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ALONG THE RIVER

LMNG

Wildermuth Brewery:
Another piece of Pomeroy's
industrialized past topples, Cl

Nl

X

I I· I

C. .! t.

Race: UAW·081mlerChrysler 400
Where: Las Vegas Motor Speed·
way 11.5 miles). 267 laps/400.5
miles.

When: Sunday, March 12
Last year's winner: Jimmie Johnson

Qualifying record : Kasey Kahne.
Dodge. 174.904 plp~ , March 5.
'2004.
.
Race recoi-d: Mark Martin. Ford.

146.554 mph, March 1. 1998,

Callfoinla is supand the
l!le
Everyone seemed
1

· heels·in'the after·

Last week: Perhaps Matt Kens.eth
deserved his Auto Club 500 victory. even though he didn't have ttie
fastest car and won at the expense of teammate Greg Biffle
and. perhaps, rival Tony SteWart.
81tfle. the defending champion,
dominated the ection on the track
until his Ford suffered engine .fail·
ure late in the race. Stewart

11~

Sol:' •-.tiF S

seemed .poised to challenge Biffle.
but on a day when there was little
attrition, he also fell victlrh to engine failure . As it turned out,
Kenseth was able to hold off Jimmie Johnson in yet another overtime finish. Kenseth had started

31st but managed to climb into
the top 10 by the 40th lap. He

seemed likely to win t}le race fairly
easily until his two-second l ea~
over Johnson wa"s erased by a cau_tion flag that created a green·
white-checkered-flag nnish. John·
son's Chevrolet lagged behind
Kenseth's Ford, hoping to make a
run when the green flag waved.
Ken seth was able to counter the
Daytona 500 winner's maneuver
·successfully.

BUSCH S.F..H'tES

RaCe: Telcei-Motorota
200
Where : Autodromo

Hermanos Rodrrguez.
Mexico City 12.518

Rac8 : Craftsman 200
Where: Atlanta Motor
Speedway. Hampton,

11.54 mi. ), 130
laps/200.2 miles.

Ga.

When : Friday, March 17
Last year's winner:

last year's winner:
Martin Truex Jr.
Qualifying record:

. Qualifying record: Rick
Crawford, Ford,

LAS VEGAS

DATA · ·"

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs .c ounties

UAW-Dslm/e~r 400

March 12

Ohio \'all&lt;·~ Puh!i,hing('o,

SPORTS

When: Sunday, March 5 Ron Hornaday Jr.
Jorge Goeters, Ford,

182.735 mph, March
17, 2005.

103.366 mph, March

Race record: Ron Hor-

Race record: Martin

Truex Jr.. Chevrolet.
67.591 mph, March 6.
2005.
Last week : Greg Biffle,

in a Ford, won the
Stater Brothers 300 at
Cal,ifornia Speedway.

• Redmen split AMC
openers. See Page 81

~

driver wronged
Kenseth, won.
wronged him,
·''. Tony
flnlshOd last. Even
·the driver who finiShed last at
Daytona. Carl Edwards, rallied in
•·· Ce!lfomia to finish third.
~·i-ofcourse: there was Jimmie
Johrison, finishing second in
· .fOntana e week after finishing
ftrst in Daytona, still without
crew chief Chad Knaus and still
feeling no apparent disadvantage from NASCAR's suspension
ol Krlaus.
.., Kurt Busch won the' pole iiJ an

Intrepid. circa 2004, not a
Charger, circa the present.
Three drivers dro\le lntrepids,

hoping they would handle better
In traffic. AI IIIley proved is that
the Intrepid could handle better
on the traek by itself. The top
two Dodge finishers in the race
drove Chargers. The three lntre-

pids- driven by Busch, Ryan
Newman and Bobby Labonte all finished outside the top 15.

. • Dale Earnhardt Jr.. despite two
relatively unspectacular show-

lrigs, finds himself fifth in the
Nextel Cup points standings.
That's the good news. The bad
news is that he didn't run partic-

ularly well on

an intermediate

track. and those tracks were hi s

chief weakness in 2005.
• The early setbacks of drivers

like Stewart, Greg Biffle and Ed·
wards may be creating a false
s.ense of security. All three have

been fast, and Stewart and Bif·
fle are unlikely to have engrne
trouble very often.
• Jeff Burton's in a Childress
Chevy now, but his fifth·place
finish 81 California was his first
top-10'showing at the track
since 2000.

WHO'S HOT
AND WHO ' S NOT

....... hot

-Jimmie
Johnson's fN.
erage finish
so farJs 1.5.
,, He's been In ·
the toj&gt; 10 In
points for 71
strai&amp;ht

r .,",

I

~··

races ....

Casey Mears

haS finished in the top 10 In
races to date.

·both

Greg Biffle and
Tony Stewart probably dmve
the two fastest cars at Califor•' nla,.lhey finished 42nd .and
. "'Wlio.. not .-

· *· 43rd, rllsjlectlvely.

·

MAn KENSETH

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

BY PAUL DARST
GALLIPOLIS '_ A project
that started at I he end of .last
summer 1s sc hedul ed to
re sume this week.
Beginning on Monday,
Amerescv Energy Inc., wi ll
once agai n begin replaci ng
water meters in Gallipolis .
The projecl was halted in
December bec,au sc of winter
weather.
The new meiers are more
efficient and, once Ihey are all

tin, in.a Ford. won for
th€ second week in a
row, this time at Califprnia Speedway.

• FEUD OF-THE WEEK · •

v

No. 17 DEWALT FORD

E

R

s
·Tony
Stewa't

the
media

u

!'\t.;;o • Vol. 411. ~o.

installed ,. the 'city can read
them re!Tiotely. Cit y reve nues
already
have
increased
because of ihe more aCClirale
meters. Ci ty Manager Bill ·
Jenkins has said.
And the city ex peels to see
major cost savings because·
.of the project. he 'aid. Once
all of the meter s are
installed. the water department will be ab le to read all
nleters in th'e city in one day
· by simp ly Jri vin g through
each nei g hborhood. The
results then. will be uploaded

into the department's com- roughly 3.800 meters. sa id
puler system . ·
·
Paul LaPrise. project manager
That is expected 10 save a for Amercsco. None of lhe
lot of man hours. ilC said.
city\ commercial mew;.,
Additionally. once com- ha ve . been replaced ycl. but
plete. the new meters wi ll . those wi ll start SOllll, he said.
speed tip the city' s hilling . In &lt;~udition lo rep lacing
process. Jenkins said. Now. · the meters. Ameresco und
res idenh receive hills six ci ty wa ter departmen·t crews
weeks after ihe rnelers are have ch;mged 15 to 20 meter
re ad. When the project i&gt; pils and ·repaired wa ter leak'
complete, it wi ll be ju&gt;t a 11)al- on I 00 to I.SO lllei''I'S. .
'
ler of days, he said.
LaPrise sa id.
su bcontractors
So far,
"Some of th em were leaky
work ing · for Ameresco have valv~ s. some had service
replaced 1.854 of the city'&gt; problem,_'' he said. "The cily

ere"' ha\'c rea lly helped."
Workers will knock on each
resident\ door prior to IJeginning work. LaPri'e said . They
will leave ll tag on the .door
when' Ihey arc .finished . That
tag wi ll list telephone number.s lo cal l in case 'of prob!ems and in,lructions for
llushing the line.
The . inlerruptiori to water
. sen';ce
· ts
· expecred to lake an
hour or le" for each resiuem:e. he said.
Plea$e see Meters, Al

I City.approves

History .Day Competition

s

1

Tony Stewart
vs. the media

After tangling with Stewart in Daytona, Kenseth rebounds in California
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
How sweet it wa s. Matt Kenseth
didn 't actually paraphrase tlie late
Jackie Gleason after his AutQ Club
500 win, but. perhaps at some point in
the race, he uttered ano~her Gleason
signature:
41

Away we go!''

That may have been Kenseth's feeling when his teammate, Greg Biffle ,
who had dominated the race, suffered
late engine failure that at least simpli·
fied Kenseth's path to victory lane at
California Speedway.
Ken seth's fortunes turned dramati·
cally. In the Daytona 500, he felt he
had a decent shot at winning and was
quite bitter after an altercation between his Ford and Tony Stewart 's
Chevy sent Kenseth reeling literally
and figuratively.
The two have apparently made up ,
though neit)ler particularly wanted to
talk about the details of their visit.
Kenseth assured reporters that his probLm with Stewart was "water under the
bridge," and the two notably gave each
other plenty of room when they were
racing in close proXimity in California.
An earl y victory comes in handy for
Kenseth, the 2003 Win ston (now Nex·
tel) Cup champion, for two reasons.
first of all, it enabled him to recover ·
from the Daytona setback and move up
to third in the points standings. It also
John Clark;'NASCAR Ttl1S Week
established the fact that he won't be After a scrape with Tony Stewart in the season-opening Daytona 500, Matt Kenseth reversed
getting off to the poor start of a year
course and won the season's second race in California.
ago, when he finished 42nct and 26th in
the first two races. Kenseth eventually
rallied to make the Chase and wound and come back and win, I can't say cause I felt last week we had a car
up seventh in the final standings.
enough for all the guys who work on that could have won," he sa id. "Usual·
"For us to come back and have mo- our cars and work on our team and . ly I go awa y from the plate stuff and
mentum cominginto thi s race, the put all the effort towards it."
don' t feel like I'm very good at it and
guys have worked really ,hard," said
Kenseth, who turns 34 on March 10, usuall y aren't in position to win. (At
· Kenseth 's crew chief, Robbie Reiser. is from Cambridge, Wis. He won the Daytona ) we had a real fa st car and
"After last year's struggle for the first
Raybestos Rookie of the Year award felt like we did all the right things and
half of the season and the things that in 2000 in addition to hi s champi· were going to be in position to wm, so
we went through to get ourselves in onship three years later.
it was disappointing.
. the Chase, arid to come out of the box
"Sometimes. it feels like there is jus"Last week was last week."
this year and run real well at Daytona tice in the world , so that feels good.t&gt;e·
Hard to argu·e \Vith that.

PDARST@MYDAiLYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLI POLI S - Despite
uisagreement about some of
the detai Is. the Gallipoli s
City Comm ission approved
th e lirst readi ng of their proposed 2006 budget during a
special seS&gt;ion Saturday.
They plan 10 have the second reading in two weeks.
and. if approved then, the
$3.6 million bud£e t will take
effect on Apri l as req uired
by state law.
The special Saturday session
followed a public hearing on
the budget. which was conducted Feb. 28. Commissioners discus-;ed the budget at that hearing. but no act ion was taken
because two commissio ners
were un-able to attend.
If re\'enues collected this
year meet wilh the proposed
budget's expectatio ns, and if
all money appropriated in the
document is spent. the ci ty
will ha"e 10 use about
$.150.000 of lust year's carryn\'er.
Auditor
Annette
Lande" said during last
week 's hearing.

NASCAR This Week 's Monte
Dutton gives his take: ·One of the
littl~ · known aspects of Stewart is
that h1s sense of humor is about as
well developed as his temper. Like
him or nol. the sport would be considerably less interesting without
him in it."

Page AS
• William Leslie 'Billy'
Campbell
• Clifford Carman
• Larly Edward Fo~h
• Francis H. Gallant
• Walter E. Hanning
• Wesley Earl Kelvington
• Wanda Mae Potts Rizer
• Virgie M. Wilson

·

Wlx Filters gives fans
chance to go to Vegas
Wix Filters is holding 1ts tap
Leader Award Contest. an online
competition that gives NASCAR .fans
weekly opportuntties tGJ p"redict which
dnvers .m each. of the top three
. NASCAR series wi ll Wirl the Wix Fil·
ters Lap Leader Award and to earn ~
prizes including an all -eXpenses-paid:·
. trip to the 2007 NASCAR race week·, ~
end in Las Vegas : For rno re infcrma- ·ttOn on hoW to enter each week. go
to www.wtl(laoleader.com.
.,

INSIPE .

-·

What's up with NASCAR's ·;:
choice of 'm usic? .
••

W

We assume you ·re reterrin~ to Bon
Jovi (above ) playing before the Day·
tona 500. The band 's ctmem tour' is .
sponsored by Sprint Nextel. a corporation that ha s. uh. some interest in
NASCAR.

I:

OBITUARIES

ell, sir. chalk me up as one 9.f..,
the fans who thinks that
NASCAR really needs to "return to her roots" and. in this case,
wtth the selection of musicians,
If it continues. 1w111 find ver y 11ttle
reason to" tune in for pre-race sllows.
Don Moore
Alanson. Mich .

First reading of
2006 budget
BY PAUL DARST

Stewart flashed his bit1ng wit
when ~ ressed about h1s post-Daytona meetings with Matt Kenseth
and Kyle Busch. He said Daytona
was in the past and refused to discuss anything other than th.e t~en - up­
coming race at Cal1fornia Speedway.
Asked by a California columnist how,..
he'd done in history in school. Stewart repbrtedly said: ""I haven't found
anybody ill the history of history
who's been able to change h1story.
So. if you can't change it, it's really
not that important:·· ·

· - FAN- 'TIF"S

(J

Water meter replacement set to resume

142 .424 mph, March

18: 2005.
·
Last week: Mark Mar·

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

also was a recur-

l'om&lt;·•·o~ • ~1iddl&lt;·pm1•Callipolis •1\lan·hs. 2ooh

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

naday Jr.. Chevrolet.

There were no

at ~~st not on the
~ffi~:~mo:st
of the 'lingering
. died down.

tm

·,·

CRAF rSMAN THUCK

miles}, 80
laps/20 1.44 miles.

5, 2005.

'

un

... 11 you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette , flO. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053

House of the Week:
Home features wraparound porch, Dl

·

• City Schools plan
kindergarten registration
for 2006. See Page A2
• Area artists to convene
at Hocking College.
See PageA2
• Regional Legal SeiVices
adds two new lawyers.
See Page AS
,
• HCHS, clinic make
first school donation.
SeePage AS

WEATHER

Please see Budget, Al
Joy Kocmoud/ photo

Saturday morn ing over 200 students com peted in the Tenth Anniversary Histor y Day Com petition for District 9 at the University
of Rio Grande/ Rio Grande Community College. "Th is is ou r biggest crowd ever." proclaimed Dr. Greg Sojka who helped Ellen
Brasel a nd Phi Alpha Theta, th e History Ho nor Society, organize the event. Students fro m area schools entered ind ividual and
group projects in hopes of becoming a fin alis t and moving on to the state competit ion. This year's t heme was "Taking a Stand
In History." Pictured here, s tudents from Oh io Valley Ch ristian School in Gallipolis eagerly awa it the judges ' descisions. From
left: Rebecca Evans. 14. Al lie Hamilton, 13, Mel,issa Stump . 13, Locey Lf!port. 14. Ashley Coughenour. 13. Olivia Ko stival.
·
·
13, and Hali Burleson, 13.

Meigs board
to begin new
election system
traini1;1g

Syracuse water project nears completion
Bv BETH SERClENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

\
Detail&amp; on

Page

A6

INDEX
4 SECTIONS -

· Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Dea r Abby

'

A3
C4
D Section
insert

A3

A4

Editorials
'
Movies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather
((.1 :mo6 O,h in

24 PAGES

A3
A.')
A2
ll Section
A6
Vu ll.t·~

Publishing Cn.

POM EROY
Meigs
. County Board of Elections
will begin training voters in ·
lhe use of new voling equip·
me nl later thi s month.
. Directo r Rita Smith said
Election
Systems
and
Software. the ve ndor for the
count y's new optical sca n
ball ot system. will demon.slrate how the system ope rates at two local supermarkets on Tuesday. · March 14,
in preparation for the first use
of the syslem on May 2.
' ES&amp;S will ·be at Powell's
Foodfair iti Pomeroy from I0
a.m. to 2 p.m.; and Hometown
Markel ip Middleport from 3
to 7 p.m.. Smith said. The
demonstrations will alluw
voters. to become familiar
with how they are 10 cast th eir
voles ttsing the new colilputer
system .
The new opt ical scan system uses 1~aper ballots similar
Beth Sergent;photo
to an swer sheets used in stan·
Tllis
slab
of
co
ncrete
will
serve
as
the
foundatiOn
for the
dardiled lesting . Once voters
or
lift
stat1on.
fo
r
the
Syracuse
wa
ter
project
cu
rrent
booster.
h;l\c filled in the appropriate
c'ir.:ks with an in~ 'pen. Iiley ly nearing completion . The lift s tat1on Wi ll begm the tnp fro m
Flonda to Syracuse on March 13 and arrrve some(rme around
Please see Training. Al
March 18. traffic. and wea ther perm1tt1 ng. ·

SYRACL'SE - The IN
piece of the punk for cn1i1 ·
pleti ng the SHaL'lrse &gt;'atn
project i' currently in Florida .
The booster. or lift s1 i11 ir1n.
is scheduled 10 h e~in its
journey north on \1:~r,· h I :1
::md arri\·e in S\r:tcu..,e on
M:~rch I~ . weather &lt;rnd traffic permitting .
The li ft station can nnl\
tra,el during davlime h&lt;&gt;UI:,
as i1 ;, an 01~ersiieu lnad . · ·
Jim Friel frnm .\.11111
Engineerin~. the \ill:. t~r · ..,
cniineerin,g._ firm. :.. aid \hat
o1H.:e the hoo . . tc:r -..tation
a;Ti\'Cs. tile L'OillnK'IOr fllr till:
· project. Stonegate nf Belpre .
will hoi'l lhe rrcasscmhled
hui1Jin c onln !h alrL'aLh
poured . . conncte foum.huuil
'' l1 ere il will then he 'ccured .
The conlrach'r ''ill then wp
inlo the \\aler ihlet anJ &lt;'Uilel
\ alv~-.. ~t:... wei\ as · L- ~1 nl1el· t the
internal and external." irint:
that l~;r, alreaJ, heen (o m~
pkted h\' a 'uhc'&lt; mtractor.
Fr1c ll'', timat~s that 'c'-·urinp
and l'&lt;lll ncc:ting the lifl 'tation
willt.ikc armmJ a·"cd,
\litl -!\t lan tic Cnn,lrcrc'I I&lt;Hl.

.

Reservations
due for annual
chamber banquet
STAFF REPORT

1

' N[WS@MYOA ILYTRIBUNE

COM

GALLIPOLIS - Tickets
are stil l a\ai lable for the 69th
Ga llia
County
I annual
Ch amber o l Commerce
I Ban&lt;juel. hut in limited num-·
I bers. acco rding to Chamber
Pre,ident Rviln Smith .
·
The banquet
IS
7
p.m.
Thursday.
March 9. in the
Student Center
Annex at the
l!nive·rsitv of
R
i . o
G rand el R i a·
Dr. Stephen G r a n d e
Douglas
Communitv
College .
·
.·\s Smi th points ou1. · "We
are pJca,cd "ith the positi\'e
re . . p~..ln . . ~ to our up~oming
mee ting. f~Llluring as guest
'peaker.
Dr.
Stephen
Dllu~la'. tile national!\ rec · ·
llg ni /eJ expert on dealing
1 "ith
\Ire ...... Dr. Dnugla~ is
1-.. !hH\ n

J..,

'!h\:"

funniest

..,pcaker in Ameri ca on the
. . eriou.., ... ubjcLI of managing
..,Ire ...... . ·· ·

for lc :ib a' \\el l a' di,inkc·t
the' lanf._ . Th i' rroc·c" "ill he

Sponsnnng thi' nut&gt;tandprogram are the QalliaJad""n · Mei gs Bomd Qf
". kllhul. Dru~ Addic·tion and
\!enta l Healtt1 Services. and
Wuudlan d Center,.
Sm ith cxp rc,,cd the appre c'i;Jtrnn ,,f the GaiJin Cnumv
C' h,unhcr f,,r it' iniponant
fi naiJc' ial 'llpport Douglas.
\\ h 1 "~~ ht~.:hc lnr·:-.. two mastc•r'' &lt;lllJ dnctorate degrees
:Ire' ;rll fn1111 Ohio . State
l 'nl\ersi l\ : IJa' an · aclive

Please see Syracuse, Al

Please see Banquet. A1

arH Jt hL'r ..,u h · ~..· tlll t ra c hl r . " 1ll
tht·n ll'"' tilL' llL'\\ \'-all'r ta nk.

+
'

"'.l!

�PageA2

REGIONAL
ACCIDENT INJURES WOMAN

Sunday, March 5,

6unbap limes ·6tnttntl

2006

The state of Ohi o's im muni zat io n req uireme nt s for
children ente ring kindrgarten
in 2006 are as foll ow s:
Five Diptheria, Wh ooping
Cough and Tetanu s vaccinati o ns (OPTs); four Po li o vacci nat ions;
two
Measles.
Mumps and Rube lla vacc in ations (MMR ); three H epatiti s
B Vacci nes; a nd one Varicell a
vacci ne is required.
It is also recomme nded that
eac h chil d have a tuberc ulin
(TB ) skin test before entering
kindergarte n . The test must
have been g iven after Jan . I .
2006. Childre n inay obta in
th ese immuni zation s from
th eir doctor, o r free of charg~
fro m the Gallia Coun ty
He alth Department, which is
located at 499 Jackso n Pike,
Gallipoli s. Be sure to take
your child ' s c urrent immuni zation record with you .

Public meetings

.

Beth Sergent;photo

An accident on West Main Street .a nd Buttern~ t Avenue in Pome roy on Friday afternoon sent
one woman to Holzer Medical Cen ter in Gallipolis fo r treatme nt. The woman ; Ma rie Ell is , was a
. passenger in a car driven by Mic hae l Ell is of Rutland. The other vehicle involved in the accide nt
· was driven· by Taylor Boyd of Tuppers Pla ins. Mic hae l Elli s was cited in the accide nt for failure
· to control . Pomeroy Police Department, Meigs EMS, Meigs Co unty Sheriff' s Department and
·
·
: Pomeroy Vo lunteer Fire De partment re s·ponded to the scene.

·Area artists to convene at Hocking·College
NELSONVILLE
all performance-related art in inc lude
Booth
Design ,
: Hocking College will co- music and theatre.
Who le sale
a nd
Re tail
Effecti ve , Jury
. sponsor and be the site of a
Lilly npted that one of the Markets,
business assistance work- most valuabl e . be nefits of Slides,
Pri cin g,
and
: shop for experienced and attending the workshop at Promotion Po wer and more.
· beginning art ists, gallery Hocking Colle ge is th e Several topi cs are taught
. owners. and rel a te'd s mall opportunity for attendees to more than once to .allow par: businesses or suppli e rs·on on have 1their artwo rk critiqued tic ipants to take full advan: April 1-2.
in a one-on-one 15- minute tage of the curriculum.
, The program . is a day -and- me ntoring session with a facArtists attending the work. a-half busine ss
trainin g ul ty member.
shop will di splay their an: workshop whi c h provides
The workshop is presented work (limit three pieces) at
: attendees with valuable real- by the Arts Business Institute Hoc'kJng College in an infor; world knowledge .
·
(ABI), a professional, non- m.al gallery where partici . "The workshop represents profit training organi zation pants cah network with other
· Hocking College ' s continu- th at foc uses on product arti sts and introdu ce their
: ing effons to support educa- d~velopme nt , pricing, public work to galler)' owners .
t.i on and economic deve)op- . relation s, sa les tec!lniques,
The work shop of $75
. ment in our community," said wholesaling and much more. includes continental break:· Dr. John Light, president of Sponsors for the workshop fast, lunch and a dinner on
· Hocking College.
· inclu\le Hocking College, the Saturday ev,e ning with enter: "We are especially pleased Arts Business Institute, the · tainment by Rattletrap, play,
: that Hocking College is the Appalachian
Re g ional in g Appal achian .Mountain
: site of this event and a part- Commi ss ion,
Governor 's Music. Regi stration can be
; ner toward it s purposes," Office · of App alachia, the done online at www.ansbusi· added Leslie Lilly, president Foundation for Appalachian nessinstitute.org or by calling
: and chief executi ve officer of Ohio, Oak Hill Banks, Oak ABI at,(800) 224-5106.
: the
Foundation
for Hill
Bank,s
CommoDity
A full schedule of events
: Appalachian Ohio.
Development Corp., ACEnet, can be found on the ABI Web
. The college has long been a Ohio University Performing site .. A block of room s for
· supporter of th e region' s Arts
Series,
Nation al conference
participants'
: anists and its mi ssion dedi- Endowment fo r the Arts, .lodging is reserved at The Inn
: cated to support entrepre- Ohio Arts Council , Oh i'o at Hocking College (740: neurship in Appa lac hian Designer Craftsmen, Ohio 75 3-353 .)
· Ohio .
River . Borde r Initiative,
Sc ho larship fundin g sup· Hocking Co llege is also Unlimited Future Inc ., and port is provided by Oak Hill
sponsoring the 2006 Panners the Voino vich Ce nter for Bank s a nd Oak Hill Banks
in Art weekend to honor out- Leadership
and
Public Community
Development
, standing high school anists in Affairs .
Corp . along w ith ACEnet and
· both 2D and 3D an as well as .
Topics for the workshop Ohi o Ri ver Bo rder Initiative.

Syracuse
from PageA1
fo llowed by some telemetry
· work ·a nd testin g to make
sure the system is ready to go
011line.
.
.
.
" We're looking at the fir st
part of April. " Friel said,
making an educated guess o n
when th.e entire syste m wi ll
be ready to se rve the citi ze ns
of Syracuse . ·
Friel added th at he had
. spoken recentl y w ith mem ·
. bers of the Syrac use Board
of Pu blic Affa irs. whi c h
re po.rted th at all but 15
wa ter me te rs had bee n
in stall ed fo r th e board 's
nearl y 400 c ustom ers .
The bac kup generator for
the project has bee n delayed

Banquet
· from Page A1

Sheriff's Office
PATRIOT
Willi am
Les ter, 89 Morgan Sister-s
Roacl , Patriot, informed the
Ga lli a County Sheriff 's
Department last . week that
the steering .column from a
car he owns was stolen and
the car di sabled.
The theft is believed to
have occ urred sometime

Meters
from PageA1
The water meter replacement schedule for the next
ti ve weeks is:
March 6 : Sun Valley Driye,
Fraley Drive, Jay . Drive,
Westwood Drive, ' Kathy
Drive, Jerry Drive, Buhl
Monon Rdad, Pinecrest
Drive, Buck Ridge Road and
Jackson Pike .
. March 13 : Sun Valley
Drive, Fraley Drive, Jay
Drive; Westwood Drive,
Kathy Drive , Terry Drive,

Train·ing
from PageA1
will feed their ballots into ihe
optical s,c anner, which will
tabulate votes and store them
on a memory card, which a
designated presiding judge
will return to the board office
at the end ofthe day.
The
new
system
is
designed to sati sfy the
requireme nts of the Helping

due to suppl y and de mand
includin g salary increases for
after the hurricanes o f last
city employees and increased
year. ,Howeve r, the delay in
workers
co mpensation
the
backu p
gene rator's
e xpen ses. He said that an
from Page A1
arrival will not de lay the proadditi o nal '$ 150,000 in the
ject, which is ove rseen by the
bud get will not actually be
Co mm issione r
John
·
Syrac use Board of P ublic Sa un de rs as ked if it wo uld spent.thi s year.
"It 's pretty muc h a ·wash,"
Affairs and backed by the vil - be pos; ible to make chaAges
Dow Saunders said . " I don 't
lage govern ment.
to the budge t at the nex t
All fou r compone nts of the reading , indicatin g th~t he think we can cut much."
Dow Saunders al so pointed
projec t ~ the tower, th e lift wo ul d like to cut some
ut
thai rarel y does the city
o
stat ion. 500 feet of new water spendin g . C it y Manager Bill
li ne and wa1er mete rs ~ J e nki ns said that, yes, spend all mone y that has
make up the water Jlroj ect a mendme nt s can be made been budgeted. ·
Commiss ioners po inted o ut
th at has an estimaied price without affec ti ng the budthat.
whil e the budge t as it is
tag of $63 1, 132.
get 's April I deadline .
written eats into the carry Over $578. I 0 I in grant s
But com mi ssion Preside nt . o v~r. it still is balanced.
have been sec ur.ed to pa y for Dow Sa unders said he -saw
"Thi s is not a ·defi cit' budthe project. Th e re mainder o f litt le roo m fo r cut s. Dow
get," Jenkin s said.
.th e costs will be fin anced Sau nders ide ntifi ed ab o ut John Sa unders ag re ed, but
th rough a loa n from Home $ 150.000
1n
addit ional pointed ou t that the city's bal Nati onal Bank borrowed by spe ndi ng the city w ill be ance wi II not be as good at
the vill age and pa id for with · req uired to pay thi s yea r, the end of 2006 as it wa s in
reven ue fro m th e .board o f
public affa irs.

Budget

chamber banque t is "L&lt;JCttL&gt;
Rolli ng: Dea li ng · wi th Life \
T horn iest Proble ms."
Ticke ts fo r Thur sJay 's
banq uet a nd mee ting a re S30
pe r pe rson for c hambe r
me mbers, and $35 fo r non Rese rvati o ns
me mber s.
mu st
be
rece i vc d · by
Mo nday. Ma rch fi. at 5 p.m.
· by calling the c hamb e r
office at 446-0596.
· '' If yo u wa nt to have a
great e ve nin g. whe re yo u
can sit back. · relax, enjo y,
lau g h and le arn , ca ll the
c ha mbe r o ffi ce and make
yo u r re se rva t ion for . th e
69t h a nn ua l c hambe r han'
qu e t, he ld in th e Uni vef'i ty
of R io G rande S tud e nt
Ce nt e r A nn e x · a t 7 p .m .
Thu r- d ay eve n tng," Sm ith

· practice in psycho log ical and
· organi zati o nal developme nt.
Hi s wife , Kay, is also a psychologis t.
He served. as an infant ry
offi ce r in th e U.S . Armv in
Vie tnam. was a h igh sc hool
teac he r a nd counselo.r, a
• teac hi ng ass ista nt at the uni versity leve l, a me ntal
hea lth co ns ultant and a.s peda l ~ o n s u ltant to seve ral
Jaw enforce men t agen cie s
in Ohio.
In dem and t hro ugho ut
North Am erica. speaking to ·
over 150 groups a year, the
title of h i' prese nta ti on on
Th'u rsda y eve nin g for tl1e o., aiU.

The
.
Join( Implant Center
'

be fore M arch I , deputie s
said.
"

Church events

City Police
GALLIPOLIS - Todd C:.
May, 513 Third Ave.,
informed Gallipolis City
Police th at hi s truck was
entered sometime betw een
9:20 p .m . Thursday and 8:30
a.m. Friday while parked in

front of his residence .
Taken .from th e vehicle
were toolboxes, fi s hing ro d s
and a boa t cover, o ffi cers
said .
Cited by officers o n
Wedne sday were Krystal G .
Hutc hi'nson, 34, 6 I I Third
Ave., Gallipoli s: on a child
support waFrant, and Laura
L Baker, 49 , 1' 161 6 Ohio
58 8 , Bidwe ll , for imprope r
backing .

Other events

Clubs and
organizations

Buhl Monon Road, Pinecrest as soon as it is ready, he said.
Drive, Buck Ridge Road and
The Sunday Time.s- Sentinel
. Jackson Pike.
will publish the schedule for
March · 20: Ohio 588, the cominll week in the ne ws
McCormick Road and Texas briefs secti o n until the proj ect
Road.
is complete.
·
March 27 : Ohio 141 ,
The water meter project is
Sanders Drive, Adelaide part of an overall ene rgy-savDrive, LeGrande Boulevard, in gs, · infrastructure improveLaSalle Circle,. Neighborhood me nt plan. Ameresco projecb
· ·Road and White Avenue.
$4.7 million in sav ings durApril 3: Ohio 141 , Safford ing the next 10 years.
School Road, Debbie Drive, . The savings detailed in the
Neighborhood Road, Hilltop · plan will, be used to sec ure
Drive, Bellomy Drive, Rusty bonds th at will be sold to
Road, : Burkhart Lane and tin ancial insiitutions. Mo ne y ·
Willowood Drive.
from the bonds wi II be used
The remainder of the sched- . for the in frastructure improveuJe has not been completed, ments. and th e savings will be
LaPrise said. It will be released used to repay the bonds.
America Vote Act, the elections
reform
legislation
passed shortly after the controversial 2000 presidential
election. HAVA requires that
votes· be counted at the
precinct level.
The supermarket demonstrations are just pan of what
the county board hopes plans
for voter training between
pow a nd the May primary.
The state ha; given the board
$9,000 for voter outreach and
training, and Smith said she
and board staff plan to visit
2005.
" We' re goin ll backward .
from the begmnmg balance ,"
he said.
Commissioners app'r oved
the first reading of the budget
4 -0 , . with commi ssioner
Caron Snowden absent. They
pl an to conduct the second
reading of the budget o n
March 18.
Commissioners are scheduled to conduct their regular
monthly meeting Tuesday,
March 7, beginning at 7 p.m:
at the Municipal Building,
518 Second Ave.; Gallipo lis.

·Grandma who favors grandson
is causing majorfamily harm
.

HEALTH AND
LIFE
CALL JERRY
Atiro-Owners Insurance
Life Home Car Business
7h '7(,. il'..JI- ;r;mp~.e .

