2009

Society's book wins local history award

""

~~~.. · ·

I•

ON THE BOOKSHELF;

PageCs

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio 45674
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

-.-uno ·

•

,

.

Monda)'. Friday: 9 am to 7 pm I Saturday: I() am to 4 pm. / Sunday. I0 am to 2 pm .

www.ohioqulckcare.com
Lc J'rd · 30\ '"""c· q,,&lt;:, R".1d 1'Jcx: '" :l·c Go .Jcr Cor"al'1 1n G,:lrpolrs and
Ew11 Center Surte 4 73 I Ea~t "'arr Street 1n Jackwn

'

'

�iunba, itmes -ienttntl

I

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

Sunday, April26, 2009

Arbors STNA named Healthcare Hero
GALLIPOLIS has a husband who requires '24-hour
The Ohio Health
care: Helen hires someone to care for
Care Association, the
him so she can come to work and care
state's largest organifor the residents she dearly loves."
zation representing
Holley has been employed at Arbors
long-term care facilisince 1978, staning work as a night
ties, has honored a
shift nurse aide . She is 1 now senior
Gallipolis state-tested
STNA, responsible for orientation to
nurse rude (STNA) as
all new nurse aides, and does skills
its April 2009 "Hero Helen Holley .training with those just out o( class.
of Long-Term Care."
·
"Her enthusiasm for having a group of
Helen Holley, restorative aide and new employees is wonderful," said Judy
senior mentor at Arbors.of Gallipolis, Ban:us, RN, director of nursing at Arbors.
was selected by the OHCA as its hero "Helen is a true leader in the building."
of long-term care for this month. The
Holley is a certified CPR instructor
organization chooses one long-term for the Red Cross, and teaches CPR to
care employee each month to honor for employees at the facility and in the
their service to the long-term care facil- community. She is a first responder for
ity, its residents and the community.
emergency situations, and is a eeniArbors Administrator Anita Davis fied emergency ·medical . technician
said that Holley is passionate abou't (EMT). Holley also visits the Gallia
-SefVing the residents m the facility.
County Senior Resource Center to
"Helen has worked through two take blood pressures quarterly.
rounds· of c~;mot~erapy ~.nd open
''Whenever a tour of !Jur building is
heart surgery, Davis sa1d. She l!lso . needed, Helen is the one we tum to,"

Barcus said. "Her smile and words of
encouragement are very special. to the
families who are making the difficult
decision to entrust their loved on to a
long-term care· facility.
"Helen is able to relate on a personal
level, as her mother recently passc4
away after being in our facility for 10
years," she added.
. ·
·
"Helen is a true leader in the building,"
Davis said. "I can think of no one \"ho
deserves to be recognized more than
Helen HoUey - she.is a1r11e 'hero!"'
The Ohio Health Care Association is
a non-profit association of nearly 75G .
nursing homes, assisted living resi; I·
deuces and facilities for , people with f
mental retardation and developmental
disabilities, representing 64,000 beds.
Its is the largest long-term care association in the state and the only char;
tered Ohio affiliate ·of the American
Health Care Association, representing
more than 12,000 long-term care facile
ities nationwide .
'
'•

Vinton resident starts.new career path·at Rio:

Bob and Loraine Venoy

VENOY
ANNIVERSARY
POMEROY - Bob and Loraine (Grover) Venoy celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary Saturday, April 25,
~009 .

RIO GRANDE - Vinton He continued performing . 2008-09 academic year, and
resident Cory Gillman has gospel music for many is pleased with the program at
been (!erforming music years, and also performed as Rio Grande. He is also adjustsince he was 12 years old, the lead singer in '80s "hair ing to life away from touring.
. and he has toured the coun- bands" and other bands that
"I'm really happy wi.th
try as a singer.
.
played classic rock music it," Gillman said about his
Today. thoujlh. the 36- from the 1970s and 1980s.
decision to attend Rio
year-old is loolung to take his
He is very talented, and Grande. "I've met some
career in a different direc- was even signed by Platinum awesome musicians here."
·rion, and is starting down this West Records. He .has been · He and students Bobby
new path at the University of the lead singer in bands that Sandlin, who plays the drums,
Rio Grande/Rio Grande have opened for some of the Matt West, who plays lead
Community College.
top groups in the cquntry, guitar, Chase Nicely, who
Gillman is a freshman at · and he has performed with. plays lead and rhytlim guitars,
Rio Grande and is studying talented musicians from all and Mail Eichenlaub, who
music business. He also is different backgrounds. .
plays bass, Jmve even formed
continuing to · perform,
After years of performing the new band, Last Call.
though, as he is a member of and touring, though, Gillman · ·'These guys are dedicatthe Rio Grande Rock was ready to do something ed,'' Gillman said about the
Ensemble, which held its different, and he was other students. "Bobby. he
spring performance on Friday. intrigued lly the music busi- plays drums all day long."
He is also a member of a new ness program he had heard
Gillman adi:led · that the
local band, Last Call, that will about at Rio Grande. The students are doing an excelperform at the annual program trains students to lent job in the band ~ and he
"Ruckus In The Weeds" event work _in the music business; is enjoying J&gt;erfO~ing with
at Rio Grande on April 30.
and'G1llman wants to eventu- them. MilsJc 1sn I JUSt a
Gillman began perform- ally get into managing musi- . hobby for the students, it is
. ing when he was ·12, singing cians and finding new talent. something they work very
Ggospel music in church.
Hedecided to enroll for the hard at and are very.good at,

· They were married on April25, 1959, at Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church by the Rev. William Strausbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Venoy are the parents of three children,
Tony (Lisa) Venoy, Mark (Melinda) Venoy and Robyn
(Gary) Howard. all of Pomeroy:
•
They are the grandparents of five grandchildren, Brooke
IZac h) Williams , Alexa, Jacob ·and Joshua Venoy, and
Garrett Howard. ·
This brain damage can lead to
They are the great-grandparents of one great grandchild, Bv RUTH LOYEDAV, LPN
GAWACOUNTYI1EALTHDEFMTh£NT
blindness. epilepsy, behavior
. Cole Williams.
WOMEN, INFANTS A~DCHILDAEN
problems, deafness, cerebral
Yenoy retired f~orn the .Rutland Bottle Gas Co. and his
palsy, learning disabilities,
wife from Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Gallia County WIC poor coordination and deatb.
A family dinner and celebration was held in honor of. the Program is · providmg its
Parents ·and care ·givers
couple hosted by their"childten.
clients.educational materials have a sacred responsibility
about how to prevent·shaken . to children: these materials
baby syndrome (SBS).
will help educate parents on
. These materials are avail- how to meet ·that respotisiable
on · the
Ohio bility by teaching thern why
Department of Health babies cry, how to try to
· (ODH) Web site at: soothe them and how to stay
http://www .odh .o hio .gov calm when frustrated."
and are mandated as prut of
Al'l babies cry and someClaire's Law. Named for times , adults get frustrated
Claire Fishpaw, who, at 11 when they cannot. soothe
months old, was shaken and children in their care. When
injured by a child care you are feeling stressed, put
provider.
Claire's Law the baby on his back in· a
required ODH to establish safe crib or playpen and:
an s~s education program.
Take several deep breaths .
SBS is a brain injury that and count to 100.
·
occurs when an adult violentWash your face or take a
ly shakes a .baby or toddler. . shower.

he added :
.
Gillman is also impres.~
with the Rio Grande facultx,
in particular Dr. Chn~
Kenney, who directs th~
Rock. Ensemble and Jaz:j:
Ensemble and teaches music:
"He makes his classes real;
ly interesting," Gillman sitid;
While he is an experi;.
enced musician, Gillman i~
learning a lot from Kenney
· and the other faculty rnem~
bers, he added .
· Kenney said that Gillma~
brings ·a lot. to the music
program, as he is able tq
share his knowledge and
wisdom with the other stu:
dents , He also serves as &lt;\
good example for then, and
. ·shows them another succeSJI
story that can inspire theni
in their work in music.
'
, For more information on
the Rock Ensemble, or on
the music programs offered
at Rio Grande, call Kenney
at (800) 282-7201. ·
'

·Prevention of Shaken Baby Syndrome . ·
· Exercise. Do sit-ups or
How to apply for WJCt
climb the stairs a few times . - Applicants must meet
Go in another room for a income eligibility guide~
change of scenery. .
lines. For example: a family
Call a friend or relative.
_size of 2, monthly incom~
Check on your baby. Peek cannot exceed $2,247; tarnin on the baby to insure · ily size of 4 - $3,400 famhis/her safety.
·
ily size 5 - $3,976; family
The ODH materials are the size 6 ~ $4,553.
result of work during the last
Please note: A pregnaril
half of 2008 by more than 50 woman counts as more thrul ·
child abuse, parenting, child one family member. A persoo
care, public health and health who currently receives
care experts. Resources Medicaid,
CareSource,
include a teachingtool and Unison or Molina health cov- .
infom1ation about preventing erage; food stamps, or Ohio
SBS. New resources and Works First (OWF) automatmaterials will be, added to the ically meets the income eligiODH Web site as they bility criteria for WIC.
.
become available.
Please call the Gallia
Who can apply for WIC? Counly WIC Office at (74~
-Women who are pregnant, 441-2977 jor funher injorma,
breastfeeding, or just had a ; tionortoschedu/eanappoinl,
baby; infadts up to I year old ment. Evening apJXJintments
and children to age 5,
are available ufxm request. ·

·· Extension offers 'Dining with Diabetes' class:
.

Keith and Dolly Woods

woo·n s
ANNIVERSARY
MIDDLEPORT - Keith and Dolly Woods will observe
their 60th wedding anniversary Monday,April27, 2009.
They were married in Racine in 1949.
.
They have five children , Tom, Mary Lyrin, Brenda, Ted
and Cheryl: II grandchildren ; and 14 great-grandchildren.

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio
State University's Gallia
County Extension Office
will offer a "Dining with
· Diabetes" .class beginning
Monday, May 4 from 12:30
to 2 p.m. in the meeting
room of the C.H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.
"Dining with Diabetes" is
a one"week class thart runs
for three weeks, with a
three-month
follow-up
class. The class is open to
those with diabetes, their
family members and caretakers. The classes are free;

but space is limited and pre- booklets and handouts will ·
r~gistration . is · r~quired, be given to each panicipant.
.Panicipants .must attend all
Diabeotes is a very ·serious
class sessions.
· and costly ·disease, · but
You will learn how to pre- research has stiown that·
P.are tueals that are healthy, those who learn to manage
easy to prepare and taste their blood glucose (sugar)
good . Recipes will be · leve)s, eat a healthy diet and
demonstrated. and partici- exercise regularly can lower
pants will have the opportu- · their risks of cotuplications
nity · to taste each one. and lead a healthier and
Participants will also learn
up-to-date information on
nutrition, meal planning,
exercise and how to understand common diabetes- ·
related medical tests. Recipe

.

more productive life.
''Dining with Diabetes" is
offered · statewide and is
sponsored
by
OSO
Extension ..
Registration for this pro'
gram can be made by (·all•
ing Amy Corbin at the
Gallia County Extension
Office at (740) 446-7007 by .
Mayl .

.
,tunba~ litntl -6entinel
'

~

What's cooking
@ the library?

..

GALLiPOLIS
- The
.
.
--~·------~------~--~--~~
Gallia
County
·Genealogical Society, OGS ·
Chapter was recently notified it has received the
., Just the other day, I was
Henry Howe Book Award
aiscussing with a library
for best Ohio local history
j)atron about my love for
from
the
Ohio
browsing through cookGenealogical Society for
books, looking for ideas for
their book Year by Year:
new recipes or twists on
The Writings of P.T. WallDebbie
some 1&gt;ld favorites.
books are choTo my surprise, the patron
Saunders senEach year.
by
the · Ohio
•
:r:
replied, ''Why, I dido 't
Genealogical Society in a
\
know the library had cookvariety of categories. This
·'
books available for check•
\
is the second time the local
••
lliut" to which r was
chapter
has
•
)\le~ to respond abOut the
The Everything ·Food won. Previously · they won
diverse selection of cooking Allergy · Cookbook: Prepare the Thomas Edison Book
titles offered by Bossard easy-to-make meals ...
Award for Ohio Residents.
Library.
Cooking Healthy with 1800-1825. OGS is cele. ' I·
: · In recent years, the popu- Splenda:
a
healthy brating its 50th anniver- .
!arity of cooking ,shows exchange cookbook
.
sary this year with its annu· with such personalities as
For some, cooking may al conference · held in
~achael Ray, Paula Oeen, be a form of relaxation. Huron. Ohio. An anniver- ·
Emeril, and Bobby Flay, Others may think they do sary program booklet feaamong others, have.mspired not have time to cook due to tunng the history and phoa, whole nation to try their their , busy · lifestyle. tos of each chapter was disculinary hand in the kitchen. Whatever your situation, we tributed.
Submitted photo
In her artiCle entitled have a book to fit your culi- . This organization has Ann Brown and Henny Evans of the· Gallia County Genealogical Society. OGS Chapter,
"Benefits of Cooking with nary needs. Be sure to check well over 6,500 members look over a .copy of the !\Ward-winning Year by Year: The Writings of PT Wall. Brown and
kids," Charlina Stewart put some of tile following and is considered the top Evans were the volume's editors.
· ·notes that spending time in titles on your next visit to state society in the United
the kitchen with kids can the library:
'I
.
States. Gallia County has
ilpen Ia world of developDon't panic- dinner's in been a chapter for 26 cial to help put it in your about the book and now is Wednesday through Friday
hands.
ihental opportunities for the freezer: great-iasting . years.
the chance to get it at a bar- from 10 a.m. to 4 pm. Or a
"But,
don't
wait
and
miss
· tbem incloding building meals you can make ahead.
gain."
.
different pickup time may
Yeur by Year is a trangood nutrition ·and food
Fresh Food Fast : 250 scription of ihe writings the opportunity altogether,"
·
The book may be pur- be arranged by calling 446,
~owledge, but also math, incredibly flavorfiJ! 5-ingre- of Wan, who was a Galli a she added. "We have had so chased at 57 Court St. 4242. Mailing is also avail~
science;
reading, and dient 15-minute recipes.
hours
are able. ·
County newspaperman many positive comments Office .
(jatience. Bossard Library
The Hfalthy College for over 50 years. He was
offers cookbooks for .our Cookbook.
editor of the Gallipolis
ump
younger patrons, including . The Taste. of Country Journal and also worked
on
the following titles:
Cooking.
'
for the Bulletin and ·
:" The Everything Kids· · Beer-Can Chicken: and Tribune. Wall recorded
SAVINGS
.
·:.
f;ross Cookbook: get your 74 other offbeat recipes for the day-to-day activities
.·· · .
...
Jiands dirty in the kitchen the grill.
of people in the county
!
With these yucky meals!
Cooking with Paula and anY.one readin¥ the
-: The Young Chef's Italian Deen.
,
·..
book w1ll discover hfe as
f;ookbook.
.
Rachael Ray's 30-Minute it was in the late 19th and
U.S.
Htstory Meals.
. _ The
early 20th centuries.
Pit Stop in a · Southern
. tookbook: delicious recipes
It took ,three years to get
Wing Chair
ahd exciting events from the Kitchen.
the handwritten manuscript
Was$299,95 4Drawer
~ast ·
.
Sandra
Lee
Semi- transcribed, typed, proofed
NOW
.. ' Let's Have a Tea Party! ·. Homemade slow cooker and indexed.
Chest
!..' Pretend soup and other recipes ...
5
P.T. Wall )Vas born in
199.95
1'-'al.recipes: a cookbook for
Cookbooks are found in 1853 and became an imporSaveSIOO
preschOolers and up
the library in the nQnfiction tant · pan of · Gallia
Mom .and Me Cookbook: · area (641.5). Visit the Co.u!Jty. Besides being a ·
. Shop th.,
have fun in the kitchen! . · library and use your library . newspaper man, he was
. For . patrons who , have card to checkout a cook- involved in the insurance · C:lassifleds!
special dietary needs, we · book or twp - and see business . and . was very
pffer cookbooks such as:
.what's cooking @ your active in the com~11nity
: Mr. Food's Quick &amp; Easy library!
·.
• . . with such ·things as' the
Vi(Jbetic C 0qkiflg. ·
.
Deb~i~~ Saunders is tile . Agricultural Soeiety and ·the
:.. Healthy . Gluten-free director of the Dr. Samuel Ariel Theater.
. ·. . .
Cooking :150 Recipes for, L: Bossard Memoria]·
On the side; he appeared
Food Lovers. ' .
· L1brary. - .
to be writing a history of
' Passionate Vegetarian.
· For more information· on Gallia County beginning
. Zone Perfect Cooking this article or the programs · with the year 1889 and proMade Easy: quick delicious a.nd services offered by the
lhrough 1928. The
·P.Jeals for your healthy zone ltbrary, please contact the gressing
society
believes
his work to
lifestyle
·
· library at (740) 446-7323. · be factu!ll .as well
as fasci.
nating, and !hat it is an
exceedingly worthWhile
offering to the public, not
just to the genealogist but to
any person . who has ·an
interest in Gallia County in
general.
,
. RIO GRANDE - Arecord coordinatorS for the contest.
Ann
BroWn
and
Hemly
number of &amp;tu~ents from
"Every school that panic'8round the region par!icipated ipated is sending represen- ·Evans . were the editors,
-in the annual History Day tatives to the state cornpeti- readers and ·proofers .of .the
book, with Jinx Farley as
comiJetition at the University tion,"·Brasel said.
The schools represented at the indexer. The main typist
of Rio GritiJde/Rio Grande
Community Oollege recently. the co.mpetltion included was Seleesa Rucker, but
were
In addition, a record num- . River Valley Middle School, also . helping
ber of students from the event Portsmouth·
Elementary· Marguerite CIJ)vin, Kathy
advanced t:O the state com~- School, Western High School, . Swift and Sue Giroux.
tilion, which will be held on Rio Grande Elementary Sandy Bledsoe was ih
Ap~ 25 in Colu!Dbus. .
. . School,
Washington charge of sketches. and
History Day Js a national · Elementary .School, Meigs Barbara Richards and Mary
competition held every year Middle School, River Valley James scanned items for tlw
· for students in grades 6-12. High School, South 'Gallia work . .
Evans bas announced that
Rio Grande serves as the host Junior Hi~jh School, South
for the District Nine contest, Oallia High School, Hannah anyone buying the book
which is open to ~t~den~ trace Elementary School and between now and July 15
from a tO-county reg10n m Portsmouth Junior . High .may do-so at $10 off the
· wuthem Ohio. This year's School. ·
current price.
'
,Cgional competition was held · The . competition also · . She said, "We want as
pn Saturday, March 7 in Bob . attracts several home- many people as possible to
Evans Farms Hall on the Rio schooled students each year, have tliis book and we feel
Grande campus.
.
. and some of these students that with Mother's Day,
.;. More thai1200 studentS reg-, also. advanced to the state Father's Day, the all class
:j$tere4 for the District 9 _com~ competition this year.
reunion and July 4 reunions
!ilion this year, accordin,g to.
For more information on there will he a lot of people
Uen Brasel. assistant protes- .· History Day, call Rio Grande seeking the book. And with
r of history at Rio Grande. history faculty members this award coming to us, we
rase! also serv()s as one of the Brastl at (BOO) 282 •7201, · want to do SOJ!lething spe·
•

.

~

'

$4995

..

!Area History Day contest .
.;, draws over 200 .students .

Excellent Healthcare at a
·price so small it is il HUGE deal!

!

New summer hours to start May 1st.

Prom &amp; Sock Hop

Over6roo f(!R.f,na6i£itation Center

Saturday# May .16 8-12 pm

~rl:~
. .~
~
)"" '

!i

..

·.!
.

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~

.L~
{~

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~

'

NJii.Cefe.bration of.Lift»

Spo,.stirn/ by 'l'm•~ldmr Toun
&amp;: lhr O.ry .S lr-n (Juinut
wit.lr music from tlte .
4tJ's,.50's &amp; 60's

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QoiiPI• cii'ICI

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NOW AVAILABLE!

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aYailabiUty In both male and female rooms for short term, long
term and respite care. ·specialized therapy progranis to treat your physical,
occupational and speech therapy needs. If you are interested in additional
admission information or· to set up a tour, please contact .the. Admissions .
Department by calling 740-992-6472.

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Adn.l r'on: S'IS,., IMrton
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MOOSE LODGE ·
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Pw-W

Money Is tight and bills need to be paid. For small illnesses, why go to~
Emettency Room or an Urgent Care service just to get home and find a
biB WJiting for you1. You need help. you need it now and you need It cheap.

That Is wflere we come in.
For a $39 basic office visit one can be seen by our nurse practitioner
and be on your~·

No bills sent to your house ... no hassle. Ju$1 pay before you leave and
. spend the rest of 1Rf worrying about something other than your heilth.

Ohio Qilickcwe ... Fast. fritnd~ and Allordable Heilthcare.

,Ill:
......,.,_,Ftlliiida-..getu tw.b .

Sunday, Apri126, 2009

Society's book wins local history award

""

~~~.. · ·

I•

ON THE BOOKSHELF;

PageCs

333 Page Street
Middleport, Ohio 45674
www.overbrookrehabilitationcenter.com

-.-uno ·

•

,

.

Monda)'. Friday: 9 am to 7 pm I Saturday: I() am to 4 pm. / Sunday. I0 am to 2 pm .

www.ohioqulckcare.com
Lc J'rd · 30\ '"""c· q,,&lt;:, R".1d 1'Jcx: '" :l·c Go .Jcr Cor"al'1 1n G,:lrpolrs and
Ew11 Center Surte 4 73 I Ea~t "'arr Street 1n Jackwn

'

'

�•

..