INSURANCE PLUS
AGENCIES, INC.
114 Court Pomeroy

992-6677

~&amp;·. ~~~1];q«:''et
.

~~~

SportsMedicine Grant &amp; Orthopedic Associates

· Adv-ce TlcketR-810.00 Per pertM•n
813.00 per p e r - aher Mareh 14, 08
Tleket.prlee hi eludes ..,~ Pal .. lnJ(N
A Sampllag of$ lriJJh Style
·
A Ales

in . I ag ree with your professor that by age 8 or 9, some
di scussio n o f pt~berty should
be introduced. If yo u wait
muc h lon ge r, yollr c hildren
will hear " th e facts" from
Dear
their friend s instead of from
Abby
you , and too often, the information th ey receive from
peers is incorrec t.
DEA'R ABBY: Abo ut a
year ago, I found out that I
am bio lo gicall y unable to
your example .
DEAR ABBY: I am the father a child . My wife and I
motherof two childre.n ages 7 looked into several options
and 4. In a recent c hi ld deve l- and cho se to go with an
opment class , there was a dis- anonymou s donor.
How would you suggest I
cussion about sex educatio n
for small childre n. My pro· handle commenJs like , "Th at
fe ssor mentioned that if chil-· ba by looks ju st .like you," o r
dren aren ' t askin g questio ns "She has your eyes." Because
about se x, we should initia te our baby will be a girl, I wa s
talks w ith o ur children. She think ing of something like, " I
also said that childre n sho uld hope not ~ she' ll never get a
have th e sex . talk by 8 years date looking like me ." Any
other
suggestions ?
old. Is th is correct?
.
I can 't imag ine ta lking to FATHER-TO-BE
DEA R FATHER-TO-BE.:
my children about sex at such
an early age . Wh at 's the best Whe n someone co mments
age to ha ve the sex talk, and that the baby resembles yoo,
is the re a limit ·o n ho w mu ch sti ck with the tried-and-true.
Smile and say, "Thank you!"
we should talk about ?' It's all that 's required from
SYLVIA IN SAN DIEGO
·
DEAR S YLVIA : Mu ch a'n y proud papa.
Dear Abby is written by
de pends upon the le vel o f
matu rity ot the child , whi ch . Abigail Van Buren, also
can vary from individual to known as Jeanne Phillips,
individua l. Pare nt s sho uld and was founded by her
certainly use correct termi- mother, Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby
at
no logy wh en talking abo ut Write
www.DearAbby.com
or
P.O.
body parts. It 's best to arm
children w ith knowle d ge Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
before their hormones ki ck . 90069.

A
POOL?

"Ct~.reers

Flexible scheduling'
3 days or 3 nights is

Job Placement Assistance ~ .

~·

Financial
Aide Ava_ilable ~
'"for thOse whO qua11ry

full -time~ Associate &amp; Diploma Degrees

!if

CHECK OUT YOUR FUTURE TPDAYI
· '•,"
1-800-214-0452
•'o•'~
•
Spring Ouarter
\O'J· o

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. .· ~
.... .

831 Elltllal• Street
Pl•lrav. IIIIa

.

'

~

Card shower

· Thesday, March 14

• FREE 24n Ttchn lcllll Support

GALLIPOLIS . PERI
meetin g, 2 · p.m., meetin g
room of the Fi rst Bapti st
C hurch , I I 00 Fourth . Ave.
Speaker will be Be v Cal vert
w ith info rma ti on on PERL

Wednesday, March IS
RJO GRANDE - Priority
deadline for submi ssion of
financi al aid fo rm s to the

·

• Instant Messaging -keep your budel~ list!
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740446·4665

Loca#Nef 1-888-488-7265
Rel 1abl(' lr&gt;lernct

Acc(;s~

Smcc 1994

THE PINK PANTHER (PG)
1:10 3:10 7:10 &amp; 9:10
BIG. MOMMA'S
HOUSE 2
.
PG1
:20 ·
STARTING 3/10106
THE SHAGGY DOG
THE' HIL~S HAVE EYES &amp;
FAILURE TO LAUNCH
"This ad sponsored by the
Holzer Cen ter for Cancer Care"

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"
• Dlabettt Stttf·Manegement C!a11a1 I Gal!lpo!la,

March 8, 7 and 8 (Monday · Wednesday) from 9:00 Bf!l • 12 Noon in the Hospital's. French 500 Room.
Call (740) .446-5971 to register or·for more information about lhese free classe s. Please have a prescription from your
physici an to anend.
Ho!ztr Cant• for Comprablfl•lye Walghl lo" Sypoort Grouo
Monday, March 6 from 10 :30 am until 11 :30 am at the Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center Room AS
In Gallipolis . An additional tupport group meeting will also be hekl at &amp;::to pm tor thoae who are unable to attend
the morning eualon . For more mformati on, .please call (740) 446-5825
Suralgl Walghl Log Informational Meeting
1
Monday,.March 6 from 5:30pm -6:30 pm at the Holzer Med ical Center Education &amp; Conference Center Room AB 1n
Gal lipolis. If you are Contemplattng gasH•c bypass surgery, _you are encouraged to attend th is informational sess1on to
learn at&gt;out weight loss surgery at tne Holzer Ceriter for Comprehensive We• ght Loss. A support group of the Center
begins after the informational meetirig at 6:30 pm. where· potential patients can hear test1mon•als from pat1ents wno ha:ve
held the surgery. For more information, please call (740) 446-5825 . ·,
'

.

Elbcomyelgla Supppd Groyq (In Jgckaon OH)
Monday, March 6 from 5:30pm until 8:00pm in !he Holzer Medical Cen)er ·J ackso n Oav1s Confe rence Room
Topics discussed include pa1n COntrol , exerc•se, relaJ~ ation . fatigi.le, depressiOn and doctor/patient relationship
For more intor.'!'allon or to register. ple ase call the HMC ·Jackson Therapy Serv •ces Depart m ~ n t at (740) 38s-.8367.
Hospice VO!untw Annyal Tnj!ning !In Me!ga Counlyl

.

TUM&lt;tay, March 1 tiom 10:30 am · 4:30 pm at the Me•gs COunty Sen.or C•tizen s Center. Anyone mterested 1n oacomrng
a volunteer for Holzer Hospice IS in vited to attend th1s flee trarn1ng th at will mclude 1nformat1on on the Hosprce progr am.
proper lift ing techniques fo r the office and w11h patients. bere avementl gnef train1ng. and more . Current '-.'olunteers Will
also aMend ana snare their e~~:pe r ienc e s of bemg a _...olunleer for Holzer .Hosp•ce For more informalion ·cat!
(740} 446-5074 or toll-free at 1-BD0-500-4850.
Freedom From Smoking l in Pomeroy\ - SeSsion S - Th e New__yQJJ
Tueactay, March 7 at 6 :00pm at the_ PomerOy Libr"ary in Pomeroy. Or"iio·. Sess•on F1ve w111cov er stress management
and weight control. Registration for this progran) Ia currentlv closed. Those who are pre-reg istered are
. welcome to attend.' For more information about upcom•ng Freedom From Smok•ng classes call (740) 44&amp;-5'940

Pining with Ql•botoa '
Wedneaday, Meech 8 from 6:00pm -8:00pm at Holzer AS:s1sted LIVIng 1n Jackson . located at 101 Markham Dr1ve
Call (740) 395-8394 for more 1nformat10n .
Lenten Service and Lunchaon

· Thursday, March 9 at 11 :30 am at Grace UOI!ed MethOdiSt Church . located at 600 Second Avenue 1n Gallipolis The
Lenten Serv•ces and Luncheons are sponsored by I he Galli a Area M1n1stnes AS!!OCJB t10n as a commun1ty .observance of
the Lenten Season, and will be held each Thursday durmg Lent Arter each serv•ce, a luncheon w1ll be available fOr
those 1n attendance. The _
theme tor th•s year's Lenten Luncheon S~nes 1S ,"The Lenten Labynnth' . iocus.ng on our
individual and collect•ve jo ~ rn eys Of fa1th . For more mformaMn , please call (740) 446·5053.

· Wel!atgn Cgmmunltv Health Fair
Saturday, March 11 from 10 :00 am. 2 OO 'pm at the Danny Holtz Memona I 8ulid1ng 1n Wellston. Oh10

Close To Home."

Small class size ~

· reaern11o1 ar ••••v

Uni versit y of Rio Gra nde/Rio wi shes to 119 Baqiani Dn ve.
Grande Community College GaJiipoli s, Ohi o 4563 1.
for 2006-07 school year. For
GALLIPOLIS ~ Minnie
more information or ass is- Y. Harrison will be cele brattance in completing financial in g her \lOth birthday o n
Monday, March 6
CHES HIRE
Kyger aid form s. contact the March 2 I . Card s may be sent
Creek Middle Sc hool PTO , 6 Financial Aid Office at 245- to her at 704 Second Ave ..
72 I 8 or e- mail jdyer@rio.edu . Gallipo li &gt;. Ohio 45631.
p.m ., KC.MS lib rary.
RIO G RANDE River
CHESH IRE Joseph
POI NT ·
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Point Pleasa nt girls Bend Chapter of the Society . : ·Juni o r" White will celebrate
Human
Resource hi s 70th birthday on March
softball league sign-ups, 6 to for,
nt,
8:30a.m.,
Roo m 12. Ca rds ma y be se nt to him
Manageme
8 p.m., Po int Pleasant High
Sc h'()ol cafeteria. T-ball, ages 216, Bob Evans Farm~ Hall , at 4595 Ohi o 554, Che shire ,
4-6: slo~ pi tch, 7-9 and 13- University of Rio Grande. If Ohio 456 20.
GALLIPOLIS Emma
18; and fast pitch, I 0- 12, 13- planning to attend. contact
Phyllis
Mason
at.
245-7228
or
Simpson
celebrated
he
r 861h
15 a nd I 6- I 8. Sa nc ti oned
USSSA. Sig n-ups will be Debbie Crawford at 245-5603. birthday on March 4. Card'
RIO G R ANDE ·~ Ga llia- may be sent to her at 11 5
cance led if sc hool is· closed
Vi nton Educational Se rvice Mapl e Dri ve. Ga llipol is .
due to bad weath er.
· Ceiller Govern ing Board reg- Ohio 4563 1.
Thesday, March 7
E-mail community calendar
G ALLIPOLIS ~
·
Ho lzer ular meeting, 5 p.m., Room
Clinic retirees wi ll meet for I 3 I, Wood Hall. Uni ve rsity items to kk elly @mydailytri·
bune.com. Fax announcelunch at noon at the Hoiiday of Rio Grande.
RIO
G
R
ANDE
~
Business
ments to 446-:1008. Mailitems
Inn . . Dr. Arno ld S;1ttle r . will
disc uss his trip to Afgbanistan. Advisory Co mmittee meetin g to 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis,
the
· Gall iu- Vi nto n Ohio 45631. Announcements
·GALLIPOLI S
.Free of
Educati
o
nal
Service
Ce nter, lliay also be dropped off at the
immunizatio ns at the Gall ia
·
County Health Depa rtment, 4 5 :45 p.m ., Confere nce Room · Tribune office.
to 6 p .m. Children in need of C. Stude nt Ann ex at the
immuni zation s mu st be Universit y of Ri o Grande .
accompanied by a pare nt o r
legal guardi an, a nd bring a
FRI 313/(!6 • THURS 319106
current immuni zation .record
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30 PM ,
with them .
MON-THURS, AND AT 12: 30 PM
GALLIPOLI S ~ Th e chil FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES
G ALLIPOLIS
FE RRY,
· W.Va.
Co mmunity dre n of Ralph · a nd Susie
'STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
AVAILABLE
Advisory Panel for Supresta Hutchinson wo uld like to celebrate
the
40th
anni
versary
of
16 BLOCKS (PG13)
Gallipolis Ferry Plant, 7 p.m.
The public is in vited to attend. the ir parents with a card
1:20 3:20 .7:20 &amp; 9:20
shower. Please se nd _yo ur .
M!lnd;ty, March 13
·ULTRAVIOLET (PG13)
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
1:30 3:30 7:3o&amp; 9:30
- Po int Pleasant girls softball
CURIOUS GEORGE (G)
league sign-ups, 6 to 8 p.m.,
1:00 3:00 &amp; 7:00
Point Pleasant Hig h School
DOOGAL G 3:15 9:15
cafete ria. T-ball, ages 4-6; slow
EIGHT. BELOW (PG)
pitch, 7-9 and 13-18 : and fast
1:00 3:30 7:00 &amp; 9:30
pitch, 10- 12, 13-1 5 and 16- 18.
DATE MOVIE (PG13)
Sanctioned USSSA . Sign-ups
1:20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp; 9:20
will be canceled if school is
NANNY MCPHEE (PG)
closed due to bad weather.
1:15 &amp; 7:15

Commynlty Coffee
Frt day, March 10 from 6:00 am - 9:00am 1n th~ HMC EctucaiiOn and Ccr.!ere.~,Ce Center Hotzl;!r Mechcal Ce'"l!er •nvllE's
alllo an informal and ongomg comm unity coffee promo1Jng con,ve rsah6n between ar"'a leaders •n ·bus1ness comm urtl\
service. education, government and pflvate anterpnse Sponsored by the HMC Chapla 1ncy Serv1ces Oepanment
For more mlormat1on . please call (740) 446-5053

··
Career College

U•llel 1e111n1
Cll! JU-112-.112110 IIDkD VDir

Community
events

Holzer HoMice Dinner with Frlonda • Gol!ja County
Thursday, March 9 at 6:00 pm a1 the Gol(jen Corral 1n Gallipolis For more 1nformat10n. cal.t locally at (740) ,446,5074 or
loiHree al 1-8Q0-5G0-4850'.

Galll~olis

next clinic date is F~i~ay, March 17.

Specializing· in total joint replacement

.

DEAR ABBY: My mother
has eig ht g randchildren . Four
are min e; fo ur are my sister 's.
One, howe ve r, is her obvious
favo rit e. She spares no
expe nse wh en it comes to my
.
' s o lde st son, "Jo hnny. "
stster
Sh e bu ys him extravagant
gifts. pra ises him con stantl y,
and hand s him large sums of
money in front of the other
c hildre n - often makin g a
big deal out of presenting it
to him.
Last C hri stmas, she in sisted that a ll the children co me
and sit around Johnny as she
presented .him with a $100
bill. When we ' re o ut tog ether
in public ; s he will say to pe rfect s(rangers, in fmnt of all
the childre n, "I love all my
· grandc hildren, but I have spe-•
cia I feelin gs for Johnny. We
ha ve a -special relation·s hip
th at! do n' t have with the others." My children are hun by
her actions and comments.
When th e c hildre n were
: youn ge r, I could disg ui se her
: favoriti sm. but as my children have grown older, they
are very aware of her feelings
'and ac tio ns. Wh en my s ister
and l confr.onted Mo th er
· abo ut it, she cried, said she
wou ldn' t liste n to suc h "hateful lie s," then stormed from
th.e room. Is the re a way to
help ~y mothe r see what
she 's do in g to our fa mil y, or
should I just protec t my children from her abu se by staying away fro m her'! - PROTECTIV E MOM IN T EXAS
D EAR MOM : You and
yo ur sister should have
fo rmed a un ited fro nt and put
a stop to thi s years ago . As it
sta nd s, yo ur mo ther has
alrea dy ali e nat ed seven o ut of
her e ight gra ndchild re n, and
unde rstandabl y so. If you' re
a sking for my permi ssion to
protec t your childre n from .
your moth er 's obsession w ith
·their cou sin . yo u have it. Ahd
your s iste r sho uld fo J.J ow

ci vic groups 'and cirgan·iza ti o ns to prese nt inform atio n
abo ut the system, and to di stribute printed informatio n to
the public.
The new voting sy s1em.
incl uding hardware a nd soft 'ware for th e board ' s offi ce.
optical scann ers for each voting location, and specia l
equipment for di sabled vot e rs , cos t about $22 I ,000,
Smith said .

Friday, .M arch J 7th-7pm

Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Thesday, March 7

Youtt:l e.vents

Robert A. Fada, MD, FAGS

. For initia l eva luations or follow-up visits for total
joint re placement, we offer office hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville , WV.

POME RO Y
Parent/teacher co nferences,
4 to 7 p.m., Me igs Hi g h
Sc hoo l.

e ncouraged to atte nd.

MIDDLE PORT
Middle
po rt Lodge 363 ,
LETART
~
Letart
F&amp;AM,
monthl y business
Tow nshi p Trustees, 6:30
meetin
g,
7:30 p .m. Brin g
p.m., a t office bu ilding .
no n-perishable food items for
Thesday, March 7
G
rand Master 's Food Bank
CH ESTE R
- Chester
Monday, March 6
.Program.
All Master Maso ns
Township E!oard of Trustees
RUTLAN D - Meigs Area
regular monthly meeting, ·7 invited. Refreshments.
Ho liness Association indoqr
TUPPERS PLA INS
p.m ., C hester Town Hall in
camp revival at the Rutl and
Tuppers
P la in s
Ball
C he ster.
Churc h o f the Nazare ne,
Southern Associati or, 6 p.m., fire . Ma rch 6- 12 with evangel ist,
RAC INE
Local School Board, 8 a.m., department. · 667 -7346 fo[ Rev. Davi d Cane n, a nd
high school, special meeting. information.
C HESTER
Chester sin ge rs, . "The S isso ns ."
RUTLAN D -·
Rutla nd
Weekday services at 7 p.m.
Village regular meetin g, 6: 30 Council 323, Da ught ers of Sunday service at 6 p.m.
p .m . in co uncil c ha mbe rs, Ameri ca, 7 ,p .m . at the
RAC INE
Rev ival ,
Masonic hall. Good of Orde r
C ivic Ce nte r. ·
Pente cos ta l A sse mbl y o n
ALFRED
~
Orange C ommittee to serve refres h- Tornado Road, 7 p.m. eac h
To wnship Trus,tees, 7:30p.m. me nt s and conduct games. day begi nnin g today throu gh
.
at th e home of C lerk Osie Take game prizes.
March I I, Dav id Dail y eva nWednesday, March 8
Foil rod.
ge
list, spec ial singing eac h
POM EROY
Me igs
SYRAC USE ~ Sy racuse
evening.
Min isteri al
Pool Committee, 6:30p.m . at Co unty
Thursday, March 9
Associati o n,
J0. a. m .,
the home of Bob Wingett .
ROC
KSPRINGS - Rev.
Po meroy United Meth odi st
·
Wednesday, March 8
Walte
r
Hei nz will lead comREE DSVILLE ~ Olive · C hurch.
muni ty Lente n se rvice at
Township T rt~st ees reg ular
Rocksprin gs
·
United
sessio n. 6:30 p .m. , office of_
Me thodist C hurch, 7 :30 p .m.
the clerk .
Wee kl y service s spo nsored
. POMEROY Meigs
. Monday, March 6
by
Mei gs
Ministeri a l
C ounty Bo ard of Health, regPOINT PLEASANT
Association.
ular meeting; 5 p.m., confe r- Point Pleasant girl s' softball
e nce roo m Mei gs Co unty league sign-ups, 6-8 p.m .,
Health Department.
Po int Pleasan.t Hi gh School
cafeteria . T-ball ages 4-6;
Monday, March 6
slow pitc h ages 7-9 and 13C ARPENTER
TB
18; and fast pitch I 0- I 2, 13at
C olumbia
15 and 16- 18. Sanctioned Clinic
USSSA . Si gn-ups will be Firehou se, 5 to 6 p.m., and
canceled if school is cl osed re turning fro m 5 to 6 p.m . on
Monday, March 6
Wednesday to read tests.
RA C INE
Rac in e due to.bad weather.
Thesday, March 7
Thursday,
March
9
C hapter I 34 . OES ,' regular
RUTLAND ~ Rutl a nd
POMEROY
Mei gs
meeting 7:30p.m. at the hall.
POMEROY Meig s Youth League ball sign ups; 6 Comity Tuberculosis Clinic
Band Boosters, 6:30 p.m. in - 8 p.m ., Rutland Fire open until 6 p.m. for skin
th e band room . Parents Department.
te sts.

.

Sunday, March 5, 2006

Gallia County calendar

Monday, March 6

For the Record

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

Meigs County calendar

City Schools plan kindergarten registration for 2006
GA LLIPOLIS
and provide mate rials for all
Kindergarten round-up (regis- students. Parents or guardian s
tration) for the Gallipolis City must bring their kindergane nSchool District will be held aged child to the reg istratio n.
·Children will be screened
o n the fo llowing dates:
• Washington Ele mentary, . for hearing, vi sio n, speech.
M ond ay, April 3, Tuesday, and communications, health
April 4, Wednesday, April 5. and · me dical iss ues, and
Call Washington at 446-32 13 developmental delays. Most
screenings will be do ne by
for an appointment.
•
Green · Elementa ry, observ in g the c hild while
Thu rsday, April 20, Friday, he/s he interacts w ith othe r
April 21. Call Green at 446- children and the registration
team.
3236 for a n appointme nt .
• Ri o Grande Elementary;
A child must be 5 years of
Monday, April 24, Tuesday, age on or before Sept. 30,
Apri l 25 . Call Rio Grande at 2006, to be eligible to atte nd
, 245-5333 for an appointr;nent. kindergane n. By law, a child
If unabl e to attend reg1 stra- must atte nd school if he or she
tion during these dates. and is 6 years of age on or befo re
time s, call the a ppropriate . Sept. 30, 2006.
sc hoo l
to
make other
To re gister, a parent or
arrangements .
guardian must bring a copy of
It is important that children the child 's birth certificat e,
be reg iste red for kinderganen record of ·immuni zations, and
in order to plan for classes Socl&lt;il Security card .

-

Begins lpril3rd

740-446-4367

.•,H~U.O lUTWt; C(N lV

www.galllp·o iiscareercollege.com

1176 JacksOn Pike-· GallipOlis, OH

Systems w11J prov1de free health screenmgs and 1nform at•on !rom all of t..,e 11 Sy stem ent1t1es
(740) 395·8394 .

Holzer Health
For more 1nforma110n . call

Qlabotea Syooprt Groyo On Gall ~
Sunday, March 12 from 2.00 pm · 4 00 pm 1h 'he Holze r Med1ca l Cente r French 500 Room Featu red spea~er wrl l
be James Jordan hom "L1fescan who wrll d•scuss glucose momtonng Call (740) 446-5971 to reg1ster or fo r more .
rnformation.
·
lntant/Chlld CPR C!all

Sunday, Marc h 12 from 2 00 pm . ol 00 pm 1n the Holzer Medoc.., .,_: .. •\ 11?1 Educat•M &amp; Conlerence Center
Please call \740) 446-5030 to reg1~·!Pf 11r-l6r more mfOtmatlon

1n

GalhJX'1•."

Parent• Who Haye Lg at a Ch il d Sypoort (Ira_~
,
Monday, Ma rch 13 at 7:00pm at New L1 te Lutheran Church on Jackson P1k:e 1n Ga!hpohs Open to the publiC
Fac1!•tati:Kl by Nancy Ctalds and Jackte Keat ley If you are mterested .1n attend•hQ please call pnor tb the meeting
For more rnlormahon . caU' N~ ncy Ch1las at (740) 446· 5446'(ctayl oi (740) 446-4066 teven1ng1. Jack:Je Keat ley at
(740) &lt;W6-2700 or· !he Lutheran Church at (740) 446-.&amp;889

�PageJ\4

OPINION

&amp;unba~ 'ime~ -&amp;enttnel

Sunday, March 5, :mo6

READERS'

Decision spurs
questions

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydallytrlbune.com

Dear Editor:

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

· Kevin Kelly

Diane Hill

Managing Editor

Controller

.

Lel/ers to the editor are welmme. Titer shvuld be less than
300 words. All f(Jtlers are slll~iect to editing and must be
sig11ed and inchtdr&gt;. nddnJss mrd tel-ephone number. No
1111signed leuers will he published. Lmers slwidd be in good
rasre. addressi11g issue.•;, nul personalities..

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday. March 5. the 64th day of 2006. lnere are
30 I days left in the year.
. .
• ·
·.
Today\ Highlight in History: On March 5. 1946, Wmston
Churchill delivered his · famous "Iron Curtai n' ' speech at
Westminster College in Fullon. Miss. Said Churchill: "From
Stet! in in the Baltic, to Trieste in the Adriatic. an ''iron curtain'
·has descended across the continent. allowing police governments to rule Eastern Europe.''
On this date: In 1770. the Boston Massacre took place as
British soldiers who'd been taunted ·by a crowd of colonists
opened fire. killing five people.
·
In 1849. Zachary Taylor took the oath of office at his presidential inauguration .
In 1868. the Senate was organized into a Court of Impeachment
to deqide charges against President Andrew Johnson.
.
.
In 1933. in German parliamentary elections, the Nazi Party
won 44 percent of the vote. enabli!)g .it •to join with the
Nationalists to gain a slender majority in the Reichstag.
· In 1953, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin died at age 73 after 29
years in power.
·
In 1963. country music performers Patsy Cline, "Cowboy"
Copas and "Hawkshaw" Hawkins died in a plane crash near
Camden, Tenn.
In 1970. a nuclear nonproliferation treaty went into effect
·
after 43 nations ratified it.
In 1982, comedian John Belushi was found dead of a drug
overdose in a rented bungalow in Hollywood ; he was 33.
In 1986. in Lebanon. Islamic Jihad issued a statement saying it had '·executed" French hostage Michel Seurat, who had
been abducted almost a vear earlier.
In 2004. Martha· Stewart was co·nvicted in New York of
lying to the government about a stock sale; her ex-stockbroker.· Peter Bacanovic. also was · found guilt~· in the scandal.
(Each l.atefrecei,ved a five-month sentence.) .
Ten years ago: Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole swept the
"hmior Tuesday'' primaries. U.S. Rep. Enid Greene
Waldholtz, ·R-Utah. tangled in a financial mess that she
blamed on her estranged .husband. announced she would not
seek a second term .
·
.
· Five years ago: Vice President Dick Cheney underwent an
angiciplasty for a partially blocked artery after going to a hospital with chest pain~. Two studenb at Santana High·School in
Santee. Calif.. were shot to death. 13 other people were
wounded: student shooter Charles "Anqy" Williams was later ·
sentenced to 50 years to li fe in prison. A stampede broke out ·
during the annual hajj pilgrimage in Mina. Saudi Arabia,
killing 35 Muslims.
: One year ago: Syrian President. Bashar Assad announced a
two-stage pullback of his country's force s to the Lebanese
border. but he failed to address broad international demands
that he completely withdraw Syria's ! 5.000 troops after nearly 30 years in Lebanon.
.
Today's Birthdays: Actor James Noble is 84. Actor James B.
Sikking is 72. Actor Dean Stockwell is 70. Actor Fred
Williamson is 68. Actor Michael Warren is 60. Actor Eddie
· Hodges is 59. Singer Eddy Grant is 58. Violinist Eugene
Fodor is. 56. Rock musician Alan Clark (Dire Straits) is 54.
Actress-.comedian Marsha Warfiel,d is 52 . Magician Penn
;Jillette is 51. Por ~ in ger Teena Marie is 50. Rock singer
Charlie Reid is 44. Rock singer Craig Reid is 44. Rock musi l;ian John Frusciante (Red Hot Chili Peppers ) is 36. Singer
Rome is 36. Actor Kevin Connollv is 32. Actress Jolene
Blalock is 31. Model Niki Taylor is ·31. Actress Eva Mendes
is 28. Actor Jake Lloyd is 17.
: Thought for Today : "Don't' forget to lo ve yourself." !')oren Kierkegaard. Danish philosopher { 1813- 1855).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the ediwr are •relcome. They should he less than
,300 words. All let/en are subject to editinK. mttsl be signed.
and include address wrd teleplwne n11ntbn: No unsigned letters will be pt1h/ished. Letters s hot~ld he i11 good taste,

addressing issues. not personalitin. Leiters of thanks 10 organi~arions and individuals ~t · il/not he accepi{'(lfor ptlblication.

·~unbap \!time~ -~enttnel
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not. We as parents understand that the girls have to .
learn to deal with the competitiveness. We were told.
that when they gel to high
school, they would not be
allowed to end a game like
this. That is true, however,
they will not be playing
agai nst the kids that they
attend school with every day:
We were a.lso told this is a
"Meigs" tournament. I
thought that this was a
league tournament hosted by
Meigs. That all of the league
would be treated fairly.

I am a parent of a fifth
g.rader at Eastern. My daughter has been playing on one
of girls' fifth grade teams at
Eastern. They are playing in
the league · that includes
Meigs and Southern al.so.
This · past few days have
concluded the league tbumaments. T.he boys' fifth grade
bracket came down to the
championship game being
Melissa Jones
. played amo ng two Eastern
Reedsville
boys· teams . . The game
ended in a tie. They did not
play any overtime. They .
declared both teams co- .
champions.
The fifth grade girls'
Dear Editor:
championship game also
.
My daughter plays fifth
· came down to two Eastern
teams. The girls have played grade girls basketball for
against each other a couple Eastern. The championship
of times this season at some game on Tuesday evening
outside tournaments. not in ·ended in a tie. Because the
the league. until this tourna- girls would not play overment. This has created a lot time, they were not allowed
of tension and upsei amongst to receive their trophies.
Two Eastern boys .teams ,
classmates. The girls game
were allowed, however, to
also ended in a tie.
However. the girls were end in a tie and be declared
told that if they did not play co-champions on Monday
overtime and have an actual evening for the tifth grade
winner. they would not boys division ,o f the league .
receive any trophies. The · The girls from both teams
girls themselves made the attend class together every· decision to walk away with- day. and are all good friends .
The girls on each team were
out receiving trophies.
What we don't understand offering to play and let the
is, this was a league tourna- other team win.
There has been a lot of
ment, the boys were allowed
to do this. but the girls are problems among the girls at

Same ndes
don't apply

VIEWS

school, to add the pressure
of having to play against
each other cannot help the
situation.
The boys were allowed,
but the girls are not, to end
the game in a tie. They are
both teams in the same
league, . but the rules are
apparently different depending on who you are and what
team you play for.

. Rachael Church
Reedsville

the schoolroom, pulpit and
press. These illusiOns foster
development of the love it o~
leave it mindset.
'
There is an enormous gap
between what the masses
think this government stand~
for and what it really does.
Dominant
assumptions
about the benevolent intent
of the U.S. remain largely
unquestioned, regardless of
. the contrary evidence p(ft
forth by truth setters, such a,s
myself.

Jeff Fields
Syracuse

DAR view
of history

What are
w~ eating?

Dear Editor:

-·

After scanning the Feb. 27
article on the DAR contest
Dear Editor:
winners, I must state that I
•
We, the people, have a
have major problems with
that organization's historical right to know what we are
views. That's putting it mild- . eating. As a vegetarian· an~
ly. In the past, it has been a an organic gardener, I have a
vehemently racist organiza- sincere interest in my healt~
tion. During one of the low- and the safety of my food .
I think it is abysmal that
est points in history, it
here
in the United States, the
refused to allow Marian
Anderson, the black fe~ale most affluent nation in tli
singer, ·to perform in · its world, we have such poor
health and food security,
Constitutional Hall.
But the racial issue aside, I Plt~ase work hard to protect
believe that · when people the rights of the people to !I
reject offered truth, they are safe and secure food suppl)(.
guilty of the most heinous Homeland security starts
misdeed. The DAR mindset with our food system.
is that of the Messianic . ·The special interests of
Nation, (e., the virtuous, corporate agribusiness and
public-spirited republic. The food companies should no.t
citizenry is taught at a very . override the rights of conearly age to cheerfully abide sumers to know what they
by illusions rather than are eating.
Catherine Cutcher
accept the truth -illusions
Rutland
traditionally reinforced by

: Sunday, March 5, 2006
.,.

Obituaries

rVE6/VEN UP

'THIN MINT5 1

FOR li:NT. ..

DO YOU
HAVE THE .

SHORTBREAD?

•'

Deaths

William Leslie ·anly' campbell

In addition to his parents, he was preceued in death by three
infant sisters: a brother, Brice Hanning ; a , i, ler. Opal Taylor:
and a son. Harold Keith Hanning .
:: william · Leslie "Bi liy" Campbe ll , 44, Bidwell. died
Services will be 2 p.m. Sunday, March 5, 2006. at the Vail
Saturday, Ma~ch 4, 2006 at the Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral Home in Ripley, with the Rev. Charles Hicks officiat. ,. He was born August 23, 1961. in Louisville, Ky., son of ing.
Burial will be ,in the Fairplain Cemetery at Fairvlain .
9ary Leslie Campbe ll , Lebanon, Ky., and the late Alice Ann
Visitation
was · held in the funeral home from 6 to ~ p.m.
flooth Campbell.
, In addition to his mother. he is preceded in death by a sister, Saturday, March 4. 2006.
In lieu of tlowers, donations. may be made to Hospice·.
1\athryn L, Campbel l, and grandparents Charles Booth, Hazel .
may be sent towww.vailfh .com.
.Condolence'
Bpoth Clark, and Earl Campbell.
. .·
·He is survived by three children; Casey Jones, Cheshire,
B~andon . Campbell , Gallipolis, ancd Daniel Campbell, Oak
Htll; three st sler~; Deborah (Rick) Hill, Bidwell, Michelle
(.Tim) Angel , Crown City and Joy (Jim) Dotson, Gulf Shore,
Wanda Mac Potts Ri zer, 81, of Pomeroy, died Friday. March
· Ala~ama; an~ a grandmother, Kay Campbell, Orange County, 3, 2006. at her residence.
Cahf.
. She was born April 29, 1924 , in Syracuse. 10 the late Harry
Grave Side Services will be held J· p.m. Monday, March 6, and Mary Pott s. .
She graduated from Pomeroy High School in 1()42 , wa. s a
2006 m the Mt. Tabor Cemetery near Vinton with Rev. Marvin
Sallee officiating.
·
member of the Ash bury United Methodist Church in
Arrangements are by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton. Syracuse,
spent 39 years as church treasurer, was a member of
In lieu of flowers, Memorial Gifts may be sent to the W.L.
Pomeroy
Order
of Eastern Star No. 186, and was co-owner of
Campbell Memorial Fund , P.O. Box 148, Vinton, Ohio 45686.
Rizer Oil.
'
Wanda was well known an.d a respected member of the
'community. She never knew a strange'r and always treated
everyone with respect. She never went anywhere but what she
·. Walter E. Hanning, 94, of Ripl ey, W.Va., died Thursday, knew someone.
In addition to her parents, she is preceded in death by her
. ·
·
March 2, 2006.
.. He was born June 4. 1911 , in Ripley. son of the late Walter hu sband, Franklin M. Rizer; son, Dr. Franklin M. Ri zer II ; and
S. and Martha Webster Hanning .
. brothers Thomas and Harry Junior Potts.
She is, survived by Dr. Milisa K Rizer and · James D.
A veteran of World War II. he was a construction worker in
Allshouse,
Upper Arlington, Ohio ; granddaughter Kaylin
1a~kson County, W.Va .. and also worked in the Civilian
Conservation Corps in California, along with construction on Rizer Allshouse, Upper Arlington ; godson Benny Ewing II,
Pomeroy; and daughter-in-law MariaN . Rizer, Warren.
tile West Virginia and Pennsylvania turnpikes.
' He owned and operated · general stores in Fairplain and . Services will be Monday at I p.m. at the Ashbury Methodist
()ilverton, W.Va. He later moved to Portage County, Ohio. had · Church , Syracuse, Ohio with Pastor Mark Mora and Rev.
4·cattle and dairy farm, and was a member. of the Palmyra Robert Robinson officiating and Interment at Letart Falls
Methodist Church. He retired from North American Rockwell Cemetery'.
Calling hours are Sunday from 6-8 p.m. at the Ewing
ai Newton Falls, Ohio . He was a member of Ripley Lodge No.
.
3b and attended Calvary United Methodist Church in Ripley. Funeral Home, Pomeroy.
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to In Memory of
. · He IS survtved by hts wtfe, Hazel Hanmng; a son, Okey
Brice Hanning: a sister. 'Frances Casto of Ripley; and six Wanda Rizer c/o O.S.U. Office of University Development.
grandchildren, II. great-grandchildren and 'two great-great- 1480 West Lane Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43221.
grandchildren.
Funds will go tow;trd Hearing Related Care and Research.

Wanda Mae Potts Rizer

Walter.E. Hanning

Regional Legal Services adds two new lawyers
. ATHENS - . Southeastern
Ohio Legal Services' Athens
Office announces· two new
attorneys have joined the
staff.
They are Minerva
Elizaga and Charles Cohara.
Minerva · Elizaga attend
McGill University in Montreal.
Quebec, as an undergradutate
and has a BA degree in socialogy with a. minor in environmental studies. She has a JD
degree ftom Temple University.
School of Law, where she was
vice president of the Asian
Pacific
American
Law
Students Association.
Before moving to Athens,
Ms. Elizaga was an ,intern with
the Camden County (N.J.)
Ollice of the Public Defender.

OH 1 DEAR...

She was admitted to the prac·tice of law in Ohio .in 2004.
· She is working at Southeastern
. Ohio Legal Services in conjunction with the program's
receipt of a grant for legal services from t!Je Depimment of
Justice Office on Violence
Against Women.
Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services provides a full range
of legal services to victims .of