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
s:
'Bruno ' rFunny People' highlight summer CQmedie_
'

iunbap ltmes -ientintl

Sunday, April26, 2009

'

Bv JAKE CovLE

"The Office" and now to
more movies . This summer. he also has a part in
NEW YORK (AP) - As "The Goods: Live Hard,
much. as tentpole action Sell Hard" (Aug. 14) and
films dominate the summer, makes an appearance in the
comedies. roo. are a sraple cameo-stuffed
sequel:
llf the season.
"Night at the M~seum:
In wai(n summer nights, Battle of the SmithSonian"
waves of cackling have long (May 22).
.
floated out of r,nultiplexes
·'The Goods," which is.
playing
"Caddyshack," produced by Ferrell and
"There's Something Abour. Adam McKay, slars Jeremy
~ary" or "The 40· Year-Old Piven, Ving Rhames and
Virgin."
James Brolin.
· Judd Apatow · recalls
Other anticipated comegoing wirh his summer dies this summer:
camp lo see Bill Murray in
• "Extract," Sept. 4: The
~'Stnpes" as "one of rhe
Mike Judge ("Beavis and
&amp;reat momenls. of my enlire Butt-Head,"
"Office
Space") comedy stars Mila
jife."
: "There are a lol of gigan- Kunis, Ben Affleck, Jason
tic movies wilh budgets Bateman and Krisren Wiig.
well over $100 million !hat
• "Wharever Works," June ·
come out during !he sum- 19: WoO&lt;Iy Allen returned to
mer,"
said
Apatow. New York to shoot this film,
~'There's a lot of excitestarring
Larry
David
JDent and spectacle. Bur I
think people also enjoy
i!omething less intense and
fun and funny."
. Apatow has become a
summertime regular, having directed "Knocked Up"
11nd produced "Superbad"
and "Stepbrothers" - all
of which, he notes. benefited from coming out late in
the season when people
were ''a little burnt-out" by
the blockbuslers.
On July 31, he'll release
"Funny People," starring
Adam Sandler as a stand-up ·
comedian who finds our he
has a termina'l disease. Seth
Rogen co-stars.
"It's a human comedy," ·
said Afatow. "It's about the
norma struggles that people
face in their lives·. It's funny
and relatable."
Apatow also produced
"Year One" (June 19);
which
Harold
Ramis
~"Groundhog
Dog,''
:'Analyze Thai") directed. It
1;tars Jack Black and
Michael Cera as Roman
Empire era wa.nderers with
girl problems.
·
It's noi the only .timetJ'llvehng com~cjy this summer. In "Land of the .Lost"
Uune 5), adapted from the
:campy '70s TV series, Will .
ferrell plays a scientist
who leads h1s team (including
Danny
McBride)
through a time warp and
into an alternate dimension .
where dinosaurs (among
other things) exist.
Then, there's yet another
alter ego of Sacha Baron
Cohen's.
: On July 10, he returns
with "Bruno," the lone film
this year with an umlaut that
American moviegoers are
filcely to flock to.
·
·
: "Bruno" is Cohen's follow-up to "Bora!," which in
2006 earned more than
$12S million at the domesJic box office and caused a
cultu(al stir. In "Bruno,"
Cohen again flings a character- from his TV series
'1Da Ali G Show" into the
real world, where director
Larry Charles' cameras cap- ,,
· JUre his interactions with ·
~mingly unknowing citi.
.
Jens.
~ · The culture clash of his
~ay
Austrian
fashion
reporter might be . even
g_reater . than that of his
~azakh journalist. Just as
:entertaining will be the
~ideshow of Cohen's incharacter interviews and the
possible ensuing lawsuits
{which
resulted
after
'$orat").
· Coming June 5 with less
fanfare and star wattage is
:'The Hangover," about a
group of friends who find
themselves trying to put the
pieces together after a wild
Las Vegas night. Starring
Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms
and Zach Galifianakis as a
trio of groomsmen looking
!or !heir missing friend. it's
11 kind of "Dude, Where's
My Buddy?"
·:. "It sticks to a very simple detective format,
almost like a mystery. like
a Hardy Boys kind of
thing,"
said
Helms.·
:'You're trying to figure
out with the main charact~rs exactly what hap~ned."
· Such summer comedies
afford actors and comedians ·
a chance to turn a small part
lJr a cameo into a career
preakthrough. (Remember
Mcl.ovin?)
· · "The Hangover" is the
first major movie role for
Helms , who graduated
ftom "The Daily Show" to
AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITE A

j

.

•

Dl

:INSIDE
Down on the Farm, Page Dl

~.P~D3 '

.·..
·.

+· '

~unday, April26,

•

2009

Reusable shopping·bags1come of age
Bv JENNIFER

cent grocery-store totes will conservation ·is made from
. do. But maybe you'd like a canvas and juie, and fealittle more bling in your tures the WWF's tradeiiilUk
A lot of folks have moved l)ag? Then this list is for panda bear.
·
·
beyond the "paJ&gt;J:r vs. plas- you.
http :1/www. worldtic" grocery bag debate,
•••
wildlife .org
having settled on neiU!er.
The Recycled Denim Toie
...
. Today, there are so many ·($95, MoMA Store), from . Tile "This Bag is
other bags from which to the gift shop afthe Museum Garbage" Tote ($44.95,
choose, made from materi- of ~odern Art in New York, Original Good) rums trashy
als both familiar and unusu- Is made· from r'epurposed . into irendy: It's made in·
al. at ·f.rice points both denim collCGted by a South New Delhi, India, from
affordab e 1\Dd astronomicaL Korean · non-profit group · plastl{:-bag litter, .which ·is
It appears everyone thatpromotes recycling and · melted down and handcraftfrom · grocery stores . to slistainability.. It comes in .• ed into these totes. ·
online sellers - w~ts in on black or bfue .(selected at . http:·liwww.originalgood.c
this eco-friendly game. J'lllld0111). ·
· om or http:llwww.worldofNonprofits have jumped
http://momastore.org
good;com
into the fray, trading sturdy
•••
•••
totes for donations.
The medium or large to(e ·t This grocery bag.($24 .95,
For the shopper, it's a ($51') . · donation, Worl(l . 'Bazura S~op) Is made from
matter of how much to Wildlife Fund) bffered by recycled JUICe boxes at a
spend and where .
this ·non-prOfit group that · women's cooperative in the
For many, the sturdy, 99-. champions wildlife and !ani! Philippines.
·
FoRKER

·FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photos

In this film publicity image released by Warner Bros., Zach
Galifianakis, left, Bradley Cooper, center, and Ed Helms
are shown in a scene from, "The Hangover."

In this film publicity image released by Universal Pictures,
actors, from left, Leslie Marin. Adam Sandier, Seth Rogen
and Eric Bana are.shown .in a scene "Funny People:•

("Seinfeld," "Curb Your . Rocked," Aug. 2~: Richard about a 196os illeg~l radio The Wayans brothers sati·
Enthusiasm") .
Curtis ("Love Actually") · station.
..rize the recent slew of dance
• "The
Boat Thai directs !his period comedy
• "Dance Flick," May 22: films like "Step Up."

.

·•.

·,

......
-~·

'

.;.

'

•

· AP photos

:Fhis
undated
photo
released by the World
Wildlife Fund shows the
iiatural jute .and canvas tote:
'J'he medium or large tote is
made from canvas and jute,
and feature$ the WWF's
tiad~mark panda bear.

Value
. Piwtectioa lor.
four Velticlt

http: l/www.bazurashop .c
om

.•••

Each of these four ·
reusable bags touts an ecological message ($5 .99 each
or $18.99 for all four, Green
Concept Online), including
this one: "Plastic bags take
1,000 years to degrade . This ·
bag won'!."
.
http://www.greenconcep-'
tonline .com

...

· This grocery tote ($25,
Green With Envy) is mope
from recycled adverlisiilg
banners, such as those from
past AFI Film Festivals. The
company also can mal&lt;;e
totes from banners that cus.tamers provide.
. http:l!www.greenwithenvy.com

This . product · image
released by Original Good
shows the "This · Bag Is ·
Garbage" l'ote. The "This
B!!Q is Garba~e· Tote turns
trashy int9 trendy: It's made
in New Delhi, India, from
plastic-bag IItier, which is
melted down and himdcrafted into these totes.

........
'
•ontla ,.,....
.

·protection for

�•

..

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT
s:
'Bruno ' rFunny People' highlight summer CQmedie_
'

iunbap ltmes -ientintl

Sunday, April26, 2009

'

Bv JAKE CovLE

"The Office" and now to
more movies . This summer. he also has a part in
NEW YORK (AP) - As "The Goods: Live Hard,
much. as tentpole action Sell Hard" (Aug. 14) and
films dominate the summer, makes an appearance in the
comedies. roo. are a sraple cameo-stuffed
sequel:
llf the season.
"Night at the M~seum:
In wai(n summer nights, Battle of the SmithSonian"
waves of cackling have long (May 22).
.
floated out of r,nultiplexes
·'The Goods," which is.
playing
"Caddyshack," produced by Ferrell and
"There's Something Abour. Adam McKay, slars Jeremy
~ary" or "The 40· Year-Old Piven, Ving Rhames and
Virgin."
James Brolin.
· Judd Apatow · recalls
Other anticipated comegoing wirh his summer dies this summer:
camp lo see Bill Murray in
• "Extract," Sept. 4: The
~'Stnpes" as "one of rhe
Mike Judge ("Beavis and
&amp;reat momenls. of my enlire Butt-Head,"
"Office
Space") comedy stars Mila
jife."
: "There are a lol of gigan- Kunis, Ben Affleck, Jason
tic movies wilh budgets Bateman and Krisren Wiig.
well over $100 million !hat
• "Wharever Works," June ·
come out during !he sum- 19: WoO&lt;Iy Allen returned to
mer,"
said
Apatow. New York to shoot this film,
~'There's a lot of excitestarring
Larry
David
JDent and spectacle. Bur I
think people also enjoy
i!omething less intense and
fun and funny."
. Apatow has become a
summertime regular, having directed "Knocked Up"
11nd produced "Superbad"
and "Stepbrothers" - all
of which, he notes. benefited from coming out late in
the season when people
were ''a little burnt-out" by
the blockbuslers.
On July 31, he'll release
"Funny People," starring
Adam Sandler as a stand-up ·
comedian who finds our he
has a termina'l disease. Seth
Rogen co-stars.
"It's a human comedy," ·
said Afatow. "It's about the
norma struggles that people
face in their lives·. It's funny
and relatable."
Apatow also produced
"Year One" (June 19);
which
Harold
Ramis
~"Groundhog
Dog,''
:'Analyze Thai") directed. It
1;tars Jack Black and
Michael Cera as Roman
Empire era wa.nderers with
girl problems.
·
It's noi the only .timetJ'llvehng com~cjy this summer. In "Land of the .Lost"
Uune 5), adapted from the
:campy '70s TV series, Will .
ferrell plays a scientist
who leads h1s team (including
Danny
McBride)
through a time warp and
into an alternate dimension .
where dinosaurs (among
other things) exist.
Then, there's yet another
alter ego of Sacha Baron
Cohen's.
: On July 10, he returns
with "Bruno," the lone film
this year with an umlaut that
American moviegoers are
filcely to flock to.
·
·
: "Bruno" is Cohen's follow-up to "Bora!," which in
2006 earned more than
$12S million at the domesJic box office and caused a
cultu(al stir. In "Bruno,"
Cohen again flings a character- from his TV series
'1Da Ali G Show" into the
real world, where director
Larry Charles' cameras cap- ,,
· JUre his interactions with ·
~mingly unknowing citi.
.
Jens.
~ · The culture clash of his
~ay
Austrian
fashion
reporter might be . even
g_reater . than that of his
~azakh journalist. Just as
:entertaining will be the
~ideshow of Cohen's incharacter interviews and the
possible ensuing lawsuits
{which
resulted
after
'$orat").
· Coming June 5 with less
fanfare and star wattage is
:'The Hangover," about a
group of friends who find
themselves trying to put the
pieces together after a wild
Las Vegas night. Starring
Bradley Cooper, Ed Helms
and Zach Galifianakis as a
trio of groomsmen looking
!or !heir missing friend. it's
11 kind of "Dude, Where's
My Buddy?"
·:. "It sticks to a very simple detective format,
almost like a mystery. like
a Hardy Boys kind of
thing,"
said
Helms.·
:'You're trying to figure
out with the main charact~rs exactly what hap~ned."
· Such summer comedies
afford actors and comedians ·
a chance to turn a small part
lJr a cameo into a career
preakthrough. (Remember
Mcl.ovin?)
· · "The Hangover" is the
first major movie role for
Helms , who graduated
ftom "The Daily Show" to
AP ENTERTAINMENT WRITE A

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:INSIDE
Down on the Farm, Page Dl

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~unday, April26,

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2009

Reusable shopping·bags1come of age
Bv JENNIFER

cent grocery-store totes will conservation ·is made from
. do. But maybe you'd like a canvas and juie, and fealittle more bling in your tures the WWF's tradeiiilUk
A lot of folks have moved l)ag? Then this list is for panda bear.
·
·
beyond the "paJ&gt;J:r vs. plas- you.
http :1/www. worldtic" grocery bag debate,
•••
wildlife .org
having settled on neiU!er.
The Recycled Denim Toie
...
. Today, there are so many ·($95, MoMA Store), from . Tile "This Bag is
other bags from which to the gift shop afthe Museum Garbage" Tote ($44.95,
choose, made from materi- of ~odern Art in New York, Original Good) rums trashy
als both familiar and unusu- Is made· from r'epurposed . into irendy: It's made in·
al. at ·f.rice points both denim collCGted by a South New Delhi, India, from
affordab e 1\Dd astronomicaL Korean · non-profit group · plastl{:-bag litter, .which ·is
It appears everyone thatpromotes recycling and · melted down and handcraftfrom · grocery stores . to slistainability.. It comes in .• ed into these totes. ·
online sellers - w~ts in on black or bfue .(selected at . http:·liwww.originalgood.c
this eco-friendly game. J'lllld0111). ·
· om or http:llwww.worldofNonprofits have jumped
http://momastore.org
good;com
into the fray, trading sturdy
•••
•••
totes for donations.
The medium or large to(e ·t This grocery bag.($24 .95,
For the shopper, it's a ($51') . · donation, Worl(l . 'Bazura S~op) Is made from
matter of how much to Wildlife Fund) bffered by recycled JUICe boxes at a
spend and where .
this ·non-prOfit group that · women's cooperative in the
For many, the sturdy, 99-. champions wildlife and !ani! Philippines.
·
FoRKER

·FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

AP photos

In this film publicity image released by Warner Bros., Zach
Galifianakis, left, Bradley Cooper, center, and Ed Helms
are shown in a scene from, "The Hangover."

In this film publicity image released by Universal Pictures,
actors, from left, Leslie Marin. Adam Sandier, Seth Rogen
and Eric Bana are.shown .in a scene "Funny People:•

("Seinfeld," "Curb Your . Rocked," Aug. 2~: Richard about a 196os illeg~l radio The Wayans brothers sati·
Enthusiasm") .
Curtis ("Love Actually") · station.
..rize the recent slew of dance
• "The
Boat Thai directs !his period comedy
• "Dance Flick," May 22: films like "Step Up."

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· AP photos

:Fhis
undated
photo
released by the World
Wildlife Fund shows the
iiatural jute .and canvas tote:
'J'he medium or large tote is
made from canvas and jute,
and feature$ the WWF's
tiad~mark panda bear.

Value
. Piwtectioa lor.
four Velticlt

http: l/www.bazurashop .c
om

.•••

Each of these four ·
reusable bags touts an ecological message ($5 .99 each
or $18.99 for all four, Green
Concept Online), including
this one: "Plastic bags take
1,000 years to degrade . This ·
bag won'!."
.
http://www.greenconcep-'
tonline .com

...

· This grocery tote ($25,
Green With Envy) is mope
from recycled adverlisiilg
banners, such as those from
past AFI Film Festivals. The
company also can mal&lt;;e
totes from banners that cus.tamers provide.
. http:l!www.greenwithenvy.com

This . product · image
released by Original Good
shows the "This · Bag Is ·
Garbage" l'ote. The "This
B!!Q is Garba~e· Tote turns
trashy int9 trendy: It's made
in New Delhi, India, from
plastic-bag IItier, which is
melted down and himdcrafted into these totes.

........
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•ontla ,.,....
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·protection for

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j,unbap Qt:tnres -ienttne(

OWN ON THE.FARM '
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PageD2

-EXTENSION CORNER-

Place hummingbird
feeders out in yard
Bv HAL

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Do you have woody invasive plants, i.e., multi-llo'Yer
rose Mexican bamboo, autumn olive or honeysuckle vme
'
in your backyard?
. . .
..
Now is a great time to begin controlling 1!. Start th1s .
spring with cutting it back to the ·ground as It begms to
sprouts. It used stored overwintered energy fro~ 1ts root
system to initiate this new growt, .. When you cut 1t off you
weaken the plant. It will re-sprout ..yith ~ore stalks but the
plant is &lt;~..lot weaken due to tappmg uilo 1ts energy. reserves.
Cut off the new growth as it reacbes the two foot s1ze. Allo:-"
it to sprout one more time then either re-cut the sprouts agam
or apply a translocated herbicide l~e glyp~o~te ~ound Up).
The herbiCide may have to . ~ apphed agam m nud August to
any stra:y sprouts that appear m the area. Remember tJ:tat established weed beds have severlli years of seed m the soil so con·
tinue to cut back or hoe out any riew seedlings.
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• Although it may be warm, remember that we may have a
killing frost in May.
. ·
·
·
Tender annuals .and non hardy perennials like cannas and
dahlias need to be planted outside when there is less of a
chance of frost, walt until we get closer to Mother's Day.
Gardens near the Ohio River and Shade River may not get
frosted due to the heat released from the water during cold
mornings however the rest of us on hilltops and away from
the ·rivers have a good chance of a killing frost.
·
True warm season crops like vinca (periwirikle), basil,
pumpkins, squash and melons need night temperatures abov€;
60 degrees to grow properly. Don't plant these crops too soon
or you may find yourself replanung them agam. Contamenzed
gardening may be for you early planters as you can move them
. mtO a more protected place like.a garage or porch.
:
· Enjoy this spring weather, soon it will be summer and too
wartn to work outdoors in the afte$000.
Submitted photo
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs County Agric!!lture and Natural
· T~o Ohio 4-H volunteers. Ethel Lois Smith of Berlin Heights, Erie County, and Dorothy Toler of Bidwell, Gallia c ·aunty,. Reiource Educator, Ohio State·UniversiJy Exrension).
seen from left in the front row, were recently honored for marking their 50 years of serv!ce to the Ohio 4-H program in
··.
2008. They were given their awards during the Bob.Evans Farms Ohio 4-H Voi!Jnteer Recognition Luncheon·on March.14
at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. The recognition luncheon was part of all all-day 4-H volunteer education.
· conference. In the back row are Keith Smith, director of Ohio State University Extel!ltlon, Karen Corcoran, president of
the Ohio 4-H Foundation, and Bobby Moser, vice president of agriculture administration and dean of tne College of Food,
Agriculture and Environmental Sciences at Ohio State UniversHy.
GALLIPOUS - United Producers Inc. market

livESTOCK REPORT

NM management areas battle noxious~ costly weeds ·
small, and the best way . is
early detection."
·
Gonzales · and Tony
. Valdez. Rio Arriba County
extension agent with New
Mexico State University,
work with landowners to
identify noxious weeds and
advise how to control them.
Valdez said private
landowners can rent equipment through the management areas to do necessary
plowing or spraying to keep
noxious weeds under control.
Wanstall said awareness
is key to preventing declining land .value and productivity for farmers. . For
example, they. need to pay
attentiOn to the .hay they buy
and wash down equipment
when moYing from · one
field .to another. . .
Thi's year, Wanstall and
his colleagues contracted

with NMSU's Spatial
Applicaiions · Research
Center to set up a database
to . collect information and
find our how much acreage
is affected by noxious
weeds and what specific
species are involved.
He hopes the database
wi II be ready for management areas this summer.
· Quintana said one the best ·
ways to combat noxipus
weeds is to get neighbors to
work together.
,
. "We can kill it off every
five years, but the biggest
problem is the neighbor that
doesn't take care of it. It
will end up on our property,'' he said. . .
· ·
Quintana said he thinks
·it's possible ·to eradicate
noxious weeds in his area.
"It certainly would make
things a lot e11sier for me,".
he said. ·

report from. Gallipolis for ·sales conducted on
.Wednesdayi1\pril22.
. .
·

spurts throughout the growing season, and along their
stems have many latent
You don't have to look far buds just waiting to be
to find homes whose awakene\1 when the stem is
entrances, windows and cut back. Cut back ye~
very walls are being gob- · when and where you want,
bled up by yews and and new sprouts will grow
junipers planted along the out along whatever stubs
foundations .
·
remain. The same can be
· Nothing wrong wirh · said for hemlock, firs,
most
evergreens planted near . arborvitae
and
,_, house walls - the plants junipers.
do soften that transition . Whorled .
branching
between the wall and the . conifers generally have
ground. But when a few few latent buds on leafless
years of neglect . turns . parts of stems, so do not
these plants mro ommous , grow again when cur back .
billo.v.;in~ masses of green- severely. And, as growth
ery, 1t s ume to take out the begins, each bud is already
prumng tools .
.
programmed for the single
. Unless .your goal IS to kill flush of growth it will
the plants - cutting stems make for that season.
to the ground, grubbing out Therefore. don't expect a
roots , and replanting - you whorled branching conifer
have to be careful about to grow again from where
how much and where you you cut it back to old
cut evergreens . These plants wood.
vary in their tolerance to
severe pruning, and the
BROADLEAF
right cut can spell the differEVER~REENS
ence between a plant that is
Not all evergreens have
butchered , even dead, and needle-like leaves; so-called
one that is pleasing to look broadleaf evergreens, which
at.
inc! ude plants such as
rhododendron , mountain
· DIFFERENT HABITS,
,laurel, Oregon grape holly
SAME POINTY LEAVES
and pieris, have wide
• Take · a look at conifers, leaves.
that group of evergreens
These plants generally
with .needle-like leaves .. You will iiend up vigorous new
will notice two kinds of growth whether a stem or
branching patterns. Junipers even the whole plant is cut
and yews are examples of back severely. There are
conifers that branch ran- exceptions, though, such as
domly. Contrast that with rhododendrons
having
pines and spruces, whose smooth bark.
branches are arranged in
whorls at discrete intervals
CUTTIN~ PLANTS
along tl\eir trunks and
DOWN TO SIZE
~terns.
·
· The quickest way to bring
Generally,
random down 'the size of any evert&gt;ranching conifers are more . g'reen that respro
. tits readily
tolerant of being. "!antonly 1s to merely lop the wh()le
hacked back than are plant to near ground level. I~
horledbranching conifers. will look forlorn for two,
hat's because random perhaps three years as it fills
ranching conifers grow in m . . Fueled by the large,
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FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KNEEN

...