domestic violence.
Charles Cohara replaces
former staff attorney Katie
Crates. Ms. Crates has tran sierred to Ohio State Legal
Services to serve as the pro
bono
coordinator
for
Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services and director of the

Local Briefs
developed and/o( implemented in their bu~inesses that
have been successful.
A light breakfast · will be
served.
A donation of $2 wi II
GALLIPOLIS
All .
be
acce
pted
.
Gallipolis city it1come taxIf you plan to attend the
payers needing assistance in
March
meeting. please contact
completing the 2005 returns.
Phyllis
_Mason at 245-7228 or
roust have the information to
the City Tax Department by Debbie Crawford at 245-5603.
March 29, 2006.
Items due to the tax depart·rnent by April I 5. 2006, are
all calendar year city income
tax returns. all first quarter
PORTSMOUTH - Area
2006 estimates. all extensions
Agency
on Aging District 7
for the 2005 city tax returns
;1,11d all 2005 tax balances due . . Inc. will present "Respecting
.. Items du~ to the tax depart- Choices: Advanced Care
lnent by April 30. 2006. Planning" by Margaret s'.
tnGiucle all monthly withhold- Selby. RN. MSN, on Tuesday,
ing for March 2006 and all March 14 from 8:30a.m. until
guarterly . withholding for 12:30 p.m. at the AAA 7 office,
1644 I lth St., Portsmouth.
tirst quart~r 2006.
·
Application has been made
for continuing education
units for social workers and
nurses. ·For more information
about registration and fee s,
RIO GRANDE ·- River co ntact Debbie Crawford at
ijend Chapter of the Society.tor (800) 582-7277.
Human Resource Management
will meet on Wednesday,
March 15 at 8:30a.m. in Room
216 of Bob Evan~ Farms HUll
011 the campus of the .
CHESHIRE - Cheshire
University of Rio Grande.
. This meeting wi ll feature a TowRship Trustees announced
"best pmctice .. session which that Story's Run Road will be .
will allow members to share closed on Tue sday, March 7,
with other some pqlicies or from 8:30a. m. umil4)0 p.m.
· practices that they . have for tree trimming .

City income tax
advisory

The quick and the dread
When you're 47 years old,
you sometimes hear a small
voice inside you that says:
"Just
because
you ' ve
reached .middle age, that
doesn't mean you shouldn 't
Dave
take on new challenges and
Barry
· seek new adventures. You
get qnly . one ride on this
crazy carousel we call life ,
and by go ll y you should
make the must of it 1"
This is the voice of Satan. you ski down the hill :
I know thi s because whereas I ski via the Breathrecently, on a mountain in Catching 'Method, in which
Idaho . I listened to this you stand sideways on the
voice . .and as a result my hill, looking as athletic as
body feels as though it has possible without actually
been used as a trampoline by moving muscles (this could
the Budweiser Clydesdales. . cause yoli to start sliding
I am currentl y on an all- down the hill) . .If anybody
painkiller diet. "I'll have a · asks if you're OK, you say,
black coffee and 250 Advil ''I'm just catching my
tablets" is a typical breakfast ' breath 1" iii a tone of voice
order for me these days.
that suggests that at any
Thi s is because I went moment you're going to
snowboarding.
swoop rapidly down the
. For those of you who, for slope : whereas in fact you're
whatever reason, such as a pJanning to stay right where
will to live, do not partici- you are, rigid as a statue,
pate in downhill winter until the spring thaw. At
sports. I should explain that night. when the Downhillers
sncwboarding is an activity hav·e all ·gone home, we
that is very popular with Breath -Catchers will still be
people who do not feel that up there, clinging to the'
· regular skiing is lethal mountainside, chewing on
enough . These are. of our parkas for sustenance.
course. young people. fear- · So I thought I'd take a stab
les; people, people with I00 at s nowboardin~. which is
percem synthetic bod'ies quite differem · from skiing.
who can hurtle down a In skiing, you wear a tot~! of
mountainside at 50 mph and two skis. or approximately
knock down mature trees one per fo,&amp;&gt;t. so. you can sort
with their faces and then of maintam your balance by
1 prin~ to their feet and go, . moving your feet. plus you
" (' 00.
have poles that you can stab
People like my son. He people with if they make fun
w~nted lo try snowboardi ng.
of you at close range .
and I thought it would be Whereas with snowboardgood to learn with him. ing. all you get ·is one board.
because we can · no longer whi ch is shaped like a .gialll
ski together. We hav~ a fun - tongue depressor and 11)anu. damental difference in tech- factured by the Institute of
nique: He ski s via the ~xtremely Slippery Things.
Downhill Method , in which Both of . your feet ~are

..

strapped firmly to this board.
so that if you start to fall.
you can't stick a foot out and
catch yourself. You crash to
the ground Iike a tree and lie
there while skiers swoop
past and deliberately spray
snow on you.
Skiers hate snowboarders.
It 's a generational thing.
Skiers are (and here I am
generalizing) middle-aged
Republicans
wearing
designer space suits; snowboarders are defiant -young
rebel s wearing deliberately
drab clothing that is baggy
enough to cover the snnwboarder plus a major appliaQce. Skiers like to glide
down the slopes in a series
·of graceful arcs; snow.boarders like to attack the mountain, slashing, spinning, tumbling , going backward,
blasting through snowdrifts,
leaping off cliffs, getting
their noses pier.cedinmidair,
etc. Skiers view snowboarders as a menace ; snowboarders view skiers as Elmer
Fudd.
I took my snowboarding
lesson in a small group led
by a friend of mine named
Brad Pearson, who also once
talked me into jumping from
a tall tree while attached
only to a thin rope: Brad
tqok us up on a slope that
offered ideal snow condiLions for the novice who's
g~ing · to fall a lot: approximutely seven flakes of powder on top of an 18-footthick base of reinforced con'crete. You could not dent
this snow with a jackharllmer. (I later learned . however. that you COULD .dent it
with the back of your head.)
We learned snow boarding
via a tv.{o-step method:
STEP ONE: Watching
Brad do something.

..
STEP TWO: Trying to d9
it ourselves.
I was pretty good at Step
One. The problem with Step
Two was that you had io
stand up on your snow board,
which turns out to be a vialation of at least five important law s of physics. I'd
struggle to my feet, arid I'd .
be wavering there and then
the · Physics Police would
drop a huge chunk of gravity
on me. and Wl-IAM , my
body would hit the concrete
snow, sometimes bouncing
as much as a foot.
"Keep your knees bent! "
..Brad would yell, helpfully:
Have you noticed that whatever sport you're trying to
learn, some earnest person is
always telling you to keep
your knees bent? As if
THAT would solve anything. I wanted to shout
back,
"FORGET
MY
KNEES' DO SOMETHING
ABOUT THESE. GRAVITY
CHUNKS'"
Needless to ·say, my son
had no trouble at all. None.
In minutes, he was cruising
. happily down the mounl&lt;tin;
you could actually see his
clothing getting baggier. T;
on the other hand, spent
most of·my time lying on mt,
back,,groaning. while space-;
suited Republicans swooped
past and sprayed ~npw on
me. If I hadn 't gotten out ot
there, they'd have complete ~
·1y covered me: I now realize
that the small hills you see
· on ski slopes are forme&lt;t
around the bodie~ of 4 7~ .
year-olds who tried to le&lt;trr'(
snowboa~ding.
,
So I thmk , when my body
· heals. I'll go back to skiing ..
·Maybe sometime you'll see
me out on the slopes..catch,
ing my breath. Please .throv.t
me some food.
'

sunblll' il:tmr!i -~rnttnrl • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

AAA7 slates
program

HAM group to
meet

Road closing
set Tuesday

Quality Window Systems, Inc.

10 for s2190
Installed

program's Low Income
Taxpayer Clinic project.
Cohara has worked· for
Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services since 2004 in both the
Portsmouth and Newark. area
offices. He is a graduate of
Miami University of Ohio
with a · BS degree in history
and psychology. He has a JD
degree from University of
Cincinnati School of Law. He
is licensed to practice law ih
state and federal court in Ohio.
He is also admitted to practice
law in Idaho, where he previously was employed as a juvenile . public defender . in Twin
Falls. He has previous . work
experience for .the Children's
Law Center in Covington, Ky.

Wesley Earl Kelvington ·.·
Wesley Earl Kel vi.ngton . 85. or Letart. W.Va.. died at the
Rockspring' Rehabilitation Center qn Friday, March 3. 2006, ·
He is survived by his wife, Lily 1Staah) Kelvington . of Letart.
Services will be on Tue&gt;day at 2 p.m. at Fogleson g-Tucker
Funeral Home. Mason , W.Va. with Pa&gt;tor Gre!!ory Collins
officiating.
.
Visitation wil l be Tuesday rrom 12-2 p.m. at the funeral home.
Burial will be at Old Town B11ard Bapti st Cemetery. Letart. with
Military Grave,ide ·services performed hy the Stewart-Johnson
VFW Post 9926 ~nd Sm ith-Capeh;u1 American Legion Post 140..
In lieu of flowers. donation' can be made to the Old Town
Board Baptist Church Cemetery Fund .

Virgie M. Wilson
. Virgie M. Wilson. I 0 I. of Crown Ci ty. died Friu c1y, March
3. 2006 al 1-le~rtland uf Riverview.
· ·
She was jJreceLied in death by her hu, baml , Embry R. Wilson.
Services wi ll be I p.m. Tue"l") at H;tll Funeral Home,
Proctorville.
,
Burial will follow at Miller Cemetery. Miller. Ohio.
Visitation will be 6-8 p.m.. Monday at the funeral home.

Clifford ccinnan
.Word has · been received · here of the death of Clifford I.
Carman, 83 . Plain City. formerly of Pomeroy, on Feb. 13, 2006.
. His wife, Gladys Cannan , survives.
Services were held in North Lewisburg on Feb ..16.

Larry Edward Forth ·

?-year-o.ld
alk
. c}'lffibs h'}}
1 '· w . s more
. than a mile for help after wreck

MATOAKA. W.Va. (APJ School on Friday morning
-A 7-year-old girl climbed when her sport utility vetiicle
a 100-foot embankment and slipped off the side of the
walked more ti)Un a mile to road and rolled at least seven
get help after the vehicle in times. coming to rest on an
which she and her grand- old strip mine site. Cary said.
mother were .traveling ran off
Vickers . was pinned · in
a mountain road and crashed. wreckage but Kin ser was able
''When I got the call to go to get out. The first-grader
out on thi s accident, I didn't climbed the embankment to
think it would have a happy the road and walked a mile
ending, but this was just such and a half to a neighbor's
a great story. It made me feel house to get help . She then
good. The little girl only had returned to. the wreck site to ·
a few scratches and bruise s be with her grandmother until ·
on her and she managed to rescuers arti ved. Cary said.
save the life of her grandVickers said she was sore
BURTON (AP) - A pick- Hopkins, 18, of Warren, and mother." said Mercer Countv and bruised but otherwise
up fleeing police struck a car passenger Evan Dasilva, of sheriff' s Capt. Stan Cary. - uninjured .
"She will do anything she can
Mildred Vickers. 48. of
carrying three college stu- Rhode Island, were both in
to
help out." V1ckers said of her
Mountain
near
dents on spring breqk , killing critical condition Friday at Arista
one, the Ohio State Highway · MetroHealth Medical Center Matoaka wao; taking her granddaughter. "Anything she
Danyelle can do to help. she· s ready. We
Patrol s~id Friday.
in Cleveland, said hospital granddaughter
Kinser 10 Lashmeet-Matoaka have always been proud of her."
Hiram College student spokesman Luzon Thomas.
Grace Chamberlain, 18. of
Kirtland. was the front-scat
Preoare NOW .l!2J.~'W!'!Q!:YR11JJ!X,_
passenger in a sedan that was
struck head-on Thursday in
ORDER MONUMENTS NOW!
1
Burton To~· nship. The pickup
Payment Plans .•h ailable
10:30-7:00 Mon .- Fri . .
then rolled into a ditch. injur..
ausoleum Special:-----.,
ing the driver. James Cline.
10:30- 3:30 Saturday
Earlier, the Geauga County
l caskets Included with RI8US4lleum
Closed Sunday
·1
;
~n~
,
Sheriff's office received a call
- - - ·-----'--~----~·-~-,_j
about an erratic dt'iver, the
patrol said. Police from the vil.&lt;lJ~autiJuf ,Sl{emories ~ l(enioriaf r;JJark
lage of Burton tried to pull over
(740) 992-7440
Cline's truck, but he sped away.
M
The officer did not pursue
Cline, the patrol said. Cline.
47 , was at Hillcrest Hospital .
in Mayfi eld Hei ghts, where
APPOINTMENTS
a nursmg superv 1sor on
Fridav Lieclined to release
his condition . .
Geauga County Prosecutor
David Joyce said Cline
r.Jlysell ~un ~opd • Ponu!roy. 0'11.
would face criminal charges.
Chamberlain was pronounced dead at ·universit,y
wouUi lik.e to invite you and your family
HospitalS Health System
(740) 446-7425
to li redl'.dirotion ctr~nwny of our new
Geauga Regionai .Hospital. .
sa net uary on
The sedan's driver. Andrew

Student dies in crash
with vehicle fleeing police

New Hours:

I
·I

I

SCHEDULE
YOUR
PROM

·fJiysell fllun
Community Church

Now!

.March 12. 2006 at 2 o'clock P.M.

vHf. Larry 'Jiaynes rectntly remodel£d oui'

Hol;er Hospice
Volunteer lraininu
'- ·

Please note changes in
dates and location:
March 7, 2006- Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. 10:30-4 :00 p.m.
March 14,2006. Hol7.er Assisted l.i\ ing
· in Jacksqn, I Q:OO- 4:00p.m.
I

1-800-291-5600
Pomeroy, Ohio

March21,2006- Holzer Assisted Living ·
in Galli(Xllis. I0:00-4:00 p.m .

CONTRACTORS WELCOME

Please call ( 740) 446-5074 or 1-800-500-4850
for more infonnatinn

WWW.QUALITYWINDOWSYSTEMS.CO.M

rrancis H . Gallant. 74 . Uallipu li, . dteu Thur,day, March 2,
2006 . at his re,iuence.
Service" will be Tue&gt;da) in the Newton Cemetery in
Newton . Mas,achu&gt;ell, . There are no callmg hour,. Cremeen&gt;
Funeral Ch\ipel i' in charge of arran gement'.

Larry Edward Forth ; 37, Winchester. Calif.. died Thursday,
March 2. 2006 . in Norman. Okla.
'
·
He was the son of Michael and Beverly Timmons Forth of
Crown City.
Private services will be held at the convenience of the family. Arrangements are under the direction of the McCoyMoore Funeral Home . 420 First Ave .; Gallipolis.
· Condolences can bee-mailed to www.timeforrnemory.corn/mm.

Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services provides free legal
services in civil matters to .people whose income is at or
bel'ow 125 per cent of federal
poverty level. Priority is given
to helping victims of domestic
violence and familie s at risk of
homelessness, as well as help- .
ing those facing loss of income,
assets, and medical benefits.
Through a special grant..
low-income taxpayers can
also obtain referral for assistance with' problems with IRS .
Southeastern Ohio Legal
Services Athens office serves
eligible clients in Athens ,
Vi.nton , Meigs and Gallia
counties , and is located at
1005 E. State St., Athens.

Up to 101 U.l.

White Double Hung
Insulated Glass

Francis H. Gallant

sanctuary ·and we wouUi likP our old
frwruis from tlw past who have a family
history with our church to return and
. help us dedicate our new facility
.Also. all our new families wlw are tlw
church of tomorrow are encouraged to
attend and be a part of this momilnt
.
in our church histnry.
.
Please plan to attend this event and
lwlp us ctU!braiP rvlwl the .llird is doi111{l
in our midst.
'The ctremony will be brief and
refreshllllln/5 will be s~rved in tlu!
·fellowship lwll/ollorving.
Pastor Larry Leml.i!y
and tlw congreg&lt;1tion of 'lljJsell 'Run
Community ChurCh

.'

�,.

iunba~

PageA6

OHIO

limes ·ientinel

Sunday, March 5,

2006

Bl

&amp;unbap QI:Ime~ -&amp;enttnel

Inside
Scoreboard, 8 2 ·
NFL mo'ves. 8 3
Baseball, 85
NBA Roundup. B6

.HCHS, CLINIC MAKE FIRST SCHOOL DONATION
STAFF REPORT

. NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
GALLIPOLIS Holzer
Consolidated
cHealth
Sys tems (HCHS) and Holzer
Clinic recently made check
presentation s to both the
Gallia County Loc al Schools
and Gallipolis City School s,
marking the first $200.000
donation of a $2 million , 10year pledge.
·
The two organizations
announced their · financial
commitmen t upon passage
of each school levy prior to
the vo[c o n Nov. S, 2005.
HCHS and Hol zer Clinic
have stressed the importance
of having new schools in
Gallia County. which will
not o nly help with recruitment of man y physician s
and staff to both facilit ies.
but also brin g an ecollllm ic
boost to the communi ty.

Sunday, March 5, 2006

Lady Defenders advance.toACSI title game
.

.

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM®MYDAILYRE;GISTER.CQM

.

Submitted pllotos

.
On hand for the presentation of the first donation in a pledge from Holzer From left ·are HCHS board members To·m Tope, presi dent and chief execClin ic to Gall ipolis City Schools were, from left, Clinic Board members Jackie utive officer of HCHS, Verlin Swain, treasurer. Steve Chapman, Phil
Heiser, DO. Jamal H,addad, DO, Vivian Newbold, MD, Nicholas Economides, Bowman, secretary,Brent Saunders, vice chairman; James Magnussen,
MD, Phillip Long, MD, Joe Anderson, DO, outgoing board member. Jon MD, and Alan Stockmeister, chairman, who presents a $50,000 check
Sull ivan , MD, vice president and medical director of Holzer Clinic, and Wayne t'o Dannie Greene, presideni of the Gallipolis City eoard of Education.
Munro , MD. pre sident of Holzer·Clinic, who presented the $50,000 check to Standing behind Stockmeister, from left , are Gallipolis City Schools
Dannie Greene , president of the Gallipolis City Board ·of Education. Standing board members Dr. Timothy Kyger. vice president. David Walker, Jack
behind Munro, from left, .are Gallipolis City Schools board members Dr. Payton, superintendent, Robert Cornwell, Ellen Marple, ' treasurer, and
Timothy Kyger, vice president, David Walker. Jack Payton, superintendent, . Lynn Angeii-Queen . Standing next to Queen is Jim PM!ippe , president of
Ho lzer Medical Center.
Robert Cornwell, Ellen Marple. treasurer, and Lynn Angeii-Queen.

CANTON The Ohio
Valley Christian gi'rls can't
fini sh with a winning record ,
but can !1nish on the ultimate
winning note.
Richelle · Blanken ship
scored a career high 13 points
and Sarah Jenkins had a double-double in leading the
La(ly Defenders (9- 12) to a

LocAL &amp;:mmoLE
. GAUIPOUS - A scheclulo of upcomi ng college
and high 9Choot varsity sporting events involving
teams !rom Gallia, Meigs and MaSQn countie&amp;.

frldav's results
. College Baseball
Rio Grande 2 , Shawnee State 1
Shawnee State 8 , fl io Grande 4

Saturday'e resylta
College Baseball
Shawnee State at Rio Grande late
Shawnee State at Rio Grande: tate
Soya Tournament Buketball
Wahama vs . Buffalo, late
Point Pleasant vs . Wintietd. late
1'1Jt1'!V 1\ !JM!U~O:
College Baseball
Rio Grande at Ohio. 1 p.m.
Sotyrdav. March 11
College Baseball
Rio Gra nde on -Spri ng Trip
College Softball
Rio Grande on Spring "trip

62-37

gir ls
basketball.
victory over
Monclova
· Christian in
an
ACSJ
r egio nal
linal
on
Friday
at
Lake Cen ter ·
Christian
School
in
Blakenship Canton.

w1n
The
advunce s
them to the
title
state
game again st

A d a m s
Co unt y
Christian in
a rematch of
last
year 's
title Lilt.
OVC used
a 10-0 run to

Jenkins

st art the game and held tic~ .
Monclova scoreless through
FriHn there. OVCS posted
the !1rst seven and a half min- 14 mure marker' in the secutes on their wav to a 17-2 ond eight minute 'ession ,
opening quart~r ·liammering . while holding Monclova to
Guards Blankenship and ju&gt;t II point' tu take a conBu"rleson heiRed create a lot vincing 3 1-13 lead into the
of the first quarier ofTense by half.
playing smart defense. The
The Lady Defenders then
Defender&gt; forc·cd added 3 1 more points in the
Lady
numerous first half turnovers second half while using an
and helped spread the floor
for easy scodng opportuni- Please see Defenders, Bl

Arnold
voted
SEOAL's
top player

COLLEGE BASEBALL I Al\-tERICAN MlllEAST CONJ 'I·: Ri·:NCE

NASCAR .

Robinson, Haggerty
named all-SEOAL
Bv BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDA.ILYTRIBUNE .COM

Pictured presenting a $50 .000 check to Charla Evans,
superintendent of Gallia County Loca l Schools, is W&lt;~yne
Munro, MD , president of Holzer Clinic. Also pictured are clinic board members, from left, Jackie Heiser, DO; Phillip Long,
MD.: Jon Sull ivan, MD, vice president and medical director of
Holzer Clinic: ·Joe Anderson, DO , outgoing board member,
Jamal Haddad, DO: Vivian Newbold, MD, and Nicholas
Economide s, MD.

'

It's a.G reat Deal.
I

• Kenseth off to fast start
5ee Page B4
• HOF headed to Char1otte
See Page B4

RVHS banquet
re-scheduled

'1'1W ALLOVER n~~t)i.oork-cov"u •
273 million people and~~ ~ng.,

Local Weather
Sunday ... Mostly suriny in
the morning ... Then becoming
partly cloudy. H1ghs around
50. Southwest wind s around
5 mph
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy wi th rain likely. Not
as coo l with lows in the
lower 30s . East winds 5 to
10 mph. Chane~ of rain 60
percen t.
Monday... M 01 1Iy cloudy
with a chan ce of rain and
snow &gt;hower&gt;. Highs in the

RIO GRANDE The
River Valley winter sport s
banquet has be~n re-scheduled
for
·6 :30
p.m
Wednesday, March 8 at the
buckey e . Hill s
Career
Center.
The dinner will be catered
and reservation.s mu st be
made no later than Monday.

•'

mid 40s . Northwest winds

Redmen split

BRIEFS

Pictured presenting a $50,000 check to Charla Evans,
sup!'!rintendent of Gall ia County Local 'Schools, is Alan
Stockmeister, cpairman of the Holzer Consol idated Health
System Board. Also pictured are HCHS board members, from
left, Verlin Swain, treasurer, Phi l Bowman , secretary,· Steve
Chapman, Brent Saunders, vice chairman, Tom Tope, president and chief executive officer of HCHS, and Jim Phillippe,
· president of Holzer Medical Center.

5

to I 0 mph. Chance of precipitation 40 percent.
Monday
night
and
Tuesday... Partl y
cloudy.
Lows in the upper 20s. Highs
in the upper 40~ .
Tuesday
night ... Mostly
clear. Cold with lows in .the
. '0 s.
upperWednesctay•.. Partl y cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of .
rain showers. Highs in the
lower 50s.

.Middleport Youth I
League sign-ups I
set for ]\farch
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport ·. Youth League
baseball and sortball signups for g irb !ages 5- l X) .~nd
boy' (age&gt; 5- 171 wi ll be
held . ·10 a.m . until 2 p.m.
·March 4 , I I and 18 at the
M i ddleport
Coun,ci l
Cl1ambers.
· Copie s c'l birth certifi cates are requir~d for new
playe r s.
For m ore infurma tion. call ·
[). ave Boyd at 992 &lt;166~.
Tanya Co leman at'9lJ 2-5.:f81
or Tim Ebe,hach al 992 -

Local Stocks

JA C KSON
Versatile
Jackson ce nter Reid .Arnold
was named Player of the Year
when
the
. 2005-06
Snutheaste'rn Ohio Athletic
L eague all-league team wa s
announced on Saturday.
,
The team i' se lected by ·a
panel of SEOAL coac hes.
· Arnold, who
was dangerous
both near the
bas.ket
and
from beyond
tlie 3-point arc.
averaged
18 ·
points
and
seven rebounds
during
hi s
sen ior
ca mpaign in leadRobinson
.
Brad Shermao/photo
hi s
Ing
Shawnee State. Bears' catcher R.J .. Niemer applies the tag to Rio Grande Redmen 's Bobby Jones '(10) during fifth inning
lronm en to a
of an Amencan M1deast Conference South Division basel)all game Friday in Portsmouth.
· .
·
third-place
fin'
'
i sh
in
the
league .
Jack son finished
tw o
game&gt; back of
co -champ ion s
BY MARK WILLIAMS
Park . The two teams split hits ov~r seven innings and
Warren (8-2 )
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTlNEL
with Rio winning the first qriking out nine.
and Marietta
Rio 'scored both · of its
game. 2-1. and ' Shawnee
(8 -21.
The
Haggerty
PORTSMOUTH lt. bouncing · back to ca pture runs ill' the f ifth inni11 g to
S uNDAY
coaches
of
was the opening double- game two, 8-4 .
take a 2-0 lead. The run s
those
title
s4uads
shared
the
. Redmen
heade r of the American
Rio Grande (8 -4, 1- 1 &lt;:ame o~ a bases loaded
top coaching honor : Ron
II
Mideast Conference Smith AMCS) received an nut- passed hall and a base -hit
Wainer of . Marietta and
Divi sion portion of the standin g pitching perfor- from senior short stop Matt
OhiO
Warren's Blane Maddox .were
scheuule for th e lj ni versity mance from junior Nate Martin. Martin went 2-for-'named Co-Coaches of the Year.
· 1 p.m.
of Ri o Grande Redmen Chau in the first game vic- .:f at th e plate. Junior
·
Warren led thl;' way with
(9 Inn.)
Warren
also
ha seba ll team on Friday tory. Chau (2-1) tossed his Michael
three 'ekctions : se niors Alex
with a road trip to Shawnee sec ond complete ga me nf
Barth. Rnbhi e Caldwell and
Please see Redmen. Bl
State and flranch Rickey the ~eason. scattering four
Duqin Smith .. Marietta was
represented
bv
se niors
Anthom· Youn~blood and Dan

c.openers

. .

· C:li\•Je,·
'
M a r~· u .' Bogg' joined class-

South Gallia junior Rio volleyball signs varsity team has
first recruit for 2006
1unblemished ·season
' BY MARK WilLIAMS
TIMES- SE~ TINEL

SPECIAL TO THE

BY BRAD SHERMAN

I

7747.
ACI -'-- 78.15
. AEP -38.46
Akzli - 50.12
Ashland Inc. - 66.10

grade and ran track for three

er . . in a . . ~i ... h and ~lea! ... .

vears .
· She plan' I·O major in
Health Care Admini,t.ralion .
Rinehart wa&gt; pll' a; ~d to
ha\'e the opportunity 10 pia)
at Ri&lt;' Grande . ·' it's \Cf\ '

SnphlHlHll"L g:uarJ
Lucas·
\\.right 11 a' t il~ lone L oga n

~xl·ir in g." she :-i~iid. '·I kru.~,\

BLI-·1t.98

Kroger - 19.96
Ltd.- 23:23
NSC- 52.12
Oak Hill Financial OVB- 25.20

Bob Evans - · 28.58
BorgWarner- 54.98
CENX- 38.01
Champion - 5.99
Charming Shops - 13.55
City Holding - 36.73
Col- 52.97
DG -17.35
DuPont- 41
Federal ~ogul - .35

BBT- 39.10
Peoples- 28.44
Pepsico - 59.48
Premier - 15.06
Rockwell - 68.35
Rocky Boots - 24.85
Sears - 120.49
Wai-Mart - 45.33
Wendy's- 60.54
Worthington - 20.13

USB- 30.40
Gannett - 62.18

Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quotes of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

..
General Electric - 33.06
GKNLY --' 5.80
Harley Davidson - 51.27
JPM -41.59

mate Arn old '" the Jackson (641
reprc,enlatl\es .
Gallia
A,·adcnl\ '~- 5 l aho had two
pi aver, : ,,,lc,·teJ. ih junior
· .I a\ me HJ t;~ert \ and ~e nior
percentage at 91.67 percent Stiaphcn R,;hin"-,n .
She also was succes,ful on
.:fO-ofA 1 pas' al te mph .
Hctggcrt) led the Blue Devils
She made hoomahlc men" 111 '"'"·; ng "ith" l tl ..J average
liun 'All-Scioto
Valin . ami .thu had ,the mo'i steal&gt; .
Conference tSVCi in each , Rob i n" 'i' '"era~ed tl . ~ point s.
of the last two sc a, on,. She kJ tht' cluh in rebo undinc and
ha.' played \'6lleyhall and blncl,cd a tc'am- h1~h 3~ ~hots.
basketl,.lll . Since I he 6th He \\th al"' amnncq the lead-

(. IV.Id

.,R\\IRUfS~
.
.
.

OVP ScoreLine,is p.m.·1 a.m .)

2145 EJstern Ave .
1740) 446-2407

1-740·446-2342 ext. 33
Fax- 1-740-446·3908
E-mail -· sports @mydallytnbune corn
~t&gt;..S!!&gt;f(

altealiil!l

1merJ

' CIItlilf li5o *tuellllldtll
too
CIIIJ! ~ Ill_, 11.2510 ilfp Iiital COilS II'CIIllll ~ llliiiPYIII Wllh State a«! F«&lt;!fa!Simn lellillOln;SlaUII Fdtllllrl!llBal
SenlceclqlS; anlsudlqesb:c--IIEianl181e111J!:jaa)sU~eanlkl:ala&amp;SellllertsontlfV11111', llase1111111tlale!ori!MfMII!It.fa)lllalclqlS .

tool"''

~ net !VIIIIble • all '~" Umltllj.lllle ol*lt ~lie! cood ;l"'s and~~·•""" 114!. See
"d ~le ~'" b&lt;tthu•lor deta•ls. Up 10 116 !Ct;nliln lee aflllos hu'i&gt;'11'•!lfli:f ud flliiiMrty
m1y n~ l&gt;j marlol ~an! Terlllra!Jn fBI!; fllne I tlnctiOd '" lhe hr~ )0 dljl t"""lf~r !1/5 ~me ll't1tS IOPJ~ i.d d~""li lees Sal!slil CllcUII1ed bo~d 1&gt;1 ~&lt;ellf UftO:!NIIeri "'UOP11"111 IIIfll;
Ullll!'""dOO up to the""' lull mmu~ or ~!Jb,te. llllre,l!lld oleo:h call or dilo ''"'"'"' ~llm1 il''lll'" Rellale taitl Prices ollG C1000 ilrooes lolo•ll Om•l ·mreba~ rards "d doll po:kor,e
"""'""'" $79 99 "' 119 9'l. l!ll"'tl\olr Pro!~ lobiOllla RAIR lol"' 150 m11l ~• .Oalm~ I"d dill po:kor.e ill&lt;h l ~ '' $169.99 Mk&gt;r 10- ll *&lt;!llrs rorr•llllec 11d !leb a~ card oar Iiiiiabie ~ all
b:ll.. s.lrloioremlomedor lOeoo.. ~r.. days Mu• 1:1! P&gt;•••rltd l&gt;j \1111116 •1199 . ,•• ,. dill pdli&lt; PiJ&lt;h•~ .QUire&lt;l Cl!iliar ltatiJil
n!hl ro lem1mi!E PJI...... II
~ss th111 511\ iJ jOur m1e r•erth."" "'"""~ .. ~llin! t~le1 !' oo C••&amp;u lll&lt;t&lt;IO&lt;i sysleos Cu;tnmer "·"''I II •~ """"' p!OIIIm""' •rth Smtulll W
;reol!' ~d ~• mm &amp; data bali t1i ''" '
mllilnl addre51 o.d live mlhP ,,.. uhch 1ub~"~" ''made 111e HCM MO&lt;h lbdoe!l. f;ul foor. lle• s f;n~ llj}ur · ~ii'!Jme'l f011 ft&gt;ur are I"""'~ ~nditlf triOOmllksiMood or ltOfl ~d t, lhP
N•mal Ca!Eg111e AthOl&lt; Am:11too All oli&lt;r ~rsn.,, or lrademails&lt;o pqorl) d '"'" •~~&gt;&lt;'"'lwJders All n&amp;Jlll•""" ~I()); Cm1ular Wi•&lt;m ijlnghh ""''"''

c'" '"'" """'" ""

+

----.

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_........,
'"'!

,

I

"' - ·~-

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
. (740) 446·2"342 €)(1. 33
bsherman ~myd&lt;l1 l ytnbune

com

r..tmru~. the fllnd c1n lrnnlll('llt . 11'"~ a hl'&lt;lllflflll pL1rc.
II ll~cdt·llll' quail!' ol· th,·
p n, ~r. ll n' 1h.;t 1·' &lt;' lll'.trd

I

•

Bryan Waltors , Sports Writer

· {740)446·2342. e•t 2.3
bwaUers@ mydallyt ribu1'1e com
Larry Crum; Sports Writer
{740) 446·2342 . e)(t 33
"lcrum@mydallyreg.ster com

There \\en.~ nn r~pe~·H ..,elec- ·

lik~d the ~ ~)ll e~c ;1110 , li on' l n "n l.t, l ,,a,nn .
,he ( R in Gia nlf~ n'ac' h'
·Field, l '"""" me to
2005·06 AII·SEOAL
\o ll eyl:1all-. il mack
Boys Basketball
t'\L'f\ til in~· :-on much h~lltC"r...
''
.. l .lll\l'-the 'port. It\ Ill) I
Javr"ltl
Hagge1\
Gall1~•s
G
6·1 Jr
pa"ioli ... Rinehart a dd~d ... ,
Shaphen
RoblnSO'"I
Ga!hpohs
W
&amp;2
Sr
ltn\.' it,"
i
·
Re1a Arnold
J a c~sor
C 6-S Sr
Rind1art al'o 'aid that 'he
' Mdrcu:. lk'gy~
Jac.,sor F 6·1 Sr
lil,cJ the ,i/c of th&lt;' R1o.
L'.•\:85 Wr•ghl
Logan
G
5·8 So
Grdlldc . " I li&gt;-ed 1hc ,m,tller
1

SfOill

Gallipolis

.. \ then' fini,hcJ 11 1nle" in
tile· lca~u~ and J1lf 1wt ha,·e ·a
jll.t)c'r i1amd t&lt;&gt; the team ..

I 1hc
"hen
Pah\
pl ay·

CONTACI'S

31.30

I

pi.:~ .

:1h,1l1t ... K11 1~· h,11 ·t ... ;nd .

,,

Pl ease see Season, Bl

+

ManPtt;:l

G

5·9 .Sr

b"'o YClU':1QDIClOO Manell a

F

6-~

t..•e.-.. Bttrth

Sr

W~w,,.,

·G·F 6·2 Sr

Wan en

G

G·F 6·2 Sr
5-9 Sr

11 J1dn ·, hun that ,he

P'layer of the Year- Re•d t.. rnold

Please see Recruit. Bl

Co--Coaches of the Veer - Ror'l Wamer
Manerta ana Bla11e Madom. Wa r•en
f..

~e a~( .lll .

t\1any nf the resl.!rn·-.. were

Dan ,""":a w €'y

J a ~ k.son

.

�iunba, ~fmts -ientinel
Bucyrus Wynford 61 Bascom Hopewell·
LoudOfl 51
Carey 60 , Vanlue 51
CedaNIIIe 65 Pitsburg Franklin-Monroe 50
Cle His lutheran E 66 Cle Honzon
Soence 53
Columbus Grove a2 Gory-Rawson 62
Contmental 53 leiPSIC 51
Delphos St Johns 50, Kal•da 41
Fremont St Joseph 48 GreenWich S
Cent 47
Gorham Fayette 58 S1ryker 54
H•ck.sville 5e, Edon 46
Holgate 45, PettiSVIlle 42, 20T
Leetonta 43 , Berlm Center Weslern
Reserve 33
Lima Perf)' 55 Lafayette AllenE 51
Mansfteld St Peters 73 Lucas 63 OT
McDonald 72 Hartville l ake Center
Chnsflan 46
Montpelier 56 Edgerton 54
N Baltimore 59, McComb 57
New Bremen 44 Ft Recovery 36
New Knoxv•lle 73, Minster 50
New R1 egel 65, Tiffin Calvert 58
Oregon Stntch 66 Tol Ottawa Hills 52
OttOVIlle 6t ' van Wert LlncolnvJeW 44
Plymouth 6 1 Crestline 41
Ru ss1a 42 JB:c~son Center 26
Sycamore Mohawk 80 Old Fan 34
Thompson Ledgemont 66 Fa1rport Harbor
56
Tot Chnsllan 77 Tol Maumee Valley 49
Wmdham 56 Warren Lordslown 36
Yellow Spnngs 58 Anson•a ~ 1

PREP BASKETBALL
ACSI

REG!ONe\b ftNAb

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 62,
' MONCLOVA CHRISTIAN 37
MONCLOVA CHRISTIAN (~•)
Sarah Ke1ser I 1·2 4, Tiffany Smallwood 1
1-2 3, Hannah Keiser 4 5·8 13, Chelsea
Page 1 1-4 3 Sarah Clark 5 4-4 14 Totals

1212·2037
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN (9-12)
Juhe Hussell 2 0.1 4, A1chelle BlankenshiP 5
3·7 13, Ann1e Carman 2 0·0 4 Calee
Edmonds 2 0-0 4, Jasmine Owens 1 Q..O 2
Sarah Jenk1ns 9 0-1 18, L1ndsay Carr 2 ().()
4 , Kns11 Oav1s 6 1-2 13 Sarah Burleson 0 o0 0 Andrea Van Meter 0 0-Q 0 Totals '29 411 62
MCS
2 11 9 15 - 37
17 14 15 16 - 62
3·P01nl Goats-MCS 1 (S /(e1ser) • OVCS
(none)

ovcs

Ohio Hlgn School Boys Basketball

Friday's Results
Tournament
DIVISION I
Bowhng Green 62 Wh1tehouse Anthony

Wayne48

,.

Can GlenOak 65 Youngs AustintownFitch 39
Cle Rhodes 43 Parma Valley Forge 37

SCOREBOARD
N1agara 84, Falr1ield 77
St Peters 80 R1der 51
Missouri Valley Conferunce
Quarterfinals
Bradley 54 Cre1ghton 47
S llhnoJS 71 . Evansville 55
WtChll&lt;l $ 1 81 Indiana Sl 63
Oh1o Valley Conference
Semifinals
Murray S:t 69 Jacksonville S1 64
Patriot league
First Round
A m~nca n U 75 Lafayette 62
Bucknell 59 Army 47
Holy Cross 78, Navy 50
Lehigh 48, Colgate 44
Quarterfinals
Appa lachian St 74 , Georg1a Southern 61
Chattanooga 65, Coil ol Charleston 63
Davidson 79, The C•tadel 73
Eton 64 UNC-Greensboro 61 , OT
Sun Belt Conference
First Round
Ark ·L•ttle Rpek 72. North Te,.;as 55
New Orleans 76, Fla lnlemat•onat 56
Troy 107 Arkansas St a3
West Coast Conference
First Round
San D1ego 85, Pepperd•ne 72

PRo BASKETBALL

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

1

BASEBALL

GROUPS
WL
PC1
0 0
000

ASSOCIATED

I

I

SEMIFINALS
Thursday 's Games
I Boston 3, Atlanta 2
saturday, Morch 18
1
AtSenD..
Montreal 1, Flomia 0
Group Two winner vs Group Two second
N Y Rangers 6 Ph~adetphta 1
Place, 3 p m
) N y Islanders 3, New Jersey 2, SO
Group One winner vs Group One second
Ottawa 7, Washmgton 1
place . 10 p m
Nashv•lle 3, Vancouver 1
Phoentx 6, Dallas 2
CHAMPIONSHIP
Calgary 3, St Louis 1
Mond.y, Ma~h 20
Colorado t :Columbus 0
AtS.nDiego
los Angeles 3, M1nnesota 2
Semtfrnal winners, 9 p m
Friday's Games
Carolma 5, Flonda 2
Buffalo 6, Toronto 2
Vancouver 5 ChiGego 4, SO
Edmonton 3, San Jose 2
Anahetm 4, Mrnnesota 2
Arene Football League
Saturday's Games
NATIONAL GONFERENCE
Columbus at Los Angeles 4 p m
E81teim Dlvlalon
Buffalo at Boston, 7 p m
WLTPctPFF'A
Dallas
4 1 0
eoo 270 239 1 Ottawa at Toron to, 7 p m
Philadelphia 3 2 o 600 245 22 1
Washington at Atlanta, 7 p n'l
Columbus
3 3 0
500 249 260
Carolina at Pmsburgh 7 30 p m
New Vork
3 3 0 .500 331 360
Montreal at Tampa Bay 7 30 p m
Southern Dlvlaton
N Y Rangers at New Jersey, 7 30 p m
WLTPciPFPA
Colorado at Dallas, 8 p m
Austin
4 1 0 800 258 220
Philadelphia at N Y Islanders 8 p m
Georg1a
3 2 o 600 272 206
Detroit at Phoen1x, 9 p m
Orlando
3 2 0 600 225 239
San Jose at Calgary 10 p m
Tampa Bay , 3 2 0
600 266 267
Sunday's Games
Kansas C1ty 1 4 0
200 182 2 t8
Nashville at Edmonton, 4 p m
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
Columbus at Anahe1m, 4 p m
Central Division
Dallas at ChiCago, 7 p m
WL ' TPC1PFPA
Colorado at M•nnesota 7 p m
ColOrado
4 1 0 800 275 266
St LoUis at Vancouver tOp m
Nashville
4 1 0
BOO 270 17a
Chicago
3 2 o 600 27e 265
Grand Rapids 2 3 0 400 236 244
Waltem Dlvtalon
WLTPC1PFPA
Friday's Sports TranBactlon&amp;
Utah
2 3 0
400 288 2e6
BASEBALL
1 4 0 200 186 231
Anzona
American League
Las Vegas
1 4 0 .200 234 2e6 1 MINNESOTA TWINS- Announced the
Los Angeles 1 4 0 200 226 277
retrrement of LHP Gabe Wh1le
San Jose
1 4 0 200 241 269 I TAMPA BAY DEVIL RAVS-Re·Stgned 28
Jorge Canlu.
Frtct.y'a Game
TEXAS RANGER5-ASSIQned C Taylor
Columbus 65 New York 54
Teagarden to the•r m1nor league camp
S.turday'a Games
NatlonaiLeague
Aust1n at Georgia late
ATLANTA BRAVES- Agreed to terms w1th
San Jose at Utah, late
AHP Blaine Boyer AHP Lance Corm1er
Nashville at Arizona, lare
AHP Kyle Dav•es, LHP John Foster, C Bnan
Sundey'a G1me1
MCCann, OF Matt D1az, OF Kelly Johnson
Dallas at Chicago, Noon
OF Ryan langemans 1B Adam LaRoche
los Angeles at Orlando, Noon
1 and INF W1lson Betemtt on one-year conGrand Rapids at Colorado 3 p m
tracts
Tampa Bay at Kansas City, 4 p m
SAN DIEGO PADRE5-Named Bob Cluck
Philadelphia at Las Vegas 6 30 p m
m1nor league p1tchmQconsultant
Fridoy, Morch 10
BASKETBALL
Georgta at Columbus, 7 p m
National Baaketball Association
Colorado a1 Chicago, a 30 p m
NBA- Suspended San Anton1o F Raben
Nashvtlle at Utah, 9 p m
Harry two games lor hrs ac'!IOns tn a game
Orlando at Anzona, 9 p rn
agatnst Dallas on March 2 F1ned Dallas G
Grand Aap1ds at Las Vegas tO 30 p m
Jerry Stackhouse $30,000 for cnt1C1Z1ng the
Sund.y, M1~h 12
officials follow1ng the game
·
Dallas at Tampa Bay, Noon
DENVER NUGGET5-Sogned G Howard
New York at Austin 3 p.m
E1sley, to a 1Q-day contract
los Angeles at San Jose, 6 p m
· PHOENIX SUN5-Signed F. T1m Thomas
Monday, March 13
for the remamder of the season
Philadelphia at Kansas City 8 p m
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONs-Released DE Brady
Sm1th Named B•lly Devaney semor person·
Hltlonol Hoc:key lalguo
nel execut1ve
EASTERN CONFERENCE
CLEVELAND BROWN5-Signad RB
Atlontlc Dlvlolon
Reuben Droughns to a three-year contract
WLOTP1sGFGA
extensiOn
NY Rangers 36 15 6 80 195 143
DALLAS COWBOYS-Releas ed DT
Philadelphia
33 17 10 76 197 194
La'Ro• Glover Anoounced the retirement of
New Jersey
31 22 7 69 174 170
LB Da1 Nguyen
NY Islanders 26 28 4 56 t71 207
DETROIT LION ~1gned 08 Shaun Kmg
l'ittsburgh
14 35 11 39 168 239
to a1one-year contract
Northeaat Dlvlak&gt;n
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS-Re-Signed
W LOT P1sGF GA
CB Hank Poteat
Ottawa
39 14 5 83 234 14 1
PITTSBURGH STEELER5-Released QB
Buffalo
37 16 5 79 194 164
Tommy ~ddox and CB Willie Wtlbams
Montreal
26 22 8 64 166 183
HOCKEY
Boslon
25 25 10 60 174 ' 1e6
National
Hockey League
Toronto
27 27 5 59 183 202
NHL-Suspended Phtladelphra F Donald
Southeaat Division
Brashear one game without pay and fined
W LOT P1sGF GA
Ken Httchcock coach $10.000 lor the1r
Carolina
41 14 4 86 224 181
parts 1n 1ns11ga:t•ng an altercaholl w1lh NY
Tampa Bay
32 23 4 6B 182 176
Rangers D Danus KasparA111s 1n March 2
Atlanta
27 27 6 60 200 208
game Named John Shannon samor vtce
Flooda
23 29 8 54 164 186
president of marl&lt;ellng
Washtngton
20 33 5 45' 162 227'
CAROLINA HURRICANE5-ASSIQned 0
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Anton 8abchuk to Lowell of !he AHL
Central Dlvlalon
DAL:LAS STARS- S1gned 0 Ph1l1ppe
W L OT P1s GF GA
BoU(;her to a lhree·year contract e)rtensron
DetrOll
40 14 5 es 211 147
MINNESOTA WILD-Re-s1gned G Manny
Nashv•lle
35 19 6 76 186 173
Fernandel to a multiyear conlract
Columbus
23 34 2 4e 147 210
ChiCAgo
COLLEGE
t9 31 9 47 152 204
CAMERON-Announced the retirement of
St lours
17 32 9 43 158 215
DICk Halterman women s basketball coach
Northwest Dlvlalon
etfectw9 at the end of May
W L OT Pts GF GA
Vancouver
DUQUESNE-Announced the res.gnat1on
35 22 5 75 206 188
34 18 7 75 157 147
Of Danny Nee men's basketball coa'ch
Ca~arv
Colorado
eflec:hve March 5
34 21 6 74 218 189
Edmonto n
31 21 e 70 19e 192
WASH INGTON
&amp;
JEFFERSONMmnesota
29 28 5 63 1e2 164
Announced the res1gnat1on ol Karel Jelinek
Pacific OMalon
mens basketball coach

I

PRO FOOTBALL

I

TRANSACTIONS

GROUPO
W l
Pet

GB
Australia
0 0
000
Doffilmcan Rep
0 0
000
Italy
0 0
000
Venezuela
0 0
000
Tuesday, March 7
At Klsalmmee, Fla.
Domln1can Republic vs Venezuela, 1 p m
Australia vs Italy, a p m
Wednesday, March 8
At Klsalmmee, Fl•.
Venezuela vs Italy, 7 p m
Thuraday, March 9
At Klaalmmea, Fl1.
1 Domm•can Republic vs Italy, 1 p m
Venezuela vs Australia, 8 p m
Friday, March 10
At Kl ...mmee, Fla.
Domm1can Republic vs Australia, 7 p m
SECOND ROUND
GROUP ONE
W L
Pet
GB
Group A wmner
0 0
000
1 Group A 2nd
0 o
000
Group 8 w111ner
0 0 .000
Group B 2nd
0 0
000
1
Sundoy, Morch 12
~
At Anaheim, C•llt.
Group A second place vs Group B second
place. 4 p m
: Group A w1nner vs Group B wmner, 11

pm
Monday, March 13
At Anaheim, Clllf.
Group ~Winner vs Group B second place.
10p m
Tuesday, March 14
At Anaheim, Calif.
Group B w1nner vs Group A second place,

7p m
Wednesday, March 15
At Anaheim, Col~.
Group A Winner vs Group A second place,
10p m
Thursday, March 16
At Anaheim, CaU1'.
Group B wrnner vs Groupe second place,
7 30 p m

I
1

GROUP TWO
W l
PC1
GB
Group C wmner
0 0
000
Group C 2nd
o o 000
Group D wtnner
0 0
000
Group D 2nd
0 o
000
Sunday, March 12
AI San Juan, Puerto Rico
Group C w•nner vs Group D ~ond place

1pm

Group 0 w1nner vs Group C second place

8pm
Monday, March 13
AI Sen Juan, Puerto Rico
Group D wmner vs Group C w1nner, 1 p m
Group 0 second place vs Group C second

1

1

I

nowhere for Denver in 2004,
rushing for 1,240 yards when
injuries thrust him into the
starting role after years of
be~ng used as a fullback . But
the Broncos didn't env1sion
him as their starting. tailback
and dealt him to the Browns
for
defensive
linemen
Ebenezer
Ekuban
and
Michael Myers.
Out to prove that 2004 wasn't a fluke, Droughns quickfy
became a fan favorite m
Cleveland with hts phys1cal,
no nonsense play. He rushed
for more than I 00 yards three
times, had 39 catches for 369
yards and scored two touchdowns.
H1s best game came m a
win over Miaml when he ran
for 166 yards, including a
career-long 75-yard rushing
TO.

Droughns ' tenure with the
Browns began roughly last
summer when he threatened
to hold out of training camp.
He later changed h1 s mmd.
The only blem1sh on his

STAFF REPORT

season was his arrest on a
drunken driving charge after
leaving a Halloween party
with his wife 111 suburban
Cleveland. He apolog1zed to
the team for his actions and
put the incident behind him to
have a productive season.
Droughns. who made
$950,000 last season, had one
year left on h1s contract and
was scheduled to make $1.15
million next season He was a
third-round p1ck by Detroit in
the 2000 NFL draft.
Before Droughns, the
Browns were the only team 111
the league not to have a
I ,000-yard rusher in the past
20 years. In 1985, Earnest
Byner and Kevin Mack both
reached the mark for
Cleveland.
.
"This deal will allow me to
establish myself as a member
of the Cleveland Browns and
be a part of a team that is
improving and an organization on the rise," Droughn s
smd m a statement.

SPO RTS@MYDAI LYTRIBUN E COM

STEUBENVILLE
- A pair ol Gallw
yo uth wrestle" have
~ual1fled
for th1rd
annual Oh10 Grade
School
State
Wr e , t l 1 n g
Champ1onsh1p. wh1ch
takes place March 1819 at St Joh n Arena 111
Steubenville. ·
Zack Tackell and
Brandon Taylor are
the fi rst grade 'chool
student&gt;
1n
the
Ga llipolis
City
Schoo ls to qual1fy for
the tournament.
They are bolh &gt;~xth
graders at Wa1hington
Elemenlary
Sc hool
and members ot the
Gall1pol" Python, .

Bengals make offers to free agents
CINCINNATI (AP)
Rece1ver Kelley Washtngton
and three other restricted free
agents rece1ved one-year contract offers Friday from the
Cinc111nat1 Bengals, giving
the team control over whether
they stay or go.
Rece1ver Kevin Walter,
fullback Jeremi Johnson and
guard Scott Koo1stra also
were tendered contracts, a
1

move that allows the Ben~ al s
to match any offer they m1ght
receive from another team.
if the Bengals dec1de not to
match an offer, they would
receive a draft pick from the
other team as compensatiOn
Players also are free to accept
the Bengals' one-year offers'
or negotiate a mult1year deal.
Washington fell bebmd
rookie Chris Henry for the

No. 3 receiving job last season. Washington was inactive
for nine of the 16 regular-season games and had only- I0
catches for I0 I yards and a
touchdown.
Henry faces manjuana possession charges m northern
Kentucky and felony gun
charges in Orlando , Fla.,
cloudmg h1 s future w1th the
team.

06JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE 4X4'1321821,000 90FW AT AC TILT CASE PW PLC:tl PW1'1 SEAT AllCYWHLS

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sII 995

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SH5
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$294
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$199
$289
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04 BUICK RAINER CLX AWO "13244 CASE PW PL CO AWD LTHR HEATED SEATI3 22,000 BOFW AT AC TILT $22.975
04 JEEP WRANGLER SPRT 4X4 1131476 CYL 5 SPO PW PL TILT CO SPliT WHLS SOUND BAR ............. - 111.995
04 NISSAN XTERRA t13102 IIOfW AT AC 4X4 TLT CRUISE PW PL SPORT WH CO ..................................,..... 111.495
03SATURN VUE f1318828.000MLSV6ATAC PW PI.COSPRTWHLSAED&amp; ROAO~Y .

Steelers cut Maddox, Williams
PITTSBURGH (AP)
Tommy Maddox , who lost his
start1ng quarterback's JOb
shoFtly
after
Ben
Roethh sberger 's arrival m
2004. was released Fnday by
the Pittsburgh Steelers in a
l ong-e~pecte d
salary cap
move.
Al so cut was W1lhe
Williams. a cornerback on the
Steelers' 1995 Super Bowl
team who
unexpectedly
became a starter again after
returning to the team in 2004:
He was deactivated for most of
lust season after bemg beaten

PRo HOCKEY
I

PRESS

CLEVELAND - Running
back Reuben. Droughns, who
last season became the first
Cleveland back to go over
1,000 yards since 1985,
signed a three-year contract
extension Friday.
Droughns rushed for I ,232
yards last year and broke Jim
Brown's record for carries in
a season (309) while starting
all 16 games, finally giving
the Browns some consi stency
at the pos1t1on.
The 27-year-old lobbied the
Brown s for a long-term deal
and general manager Phil.
Savage sa1d be earned it with
his performance last season.
· Terms of the deal were not
disclosed.
"We are anxwus to give
him the opportunity to have a
focused offseason where he
can emerge as' a leader on
offense," Savage said 111 a
statement.
Droughn s came out of

I

GROUPC
WL
Pel
GB
Cuba
0 0
000
Netherlands
0 0
000
Panama
0 0
OOCI
Puerto RICO
0 0
000
Tuesday, March 7
At San Juan, Puerto Rico
Panama at Puerto R1c;o, 7 p m .
Wednesday, March 8
At San Juan Puerto R1co
Cuba vs Panama, 1 p m
Netherlands at Puerto A1co, 7 30 p m
Thursday, March 9
At S.n Juan, Puerto Rico
Cuba vs Netherlands, 7 p m
Friday, Morch to
At San Juan, Puerto Rico
Panama vs Nether1ands 1 p m
Cuba al Puerto Rtco, 7 30 p m

1

Bv JOE MILICIA

W L OT PtsGF GA
38 18 3 79 194 162
Dallas
33 23 5 71 206 202
,
At San Juan. Puerto Rico
Los Angeles
28 20 11 67 172 163
Group 0 wmner vs Group D second place, ( Anahetm
7p m
28 2.2 8 64 18i 176
San Jose
Wodnooday, Morch 15
28 28 4 60 177 194
Phoenix
At San Juan, Pueno Rleo
1 Group 0 winner vs Group C second place,
Two pomts lor a wtn, One point for overtime
, 7pm
j loss or shOOtoul loss

GB

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2006

Browns extend Droughns' contract Youth wrestlers on to stat~ championship

2006

I place 7pmTU. .dsy, M1rch 14

Canada
I MexiCO
0 0
000
1 South Afnca
0 0
000
Un1led Sta tes
0 0
OQO
Tuesday, Mirch 7
At Phoenix
I MeKICO at United States, 4 p m
At Scottsdale A ri Z
Canada vs South Alnca, 9 p.m
Wednesday, March 8
At Phoenix
Canada al Untted Slates, 4 p m
At Scottsdale Anz
Me,.;rco vs South Afnca 1 9 p m
Thursday, March 9
AI Phoenix
Canada vs Mex1co, 8 p m
Friday. March 10
At Scottlldala, Ariz.
South Afnca at United States, 3 p m

Southern Conference

Lakewood St Edward 83, Grafton M1dv1ew
Nat1ona1 Basketball Assoclatlon
49
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Perrysburg 70, Findlay 67 , 20T
Atlantic Division
Oh1o
High
School
Gtrls
Basketball
Tal Scott 65 Tol Rogers 47
W L
Pel
GB
Frtday's Results
Tal St Franc1s 61 Tol W811e 54
New Jersey
31 26 544
Tournament
Tal St John s 70 Oregon Clay 56
Phlladelph•a
30 28 5t7 1 '~
DIVISION II
Tal Start 57 Tol Libbey 55
Bos1on
24 34 414 7\
Cols
DeSales
68
Cols
Mlffhn
51
Mansfield Sr 82 Sandusky 53
20 37 351 11
Cots Eastmoor 50 Sunbury B1g Walnut 45 Toroll to
Fremont Ross 75 M&lt;JnsfJeld Mad1son 67
New York
t 5 43 259 16/l
Day Carroll 44 Cln McNicholas 42
Mass111on Washington 80 Green 55
Southeast Division
Keltenng
Alter
53
C1n
Taft
31
Stow 67 Wadswon h 39
W L PC1 GB
MorrO\\ Ltttle M1amt 65 Spnng Kenton
Macedonia Nordon•a 57 Wooster 55
Mtam1
37 20 649
R1dge 40
Euclid 74 Shaker Hts 58
Wash •ng ton
29 2e 509 e
DIVISION Ill
Bedford 94 Cte JFK 79
Orlando
20 38 345 17 ~:
Ironton
62
,
Lynchburg-Clay
43
Mentor 58, Lyndhurst Brush 40
Atlanta
19 38 333 18
Chagnn Falls Kenston 51 Pa•nesv111e Sugarcreek Garaway 39 Old Washlflglon ' Ch arlotte
16 44 267 22/1
Buckeye Tra11 32
R•vers•de 30
Central Dlvtston
DIVISION
IV
Loram Adm1ral K•ng 55 Med•na 49
W L PC1 GB
Berlin Hiland 68 Caldwell 43
Strongsville 73, N Olmsted 62
Detroit
48 10 828
Cols Afncentnc 48 Newark Cath Ja
DIVISION II
Cleveland
33 26 559 15'b
Akr Buchtel 74 Norton 64
lnd1ana
29 26 527 17'1l
w
Va.
prep
basketball
scores
Akr Hoban 61. Akr Central-Hewer 45
Milwaukee
29 29 500 19
Friday's
Results
BeHelonta•ne 47, Spring Kenton R1dge 41
Chtcago
26 32 448 22
Boys Sectronals
Can S 44. Orrvrlle 42
WESTERN CONFERENCE •
Bluef•eld 47, James Monroe 45
Canal Fulton NW 79, Alliance Marlmgton
Southwest OIV1slon
Cabell
Mtdland
56
Hurncan
e
53
61
WlPciGB
Cameron 57 Paden C1ty 43
Canfield 68. Youngs, Woodrow Wilson 44
Dallas
46 12 793
Chapmanvtlle 63 Scott 51
CirCleville Logan Elm 53 Greenf1eld
5an AntoniO
45 12 789
Charleston
Cathol•c
70,
Guyan
Valley
36
McCia•n43
MemphiS
32 26 552 14
Gilmer
County
53
W1rt
County
52,
OT
Cots Centenn1al 64, Cots Beechcroft 60
New Orleans
31 27 534 15
Independence 59 Shady Spnng 49
Cols DeSales 60 Plain Ctty Jonathan Alter
Houston
26 33 44 1 20',
Keyser 63, Petersburg 57
31
Northwest Dtvlsion
Logan
83
Wayne
6fl
Cols Watlerson 72 Cots Eastmoor 65, OT
WLPctGB
Mar11nsburg 53, Hedgesv•lle 48
Day Cham1nade-Ju11enne 50 Bellbrook 41
31 28 525
Moun t Hope 62, Greater Beckley Chnst•an Denver
Day Dunbar 61 , Kettenng Alter 52
55
•
utah
29 30 483 2',
Elida 56 S1 Mal)'s Memonal 4t
M1nnesota
25 32 439 5
Oak
Htll
45,
Braxton
County
44
Hunt1ng Valley UniverSity 58 Chagnn Falls
Seattle
22 37 373 9
TrinitY 63 Clay-Batte lle 43
56
Portland
19 38 333 11
Tucker County 74 Un1vn 55
Lancaster Fanf1eld Un1on 54 HillSboro 45
Pacific Division
Tyler Consolidated 71 Magnolia 51
Mentor Lake Cath 44 Geneva 40
WLPciGB
Unlverstty 70 Morgantown 68, OT
New Albany 74, Cols M1flhn 70
PhOeniX
40 17 702 ' Wheelmg Park 70 Brooke 52
Norwalk 52 Bellevue 49
LA Clippers
33 24 579 7
Williamstown 65 Parkersburg Catholic 51
Olmsted Falls 79 Oberlrn F1relands 54
L A Lakers
30 29 508 11
Port Clinton 75, Fostona 71
Sacramento
28 30 483 12',
Rocky River 60 Cle Max Hayes 57
Golden State
25 33 431 15'?
Tipp City Tippet;;anoe 43, St Pans Graham
27
Fnday's College Basketball
Thursday s Games
Tal Cent Cath 65 Bryan 52 ,
Major Scores
Cleveland 92, Ch1cago 91
Upper Sandusky 76, Ontano 49
By The ASSOCiated Press
San Anton 1o 9a, Dallas 89
Wapakoneta 64 , Lima Shawnee 59
EAST
Friday's Games
Wauseon 57 Napoleon 50
Brown 61, Pnnceton 46
Sacramento 102 Atlanta 93
Willard 56 Shelby 42
Cornell 71 HaNe.rd 44
Boston 99. Indiana 98
DIVISION Ill
Dartmouth 69 Columbia 62
ChJCago 108 New York 101
Apple Creek Waynedale 51 loudonville 43
Penn 57 Yale 55
Phtladelphla 119. Washmgton t 13
Archbold 63, Delta 47
Seton Hall 65, P1ttsburgh 6t
Houston 89 Denver 78
Ashland Crestview 44 Huron 36
SOUTH
Dallas 90 Charlotte 76
Bed1ord Char.el 100, Broo klyn 50
Coppm St 67 Morga n St 63, OT
Phoemx 123, Orlando 11a.
Campbell Memor1al 75 Columb•ana
N1choll(i St 86 Texas St 67
Utah 105, LA Clippers 103
Crestv1ew 36
S Carolina St 51. N Carolnia A&amp; T 44
Detro1t 98, Seattle 96
C1n Maderra 67 Ctn Deer Park 53
MIDWEST
L A Lakers 106, Golden State 94
C1n N College Hill 75 Cm Purcell Manan
No maJOr team scores reported from the
Saturday's Games
4e
MIDWEST
Toronto at New Jers ey, 1 p m
1
Cle VASJ 63, Mlddlef•eld Card1nat 33
SOUTHWEST
Allanla at Miam1 7 30 p m
Col\lns Western Reserve 6a Castal•a
Northwestern St 85, Tex:as-San AniOfiiO64
New York at Milwaukee 8 30 p m
Margaretta 54
SE LOUISiana 89, lamar 79
Portland at San Antbmo a 30 p m
Convoy Crestv•ew 40 Haviland Wayne
Texas-Arlington 71 ~Nees e St 62
Orlando a1 Denver, 9 p m·
Trace 35
FAR WEST
Detro1t at L A lakers. 10 30 p m
Day Jefferson 61 Arcanum 57
No maJOr team scores reported from the
Sunday's Games
Day Srivers 68 Jamestown Greenevrew FAR WEST
Basion
at
Toronto
1 pm
49
TOURNAMENT
Sacramento at Washington t p m
Findlay Ltberty-Benton 57 Bloomdale
America East Conference
lnd•ana at Phlladelph•a 1 p m
Elmwood 48
First Round
Phoemx at Dallas 3 30 p m
Garfreld Hts Tnn•ty 49 Elyna Cath 48
UMBC 88, Stony Brook 70
Gok:len State at Minnesota, 3 30 p m
Gates Mills Hawken 62, K•rtland 37
AtlantiC Sun Conference
Ch•cago at Cleveland . 7 30 p m
G•bsonburg 59 Atlrca Seneca E 56
Sem1f1nals
Portland at Houston 8 30 p m
Hamler Patnck Henry 51 Deflanee
Belmont 72, Stetson 59
Utah at Sea tile 9 p m
Ayersv111e 24
L1pscomb 70 Gardner-Webb 51
Memph•s at L A Clippers 9 p m
1
LOUISVille Aq u1nas 61 , Doylestown
Colon~al AthletiC Assootation
Ch1pppewa 51
F1rst Round
Metamora Evergreen
47,
Elmore
Delaware 52 Drexel 49
Woodmere 36
Georg~:.. St 72 Towson 64
Ottawa-Glandorf 64 Bluffton 48
Northeastern 74 James Mad1$()n 56
World Baseball Classic
Spencarv111e 52 uma Cent Cath 48
Va Commonwealth 62 , W1ll1am &amp; Mary 59
FIRST ROUND
St Henry 44 . Coldwater 41
Hor•zon League
GROUP A
Tontogany Otsego 56, Genoa 49
Second Round
W L
Pet
GB
Warren JFK 64 Atwater Waterloo 32
Loyola of Ch1cago 64 Oetrott 55
Japan
1 0
1 000
DIVISION IV
W1s Green Bay 76 Ill-ChiCago 66
South Korea
1 0
1 000
Ada 64 Oola Hardin Northern 29
Metro Atl anl•c Athletic Conference
Chma
o 1 000 1
Arlington 74 Mt Blanchard Rtverdale 55
F1rst Round
Ta1wan
0 1
000
1
Ash1and Mapleton 58 Oberlin 50
Canrs1us 74 Loyola Md 72
Friday, March 3

Sunday, March 5,

At Tokyo
South Korea 2, Taiwan 0
Japan 18 Ch1na 2, 8 1nntngs
Saturd•y, March 4
At Tokyo
South Korea vs Ch~na, 9 30 p m Fnday
Tarwan at Japan, 4 30 a.m
Sunday, March 5
At Tokyo
Ta rwan vs Chrna, 9.30 p m Saturday
South Korea at .Japan, 4 30 a m

I

Sunday, March 5,

PageB2

out by Ike Taylor
Maddox became one of the
NR.'s unlikeliest success stories in years when, after retirmg from football and becommg an insurance agent, he
returned after a six -year
absence and a short stay in the
XR. to lead the Steelers to a
I0-5- l record and the second
round of the playoffs m 2002
Maddo~ . becoming an NFL
starter for the tir'st time at age
31 , completed 234 of 377 passes for 2,836 yards. 20 touchdowns and 16 mterceptwn s
and set a St~elers smgle-game

Defenders

rebounds . Krisu Davis was
next w1th 13 points, followed
by Calee Edmonds w1th four
pomts and s1 x rebound s,
from Page Bl
Anme Carmen, Kri sti Duv1s
and Juhe Hussell all with
oppressive defense to limn four
pomts and Jasmme
th e1r opponent to JUSt 24 Owens with two pOints m the
pomts en rout to a dominat- VICtory
mg 25 pomt regional v1ctory.
Monclova Christian was
Jenkins paced •OVCS with led b) Sarah Clark. who
18 point s and 12 rebounds, as posted 14 points and Hannah
well as luur steals and five Keiser who had 13 pomts as
assists. She was joined ~y the only two players m douBlankenship and her career ble f1gures. Sarah Keiser
· high I3 pomts, as well as added four points and
:seven steal s and five Tiffany Smallwood and

Redmen
from PageBl

record of 473 yards passing
against Atlanta that season. H1s
breakthrough season came
only months after the fanner
Broncos first-round draft ptck
was the XFL' s one and only
MVP
But Maddox, whose ascenswn to starter pushed longtime
Steelers QB Kardell Stewart
off the team. subsequently rost
h1s job following a 6-10 season
in 2003 - after the Steelers
restructured an offense that had
long been built around the run
to f1t Maddox· s downfield
throw mg.
Chelsea Page added three
points each.
OVCS already holds two
~tate title victones m 1998
and 1999, however those
wms came in the WVCEA
They w1ll be seekmg the1r
f1rst t1tle m the AssoCiation
of
Chnstian
Schools
International (ACSI).
In last year's ACSI state
title match, Ohio Valley
Christmn fell to Adam s
County Chnstian 46-31,
The Lady
Defenders
played for the title Saturday
in Camon
'

... ·-- ......- ·---

s11.260

02 HONDA CRV LX AWO 113203 AT AC 11LT CASe PW PL CO SPAT WHLS

116,170

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01 FORD EXPLORER 4X4 SPRT 113193AT ACOo4LTifR SEATS PWRSU'l ROOF SPRTWHLS - - - ---- ----- - -01 SUBAAUFORRESTEAAWDmcN12111JJ~awonuCASEco-Pl.au.ovWHUIPIIW!IISl.IHAOOf~•nosu..TS . __
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s1 19

99 CHEV TRACKER 4X4 4 0!1.,3:143 HARD TOP AT AC SPliT WI&lt;LS. - ... - _.. . - . .. ... - --. ,_ • .. .. .. .. ....
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05 DODGE RAM CREW CAB4X4 113232 26,000MLS BOFW. -· ·- _ ...... ·-· ................. 119,995
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04 FORDF·150 s.cREW4XU13116 XLTSPTWHLS 4 Oil AT ACTitTCRU PW Pl .•.' ...... ............
03 CHEV $10 CREW CAB 4X4 fll21132,000MLS LSAT,C .. ORTlLTCRSE PW Pt. CO BEOL.I'ERSPRTWHL.S ............
03 FORD F150 4X4 113206 XL 5 SPD SPRT WHLS........... ... . .. ..... ................. ..... ........ ........ ...............
03 DODGE DAKOTA CLUB CAB SLT 4X4 113173 AT AC V6 TILT CRUISE CO ALLOY WHEELS BEOUNER
03 CHEV K1500 4X4 XCAB 113144 V8AT AC QUA.ORASTURING PW PL PWR SEATS C011LTCRSE SPRTWHLS
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02FORO F150 SUPER CAB4X4t13:141 V8AT ACTLTCRSE PWPL noo LB GVWSI'RTWI&lt;LSPWPL- ..
00 FOAD F250 4X4 SC 1132215 V8 AT AC TILT CASE PW Pl PWR SEATSAU.OY WHLSTO PKG _ ......... . .. . .. -·OOTOYOTA nJNDRAACCESS CAB 4X4 11:3224 V8 AT AC liLT CJISE PW PlSPRT WHLS REO SR5 - OOFORDRANGERSC4X4113099ATACPWPLSPRTWHLSXlT ....... _ .............. _ ... - · ... .. ·- ...
99 CHEVY SILVERADO SUPER CAB 4X4 0132&gt;11 FLAAESID£ Z71 SPRT WHLS YO AT AC T1LT CASE PW PL co.

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I 19 995

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99 TOYOTA TACOMA XCAB 4X4 SR5 S'TX 113151 '115 SPD SUPER CAB co PWPt. Tl.TCRSC SPRT Wti.S TRD~ PKG Sl i,lOO

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06 FORD TAURUS 11324518,000 ML.S BOFW AT AC nLTCRSE PW Pl PWR SEATS SPRT WHLS.. .

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06 DOOGE CHARGER tl3191 18,000 MLS eOFW AT AC TILT CASE PW PL SPAT WHLS

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05 FORO MUSTANG 11321123,000MLS BOFWSILVERGRAVLn-tR 116AT A.CTILT CASE PW PL. PWR SEAT A.U.OV WHlS. - 119.995
06 POHTIAC VIBEf13213 28,000 BOfW AT AC TlLT CR!;E PW PL ALLOY WHLS CD .... -· . .. .. I 15995
06 DOOGE STRATUS 113208 PlAT AC TlLT CASE PW .... ... .... ... ........... ... ·--.... ... ...... ....... . I 13350
06 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GH13J89 MLS IIOfWATACTILTCRSE PWPl"""' EATSSPRTWHLS .... . 116 395
06 BUICK LACROSSE t131311 ATAC TILT CRSE PW PL PWR SEATS 26.000 MLS IIOfW .. - .. -... .... . • ..

notched two hils wtth a double for the Red men.
Shawnee State (4-2, 1- 1
AMCS) scored 1ts lone run
oft Chau m the s1xth mmng .
''Nate thre"' well," said
R10 Grande head coach Brad
Warnimont. " Nate was a
bright spot ··
The Bears were , able to
bounce back m the second
game to collect an 8-4 w1n .
Shawnee totaled nine h1ts to
only s1x for the Redmen .
Semor Du stin G1bbs started fo r the Redmen and
struck out and walked three
in h1 s fout-innlng stmt on
the mound All three walks
later turned mto runs for the
Bears.
Shawnee got the scoring
in the bottom of the first
inning wtth back-to-back
doubles.
Sophomore Chns Brown
took the loss 1n rehef
Brown (0- J J gave up the goahead run m h1 s one 1nning
of the work. Sophomore
Kenta Sato d1dn '1 fare much
better as he gave up three
runs m the SIXth 1nnmg.
Jonathon Venters p1c ked
up the wtn for Shawnee
State
The second game .Joss
ended a 'even -game Winning 'treak for the Redmen
Warn1mont ' ummed up
Brad Sherman/photo
the loss We JUS! d1d n 't hll " R10 Grande Redmen pitche r Oustm G1bbs wmds up to del1ve r a
he sa1d
p1tch dunng game two of FTiday·s doubleheader

Season

2005 cadillac DeVille

Factory W~rranty . $
tSK m1les

from Page Bl

22 995
1

to only 31.5 .

-

I

"Our defense allowed 31
pomts per game and that w1ll
make any coaches JOb a lot
easier." ad mitted Brace
''This group played tena-

s·. , . . .

2005 Grand Am, S1lver, factory warranty, 22k m1les
$11,495
2001 Wrangler Sport, auto, a1r, 4.0..
$11 ,700
2004 Grand AM , Red, 30 k m1les, factory warranty
. .... .. ..$10,500
2005 Impala, Wheels, factory warranty, po~r seats, 32 k m1les..
. ..
...$12,400
2005 Cavalier, 4 door, auto, a1r, .............. ........ .. ...... .. . .
. .. $9,495
2003 Cavalier. Silver, 4 door, auto, a1r........ .......... .. .................
,.
. ... $7,795
2004 Jeep' L1berty Sport, ......... .... ..... ....... ........... . .........
..... .. .. $14,300
2005 Mal1 bu LS V6 Charcoal, 18 k miles, factory warranty............
. .$13,400
2005 Suzuki 4x4 XL7 Factory Warranty... .. .... ...... ..... ... ......... .
$16,900
2004 Grand Pnx GT
.... ........
$13,000
2006 T~urus 1Bk m1les... .
.... ........... ........... .... ... . .
.$13,295
2005 LeSabre, 23 k m1les, power seats, XM rad10, factory warranty
$15,400
2003 Intrepid , ....... .......... ......
... ... . . .
.$7,995
2004 Intrepid, 38 k miles, factory warranty.. . .... .
......... .. . . .$9,995
1992 Camry LE

.... ..

..

Recruit
from Page Bl

$3,500

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2001 Regal LS, 44 k m1les, leather, local trade, low m1les
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2003 D1amante-LS, 42 k m1les, sun root, leather heated seats, factory warranty
$12,600
2005 Chevy Cargo Van, Auto, a1r, factory warranty, 22 k m1les . ..
.... . $14,995
2003 Dodge Grand Caravan, Wh1te, local trade, 58 k m1les
$10,995
2005 Dodge Grand Caravan, Blue, rear a1r, factory warranty, 22 km1les
$15,500
2005 Dodge Grand C~ravan SXT, Slow N Go seats, all power, factory warranty, 20 k m1les
$18,500
1999 Astro Convers1on Van, 65 k miles, 1 owner. ... '
$7,295
2001 Olds Van leather quad seats
$6,995
2004 Colorado LS Z71 Xcab 4x4, factory warranty, XM rad1o, 20 km1les
$17,900
2004 GMC Xcab 4x4 long bed, 5 3 tow .. . .. .... .. . ... ....
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2001 Sonoma Xcab.auto, a1r, 56 k miles .
$8,495
2001 Ranger Xcab Flare s1de, 4x4, sharp local trade 69 k m1les .... .
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2005 Dodge D1esel Quad Cab 4x4 SLT Factory Warranty, 31 k m1les .
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•

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03SAlURNVUEAW0t13137ATACPWPLCDTILTCRSE ....... ...... ..... ............. .....................

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J

: played club volleyball and is
· very good lnend s w1th current R10 player, sophomoreto-be, Jess1ca Rodgers from
Westfall High School. "We
get along so well and she 's
someone that I really look up
. to and she's done so well for
· herse lf and that's somethmg
that motivates me to do just
as well "
Rinehart is not planning on
re stmg on he r -accomplish ments that she ach1eved at the
high school level, she 's
: knows that college ball is a
brartd new ball game. but she
bel1eves that she is prepared
fo r the 'C hallenge ''You can
always improve, but I fee l
tll.tt the competiti on and
everythmg that we pu shed
: towards at Ade na has helped
· me grow a lot 111 the volleyball area." R1nehart ~a1d
Indications arc that she w1ll
play hbero for RJO Grande.
but Rmehart was to quick to

cious defense, which was led
by Dev.ey Cantrell and
Derrick Beaver." Srace stated. "These two guys compiled an amazmg I0 steal s
per game between them "
The Rebels two best defensive etforts came aga1nst
Southern and Hannan, holding them to nine and I0 total
pomts respect1 vely
say she would play wherever
Coach F1elds Will put her.
"Where ever they need me,
that's where I' ll be happy, no
matte1 \\hat 11 is,'' she sa1d
De spi te the success of the
Adena program, Rmehan IS
one ot only a few to s1gn to
play at the college level. "We
haven't had that many playe" that have gone on 10 play
m college,'' said Adena head
coac h Laura Sm1th. "But It 's
good to see Summer want to
continue th at."
Smith added thai Rme hart
\\Orks really hard at th e
'game. "She 's a hard v.orker
and she's played in our program smce seve nth grade,' '
Sm1th sa1d "Most rece ntl y
she's become our hbero and
she 's JUst played ve ry hard
and I'm su1e she' ll do a
good JOb .1t R10 Grande
Sm1th extolled the pas,IOn
th at R1nehan pla ys w1 th
"Summer plays w1th a lot
of hean, she 's a good co mmunicator on the fl oor,"
Smilh sa1d . "S he w1ll JUSt
sacnfice her body for the
ball and she's ,, gond

Members of the junior varsity team included Duncan,
Cantrell , Beaver, John Wells,
Ehph Ingles. Vance Fellure,
Ju stin
Triplett,
Caleb
rytcClanahan,
M1cah
Cardwell. Trav1s. McCarty,
Corey small , Paul Barker.
Kevin
Jacob
Watson,
Johnson, Dakota Stapleton.
Steven Call alld Ryan Ge1ger.
defens1ve player.
''She ' II g1ve you all she
can g1ve you on defense."
R 10 Grande head coach
Pat sy F1elds beheve s she
has someone 1n the fold that
knows the game and can
produce nght . away " It
seems hke she just loves the
game and commg out of a
great program. a w1nnmg
program and she know s the
ga me," F1elds said "That's
going to really be a factor
for us
"Las t year, "'e only two
kltls on our team that rea lly
knew the ga me ." F1eld s
added "This year. we teel
that sl1e 1s g01 ng be a great
asset to our program
"She's a · leade r, lh at's
another th1 ng that I nollced
when \\e were watching her
111 club ball." F1elds sa1d.
"We thmk that 'he 1s great
k1d and th.1 t she's gmng 1o
be a great player tor u; "
Rm ehart is the ftrst s1gnee
for the 2006 R1o volleyball
recnl 1t cla ss
Summer IS the daughter o r
Pau I dOd Shar1 Rmchnrt

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�PageB4

.WEEKEND

Sunday, March 5,

20®

BASEBALL

~,unbap lime~ -ientinel

Kenseth off to strong start
in 2005, would rather not
ASSOCIATED PRESS
have to come from behind
'
aga_in
to
qualify
for
. Frustration
was
Matt
NASCAR's playoff.
"It feels good to get off to a
;Ken seth's nearly · constant
-companion during the first
good start," he sajd. "Last
year, we didn't . But a couple
:three months of the 2005 sea:son.
of years before that, we did. I
· While his fo ur Roush
think we won early in '03 and
· :Racing teammates were find'04 .. so, hopefully, we can
:ing success in the early going,
keep it up all the way through
the year - keep the same
:Kenseth was stru ggling. It
~ook the 2003 NASCAR
le vel of energy and excite:champion three races to regisment and Work on the cars
·ter his first top I0 - an
and do all the stuff that we are
:eighth pl ace at Las Vegas right now."
·and the second top I0 didn 't
Like Reiser, he has great
come until the 13th race. at
confidence in Jack Roush's
:Oover. Hi s one and only vicpowerhouse team, which has
:tory, at Bristol, came in race
won two of the last three Cup
.
championships and last year
;No ..24.
· What a difference a year
had the second-, third- and
:makes.
fourth-place finishers (Biftle,
· 1\vo races into the new seaEdwards and' Manin).
;son, Kenseth is rolling.
"It's definitely .a big confi: Only gettin~ punted by
dence builder as a driver to
Tony Stewalt m the seasonget in .cars like these,"
-~ening Daytona 500 kept
. Kenseth said. "Things change
AP photo every year. Like, this year, we
ex tel C up's quiet man I.rom
·
.
·
·
Matt
Kenseth
tries
to
remove
celebratory
liquid
from
his ear have the new Ford Fusion.
f. mtshmg ,in the top 10 m
NASCAR's biggest race, and after winning the NASCAR Auto Club 500 auto race at the But you keep developing difKenseth still managed 10 sal- California Speedway in Fontana, Calif., Sunday, Feb. 26. In the ferent stuff and it always feels
:vage 15th.
2005 season. Ken seth's four Roush Racing teammates were good to start off the. year hav.: Last Su nday at California finding success while Kenseth struggled. Two races into the ing your car balanced right
·Speedway. Kenseth had what new season, Kenseth is rolling.
·
·
·
and driving the way it's sup:appeared to be the third·
posed to."
:fastest car in the race. But rhis will carry some momen- year," Reiser said. "I think
'Kenseth feels so -good about
;engine failures for teammate tum and we ' ll be able to gel a that the knowledge that we the way things are going, he
Greg Biffle and _ in a bit of few more wins this year."
had last season to wh.ere we isn't .even holding a grudge
S tewart. gave
Robbie
Reiser,
crew
chief
are
thi s season becomes
.trony
.
.
. · agat'nst Stewart for the inciKenseth his 11 th career victo- of the No. 17 Ford and greater. We're always addmg dent in Daytona.
ry and third place in the sea- Kenseth's longtime friend, to the resources that we have.
The two veteran drivers