·ARE EVERGREENS EATING YOUR HOUSE? Weather
Prune with care
ca1·a•nities and
how to prepare.
for them
BY LEE REICH

Spring must be here. Ruby throated hummingbirds h~ve
been spotted in our area having re~ fu;m a wmtervacauon
in South America. So place the hunurungbird feeders out m the
yard. You 'II soon have visitors enjoying the sugary syrup and
giving you the devil when you allow 11 to run out of syrup. ·
· Many homeowners have called about their rhubarb plants
already going to seed. Remember tO cut the flower heads as soon
as they appear. They sap the energy from the rh.u~ plant. Keep
~two foot.away from the plant and mulch 1t With two to fow:
mches of manure compost. This keeps the plant roots cool dur,
ing the sununer and provides nutrients for the tbubarb plant. ·

ers, the chal)enge lies in
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
keeping noxious weeds out
of crops, fields and liveALBUQUERQUE, N.M. stock forage. Invasive
Rio Arriba County weeds ca.n mean lost revrancher Delfin Quintana enue.
remembers buying huy for
"That cost can come in two
· his cattle several years ago. forms: tile cost of eliminating
It wasn 't long before the 80- and controlling the .weed and
year-old realized he got the cost of the loss of produc·
more· than he had ba~gained tion," Wanstall said. "If you
for with those bundles.
want grass to feed cattle , it
Noxious · weeds started can interfere with production
popping up on the range of that forage. And some of
where his family · has the (noxious) . plants are
. ranched for more than a toxic, and that's another way
· century.
you can suffer losses. They
"That's where it all start- can kill ·an animal ... aild ·
ed. Then the seeds spread humans," he said.
and you're 'dispersing it
Toma&amp; Gonzales, district
when you're putting (the conservationis.t with ..the
hay) out ·ror the cattle," Natural
Resources
Quintana said. "The prob- l:onservation Service in
lem, it's bad .... The weeds tspanola. · said invasive
are very dominant and weeds can also rob fields of
aggressive. They take over · nutrients, water and pestiother plants."
cides and result in crops that
Soil and water conserva- are not as desirable at martion . districts have teamed ket.
up with federaL state and
Quintana said it's expenlocal land management sive to battle the weeds on
agencies to create noxious his land .
weed management ari!as
"The herbicide we're
throughout New Mexico. using is very ·expensive,
Currently, 14 cooperative around $400-and-some dolweed management areas lars per gallon. and you use
have been created &gt;n 17 around a . gallon every six
counties.
acres. And I have to pay for
Management areas are that.'' he said.
sprouting as quickly as the
The most critical first step
weeds they 're working to ih attacking the weeds is to
battle.
correctly identify the plant, ·
Three years ago . the state. learn about its growing
had only four noxious weed habits and contact weed
management areas. By the · management a1'eas for nssisend of this summer. the tance, Gonzales said .. ,
number will increase to·
Based on the. plant's
around 17. said Jim growi.ng habits, manage-.
Wanstall , Los Lunas-based nlent approaches
can
state noxious weed coordi- include spraying, mowing,
nator for the New Mexico plowing. planting a competDepartment of Agriculture. itive grass to choke ounhe
Battling invasive weeds is plants. or rotating crops .
the bane of landowners and
"lr depends on the situaagencies, from national tion. Each one of the plants ·
forests to farmland to back- grow differentlx," Gonzales
yards across the country.
said . "EradicatiOn is possiFor agricultural produc- ble if the infestations are

Sunday, April26, 2009

'

4-H volunteer recognition

BY MELANIE DABOVICH

GARDENING

.iunba!J limes ·itntintl

· Sunday, April 26, 2009

PageD3

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Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs, $500-$950; a'red Cows, $325-$725;
Baby Calves, $10-$310; Goats, $25-$44; Hogs, $40-$45.

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pare for them:

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• Hurricanes: Use plants that are wind and salt toler-

ant. Natives are best for wetter areas, such as palms, ·
cypress and magnolia trees. Containerized plants can be
moved indoors quickly. Prune overhanging limbs from
large trees; stake smaller ones . Pick up or secure ~ny
~arden debris or ornaments that can become proJectiles
10 high winds.
·
.
• Flooding: Lawns take a beating from floods. Grass
ca~ survive several days un~er w~ter in early . spring,
wh1le the ground 1s st.1ll thawmg and before growth has
begun. But standing water on hot summer days wi.ll
cause significant damage. Pending generally occurs 10
· low, poorly drained areas after the high water has receded. Take note of those locations and re-shape them.
Reseed or re-sod where the grass has been killed.
Quickly and carefully· remove any silt dropped ·by
floodwaters.
.
• Tornadoes: Soften your landscaping. Unless you're
in a wildfire-prone zone, replace crushed rock and pebbles used as protective mulch with shredded bark. That
could lessen structural damage should it be thrown into
APphoto the air.
· ·
A man shears his hedges Monday April6 in Warren, Rhode
• Wildfires: The ·amount of cleared SP.~ce around a
Island.
home is directly related to the home's ab1hty to surv1ve
a wildfire, the Colorado State Forest Service says.
Create ·fire-safe vegetatioll·. Mow grasses I ow around
existing roots system·. how- years cuta few larger lirnbs structures. Plant flowers m w1dely separated beds;
ever, 11ew ·growth will be back to their ot:igins or to Shrubs can be "ladder fuels,'' enabling fires to spread, sn
side branches within the plant them well away from one another and far from
rapid.
Another approach to mak- canopy. This removes a lot trees . You don't need to clear-cut your property, but
ing an overgrown evergreen of wood with just a few prune branches at least 10 feet above the ground and dis ~
smaller is to lower ·it gradu- cuts, and pruning stubs are tance trees. from structures.
.
ally. That takes a little hidden in the plant canopy
• Hail: Protect rrized plants with a shelter or cover.
longer, but avoids that two rather than staring out from Plants that the hai has stripped of leaves generally will
or . three years of desolate the edge.
grow back. Plants with pounded stems, however, may '!ot.
appearance.
· Occasional re!1Joval of a Wait a few days to see 1f they appear to be recovenn11
Gradual lowering is al~o few large limbs is also a before re-planting or calling it a season. Hail-damaged fru11
the method of choice if a good way to bring down the should be/icked and discarded before it rots and attrac~s
plant Is particularly vahi- size of an overgrown insects an other garden pests. Flowers hammered by hall
able and you have any .whorled branching conifer. ·may survive, especially if they're among the varieties.,that
·
doubts about. its ability to Even without regrowth, need deadheading.
resproilt after severe prun· pruning stubs are at least
•Icing: First rc:rrdve trees with da~ag~d root syste~s ing.
·
hidden, and if you · choose. any that are leanmg or have fallen . Ehm~nate broken lu:nbs
To gradually · reduce the your cuts carefully, your still attached to trees. Prune trees extens1vely 1f they m1ght
size of an overgrown ever· plant can retain a pleasing becorne hazards with the next storm·. And there will. be a
next storm.
green, each year for a few form.

·BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

.

.',

Hidden View
' · Amish Bakery

Hidden View
.Rustic Log Furniture·
Amish Built

Pies, Bread,

Cookies, Donuts

.

82 Deckard Ad. Bidwell, OH
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.

'.'

7AM· 5 PM

.,

Upcoming specials: .
Ohio approved feeder sale, I0 a.m. Wednesday, May 20.
For more information, call DeWayne at (740) 3390~41 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at
www.uproducers.com . .

A look at some kinds of severe weather and how to pre.

•

.Cows-Steady
Well-Muscled/Fleshed, $45-$55.
Medium/Lean, $40-$45,
Thin/Light, $30-$40.
Bulls, $55-$70.
·

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

Feeder Cattle-Ste~dy
· 275-415lbs., Steers, $75-$115, Heifers, $70-$99;
425-525 lbs., Steers, $75-$114, Heifers, $70~$95; 550625 lbs., Steers, $75-$100, Heifers, $70-$88; 650-725
lbs., Steers, $75-$95, Heifers, $70-$85; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$90, Heifers, $70-$84.

BY DEAN FOSDICK

•

•
. ••·

Fund Raiser
PUBLIC WELCOME
Senior Citizens Center
Tues. April 26th
Dinmier Spm - 7pm $5.00

82 Deckard Rd. Bidwell, OH
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.
7AM·5 PM

O'Dell True Value Lumber
GAF:Elk Shingles $59.97/sq.
· Quantities limited to stock on hand
Roof top Delivery available
61 Vine St Open M-F 7-6: Sal. S.S; Sun. 104

Evans Family Sale

BASKET BINGO

May 1st &amp; 2nd 9-5
. At Jewell Evans Mill
on Rodney Plk~ 850.Bidwell
Serving Steve Evans Sausage
take a box home!
.
Featuring Bob Evans
Ball Hats!

Gallipolis Youth
Wrestling Team
Monday, Apiil 27

Doors open 5:30pm
Games.start 6:00 pm
3319 St. At. 141
(Beside the Jumbo)

O'Dell True Value Lumber
Stiht Chain Saws, Starting at
$189.95 Full time repair ~hop
Parts &amp; Service Available
61 Vrne St•.Open M·F 7·8: Sat. 8-5; Sun. 10.4

Hoi Dogs, Baked Beans, ·

Potato Salad. Deserts and Drinks.
Free Health Fair by
Holzer Medical Center

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
THIS PROJECT IS
OPEN TO ALL BID'
DERS:
Bide will be received
by the Malga County
Commloalonera lithe
olflcH Of ·Panlch· +
Noel Archltoctt, 507
Richland Avenue, Butte
. 301, Athena, OH 45701,
for the following prol·
ect: ·
ADDITION AND ALTER·
ATIONS CARLETON
SCHOOL 1310 CAR·
LETON STREET SYRA·
CUSE, OHIO 45n9
In accordance with the
Drawlnga and Spectfl·
catlono prepared by:
Panich; Noel + AIIOCI·
aiel Archltoctt and En·
glneere 507 Richland
Avenue, Suite 301
Athena OH 45701
Telephone: 74ttl582'
242Q Telefu: 741t1592-

3824

·

Uon within ten (II
daya of the bid .oper
lng; MJ!erlll auppllor
and aubcontractor
may purchaae aeto 1
their own expenae to
$100.00 per aet, plu
ohlpplng:
·The bidding' ciOcL
menta rnay be • "
viewed
• durin
bualneaa houra at th
following locatlono:
Panlch, Noel + ,\Jaoc
atH ArchltecW and Er
glnwa
507 Richland Avenu1
Suite 301 Athent 01
45701 ·
F. W. Dodge
1175 Dublin Ro•
CoiUmbul OH 43215 .
Bulldert Exchll'!tlt
8555 Rockalde 'Roec
Suite 300 Valloy VIe•
OH 44125
The Mtlga Count
Commlulonora eha
have lhe right to re[«

for a SIJindard shall be rejecl a Bid not occorr
~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~!~i
Any
propoaed
Equal any
or by
ill lillY
Bidsrequire
and 1
aubmlned
10 the Archl·
panted
5
~

Attention

Busin~ss

Owners ·

Free on-line business Listings
.o n

www.m.ydallytrlbune.co~

-;mydallyaentlnel.com.

-.m.ydallyreglater.com.

C&lt;J'&gt;Y to s.etup, upqrHdes·availableJ

We can help!
Simple. At'fordable. Et'fective.

Upgr~de ~?.~~!;!!!~!~,..~.!~...':.!~!~r'o~p!e~v~;;re!?~.~.;: .."~~~.~.(a~n~afly*
.

More online advertising opportunities &amp;re now avaUabte at
MyDellyTrlbun•. corn, MyD•IIySentlnet.corn and MyDallyRegl•t.-r- .COrtl .

Contact your ••••• coOault•nt to to he'l p you aet- up you FREE lletlng and more inforn1atlon ebout
Upgreded Bu•lneaa Ll•tlnge.

..
t!J;I}e

s~t:-up your
FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

~allipolis

Ca II now!

maill' tltribune

825 Third Averiu,e
GaUipolla, Ohio 45631 ·

740-446-2342

to

The' Daily Sentinel
1 11 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

740-992-2155

tll:be ~oint ~leuant l\rgilter
·

200 Mtaln Street
Point Pleaaant, 'VIN 25550

. 304-675-1333

teet no tater than ten ·bid -urlty or by othe
(111) daya prior to the data required . by lh
bid opening. If no Ad· 'Bidding Documents, o
danda Ia luued In at• to retect a Bid which I
eocletlon with. the .In any wty lncomplet
Blddtr'o requeJt. Tho or ll'fllllulllr.
propolled ~quat ahall (4) 18, 22, 2&amp;
beconaldlrld reJected.
Sealed bide will be,.._
cehred for:
Public Notice
Generel
Contract:
$247,000.1111
Sealed Bids will be IK
Plumbing . Contrect: cepted In the Galli
$18,000.00
County Commlaator
HVAC . .
Contrtct: era Office, 18 LOCUI '
$19,500.00
Street, Galllpolla, 01
Electrical
Contract: 45631 fort 200e Chev
$38,500.00
Uplender. Tho vtn ca
until May 6th, 2009 at be vltwed at the Gtlll
2:30 p.m. toctl tlmt, County Vtttn~na Sel
when they will be viet Office at 110
opened and read Jack10n Pike, Gllllpc
Ita between the hour
aloud.
A Pre-Bid Meeting will of 8:30 am to 4:30 pn .
be held on Wednesday, Monday • Friday. At
April 29th, 2009. at 3:00 aarva amounl on lh
p.m. at tha C.rteton ven htl been aet e
School.
. $3,000.00; for add
Bidding ·document• tlonallnforillatlon cor
may be Obtained by tact Veteran Servlc
placing a dopoalt Officer at 740-441-200!
check In the amount of Blda must be aubmll
$100.00 per aet, plus ted before the opanln·
lhlpplng, paytble to date of·Thureday Apr
Panlch, Noel + Aaaoc~ 30, 2009 at 11:00 am r
olea. No more than two the Gallla County Corr
(2) oa11 will be pro- rntsalonera Office. Bl·
vlded on a refundabto will be awarded Thurt .
besla. DeposiiJI are re- day May 7, 2009 •
fundable to PRIME 11 :00 am In the Galli
CONTACTORS ONLY County Comml..lor
and only II a bona fide ora Office, 18 Locua
bid Ia oubmltted and Street, Galllpollo.
documents ora re- Aprll19, 26, 2009
turned In gOOd condl·

�I

I

j,unbap Qt:tnres -ienttne(

OWN ON THE.FARM '
.

PageD2

-EXTENSION CORNER-

Place hummingbird
feeders out in yard
Bv HAL

.

.

Do you have woody invasive plants, i.e., multi-llo'Yer
rose Mexican bamboo, autumn olive or honeysuckle vme
'
in your backyard?
. . .
..
Now is a great time to begin controlling 1!. Start th1s .
spring with cutting it back to the ·ground as It begms to
sprouts. It used stored overwintered energy fro~ 1ts root
system to initiate this new growt, .. When you cut 1t off you
weaken the plant. It will re-sprout ..yith ~ore stalks but the
plant is &lt;~..lot weaken due to tappmg uilo 1ts energy. reserves.
Cut off the new growth as it reacbes the two foot s1ze. Allo:-"
it to sprout one more time then either re-cut the sprouts agam
or apply a translocated herbicide l~e glyp~o~te ~ound Up).
The herbiCide may have to . ~ apphed agam m nud August to
any stra:y sprouts that appear m the area. Remember tJ:tat established weed beds have severlli years of seed m the soil so con·
tinue to cut back or hoe out any riew seedlings.
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• Although it may be warm, remember that we may have a
killing frost in May.
. ·
·
·
Tender annuals .and non hardy perennials like cannas and
dahlias need to be planted outside when there is less of a
chance of frost, walt until we get closer to Mother's Day.
Gardens near the Ohio River and Shade River may not get
frosted due to the heat released from the water during cold
mornings however the rest of us on hilltops and away from
the ·rivers have a good chance of a killing frost.
·
True warm season crops like vinca (periwirikle), basil,
pumpkins, squash and melons need night temperatures abov€;
60 degrees to grow properly. Don't plant these crops too soon
or you may find yourself replanung them agam. Contamenzed
gardening may be for you early planters as you can move them
. mtO a more protected place like.a garage or porch.
:
· Enjoy this spring weather, soon it will be summer and too
wartn to work outdoors in the afte$000.
Submitted photo
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs County Agric!!lture and Natural
· T~o Ohio 4-H volunteers. Ethel Lois Smith of Berlin Heights, Erie County, and Dorothy Toler of Bidwell, Gallia c ·aunty,. Reiource Educator, Ohio State·UniversiJy Exrension).
seen from left in the front row, were recently honored for marking their 50 years of serv!ce to the Ohio 4-H program in
··.
2008. They were given their awards during the Bob.Evans Farms Ohio 4-H Voi!Jnteer Recognition Luncheon·on March.14
at the Greater Columbus Convention Center. The recognition luncheon was part of all all-day 4-H volunteer education.
· conference. In the back row are Keith Smith, director of Ohio State University Extel!ltlon, Karen Corcoran, president of
the Ohio 4-H Foundation, and Bobby Moser, vice president of agriculture administration and dean of tne College of Food,
Agriculture and Environmental Sciences at Ohio State UniversHy.
GALLIPOUS - United Producers Inc. market

livESTOCK REPORT

NM management areas battle noxious~ costly weeds ·
small, and the best way . is
early detection."
·
Gonzales · and Tony
. Valdez. Rio Arriba County
extension agent with New
Mexico State University,
work with landowners to
identify noxious weeds and
advise how to control them.
Valdez said private
landowners can rent equipment through the management areas to do necessary
plowing or spraying to keep
noxious weeds under control.
Wanstall said awareness
is key to preventing declining land .value and productivity for farmers. . For
example, they. need to pay
attentiOn to the .hay they buy
and wash down equipment
when moYing from · one
field .to another. . .
Thi's year, Wanstall and
his colleagues contracted

with NMSU's Spatial
Applicaiions · Research
Center to set up a database
to . collect information and
find our how much acreage
is affected by noxious
weeds and what specific
species are involved.
He hopes the database
wi II be ready for management areas this summer.
· Quintana said one the best ·
ways to combat noxipus
weeds is to get neighbors to
work together.
,
. "We can kill it off every
five years, but the biggest
problem is the neighbor that
doesn't take care of it. It
will end up on our property,'' he said. . .
· ·
Quintana said he thinks
·it's possible ·to eradicate
noxious weeds in his area.
"It certainly would make
things a lot e11sier for me,".
he said. ·

report from. Gallipolis for ·sales conducted on
.Wednesdayi1\pril22.
. .
·

spurts throughout the growing season, and along their
stems have many latent
You don't have to look far buds just waiting to be
to find homes whose awakene\1 when the stem is
entrances, windows and cut back. Cut back ye~
very walls are being gob- · when and where you want,
bled up by yews and and new sprouts will grow
junipers planted along the out along whatever stubs
foundations .
·
remain. The same can be
· Nothing wrong wirh · said for hemlock, firs,
most
evergreens planted near . arborvitae
and
,_, house walls - the plants junipers.
do soften that transition . Whorled .
branching
between the wall and the . conifers generally have
ground. But when a few few latent buds on leafless
years of neglect . turns . parts of stems, so do not
these plants mro ommous , grow again when cur back .
billo.v.;in~ masses of green- severely. And, as growth
ery, 1t s ume to take out the begins, each bud is already
prumng tools .
.
programmed for the single
. Unless .your goal IS to kill flush of growth it will
the plants - cutting stems make for that season.
to the ground, grubbing out Therefore. don't expect a
roots , and replanting - you whorled branching conifer
have to be careful about to grow again from where
how much and where you you cut it back to old
cut evergreens . These plants wood.
vary in their tolerance to
severe pruning, and the
BROADLEAF
right cut can spell the differEVER~REENS
ence between a plant that is
Not all evergreens have
butchered , even dead, and needle-like leaves; so-called
one that is pleasing to look broadleaf evergreens, which
at.
inc! ude plants such as
rhododendron , mountain
· DIFFERENT HABITS,
,laurel, Oregon grape holly
SAME POINTY LEAVES
and pieris, have wide
• Take · a look at conifers, leaves.
that group of evergreens
These plants generally
with .needle-like leaves .. You will iiend up vigorous new
will notice two kinds of growth whether a stem or
branching patterns. Junipers even the whole plant is cut
and yews are examples of back severely. There are
conifers that branch ran- exceptions, though, such as
domly. Contrast that with rhododendrons
having
pines and spruces, whose smooth bark.
branches are arranged in
whorls at discrete intervals
CUTTIN~ PLANTS
along tl\eir trunks and
DOWN TO SIZE
~terns.
·
· The quickest way to bring
Generally,
random down 'the size of any evert&gt;ranching conifers are more . g'reen that respro
. tits readily
tolerant of being. "!antonly 1s to merely lop the wh()le
hacked back than are plant to near ground level. I~
horledbranching conifers. will look forlorn for two,
hat's because random perhaps three years as it fills
ranching conifers grow in m . . Fueled by the large,
'
•
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

KNEEN

...

·ARE EVERGREENS EATING YOUR HOUSE? Weather
Prune with care
ca1·a•nities and
how to prepare.
for them
BY LEE REICH

Spring must be here. Ruby throated hummingbirds h~ve
been spotted in our area having re~ fu;m a wmtervacauon
in South America. So place the hunurungbird feeders out m the
yard. You 'II soon have visitors enjoying the sugary syrup and
giving you the devil when you allow 11 to run out of syrup. ·
· Many homeowners have called about their rhubarb plants
already going to seed. Remember tO cut the flower heads as soon
as they appear. They sap the energy from the rh.u~ plant. Keep
~two foot.away from the plant and mulch 1t With two to fow:
mches of manure compost. This keeps the plant roots cool dur,
ing the sununer and provides nutrients for the tbubarb plant. ·

ers, the chal)enge lies in
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
keeping noxious weeds out
of crops, fields and liveALBUQUERQUE, N.M. stock forage. Invasive
Rio Arriba County weeds ca.n mean lost revrancher Delfin Quintana enue.
remembers buying huy for
"That cost can come in two
· his cattle several years ago. forms: tile cost of eliminating
It wasn 't long before the 80- and controlling the .weed and
year-old realized he got the cost of the loss of produc·
more· than he had ba~gained tion," Wanstall said. "If you
for with those bundles.
want grass to feed cattle , it
Noxious · weeds started can interfere with production
popping up on the range of that forage. And some of
where his family · has the (noxious) . plants are
. ranched for more than a toxic, and that's another way
· century.
you can suffer losses. They
"That's where it all start- can kill ·an animal ... aild ·
ed. Then the seeds spread humans," he said.
and you're 'dispersing it
Toma&amp; Gonzales, district
when you're putting (the conservationis.t with ..the
hay) out ·ror the cattle," Natural
Resources
Quintana said. "The prob- l:onservation Service in
lem, it's bad .... The weeds tspanola. · said invasive
are very dominant and weeds can also rob fields of
aggressive. They take over · nutrients, water and pestiother plants."
cides and result in crops that
Soil and water conserva- are not as desirable at martion . districts have teamed ket.
up with federaL state and
Quintana said it's expenlocal land management sive to battle the weeds on
agencies to create noxious his land .
weed management ari!as
"The herbicide we're
throughout New Mexico. using is very ·expensive,
Currently, 14 cooperative around $400-and-some dolweed management areas lars per gallon. and you use
have been created &gt;n 17 around a . gallon every six
counties.
acres. And I have to pay for
Management areas are that.'' he said.
sprouting as quickly as the
The most critical first step
weeds they 're working to ih attacking the weeds is to
battle.
correctly identify the plant, ·
Three years ago . the state. learn about its growing
had only four noxious weed habits and contact weed
management areas. By the · management a1'eas for nssisend of this summer. the tance, Gonzales said .. ,
number will increase to·
Based on the. plant's
around 17. said Jim growi.ng habits, manage-.
Wanstall , Los Lunas-based nlent approaches
can
state noxious weed coordi- include spraying, mowing,
nator for the New Mexico plowing. planting a competDepartment of Agriculture. itive grass to choke ounhe
Battling invasive weeds is plants. or rotating crops .
the bane of landowners and
"lr depends on the situaagencies, from national tion. Each one of the plants ·
forests to farmland to back- grow differentlx," Gonzales
yards across the country.
said . "EradicatiOn is possiFor agricultural produc- ble if the infestations are

Sunday, April26, 2009

'

4-H volunteer recognition

BY MELANIE DABOVICH

GARDENING

.iunba!J limes ·itntintl

· Sunday, April 26, 2009

PageD3

I
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I
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f

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs, $500-$950; a'red Cows, $325-$725;
Baby Calves, $10-$310; Goats, $25-$44; Hogs, $40-$45.

,, .

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'

~·

,

'

pare for them:

'

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.

• Hurricanes: Use plants that are wind and salt toler-

ant. Natives are best for wetter areas, such as palms, ·
cypress and magnolia trees. Containerized plants can be
moved indoors quickly. Prune overhanging limbs from
large trees; stake smaller ones . Pick up or secure ~ny
~arden debris or ornaments that can become proJectiles
10 high winds.
·
.
• Flooding: Lawns take a beating from floods. Grass
ca~ survive several days un~er w~ter in early . spring,
wh1le the ground 1s st.1ll thawmg and before growth has
begun. But standing water on hot summer days wi.ll
cause significant damage. Pending generally occurs 10
· low, poorly drained areas after the high water has receded. Take note of those locations and re-shape them.
Reseed or re-sod where the grass has been killed.
Quickly and carefully· remove any silt dropped ·by
floodwaters.
.
• Tornadoes: Soften your landscaping. Unless you're
in a wildfire-prone zone, replace crushed rock and pebbles used as protective mulch with shredded bark. That
could lessen structural damage should it be thrown into
APphoto the air.
· ·
A man shears his hedges Monday April6 in Warren, Rhode
• Wildfires: The ·amount of cleared SP.~ce around a
Island.
home is directly related to the home's ab1hty to surv1ve
a wildfire, the Colorado State Forest Service says.
Create ·fire-safe vegetatioll·. Mow grasses I ow around
existing roots system·. how- years cuta few larger lirnbs structures. Plant flowers m w1dely separated beds;
ever, 11ew ·growth will be back to their ot:igins or to Shrubs can be "ladder fuels,'' enabling fires to spread, sn
side branches within the plant them well away from one another and far from
rapid.
Another approach to mak- canopy. This removes a lot trees . You don't need to clear-cut your property, but
ing an overgrown evergreen of wood with just a few prune branches at least 10 feet above the ground and dis ~
smaller is to lower ·it gradu- cuts, and pruning stubs are tance trees. from structures.
.
ally. That takes a little hidden in the plant canopy
• Hail: Protect rrized plants with a shelter or cover.
longer, but avoids that two rather than staring out from Plants that the hai has stripped of leaves generally will
or . three years of desolate the edge.
grow back. Plants with pounded stems, however, may '!ot.
appearance.
· Occasional re!1Joval of a Wait a few days to see 1f they appear to be recovenn11
Gradual lowering is al~o few large limbs is also a before re-planting or calling it a season. Hail-damaged fru11
the method of choice if a good way to bring down the should be/icked and discarded before it rots and attrac~s
plant Is particularly vahi- size of an overgrown insects an other garden pests. Flowers hammered by hall
able and you have any .whorled branching conifer. ·may survive, especially if they're among the varieties.,that
·
doubts about. its ability to Even without regrowth, need deadheading.
resproilt after severe prun· pruning stubs are at least
•Icing: First rc:rrdve trees with da~ag~d root syste~s ing.
·
hidden, and if you · choose. any that are leanmg or have fallen . Ehm~nate broken lu:nbs
To gradually · reduce the your cuts carefully, your still attached to trees. Prune trees extens1vely 1f they m1ght
size of an overgrown ever· plant can retain a pleasing becorne hazards with the next storm·. And there will. be a
next storm.
green, each year for a few form.

·BULLETIN BOARD
DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

.

.',

Hidden View
' · Amish Bakery

Hidden View
.Rustic Log Furniture·
Amish Built

Pies, Bread,

Cookies, Donuts

.

82 Deckard Ad. Bidwell, OH
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.

'.'

7AM· 5 PM

.,

Upcoming specials: .
Ohio approved feeder sale, I0 a.m. Wednesday, May 20.
For more information, call DeWayne at (740) 3390~41 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at
www.uproducers.com . .

A look at some kinds of severe weather and how to pre.

•

.Cows-Steady
Well-Muscled/Fleshed, $45-$55.
Medium/Lean, $40-$45,
Thin/Light, $30-$40.
Bulls, $55-$70.
·

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

.

Feeder Cattle-Ste~dy
· 275-415lbs., Steers, $75-$115, Heifers, $70-$99;
425-525 lbs., Steers, $75-$114, Heifers, $70~$95; 550625 lbs., Steers, $75-$100, Heifers, $70-$88; 650-725
lbs., Steers, $75-$95, Heifers, $70-$85; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$90, Heifers, $70-$84.

BY DEAN FOSDICK

•

•
. ••·

Fund Raiser
PUBLIC WELCOME
Senior Citizens Center
Tues. April 26th
Dinmier Spm - 7pm $5.00

82 Deckard Rd. Bidwell, OH
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT.
7AM·5 PM

O'Dell True Value Lumber
GAF:Elk Shingles $59.97/sq.
· Quantities limited to stock on hand
Roof top Delivery available
61 Vine St Open M-F 7-6: Sal. S.S; Sun. 104

Evans Family Sale

BASKET BINGO

May 1st &amp; 2nd 9-5
. At Jewell Evans Mill
on Rodney Plk~ 850.Bidwell
Serving Steve Evans Sausage
take a box home!
.
Featuring Bob Evans
Ball Hats!

Gallipolis Youth
Wrestling Team
Monday, Apiil 27

Doors open 5:30pm
Games.start 6:00 pm
3319 St. At. 141
(Beside the Jumbo)

O'Dell True Value Lumber
Stiht Chain Saws, Starting at
$189.95 Full time repair ~hop
Parts &amp; Service Available
61 Vrne St•.Open M·F 7·8: Sat. 8-5; Sun. 10.4

Hoi Dogs, Baked Beans, ·

Potato Salad. Deserts and Drinks.
Free Health Fair by
Holzer Medical Center

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
THIS PROJECT IS
OPEN TO ALL BID'
DERS:
Bide will be received
by the Malga County
Commloalonera lithe
olflcH Of ·Panlch· +
Noel Archltoctt, 507
Richland Avenue, Butte
. 301, Athena, OH 45701,
for the following prol·
ect: ·
ADDITION AND ALTER·
ATIONS CARLETON
SCHOOL 1310 CAR·
LETON STREET SYRA·
CUSE, OHIO 45n9
In accordance with the
Drawlnga and Spectfl·
catlono prepared by:
Panich; Noel + AIIOCI·
aiel Archltoctt and En·
glneere 507 Richland
Avenue, Suite 301
Athena OH 45701
Telephone: 74ttl582'
242Q Telefu: 741t1592-

3824

·

Uon within ten (II
daya of the bid .oper
lng; MJ!erlll auppllor
and aubcontractor
may purchaae aeto 1
their own expenae to
$100.00 per aet, plu
ohlpplng:
·The bidding' ciOcL
menta rnay be • "
viewed
• durin
bualneaa houra at th
following locatlono:
Panlch, Noel + ,\Jaoc
atH ArchltecW and Er
glnwa
507 Richland Avenu1
Suite 301 Athent 01
45701 ·
F. W. Dodge
1175 Dublin Ro•
CoiUmbul OH 43215 .
Bulldert Exchll'!tlt
8555 Rockalde 'Roec
Suite 300 Valloy VIe•
OH 44125
The Mtlga Count
Commlulonora eha
have lhe right to re[«

for a SIJindard shall be rejecl a Bid not occorr
~~~~
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!~~~!~i
Any
propoaed
Equal any
or by
ill lillY
Bidsrequire
and 1
aubmlned
10 the Archl·
panted
5
~

Attention

Busin~ss

Owners ·

Free on-line business Listings
.o n

www.m.ydallytrlbune.co~

-;mydallyaentlnel.com.

-.m.ydallyreglater.com.

C&lt;J'&gt;Y to s.etup, upqrHdes·availableJ

We can help!
Simple. At'fordable. Et'fective.

Upgr~de ~?.~~!;!!!~!~,..~.!~...':.!~!~r'o~p!e~v~;;re!?~.~.;: .."~~~.~.(a~n~afly*
.

More online advertising opportunities &amp;re now avaUabte at
MyDellyTrlbun•. corn, MyD•IIySentlnet.corn and MyDallyRegl•t.-r- .COrtl .

Contact your ••••• coOault•nt to to he'l p you aet- up you FREE lletlng and more inforn1atlon ebout
Upgreded Bu•lneaa Ll•tlnge.

..
t!J;I}e

s~t:-up your
FREE ONLINE BUSINESS LISTING

~allipolis

Ca II now!

maill' tltribune

825 Third Averiu,e
GaUipolla, Ohio 45631 ·

740-446-2342

to

The' Daily Sentinel
1 11 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

740-992-2155

tll:be ~oint ~leuant l\rgilter
·

200 Mtaln Street
Point Pleaaant, 'VIN 25550

. 304-675-1333

teet no tater than ten ·bid -urlty or by othe
(111) daya prior to the data required . by lh
bid opening. If no Ad· 'Bidding Documents, o
danda Ia luued In at• to retect a Bid which I
eocletlon with. the .In any wty lncomplet
Blddtr'o requeJt. Tho or ll'fllllulllr.
propolled ~quat ahall (4) 18, 22, 2&amp;
beconaldlrld reJected.
Sealed bide will be,.._
cehred for:
Public Notice
Generel
Contract:
$247,000.1111
Sealed Bids will be IK
Plumbing . Contrect: cepted In the Galli
$18,000.00
County Commlaator
HVAC . .
Contrtct: era Office, 18 LOCUI '
$19,500.00
Street, Galllpolla, 01
Electrical
Contract: 45631 fort 200e Chev
$38,500.00
Uplender. Tho vtn ca
until May 6th, 2009 at be vltwed at the Gtlll
2:30 p.m. toctl tlmt, County Vtttn~na Sel
when they will be viet Office at 110
opened and read Jack10n Pike, Gllllpc
Ita between the hour
aloud.
A Pre-Bid Meeting will of 8:30 am to 4:30 pn .
be held on Wednesday, Monday • Friday. At
April 29th, 2009. at 3:00 aarva amounl on lh
p.m. at tha C.rteton ven htl been aet e
School.
. $3,000.00; for add
Bidding ·document• tlonallnforillatlon cor
may be Obtained by tact Veteran Servlc
placing a dopoalt Officer at 740-441-200!
check In the amount of Blda must be aubmll
$100.00 per aet, plus ted before the opanln·
lhlpplng, paytble to date of·Thureday Apr
Panlch, Noel + Aaaoc~ 30, 2009 at 11:00 am r
olea. No more than two the Gallla County Corr
(2) oa11 will be pro- rntsalonera Office. Bl·
vlded on a refundabto will be awarded Thurt .
besla. DeposiiJI are re- day May 7, 2009 •
fundable to PRIME 11 :00 am In the Galli
CONTACTORS ONLY County Comml..lor
and only II a bona fide ora Office, 18 Locua
bid Ia oubmltted and Street, Galllpollo.
documents ora re- Aprll19, 26, 2009
turned In gOOd condl·

�Page 04 • 6unb4p 11tw.-6enttnd

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • .,.. Pll'asant, WV

m:ribune- Sentinel -

Sunday, April 26, 2009

v

~egister

'

'

2009

. ·.~

' ''
,
· o,t/!:1-.
~·

Holp Wanlod - Gononl
Ololooy ~
Application&amp; ·Are

.Melga County, OH

&amp;...._......... ,

OH

E,m.U

mdtelassirtt"d@mydapycribwu-.com

mribune

TO Place

Your Ad,

Sentinel

Help W!lnled

W.eblllles;

.

~egister

(7 40) ' 446-2342 (7 40) 992-215(; (304) 675-1333

Call TOday•••

OrF•

Otp,eH~

~

Monday thru Friday
:oo a~rn. t:o 5:00 p.m.

JUSI .SAY
C.l:tAAGE LTJ

•. z

-GALLIPOLIS-

0-.«'1_,

~~~~~~

e100

a.tft6

;r,...rt:ton

m-

Residenl Assistants

All D~pi•Y• &amp;2 ~n 2

Dl•plilly
.Act..
au
. .. . - Day•
Prior

If yoo are in!tres'Ied in becoming apart of OUI
ASs~Ied Living Community·we oor seeking Resident
Assistants.
Cjrtifted Nursing awJicants are prefemd bul on the jJb
I Iraining can be provided by the facility.

~o

••oo .....

P•p_,.

• AM •de

........
,.....
~... •

l&gt;e pntpllld"

.-..w••~•DM:f...._~.-.,

lit~ A llr1cfl • AWOM 'I 1 ........ ,
• I"IIC.._. ....._.Nil.......... Alildnll!l Wlaelt,...,...

'•
.I

........... uw ..... ......

•

We offer oompetitive wages and einployment benefiiS.

• POLICIESc

the

Lost· between Tudors in Jim's lawn Maintenance,

Mason!Cour1

St. mowing

mulching

and

PomeroY on 16U1. male much more. Insured, tree -;;;;"F;;;ann=o;E;;iqu.i;;;·O;pt;;;m;;;llll;;;;~
Audlont
long chaired black · wiener estimates. 740·395-3369
~
1219 AUCTIONctog wt blue collar,
John
Deer
Modulaf
, •Spanky', child's pet, Re- Looking to do yard work, cunerlconclltiorer &amp; Mas· House at 12:00 Noon or;t
ward, 304-a 82 _8200
mowing, trimming.. Call sie Ferguson Hay rake. May. 9, 2009. Buckeye

:

7:40:·2:56:·~654~1;~::

Ttlbun

ublicatlon
mlsslo" · of
dvertltement.
orrectlons will
ade In the firs
vallable edition.

~

Box r~umber ads ar
lwars confidential.
Current .
pplles.
Real
dvtrtlsements a
bject to the Fedara
air Houalng Act o
1968.
Thlo
newopape
ccepta only ·h
anted ads meetln
OE atandarda.

n
.
eu
·
ts

We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertisement
. 1
lolatton of the laW.

Building Matorialo
Announur••r&gt;r11s

lost &amp; founCI

~=~.;;;..o;a;;;;;;;•

Found Georgei Creek
Rd. Small male dog .
Brownisl'1/red.
friendly,
Boxer mix? 446-2212

Stet! Arch .Bu!ldlnga

SAYE
THOUSANDS·3 ·
cancelled orders, 25:(30,
35x50 immediate shipment Of pick up available! Inventory wun1
lastl CALL TODAY/
t --866:352·04t39.

.T

FIND ·
BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

H0 . . . . , , , , . . , , •

RecJMtton• Velilclet ............................... 10110
ATV ......
11105
Blcyclet .........................................,.......... tOtO
l l o l l l l -.................................... t015
Clmper!IIVo &amp;Tlllllrl ............................. 1020
Matorcyclet ....................,.......................... t025
Olior .........................................................,1030
Want to buy ., .................... ~................. ,..,, 1035
A.utomoUQ ..••.:....,..........;.....~................... 2000
Auto Rtn~ ................................... 2005
Au10I ...... ,;............ R.:.. ..... ....... .................... 2010
Clllllc/Anllquot ............................:.......... 201 5
com-la~ncllllfrlll ............................. 2020
Partt I ActtiiOries., ..............................,,2025
$porta UUIHy ................ ,........................... 2030
Trucko................ ,.....................................2035
UIIIHyTrllltrl ......,,,,.,,., ..................... , ..... 2040
Yanl ............................................................ 2045
Wont to buy .............................................. 205G
Roll EobtoSello ................ - .................. 30110
C.nwry Plotl .............. , ......................... 3005
COmmiiCI.tif ...... ,........................................ 30fO
Condomlnlutt11 ...................................... ,, .. 30t5
For Sale by Owntt..................................... 3020
Hou• for Sllt....; .................................... 3025
Lind {~) ................,... - ................. 3030
l.otl ............................................................ 3035
wont to buy............................................... 3040
,Rill Ettall Rtrdlla................................ "" 35QO
Aj&gt;lrlitttnb/!owtthoUIII ........................ 3505
Com~............ ,...... ,............................ 3S10
ContiOtttlnltiM ......................................... 3!t5
HOIIIIIIOJ Rent ................................. :.3520
Land {Acrt~g~j ........................................ 3!25 ·
S1orage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent ................._...........................l540
u ..n.~·~ Houlf~
·., ••,N
"0"""" ""'"""""""" -

........,
........

Pets .......................
62o
Want to btly.................................:............... a2s
n •• , , ... . ......................... . ....

Agriculture ............... : ................................ 7110
Farm Equlpmenl ......................................... 705
Gardin AProduct....................................710.
Hoy, Ftorl. Sood, Groin ............................... 115
Hunting &amp; Lllid ........................................... 720
Want to buy ............................................... 725

Mordltndiii .................... ,, .. ,... ,, .................. BIIO

Antlqueo ..................................................i05
~Kalt&lt;o ......,........................................... lfO

A.uctlons................. ,.................................... IUS
Bargain llalement... ...................................l20
COIIectlbiot ................................................ 925
Comp&lt;lloro ................................................ i30
Equljlment/Supptltl ...................................935
Fill Mort&lt;eto ............................................... 940
Fuel 01 CotVNOCMI'Gas ............................ !MS
Fumlturt ............................................ ,......... i50
Hobbylltunt &amp; 590rt....................,,.,.,... ,...... 955
Kld'o,Comer ................................................ 960
Mloctl~neouo .............. - ............................ 965
W•nt to buy.................................................. 970
lord Sole ................................................... 975

-

-

;JOUO

•

-grandmother. Your visits remind~
us ofallthe lives she touched. A
special thanks lo Ohio Valley Home
Heallh and Holzer Hospice who ·
.
•
were compassionate and caring.
Thanks to Harold Montgomery and
the Centena.ry Community Thanks
·
to Richard Unrue and John Arnold
for their comforting words
celebraling her life. Thanks 10 the
·
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church for the time of fellowship
and· food provided. Your kindness
will nevrr be forgotten ;
Marlin Carl Don James Charlotte

v•-

.

',

. ·

-~~

...._..,...