son points. both of which h~ isn ' t surprised hy the strong We're adding to the people cleared the air in a conversacan enjoy until the next Cup stan.
we have. We're beefmg up the tion . the day before the
race, March 12 in Las Vegas .
"Thi s• team is very good," engineering staff. We're California event. ,
. "Somet imes it feels like Reiser said . "Looking at the working on the car.
"I thihk we understand each
"So, yeah, the pool gets big- other better after we talked,"
there is justi ce in the world, so · cars · we brought to Daytona
that feel s good,'' K.eilseth and California .. and the way ger and bigger and bigger the Kenseth said. "Everything fs
said. "I felt (at Daytona) we they operated on pi1" road, more we build on it."
going to be tine on track. As
had a car that could have won. they're · here 'to race and
That could be real bad news you saw, we passed each other
"Our pit stop stuff has been they're here to win races and for the rest of the Cup com- two or three ·times and gave
going good, so it just fee ls the championship this year." petitors, considering that each other room ·and did
Reiser pointed out that Kenseth rallied in the second everythi ng just like we did
incredibly good to come to
the track and have ev~rything working for a team as deep in half. of the season last year to every other race before
kind of go right and all the talent as Roush Racing join all of his' teammates (Daytona).
"It's water under the bridge
'stars .align for us to get to which also fields Cup cars for which then included Kurt
Victory Lane . We haven ' t Biftle. Mark Martin. Carl Busch - in the season-end- and this was a much better
won a ton of races the last Edwards and team newcomer ing, lO-man, 10-race Chase week for us."
three years -· one or two a Jamie McMurray._- gives all for the championship.
Chances are, 2006 is going
year- and whenever you can of them a big advantage.
Ken seth. who · wound up to be a much better season for
win, it feels good. Hopefully,
"I think we build every seventh in the tina! standi ngs Kenseth, too.
Bv

MIK~

PageBs
Sunday, March 5,

2006

Star~studded
Cincinnati
Reds starting
pitcher Justin
Germano
throws during·
a spring train. ing game with
the Detro it
Tigers , Friday
in Sarasota,
Fla.

HARRIS

AP photo

following

nm 1 Dl'f; (c.ntrltrl/4)

Ilk Dltvw

l'olnll

...

.

....

t . Jimmie Johnson

355

·1

2

2. Casey Mears

3t6

2

3. Matt Kenseth

308
295 .

0
1

4. Kasey Kahne

5. Dale Earnhardt Jr. 287

. . . 111111

Tip
Ill
lMI 1lrllw
1Di 'lllp1D w.t 1111111111

0
1.'

115.6

2

89.2

15

105.5

1

12

92.5

"

2

6

91 .2

"" •

t

t1

100.6
91 .2

6. Mark Martin

275

0
0

7. Ryan Newman

273

0

2

8. Clint Bowyer

271

0

2

3
8

9. Brian Vickers

260

0

2'

7

78.9
91 :2

10. Elliott Sadler

259

0

2

4

73.6

f1 . Dale Jarrett

...

.. 246
.. .233
13. Martin True~ Jr . . .. 233
14. Jeff Burton . ... " .227
. . .219
15. Jeff Gordon .
16. K~n Sl;hrader .... 211
11. Robby. Gordon . .. .209
16. Jamie McMurray . . 207
19. Kevin Harvick
.202
20. Denny Hamlin . .. 200
21 tar! Edwards .. ... 199
22. Tony Stewart . . . .. 199
23 J.J
...... 187

v.t;,

24. Reed Sorenson . . , .176
25.Kurt8usct1 .... . .. 174
26. Dave Blaney ... . .. 170
27. MiaJael waltrip , . .. 164
28. Brem Sherman . . .152
29. Jeremy Mavtield . .. 152
30. Ke~n L~page . . .151
31 . Terry Labonte .. : .. 148
32. Joe Nemed"I!Jt( .... 146
h David Stremme . .. 143
34. Kyle Pellj
.. 13-1
. . .128
35. Jeff Green . .

..
~

36. BOOby Labonto

.

37. St~r1Jog Marlin . ' .. 128
38. Greg Biffle .. .... 122
39. Bil Elliott _ .. . .. . .111
40. Soon R~gs ...
.106
41 . Kirk Sheli'nerdlne· ..103
... 91
42. M~e Wallace
43. Tra~s Kvapil . . . . . .87
44. Mike GaNey ... . . .49
45. Scott Wimmer . ....46
46. Hermie Sadler ... . .43

..

47. Starrton Barrett .

.43

48. Kenny Wallace.· . .. 40

.. 1211

NOte; The first 26 race!! of the NASCAR NEXTEI: Cup Series st!son detemlined wfllch drivers were
pM of the "Chase for the NASCAR·NEXTEL Cup" in the final! 0 races. The dfNert who were in the
NASCAR Top 10 ry within •oo points of tmllfll:lder !ftet those 26 races -l!d for the series 1~ In ·
the :ch8se fOf the NASCAA NEXTEL Cup."
•

•

•

:NASCAR Hall of
·Fame reportedly ·
headed to Charlotte

With Labonte, Pettys talking turnaround

NASCAR's research and
CHARLOTTE, N.C. NASCAR 's Hall of Fame development center. is in subappears headed to Charlott~. urban Charlotte, and thre~
according to a report . in Nextel Cup races are held at
Bv CHRIS JENKINS
Wednesday's editions of The nellfbY
Lowe's
Moto.t
, ASSOCIATED PRESS
Speedway.
·
Charlotte Observer. ·
three
anonymous
Atlanta
also
submitted
a
Citing
Kyle Petty's' improbable
sources, the Observer reported strong bid and has corporate
recruiting effort finally paid
that Charlotte beat out Atlanta backing from many of
off.
.
and
· Daytona Beach, Aa, for NASCAR's top sponsors.
· For 1hree years, Petty nagged
Beach ,
where
.
the
stock' car racing museum Daytona
Bobby Labcnte to come drive
and an official announcement NASCAR is headquartered
the family team 's famed No.
is expected Monday. . One and is home of the series~
43 car.
.
source
told the paper that ftnal biggest race of the year., is also
. He· d stop Labonte on the
logistics
must be worked out, on the list of finalists. In
streets of their subdivision in
but "it's going to happen."
January, NASCAR eliminat~
Trinity, N.C .. where Petty jogs
Messages
left
·
with
several
Richmond, Va., and Kansas
and Labcnte rides his bicycfe.
City,
'Kan., from contention. ·
NASCAR
officials,
seeking
They' d talk on aillllane ndes. ·
.comment
about
the
report,
·
The
Observer, citing four
One day, they ran into each
were
not · immediately NASCAR sources, reported
other getting a bite to eat at
Monday that Charlotte had
returned.
Panera.
In
the
past
week,
several
moved ahead of both cities as
. Petty delivered the same plea
NASCAR
sources
have
told
.
the front-runner to land the
every time: "Come drive that
The Associated Pre ss that Hall of Fame.
. 43, man ."
Charlotte is indeed the leading
Charlotte . has proposed
Petty was joking - at least
candidate to land the shrine, building a $137.. 5 million Hall
he thought he was. Why would
but that negotiations are ongo- of Fame on city-owned land
Labonte. the 2000 series cham- ·
mg .
near its convention center. The
pion. ieave an elite team such
as Joe Gibbs Racing for a
·Charlotte has been viewed as bid includes private funds and
once-dominant team that has .
the favorite to land the hall for money from a· 2 .percentage
fallen on two ·decades worth of
some time. The city is home to point hike in the hotel tax rate,
;hard times?
AP photo
most of the teams and drivers which lawmakers have already
. Turns out. the chance to·help NASCAR driver Bobby Labonte talks with crew chief Todd Parrott, right, and car owner Richard who compete in the series. approved. Charlotte also has a
~urn around Petty Enterpnses . Petty during preparations for tHe Daytona 500 auto rttce at Daytona International Speedway in · NASCAR has several ·offices catchy sloga,n in . "Racing was
proved more attractive to Daytona .Beach, Fla ., Saturday, Feb. 18.in the city, and NASCAR built here . Racing belong's
Labonte than Petty anticipated:
·
· chairman Brian France recent- here," and a big-time supporter
· "He had people thr9wing his way to as high as sixth.
behind on our money and our become good enough to attract ly purchased a home here.·
in team owner Rick Hendrick.
money at htm, fonune and
Asked to list reasonable engineering and all that stuff a hotshot young driver.
fame and houses and cars and goals for the season, Petty talks it's just taken us a little time to
"Then we have a Kurt
!lll kinds of stuff." Petty said.. about trying to develop chem- get going." ·
·
Busch, we have a. Ryan
"But in the end, this is where istry and becoming more conThe team wi.dei,Y is per- .Newman, we have somebody
he chose to come.''
sistent in the ftrst half; then ceived to be at a maJor techno- of that caliber and somebody
. Labonte's move is.·the latest going after stead~ top-five and logical disadvantage to rival who can step in and drive the
and most high-profile ste p in a top- I0 linishes m the second megateams such as Hendrick second car," Petty said.
Motorsports, Roush Racing
Petty 's son, Adam, was suprecent talent infusion . that has half.
the Petty people talking tumAnd this: "I think Bobby tan and Gibbs, but Labcnte said posed to be that young -hotshot.
around.
win rdces," Petty said.
·
the dropoff.really isn't dra.mat- · But he was killed in a racing
: RQbbie Loomis, who left the
A Petty car hasn't visited ic. An engine deal with another accident in 2000,· sending the
Pettys to become Jeff Gordon's Victory Lane.,!.'ince 1999, and Dodge
team,
Evemham Petty family and the team into
J;rew chief in · 2000.. has the team, which won 10-cham- Motorsports, has boosted a sptral of grief. A talented driretumed to become the team's pionships from 1954-79, has horsepower.
ver who could charm the
executive vice president. Todd only three victories since 1984. ."They might not have the checkbook off potential spon?arrott, who won a cham pi- ·Richard Petty said the team luxury stuff like some teams. sors, Adam was supposed to be
'
'
on ship with Dale Jarrett in . lost its edge in the 1980s. when ~ul as far as havin~ the stuff to the future of Petty Entelllrises.
'l'lle Jlhplt:-• at th• Mllfllt:al Jllua .,.
l999 , will be Labcnte's crew new team · owners with bi g work with. the~ ve got it,"
"If Adam was here, I probanow acnpllng.new patients
j:;hief They joi n Paul Andrews, ideas and even higger 'budgets Labonte said. ' That 's not a bly wouldn ~ t be driving today,"
another championship-win- entered NASCAR.
problem ."
Kyle Petty said.
.
Dr. Thomas P. Price
ning crew chief.. whci came to
"A lot of them also looked a
Petty SUSPeCtS the chance to
Petty said the presence of.
Board Certified in the practice ot Gynecology
!he team last season.
little fulther down the 'line in help lead a team back to great- Labcnte and the other newDr. Gene H. Abela and Dr. Baluamy Subblah
: Petty calls the rour men ''cor- the future than we did," ness played a key role in comers has boosted morale in
Board Certified Internists and Pulmonary and Cardiology
nerstones" who form the foun- Rich ard Petty said. "We Labonte's decision to join the the team 's . shop. especially
Disease. offering a wide variety ot diagnostic procedures .
i:lation for something the team always did everything out of team. Labcnte seems to have among longtime employees
For more details please see our yellow pages ad under
jlasn' t had in years: hope.
Level Cross (N.C. ) in the back- embraced the role,
who gricvedfor Adam with the
Physicians &amp; Surgeons
·
: "In a ; holt period of time, yard and we were fairly sue- · "When I yuit driving it one family.
morale really went through the cessful with the thing. Then it day, I want to see 25 guys in
"The guys at the shop were ·
The Physi~lans at Medical Pl.aza
started being a bigger and big- line wanting to drive it because here when Adam's accident
ceiling," Petty said.
.: Labonte and Pe[ty beth were ge r bu,ine" . It stalted goi ng it must be a great car.'' Labcnte happened, the majority uf
936 St. Rt. 160 •Gallipolis, OH
involved in crashes. in the 'ea- and bringi ng more people in. said. "You want people to want those guys." Kyle Petty said .
son-opening Daytona 500. b~t more money, more tec hnology. to dri ve the car. That would be "So it \ huge for them 10 think.
Labonte snowed .the team s that kind of stuff. We still sat better than any money you OK. fi ve years ago for us.
potential in the middle of the there in the backyard. By the · could get to have thiltfeeling." where we were at. ·and then
Call for an appointment
race by climbing into · the top time we got ready to do someThat's Petty's vi sion: too . ·where we are at this year at
8:30am-4 :00pm Mon.· Fri.
;10 and st(!ying there, weavmg · thing abcut it; we were so far The team's long- term goal is to Daytona i.' a huge difference."

7 40-446-9620

.

~

• Bv DAVE CAMPBELL

Additional cbamplonlhlp~polnt eametSi
12. Kyle Bt1sch

Reds thrash Minnesota

1

2
2

Tigers outslug split-squad Reds

ASSOCIATED PRESS

•
: FORT MYERS, Fla.
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - · Carlos Guillen hit a basesT.hird
base
is
Edwin loaded triple in his last spring training game before the
~carnacion 's job to lose with
World Baseball Classic and the Detroit Tigers beat a split&lt;;incinnati, and the 23-year- squad of Cincinnati Reds 17-10 Friday.
.
~d is off to a strong start thi s
Guillen went 2-for-3 and tripled with the bases loaded
1'ring.
··
during a six-run inning off Reds closer David Weathers. The
• Encarnacion
homered shonstop plans to leave Sunday to play for Venezuela in the
twice. doubled and drove in WBC.
'
, fbur runs for a Reds split
Chris Shelton had a solo homer and a two-run double, and
~uad in a 9-1 victory over the
designated hitter Josh Phelps hit a three-run ho111er and an
l\1innesota Twins on Friday RBI double for the Tigers, who finished with 20 hits .
'lfternoon . .
Weathers, who tore a tendon .in his right index finger while
:Michael Gosling, who has a working out in mid-January, faced 10 batters in Detroit's
&lt;;Pance ·to make Cincinnati 's six-run third inning. He gave up -five hits and hit a batter
~tation, pitched three shutout
.
during an inning extended by two errors.
innings for the victory. Ruben .
Mike Maroth started for the Tigers and gave up four hits
Sierra' s eighth-inning RBI in two innings, including Adam Dunn's two-run homer.
s!ngle
accounted . for Justin Verlander replaced Maroth and struggled with his
Minnesota's only run .
control, hitting a batter and throwing a pair of wild pitches
::, Encarnacion , who has while giving up a pair of runs in two innings.
Verlander, the Tigers' top draft pick in 2004, is one of sevp:layed' in the All-Star Futures
eral candidates for the fifth spot in Detroit's rotation.
~Same each of the last three
Jus tin Germano started for the Reds and gave up -two runs
~asons, was the organization' s minor league hitter of in two innings. Germano is a candidate for the starting rotathe year 'in 2005~ He hit .232 tion if right-hander Paul Wilson is Still recovering from
shoulder surgery on opening day.
with nine homers and 31
RBis in 2) I at-bats for the
Red s. becoming the starter McCracken ( 1-for-3), Frank and h~alth of his shoulder,
after Joe Randa was traded in Menechino (0-for-3). Jacob Which he said felt tine on
late July.
Cruz · (O,for-3) and Tut'fy Friday.
Against Twins starter Brad Rhode s (2-for-3 with an RBI
" Hopefully
it'll
stay
Radke. Encarnacion hit a two- double).
attached.'' Radke said.
run shot.in the first inning. He
Rhodes. a non-tusler invite
Left-hander Gabe White's
homered off Willie Eyre in 10 camp who has been playing retirement
announcement
the sixth and added an · RBI in Japan for the past 10 years. thinned the competition for
double against J.D. Durbin in is remembered for the three two bullpen openings by one,
a five-run seventh.
honwrs he hit on opening day with lefty Dennys Reyes and
· "We all know he has a with the Cubs in 1994. ·
right-handed rookie Eyre
chance to be an outstanding
Brian. Bucha. nan,
who 1eading the pack for a spot as
major . leag-ue
player," began the 2002 season as a speciali st. Another lefty.
Cincinnati manager Jerry Minnesota's starting right Darrell Mav, is in the mix
Narron said. ·'and he'll · get fielder but has . bounced with a handful of rookies for a
!!very chance in the world to around since. hit an RBI dou. ble off Durbin in the seventh long role with the Twins .
~~ow it.''
Glen Perkins. a Minnesota
·,, Homer Bailey. the seventh to make' it 5-0.
Radke threw all fastballs. so native who was an All qverall draft pi ck in 2004,
he
Wasn't concerned . by hi s American for' the Gophers
pitched two scoreless innings
line in what could be and was drafted . in the first
opening
for the .Reds. who brought
mostly minor leaguers for the his final spring. He won 't round in 2004 .. struck out
hour-p lu s drive south from . make a deci sion on whether three in two hitless innings.
Sarasota. A handful of players to conti nue playing until after . " I know it's early, but
fighting for spots on the the season, but right now he's we've · always liked the way
he's thrown," manager Ron
b,ench were in the lineup. leaning toward ·ret irement.
. including
Quinton
One factor is the strength Gardenhire said .

'

Sabathia gets rocked, but feels fine
'

. WINTER HAYEN. Fla .
(AP) - C.C. Sabathia clearly made the right decision .
; .Two days after announcing
that he didn't think he was
~game ready."· the Cleveland
l,hdians ace left-hander wen t
out and proved it iti hi s first
~pring ·s tart 'Friday - an II5 loss to the Houston .Astros.
'T m not ex'cited about
what
happened ,"
said
Sabathia. "Nobody ever
kkes to get hit around. But I
Celt good. I really did. "
; On Wednesday, Sabathia
~id he wou'!d not play for
(he Uni·t~d States in the
'florid Baseball Classic this
qwnth.
·
:"I don't think I'm ready 10
!!itch in meaningful games
ltJi s early," he said then . "I
don't think I'm game ready."
: Again st the Astros, he
.iJJowed two walk.s, six hits
lnd seven runs while recordiflg only five outs.
~ " I was back-ing up a lot of
llases, so I guess it was good '
O:Jr my cardio work," joked
ate 6-foot-7 , · 290-pounder.
':J)on' t get rne wrong. I care.
fh ey kept score toda~. and I
Qidn 't like what I d1d.
• Sabathia refused . to blame
· llle heat; humidfty or having
ille first ball put in play by
A;&gt;uston 's •Jeff Ba gwe ll
'looted for an error by third
llase t.nan Aaron Boone .
: " I threw pretty much all
(llstbalh and I missed badly
tith a few of them ... he said.
:I \lill y threw on.c c:ur.veball
;nd about fiv~ sltder, . 13u.t_l
felt good with all ul them .
,&gt;

•

•

p

M~nager Eric Wedge was year. He put so much pres.not concerned.
sure on himself, well beyond
"C.C. was working to stay what any fan could ever put
·
in his delivery and I fee l he on him.
did a good job with thai,"
"No one can understand
said Wedge .
the amount of responsibility
Sabathia said maintair1ing he feels for this organization.
a smooth rhythm was key to That's a tou gh bt1rden to
his second-ha lf turnaround carry. He got through it and
in 2005. He went 9- 1 with a was about as good ·as there
2.24 EI\A over his final II was the la st six .weeks of the
.start s after Aug .' 5 as season.
Cleveland closed to within I . Sabathia said his intense
1-2 games in late September desire to help the Indians
of the eventual World Series win entered into his decision
champion Chicago White to leave Team USA before he
even reported to its training
Sox.
,
Almost as soon .a s camp camp.
"I wani to make sure I" m
opened · this · year. Wedge
selected the 25-ye&lt;!r-old to right.'' he sai(l. "If I go there
open the .season on the and gei hurt. I feel like I'll be.
mound in Chicago on April selling the guys here short. "
· Despite . the poor results,
2.
"It's a great honor and one Sabathi a is already way
that I take very seriously.'' ahead of last season, when
said Sabathia, whose 69 he mi ssed all 'o f spring traincareer wins are the . most of ing an.d began the season 6-9
any current pitcher under the before rebounding to go 1510 with a 4.03 ERA .
age of 26.
He strained a mu scle in his
General maDager Mark
Shapiro lhinks Sa~athia is rig ht side while warming up
JUSt tappmg tnto hrs poten- for hts first exhibition start
last March 6 and began th e
ttal. ·
.
"C.C. ma~e great stndes season on the disabled list.
'That wasn't •anv fun at
last season. ' Sh aptro said.
all."
he said. '' I don't like si t"He's been around a while
now. even though he 's still a ting around and watching."
But that 's what he' ll be
real young guy. But the
league got to know him and doing when it comes to Team
.
had a strategy for how to hit USA~
him . He rnaue · some adjust ''I'd like to be there
ments and th ey couldh 't hit because it \ all h1111or to pial
hun. We hope th'at COntinue s. for ·y,,ur countr} ... he 'aid .
" I really f~el like what h~ " But what we ' \"e got oo im.!
did wa., as good of an in&gt;}i - he re in thi' ca.mp. with ~hc'c
Vid ual ac compltshment. · a~ gUy~. !~ very important 1\)
·
anything we had happen ta .sl t111' . too ."

U.S. team begins
workouts for World Classic
BY BOB BAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

PHOENIX . America
might be taking a bla'e atti tllde toward the inaugural
World Baseball Classic. The
players on. the star-studded
U.S. learn certainly aren't.
Team USA wa&gt; focu sed on
· patrioti sm. pride 'and perfor,
mance in its first workout
.Friday at Chase Field, -for. merly known as Bank One
Ballpark.
In their squeaky-clean
white uniforms , with "USA''
on their chest and an
American nag on their caps,
the pi ayers posed for .a teall]
picture, then tal ked about the
co mpetition that will begin
next Tuesday with a game
. against Mexico.
.
"To me. I got a little bumps
and ch ills when I saw my
uniform, No. 13, Rodriguez,"
Alex· Rodriguez said , "and I
saw the USA, the red, white
and blue, as corny as tha t
sounds."
The players initially gath.
ered Thursday night and
were shown a video of the
emotiona l, go ld-medal tri umph of the U.S. ba~eball
team under Tommy Lasorda
At&gt; photo
at
the
2002
Sydney Team USA outfielder Ken Griffey, Jr .. takes batting practice for
Olympics. Baseball is to be
eliminated
from
the the World Baseball Classic Fnday at Chase Field in Phoenix.
'Olympics after the 2008
Beijing Games , and the lege. Nobody's here for taken a back seat to some of
World Baseball Classic is money. You're here for pride . the other sports in terms of
and to represent the U.S .. and expansion." . Jeter said. "This
sort of a sub stitute .
is a huge step. You 've got the
"Thi s is an enormous I like that part of it.''
·
'd
1
For 4 3~year-o l,j . Roger players' association and the
dea I' " R0 d nguez
sat · " Clemens . it is the first chance owners coming· together on
have a brother who has 30
years in the U.S. Air Force to represent hi s C\1Untry in an thi s. I think it 's a great idea .
People have questioned the
and is a very high ranking athletic competition .
" When I was given . the timing of it. but when you
officer and has been in two
wars. When you wear this opportunity a month or so think about it. when else are
uniform. you have the oppor- ago. it was nut only very you go ing to have it?"
The tournament comes less
tunity to represent 400 or 500 exc iting for me. but a chalmillion American s."
lenge." · he sai d. ''I think than a month into spring
which
make-s
Rodriguez and his New that's why I waited so lon g to training.
Martinez
's
job
tricky.
espeYork Yankees teammates give Buck my word that I'd
wi'th the pitchers .
Derek Jeter and Johnny be here. I wanted
.. 10 see how ci&lt;tlly
will not go longer
Starters
Damon said team owner my ·body was.
than
three
innings. he said.
George Steinbrenner, an out Manager Buck Martinez
spoken opponent of the tour- spid Clemens . wil l start Non.e of the relievers are
Sunday' s exhibit ion game expected to throw more than
nament, . never tried to di s- again sf the San Franci sco an inning at a t.ime .
suade them from volunteer- Giants in Scottsdale. San · The starting lineup will
mg forlhe team_..
. Diego' s Jake Peavy will stan vary fr om game to game.
Rodnguez mlt1ally _was a against
Mexico .
Nex.t
'·We're QOing to . start
re luctant
.
parttcipant. · Wednesday, .
left-hJ nder everyhody in the first round
ack nowledgtng
concern Dontrelle Willi s of the for · sure," Martinez said .
about disturbing his che r· Florida Marlin s will ao ··we ·re .gomg to try to get as
ished sprin g routine. and against a Canada team don~i­ many at-bat s for everybody
bnn~mg hts famtly from nated by left-handedhi tters . as possible. We've got a lot
Flonda to the .West tor what
Clemens is sc heduled to of talent . Everybody on · this
should be, a three-week slay. start the final game· of the team deserves to start."
He also constdered playmg first round March I0 aga in ~ !
It 's an unu sual world for
tor the Domtmcan Republic, South-Africa.
players used to eas ing them:
but once he got to the
The top two sq uads · in the selves into re g ular-s~ason
Phoentx ballpark, he knew he four-team . pool advance to form.
·
had made the nght cho tce.
round two in Anaheim. Calif.
"I doti ' i know if we're
''I'm changing my tune a ' The semifinal .s and fi nals are ready. I don 't \hipk wC:re
little bit," Rodriguez said . schedu led for March 18 mad July ready: .. Rodriguez said .
"Winning a world champi- 20 in San Diego.
''But it's hard when you wear
onship with the New York
The tournament is a pet this uniform to go between
Yankees is the No. I priori ty proj ec t for commi,sioner the white lines and say. ·oK.
in my life, but once you get Bud Seli g and is su pported I'm goi ng to play 60 or 70
here and you reali ze what's by the Major League percent.: Th at ·s where I hope
going on, the commitment Baseball
·
Players people dun· t get hurt. .where
that everybody made here. Association. Sixteen coun- yo ur mind wants to be in July
,wearing this uniform - it trie s are participating .
but your body is still in the
feels like you' re back in col "Baseball in the past has middle of March ."

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�•

Sunday, M!lrch 5,

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·- - ...

2006

Atlanta 93: Phoenix 123, extended it s club-record
'Orlando · 118; Utah I05, the home winning streak to 16
The Philadelphia 76ers Los Angeles Clippers 103: games.
probably wish Allen Iverson and Detroit 98 , Seattle 96.
Erick Dampier had nine
In Philadelphia, Iverson points, 14 rebounds and two
found out he wasn't playing
on the U.S. national team a also got plenty-of help from blocked shots for the
Chris Webber, who had 30 Mavericks, who have won 20
long time ago.
Iverson had hi s second point s and 12 rebounds. The of their last 22.
Gerald Wallace had 14
huge game since being 77· points are the most two
snubbed by Team USA boss have combi ned for si nc e points for the Bobcats.
Bull s 108 , Kn.icks 101
Jerry Colangelo. finishing Webber joined the team last
with 47 points and ·I2 assists season.
At New York, Chicago's
in the Sixers' 119- 113 home
"We ' ve been talking about Ben Gordon scored 32 points
victory over the Washington this for a year-ami-a-half, so in another big game against
Wizard s on Friday night.
we're glad that this is com- the Kni cks." including a goIt 's the ing.'' Webber said. "We real- ahead 3-pointer with 31 sec·
first time ly like playing together, and onds left.
Iverson we're ge ttin g. it going. We ' re
Kirk Hinrich had 33 points
s ·really just trying to lead this for the Bulls, who trailed by
h
a
reached 40 team to where we know we 16 points in the third quarter
points and can be."
before he and Gordon, from
10 assists in · consecutive
Gilbert Arenas scored 17 of nearby
Mount
Vernon,
games. He had 40 points and his J3 points in the fourth brought Chicago back to .
10 assists against Houstmn on quarter.
including
five hand the Knicks their sixth
Wednesday night. The victo- straigh t to bring Washington straight loss and 22nd ·in 24
ry was the 76ers' fifth in six to 11 4-1 13 with I:30 remain- games.
games . since the All-Star ing . But his driving layup
Steve Franci s remained
break.
spilled out with the Sixers up winl ess si nce joining ' the
week , three and 50 seconds to go, · Knicks. He scored 18 points,
Earlier
thi s
Colangelo declined to invite and the Wizards wouldn't but commi tted two huge
Iverson to this summer 's try- score agai n.
turnovers and had a shot
Antawn Jami son · had 24 blocked · in the final minute,
out camp in Las Vegas for the
U.S. national team. Iverson points and 15 rebounds for bringing boos from the
said he was l&lt;:ioking forward the Wizards.
Madi son Square Garden
to staying at home with hi s
Lakers 106, Waniors 94 crowd.
fa mily rather than goi ng to
At Oakland, Calif. , Kobe
Celtics 99, Pacers 98
Japari for the world champi- Bryant became the youngest · At Boston, Paul Pierce had
unships.
NBA player to score 16,000 31 points and eight assists,
But he has been simply points, finishing with 42 in and hi s 3-pointer wi th 39.2
unstoppable in the two games the Lakei-s' victory.
seconds left- and 4 seconds
smce. .
With a jumper late in the left on the shot clock - put
'' I promise you it 's not first quarter, the NBA's lead- the Celtic s ahead fqr good. ·
that," Iverson said. "If I can ing score~ this season got his .. Peja Stojakovic led the
play the way I played the last 16,000th career point at 27 f'Jacers with 24 points.
two games from some con- years, 192 days old - four
Rockets 89, Nuggets 78
trov.ersy, I will hope there's day s earlier th an Wilt
At
Houston,
Tracy
controversy going on all of Chamberlain, who reac hed McGrady scored 23 points
the time ."
the mark in 1964.
and Yao Ming added 21 for
In other NBA games, it · Jason Richard son scored the Rockeis.
·
was : the Los Angeles Lakers 27 points for the Warri ors, 1Denver got 34 points -from
106, Golden State 94; Dallas 5 since the All-Star break.
Carmelo Anthony in· his best
90, Charlotte 76 ; Chi cago
Mavericks 90, Bobcats 76 outing si nce the All -Star
108, New York 101 : Boston
At Dallas , Dirk Nowitzki break, but he didn ' t get much
99. Indiana 98; Houston 89. scored 26 points and Jason help and only . scored four
Denver 78; Sacramento I 02. Terry. had 17 to -help Dallas points in the fourth.

NBA

Roundup

AP photo

PhilaJelphia 76ers' Allen Ive rson (3 ) gestures to the crowd during the final seconds · of the 76ers' 119-1:1.3 win ove r the
Washington W1zards in an NBA basketball .game in
Philadelp hia Friday.
·

•

The way car
buying should be.

1n.

1AYLOR
TEAM

Kings I 02, Hawks 93
i'\t Atlanta, Brad Miller had
24 points and I 0 rebounds
for Sacramento.
·
AI Harrington scored 19 of
his 23 points in the secon(l
half for Atlanta.
Suns 123, Magic 118
At
Phoenix.
newly
acquired Tim Thomas made a
good first impr,ession, scoring 20 points to help the Suns
to their ninth straight victory.
Shawn Marion fini shed
with 24 points and nine
rebounds.
Jameer Nelson scored 20
of his 24 points in the second '
half for Orlando and Carlos
Arroyo added a season-high
21 points . ·
,
Jazz 105, Clippers I 03 :
At Salt Lake City, rookie
Deron Williams banked in a
running jumper with 2.4 seconds left and the Jazz beat
Los Ange les for the 32nd
time in the last 33 meetings
in Utah - barely.
Sam Casse ll nearly won it
for Los Angele s, but his halfcourt shot at tlie buzzer
bounced off the froni of the·
rim .
Mehmet Okur led the J azt
with 29 points. Elton Brand
scored 14 of hi s -3 1 points in
the fourth quarter for the · ·
Clippers.
Pi stons 98, SuperSonics 96
At
Seattle,
Richard
l;lamilton made a fallaway
baseline jumper with less
than a second remaining to
help Detroit avoid its second
two-game losing skid of the
seaso n.
Hamilton fini shed with 20
points, 10 in the fou rth quarter. Rasheed Wallace had 21
points and II rebounds. and
Chauncey Billup s · had 21
points and II 'as sists.
Ray Allen led the Son ics
with 31 point s.

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·
Pomeroy once had its own "days of.wines and roses'' .in the
. form of "beer and ice" produced at the Wildermuth Brewery
on Condor Street in the late 1800s and early 1900s during the
village's industrialized heyday.
·
"Howeve r, remnants of what was Wildermuth Brewery had
been litnguishing on Condor Street for years. its few remaining walls resembling a· red-bricke.d skeleton that curious
onlookers occasionall y took an interest in.
· .
Wildermuth Brewery actually took up residence on 'both
sides of Condor Street on approximately one acce of land. The
beer was brewed and stored in kegs inside a three-story building against the cliff side of Condor while the bottling plant
was across the 'ireet, Closest to East Mai·n Street.
·
The bottling plant also housed an ice plant. .
The bottling plant. the only part ofthe brewery complex that
had remained standi ng in Pomeroy for the last few decade s,
w~ s recently torn down by its new owner, Bill Pullins of

·.

Please see Brewery,.C4

Submitted photo

The cliff side brewery bu ilding had several stone
arches, one of which had this stone . keg embpssed
at its center with the date 18 78 etched above what
may have been wh~n the build ing was erected,
(hough the foundation for the building has the date
qf 1873 on its cornerstone.

Submitted photo

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This three-story
building was an
integral part of
the Wildermuth
Brewery complex
and housed the
actual brewery
where the oeer
was made and
stored in kegs
underground . The
brewery building ,
has been gone
for a few
decades now and
sat against the
cliff side of
Condor Street.
Despite its
dem ise . und'erground tunnels
rem am beneatti
where the building sat. connectIng wtth the bottling plant.

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Right: What was left
'of the Wildermuth
Brewery's. bottling
plant had been languish ing on Condor
Street for years.
creating a hazard to
onlookers·. It was
recently purchased
by Bi ll PullinS of
Pullins Excavation
and torn dOWn.

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"after" picture of
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After the ceiling col- ·
lapsed on the structure years ago,
water was a ll ow~d
to get between the
bricks and ·weaken
the walls with
neglect, proving to
oe a stronger, foe
than Prohibition .

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Beth Sergont/ photo

This landmark arch from the Wildermuth Brewery is starting to ,
show its age with vines growing into it to separate and weaken
the stone. The arch is now a lone' reminder of the brewer y complex that operated in Pomeroy until Proh ibition sealed its fate.

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�PageC2

YOUR HOMETOWN
- COMMUNITY (ORNER Scott Westerman's love
Thats way one.to get some attention of music was well-known··

.iunba~ m:ime• ·ienttntl