....__,..

pd.
or

www.IKJizlr.org

·F.ljual Opportunity Employer
Help

========

Help Wanted

Indepen4ent &lt;;;ontraciors (must be at-leilSI
needed to deliver the Qhio Val~y Phone
.in Gallip&lt;ilis , Jackson, Wellston &amp; surrotmding

-v

County
Mobile
Rn.n k R~po! (5% oown. !"~
homo · &lt;&gt;·water.
k.
$12
,500 . ,·ears, 8% APR! for lislin""·
•·
388-755·5596
800·6204946 ex KOJ7

~~-~-~~=
Gallla Co. 10 acres
$12,5001 Meigs Co." 5
aCI'8 'homesite, co. water
R
$19,900. eedsvi/le 12
acres $2.1,900 or Dan·
ville 13 .acres $25,900!.
~~-:~~":":.~~ Wo
linancol Call

-- '"'

zaA house in Mkldlepott
$450 per month hatl.
stove, fridge, micrOWave,',
R
washer &amp; dryer. ental':
pays
utilities.
ca~
1
740..352•4376

A s~ion
avaK. JacJcJon,
Pan-nme, 1·9pm Dielary Gallia good pay flexible

FinGnt:lol . Being 'Aa:aptO&lt;I 'For

Trade your 'ifob~ in
for a'Career you'll love/ .

l:,~:IIGIIW..bllillllin

are a I00-bed lad lily locatetlln ll!miloy, OH.
To a)ltily, pease ~tour Idly at 38'11tAIIII(IIttlllllld.1
LPonMm. Gii4Slell or call (7.o) 9112-1111011. ·

~~· ~

,.

,740-828-2750

· Help Wanted

Help Wentld

·.-

· Help Wa.n ted

RNs and LPNs .
I

\'

'

Full Time, Part Tinie,

PRN- Positions

AUCTION
May l, 2009 IO:OO aJD,

· Selling The Personal Property of the late
case mana.oement posl-

Merrll Roach

Uon · avail. In Gallia. pft.
fer at least Associates

Location : 1473 Co. Rd. 13·E Scottown, OH
45678

.

Degree {POd pay flexlbfe
hrs. 740-853-2281

!,

Fiscal Senices
. Coordinator

Highly &amp; ReSident Assistant Pomachlnllt sffions II You Are A. Carn-.:t.
ing, EnlllU1loastic &amp; o..
pendable Person. Then
We want You To Join
Oui Team Come On
PoattkJn requlrn:
Over &amp; Check Us Out!
You'll 9e Glad You Oidt
• Aecant experhtnc• Competitive
CNA
With manual lathH, Wages. Paid vacations,
milling
machines, Paid Meals, Many Otner:
uwa, and radial drills
Benefits,
Raver1swood·
• Ablltty to hold loltr· Care
Center, · 1113
ancn to .0005" an fine Washington St., Ravens·
work
wood. WV, .References
• Ability to eec:u· Aeqwed, E.O.E . .
re1aly cut varloua male Overbrook Rehabiltarlon·
&amp; female threac#l, In- Center is currently ac·
ct~lr::~=~ machln- cepting appticalions lor:
. tng llfllerlalo of vlrlouo part time LPN'o AVailable
hanfneu and m¥hln- sholts are 7A·7P &amp;
. lng characterlattcs
-7P-7A All Interested ·ap·
-: AbUI1y lo reid ·plicants ,.should
pick up
t·
drawlngt and make a-n apptca ton· a1 333
panl to appropnata Page Street, Middleport,
ipeCifleallona
Oh. F(lr tunher informa· ·
• Famlllarit"1 with 1ion, please contact lucy
t •7401992 li472 EOE
ahop safety routines a '
·
·
• and."'~'" .
Lift truck operation
,. . pluo
• Candf"·tao must
wa
,be eligible for u.s. ·,..
cret clearance.
Send your resume or a
completed
appllcatlcm
form (call to request one
or prlnt ona from
www.utrOnlnc.com/ca·
rears) by email , fax or
· mall to I
Attn. B. Davis
UTRON, Inc.
9441
lnno'vallon
Dr.
Manassas, VA20110
Tel.
703·369-5552/Fax
703-389-6296
Toll Free 86S-23t ·2476

Alihton, WV -

skilled

_,nit

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

w

the

. Classifieds!!

a

,

Employses ate needed
to proVIde customor
service over rhe phor,'le

..

,,

Vinton,,Qhlo
Saturday, Mlly 2nd at.1 pm
Partial lis!;
Hoosier style kitchen caninel 1 . w/ porcliit .top;
kitchen drop leaf table, app. 65 pes. of ~von
cap o;od, 2 pes. Early Americun {S!ar of Duvid)
· Berry bowl set, sm . pitcher, Iris Herringbone
bowl, vintage men's and women 's lluts, old
dolls. crocked glass, cookie cutters, candle
holders, RR Sponge ware bowls. old post
cards, box Of cOins,
We· still have table sp~ce for this sale. We will
tilke merchandise until 6 pm day ,of' sale. Most
sales last 3-4 . hrs and usual have a good
selection of items to chO&lt;m !rom.
·

.
. 7~41
Cash or ~k wilD. Not mponslble
acddebts or loslltenis. ·
. For Info: Call VIrgil tit7.W:388·H880

for ·

· RaiD dine Sbclter available ff it rabts,
. Trailer parkin! aval, 1171 Blessin1 Road Patriot, Ohio
Dla1illi:SR Ul ~ Lili.'illli Pk,Sitligbloo!o~ll'llllp 1!*1, I~ 1!*1
to ltlllll!l1ilg ROil. FolliwS~.Fiillar~.Fir pl!li!i ill) dsale
iii'alN ')i~~ llllht&gt;.{a4.llyi'll~.•iH!~'F·hkh .
lA llll Wader ·~•!•"l oooOi•. IMido" ':'&gt;' "'"'" ,,.~

~ulelmorvlow

Todlyl
Sllrt Work Mondlyl
1-iu-IMC-PAYU
. Ext.~.·. --

onuno:

I

i

191611mtr r.p.. 2~ ;...,,...wtotm~•l ''"'II rro
lo!tban 100 b!l.M oroioll U,uu 1~ ~"""'' !"' "n
trl&lt;ll l·koo f1 Cilljjnc ~l•foil lp&lt;iil!' Q,4 roHOra t.c&amp;i Jl.li iblltl

Sundiy &amp;Monday OF~
: Ctll tor lotarvtew

· 1•·2pm
Auction

Auction •

, · Farm Auction May ~It ll A.M.

1 Hiring Full Time
Position• (2-11 pm)
1 Hlrlng Part Time
Poonlona {S:Oil-1 :30pm &amp;
5:30 ·I 1:00pm)
1 OFF oo Sunday
. 1 Weekly Bonus
1 Onslle Doctor
1 Fun &amp; Professional
Working Environment
1 Complete Benents
Package .
·

A~llo~r: Fftlis 'oftte" Isaac

Auction

I I
f.t.ibOh)OnmarilriiDil,
i'ttoleol&gt;l• oil•c•o l,., COO!) &gt;~Via~ ,.;1&gt;\tiD JlB !IJ GO.
neld SJ'If•,llft G&lt;oor liolin Toile ' '"' ,;., l&lt;r.J,. H"h ll ioch •!"

Auction

' 4·l t• ~lk 1m• ... 11·! '""I!"' &gt;n. IIMI!lll~oid
I ni~!lf'll•t. lllft ~~'~''"!&lt;f·l ~~ o;ir•nlt"'"'~"'l" o.~ ""'
1

AUCTION
May 2, 2009 at 10 am

l&lt;ci~illlc&lt;ldoily~~~

Location Melgl County Fair Groun.da, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Wf'

ol!l' iJ.lVIIlq

J!'i'll'

,.

..

Auction

Auction ·

We are growing!

Home Health Experience Required. .
·.- . OASIS and Cooing plus.
,

WrilllP

! ; Oll'-ol(jlll1l!'!1t ,l\l\tl("!f1
1 C'f 1'\t'IVOilt''

~Otllo""~llltl'(j

Flexible Scheduling ·
Paid Mileage
Benefits offered for full time.
Send Resumes to:

Pam Moran, RN
352 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
74lt-441·1779

.,',

EOE

'J

mymldWesthome.com ..

304-674-5267'

Auction .

;:,0·

·
rr.,

up to $8000 to buy a nevf.
home. Doni m)ss you('
share o1 the stimUlus baW.:
out money. No Olm·..
micks. No Hype. Call b.,
be
Pre-Qualified~.
2 br. apa~ment $375.00 74D-423·9728 or toll fro&amp;·
.a mon 304·612-4350
666-3311-3201
I
3br 1rom $299 mo

Cenllr is seeltlog SliiAI for

We have e new 8UirtJng waQt of $8/ltllr tt1ue 111J for
eJperlencs and shift diflaoolials! No ltlltldatltta as of

,-------~----~~
Government will . pay y~

NEW Double-s

Auction
Hoooekeeplng
laundry
and Floor ,;.re wanted
Apply at Arbors of Gall:
polit.

n .....

Isaac's Auction House

t

'

'-========--=======~

-

.ttlr six monUtsl

6020 ST AT 554 .Bidwell.:

2 br. apt. $375.00 a mon.

avail.

CNA'o 6 Relident
AlllttaniS .
Interviews Are Now Be·
lng Conducted F&lt;Jr CNA

Dlredtons: From Proctorville mke 775· N 11
miles to Co. Rd . 2. tum right go I mile.
From Ironton take )41 to 1Wilgus, tum right on
m you I n - In 1 175go3milestoCo.Rd. l3,tumleftgotodead
rewarding·
posiUon? end tum right watch. ror .signs. From Gallipolis
PAIS li eun-.ntfy •c· take 175 35 mile~ to Co. Rd. 2, turn lert go 4
ceptlng
appllcationa .miles wtttch foi signs.
::...~ folloWfng post- . Fann Equipment .. Tractor Lon&amp; #610, Tractor
Direct Care· A lull time wjcab &amp; Loader Belarus #5 2 4WD. 256 Hay
Hllp Wanl&lt;ld .·Gonoral direct ca(e position lor .Rake. Ford #501 Mower, 51 Bushhog , N.H. Hay
Emplopment ~1ncf11
Ripley WI/ providing resi- bme 1', 3 pt Hay Ca~r. 3 pt ~ood Splitter, 2{
Basket Hay Tedder, Loader 1 Hay Forks: N.H/
.ExirJMontyS dentiaVcommunlty
s~n
lndependentContraetorl lralnlnO wiltl lndlvidl,lals Round Baler 1130l.N, Pond Scoop, J pt Fen.
Grouoidskeeper needed
{musl be at loaat 18)
wl1h MAIDD. M""""y- Spr&lt;ader, 6' Pickup Disk, Wheelbarrow, 2
In Rio Grande, OH
needed to dEiliver the·
Friday hrs.fMndbl8 de· Scythes. Front Tractor Weight~ ,·Long Front. End
Prevlouo exp. req. MuSt
Ohio Valley Phone Boo!(
L-~ -~A~
pending orl cflenl needs
~~
bel8 and poeseas HS
in Gallipolis, Wellston &amp; up to 40 ..hrs a week. TrUck- 4 Wheeler - Catlle Trailer- Lawn
Dlptorna/GED. Pay
8
'j~:a~:
High school diploma or Mower, 2001 Chevy 1500 4WD Auto 24,243
S7.80illr. Call
GED
required. Experl· miles, 2001 Hl)nda Rancher 136 miles. 16'
Kelly ServiCes
C'""!""~.,..--~
•
oe Pr~t~~-•a rred, crlml naI M_ontz
. L'Jvestoc k Tra
'
Tra1'Ier.
'
:
":
n
.. 1'Ie-r , 18' Equ1pment
60C\'295-9470 or
Need 7 ladles to seH background check ra- D x:on 0 Tum M
304-529·2t41
. A'f'on call740-448-3358
qulred, must have reli·
J
•
o~~r
.
..
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - able
trlhaportatlon. Too
/ Is &amp; MSlseelllanFeotis •J'uel Tank .30!) ~
Help Wanted . .
Help Wanted
H rty
t
tartln
1 w pump, evera
arm ates, appmx.
S:.~sa::V~ ~asedg
Tobacco Sticks, Rough. Lum~r. Cattle Crossing,
eJCpe"nellCe ·
Air Compressor, New Steel ·Pcsl , Air ·Tank,
callt-304-373-1011 . ·
Battery Charger, Jumper Cables.' Long Haodle
Tools, Boomers. Brush AJC, Barb .Wire Stretchers,
Are you lntlrettecl In 1 Fence Charger, Elec. Fence Posts, Over Fence
pooHion? Feeders, Corn Knives , Hedge Trimmer, Tobacco
PAIS II c:unwrtrr ec- Boxes, C.ar ·Ramps, Yard Spreader, 28' EJCt.
oppllcotl0111 Ladder, Creeper, Seeder, Chain Saw Husq . #351,
Rio Grande Communi1y CoUege seeks to . COpllng
hire a Fiscal Services Coon,linatot who will be· for ttlt following poet- Weedeater , Husq., Drill, Circular Saws, Log
h
tkJn1:
Ch · H d 1 k " . H d~ 1 W
responsible for various accountil1&amp; and fiscal
Direct Care- A full time
ams, y . ac s, vanous an 100 s. rene
Sockets,
Chainsaw
Sharpener,
Burlap
Sacks
activities. including Local tux levy fonm. grant
dtreot care poott~na .for Houseb9ld • Refrigerator 18 .2, Range N.G. Ava,
billings. financial statement preparation and
Point Pleasant WV pro· Microwave.• ' Kitchen Utensils, Pots, Pans ,
other daily financial items . The successful
vldlng
realdentlalloommunlty
skill training with Dishes, WOQd Dinette Set, Living Rwm Suit
. candidate · should have ·. strong-interpersonal
lndlvlduit~ with . MR/00. Jpc . Blk, End Tables, Pictures, Wail Clocks,
skills. excellent wr•ue.n :· and verbal
MondayFnday evening RCA .TV, VCR, TV Cabinet, CD Player, Phone
c:mrtmunicati~ skills fUld the ability lo work in
. &amp; mld-n~t shltts Satur- Stand, Night SIIUtd. Pon . Radio. Pen &amp; Pencil.
a team.oriented environMent. A minimum of a
)
dey &amp; Sunday dayllme. Sets; Bedroom Set Jpc. Humidifier. Elec. Vib.
PAIS !IOO~Ing
bachelor's degree in butin"ess or equiValent is
evening &amp; mid nl~ Chs.ir, Console Stereo, Kerosene LampS, Ced!r
required with cxperience ."pn;ferred . This full- · ahlf\8. H~n school .dl- Wardrobe, . Blanket Chest, Bedroom Set 3pc, ·L.PN :· · &amp;qmlni8terimonllor
patient
madicati&lt;Jn
time. 12 mon.th position·would ·rep6rt to the
ploma or GEO required. Ot:caslonal Ch.air, Kitchen Cabinet, Hoover preparation ' lor lndivldu·
Vice President for·Financial' and Administrative · Experience
preferred, Sweeper, Auto Wnsher. M.C., Dryer GE, Folding ala with developmental
Affairs. The Collese offers a competitiVe cnmlnat ' background Wood Tables. Folding Chairs. Card Tables, disabilities in Clifton WV
salary and an exCellent fringe benefit&amp; package. · check required, must Coleman Lantern, Fl~hli_ghts 1 Scanner, Sentry $13.-$15. per hr. based
have rBHable .transports· Safe, Luggage, Telephones,- Movies, Linens; on &amp;Kperience. PleaSfJ
llqn. Hourly rafa '•otartlng . Towels, Blankets, Coolers, ·B.R. StOIJI, Old : call 304-373-1011 or tO!I
Please send a· leuc!r outlining y~ur
at S7.01l-S6. 51lillr. ' balled. Chairs, Washboard, Apple butter Paddle, Home tree at t-817•373·1011.
qualifications and·interest in the position , and a
on eJCperience
r~sume along with the names arid contact
caf1 1.304-37a- 1o11 .
Interior, Fishing Poles, Wood Stove, ater Pump
Guns·Guitar -20 gao Sgl. Hercules, Marlin 22
infOrmation of three references. Please submil
Auto w/Scope, Marlin 22 At~to , Swiss M78
this information by Ma~r 4 to:
AVONI All Aieast To Bw
Vetter\i
.41 Cal. Militnry Rifle, Mozzle l._...oader,
or . Sell Shl~"'' Spears
ANew
GUitar Ventuta /1.6
·
304-875-1429
'
Luanne Bowman
Tr)l'
LUNCH served by Kitts Hill Willing Workers 4Vice President for Financial and
H Club • lD Required
Admlnlsli'allve Affairs
R.L. "Bob" SeUs Auction Service
168 Twp Rd 122·W Willowwood OH-45696
Rio Grande Community CoUege '
Work for a top
·Licensed &amp; Bonded In Favor Ot" State Of Ohio
ernp~yer. committed to
PO Box326
Auctioneers: Bob Sells &amp; Harold Ncul App.
ofterlng ,em~toyment
Rio Grande , Ohio 45674
opportunldes In our areal
.
Ryan Sells
lbowman@rio.edu
Not Res nsible For Theft Ort'lccide ts
Auction

$
$
It
;~- 1 1 dod '
poa ' · wno u "

+ $300.00 dep. HUO. approved,
no
pets

abMtty to wo11&lt; !()depend· wOOd, WV, E.O.E.
enUy w11t1 strong attentlon ta deti.ll. ~ Wanted: server for the
send resume and tefer· Gallipolis tiollday Inn,
encetto
Come and bp a part of a
gallipollsaccountantO
great tellm. No ·elq:lerigmaii.C()m
ence necessary, IITIIIes
or mail to CL.A 101, PO mandatory. Pick up ap:.
Box- · -'69, Gallipolis, OH plication at the front
4563L
~ No phone cahs
P
·

tus.
t!'ak"ling
740-853-2261 ·

MACHINIST

Medical

:

Help Wanted

AdmlnfltratlvtiProftss .....................IO(M

Cllltltr.tltrk ............................................m

ChlltiiEidorly Cant ..................................... 6008

Cterlclt .......... _........................................ &amp;010
Conotructlotl. .. - .................................... li012
DriVOJI &amp;Dolvory ................................... li014
Educlllon ........,_,,.,,.,,,............................liOf&amp;
E1oc1r1co1 Plumlllng .................... - ...~..... liOf&amp;
Em~,..._, __,_,...,, ....... l020
- -........................................1022
Food Serllcol......................... ,.. _.,.. _,,,.fl024
Government 1 FedtrJI Jobt ... _..............f026

Holt&gt; lfllttl- -

................................ &amp;021

Low [nfort:lioOid- .................................1030

.........__.-......................1022
. Mliil)llftil!it/Supo olaoly ....- ................ 11034

-

..............................- ...- .....1036

Mtdlcat ......................................................li038

Musical,_................................................... 601110
Plrt·nm.Ttmj)Of•ito ........................... II042
Roo1aunrnto ......- .................................... IIM4
Sofii ....................... ,....... ,.... ,................... IIMI
Technlcll Tfldlt ....................................... IKISO
To-Ktory ..................... - ................ w

05

Earn up to $25,0GWyr+

•,.,..,.,m
• _,,_.,,._
2..99 , acrea . . or ·
.
vis~ 650 montli 400 de'

200R6 on
2B • large LR. ·asking ·•·-'• b . "end oom
"""· rune., ·

YOUR AUCTION
JN THE CLASSJfiEDS

LPC/LPCC,

lnfoCision

3 9 24

I

Wanted

S EARN FXTRA MONEYS
DELIVER IN G TELEPHONF ROOKS

Pontiac Grand Pnx
~64!".!5--22_1.,.4---~
GT2 CD
leather, aded
sunroof, 6 30.5 acres w/ 2100 sq. ft.
38R house In soul"·
ll"o
1
61
.=oo. C~lt ~ _ 9. K, 02 Claylon on block ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; we stem School District.'
foundation w/ 2x6 con- "
Call
379·2254
or:
~200::::'!'1-::Pon~tia~c~':':G~ra"-'nd~e structlon &amp; premium win~ents/
379-2879
Prix 4 door white 95,000 dows. 4 BR 2 full BA
TownhouMI
miles. Loaded eMtra nice gas, log FP, large kit
$4 500 OBO. 388•0332
large laundry room, walk
In Closets, master ba:th
Clip this AD and take 11
2005 Dodge Neon 4 cyl, wl dressing room. Total with you when rou vlslt
auto ,
46.000
mites, etec heating 1 cooling
our community 10 get
this special d!scounl.
$4000 OBO. 256-1233
14x80 concrete patio · on
'sso.oo off your 111
1996 Goo Metro 121.000 ~~c: 6 w/ carport. 8' 16 &amp;
ruu· moAth of rent.
miles.. •oooo or trade.
x o·ut bldgs. . above
ground pool exc hunting
Curren11y renting 1 &amp; 2
446·7181
~-:::-~=:-~~~ fields woods w/ trails. BR untts Spacious floor
pla,nS, ranch &amp; townSuv's, Trucks, pars full Very private &amp; peaceful.
size and compacts, all Adda:vll18 school district home style living, playground .&amp; basketball
w1th
warranty. Rrices ·G_eorges Creek Road. 10
court, on-site laundry
starting at $t 9oo: stop or mlns.
from Gallipolis
l&amp;clllty, 24 hr emer- .
can Cook Motors 326 Walmert.
. Asking
gency maintenance,
Jackson
Pike. $160,000. For appt call
'1anulaA'Ill•'d
339-9733.
·
quiet country location
4000
740_446.0103
Ht' ,, 'iJ
close to major medical
1995
Buick , S~ylark,
.
faoili1ies, pharmacies,
auto, air condition, 4 cyl, 4 Bod, 2 Bath! Only
grocery store ... just
Rantala
;
runs good, nice &amp; cleS:n, 'S25,ooo.
!Of
listings
minutes away from
12B,OQO miles, new tires, 8QO.ti20··4946 eK A019
other major shopping In
2 br. . trailer $400.00
the area.
call
om-740·992·2272,
mon. + dep. 12-Spnt.;
Honey1uckle Hltla
74 992 300
pm- ()- -6
· House for sale In Hart·
304-675-41 00
of
1\P-l~·
740,973-6999.
Police lmpOUmlst CIU"li fiO!ll lord W'l on t/3 acre
266 Colonial Orlve t113
SOO!
Honda,CheVys Jeep5., 3br.,2ba. new central
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
· Saloo
•
HVAC,
appliances;
2
car
Fords.&amp; more. for listing!
740-446·3344
'
800-620-4876e,. V435
garaQ&lt; , 304-882-3901 .
Office Hours M, W, F
1999 Redmond 16x73'
9AM · 5PM.
3br.2ba. wmreptaoe muaf
move 304·675·2897.
·,•

04

Bach.'Joyce' Vloland and famllie~.
·

Au!cmoln,e

deft.