Synday Tlmes~Sentlnel • C3

Sunday, March 5, 2006

.'

Some people will do anything in order to get a little ·
attention.
Apparently
Chuck
YanCooney, who lives out on
Bailey Run Road, is one of
Charlene
those people. Seems he took it .
Hoeflich
upon ·himself last week to go
from one end of Bailey Run to
the other using orange paint to
' ·circle potholes in the road.
That 's what he did last
year, and yep, it got some . keeping the charge i!.( line
attention. Road workers were with today 's costs of operaright out there filling thoSt: tion, and that in other towns
potholes. So when they you have to pay even more
developed again this year, out than the new rate here.
came the bucket of orange
Perhaps so, but I'm told if
paint. He 's waiting.
you travel aro\]nd much
•••
you' II see more places taking
There's a very good reason meters out than putting them
why teachers are required to iQ. Taking them out seems to
learn the Heimlich maneuver be a community's effort to
- it could be a lifesaver. . encourage residents to shop
At . Meigs Elementary at home and not run to a store
School a week or so ago, it or mall where they can park
was used on a second grader for free and shop as long 'as·it
by teacher Lynn Bookman. A takes without worrying about
child got a piece of candy whether they have any time
. caught in her throat and was left on the meter.
·
gasping for air.
Meanwhile,
back
to
Bookman realized she was Pomeroy
and
those
choking,
applied
the increased meter fees . Better
Heimlich and the piece of just continue dropping coins
candy came !lying out of the in the meters, 'cause if you
student's· mouth.
don' t, you' ll get a ticket and
This was not the ftrst time the charge on that just went
the procedure has been used up too. There's now a $3
in a choking incident in Meigs charge for parking tickets
Local schools. Good thing and if you don't pay within
teachers know what ro do.
24 hours, it goes up to $6,
•••
and if you still haven't paid
Now about those new park- after 30 days, you could be
ing meters in Pomeroy and cited to court where the fine·
the 20 cents you have to pay has been set at $50 plus
to park for an hour.
court costs, which is no
If you ask why the small amount either.
increase, village officials will
probably tell you they are just
The Meigs County jail ren-

...

ovation is all but complete,
the state jail inspectors have
been in to check it all out,
Sheriff Bob Beegle has complied with personnel requirements, and now we're .into
. the waiting game toward
final approval from the state
to open the jail.
That's the latest word from
Beegle, whose hope is that
everything will come together and he can open the jail
about April l.
Meanwhile , the department
continues to transport prisoners back and forth from outof-county facilities - about
7,000 miles this year already
- and pay a high daily rate
for space and food in somebody else's jaiL
The sheriff is the first to
admit that unless he can get
the jail open soon to reduce
the cost of housing prisoners,
his department will be faced
with major money problems,
again this year.

•••

Now to answer questions
about the progress toward a
resolution on "who took the
thousands of dollars missing
from the sheriff's office,"
Beegle responded, "the BCI
is handling the investigation.
I have nothing to do with it."
The money was discovered
missing last May. The sheriff
says polygraph tests on current and former employees
are continuing. He says he is
confident that in time the
case of the missing money
· will be resolved.
(Charlene Hoeflich is gen, eral IIIIJnager of The Daily
Sentinel in Pomeroy.)

Education vital in' cooling procedures·
E.

I

BY JAMES SANDS

One of th6 most unique
persons to have ever served
Gallipolis as pastor would
have to be Walter Scott
Westerman, who was the pastor at Grace Methodist
Church from 1937 to 1948.
Westerman was unique most·
ly because of h1s . great
knowledge of music . He was
not only the pastor of the
church, but he directed many
of its choirs as welL
Rev. Westerman was born
in 1895 in Adrian, Mich. He
received his A.B. degree
from the University of
Michigan School of Music in
1917 and spent two yeas
after graduation serving with
the Army )'MCA. At the ·
same time he did advaitce
work at the University of
· Michigan Conservatory of
Music. He served two years
as a missionary in La Paz,
Bolivia, with his wife Frieda
and then returned to .the
University of Michigan ahd
served a number of student
charges while working on his
post graduate degrees.
In I 926, he took an
· appointment as full time
minister of music at Grace
Methodist
Church
in
Dayton. He stayed in Dayton
for 11 years and helped organize
the
Dayton
Choirmasters' Club. But
many summers found him
traveling to Europe. One
yeaar he ws a student at the
Royal School of Church
Music in London, England.• ·
and there . became a close
friend of the organist at
Westminster Abbey.
The organist introduced
Westerman to ihe ' directors
of numerous choirs across
England.
Westerman
attended some 45 cathedral
services and· was allowed to
go through the vast libraries

of some of England's greatWesterman invented.a lot
est churches.
of apophthegms for his serWhile in Dayton , Rev. rnons, like "we have as much
Westerman became active in right to question our doubts
the Hymn Society of as to question our faith."
America, even organizing the Westerman ·was also rememOhio chapter of that organi- bered for hi s' crusade a11ainsr
zation. He made numererous a few men in the Galltpolis
trips around the country pro- area who advertised highmating the · Hymn Society speed .weddings . Westerman
and collecting.a 'great deal of helped to oust from 'public
research·on hymns.
offtce these men who made a '
Once, the Galli a Times lot of money on cheap speedy
remarked about Westerman's weddings.
children's choir, "Sunday's
During his II ye.ars at
performance of the little bitty Grace Church in Gallipolis,
tots at the, Grace Methodi st some 658 persons were
Church was just plain magic added , to the membership
to us. Of course, we 'd lis- rolls.
tened to Scott Westerman's
In 1948, Westerman moved
famou's Grace Choir SUJiday to Co lumbu s to First
after Sunday ... and we Methodist Church, which is
assumed his driection had near the dow.ntown area. He
been good becau,.se he had later served churches at
the best voices in the churc h Hillsboro and Bloomdale
at his command. -But when before his 1970 retirement .
youngsters whose voices ·Westerman was the founder
haven 't even changed can of the West Ohio Conference
produce the sweet melody Ministers' Choir, which sang
the Rev. Mr. Westerman got at annual conference ever
out of them, there certainly year as well as on tours
must be something to the across America and Europe.
man who waves his anns and · He was also a lecturer at
moves his lips and nods at Ohio State and other pbces
them from the little rostrum on the role of church music in
up front."
Amencim. society. Dunng the
One of Westerman's most Vietnam War, he headed up a
memorable sermons was project · to send recorded
about children. In 1945, he ' music to · American soldiers
told adults to be more serving in Southeast Asia . He
patient with children. "A also recorded many historic
child is all left-handed." events in American ·history
That is to say they are natu- and hi s great collection can
rally clumsy and a little out be found at the Eastern
of sink w(th the world. They Michigan Universiry Library
are fairly new · to it. in Ypsilanti. Mich,
Westerman suggested that
Scot.t WEste rman died in
everyone go home and try 1977 at the Methodi st Home
eating with their opposite in Chelsea. Mich .. at he age
hand. Then they .should of 82, His wife preceded him
remember what thatJelt like in death in 1973.
before they criticized a ch ild
{james Sands is a special
again for being clumsy: corresp01ule11t for
the
Westerman' started the youth Su11day Times-Sentinel. He
canteen at Grace Church as . can be co11tacted by writing
well as a recreation prograin to /040 Military Road,
for young people.
Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)

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to 70°F' and four hours io get imponant: The second part of
the chili from 70°F to 41 ' F, the cooling process, getung the
making a total cooling time of chili from 70' F down to 41 °F
six .hours. The code's cooling . in four hours, is a temperature
Closuidium perfringens, or procedure is set up so that food change of 29 degrees. EveiJ
C. perfringens, is a bacterium is not sitting at ambient tern- though you have more time in
that can be' found in the soil, in peratures for any length of ·this step, it is still important to
the intestinal tract of man and time greater than four hours. check the temperature and ·
animals, in cattle, poultry, pigs, The cooling procedure's pur- make sure the chili is cooling
RIO GRANDE - Fifty- chapter's president.
Web sites.
vermin, and wastes. In turn, it pose is .to make sure that bac- quickly enough to meet the five
members of the
This power point presenDoor prizes for the event ·
means that C. perfringens can teria ·do not have the correct four hour time period.
. Southeastern Qhio Safety tation was desigQed to assist were provided by American
be found in the food we eat, time or temperature to grow.
If for some reason your Council received valuable Safety Council members in Electnc Power. All members
especially in the foods we eat So let's say you have fmished chili does not cool down to information available from finding safety . information were urged to attend the
that have been improperly eating the chili and you have 41 °F within the correci the Ohio Bureau of Workers more easily' and eliminating Ohio Safety Congress in
heated, cooled and reheated. . half a pot left.
.
amount of time, you should Compensation from Karen those lengthy searches on Columbu s on March 28, 29
I would . like to focus on
There are several ways to reheat the entire pot to 165'F' Jensen, BWC librarian, at the Internet. Handouts of and
30.
The
next
proper cooling as a preventa- go about cooling the chili, . and maintain 165°F for 30 their February meeting.
available BWC audio · and Southeastern Ohio Safety
tive measure. People may be these are some suggestions : . seconds, then start the coolThe meeting, held at Bob visual materials were avail- Council meeting will be held
under thejmpression that it is
1: Hace the remaining chili ing process .all over again .
Evaps Farms Hall on the able , as well as handouts on March 28 at noon at Bob
okay to let hot foods sit outon into small shallow containC. perfringens is not the campus of the Ul)iversity of featuring safety internet Evans Farm s HaiL ,
the counter for a few hours to ers. Do not fill the containers only bacteria that can make Rio Grande, featured Ms .
cool and then place the food completely full, the idea is to you ill if proper cooling pro- Jensen, who . has been a
.
into the refrigerator. . Proper avoid a large amount of chili cedures are not followed. librarian with Ohio Bureau of
cooling procedures are so in one container, we want the Others include: Bacillus .Workers Compensation for
important in making Sure that chili to be able ro cool evenly cereus , Clostridium bow- the past 20 years.
your food is stored safely.
and quickly.
.
!inurn, and Staphylococcus
Ms. Jensen assists cusC. perfringens is sometimes
2. Place the chili in a small aureus. Follow the steps tomers from both inside and
called the "cafeteria germ" container and then place the above and all should be welL outside BWC with their
because a large number of out- container into an ice bath; So, no more sitting hot foods information needs, primari- ·
Subscribe. today • 992-2155 446-2342
breaks involving .C. perfrin- stirring occasionally.
· out ·on' the counter for hours lyon the subject of occupa:
gens are due to food being left
3. When putting the chili to cool down, you now know
out for too long at room tern- container into the cooling unit how to cool your foods prop- is
tiona!
safety and for
health,
and '·--------~---•-------­
responsible
adding
perature, which can result in or cold holding · equipment, erly, an(! prevent illness.
new videos to the video
many sick people. C. perfrin- arrange the container.so'that it
Education is key, cooks and library.
gens is a spore former, which is, not placed against the walls food handlers must be
In addition, she has been
means that the bacteria can be of the unit or on·top of or next . informed about proper cool- involved with Safety &amp;
destroyed by the cooking to another food' item . ,You ing procedures. Last but not Hygiene's training center as· ·
process,· but · its spares may want cold air to be able to cir- least, remember to always art instructor and information .
survive. If the spores · are culate around the container.
wash your hands before imd speciali st. She was part of the
allowed to germinate and mul· 4. Loosely cover or keep the after handling food and food Dolphin Project, which
tiply (luring improper cooling, container uncovered, as. long equipment . .
developed BWC's e-comstorage at room temperature, . as it is protected from overFor additional food safety .merce web site. She is a
or inadequate reheating; the head contamination. This will information, co11tact the Gal/ia member of the Special
toxin will make you very ilL allow heat to transfer from the County Health Department at Libraries Association and has
Cooked meat a:nd poultry and surface of the chili, making (740) 441-2943.
served as the Central Ohio
products like gravies, stews, cooling time faster· and aiding
and casseroles are some foods in spore prevention.
associated with C. perfringens.
Remember: You have only
Notice it is cooked meat, two hours to g.et the temperanot raw. Within eight to 24 ture from 135°F to 70°F, a
hours. after ingesting the C. change of 65 degrees, so the
93 West Frankl.in Street Suite 302
perfringens spores and their chili needs to cool quickly.
toxin. a lovely series of ·This is why placing the chili
Centerville, Ohio 45459 ·
'
events can unfold, including in smaller containers is usefuL
abdominal pain and diarrhea. Placing the entire pot of chili · MB 6221
Toll-free: 1(866) 433-6462
Symptoms usually last only a directly into the refrigerator
day, but less severe symptoms will ·not allow even cooling,
Free mortgage consultation
can persist for one to two the top of the chili may cool
weeks. So, you cari see the easily, but the middle and botimportance of making sure tom of the pot may take live
that the &gt;pores do not survive . or more hours to reach 41 °F,
How do you make sure the and that can , mean that the
. spores don't survive" By taking chili is being held at temperaIs the new credit card rate hike
the proper control measures, tures in the "danger zone."
Stealing your savings?
wliich are cooling, cold .holdThe danger zone is a range
ing, reheating and hot holding, of 41 ' F to 135°F. This is a
WE CAN HELP!
Let's use chili a1 our exam- temperatu re range at which
.• Consolidqte your current debt ridding
pie. Suppose you have a pot of bacteria · reproduce
th e
· chili on'the stove. The chili has faste st. You do not want you(
you of high rates
been cooked and is being held foods to sit in thi s range for ·
•100-125% Financing, first time homebuyers
at a temperature of 1.35°F The longer than four hours. This
Ohio Uniform Food Code is why cooling time and proincluded
states that hot foods. have to be cedure are so very impqnant .
•.low fu:ed rates at wholesale price
held at 13SOF or above. The Keeping the chili out of the
Food Code requi res 135' F for danger zone will prohibir the
• Bad credit okay, we will cred,it educate you
hot holdin g to ensure · that ' pore' and their toxin from
for free
foodbome illness is prevented. forming and making yo u ilL
The Food Code also says that , Monitoring the tempe rature
• Every application accepted, Call us today!
you have two hours to cool of your f\)Od with a food safe
your hot chili at 135°F down · thermometer is also, extremely
BY lAUREN

.
SANITARIAN-IN-TRAINING
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH DEPARTMENT

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.2006

&lt;

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iunba~ Ql:ime~ -ientintl

CELEBRATIONS

PageC4

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COMMUNITY

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Sunday, March 5, 20o6

..
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Sunday, March 5, 2006

PRArnCAL NURSING STUDENTS RECEIVE CERTIFICATES

.':;. RIO GRANDE The
t:Clmmencement program for
r,tle class of 2005 of the
!!tactical Nursing School of
Q.uckeye Hills Career Center
~as held recently .
. Forty-eight
stude11ts
received their certificates and
sc hool pins. Thi s included 36
full-time students and 12 parttime students. This is the first
part-time class to graduate
from the Practical Nursing
School of Bu ckeye Hills
Career Center, having completed the program in 21
· months.
, The invocation was deliv- .
ared by Amanda Mc Kinney
abd Tabatha Polcyn. After
I
opening remark s; the class
Sang "Lean on Me," accomparued by the mu sic group Rise.
featured speakers were class
~esidents Vicki Mulholand
a11d Shelly Price, class vice
president s Robert Bonecutter
and Kim Hood ; and class repi'esentatives Kriston Jones and
Casey Thompson, who also
led the class in the Practical
Submmoct photo
Nurse Pledge.
.
Graduates of the class of 2006 of the Practical Nurs ing Program at Buckeye Hills Career Center are. first row, from left, Bre'nda Hood of Gall ipoli s, Ruby Cumpton
Sharon Carmichael. Health of Gallipolis. Misty Leach of Gallipolis, Kim Hood of Jackson , Amber Shadle of Gallipolis. Kriston Jones of Wellston, She,rry Cox of Thu rman, Melissa Wilson of
Careers administrator, intro- Jackson,Regina Wolfe of Racine, Shelly Price of Rutland, Donna Bush of Crown City, Bobbi Searls Of Ravenswood , W.Va. , and Nicole Doss of Point Pleasapt ,W.Va.;
duced each grad uate while
Gallia-Jackon -Vinton Joint second row, Tabatha Polycn of Gallipol is ; Bridget Cross of Racine. Tara Thevenin of Point Pleasant, Scott Edwa rds of Wellston, Linda Hess of Oak Hi ll, Dorena
Vocational School Di strict Fischer of Jackson, Peggy Cupp of McArthur, Tanya Lanhart of Jackson , Tanya Bowman of Wellston. Megan Mien of Oak Hill. Cindy Hawkins of Ga llipo lis, Vicki
Superintendent . Kent Lewis ' Mulholland of Vinton , Katherine [larnett of McArthur; and Celeste Harrington of Patriot ; th ird row, Ginger Evans. R.N .. rn stru ctor. Gwen Phillips , R.N .. B.S.N .. instruc·
and Board of Education to(. Jeanetta Shriver. R.N. , B.S.N., instructor. Beth Harless of Jackson. Diana Angel of Gallipoli s . Lorrie Nolan of Bidwell, Wesley Howard of Oak Hi ll'. Amanda
President Carry Montgomery VanMatre of Mason , W.Va., Amanda McKinney of Vinton , Alicia Tilley of . Jackson. Bobbie Crabtree of Jackson , Glenna Adkins of Oak Hill. Casey Thompson of
. McArthur. Amanda Strickland. R.N .. B.S .N.. instructor. and Sharon Carmichael, R.N.. M. S. N.. administrator of health programs; fou rth row, Cheryl Adk1ns of Oak
awarded the certificates.
. . The graduates were each pre- Hill , Carrie Diedrick of Beaver. Teresa Taylor of Gallipolis. Ja rred Gi lmo re of Cheshire, Roger Copley of Gall ipolis , Robe rt Bonecutter of Point Pleasant; Patsy Cornell
sented a gift. and their school of Syracuse, and Judith Brace of Crown. City. Absent from the photo were Stacy Barnett of McArthur. James Cochrane of Gallipolis. and Amiee Webb of.Zaleski.
pin by in structors, ·Gwen
Phillips. R.N .. B.S.I'I. Jeanetta Valley Hospital. Presenting City received a $500 scholar- year membership in LPNAO. by their peers as the students reception was .held honoring
from
Arbors
of
• Three students' were pre- who most exemplify the qual- the graduates.
Shriver, R.N., B.S..N., Amanda the gift was Lisa Merry, R.N. , ship
B.S.N.
The
award
was
Gallipolis.
scnttid
awards for perfec t ity and spirit of the licensed
The enrollment period is
Strickland, R.N. ,B.S.N., and
Outstanding
student
awards
presented
by
Teresa
Woods
.
attendance
:
Tara
Thevenin
for
practi cal nurse . Eac h received now open for the September
Ginger Evans, R,N:
R.N ., B.S.N. Brenda Hood the 12-month (full-time) pro- a gift certificate donated by 2006 class. For more informa~
Three students received were 'presented to:
recognition for their academic· • Judith Brace of Crown and Dorena Fi scher rec.ei ved gram. and Judith Brace and the Uniform Store in tion about . the Practical
and overall achievement. The City. Judith received a· $500 the second, highest academic Linda Hess for tb e 21-month Huntington , W.Va .
Nursing program or other ,
(part-time ) program. Lorrie· Class historians Glenna related medical programs call
highest academic award was scholarship from Holzer achievement awards.
presented to Vicki Mulholand Medical Center presented by
Other awards presented ;
Nolan (full-time program) Adkins and Bobbi Searls gave the Adult Services Divison of
from Vinton. Vicki received a Ru.th Ann Sattler, R.N., B.S.N.
• Scott Edwards and Megan and Amanda McKinney (part- the benediction .
Buckeye Hill s Career Center
check for $100 from Pleasant
• Donna Bu's h of Crown Allen were presented a one time program ) were se lected
Following the ceremony. a at 245-5334.

....
?r ,\

Chad Dodson and Jamltha Willford

Erik Relds and Joly Cummins

CUMMINS-FIELDS
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs: Johnnv Cummii1s of Roxie,
Mi ss., an nounce the engagement and approaching marriage of
their daughter. :Joly Cecile, to Erik Douglas Fields, son of Mr.
and Mr&gt;. Dave Thomas of Wes t~rvill e. Ohio, and Mr. and
Mrs. DiJL1g Fields of Covington·, Ky.
The groom is the grandson of Alfred and Emelyn Scarberry
·of Gallipol is.
·
The wedding cerem ony ivill be held at the Roxie Baptist
Church in Roxie. Mi ss.. on April 22. 2006, at 5 p.m. A reception will follow at the Eola Hotel in Natchez. Miss.
The·couple wi ll reside in Florem:e, S .C., where the groom is
·eniployed as ar engineering coordinator with Honda of
America Manufacrurin g. The bride is employed as a nursing
recruiter with Trinity Healthcare of Florence.

WILLFORD·DODSON
ENGAGEMENT
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs. · Ray Willford of Rutland
announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their
daughter, Jamitha, to Chad Brandon Dodson, son of Connie
Dodson of Middleport. and Dave and Arlene Dodson of Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Marie Birchfield of
Rutland and the late Howard Birchfield, and Charlotte Van
Meter of Pomeroy and the laie Bill Willford. She is a 2004
graduate of Meigs High School and attends the Universify of
Rio Grande. She is employed at Holzer Clinic in Gallipolis.
The prospective groom is the grandson of Nellie and Sam
Michael of Dexter and the late Clarence Hattield, and Gene ·and
Agnes. Dodson of Middleport. He is a 1998 graduate of Meigs
High School and a .2005 graduate of Ohio Universiiy. He is
employed as band director in the Southern Local Scliool District,
A.sunnmer wedding is being planned.

Roberta Young and Jason Shain

YOUNG-SHAIN
ENGAGEMENT

'.

..

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POMEROY - Jason D. Shain and Roberia S. Young
announce .their engagement and upcoming wedding.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Lena Napper and the late
David E. Napper Jr. of Pomeroy, and the granddaughter of th!:
late David and Mary Napper and the late Walter, and Margaret
Hy~ell. She is employed at Athens Wai-Mart as an inventory
control specialist.
·.
Her fiance is the son of Dave and Terry Shain of Racine. Hl::
is the grandson of Barney and Maxine Shain of Racine, and
the. late Charles and Ruth Hysell. He is the owner of Sha\Q
Custom Signs in Racine.
:..
A private ceremony will be held in April with a honeymoQn
in the Caribbean to follow. The couple will reside in R;~cine .'
:j \

..

ning to .separate the structure. was said to be upwards of
Photos exi:st that show anoth- · .ti,OOO barrels per annum. The
er stone archway that was built brewery also manufactured all
It seems that relationships
boy whom they in turn adopt· onto the cliff side brewery · ofitsown 'malt .
from
·Page
C1
ed out to a New Zealand coubetween mothers and daughbuilding with a stone keg tixed
The ice plant was said · to
ters, like those between
ple. How's that for fami\y sta- Pullins Exca'vation Inc., after to the archway's .keystone. The have a capacity to manufacbility? .
fathe rs and sons. are either
.
date 1878 wa~ etched above the ture 35 tons per day. with resextremel y close or totally
Courtney was · a problem changing hands many times ·. s·tone ke·g. \Vhl' le the date 1873 1·den ts a II owe d a II th c 1ce
· th ey
child from infancy, given to th roug h the years and b·ecom- was found on a cornerstone of wanted for a dime .
fractured. The following two
e·e verly
books tell of three gene(ati ons
· tantrums, a huge imagination, ing a potential hazard via jts the cliff s.ide brewery .building.
Th~ arrival of prohibitioq
state.
GeHies
of women . each a unique and
and an inability to get along dilapidated
Pullins said it was a shame
History books :on Meigs spelled doom for WildermultJ
ta lented individual. whose
with other children. It seems that the bottling plant build- County recall !hat the ac tual Brewery. The 18th Amendment
connections are fragile at be'st.
her mother did nearly everyt- ing had been allowed to detti!- brewery business in Pomeroy as it was then known essentialPaula Fox is a Newberry
ing possible,. including trying ·
was established in 1847 by ly closed both the brewery and
Award-wi nning author of
different types of school s, riorate over the years from Fred Schaeffer. but in May of ice plant. Although it is unclear
children's books. The Shiv&lt;' Memoir ~f the Mother/ Never several psychiatrists, even neglect.
1866, Gottileb. Wildermuth ex&lt;~ctly when the facility shut
"It was a beautiful building," purchased the entire 'plant down, Prohibition was pa~sed
Dallcer. about a child forced Knew and of My Daughter, allowing her to live with a
·
to ''dance" the occupants of a Cout'tnev Love. Linda Carroll , therapist i11 New Zealand. he added, but explained that which is described as being into federal law in 1919.
Nothrng
worked,
and
the
roof
had
long
ago
collapsed
made
of
the
"finest
brick
and
Attempts
to
revive
the
busislaving ship so that th ey can Fox 's daughter, would probaget some exercise. won the bly be of little interest except Courtney grew up a hostile, . and Wa!er had begun to run in wooden structures" with the ness as. a brewery failed whe!l
unhappy. anti-social little girl. between the brick,s, causing whole complex sitting on one Prohibition was lifted in 1933'.
Newberry in 1974. She has for her famou s relatives.
acre of land. ·
and although it spent some
also written six novel s and
Of Jewish neritage, Linda She began running away and them 10 separate and topple.
Pullins
·1derm.uth
·n
· throug hout the years· as
said
the
only
piece
w
was
born
· a. .
performing
in
clubs
as
singer
two memoirs. includ ing was adopted by a Catholic
1
1 t1me
f
Borrm&lt;'ed Finerr. In her lat- couple and grew up . in .or stripper. then . met Kurt o the bottling .plant he could Wurttemburg. Germany, in .. garage, a tractor sales store, ·atf
1828 and arrived in Pomeroy auto repair garage and body
est 'memoir, Th e. Coldest California. Her adoptive par- Cobain, who seemed gentle salvage were steel i-beams.
While
dismantling
the
old
in
1857. where he established shop, the days of beer and ic~ .
and
sweet,
but
must
have
Willt el; she writes of traveling ems always introduced her as
plant,
Ptrllins
said
he
and
hi
s
)]i
s
business and was even a and wine and roses were over
'to Europe immedi ately fol - · "our adopted daughter," and been as "wasted" as Courtney.
of
workers
came
across
two
"lowing World War II. when she always fe lt she did not Her mother says, "She was a h
village council member. He for the facility.
d
As for the brewery' s latest
the devastation from thatter- really belong. There was whirlwind of rage and venom 1 e un erground tunnels that died in 1903 and is buried in
run
underneath
Condor
Street
ribl e co ntli ct was all too some sexual abuse by the and passion in peroxide hair that once connected the bot- Beech Grove Cemete'ry.
reincarnation, Pullins said h'e
immediate and evident. She father. much .contlict with her and lacy, torn . dresses. Her tling plant to the long gone
The Wildermuth . Brewery has no plans at this time 16
was then 22 , tlee ing memo- ·adoptive .mother, and a gener- celebrity image revolved cliff side building where the produced an "amber nectar" develop his new property.
around parts of her - pain, beer was brewed and stored.
ries of a terri ble childhood. all y unhappy childhood.
known . as "Wildermuth's
Still, with the promise qf
hi red as a jourmilist-stri11ger
At 18, Linda entered the emptiness; anger - · that had
The beer, which was stored Special." The beer was man- new power plants coming into
fo r a Britis h news service .
hippie scene in San Francisco, worried me all her life."
ufactured for sale iri kegs, by the county arid the revitalizaLinda always wondered underground in kegs, was the glass and also in bottles. tion effort s in downtown
Paula visi ted London. Pari s. met an older man who fancied
Prague, Warsaw and Spain in hi mself some sort of philoso- about her "real" moiher, but transported though the tun- The bottles were brown and Pomeroy, maxbe it's all a si~n
nels from the brewery to the had rubber stoppers since the that days of wme and roses are
1946. One of her best pieces ·pher, and he became her hus- did not directly seek her until bottling
plant.
describes an orphanage hous- band the father of Courtney. she was in her late 40s. It
Pullins described both tun- capping process was years returning · to the area, though
ing children born in concenta• That relation ship did not last was a joyous reunion for both nel
· .
.
away back then. The stoppers one of the oldest structures in
s as ~PP&lt;;;tnng .structura 11 Y were secured with wire.
the village is now gone.
.
tion camps 'or who had spent long. He did not work, was of them .
so~nd
~~th
beautiful,
arched
\
The
plan~
is
said
to
have
Much
of
the
information
for:
time. in them. All of their par- . more than a bit of a nut ' case,
Linda is now a therapist and
ents had been murdered. All of and they divorced. She next writer, living in Corvallis, ceiimgs · made. of ornate annually consumed I0,000 this article was provided by
the children are stu nted. so ir married Frank and had two Ore., with her fourth husband stonework and wtde enough to . bushels of barley &lt;)Od 5 000 the Meigs Coumy Museum,
is impossible to tell their ages. more dau gh ters. He . wasn' t of 17 years. Her children have drive a ptckup truck ~rough. p6unds of hops in ll)anufa~tur- whii:h has information on this
Perhaps some readers will the right on'e either. Then she careers in psychotherapy, law, One can only speculate that ing "Wildermuth's Special." and manv other historic Iande
. horse-drawn wagons The capacity of the brewery marks in. Meigs Coun~&lt;·. ·
be interested to know that met Hank at a group for those academe, writing and little many
made tt though those tunnels
·
'J
.'
Paula Fox is the grand mother had recently lost their part- Joshua, the child they left in to load up with kegs that were
of rock singer Courtney Love . ners. He was a dreamer, and New Zealand is back and said to be delivered not .only
Now. Courtney's own mother. they moved to New Zealand , studying to be a CPA. And throughout Meigs but Mason
give n up for adoption when whe re they had one son who then there is Courtney, whose County, W.Va., a.s well.
·
Paul a 'Fox was a tee nager. has died and ·another who sur- story is not yet finished.
While one of the tunnels
writte n her Qw n memoir. Her vived. Meantime, the)l had Watch for her in the led to what was once the old
Mother ·.,. .. D"ughter:
A adopted a mixed-race little ENQUIRER!
brewery, Puliins said the
other went east on Condor
Street for about 30 feet into ·
an underground room.
Pullins and hi s workers did
CLEVELAND !AP) month of April they will himself as an almost-retired not venture too far into the
Myron Manders wants the receive correct payments."
archit~t . sought to clear up the . tunnels because there was
Social
, Security
His wife . Eunice, remem· problem bx showing up at a two feet of standing water In
Admim stralion to kn ow that. bered that she had first react- Social Security office. The .in- them and they feared walking
ed to. notification of her alive person appearance didn 't help. into a soft bottom. Pullins
at age 81. he ' ti ll i' al1vc.
Last Nove mber. \1ander' h usband \ death with anger
of Excavation could not fill the ·
The
Department
wa' preparin g to lea' c a hos- and laughter.
Veterans Affairs . recognizing tunnels completely, but did
pit al where he was tr&lt;oated for
" I never laughed about it,.. that Manders served in the fill the openings.
.
pncu mon i kt w hen a -;uci al Mywn Manders said.
Army during World War II ,
Although Pullins did tear .
work er -&lt;a id hi s in sura nce .. The
couple from
a notified Eunice that she is a down the bottling plant. the
company v.u uld not pay the Cleveland suburb still does beneficiary on hi s VA life Wildermuth archway still
bill becau se it believed not under;tand how the insurance poli cy and that remains. The archway belongs
M;~nders di ed on Sept. I.
agency came to the conclu- Social Security had notified to the Meigs Cooperative
W11liam Jarret t. a Social ; ion th in he was dead.VA of Myron 's death :
Parish that had the property
S ecurit y
spokesman
1n
."That\ the big question for
The latest correspondence donated to the organization by
Cle ve land. ~ aid Friday the me." Eunice said.
from Social Security . came previous owners in the 1990s.
mistake was due to an errosaid
Euni ce Monday addressed to Eunice, The Coopemtive Parish also
Jarrett
neous document. He could Manders has been paid a sur- advising she is entitled to owns . the building (the old
n'' ' di sclose the error \ · vivor \ benefi t. whic h he said .monthl y widow's benefits .
clothing shop) next to the arc'hsource.
" now con; idcred an over- · Myron Manders, who read way and (he empty lot where
··11 w a ~ 11 m·i.. , take 1!11 our pct)' m e ~ t ' he "i ll be responsi- the latest letter for the first the aiEl cl iff side brewery sat.
part and we are apoloveric." ble for payin g back, although time Wednesd ay, .wou ldn ' t
The brewery's only remain he said. "We don .tllke .to .,cc ' he will ha ve a rig ht to say exactl y what wa&gt; going · ing archw ay is itself beginfol h put . in any hard , hip ctppea l.
ning to show its age with
through his mind.
because of a mi 't" ke. By the ' Mander,. who desnibe;
··curse word s: · he said .
vine1 growi ng into i.t. begi11-

Books probe mother-daughter relationships

81-year-old

man convinces Social Security is not dead

Brewery

.

.

.

.

Concerns about"bird flu contiriue
As avian iniJuenza spills
outside eastern Asia into
Europe, Africa. the Middle
)::ast and India, the viral disease many fear will cause the
world,s next pandemi~ is
becoming.a recurrent topic in
news shows and family conversations. It has even struck
an entrepreneurial cord, ·as
some ·companies \Ire now
selling "bird flu prevention
kits" over the Internet.
But should Ohioans worry ry
Mo Saif, an expert on poultry
diseases and chair of the Food
Animal Health Research
Program (FAHRP) on the
Ohio Agricu It ural Research
and Development Center's
(OARDC) Wooster campus.
said the first thing people
should do is understand what
the media or public ofticials
exactly mean .when they say
"bird flu ," "avian influenza,"
"HSN I" or any of variou s
terms that are being tossed
· around in the evening news or
presidential speeches .
"Avian intluenza is a very
complex disease. involving
many virus· strai ns l~at can
cause different levels of ·illness in an imals or people,"
s11id Saif. also a poultry-disease specialist with O~io State
University Extension. "That's
why it's very important . to
know ho w avian influenza
viruses work and which virus
itrains are involNed in a par~cular outbreak."
·
So what is avian
flu anyway?
'• Avian tlu is an infection in
i»irds caused by avian
intlue nza viruses. First identitied in Italy more than .I00
years ago,' this infection is
common among wild birds
and . poultry and occurs
worldwide . Wild 'birds. especially waterfowl. act as hosts
for avian tlu by carrying tile
viru s in their intestines and
ahcdding it . Even ·when
infected. some birds do not
show any di sease sy111ptoms .
. The viruses responsible for
avian llu are classifie d as
iipe A influenza viruses :
other intluenza virus types
are l:l and C. Influenza A
v.iru ,es are nn stran gers to
humans - the llu epidemics
that take place almost every
winter in the United States
at1d kil l a11 .average of Jti,OOO
PeOple. for example. are
ca used mostly by type A
vin"es . with type B viru ses
so metimes being the culprit.
kltlue1w1 ty pe C in fecti om
' ~!:~use onl y mild re;piratory
.Illness ill people.

So far, so good. But things
es that came from other
get a littli: more complicated,
species. If a person is harborSaif said. That's because there
ing a highly contagious
are 144 subtypes of avian
human influenza virus and the
influenza - and even though
H5NI viru s at the same time,
all of them can infect poultry,
there's a possibility th at those
Becky
they are not created equal.
. two viruses could recombine
NesbiH
These subtypes result from the
into a new. virus that possesscombination of two proteins
es the .characteristics of both
·on the surface of the virus:
original viru s.es . In order for
hemagglutinin (HA) and neuthat to happen , both viruses
raminidase (NA). There are 16
would have to infect the same
known HA subtypes and nine respiratory symptoms was cell - and the mixing of the
· known NA subtypes. An admitted to a New York hos- viruses would have to occur
"H7N2 virus,'' for example. pital. In 2004 , a highly patho- in that very cell. I qn't tell
designates an influenza A sub- genic H5N2 virus caused an you h(}W often that happens.
type; that has an HA 7 protein avian flu outbreak in poultry But it could happen."
and anNA 2 p(otein .
in Tex·a s, and a low-pathoAvian flu in Ohio?
" HA is a tnolecule that genic H5N2 virus was found
Ye s. there have been cases
allows the virus to attach to in poultry in Dela\vare. New of avian tlu in Ohio. But not
cells of the respiratory tract, Jersey and Maryland.
H5N I. Not e\ en a hi gh ly
while NA is an enzyme that
But what about
pathogenic subtype. Recent
enables the virus to leave·
the HSN I virus?
cases in.dudc a mild H3N2·
infected cel ls in search of
First identified in Hong ,·irus that in fec ted turkeys on
· new cells to attach to," Saif Kong in !'997. the H5N I virus
a western Ohio farm in 2004.
explained. "Only H5 and H7 is a highly pathogenic strain of resulting in the slaughter of
subtypes can cause severe avian . influenza that has &gt;onte 12.000 gobblers to condisease in birds. wild or proven deadly to wild birds tain the 'p rea~l. Avian tlu Is a
domestic. But even within and poultry. For reasons that constant ' th reat to the state's
H5 and H7 viruses there are still remain a riddle to scienvariations in how m'uch they ti sts. thi&gt; virus managed to $3.3 billio.n poultry indu stry.
but f ears of a pandemic are
. k-en a b'u d...
can stc
jump into humans. thu s far not likely to impact .the
Which is why there's a third infecting and/or killing dozens already stri ct. biosecurity ·
way we can classify avian . of people in southeast Asia.
intluenza vinrses: according China, Turkey and Iraq - all measures producers take to
to their disease-causing abili- of whom were in close contact ke ep infecti\lLI\ diseases
away. said Mike Lilhurn. an
ties - low pathogenic or with infected t hickens.
OARDC
scie nti st and OSU
highly pathogenic . Most avian
But H5N I is not the only
tlu viruses are low pathogen- avian tlu virus that has claimed Extensi.o n poultry- nutrit ion
ic. 'typically associated with human lives In recem years. In specialist.
""Most commercial operamild disease in poultry. On the 2003, in The Netherlands. an
other hand. highly pathogenic H7N7 virus infected ~3 peostrains of the virus (H5 and ple, one of whom died.
•
H7) can cause severe illness
Howe ver. the H5N I virus is •
and high mortality in domes- the one making headline s •
tic birds. But since change is because of its aggresi\ · enes ~ .
· the word when it comes to the number of btrds and
influenza viruses, low-patho- humans it has infected. and
genic H5 or H7 viruses have the fear that it could mutate
been known to mutate into into a form ·that spreads from
highly pathogenic form s.
human to human - as d.ead ly
Outbreaks of both low-. as the Asian strain and"' conpathogenic and highly patho- tagious as the U.S. wi nter tlu
ge nic H5 .and H7 avian llu viru se s. ·Such co mbin ation
viruses have been reported . could result in a pandemic. ·
''Viru ses arc to nstan'tly
and controlled in the United
States in the past few years. replicating. and every time
both in poultry and in they replicate there· , a
humans. In· 2003 , an individ- change:· ·Saif said .. ""Anv
ual in fected with .an H7N2 · species . humans incl uded.
virus . and showin'g seri.ous coul d harbor intluen!a' 'irus-

Lions today are taking blood
For Lilburn, continuous
samples on a regular basis for monitoring
including
avian .influenza testing con- migratory birds , backyard
by
the
Ohio flocks and birds sold state-toducted
Department of Agriculture," state in live markets- is our
said Lilburn, a professor in best shot at keeping highly
the Department of Animal pathogenic forms of avian
Sciences. "The level of biose- influenza out' of the country
curity is the same today as it and Ohio., '
has always been , which is
(Bec ky Nesbitt is the
pretty tight. The distinction Ga/.lia County Extension
between virus types will die- Educator for family and
tate the response to a viral comumer sciences/commu·
confirmation rather than any· nity development and chair,
thing on the prevention side ." ·· Ohio State University.)

...•.•.•...•.•......•...•.•.•.•..••••••....••.•

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SATURDAY OFFICE HOITRS
10" tk CQ/(~I(!el(oe ·(}1 {)().!' M"i;9 Patti-lrt.r

••

Do you use tobacco ·products? Are . you '
interested in talking about smoking · and
quitting? Tell us what you think. We are looking
for women who currently smoke cigarettes or
who have been using nicotine repacement
therapy for more than three months. Participate
in a group ·discussion and earn $25 . For .more .
information about this study, please call Amy
Ferketch at The Ohio State University.
1-866-770"73 76

~

.•

••••

.••
•••
•
•

9 .yn • ~oon
• \1 mula,· - t~riday:
f) a.m. to a IJ.III.

T!u tJffrce (}f
f. ;l{g/&lt;-jalf, .;If/}
(:104) 675-0492

. 8/'etolf

Proud~v serving the community for

/9 years.'

· ~
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�Page C6 • E&gt;unbav lr1mr!i -E&gt;rnttnl'l

Pomeroy •

Mid~leport

• Gallipolis, QH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

Sunday, March 5, 2006

Dl

INSIDE .
Down on the Farm, Page D2
Farm • Garden, Page 06

'

HOLZER CLINIC
Sunday, March 5, 2006

ol
Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

Pe,r lllltlt

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Holzer Clinic is happy to announce the availability
For
many or can be "burned".
years couples For men a vasectomy involves two small incisions of a new option for permanent sterilization for their
have had only on the scrotum and the tubes that carry the sperm female patients. ESSURE.
two choices · (vas deferens) are tied and cut. ·
.
when it came
Essure is a procedure that is done without incisions
to permanent Although many of these surgeries are performed in and is as effect.ive as th e other methods. This procemeans o( birth this country every year they are not without risks . dure inyolves less discomfort, less time off your feet ,
·· control, · tubal
Even though these involve small cuts there is still a and less risk of complications than traditional meth'
sterilization risk of bleeding, infection, injury to other iinemal ods. Essure is dorte under anesthesia during an exam,·
your organs that rna~ require further surgery. There is.also
very similar to your PAP smear by placing a small
"tied")
the matter of recovery, most of the time these proce- camera thru the opening of the cervix and into the
vasectomy
dures require 3-7 days away from regular activities. uterus and placing very small titan'ium coils into the
,if
his
openings of the fallopian tubes. Over a period of
.
tubes "tied") .
three months you·r body \vill form new tissue that
Both of these procedures involve a surgical .proce"For many year~· couples have had only
.blocks the tubal opening~ and results in pehnanent
dure where incisions (or cuts) are made in the skin.
Mo choice.~ when it came to permanent
sterilization. This process take s about 3 months and
For women thi s is either done right after the birth of
means of birth control; tllbal .sterilizution
a patient must continue to use another form of birth
their last child though an inch and a half cut on her
(}raving
your
lllbe.
~
·
"tied'~
or
vasectomy
.
. .
control during ·this time. An xray study k1iown as a
stomach just below herbelly button andthe tubes are ·
(having his tubes "tied'')."
hysterosalpingogram or (HSG) will be performed to
tied off twice and then a segment of tube is removed
be sure that the tubes are blocked.
or in women who have not just had a baby a tubal can
. !Je accomplished through two cuts on the stomach
To learn inore, make an appointment with Dr. Patrick
·one in the belly button and one just above the pubic
Muffley in the Department of Obs-tetrics and
bone and the tubes are clamped with a clip or fl band
•
Gynecology at Holzer Clinic (740) 446-5381.
.

l

(AP) - The handsom e
· facade of lhi s home. plan
RLA-11 by 11ie Homestore
Plans and Publications
Designers' Net-work, showcases a wraparound porch,
·which uses slurdy columns
and wide walkways to create ·
a welcoming spot for family,friends and neighbors.
The floor plan covers I ,270
square feet of living space.
Inside, the entry spills into
lhe living room, which features tall windows and a traditional tlreplace.
Sunlight illuminating the
bayed dining room also lights
up lhe roomy kitchen . A
good-sized panlry, ample
counter space and a snack bar
to serve the living and dining
. rooms top off the kitchen .
The master suite provides ·
luxury
and
relaxa1ion.
There 's a sizable walk-in
closet and private balh. with a
garden tub and a dual-sink
AP PhOIOI
vanily. Outdoor access from lnthis illustratio~ provided,by Homestore Plans and Publications Des igners Network. refined details, including a single dormer, a brick chimney and attractive
the bedroom is an added porch columns, make .this intricate, Craftsman-style design truly a standout.
· ·
bonu s.
Just down I he hall from the
master suite, a- second bedroom features a bay window,
a large closel and easy access
to a hall bath.
.

HOME FEATURES WRAPAROUND PO-RCH

RLA-11 DETAILS
Bedrooms: 2
Baths: 2
Main floor: 1,270 sq. ft.
Total living area: I ,270 sq. fl.
Exterior wall framing: 2x4
Foundation options: Crawlspace, slab

patient then goes about her business for the next
seven hours but returns for removal of the belt and
recorder later in the day.. The patient is allowed
clear liquids after two hours; food and medication
are permitted four hours after irigestiori of the capsule. After detachment the recorder is attached to a
computer work station, and the recordings are
down)oaded, processed, and reviewed by the gastroenterologist. The capsule is eventually passed in
a subsequent bowel movement but the patient is frequently unaware of it.

The technology. wireless video Capsule endoscopy
(VCE) for the first time allows physicians to visual- Possible complications exist with any procedure
ize the entire intestinal tract and to identify diseases and VCE is no exception. The major issue is capsule retention as a result of failure to pass through a
particularly in the 22 foot length of small intestine
narrowed, strictured bowel. · The capsule itself canthat previously equid not be diagnosed or required
not obstruct the bowel unless there is a stricture
surgical .exploration of the open abdomen. The ·
which then requires surgery to remove the capsule
patient swallows a tiny camera about the size of.a:
and fix the stricture. A capsule can also be retained
kidney bean which then passes through the entire
due to slow transit time through
intestinal tract taking video pictures as it moves
along. During the cours·e of the study approximate- the bowel. A retained capsule
ly 50,000 images are transmitted to a recorder worn usually causes no symptoms and
is detected on the video when
on a belt A physician, typically a gastroenteroloreviewed. Plain x-rays of the
gist trained in the procedure can then review the ·
abdomen can be obtained after ·
video in about ·60 minutes and determine if there
are small bowel diseases causing bleeding, anemia, · several days to see whether the •
capsule passes spontaneously. If it
or other symptoms.
does not, surgery could become
necessary to remove it. So far, .
Wireless capsule endoscopy has revolutionized
experience reveals a 5% retention
evaluation of the gastrointestinal tract. The Given
Pill Cam wireless capsul e was developed four years rate with less than I% of cases
requiring surgical retrieval.
ago and is only now moving out of tertiary care
centers to smaller commun ities like Athens. In
The only definite contraindica-.
term s of who should receive the test it is indicated
lions to the procedure are patients
· for people with unexplained intestinal bleeding,
who are nonsurgical candidates,
chro nic diarrhea, an emia, and pati ents suspected of
having Crohn 's di sease. Initial experience with the · who refuse to. entertain the idea of .
.surgery, 'or who are known to have' .
capsule suggests that it may reveal the source of
strictures.
unex pl ained bleeding or anemia in 50-7 5% of
patients being tested, and it is rapidl y replacing x- ·
Findings identified as a result of
rays
as the best way to i dentify small bowel Crohn 's dis- . VCE cim then be treated. If
Crohn 's disease is found tlie gasease.
troenterologist will gi ve medications to .improve the condition. A
Preparation for the pati ent is simpl y nothing by
ga stroenterologist who performs
mouth for six hours before the procedure and sodi VCE will also work with a surum phosphate bowel rrep. The capsul e is swalgeon as part of the team. In some
lowed wi th water at a ph ys icia n's offi ce or a~bul a­
tory surgery center. and a recorder is attached to the pati ents the. finding of active
pati ent wi_th an adj usta ble Vc kro belt system. The . bl eeding will require intraopera-

live endoscopy or surgical removal of the involved
bowel.
' in place and
The technology costs $40,000 to put
requires regular upgrades. The f~e to the patient is
generally around $400 and is covered by most
insurance companies.' Gastroenterologists may see
as many as 8-!0patients a month-who might
require VCE. The introduction ofVCE irito the
Athens area will now eliminate the need to send
patients needing the test to university referral cen,ters in distant cities.

DINING
· 14' X12'
10' clg ·

A downloadable study plan of this house, including
general information on building cosl s and financing, isavailable al hnp://www.hou seoftheweek.com. To
receive a s1udy plan by mail, please fill out 1he following order form . Be sure lo reference the plan number. To
view hundreds of home designs, visit our Web site at
hup://www.hou seoftheweek.com.

·Holzer Clinic Introduces New Technology In The Athens Area
Ruth M. a 72 year old female has been hospitalized
six times in the last five years because of recurring
anemia and obscure intestinal bleecling. During this
time she has undergone numerous invasive scope
tests whi,ch revealed no abnormalities and she .continues to require iron therapy and occasional transc
fusions to remain well. Nov new technology being
introduced in the Athens a~ea by the Holzer Clinic
m3y lead t9 a diagnosis an·d possible treatment for
her problems.

+---------__..;..--46'·0·------------+

KITCHEN
,..,.----., 10' X12'

MA5TER BEDRM
16' X 12'
10' clg

10' clg

ORDER THE HOUSE PLAN
T0 receive lhe study plan for this home. order by
phone. online. or by mail.
.
By phone: Call 1866) 772-1013. Reference the pl_an
number.
· Online: Go to http://www.houseoftheweek.com and
type the plan # into I he tield labeled ''Enter Plan#." The
downloadqble study plan s are available for $10, plus
slate and local sales lax.
ay mail : Clip and complete thi s form. Include a check
or money order for $10, plus state and local 'sales tax,
payable lo House of the Week.

Mail to:

House of the Week

II
II
II

16' X1:5' ·
10' clg

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UTILITY

. . . . . . L-...J

ENTRY
10' c:Je

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P.O. Box 75488
St. Paul, MN 55175-0488
Plm1

I
I

LIVI!'IG ROOM

. r-·- -,.

COVERED PORCH

#:_ _ _ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ _~-

~EDROOM

Name: _ _ ____~-~-----------

13' X12'

. Address:----,-----'-- --,-----'---'---....:

#2

10'.clg

RLA-11

City :_ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __ _ ____
Stale:_______ __

Zip: ~----~-

•

In this illustration provided by. Homestore Plans and Pub lications Designers Network. the entry spil ls into the livin!S room. wh ich
features tall windo\'15 and a traditional fireplace.

upon 1he climate where you live, how of1en
you use. your air condilioning . and huw long
yt\u expect to live in your home, -there may
be lois of money (and energy) to be saved
over the long haul. A 13-SEER unit wi II
..
deliver aboul 23 peq:en t energy sav ings
J;Jv MORRIS AND JAMES CAREY
will· if your system has a SEER of 12 or J~ ss . compared to a I0-SEER model and about 8
FOR 'P w EEKLY FEATURE s
Bur there 's no need to panic. given thai exisl- · percent· energy saving s compared to a 12ing syslems may remain in use and repaired SEER model. Actua l savings will depend on
hough it':, still freezing in 'many parts of when needed. However, keep in mind 1ha1 the age. effi ciency and condition of the unil
the coumry, there's big news when it · replacemem parts for 12 SEER and lower bein g replaced.
comes to air ~ onditionin g thai you units will become increasingly sparse, lhus
Therefore . if you live in a warm and humid
should know before n s ume to crank up your ' evenlually requiring syslem replacement wilh cl"itnale. use your air condi1ioning of1en and .
home cooling sy slem.
· ·
a more.energy efficientmodel.
·
expec1 10 li ve in you home for a while . 1hc
,, .
As of Jm\_ 23. 2006, lhe U.S. Departm~nt ~f · You may also be requi,red tci alter or hi gher lhe SEER rating. the· better. Even
Energy requues manufacturers of atr cond1- ·upgrade your old furnace.
·
thou gh equipment costs increase as SEER·ral SEER •s a m easu re of the
coohng eflicoency of your Air
tioners and heat pumps to produce equipment
Mos1 air conditioning systems con sist of ings rise.- you' ll . be mone y ahead in the long
condll10 ner or r'lflat pump
thai has a Seasonal Energy Effi ciency Rating 1wo major component s: the outdoor unit. Tllll. And as a bonus you' ll be consuming le."
The n ~ her the SEE A •
number, lhe mo re eftK,;ient
.Cumulattve energy bUt
of at lea' t 13.
.
referred to as the "condensing un il'' or "com - of ou r prec iOlJ' natural resource, .
th9 syste m IS a l converttn!jl
Mvtnga, Oll_IIQil 2004 0011ers
SEER is the numher-Jhat lhe DO E uses to pressor," and 1he indoor component called an
How do you deter mine whi c.h SEE R i'
electnctry Into COOling powel'
20.)6..2015
5.,
measures the effic iency of air .condilio ning "evaporator coil" or "coil case: · which is part . be st for yo u? A good plal·e to begi l) is hy
Eloc1rlclly conoumptiof1
12.1
~2025
~evlnga, blll100 k.JiowatthOur$
equipmenl. SEER is 10 air condilioning what of the furnace .
co nslJltin g )·our loc al ut ili ty .:orllpan, _
2015
11 ,
NOT E
u ..""'91 e••
R-Value is lo insulalion and , like insulation .
The size of the coil case at the furnace ha&gt;. They ,·un heir yo u d ~ l e rm i n e 1h e approx iIMICI\ IC 2005
.
2025
the hi gher the ~ EE R raling lhe .more energy a direct relationship to the SEER rating and mmc porti on of your ul ility hi ll 1h:n is
· effici elll 1he cquipmenl.
·
lhe conden sing unil. Thus, if I he inside and ,d t' \' Ot ~d lO cooling . A profe,sio nal he a ti n g snuRb l~rlf'l\oor&gt;'o)!F,..'V'I
Prior to Jan . 23. the minimum efficiency oulside units are not compatible. ·you . may and C&lt;lOi in g cont ractor can use this lnfo rstandanJ was I 0 SEER - meaning that man- need to replace both uni ts in order to maimain maii on to dete rmine payback and 11 hal . S •HHC moLkl.• hJ\ c been tcsied al 69 dedbels.
"hiL·h '' 4ll l ~te r than an cl\ erage runmng
ufaclurers were requi red 10 _produ ce equip- system compatibility. This really isn't neces- mak es 1he best cL·onomic se n•e .
To get the he q hang li1r )'Our cooli1\g bud . . r,·fri gerator. In aJd 1tinn . ne" mnd'els use an
memlhatmel or exce.cdcd 10 SEER.
·
sarily bad news since il does n't make a whole
The U.S. governmenl wants Amcrican.s to lol of sense to have a new. more cnagy-e fti - lo.ok for eqll ipme nt that has earned 1he Encrg) c11\ 1rlll1men lull' "1u nd ret ngerant.
u.se less fuel tu cool their hnmcs and I he near- . ciem air cundilioner, and-a gas-guul ing fur- St ar seal &lt;&gt;f approval and don ' t forge l l&lt;lchcc k
,..-(, r mr•r(' h ~ n~u:' tmr n·•rcment rips imd h~f'o r~
ly onc-lhi rd increase in th ~ ,minimum slandard nace .
with ;.ou lL"~l;' al ptilit y ~ 01 n pa n y for rcha tc-\ fnr·
11/cllfon .
ri\li
o ur
1-\'eh
.\ ile
ar
is·projectcd 10 rcdu ~· c energy bills for homeRegulalions ;iSide, yo u may nol wanl to equipmelll upgrade,.
owners up to 30 percent ove r the current 10 wait for your old energy-guzzlin g air condiIn udditi on to sa,·ing money. new prod uct&gt; lllft' ./111'\1 1\ .0nl ht' ho u.r.r•. nmt o1 u dl "·' ar
SEE~ unils.
·
li oner to fall apart' before 11pgrading to a new arc quieter tha n t) kk r. lG-"S effic ient mutkl.., tu' · J8rJOI 7.1 7- C. ~- ~~ n ..-rr s""',.""·,. 9 &lt;t.m . ro, 1
Will I he new 13 SEE R.rating affec t you·• h more energy efficient model. · Depending · crca!l' a more relax,·d hllme all11&lt;1&gt;]1 hcn: . , •. Ill. f.S(

Brrrrr. Time to crank

up the air conditioning·

T

~ 111ur 11 cr• l~ !H IC;

~~ted

..,.J'.,.,_"'VV"!

~~ a

Pflro!Yl'

,.,

�iunba~ ltmt&amp;·itnhnel

PageD2

DOWN ON THE FARM
Bv

MARTHA FtUPtc

It's the second-best time to re-seed the lawn

...

...

...

produced quite a success added $22 . per hundredOSU EXTENSION
story. · Improved genetics ' weight to the value of fed
GALLIA COUNTY
and management have pro- steers
but consumer
duced higher-quality beef, demand is just part of .the
. A little over a decade ago , and immerous new product new Long Range Plan. This
America's beef industry offerings have brought new plan also seeks to create
was in trouble. Consumer American consumers back profitability for cattlemen.
demand was in steady to beef - in supermarkets
The Long Range Planning
decline , and producer prof- and at restaurants. But the Group has worked hard to
itability was nearly non- lessons of those dark days in identify opportunities for
existent. In the midst of . the 1980s and early 1990s profitability for everyone in
those dark days, a task have not been lost. Our the production chain, while
force of cattl emen was indu&amp;try must continu~lly recognizing the challenge ~ of
charged with developing a evaluate where it stands, and competing in ·an ever-chang"
plan to stop the erosion in where it wants to go.
ing marketplace . In addition
beef demand and create
An updated Long Range to demand increases, the new
strategies to improve pro- Plan announced five years plan calls for growing beef's
ducer profitability. The ago set a goal of increa~ ing share of the U.S. protein marresult was the first Beef demand 6 percent by 2004, a ket to 32 percent , and
Industry Long Range Plan,. mark the industry wildly increasing U.S. beef exports
unveiled in 1994.
exceeded. A new Long 400 percent to 2.5 billion
That first plan was both Range Plan, announced last pounds by 20 I 0.
aggressive and . controver- month, has set a realistic, yet
Chicken continues to pres·
sial. Aggressive in the strate- ambitious goal for the next sure beef amid . changing
gies that were outlined to five years. Few believe our demographics. The Long
stop ,the erosion in beef industry can sustain · the Range Plan is a call to action
demand ;
controversial growth that has been mea- for cattlemen to draw
because of a bold recom- . sured since 1998, yet they together and agree to
mendation that one organi- believe steady growth is pos- strengthen beefs position as
zation be formed to replace sible. Therefore, the new the No. I protein. The goal.s
the four that then served the goal is to increase .' beef of the new Long Range Plan
industrY, The ,task force demand by another 10 per- are ambiiious, to be sure.
adopted the vision state- cent by 2010. It aims to do But if the past decade is any
ment : "A dynamic and prof- that by creating value measure, the goals are ceritable beef industry, which . through beef production, ·· tainly attainable. The Long
co ncentrates
resources creating growth through Range Plan, and its specific
around a unified plan, con- consumer markets and creat- strategies to achieve measistently meet s consumer ing opportunity through surable objectives, ·provides
needs and increases market global
competitiveness. so lid industry support for
share." .
'
Increa ses
in
consumer your business and your
. Fast forWard to San demand are important liveliho9d ..- and for the
Antonio, Texas, February Cattle-Fax reports increases success of future genera2005. The Cattlemen's Beef in demand since 1998 have tion s of cattlemen .
Board and the National
Cattlemen's
Beef
Association were genuinely
pleased with the latest news
about . consumer
beef
demand. The 2004 data saw
a sharp increase in demand,
GAUJPOUS - United Produ~eT'S Inc. market report
with the Beef Demand
from Gallipolis for sales coiulucted on Wednesday, March I.
Index climbing 7.74 percent. That meant the Beef
Demand
Index
had
increased more than 25 per275-415# St. $100-$162 Hf. $100-$138 425-525# St.
cent si nce 1998.
$100-$145 Hf. $100-$125 550-625# .St. $100-$130 Hf.
The past dozen years have
$95-$115 650-725# St. $100-$120 Hf. $90-$110 750-850
St. $90-$108 Hf. $85-$95.

Bv. ROBERT W.

PAWELEK

LIVESTOCK REPORT

of demonstration projects or
.' land laboratories' that can be
examples for the whole
state," Clark said.
The center held its first
advisory board meeting on
Feb. 22. Board members are
Larry Libby (chai r) , director
of the John Glenn Institute at
Ohio State ;· Don Brosius ,
attorney at law, Loveland &amp;
Brosi us: Kirby Date, coordinator of The Ceuntryside
Program : Lynne Erickson,
director of the Portage
Countv Regional Planning
Comniission ; Chris Henney.
director of Agricultural
Ecology. Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation; Peggy Kirk Hall,
director of Ohio State's Ag
Law
Program;
Amalie
Lipslreu, program coordinator of The Farmland Center;
Larry Long , executive director
of
the
County
Commissioners ASsociation
of Ohio; Krista Magaw, executive dir.ector
of the
Tecumseh Land Trust; Ken
Martin; assistant director of
OSU Extension; Tom Price of
Price- Barnes Organics; Allen
Prindle,
professor
at
Ofterbein
Cohege; Ron
Ratliff of Ratliff Farms; Ellen
Walker, administrator in
Jefferso n Township. Franklin
County; Bill Wes tbrook,
owner
of ·· We stbrook
Development
Company;
Brian William s, Ohio state
director
of
American
Farmland Trust : and Howard
Wi se, assistant director of the
Ohio
Department
of
Agriculture.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

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104 P - I l a t
toe Slnclar - Ilion
11 0 Root ol tho mouth
112 Ahny lime
t 14 Gene&lt;ot4 . 11'5 ElM!tiM god
117 M*nrcd&lt;
118 Image

Sunday
Times-Sentinel

.

r

\'\ \ 01 \t I \II \ I '

;:;F.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

r~

.

GIVEAWAY

Ir

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to edit,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
&gt;Errors
Must
84
~eported on the firs
~ay of publication anc
he Trlbune·Sentlnel

~Register

will

b1

esponslble for n
rore than the coal 0
he space occupte
the error and onl
he Hrat Insertion. W
shall not be liable to
any loss or · a~pens
h.at results from th
Jl~blicatlon or omls
ion of an advertla&amp;
!"e!"t. Corrections wll
be made In the firs
vallable edition.

P'Y

'

:&gt;Box number ada art
iaJway~ conflden,tlal.
&gt;Current
pplles.

rate

car

&gt;All

r&gt;"T hla
newspape
ccepta only ,hel
twsnted ,ada meetln
~OE standards.
r&gt;We will not knowing
y accept any adver
lsement In violatlo

~lhelaw.

Been spayed, all shots,
housebroken, Will Sit and iay,
sometimes will stay and
heeL Doesn't jump upon
people, doesn't beg at table,
ndes We111n car. We love her,
she needs mOre room than
what we have. (740)3889824.

.·

.. ,

----~--

l.l"o

AND

CrOll Creek Auction
Buffalo
Thts week Deale"r, from
Vtrginia with Cakes &amp; Pies
Building Is ful. Craftman
Tools (304)937·2118 or
304 550·t6t6

l'::!i:-~::;W~ANTED;:;.::;.::;:_ _,

u,.,.,..,

BUY

tlabbits-- 74(}..992·5550 ·

i..urr AND ·1Cardboard slandups Nascar

roLoAN

JOBSI JOBSI JOBSt
$8/hr
Positions Available
Immediately!
NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY•
Help raise money lor
non-profit and pohtleal
organ1zations including:
The American Cancer

698-0448 or-937-524-2688,

Safe
Drive rs
Point
Pleasant,
Gallipoli s
&amp;
&amp; cele brit ies. Paying $25 Pomeroy locations Apply in
Society
Earn.hardt
Sr ,
$15
Person
Earnhardt Jr., $5-10 most
The National Rtne
others. Also buying old
Drivers Needed:
Association
baseball ca rds pre 1975, CDL Drivers willing lo drive
origtnal 78 APM records for local ready-mix-concrete
Full benefits package
Hank Wil liams, Johnny
company. E)(perience is
available as well as paid·
CaSI"I. Elvis etc little Golden preferred but not necessary
tratnfrig, holidays and
books &amp; comic book pre
Med 1nsurance &amp; other
vacations.
1970. vintage toys pre 1980. benel1ts availabl e after wait·
Please call {740)441 ·9519.
ing period . Driver must be
For Immediate
w1ll1ng to do pre-mainte·
Consideration call us al
I buy Ju nk Cars (304)773nance on trucks &amp; equipeither:"
5004
ment, yard work &amp; Qlher
(700)446-7«2 ext: 2454
--------miscellaneous chOres
Wanted To' Buy.
Meigs
• Or
1-877-483-6247 ext 2454
County: Store Script, Store Experience operating equipTOkerls, and currency from ment &amp; elctra skills such as
·
p omeroy,
welding a plus,
A acme,
www.infocision.com
an d
Call Robertsburg
M1ddleporI Ban ks . 740•992 6040
·
t304)937-3410
Local Bank is seeking Par1·
or Lakln(304)773-5234
Time teller. Must be ayatl·

Lost· 2oga Ruger over &amp;
over Shotgun , near Hidden

Located in Mason County
near Buffalo WV.

Ll!l.---FiiOUNnlliiiirri-_.1.

•

--

$300 Rewa rd ·
Lost female Rottweil9r. 8
I·Years old, docked . tall .
spayed , black/tan . Last seen
on Road · 14, Feb. 10.
(740)643- t 002
Female Black Lab to a good
home t4-16 months old,
very
good
· natured.
(740)446-7595.
Lost- male lon g haired
Chthuahua tan &amp; white
wearin g red collar w!Mianii
County dog tag, last seen
Townsend Rd . &amp; -681,
"Arther". please call 740·

Valley Golf Course. Reward "~~------., - - - - - - - - - '
(304)675-3832
1110 u..,.. u.1
nr..a.P nANlF.D
Dnvers· bceUent pay, free
Lost. Cell PMn e Reward.
health inSurance: benefits &amp;
(304)67~·0880
home time! 1 year tractor
~
!ratter experien ce req wred.
¥
Mart1n Transport. 866-2937435

$

CLASSIFIED INDEX

LEARN