(4+)ac"res, to a historical ---/-["!""_~"!""home. Circa t9oo, ·s 2' roomi ·&amp; ba1h dowrt·
2 stairs
apartme·nt
1•
::;":::::'"~~-::'=~~ bedrooms, 2 firen~aces,
..,,
~
2006 Mazda 84000, V6 lull baths, 2 staircaSes, monrhs rent + deposit
4 ·Htre 4WD, a.ufomatlc, 4 beautiful original wood- references required. No .
dr e tended ab flop · ....
'"'"
· p
1
· x
c w • wo,.... many p......
ure w1n· ets c ean. 441·0245
per &amp; bed liner, 28,400 dows, mostly new · .winmites limited warranty, dows, large kitchen and Fumlshed apartment 2nd
serviCed regulal'ly, $13, breakfast room, ~auli~ Ave., upstairs, all . utilitlel
pd 1BR No Pets Ga""
900,.(740)992·7173
fUlly landscaped with In
·
•
•
".ground pool. Sit on lhe polis. 446•9523
wrap around porch .-.and NOW LEASING Jordan
enjoy the· spectaCular Landing, 2 &amp; 3BR Avaih_
view of !he Ohio River. 2 able No Pe1s. Tenant
car detached garage and Responsible for Rent (:
2 out buildings. wOuld ElactriO 304·674·0023 Ofll
· make a wonderful family 304·617·9986
~
home t~r bed &amp; breakfast.
H
F •-1
Private and P.lcturesque
3 br. dUplex for rent II\
otiMI or"" 0
SPECTACULAR YIEW . Middleport,
$1!50
W
-===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. •~e,ooo.oo, pl'eese call month Includes water a;'
3 Bed ,2 Bath
HUD 740·992·3678
eJectric, 740·992·5620 . ~
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
homesl0nly$t99.1am. on .,
Modern 1BR apt. "·•,·
'-'01\.
grt.locationl5%dwn.15
~ (Acreog•
.)
740-44.6.()390
.,
vrs, at 8% for lstngs. ~~~¥~'¥~~
'
'!!!:
·,
609·620-4918exT461.
Rio Grande - 1.8 Acies .
Ho&amp;~te~ForRent ·'i·
on paved road. 1 112 ,....;;;;;;;;;&amp;ail;...a,
m
· 1,. from uS
4 b!:oJ. 2 . bathp,
35 • ~ 19'lllmo!
ICI
• • •
•

4338 SA 141 1' Mile
From New High SChool
Molorcl1dot
2100 s F N' hom
q. educed
t. ""
e
p·
10
07 Yama ha FZ6 2100 s nee, , rFor more
· info
139 900
mlles. ExCellent Corid. ·
Red wt black accents and. pictures go to
'· www.orvb.com
phone
$6500. CBI1441·9865
446_1210 or 339 .~

A'~-

food provid~ at the time of the loss ·
of our dear molber and

R .....................................................

loll............................................................. 4005
Movoro ...................... - ...............................010
Rtntllo ... ,.......................... - ................... ; .o15
SIIII ............. ,............ ,...,,......... ,_, ............020
Supptlts ........,...........................................III025
Usaont....................................................~5f5 Wont to Buy ...............................................40311
Perlonal ................................................:.... 520 ~·
~............
,
........................................
Animllo ....................................................... soo _
........
~•• ~
-~
'
·~
..........................
Animal Suppl~o ........................................ 605 RotOr! Proporty for ronl ........................... 5050
Horses ..........................................................610 Emplo~ment ..... ..A.................................. ... ,IOQO
Uvtltoett ............... ,. .................................... ~l5 AecOIInll~nonclll .............................:..111112

:=~~~~~;

truck, like new, 92,000 Ohio River
zer.
$400 plus
mi. $10',500 080. Call Private drive oft Uncoln Some
utilit~s
740-441·8299
or Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 740-416-5288
740-441·5472
wOOds on· three sides 740·9Be-6130

~~~;;;;;;~=~- $75,000. 740·446-7029

The families of Norma James wish
lo express our sincere appreclalion
for your prayers, cards, Dowers and

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legal! ........................................................... 100
A.nnounc:ementa, ........................................ 200
Blrthday1Annlvorl0ry,................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Loll &amp;Founcl ............................................... m
Memoryllhank You ..................................... 2211
Notices ...................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wan,ed ........................................................ 235
Setvlces ............................. .-.................... 3110
Appliance Servlce......................... :............. 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 3$
Business ......................................:............... 308
Catering....................................................... 310
Chlld!E1derly Care ...................................... 312
Comp-.................................................... 314
Contractors .... :..............:.............................316
DomtsticlfJanltorlat ................................... 318
Elecklcal ...................................................... 320
~nonclal ...................................................... m
Heanh .................................:.... :.................... m
Heeling &amp; Coollng ............................ ,.......... 328
Home tmprovemenls330 ·
Insurance ..................................................... 332
LaWn Strvlct .............................................. 331'
Muslc!DanteiDrama :............... _.................. 336
Other Servlc&amp;l........................................... ,.333
Plumblng1Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Proltnlonal Servlou ................................. 342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roollng....................................................... 3411
Securi~ .......................................................3411
To/Accountlng ............. ,............................. 350
Travel/Entertainment ................................. .352
Flnenclal ... ~~.................................................400
Fininc:ial Servltts ..........:...
.,,,,,..,405
lnt"urlnct ................................................ ,... 11110
Monty to Ltncl ................ ,............................4t5
Educotlon .....................................................soo
Butlntll &amp; Trade Schoot ........................... 505
~uttlan I Trslnlng ................................. S10

Evans Mill Rodney Pike/
Rt 850 BidwelL C9Jiactibles, small appHances,
weed eater, kJtchen &amp;

-

TQANK YOU · .

Plell!e ,Mop by and lee Peggy WiUiams, ExeOOve
Diector at 300 Brialw!XXJ Drive, GaUipolis Ohio
{441-9633) or caU/email Barb Petenon Director of
Hwnan Resoo~~:es !01 LongTenn Care ai441·3401
or petetloo@holzu.org or look us up oo the web~

1st &amp; ~nd 9-5 0 Jewell doced, 04 Siverado 4X4 Spectacular view of the .2BR apt 6 ml from Hoi·

badl sinks, counte( tops
740--645-1081
Hills Career Center, Rio . &amp; much more!! Aslo serv(740) ing Steve Evans SauJohn Deere H045 zero Grande,
-5334· Ohio.
•
tum walk behind mower, 245
sage. Don't Mise; Bob
•• 1·nch cui. 17hp KawaEvansBaHCB:pstl
-w
FumHure
saki
engine,. hyd.rostatlc
3().4...674-3198
For sale Bassett living Rodney Community . Hall
room
suit . multi-color, .6 Family Yard Sal~ May
SnHL Sates &amp; Servi&lt;:e good . cond.
••~.oo tst &amp; 2nd from 9-5.
Now Available at Carmi·
..-ru
304-675-4596.
' Game
boy,game boy
chael
Equipment ::,;.:;,.....,...,,..,..,,. games, household items,
740·446-2412
:o:
MiteeiiCMeous
home .- interior, bar stool,
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""' !'::~~~~~~~ womens &amp; girls clothln!J.
Garden &amp; ProduCII
Mollohan's Carpet "Quat- girls &amp; bOys clothing, anity at low Prices' 13'6" tiques, furniture, tools
Berber carpet lil stock on and lots more. Somelarge variety of flowers sale Now. Eastern Ave. thing for everyone. .
&amp; fern baskets. Flowers Gallipolis to 446·7444
Big Vard Sale 15 Ann
I0 ,. "O r o ba ket
ox ' u wn
s s.
Drive Gallip&lt;&gt;is. May 1, 2
Large potted tomatoes.
Wont
To luy
&amp; 4. ClOthes, dishes,
FK!wers
&amp;
vege.lable "i;====;;;;i;=bedding plants. DayliQht _m_ls.c._ . "!""~~-~
· C ed
Want
to
buy
a
small
or
'
:"'
hours.
los
Sundar.
Lg.
multi family, 4·o;
a
mid
size
tractor
with
·
I!"
Yoders
reenhouse tO
days, starts ·rrl.
5.11, Jots
mi. west o1 Gallipolis on plow &amp; disc in good
of variety, Noble Summit
d
11
·
SA141
con · ca
~R,:.d,,;w;::a::;;tch~to~rs~igh~S==
304-n3-5191.

Found
s·rown do&amp; White
le a.....
A
Livattock
rna ,...,..g 18
g &lt;Jn t
35 near Jim Hilt Ad .a..vo
8
·
304·675-5580
.... ·wUS
ulls,excetlent
bloodlines,
Prk:ed
Nol1c..
Reasonably.
www.slaterunangus.coq~
Upcomlnt
certified (740)286·5395
or
nursing
llllttanl 418.0033
CIISS.
Must have a high school
hta
diploma or GED to apply. ;;;;;;=;;;;;;.;:=-;;;;;;=Applications
may
be Black female Lab 6 mos.
picked up at Lt..kin Hospi· old free to a good home.
tal, Monday . Friday call 740·367-7328
Sam- 4pm. Applications ~R~eg".··8:::1 a·c"k...,.La":'b-pu·pp;~es
must be turned in no 7 weeks old 5 male
.
later than , 05/0B/09 at
$300, 4 females $350.
0
C..,B.,E,..o,..,E,
. ""'""'"""' 367c0500 or 645·6351
7 bench leg Seagle pupPersonals
. 7 wks, tn. co1or, for
•=•ma"-;;;;;;;• plSS,
•
· 1o.
more.
1n
ca11
VIP DaUng and Match· '-'74;::1l-:;;7,;;42:o,·,::052::;:;6~--making S.Aice ' ":"'
Est.
'in
for Jack Russell puppies,
92
has shots; 2 seat light
Tri-State singles. Locally car1, new fit pony or
ownedfoperated, Single?
.
Not ''nto bars or '&gt;nternet?. horse,' 740-416·4592
Yord 5ol.
Full b~oded Golden Re·
Meet other area singles triever
pups
1st
ages 21 to 65, . many
va~
Christiarys, ·
many shOtstwonmed ·$150. Call
''"'. Sale 4867 State
446-4105
Route
· 850.M dThurSdav
he
mate s. Safe, fun and ;;::;;.:.::;;:....,...._ _....;_
A "I
rt'
..confiden1ial. Greenup Ky Giveaway 4 yr. old house l2;;~~~j P11 23 • on ay Ap I
fo
...._ oet, ha·s been
rod
?.7, 2009. From 9-1
.l oam
...,....
606-473-5901
and declav.led, very lovlng. 446·287~
Card of Thanka
Card of Thanks

ntlnei·Reglster wll
responsible tor n
ore than the cost o
he space occupl
y !he error and onl
he first insertion. W
hall not be liable f

200

Trvc:b
HOIIMI For Sot. ·
Apa~h!"'tlo/
W
.~~~~~~~
TownhOUHI
' Evans Flnily Sale May Need to sell, priced re· Extreordii'Uiry Property: ~~-"'~~~~~
Y""' Sot.

Loot &amp; Found

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edH,
rej~ or caitcel any
ad at any time.
Errors Mutt 9
ported on the firs
ar of publicatio
nd

Help Wanted

www.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallysenunel.com
www.mydaJiyreglster.com

YOUB AD NOW ONLINE

LSW/LISW,

Now AN ftJI' time therapist po-

COok, Experience PT&amp;Full·time ferred'Referencp
Reo
pooition with buly ..,_ qulred, Applk:ants May
COIIJ)tlng office In GaiiiP.,. Apply O,.lfy, Mon.-SiJn.
Ho lor knmedllite employ- 9-4pm, Come Join Our
ment. Aocounling degree T~lll ·Y6u'H Be Glad
and experience required.· You Dkll Ravtmswood
Must have good organ- Care
Cantor,
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tzalional · skills and the Washington St./ Ravens-

Galli a

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

6unb4p ¢lmai·6mtbttl •

''
I

. . _...,

I

OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

•'

CLASSIFIED

'

..

•

WE MANAGER

Pleasant Valley Hospit~l is currenily
accepting resumes for a full-ti me Case
Manager. Graduate of an accredited
sdloot of nursing required. BSN prMerred.
Prefer a minimum of three years
experience in an acute care seiling. WV :_
license.
·
··
Send resumes to:
Pleasant V.lley Hospital
(/o Hum1n Resources

M~n info 11111 Pils":
m,J®Bfllimer~ring.tUIII

Tno!SaiCISb~Cktd witn Val.ID

@Athens Commu

Day With Us.

Auctton Conducted 1111

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Owner: Mantrtl Brewer

1520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(l04)675·4340 Or. fax: ·l04·675·6975. or

304-liS-5441 Or 304-l73-Sl85
Note: Come help th&lt; center! I
llu Smllh AuctlonOitio ft3449 Cult, Positive ID, Rctitshmcnts

apply on-line 11 www,pyalley.or;c
AA/EOE

-·

IT•nn• Cash Or Check :With ID. Must Have
letter Of Credit Unless Known
Company.

Call1~1w-.

•

�Page 04 • 6unb4p 11tw.-6enttnd

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • .,.. Pll'asant, WV

m:ribune- Sentinel -

Sunday, April 26, 2009

v

~egister

'

'

2009

. ·.~

' ''
,
· o,t/!:1-.
~·

Holp Wanlod - Gononl
Ololooy ~
Application&amp; ·Are

.Melga County, OH

&amp;...._......... ,

OH

E,m.U

mdtelassirtt"d@mydapycribwu-.com

mribune

TO Place

Your Ad,

Sentinel

Help W!lnled

W.eblllles;

.

~egister

(7 40) ' 446-2342 (7 40) 992-215(; (304) 675-1333

Call TOday•••

OrF•

Otp,eH~

~

Monday thru Friday
:oo a~rn. t:o 5:00 p.m.

JUSI .SAY
C.l:tAAGE LTJ

•. z

-GALLIPOLIS-

0-.«'1_,

~~~~~~

e100

a.tft6

;r,...rt:ton

m-

Residenl Assistants

All D~pi•Y• &amp;2 ~n 2

Dl•plilly
.Act..
au
. .. . - Day•
Prior

If yoo are in!tres'Ied in becoming apart of OUI
ASs~Ied Living Community·we oor seeking Resident
Assistants.
Cjrtifted Nursing awJicants are prefemd bul on the jJb
I Iraining can be provided by the facility.

~o

••oo .....

P•p_,.

• AM •de

........
,.....
~... •

l&gt;e pntpllld"

.-..w••~•DM:f...._~.-.,

lit~ A llr1cfl • AWOM 'I 1 ........ ,
• I"IIC.._. ....._.Nil.......... Alildnll!l Wlaelt,...,...

'•
.I

........... uw ..... ......

•

We offer oompetitive wages and einployment benefiiS.

• POLICIESc

the

Lost· between Tudors in Jim's lawn Maintenance,

Mason!Cour1

St. mowing

mulching

and

PomeroY on 16U1. male much more. Insured, tree -;;;;"F;;;ann=o;E;;iqu.i;;;·O;pt;;;m;;;llll;;;;~
Audlont
long chaired black · wiener estimates. 740·395-3369
~
1219 AUCTIONctog wt blue collar,
John
Deer
Modulaf
, •Spanky', child's pet, Re- Looking to do yard work, cunerlconclltiorer &amp; Mas· House at 12:00 Noon or;t
ward, 304-a 82 _8200
mowing, trimming.. Call sie Ferguson Hay rake. May. 9, 2009. Buckeye

:

7:40:·2:56:·~654~1;~::

Ttlbun

ublicatlon
mlsslo" · of
dvertltement.
orrectlons will
ade In the firs
vallable edition.

~

Box r~umber ads ar
lwars confidential.
Current .
pplles.
Real
dvtrtlsements a
bject to the Fedara
air Houalng Act o
1968.
Thlo
newopape
ccepta only ·h
anted ads meetln
OE atandarda.

n
.
eu
·
ts

We
will
no
nowlngly accept an
dvertisement
. 1
lolatton of the laW.

Building Matorialo
Announur••r&gt;r11s

lost &amp; founCI

~=~.;;;..o;a;;;;;;;•

Found Georgei Creek
Rd. Small male dog .
Brownisl'1/red.
friendly,
Boxer mix? 446-2212

Stet! Arch .Bu!ldlnga

SAYE
THOUSANDS·3 ·
cancelled orders, 25:(30,
35x50 immediate shipment Of pick up available! Inventory wun1
lastl CALL TODAY/
t --866:352·04t39.

.T

FIND ·
BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

H0 . . . . , , , , . . , , •

RecJMtton• Velilclet ............................... 10110
ATV ......
11105
Blcyclet .........................................,.......... tOtO
l l o l l l l -.................................... t015
Clmper!IIVo &amp;Tlllllrl ............................. 1020
Matorcyclet ....................,.......................... t025
Olior .........................................................,1030
Want to buy ., .................... ~................. ,..,, 1035
A.utomoUQ ..••.:....,..........;.....~................... 2000
Auto Rtn~ ................................... 2005
Au10I ...... ,;............ R.:.. ..... ....... .................... 2010
Clllllc/Anllquot ............................:.......... 201 5
com-la~ncllllfrlll ............................. 2020
Partt I ActtiiOries., ..............................,,2025
$porta UUIHy ................ ,........................... 2030
Trucko................ ,.....................................2035
UIIIHyTrllltrl ......,,,,.,,., ..................... , ..... 2040
Yanl ............................................................ 2045
Wont to buy .............................................. 205G
Roll EobtoSello ................ - .................. 30110
C.nwry Plotl .............. , ......................... 3005
COmmiiCI.tif ...... ,........................................ 30fO
Condomlnlutt11 ...................................... ,, .. 30t5
For Sale by Owntt..................................... 3020
Hou• for Sllt....; .................................... 3025
Lind {~) ................,... - ................. 3030
l.otl ............................................................ 3035
wont to buy............................................... 3040
,Rill Ettall Rtrdlla................................ "" 35QO
Aj&gt;lrlitttnb/!owtthoUIII ........................ 3505
Com~............ ,...... ,............................ 3S10
ContiOtttlnltiM ......................................... 3!t5
HOIIIIIIOJ Rent ................................. :.3520
Land {Acrt~g~j ........................................ 3!25 ·
S1orage.......................................................3535
Want to Rent ................._...........................l540
u ..n.~·~ Houlf~
·., ••,N
"0"""" ""'"""""""" -

........,
........

Pets .......................
62o
Want to btly.................................:............... a2s
n •• , , ... . ......................... . ....

Agriculture ............... : ................................ 7110
Farm Equlpmenl ......................................... 705
Gardin AProduct....................................710.
Hoy, Ftorl. Sood, Groin ............................... 115
Hunting &amp; Lllid ........................................... 720
Want to buy ............................................... 725

Mordltndiii .................... ,, .. ,... ,, .................. BIIO

Antlqueo ..................................................i05
~Kalt&lt;o ......,........................................... lfO

A.uctlons................. ,.................................... IUS
Bargain llalement... ...................................l20
COIIectlbiot ................................................ 925
Comp&lt;lloro ................................................ i30
Equljlment/Supptltl ...................................935
Fill Mort&lt;eto ............................................... 940
Fuel 01 CotVNOCMI'Gas ............................ !MS
Fumlturt ............................................ ,......... i50
Hobbylltunt &amp; 590rt....................,,.,.,... ,...... 955
Kld'o,Comer ................................................ 960
Mloctl~neouo .............. - ............................ 965
W•nt to buy.................................................. 970
lord Sole ................................................... 975

-

-

;JOUO

•

-grandmother. Your visits remind~
us ofallthe lives she touched. A
special thanks lo Ohio Valley Home
Heallh and Holzer Hospice who ·
.
•
were compassionate and caring.
Thanks to Harold Montgomery and
the Centena.ry Community Thanks
·
to Richard Unrue and John Arnold
for their comforting words
celebraling her life. Thanks 10 the
·
Providence Missionary Baptist
Church for the time of fellowship
and· food provided. Your kindness
will nevrr be forgotten ;
Marlin Carl Don James Charlotte

v•-

.

',

. ·

-~~

...._..,...

....__,..

pd.
or

www.IKJizlr.org

·F.ljual Opportunity Employer
Help

========

Help Wanted

Indepen4ent &lt;;;ontraciors (must be at-leilSI
needed to deliver the Qhio Val~y Phone
.in Gallip&lt;ilis , Jackson, Wellston &amp; surrotmding

-v

County
Mobile
Rn.n k R~po! (5% oown. !"~
homo · &lt;&gt;·water.
k.
$12
,500 . ,·ears, 8% APR! for lislin""·
•·
388-755·5596
800·6204946 ex KOJ7

~~-~-~~=
Gallla Co. 10 acres
$12,5001 Meigs Co." 5
aCI'8 'homesite, co. water
R
$19,900. eedsvi/le 12
acres $2.1,900 or Dan·
ville 13 .acres $25,900!.
~~-:~~":":.~~ Wo
linancol Call

-- '"'

zaA house in Mkldlepott
$450 per month hatl.
stove, fridge, micrOWave,',
R
washer &amp; dryer. ental':
pays
utilities.
ca~
1
740..352•4376

A s~ion
avaK. JacJcJon,
Pan-nme, 1·9pm Dielary Gallia good pay flexible

FinGnt:lol . Being 'Aa:aptO&lt;I 'For

Trade your 'ifob~ in
for a'Career you'll love/ .

l:,~:IIGIIW..bllillllin

are a I00-bed lad lily locatetlln ll!miloy, OH.
To a)ltily, pease ~tour Idly at 38'11tAIIII(IIttlllllld.1
LPonMm. Gii4Slell or call (7.o) 9112-1111011. ·

~~· ~

,.

,740-828-2750

· Help Wanted

Help Wentld

·.-

· Help Wa.n ted

RNs and LPNs .
I

\'

'

Full Time, Part Tinie,

PRN- Positions

AUCTION
May l, 2009 IO:OO aJD,

· Selling The Personal Property of the late
case mana.oement posl-

Merrll Roach

Uon · avail. In Gallia. pft.
fer at least Associates

Location : 1473 Co. Rd. 13·E Scottown, OH
45678

.

Degree {POd pay flexlbfe
hrs. 740-853-2281

!,

Fiscal Senices
. Coordinator

Highly &amp; ReSident Assistant Pomachlnllt sffions II You Are A. Carn-.:t.
ing, EnlllU1loastic &amp; o..
pendable Person. Then
We want You To Join
Oui Team Come On
PoattkJn requlrn:
Over &amp; Check Us Out!
You'll 9e Glad You Oidt
• Aecant experhtnc• Competitive
CNA
With manual lathH, Wages. Paid vacations,
milling
machines, Paid Meals, Many Otner:
uwa, and radial drills
Benefits,
Raver1swood·
• Ablltty to hold loltr· Care
Center, · 1113
ancn to .0005" an fine Washington St., Ravens·
work
wood. WV, .References
• Ability to eec:u· Aeqwed, E.O.E . .
re1aly cut varloua male Overbrook Rehabiltarlon·
&amp; female threac#l, In- Center is currently ac·
ct~lr::~=~ machln- cepting appticalions lor:
. tng llfllerlalo of vlrlouo part time LPN'o AVailable
hanfneu and m¥hln- sholts are 7A·7P &amp;
. lng characterlattcs
-7P-7A All Interested ·ap·
-: AbUI1y lo reid ·plicants ,.should
pick up
t·
drawlngt and make a-n apptca ton· a1 333
panl to appropnata Page Street, Middleport,
ipeCifleallona
Oh. F(lr tunher informa· ·
• Famlllarit"1 with 1ion, please contact lucy
t •7401992 li472 EOE
ahop safety routines a '
·
·
• and."'~'" .
Lift truck operation
,. . pluo
• Candf"·tao must
wa
,be eligible for u.s. ·,..
cret clearance.
Send your resume or a
completed
appllcatlcm
form (call to request one
or prlnt ona from
www.utrOnlnc.com/ca·
rears) by email , fax or
· mall to I
Attn. B. Davis
UTRON, Inc.
9441
lnno'vallon
Dr.
Manassas, VA20110
Tel.
703·369-5552/Fax
703-389-6296
Toll Free 86S-23t ·2476

Alihton, WV -

skilled

_,nit

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

w

the

. Classifieds!!

a

,

Employses ate needed
to proVIde customor
service over rhe phor,'le

..

,,

Vinton,,Qhlo
Saturday, Mlly 2nd at.1 pm
Partial lis!;
Hoosier style kitchen caninel 1 . w/ porcliit .top;
kitchen drop leaf table, app. 65 pes. of ~von
cap o;od, 2 pes. Early Americun {S!ar of Duvid)
· Berry bowl set, sm . pitcher, Iris Herringbone
bowl, vintage men's and women 's lluts, old
dolls. crocked glass, cookie cutters, candle
holders, RR Sponge ware bowls. old post
cards, box Of cOins,
We· still have table sp~ce for this sale. We will
tilke merchandise until 6 pm day ,of' sale. Most
sales last 3-4 . hrs and usual have a good
selection of items to chO&lt;m !rom.
·

.
. 7~41
Cash or ~k wilD. Not mponslble
acddebts or loslltenis. ·
. For Info: Call VIrgil tit7.W:388·H880

for ·

· RaiD dine Sbclter available ff it rabts,
. Trailer parkin! aval, 1171 Blessin1 Road Patriot, Ohio
Dla1illi:SR Ul ~ Lili.'illli Pk,Sitligbloo!o~ll'llllp 1!*1, I~ 1!*1
to ltlllll!l1ilg ROil. FolliwS~.Fiillar~.Fir pl!li!i ill) dsale
iii'alN ')i~~ llllht&gt;.{a4.llyi'll~.•iH!~'F·hkh .
lA llll Wader ·~•!•"l oooOi•. IMido" ':'&gt;' "'"'" ,,.~

~ulelmorvlow

Todlyl
Sllrt Work Mondlyl
1-iu-IMC-PAYU
. Ext.~.·. --

onuno:

I

i

191611mtr r.p.. 2~ ;...,,...wtotm~•l ''"'II rro
lo!tban 100 b!l.M oroioll U,uu 1~ ~"""'' !"' "n
trl&lt;ll l·koo f1 Cilljjnc ~l•foil lp&lt;iil!' Q,4 roHOra t.c&amp;i Jl.li iblltl

Sundiy &amp;Monday OF~
: Ctll tor lotarvtew

· 1•·2pm
Auction

Auction •

, · Farm Auction May ~It ll A.M.

1 Hiring Full Time
Position• (2-11 pm)
1 Hlrlng Part Time
Poonlona {S:Oil-1 :30pm &amp;
5:30 ·I 1:00pm)
1 OFF oo Sunday
. 1 Weekly Bonus
1 Onslle Doctor
1 Fun &amp; Professional
Working Environment
1 Complete Benents
Package .
·

A~llo~r: Fftlis 'oftte" Isaac

Auction

I I
f.t.ibOh)OnmarilriiDil,
i'ttoleol&gt;l• oil•c•o l,., COO!) &gt;~Via~ ,.;1&gt;\tiD JlB !IJ GO.
neld SJ'If•,llft G&lt;oor liolin Toile ' '"' ,;., l&lt;r.J,. H"h ll ioch •!"

Auction

' 4·l t• ~lk 1m• ... 11·! '""I!"' &gt;n. IIMI!lll~oid
I ni~!lf'll•t. lllft ~~'~''"!&lt;f·l ~~ o;ir•nlt"'"'~"'l" o.~ ""'
1

AUCTION
May 2, 2009 at 10 am

l&lt;ci~illlc&lt;ldoily~~~

Location Melgl County Fair Groun.da, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Wf'

ol!l' iJ.lVIIlq

J!'i'll'

,.

..

Auction

Auction ·

We are growing!

Home Health Experience Required. .
·.- . OASIS and Cooing plus.
,

WrilllP

! ; Oll'-ol(jlll1l!'!1t ,l\l\tl("!f1
1 C'f 1'\t'IVOilt''

~Otllo""~llltl'(j

Flexible Scheduling ·
Paid Mileage
Benefits offered for full time.
Send Resumes to:

Pam Moran, RN
352 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, Oh 45631
74lt-441·1779

.,',

EOE

'J

mymldWesthome.com ..

304-674-5267'

Auction .

;:,0·

·
rr.,

up to $8000 to buy a nevf.
home. Doni m)ss you('
share o1 the stimUlus baW.:
out money. No Olm·..
micks. No Hype. Call b.,
be
Pre-Qualified~.
2 br. apa~ment $375.00 74D-423·9728 or toll fro&amp;·
.a mon 304·612-4350
666-3311-3201
I
3br 1rom $299 mo

Cenllr is seeltlog SliiAI for

We have e new 8UirtJng waQt of $8/ltllr tt1ue 111J for
eJperlencs and shift diflaoolials! No ltlltldatltta as of

,-------~----~~
Government will . pay y~

NEW Double-s

Auction
Hoooekeeplng
laundry
and Floor ,;.re wanted
Apply at Arbors of Gall:
polit.

n .....

Isaac's Auction House

t

'

'-========--=======~

-

.ttlr six monUtsl

6020 ST AT 554 .Bidwell.:

2 br. apt. $375.00 a mon.

avail.

CNA'o 6 Relident
AlllttaniS .
Interviews Are Now Be·
lng Conducted F&lt;Jr CNA

Dlredtons: From Proctorville mke 775· N 11
miles to Co. Rd . 2. tum right go I mile.
From Ironton take )41 to 1Wilgus, tum right on
m you I n - In 1 175go3milestoCo.Rd. l3,tumleftgotodead
rewarding·
posiUon? end tum right watch. ror .signs. From Gallipolis
PAIS li eun-.ntfy •c· take 175 35 mile~ to Co. Rd. 2, turn lert go 4
ceptlng
appllcationa .miles wtttch foi signs.
::...~ folloWfng post- . Fann Equipment .. Tractor Lon&amp; #610, Tractor
Direct Care· A lull time wjcab &amp; Loader Belarus #5 2 4WD. 256 Hay
Hllp Wanl&lt;ld .·Gonoral direct ca(e position lor .Rake. Ford #501 Mower, 51 Bushhog , N.H. Hay
Emplopment ~1ncf11
Ripley WI/ providing resi- bme 1', 3 pt Hay Ca~r. 3 pt ~ood Splitter, 2{
Basket Hay Tedder, Loader 1 Hay Forks: N.H/
.ExirJMontyS dentiaVcommunlty
s~n
lndependentContraetorl lralnlnO wiltl lndlvidl,lals Round Baler 1130l.N, Pond Scoop, J pt Fen.
Grouoidskeeper needed
{musl be at loaat 18)
wl1h MAIDD. M""""y- Spr&lt;ader, 6' Pickup Disk, Wheelbarrow, 2
In Rio Grande, OH
needed to dEiliver the·
Friday hrs.fMndbl8 de· Scythes. Front Tractor Weight~ ,·Long Front. End
Prevlouo exp. req. MuSt
Ohio Valley Phone Boo!(
L-~ -~A~
pending orl cflenl needs
~~
bel8 and poeseas HS
in Gallipolis, Wellston &amp; up to 40 ..hrs a week. TrUck- 4 Wheeler - Catlle Trailer- Lawn
Dlptorna/GED. Pay
8
'j~:a~:
High school diploma or Mower, 2001 Chevy 1500 4WD Auto 24,243
S7.80illr. Call
GED
required. Experl· miles, 2001 Hl)nda Rancher 136 miles. 16'
Kelly ServiCes
C'""!""~.,..--~
•
oe Pr~t~~-•a rred, crlml naI M_ontz
. L'Jvestoc k Tra
'
Tra1'Ier.
'
:
":
n
.. 1'Ie-r , 18' Equ1pment
60C\'295-9470 or
Need 7 ladles to seH background check ra- D x:on 0 Tum M
304-529·2t41
. A'f'on call740-448-3358
qulred, must have reli·
J
•
o~~r
.
..
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - able
trlhaportatlon. Too
/ Is &amp; MSlseelllanFeotis •J'uel Tank .30!) ~
Help Wanted . .
Help Wanted
H rty
t
tartln
1 w pump, evera
arm ates, appmx.
S:.~sa::V~ ~asedg
Tobacco Sticks, Rough. Lum~r. Cattle Crossing,
eJCpe"nellCe ·
Air Compressor, New Steel ·Pcsl , Air ·Tank,
callt-304-373-1011 . ·
Battery Charger, Jumper Cables.' Long Haodle
Tools, Boomers. Brush AJC, Barb .Wire Stretchers,
Are you lntlrettecl In 1 Fence Charger, Elec. Fence Posts, Over Fence
pooHion? Feeders, Corn Knives , Hedge Trimmer, Tobacco
PAIS II c:unwrtrr ec- Boxes, C.ar ·Ramps, Yard Spreader, 28' EJCt.
oppllcotl0111 Ladder, Creeper, Seeder, Chain Saw Husq . #351,
Rio Grande Communi1y CoUege seeks to . COpllng
hire a Fiscal Services Coon,linatot who will be· for ttlt following poet- Weedeater , Husq., Drill, Circular Saws, Log
h
tkJn1:
Ch · H d 1 k " . H d~ 1 W
responsible for various accountil1&amp; and fiscal
Direct Care- A full time
ams, y . ac s, vanous an 100 s. rene
Sockets,
Chainsaw
Sharpener,
Burlap
Sacks
activities. including Local tux levy fonm. grant
dtreot care poott~na .for Houseb9ld • Refrigerator 18 .2, Range N.G. Ava,
billings. financial statement preparation and
Point Pleasant WV pro· Microwave.• ' Kitchen Utensils, Pots, Pans ,
other daily financial items . The successful
vldlng
realdentlalloommunlty
skill training with Dishes, WOQd Dinette Set, Living Rwm Suit
. candidate · should have ·. strong-interpersonal
lndlvlduit~ with . MR/00. Jpc . Blk, End Tables, Pictures, Wail Clocks,
skills. excellent wr•ue.n :· and verbal
MondayFnday evening RCA .TV, VCR, TV Cabinet, CD Player, Phone
c:mrtmunicati~ skills fUld the ability lo work in
. &amp; mld-n~t shltts Satur- Stand, Night SIIUtd. Pon . Radio. Pen &amp; Pencil.
a team.oriented environMent. A minimum of a
)
dey &amp; Sunday dayllme. Sets; Bedroom Set Jpc. Humidifier. Elec. Vib.
PAIS !IOO~Ing
bachelor's degree in butin"ess or equiValent is
evening &amp; mid nl~ Chs.ir, Console Stereo, Kerosene LampS, Ced!r
required with cxperience ."pn;ferred . This full- · ahlf\8. H~n school .dl- Wardrobe, . Blanket Chest, Bedroom Set 3pc, ·L.PN :· · &amp;qmlni8terimonllor
patient
madicati&lt;Jn
time. 12 mon.th position·would ·rep6rt to the
ploma or GEO required. Ot:caslonal Ch.air, Kitchen Cabinet, Hoover preparation ' lor lndivldu·
Vice President for·Financial' and Administrative · Experience
preferred, Sweeper, Auto Wnsher. M.C., Dryer GE, Folding ala with developmental
Affairs. The Collese offers a competitiVe cnmlnat ' background Wood Tables. Folding Chairs. Card Tables, disabilities in Clifton WV
salary and an exCellent fringe benefit&amp; package. · check required, must Coleman Lantern, Fl~hli_ghts 1 Scanner, Sentry $13.-$15. per hr. based
have rBHable .transports· Safe, Luggage, Telephones,- Movies, Linens; on &amp;Kperience. PleaSfJ
llqn. Hourly rafa '•otartlng . Towels, Blankets, Coolers, ·B.R. StOIJI, Old : call 304-373-1011 or tO!I
Please send a· leuc!r outlining y~ur
at S7.01l-S6. 51lillr. ' balled. Chairs, Washboard, Apple butter Paddle, Home tree at t-817•373·1011.
qualifications and·interest in the position , and a
on eJCperience
r~sume along with the names arid contact
caf1 1.304-37a- 1o11 .
Interior, Fishing Poles, Wood Stove, ater Pump
Guns·Guitar -20 gao Sgl. Hercules, Marlin 22
infOrmation of three references. Please submil
Auto w/Scope, Marlin 22 At~to , Swiss M78
this information by Ma~r 4 to:
AVONI All Aieast To Bw
Vetter\i
.41 Cal. Militnry Rifle, Mozzle l._...oader,
or . Sell Shl~"'' Spears
ANew
GUitar Ventuta /1.6
·
304-875-1429
'
Luanne Bowman
Tr)l'
LUNCH served by Kitts Hill Willing Workers 4Vice President for Financial and
H Club • lD Required
Admlnlsli'allve Affairs
R.L. "Bob" SeUs Auction Service
168 Twp Rd 122·W Willowwood OH-45696
Rio Grande Community CoUege '
Work for a top
·Licensed &amp; Bonded In Favor Ot" State Of Ohio
ernp~yer. committed to
PO Box326
Auctioneers: Bob Sells &amp; Harold Ncul App.
ofterlng ,em~toyment
Rio Grande , Ohio 45674
opportunldes In our areal
.
Ryan Sells
lbowman@rio.edu
Not Res nsible For Theft Ort'lccide ts
Auction

$
$
It
;~- 1 1 dod '
poa ' · wno u "

+ $300.00 dep. HUO. approved,
no
pets

abMtty to wo11&lt; !()depend· wOOd, WV, E.O.E.
enUy w11t1 strong attentlon ta deti.ll. ~ Wanted: server for the
send resume and tefer· Gallipolis tiollday Inn,
encetto
Come and bp a part of a
gallipollsaccountantO
great tellm. No ·elq:lerigmaii.C()m
ence necessary, IITIIIes
or mail to CL.A 101, PO mandatory. Pick up ap:.
Box- · -'69, Gallipolis, OH plication at the front
4563L
~ No phone cahs
P
·

tus.
t!'ak"ling
740-853-2261 ·

MACHINIST

Medical

:

Help Wanted

AdmlnfltratlvtiProftss .....................IO(M

Cllltltr.tltrk ............................................m

ChlltiiEidorly Cant ..................................... 6008

Cterlclt .......... _........................................ &amp;010
Conotructlotl. .. - .................................... li012
DriVOJI &amp;Dolvory ................................... li014
Educlllon ........,_,,.,,.,,,............................liOf&amp;
E1oc1r1co1 Plumlllng .................... - ...~..... liOf&amp;
Em~,..._, __,_,...,, ....... l020
- -........................................1022
Food Serllcol......................... ,.. _.,.. _,,,.fl024
Government 1 FedtrJI Jobt ... _..............f026

Holt&gt; lfllttl- -

................................ &amp;021

Low [nfort:lioOid- .................................1030

.........__.-......................1022
. Mliil)llftil!it/Supo olaoly ....- ................ 11034

-

..............................- ...- .....1036

Mtdlcat ......................................................li038

Musical,_................................................... 601110
Plrt·nm.Ttmj)Of•ito ........................... II042
Roo1aunrnto ......- .................................... IIM4
Sofii ....................... ,....... ,.... ,................... IIMI
Technlcll Tfldlt ....................................... IKISO
To-Ktory ..................... - ................ w

05

Earn up to $25,0GWyr+

•,.,..,.,m
• _,,_.,,._
2..99 , acrea . . or ·
.
vis~ 650 montli 400 de'

200R6 on
2B • large LR. ·asking ·•·-'• b . "end oom
"""· rune., ·

YOUR AUCTION
JN THE CLASSJfiEDS

LPC/LPCC,

lnfoCision

3 9 24

I

Wanted

S EARN FXTRA MONEYS
DELIVER IN G TELEPHONF ROOKS

Pontiac Grand Pnx
~64!".!5--22_1.,.4---~
GT2 CD
leather, aded
sunroof, 6 30.5 acres w/ 2100 sq. ft.
38R house In soul"·
ll"o
1
61
.=oo. C~lt ~ _ 9. K, 02 Claylon on block ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; we stem School District.'
foundation w/ 2x6 con- "
Call
379·2254
or:
~200::::'!'1-::Pon~tia~c~':':G~ra"-'nd~e structlon &amp; premium win~ents/
379-2879
Prix 4 door white 95,000 dows. 4 BR 2 full BA
TownhouMI
miles. Loaded eMtra nice gas, log FP, large kit
$4 500 OBO. 388•0332
large laundry room, walk
In Closets, master ba:th
Clip this AD and take 11
2005 Dodge Neon 4 cyl, wl dressing room. Total with you when rou vlslt
auto ,
46.000
mites, etec heating 1 cooling
our community 10 get
this special d!scounl.
$4000 OBO. 256-1233
14x80 concrete patio · on
'sso.oo off your 111
1996 Goo Metro 121.000 ~~c: 6 w/ carport. 8' 16 &amp;
ruu· moAth of rent.
miles.. •oooo or trade.
x o·ut bldgs. . above
ground pool exc hunting
Curren11y renting 1 &amp; 2
446·7181
~-:::-~=:-~~~ fields woods w/ trails. BR untts Spacious floor
pla,nS, ranch &amp; townSuv's, Trucks, pars full Very private &amp; peaceful.
size and compacts, all Adda:vll18 school district home style living, playground .&amp; basketball
w1th
warranty. Rrices ·G_eorges Creek Road. 10
court, on-site laundry
starting at $t 9oo: stop or mlns.
from Gallipolis
l&amp;clllty, 24 hr emer- .
can Cook Motors 326 Walmert.
. Asking
gency maintenance,
Jackson
Pike. $160,000. For appt call
'1anulaA'Ill•'d
339-9733.
·
quiet country location
4000
740_446.0103
Ht' ,, 'iJ
close to major medical
1995
Buick , S~ylark,
.
faoili1ies, pharmacies,
auto, air condition, 4 cyl, 4 Bod, 2 Bath! Only
grocery store ... just
Rantala
;
runs good, nice &amp; cleS:n, 'S25,ooo.
!Of
listings
minutes away from
12B,OQO miles, new tires, 8QO.ti20··4946 eK A019
other major shopping In
2 br. . trailer $400.00
the area.
call
om-740·992·2272,
mon. + dep. 12-Spnt.;
Honey1uckle Hltla
74 992 300
pm- ()- -6
· House for sale In Hart·
304-675-41 00
of
1\P-l~·
740,973-6999.
Police lmpOUmlst CIU"li fiO!ll lord W'l on t/3 acre
266 Colonial Orlve t113
SOO!
Honda,CheVys Jeep5., 3br.,2ba. new central
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
· Saloo
•
HVAC,
appliances;
2
car
Fords.&amp; more. for listing!
740-446·3344
'
800-620-4876e,. V435
garaQ&lt; , 304-882-3901 .
Office Hours M, W, F
1999 Redmond 16x73'
9AM · 5PM.
3br.2ba. wmreptaoe muaf
move 304·675·2897.
·,•

04

Bach.'Joyce' Vloland and famllie~.
·

Au!cmoln,e

deft.

(4+)ac"res, to a historical ---/-["!""_~"!""home. Circa t9oo, ·s 2' roomi ·&amp; ba1h dowrt·
2 stairs
apartme·nt
1•
::;":::::'"~~-::'=~~ bedrooms, 2 firen~aces,
..,,
~
2006 Mazda 84000, V6 lull baths, 2 staircaSes, monrhs rent + deposit
4 ·Htre 4WD, a.ufomatlc, 4 beautiful original wood- references required. No .
dr e tended ab flop · ....
'"'"
· p
1
· x
c w • wo,.... many p......
ure w1n· ets c ean. 441·0245
per &amp; bed liner, 28,400 dows, mostly new · .winmites limited warranty, dows, large kitchen and Fumlshed apartment 2nd
serviCed regulal'ly, $13, breakfast room, ~auli~ Ave., upstairs, all . utilitlel
pd 1BR No Pets Ga""
900,.(740)992·7173
fUlly landscaped with In
·
•
•
".ground pool. Sit on lhe polis. 446•9523
wrap around porch .-.and NOW LEASING Jordan
enjoy the· spectaCular Landing, 2 &amp; 3BR Avaih_
view of !he Ohio River. 2 able No Pe1s. Tenant
car detached garage and Responsible for Rent (:
2 out buildings. wOuld ElactriO 304·674·0023 Ofll
· make a wonderful family 304·617·9986
~
home t~r bed &amp; breakfast.
H
F •-1
Private and P.lcturesque
3 br. dUplex for rent II\
otiMI or"" 0
SPECTACULAR YIEW . Middleport,
$1!50
W
-===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. •~e,ooo.oo, pl'eese call month Includes water a;'
3 Bed ,2 Bath
HUD 740·992·3678
eJectric, 740·992·5620 . ~
~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
homesl0nly$t99.1am. on .,
Modern 1BR apt. "·•,·
'-'01\.
grt.locationl5%dwn.15
~ (Acreog•
.)
740-44.6.()390
.,
vrs, at 8% for lstngs. ~~~¥~'¥~~
'
'!!!:
·,
609·620-4918exT461.
Rio Grande - 1.8 Acies .
Ho&amp;~te~ForRent ·'i·
on paved road. 1 112 ,....;;;;;;;;;&amp;ail;...a,
m
· 1,. from uS
4 b!:oJ. 2 . bathp,
35 • ~ 19'lllmo!
ICI
• • •
•

4338 SA 141 1' Mile
From New High SChool
Molorcl1dot
2100 s F N' hom
q. educed
t. ""
e
p·
10
07 Yama ha FZ6 2100 s nee, , rFor more
· info
139 900
mlles. ExCellent Corid. ·
Red wt black accents and. pictures go to
'· www.orvb.com
phone
$6500. CBI1441·9865
446_1210 or 339 .~

A'~-

food provid~ at the time of the loss ·
of our dear molber and

R .....................................................

loll............................................................. 4005
Movoro ...................... - ...............................010
Rtntllo ... ,.......................... - ................... ; .o15
SIIII ............. ,............ ,...,,......... ,_, ............020
Supptlts ........,...........................................III025
Usaont....................................................~5f5 Wont to Buy ...............................................40311
Perlonal ................................................:.... 520 ~·
~............
,
........................................
Animllo ....................................................... soo _
........
~•• ~
-~
'
·~
..........................
Animal Suppl~o ........................................ 605 RotOr! Proporty for ronl ........................... 5050
Horses ..........................................................610 Emplo~ment ..... ..A.................................. ... ,IOQO
Uvtltoett ............... ,. .................................... ~l5 AecOIInll~nonclll .............................:..111112

:=~~~~~;

truck, like new, 92,000 Ohio River
zer.
$400 plus
mi. $10',500 080. Call Private drive oft Uncoln Some
utilit~s
740-441·8299
or Hill,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 740-416-5288
740-441·5472
wOOds on· three sides 740·9Be-6130

~~~;;;;;;~=~- $75,000. 740·446-7029

The families of Norma James wish
lo express our sincere appreclalion
for your prayers, cards, Dowers and

CLASSIFIED INDEX
Legal! ........................................................... 100
A.nnounc:ementa, ........................................ 200
Blrthday1Annlvorl0ry,................................. 205
Happy Ads ....................................................210
Loll &amp;Founcl ............................................... m
Memoryllhank You ..................................... 2211
Notices ...................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wan,ed ........................................................ 235
Setvlces ............................. .-.................... 3110
Appliance Servlce......................... :............. 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materials ....................................... 3$
Business ......................................:............... 308
Catering....................................................... 310
Chlld!E1derly Care ...................................... 312
Comp-.................................................... 314
Contractors .... :..............:.............................316
DomtsticlfJanltorlat ................................... 318
Elecklcal ...................................................... 320
~nonclal ...................................................... m
Heanh .................................:.... :.................... m
Heeling &amp; Coollng ............................ ,.......... 328
Home tmprovemenls330 ·
Insurance ..................................................... 332
LaWn Strvlct .............................................. 331'
Muslc!DanteiDrama :............... _.................. 336
Other Servlc&amp;l........................................... ,.333
Plumblng1Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340
Proltnlonal Servlou ................................. 342
Repalrs .........................................................344
Roollng....................................................... 3411
Securi~ .......................................................3411
To/Accountlng ............. ,............................. 350
Travel/Entertainment ................................. .352
Flnenclal ... ~~.................................................400
Fininc:ial Servltts ..........:...
.,,,,,..,405
lnt"urlnct ................................................ ,... 11110
Monty to Ltncl ................ ,............................4t5
Educotlon .....................................................soo
Butlntll &amp; Trade Schoot ........................... 505
~uttlan I Trslnlng ................................. S10

Evans Mill Rodney Pike/
Rt 850 BidwelL C9Jiactibles, small appHances,
weed eater, kJtchen &amp;

-

TQANK YOU · .

Plell!e ,Mop by and lee Peggy WiUiams, ExeOOve
Diector at 300 Brialw!XXJ Drive, GaUipolis Ohio
{441-9633) or caU/email Barb Petenon Director of
Hwnan Resoo~~:es !01 LongTenn Care ai441·3401
or petetloo@holzu.org or look us up oo the web~

1st &amp; ~nd 9-5 0 Jewell doced, 04 Siverado 4X4 Spectacular view of the .2BR apt 6 ml from Hoi·

badl sinks, counte( tops
740--645-1081
Hills Career Center, Rio . &amp; much more!! Aslo serv(740) ing Steve Evans SauJohn Deere H045 zero Grande,
-5334· Ohio.
•
tum walk behind mower, 245
sage. Don't Mise; Bob
•• 1·nch cui. 17hp KawaEvansBaHCB:pstl
-w
FumHure
saki
engine,. hyd.rostatlc
3().4...674-3198
For sale Bassett living Rodney Community . Hall
room
suit . multi-color, .6 Family Yard Sal~ May
SnHL Sates &amp; Servi&lt;:e good . cond.
••~.oo tst &amp; 2nd from 9-5.
Now Available at Carmi·
..-ru
304-675-4596.
' Game
boy,game boy
chael
Equipment ::,;.:;,.....,...,,..,..,,. games, household items,
740·446-2412
:o:
MiteeiiCMeous
home .- interior, bar stool,
"""'""'""'""'""'""'""' !'::~~~~~~~ womens &amp; girls clothln!J.
Garden &amp; ProduCII
Mollohan's Carpet "Quat- girls &amp; bOys clothing, anity at low Prices' 13'6" tiques, furniture, tools
Berber carpet lil stock on and lots more. Somelarge variety of flowers sale Now. Eastern Ave. thing for everyone. .
&amp; fern baskets. Flowers Gallipolis to 446·7444
Big Vard Sale 15 Ann
I0 ,. "O r o ba ket
ox ' u wn
s s.
Drive Gallip&lt;&gt;is. May 1, 2
Large potted tomatoes.
Wont
To luy
&amp; 4. ClOthes, dishes,
FK!wers
&amp;
vege.lable "i;====;;;;i;=bedding plants. DayliQht _m_ls.c._ . "!""~~-~
· C ed
Want
to
buy
a
small
or
'
:"'
hours.
los
Sundar.
Lg.
multi family, 4·o;
a
mid
size
tractor
with
·
I!"
Yoders
reenhouse tO
days, starts ·rrl.
5.11, Jots
mi. west o1 Gallipolis on plow &amp; disc in good
of variety, Noble Summit
d
11
·
SA141
con · ca
~R,:.d,,;w;::a::;;tch~to~rs~igh~S==
304-n3-5191.

Found
s·rown do&amp; White
le a.....
A
Livattock
rna ,...,..g 18
g &lt;Jn t
35 near Jim Hilt Ad .a..vo
8
·
304·675-5580
.... ·wUS
ulls,excetlent
bloodlines,
Prk:ed
Nol1c..
Reasonably.
www.slaterunangus.coq~
Upcomlnt
certified (740)286·5395
or
nursing
llllttanl 418.0033
CIISS.
Must have a high school
hta
diploma or GED to apply. ;;;;;;=;;;;;;.;:=-;;;;;;=Applications
may
be Black female Lab 6 mos.
picked up at Lt..kin Hospi· old free to a good home.
tal, Monday . Friday call 740·367-7328
Sam- 4pm. Applications ~R~eg".··8:::1 a·c"k...,.La":'b-pu·pp;~es
must be turned in no 7 weeks old 5 male
.
later than , 05/0B/09 at
$300, 4 females $350.
0
C..,B.,E,..o,..,E,
. ""'""'"""' 367c0500 or 645·6351
7 bench leg Seagle pupPersonals
. 7 wks, tn. co1or, for
•=•ma"-;;;;;;;• plSS,
•
· 1o.
more.
1n
ca11
VIP DaUng and Match· '-'74;::1l-:;;7,;;42:o,·,::052::;:;6~--making S.Aice ' ":"'
Est.
'in
for Jack Russell puppies,
92
has shots; 2 seat light
Tri-State singles. Locally car1, new fit pony or
ownedfoperated, Single?
.
Not ''nto bars or '&gt;nternet?. horse,' 740-416·4592
Yord 5ol.
Full b~oded Golden Re·
Meet other area singles triever
pups
1st
ages 21 to 65, . many
va~
Christiarys, ·
many shOtstwonmed ·$150. Call
''"'. Sale 4867 State
446-4105
Route
· 850.M dThurSdav
he
mate s. Safe, fun and ;;::;;.:.::;;:....,...._ _....;_
A "I
rt'
..confiden1ial. Greenup Ky Giveaway 4 yr. old house l2;;~~~j P11 23 • on ay Ap I
fo
...._ oet, ha·s been
rod
?.7, 2009. From 9-1
.l oam
...,....
606-473-5901
and declav.led, very lovlng. 446·287~
Card of Thanka
Card of Thanks

ntlnei·Reglster wll
responsible tor n
ore than the cost o
he space occupl
y !he error and onl
he first insertion. W
hall not be liable f

200

Trvc:b
HOIIMI For Sot. ·
Apa~h!"'tlo/
W
.~~~~~~~
TownhOUHI
' Evans Flnily Sale May Need to sell, priced re· Extreordii'Uiry Property: ~~-"'~~~~~
Y""' Sot.

Loot &amp; Found

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edH,
rej~ or caitcel any
ad at any time.
Errors Mutt 9
ported on the firs
ar of publicatio
nd

Help Wanted

www.mydallytribune.com
www.mydallysenunel.com
www.mydaJiyreglster.com

YOUB AD NOW ONLINE

LSW/LISW,

Now AN ftJI' time therapist po-

COok, Experience PT&amp;Full·time ferred'Referencp
Reo
pooition with buly ..,_ qulred, Applk:ants May
COIIJ)tlng office In GaiiiP.,. Apply O,.lfy, Mon.-SiJn.
Ho lor knmedllite employ- 9-4pm, Come Join Our
ment. Aocounling degree T~lll ·Y6u'H Be Glad
and experience required.· You Dkll Ravtmswood
Must have good organ- Care
Cantor,
1113
tzalional · skills and the Washington St./ Ravens-

Galli a

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS

6unb4p ¢lmai·6mtbttl •

''
I

. . _...,

I

OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

•'

CLASSIFIED

'

..

•

WE MANAGER

Pleasant Valley Hospit~l is currenily
accepting resumes for a full-ti me Case
Manager. Graduate of an accredited
sdloot of nursing required. BSN prMerred.
Prefer a minimum of three years
experience in an acute care seiling. WV :_
license.
·
··
Send resumes to:
Pleasant V.lley Hospital
(/o Hum1n Resources

M~n info 11111 Pils":
m,J®Bfllimer~ring.tUIII

Tno!SaiCISb~Cktd witn Val.ID

@Athens Commu

Day With Us.

Auctton Conducted 1111

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
Owner: Mantrtl Brewer

1520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant. WV 25550
(l04)675·4340 Or. fax: ·l04·675·6975. or

304-liS-5441 Or 304-l73-Sl85
Note: Come help th&lt; center! I
llu Smllh AuctlonOitio ft3449 Cult, Positive ID, Rctitshmcnts

apply on-line 11 www,pyalley.or;c
AA/EOE

-·

IT•nn• Cash Or Check :With ID. Must Have
letter Of Credit Unless Known
Company.

Call1~1w-.

•

�Page D6- The Sunday Times Sentinel

Pomeroy, Middleport, Gallipolis, OH • Point PJeasanr, WV

Sunday, April 26. 2009

Ohio boy's swine flu
matches deadly
Mexican strain, A6

Job's Daugb.ter.s
to celebrate 5Qth
anniversarY; Aa

•
PriDI.od on 100'1&gt; •

· MiddlepOrt • Pomeroy, Ohio
,jl)( I \IS•\1tl

,)S

"\11

~~~ -.

\!'I' l l

\ l!l '\11 \ \

!-

'~

.

Rec:yded Nemprlatl:J41"
"''\\.nndail~-..\'lltiud.\1)111

_' IHIIJ

SPORTS
..• NFL Draft. See
. Page Bl •

FULLY BACKED HEAR,
10G,OOG-MILE POWER·
TRAIN WARRANTY ON

MOST GM VEHICLES'

SAFm AND SECURITY
I
OF
· 1oNSTAR FOR ONE YEAR
ON MOST

IDnu~NGSA.UJ

FOR RETAIL VALUE
PROTECTION AT
TRADE-IN TIME' .

Further details were not
Bv ·CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCHOMYOAILYSENTINELCCM · released by the Ohjo State
Highway · Patrol pending
. POMEROY - A four- completion of the investigavehicle crash on State tion. This is the second trafRoute 143 early Sunday fic fatality in Meigs County
afternoon resulted in a dou- this year.
ble fatality, with three other
According to unofficial
occupants bc;ing transported reports a van and a car ~ad
for trel!!ment. .
stopped on the highway to
Pronounced dead at the make a left hand tum when
scene were Robert W. the SUY struck the car froni
Harrison· II, 40 of behind, went left of center
P.omeroy, who was dri,ving and ran.into the truck which
a tnick, and Stephau•e ) . then cal!ght fire trapping
English, 38, of Middleport Harrison. · ·
who was a passenger in an
suv. '
.
Pie-~ Cruh, AS

UPT09MONTHSDF ·
PAYMENTS COVERED UP
TO $500/,,NTH'

6M VEHICLES'

.
.
·

•

•

David Harrtllpholo

Two lost ttieir lives and three others were injured in this .four-vehicle accident on Route 143
early Sunday afternoon.
.
.·
·'

Commissioners
eye costs
in capital
murder case

0BJWARIFS
.PageAS ·

Bv BRIAN J. Reeo-

·:• Kenneth Diddle, 83

eReeooMvoAILYSENTINEL.coM ..

· POMEROY The
defense team for Charles S.
Williams has reque-sted
$8,500 for expert fees so
far, and those expenses are
not included ·iu a cap on
capital murder defense costs
~ounty
commissioners
approved earlier tl)is year....'
· Attomer Charles Knight,
.Williams lead defense
counsel, has filed motions
in the Common 'Pleas
Court requesting $5,000
for a defense psychologist
and at least $3,500 for a
mitigation specialist to aid ·
in Williams' defense.
Wbile the expenses have
not yet been approved by
\he c;ourt, they are probably JUSt the begmnmg of
·costs·· associated with
Williams' defense.
· Jusl after Williams was
first charged hi the murder
of Doris Jackson, commis·
· sionets approved a $25,000
cap On defense fees in CB{'i·
tal murder cases. Wh1le ·
commissioners maintain a
contract with . the Ohio
Public Defender through its
office in Athens for indigent
counsel, death pe·nalty cases
are not included. When they
·approved the cap, commissiOners said they had seen
other counties - Vinton
· County, particularly · experience financial diffi- , ·
culties in expensive capital
murder cases.
·
Mick Davenport, president of the board of commissioners, said Friday the
commissioners are beginning to make budgetary·f rovisions in anticipation o the
costs of Williams' trial. He
Plust SH Costs, AS

INSIDE
• GM to announce
brand changes,
restructuring moves.
·~ ·~e,Al

• World Bank: Nations
should speed aid to
poor. See Page A2
·• RHS Alumni to
award scholarships.
See Page A3
:• Holzer offers
balance
.
'
i
'clinic. See Page A3
·, 12~unty food
·distribution center
&lt;&gt;Pens. See Page AS
• Operation Christmas
·Child to hold ce.lebration. .
SeePageAS .
• Homemade plane · ·
:Crashes, pilot killed.
· - .See Page AS
:• Veteran Rio educator
-retires this spring.
See Page A6

WEATIIER

Pomeroy reports b~glary, · 'Think Pink' receives Komen grant ·
·thefts ' traffic accidents
· BSERGENTIIMYIYIILYSEI'ltiNELCOM cerwithSUrviVOrS.
support for breast can- will once again be c~n.
·
dUcted to addreSS SpecifiC

Delalla on Page A5

BY BETH SeRGEtiT

INDEX ·.
.a SEC11oNs ~ 12 PAGES
~nie's Mailbox

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chief of Police Mark . E.
calendars
~ Proffitt reports that his
department is investigating
Classifieds
B3-4 the following cases, in~luda burglary, thefts and
Comics
Bs• ing
.
traffic accidents.
A
burglary
was.
recently
Editorials
A4 reported at The Pomeroy
As Flower Shop on Butternut
Obituaries
Aven~e . Pa~lman C. Brent
Section
Rose
mterv1ewed Rosemary
8
Sports
Eskew of the shop who
Weather
As ~ported she lef\ the ~midmg to go to Gal11pohs but
®a009 OhlovalleyPubllshlnaCo. upon her return nollced the
back dC?Or to the shop had
been k1cked m. , She then
checke~ the shops safe ~d
found 1t pned open w1th
4 1 11 1 1 1 t 1
• about$~ in cash missing.
1
An

. an

Ct~llllie!l

-YIH!S!!!
No wtn rlel.

-

'
www.mathenymotors.com
'

.

Bv BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYDAIIYsENTlNELCOM

.

.

~~I ~~1111

Patrolman Jon Kulchar
Think Pink raises awarewas recently dispatched to
POMEROY
The ness and provides educa- .
Powell's Food Fair to inves- · Meigs County Cancer tion about breast health,
ligate money · allegedly ' Initiative 's Think Pink ·encourages women in
stolen from the purse of Program . which provides Meigs County · to utilize
Hope Synder, Pomeroy. The free mammograms and this community resource,
store's surveillance video breast health information and · assists · medically
shows Synder setting her has received $20,884, half · underserved wom~n ailes
. change. purse down on ·a of its funding for the year.
35 and over to obt~m chmstore shelf and accidentally
The Think Pink project in ·cal breast . exammauo.ns,
walking off without it . on Meigs County is for women mammography . screenmg
the tape another female is residing in Meigs County and d~agno~uc semc~s at
· seen coming down the same and is funded through · the no cost. Thmk Pmk clients
aisle, picks up the purse and Susan G. Komen For . the rece•:ve gas vouchers·. to
allegedly takes $20 out of it . . Cure Columbus Affiliate . prov1de
transportation .
Stefanie Amott, Syracuse, Think rink uses a commu- aSSIStance to screenmg
reported her purse was ~1ty-ta1lored approach to appomtments and _mobile
stolen from the . Pomeroy 1mprovmg breast health . mammography serv1ces are
McDonalds. The purse wa8 through educanon , targeted prov1d~d at each ~f
hanging on the back of a outreach, mamll)ography MCCI s . four Women _s
chair at a restaurant and screenmg ~erv•c.es and Health Day s held at vanwh n A 11 left she forgot ref~rr_als , fmanc1al and ous locations throughout
e . mo
logistical support to obtam the county. Additionally, a
Pl.... SH RepoJ11, AS
breast health services , a!Qng survivorship . workshop

needs and concerns of
breast cancer survivors .
Described as a totally
grassroots effort; the project'
is led locally by Norma
Torres, RN, BSN, MSEd,
who is a breast cancer survivor and the program mariager. Carolyn Grueser is the
prograni assistant . . For
women wishing to inquire
about the free services
offered through the Think
Pink program, call 9922161 , ext. 236.
.
This month , the Susan G.
Kamen For the Cure
Columbus
Affili.ate
announced it was granting
$1. 25 million to fund 37
grantee ·programs that will
provide thousands
of
Pl.... SH Gr•nt. A!l

'

.. ---~ ~----··---------::-.-..,.;....:....~---------~---·- - -··-:.,.-·- -----·-···
•

.

-~

....

---- --···____ ..
....__

'

.

-- ·:'5.....---~----·---

-

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    <tag tagId="201">
      <name>ward</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