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ...••..•.....•..... •.••••• .. ....•••••..•••.. 030 '
Antiques ....................................................... 530
Apertmenls lor Rent ................................... 440
Auction and Flea Market .......................,...... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................................................. 770
Autos lor Sale .............................................. 710

TO

DRIVE
• NO', EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
• FUlL-TIME CLASSES
• COL TRAINING
• FIN.ItNCING AVAILABLE

' JOe Pi.ACE\AENT
• ENROLLING NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR · TRAILER
TRAINING CENTER S

WYTHEVILLE , VA

Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ...........:...... ...... ....... 160
Real Estate Wanled ..................................... 360
Schools lnstructlon ........... .......................... l50
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ... .. ................................... 120
Space lor Ren1 ............................................. 460
Sporting Gooda ...........................................520
SUV 'slor Sale ............................... ........ ::......720
Trucks lor Sale ................................ ............ 715
Upholstery ............................. ...................... 870
Vans For Sale ........... ....................................730
Wanted to Buy ................ :................ ............ 090
Wanted to Buy- Fatm Supplles .................. 620
Wanted To Oo ...... ........................., .............. 180
Wanted to Rent ............................................470
Yard Sale· Galllpolis....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant ................................ 076

Experienced Window
Installer
Full-time temporary ,position
with poss1bthty of fuiHtme
permanent Hinng 1mmedi·
ately. Resumes accepted
March 6th-7th cetween
1o·ooam-2 OOpm. Please
apply 1n person to : AI
Tromm . Quality Windows
Syslems. Inc . 37700 K''nn
•
Hilt s Road, Pomeroy, OH
45769. p..... commensurate
.. J
with
e)(perience .
NO
PHONE CALLS PLEASE.

1-800-334-1203

For a limited time make 50%
WNVo' allranceuaC1Qnral!4r.com
sellmg Avon . Call (740)446tOO WORKERS NEEDED . 3358.
Assemble crafts .
HarbOr
Towboa t
Plio!
wood items.
Wanted . Experienced {5
To $480/wk
years mmtmum) licensed
Materials provided.
towboat
p1 lot needed tn the
Free 1nformat1on pkg 24Hr
Pa rkersburg. WV area.
80 t-428·4649
SuccessfUl candidate wtll be
Pos1 t1on . operating clean lale·model
Admin1strat 1ve
Must be Very detail oriented eqUtprnent and will work
Word , Excel. Gallipolis area sixty hours per · week .
Contact: Kelly Services Candidate will be able to
(866)286·4777 ask tor Usa . enjoy e;o;cellent health beneIns. 401 {k). paid vacation,
An Excellent way to earn pius the abrllty lo ·have a
family li fe by being able to go
money Thd New Avon .
home everydav. Average
Call Marilyn 304·a82-2645
Wage begms al $50,000 per
Applications
Are Bemg year. Part-time work fOr har·
Accepted For A PT /Possible bar pilots available also.
FT LPN PT Evenings &amp; Fill· Phone calls wiTI be accepted
In Competittve Slartmg Pay. between the hours of 10:00
Pa1d Vacation. Patd Meals, to 3.00· pm , or res umes can
Discounts. and Insurances be mailed IO .the following:
Avallabl8.
Interested
Applicants May Apply Daily Neale Marine
9-4
Ravenswood Care Transportation
Genter. tt13 Waslimglon 229 Neale Road
WV.
304-273-9236 Fa. Parkersburg, WV 26105
References Requ ired
(304)295·4223
Asphalt E)(penence· Equip
Oper, Laborer, Dump Truck
Driver Resume : PO Bo:w
3"105. Huntfngton,WV 25702
ATHLETIC EQUipMENT

·,

SAllli

able Monday thru Satt.Jrday.
Please forward resume to
Dally Sentinel . PO Sox 72934, Pomeroy, OH . - 45769 .
EOE
~--:--:---=:-:::---':
Now
tm ing
EMTs &amp;
Paramedics. Call ~7 40)354·
5433 or ,-866-971·5433.
_
N_u_rs_e_ _ _ _ _ _

Overbrook Center IS current·
ly accepting applications lor
Nurs1ng Assistant Classes.
The classes wil l begin
March 13. ~Applications w111
be accepted until March 8.
Space is limited All Interested applicants should p1ck
up an applicatiOn· al 333
Page . Street, Middleport,
OH
NO PHONE CALLS

RN/LPN
Full-time/Part-time -

inancial
lnsltlul10n '
ffice of Consume
ffa1rs BEFORE you reft
an ce your home o
blain a loitn BEWAR
I requ ests lor any l~rg
Ovance payments o
ees or insurance Cal
he Office ol Consume

Club Car. Golf Carts, Gas

applicants should pick up an
application at 333 Page
Street, Middleport, OH. For
further lnformat1on , please
contact Hollie at 74Q-992·
6472. EOE
Retail sates Clei-k 20 to 30
hours a week at $7 .25 per
hour.
SOme evenmgs
P1ckup
application
at
Swisher
&amp;
Lohse
Pharmacy, Pomerov.

I

1180
~.---'fitllriODoililr-_.1.

tO

'-'------~

Computer Trouble Shooter
and Repair Expert Service.
~
740
.:.:..-9:.:9.:2.:·23
::c9:.:5c..- - - I' m interested in P~1nting
and Papering your Interior
Walls ca ll me {304)675·5857
or (304)593·2387

RIVER PILOT
Bluegrass Manne , Inc. 1s h1r· '-=.:.:.:.:..:.:.:.:___
ing Line
~aul Pilals.' Lawn Care, miscellaneou s
Competitive pay, 401K, com- odd jobs. free estimates.

3BR . 2 bath , den . 8 mtles
from Holzer Hosptlal .on t60
North . Owner Fmance. FHA
approved (740)446·3570 .

ortgage broker o
er:1 der
1s
proper!
Jcensed_. {This Is a pubh

...,

Certif1ed
Care
-Home
ASSI Sted &amp; Non-ASSISted
Persons, meals &amp; snacks
provided . Excellent Care
(304)682-3680

. Ho~n'll

arrow Smart Contac

..._ _ _ _ _ __

Overbrook
Aehabi lltahOn Wtth Tops, Good Shape ,
P1nes ·Hflls Golf Course .
_ .
or
Center is currently accept1ng 51 .
_ _
200 00 740 992 2720
· applications
for
LPN 's.
_
_ _
740 992 6312
Available shifts are 7A·7P ""'~;;;;;;:;;,;:;;..._ __
and 7P·7A. All interested
WANJED

Rl \I 1 " 1\11

fUR' SALt.

'Like 'Working w1th numbers?
Check out
Accounting
classes/programs @
GaltlpoHa Career College
(740)446·4367
800-214·0452
r.l'll:'--t:,:2,;;74;::B:.,._...,.
lt70

PLEASE! EOE

, Help Wanted

i Ready To Hire i
E&amp;'fl~

to

$101 Hr.

r~._ PRofrn;(r riSi iERi \iti 1CE'Si t0Ni tAL-pl

• Msnager Tram"

• Customtl Sao.
·~ntMgr! .

' lleliVMy St&gt;ecialist

r-r-;;::CT=;:'I;';;;e;--,
LOW -MOIStUr
Carpet-Ciean&amp;ng

Benefits Include

Brand New Method

• Profit SNrin&amp;
• Plkt V~Ytklfl

Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam -or-Shampoo
· Free-Estimates
···clearly Clean""
( 04)67s-oo
22
3

1'

·~t~

'Htollttlnouronct

I•

'
!.
'

• Pokl Holldlyo
'BonUHI

I

I

i

OPPORTUNITY FOR TRAINING

itO

Are you mterested in a
rewarding position? PAIS is
currently accepttng appltca·
tions for part-time and full
time d1rect care poSitions the

Qualifications include a cur·
rent AN license in Ohio. 2 Mason County, WV areas
providing restdential/cO"m·
yrs. of long-term care e~~:peri· sk'll ·
1h · d
ence preferred
mun.ry I tralnmg w t . In I·
vk:luals w1th MRiDD. Htgh
school · diploma or GEO
We offet competi!tve pay. a
required
No experience
benefils necessary. Crtmmal back·
comprehensive
package Including 40t(k) ground check requi red
wlfh company ma1ch, tuition
Must have reliable transas~lstance and more!
portation. Hourly rate start·
ing at S7·S8 00/hour. Call 1
Please forward resume to
(304)373-tOt 1
Heartland ot J8Ckson, 6668
St. Rt. 93, Jackson , OH
TranSIIions lor Youth IS seak45640. Fax · 740-286-Q295,
rng a par t hme LSW to
www hcr-manorcare.com
l1cense and recru it foster
EE~rug-Free Employer
hOmes and to do public rela ·
· P~opte. Strength
'tions with count.., agenctes
Commitment.
Make your own hours an d
work !rom home. Pl~ase
send resu me to:
Translttons for Youth
580t Stale Reule 141
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
No ptlone calls, please.

L.or-rrrriiiiririiiiiiitiliiiriri'-'
•NOTIC~•

HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ou do bus1ness wtth peo
le you know . and NOT I
end money rhrough lh
11 unt1l you nav~ mvestt
ated ttle offerin .
TIRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;·
COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?
Christian Owned Comp.;t:ny
Of1ering A Home Managed
Business Part t•me or Fu11
t1me . Full Support and
Traming
Fully financed
opportunitY i't Quahtled
1·800·946·7572 Pm 00 (If
no answer. please leave
message)

Help Wanted

rt'training. supporthe sen-ices such as
daycare, utility assistance, transportation
assistance, etc. , and j ob search

and

placement assistance. lndh·iduals who haH

lost a joh due to ula)"ofT or downsizing

j,

abo

eligible for these str-ices. There is no income

guidelines for these senkes.

A career counselor

is

a\ailablr

10 ~ssist

indi•·iduats in defining a career goal " 'hich

wOuld increast· their emplo~ abilit~· pOtenlial.
The
counselor "ill pro•·ide career
b~·

counseling, determine a skill lt&gt;\ t&gt; l

utilizing a specialized assessment. assist in
developing an indhidual sen·ice plan. and

rererral to other supportin sen-ices.
For more inforjllation. please call. 17~01

446-.1222 or stop b~ the Gallia CDJFS 1\'ork
Opportu nil~ Center l ocated

Aunur.

Galliputb, OH

at S48 .lrd

~5h31 .

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.

.

.

ELECTRICIAN
Help Wanted

We See An

RN
Like You
Joining Our Re.sident
Centered Nursing Tea~1 at
Holzer Senior Care Center
We are offering a sign on bonus
for a limited time only.

Holzer Medical
Gallipolis, OH is

Center,
seeking a

full-time Ek~trician .
Pri1narv re~pon~ibilitie~ in tJ iude
tesring- and repairing of electrical
equipment:
1nsrallmg
new
equipmenr
and . wiring
and
maintainin g the HVAC ..:mnputer
central ') 'te m. Add.ui onal d11tic'
as needed to

~ uppnrt

th e {1\t'ntl l

ftlll&lt;'li&lt;ltl
of
the ~1ainlcnance
·Depart m"n 1.
,
Qualificalilltl&gt; : Either lradc ,_·hool.
apprent. i,·e~ hip program or n n the
job tra,imn g as an cle'-· trK· i ~m 1:-.
reqt1ired .
Experien ce : ~t k a' t t\\ o vear&gt;
performmg electncian Uut1e~.
lnl cre~ted indi\'idual~ 1113)

Gallipolis Daily Tribune
Attn Jtm Freeland
825 Tt11rd Ave .
45631

POSTAL JOBS .
$15.67·$21 .96/hr, now htr·
1ng . For application and lree
governoment job mfo. call
A.mencan Assoc of LabOr 1·
913·599-8042, 24/hrs. emp.
ser'v.

I

. • Employ• Dtoc:ounts
_c_al_l(:_7_40..:)_44_:6_-68....:.61___
•Litl~nct
• Colllgo Mlilllneo
Would like to work as a Farm
' SIJNllAVS OfF!
Hand . Can run most any
TURNED DOWN ON
eqUip (740)441 '· 09 18 ask
Call lilt 2..,..... R-2-0
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
for Chuck ·
Career LJne at
1
No Fee Unless We W1n
Taking Apphcat lons for ~~.-~-~----­
1-80W2e-5601!
90
1·888·582·3345
.
Machinist &amp; Welder. 5 years
~.n~~FlU .Y
Ext.111
!
expereince.
apply 7130- .
'-AUU'..
•
I Apply on 1rnt • .w.v r20 com
4:00pm Ambros1a M8chtne
RENT-2-0WN
:
Inc. Route 2 Box 254 Poinl
Dodrills' Private Home Care ' •
Pleasant WV
25550
has room for one elderly ------~­
(304)675-t722
man or woman . Private pay
. Help Wanted
Help Wanted
only. Call Priscilla (740)388Tired ot Not Having Enough
8193
Money to Make J:nds Meet
or Go!ng ~o Work For
The Gallia County Department of Job and
11\\ "\ 11\1
Someone Else? Christian
owned Company of nearly 2 ...,,....-..,...---...,. Famil~· Services Work Opporlunif)· Center
,decades offering a home
BUSIN~
· has services available for indi\·iduals which
OpportuMy
Orft.&gt;Rll.i"Nfn'
Bus1ness
would provide an opportunit~ to' acquif~ a
( 304)576-2056 or. (364)593·
demand
dri\·en occupationc These strvices
0466 If no answer ple ase leave message
. .-~!!'ll'~!'l!'-.... include rinancial assistance for training. or
pany patd medical, dental,
STO, LTD and Life Ins.
(270)575-4080 24 hrs.
EOE . MJFN

Heartland of Jad&lt;son , part
of HCR Maner Care. has a"n
exciting career opportunity
aVailable for
-------Trainer Position:

Home Health Agency now
accepting resumes lor the
lollowtng poslttons: Home
Healttl &amp; personal care
a1des. Full t1me AN and
Schedui~;H we offer day shift
hours. benelits ancl gooel
work atmosphere, Please
send resume to . An n Office
Manager. P.O BaM 707 .
Galhpohs. OH 45631 or call
(740)441-1377

OH based company has
opemngs for salesmen m
thtS area. call1ng on cotleges. schools, ctlurches ,
etc
selling sc01eboards .
bleachers. lockers &amp; mora
Commllllon onlv with no Home tteallh Atdes- S19n
btneflta. ~ymnasiumeQUIP· On Bonus, Home Healthcare
menl.net
of SE OhtO rs curren tly htring
home health ardes . compel!·
trve wages Call (7 40)662·
Atfentton Onver::;.
· R&amp;J 1222.
· Truc kmg IS IOO ktng 101
Dnvers
w/ t
yr QTR. Home Healthcare ot SEQ is
E)(perten ce for Reg ton al Currently
.
Accepltng
Hauls Average pay 40 "s 10 Appltc.altons For Full &amp; Part·
m1d so·s Home e.vE11y time AN's, Compettt1ve
Weekend
call
Kent Wages Bonuse'S &amp; Benefits.
Call Toll free 1-866·368·100
1800)46 2·9365

,

MoNt:Y

tor
need
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or Immediate
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304- Expenenced, and recently
675· 1429.
graduated
Medical
----~--- Transcriptionists, wanted to
Dial for dollars Earn a great work 1n state of the ar1 office
hourly wage plus bonuses w1th full productiOn and supwhile contacting possible port c8pabi11ty. All the tines
clients lor med1ca1 out sourc- you want, in a great working
mg company. Apply through environment. Apply through
WorkForce West Virginia WorkForce West VIrginia
(304)675-0856
• (304)675-0858

L.or-------,.1

Puppies lor g1ve away
appear to be Lab!Boxer mt)(.
(740)446-3897.

••t• cen:ll eppl.... • All reel ••tete advertlsemln\1.,. l l.ll:l)lct to the Feder• I F•tr HOI.I•Ing Aet ol lt68 .
1!01! el.lnd•rd•. We wttt n01 knowingly .tccept •nv •dvlrUelng ln vloletlon ot lhe l•w .

IJELp WANmJ

Diesel Mechanfc w!Dump
Truck &amp; Paving Equip Exp9r
a+ Resume· PO Box 3105
Absolute Top Dollar: U S. Huntington, WV 25702
Silver and Gold Coins,
Direct
Sales
Fantastic
Proofsels, Gold Rings, Pre·
50K
no
Opportunity,
1935
US
Currency,
Solltatre, Diamonds· M.T S. Probl51m. Must be Motiv.ated
and Sell Starter Call Ken
Com Shop , 151 Secorld
Avenue . Gallipolis , 740-446- (740)992-7440
2842
Domino's Pizza. Now Hiring

10

Male and female Japanese
Chins , to a good ·home.
Beauttfu! dogs. (740)441·
9694

r

.

YARD S.U£

~--Fu.iljj'AIIriiMAiili.RKEiiii'i.I'.,J
g

Female Black Lab pup, · 9
wk 's old . (304)675-5t62

Professional Servlces ....... ......... ................. 230

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 4C

Thur•d•y f'or •unday•

• All ado must be prep•td'

~:::::====~
AucnoN

ANNOUNCEMENI'S 1
.
10 month ~ld Choc. Lab m1x. ~c

Lawn a· Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Uvestock ................................: ............ ......... 630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .........:.................................. 350
Miscellaneous .................. ,.,........ ................. 170
Miscellaneous Morchandlse ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Homos for Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Salo ................................ 320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheolers ..........................740
Musical Instruments ............ .................. ..... 570
Personals ....................................:................005
Pels lor Sale .............. ........................ .......... 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng .................................... 820

Upcoming specials:

Par Sundaya P•p•r

•re •lw•y• etonftdenll•l.
eccept•

Houses for Rent ................... l •• ••••• , .............. 4·10
In Memoriam ..............................._. ...•.•••• ••••••• 020
lnsurance ......... ......... ........ ................... ........ 130

Cow/Calf Pai~s $790-$ 1, 160: Bred Cows $300-5950:
Baby Calves $27.50-$325; Goats, $40-$110: Hogs. $57-dn.

sunday In - Column : 1 : 00 p . n-. .

tp ..

All Dl•play; 1.2 Noon 2
llu•ln••• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Dl•play: 1:00

an,-

H'appy Ads ........................................... ......... oso
Hay &amp; Grain .............................c.................... 640
Help Wanted .. ................... ............................ ItO
Homolmprovomonts ................................... 810
Homos lor Sale ............................................ 310
Household Goods ..... .................................. SIO

Back To The Farm:

How you can hove borders and graphics
'-"
added to your cla~slfled ads
-'"'
Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

POLICIES: Ohto Valley Publllhlnt re.ervn the rtght lo edit, reJecl, .,.. cane.!
lid •• •ny
Error• mu•t be r•ported on rne.ftrlt ~•v
Trlb~o~n•B.ntlnei-Reglsblr wll M ru.ponelbte fot" no rnore th•n the eo•t of I~ •p~~e• occupted by the error •nd onl,- tne flrt t lnse"ron . We
en,- los• or ••pen . . th.. r"1.1tt1 h-om I~ publlc•tlon or om ln!Qn of •n •dve-rt iMment. Correction wl!l be m.~• In tl"le llr•t •v•llll:lle Killion .

Giveaway .•. : .. ......... .................. .. ......... ......... .040

94 PIA oft
98 Old Nlclt
98 Fann Implement

Dally ln - CoJumnl 1;00 p.m.
Monday - P'rld•Y for :ln••rtlon

Prrd•v

(304) 675-1333

Display Ads

J:n N•xt pay•• Pap•r

8:00. a.rn. t:o 5:00 p.m.

Farms lor Sala ..........................................·... 330
For Lease ...................................... ............... 490
For Sale .......: ....................... ......................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .. :.,. ........................... ...... 580
Furnished Rooms ................. : ...................... 450
General Hauling............................, .............. 850

91 Slop
92 Moat- )elly
93Commotion

1L\.egtster

Oead'li;,e4'

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday

Farms for Rent. ................................... ......... 43D

Well Muscled/Fleshed $47-$52 Medium/Lean $43-$47:
Thin/Light $ 10-$30; Bulls $52-$65.

Fat cattle sale this week. 9 a.m.
Feeder calf sale March 15.
For more information. call Brad at 1740) 584-482 1 or
De Wayne at (740) 339-0241 . Vi sit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com

Gallia • 44&amp;2342
Meigs • 992-2155
Mason • 675-1333

Otf,fee lloar-.f'

Building Supplles ........................................ S$0
Business and Buildings ...... ....................... 340
Business Opportunity................................. 210
Business Tralnlng ........................... ..... ....... l40
Campers &amp; Motor Homes .............. :............ 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Cards or Tbanks .......................................... 010
Chilti/Eiderly Care ....................................... 190
,Eiectrlcai/Relrlgeratlon ......................... ...... 840
Equipment lor Rent .. , .................. ,.............. 480
Excavatlnp ................................................... 830
Farm Equ1pment ......................,...... :............ 6tO

60 Polo an • ohlp

79 Fourpoolorl

Sentinel

992-2156
Call Today••• (740) 446-2342 (740)
Or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Boals &amp; Motors ror Sale ............................. 750

58 Fucld 01 Gantry
57 Lll&lt;e ...

TT lllr ltglly

Your Ad,.

!168.

lodura

atrtbune

To Place

1191boen__,.

111

52 Wllllolrollllvt
54 - Krir9o

75F,.pt-

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS .
PLUS
AD
ONLINE

1, 3 Kind of numeral
118 Slwll Cl'ltly

Cows-Steady

·Meigs &amp; Mason
informed

CLASSIFIED
.

Real
Eatat
dverllaementa ll!lr
ub)eet to the Federa
air Housing Act "o

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Higher

Keepi~Jg ·Gallia,

atrtbune - Sentinel ~ 1L\.e ister ·

OSU launches Center for Farmland Policy Innovation

two. The center will match
OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
expertise and resources to
local priorities.
COLUMBUS - A new
The · center soon will be
center designed to promote accepting applications for
notebook
and .innowtive ways to protect funding for farmland protecweed seeds) at approximately sessions,
. Bv HAL KNEEN
one 50-pound bale per 1.000 catered lunch. Organizers are Ohio's farmland is up and tion projects under the cenplanning a hands-on demon- running at Ohio State ter's first objective, the
Do you need to reseed your square foot of area.
Keep the ground damp for stration to be held in the sum- University,
lawn? Mid-March to midthanks
to Farmland Policy Partnership
·the
·next three to four weeks mer on pruning, spraying and $400,000 in funding from the Program.
April is the second best time
to plant a lawn. Late August as the seed germinates. You crop maintenance.
U.S.
Department
· of
"I think communities who
For more information, con" Agriculture 's Cooperative are going to be most interestseems to be the best time for will not see any green grass,
lawn seeding in our area, but seedlings for two to three tact Brad Bergeford or State Research, EducatiOn · ed in this project are those
who wants to tight mud and weeks. If erosion is a co n- Charity Crabtree at (740) and Extension Service.
that still have healthy agriculdust all summer' The sooner cern, add a pound of perenni- 289- 2071 or e-mail bergetural
sectors but also are ·
"This will be an 'action'
you get the seed sown, the al ryegrass per 1.000 square ford.l @osu.edu.
center," said Jill Clark, inter- · experiencing growth, change
better established the law n feet to the lawn seed mixture.
im director of the Center for and development pressure.
Do your spirits need a linle · Farmland Policy Innovation. and ·.want to respond in an
will be before the hot, sum- . Cut the lawn at three-inch
height for the tirst three cut- lift? Signs of spring are pop- "The vast majority of our . equitable way," Clark said.
mer months.
Most homeowners · will tings. If broad leaf weeds ping up in ~mr yards as winter , resources will go directly to
Under this program, the
have the best ~uccess if they emerge with the . grass, you aconites and crocus have fund local projects. We' II be center initially plans to fund
remember . these few steps . can control them by spraying been spotted in bloom.
doing much more than four local projects, dependFebruary Gold daffodils research and planning."
Select the correct type of on a weed killer after the
ing
on
applications .
seed· for the lawn. For sunny fourth cutting (read label have been delayed; but are
"l am pleased to see the Preliminary criteria for
areas use either two or more directions on the herbicide). showing flower buds in .the Farmland Policy Center, one potential
projects
may
varieties of bluegrass or .. Several fact sheets are avail- yard. The avid gardener has of the projects l helped . include:
improved tall fescue. Shady able from our office that go in fall potted hyacinths for win- secure funding for in last
• The goal is to protect
' areas should be planted in more details about planting a ter forcing in bloom emitting year's appropriations bill, farmland.
their perfume aroma through· moving forward," said U.S.
fine fescue or in combina- new lawn, just stop by.
• The applicanl(s) must be
out the home. CheGk your Sen. Mike DeWine, a mem- a local governmental entity
tions with shade tolerant vari- ·
Are you interested in grow- local florist, grocery store or ber
eties of bluegrass or tall fesof
the
Senate or similar agency.
ing
blueberries? There is still garden center for pots of Appropriations Cqmmitte'e.
cue. Hopefully. you took a
• The project IJIUSt have a
in
the
Ohio forced bulbs .. . ·
soil sample and modified the space
budget
that includes a local
"Creating this center to help
Berry/Blueberry
Grower
soil to improve soil pH and
fund and provide resources cost-share, direct or in-kind.
Join me next Saturday at for local projects ensures that
nutrient levels last fall. If not, Training Program being held
• The project must be innotake one immediately and get March 13 and 14 at Ohio the WSAZ Home and Garden Ohio and Ohio farmers will vative and new to Ohio.
University
South Show at the Big Sandy Arena have the ability to continue to · • The project rnu&gt;l be
the results back before you State
in Huntington for a basic preserve viable farmland implemented within one to
plant. Modify the soi l per soil Centers at Piketon.
pruning. class to be given &lt;llt I while . encouraging . local two years ..
Topics
include
Integrated
sample results.
.
Management
of p.m. The show is open March development."
Prepare the soil so that the Pe st
• The project must transseed comes in direct contact insects, disease s and weeds; I 0-12 . Over 70 Master
The center is a response to late into a model for other
with the soil and starter lawn plant growth and develop- Gardeners from Kentucky, the needs of local leaders and Ohio communities and tlie
fertilizer (five' pounds of 19- ment; food safety, pesticide West Virginia and Ohio will landowners in their commu- local partner must be willing
19-19 per thousand square safety: soil and plant tissue be on hand to answer ques- nities who want to retain to participate in ongoing
feet). Rake out the roc~s and sampling techniques; and tions and hand out informa- viable farming while expand· education for other Ohio
level the ground so it drains how to monitor and man- tional sheets on gardening.
ing · development arid are communities .
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs unsure of how to balance the
. properly. Scatter the seed and agement of diseases , insects
"We want to form a series
County Agriculture and
gently rake it into the top and weeds . ·
Resources
Se ssions run 8 a.m. to 5 Natural
quarter inch or so of the
Ohio
State
ground. Cover lightly with p.m·. each day. Cost is $100 Educator,
straw (not hay - too many per person, which includes University Extension.)

Cattlemen set ambitious, attainable goal

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

Sunday, March 5, 2006

•

- ·EXTEN.SION (ORNER

Sunday, March 5, 2006

For a personal inten•iew Conlact
Phyllis Cantrell, Ri\ , DSI\ at
· 740-446-500 I or slop in and see
380 Colonial Drive
Did ,.·ell. Ohio ~S~ 1~

us at

HeLZER

com act :
Huntan Re:-ooun..·e:-.
Holz~r

Oepo.trttHent

Medical Center

HU n1;1n R e~P urc e-..: O~parllltt"lll
I()() Jacbnn

pt~~

G:!llopu li ~. OH 4.&lt;;11 I I
Phon~ : (7401

Fax : 17 401

44 to-5 105
446 - 5 106

SENOOR CARE CEN1ER
rtunit~

Em loHr

EEO/ADA Empln"er

�Page 04 • &amp;unbap tthnn: -6eutintl

...

:, r,O
~

HOIIIJ."li
fOR SALE

MOBILE HOMES
HJR SAL£

•.............~....~ ' -....iiiiiiii......

: 3BR, 2 Car anached Garage
• on 1.06 acres $62 ,000

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • ~. Pleasant, WV
l.,t'.O_oiFOtliiHR;;,OIJSISiiRfNriiiiiti-·1
Attention!

: (3041675-6331
: 3BR , 2lull bath, 1.900 sq. ft .
·full basemen I. 2 car
:attached garage. 3 acres.
• Chester Townsh1p. Eastern
· school d1stnct Ott At 7 near
: Memonal Ga rdens. CaJI
: :.:&lt;7...:4.:;01.:;98::5:..·4.::3.::2...:1.::•l.::l•::.r.::6P:.:m:.:._

Doublewtde Aepo 3B R. 2
baths on Ohio St.. Point
Pleasant. Land &amp; home
$59,500. Owner Finance,
(7401446·3570

Local company offering ·No
DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams for you to buy your
home Instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than perfect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
Locators.
(740 )367.0000

r

M

It

Brand New 2BR Apartments
Ref., Stove, Wa, Dry
HtPump, Wa, Sewer Incl.
Close to At 35 Rodney Area
Ref required, Deposit, No
Pets $585mo. Call 446-1271
--------Brand new 2BA apts. on
Bob McCormick Rd. Call !or
details (740)441 ·0194 or
{740)441-1184

Clean upstairs apt. In down. Like new 2002 CIByton House tor rent in Cliffton, 3 town Gallipolis; 2/bedrooms,
141152
$148/mo
Call Bedroom, $425 pe'r Month 2/baths, dishwasMer, wash(740)385·9948.
plus deposit. 74Q-742·1903 e.rtdryer hookup , S525,
Nice 1987 14x70 3 bedroom
home. Only $8.995. Will help
with delivery. Call Elaine
4 year old Colonial on 3 (740)385-0698

WEEKLY AVAILABLE
'want to rent hailer space In
n c I u d e s Gallipolis or Alo Grande
Re frig era to r/ Microwave ~
From $175 To $250 College .Hill Motel Call (740)245·
5326
~

rid

~-

..:Jii'\.CE

:leo:'u~a=i-v:a:lu~e:.===~

r.

2 bedroom mobil&amp; home in
Racine, $350 mo. plus $350
I deposil. years lease. no
pets. no calls after 9pm,
. (7401992·S039

$14,900 . For llstmgs can
800·391·5228 ext. F254
Bt,JSimSS
"ento'onl
AND
Bun.nrNGS
A"
~
Local company otler~ng '" NO ·
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Busmess Location for Sa·le.
grams tor you 10 buy your Located on Sandhill Road.
home 1 n~tead at renting.
Point Pleasant, WV call
• tooo::, linanc 1ng
3Q.4J675-3423
I....on; &amp;
• Less than perfect credit j.1:lU
accepted
·--AiiiCIU'Aiii
' iGiiEO.-'
~ Payment could be the .
same as renl.
1.6 acres on Oak Hill Ad..
Mor tgage
Locators. Chester. Ohio. water, .gas,
(7401367·0000
electnc
on
property.
$15,000,304-483-7550

28R mobile home, very
clean, in the country. Rent
$300, DepOsit $200 plus utilitles. (740)256·6202.
For Sale or Rent 2 bd. Ira.
·furn . $375/mo., $150fdp.
Ref., No Pets , Non
Smokers, 8-mi. from Pt.
Pleasant. At 2-N (3041675·
3151

Pleasant, $500/month, next
Downtown location, 1 eR to CourthoUse. Contact Julie
apt, unfurnished, no pets, a
I
deposit. pointpleasanLcomm_rental
refere·n ces,
(740l446·0139 . .
@yahoo.com or (703)528Furnished 1 Br Apartm~lit,
very nice $350/month
(3041675· 2970

real utate advertising
In thla newapaper' Is '
subject to the Federal
Fair t~ouaing Act ,of 1968
which makes It llleg11l to
advertise "any
preference, limttatiQn or
discrimination based on
race, color. religion, sex
familial status Of national
origin, or any intention to
make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.'"

'lhlcks, Graders, Scrapers, Excavators

Train in Ohio
National Certification
-F inancial Assistance

;:;.=======:;
3/7/18 . 10/9/94

Ret1nng from rrt ifitary, comhome after 20 years.
looking for 3BA+ home or
5+ acre buildin g site in
Eastern school district closeto Tuppers Plains or AT 7
with utilities on site. Contact
Jeff 301-636·0664 E-mail
etcshiUet@vahoo.com

1BR. nicely furnished apartment , quiet ar!3a, suitable for
1 adutl, pnvate driveway
w/carport. {740)446-4782.

~"
EtU

· 99 16X80 Schullz New ·
GeneraliOn Vmyt" 5tding ,
shingled 2x&amp;outSrde walls. 3
bedroom 2 bath mb garden tub slat"id-up shower
k:itchel"l appliances central
AJC, h~at pum p g&amp;s fur- .
r ace .ex 12 cove rea front
porCh . shlr1'Jied ~o f'J f mm1
barn 1740)256-6427
'
....,.._......__._
.
Used mobile t-,omes for,sate
f4" &amp; 16' w1de 2 &amp; 3 bed·
rooms 6 to c'"loose frorr
1996 model &amp; up (740)3888513 (dayt1n1e1 17401388-,
BOi7 (even1ngs 1 1740)2940460 { ,...APkends)

__ ---

Monday, March 6, 6:00 pm
Getting ready for yard saleFlea markets or whatever'!

Real Estate

You don ' t want to miss this one.

Real Estate

Good Food, good time for everyone
Auctioneer, Jim Taylor #0014
Licensed &amp; Bonded in favor of State of Ohio &amp; WV

SiteS

._vallal)le
tAove '"

Auction

ESTATE AUCTION
Friday, March 10, 6:00 pm
AMVETS BLDG., ofT Burnette Rd. on Liberty Ave. (Kanauga)
Gallipolis, Ohio

Intersection
of 33 &amp; 654 (..ogan
M·F 9-7: Sat 9-6 Closed Sunday

In Memory

Real Estate

Real Estate

In Memory

In Memory of our Beloved

j/13. 13oso ·

on his 24th Birthday

3/4182. 7/16/05
Remember me, when nowers bloom
early in the spring • .
Remember me, on (he sunny days
in (he fun that summer brings.

·"Great Investment"

Remember me, in the fall,

• Three Bedrooms, One Bath

as you walk through leaves of gold;

' Home rents for

And in the winter time-Remember me
in the stories that arc told.

$100

But most of all· remember each day
will be forever near, for

each

• Possible 4th trailer lot.

right from the start.

I

$4qo per month

• Has Three Trailer lots 'renting for

(Needs set up)

I

live

Use

trailer

r.e nt

toward

mortgage

within your heart.

payment.

Loved and Missed,

minutes from Holzer Hospital.

Grandma, Dad, Sister, Olivia, Brother. Stt!vie,
Nancy, Bob, Peggy, Dave, Debbie, Vic"ki, Tom,
Kim, Buddy; Bonnie, Charlie, Mandy, Michael,

Home

is

located

Home Sold As-Is
· For more information call
Danny
Toll Free 888-368-8467
Auction ·

Auction

IS TEMPORARILY MOVING
OUR NEW ADDRESS IS:
530 ·SECOND AVE.

The Ohio Valley Bank will offer for sale

1994
2000
2000

2001
19112

2003
1~

2005

1996
2004
1998

,'

1998
2004
2004
2002

by.public auction

Valley Bank

Gallipolis , OH on the date and time specified

above

F

b uy or sell. Rive rine
Antiques, 1124 East Main
SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740. 992-2526. Russ Moore,
owner.

where-1s' without expressed

or implied

I

~16
1

AUTOS
FORS.u.E

•--iriiiiiriiiiiiiO._.I
$5001 Police Impounds I
Cars from $500. For listings
600-391·5227 ext 3901

-:cc:---.,.,---1989 Honda Civic 4 speed,
2dr, halchback. brand new
Sony CD player w/remote,
looiC;s/runs good. $BOO.
(740)388-8110.
--------1992 Honda Civic $500.
Cars from $500. For listings

r

.

F!

.

81ock, brick, ..sewer pipes,
)'tindOws, lintels, etc. Claude
Wmlers , Rio Grande, OH
pa11740-24.5·5t21 .

fole Barn 30x50.:1 2 feet
.painted metal, slider, tree
- ~elivery.
Only $7 ,595.
{937)718-1471 . www,nation·

e~leb=~~

St~ndards Acl), work·
ers
compensation
and
demonstrate
extensive experience
In the appllcallon of
these laws. The sue·
ceaslul vendor Is
expec1ed, conslsten1
with the authority and
consent ot the County
Prosecutor, to provide
a wide range of services, lncl(lding consultallon on public
sector employment
issues, public sector
labor rela11ons and
admlnlstra11on, personnel and human
resoUrces consulting . .
Interested
persons/firms must
submit a proposal
which
meets
the
requirements of lhe
Request for Proposal
(REP). The REP which
de1alls Jhe scope of
services requested ,
the desired minimum
quallflcalions of. proposers, submission
guidelines, the evalu·
allan crl1erla, and
other related IIams
may be obtained by
contacting
Jane
Banks, Administrative
Assistant, at (74D)
992·2117 or 1·800·
992·2608 ext. 106, or
by
visiting
the
agency's oHices at
175
Race Street,
Middleport, OH 45760.
, The deadline fo sub. milting pi'oposals Is ·
10:00 A.M. March 6,
2006.
Proposals
received alter this
dale will be rejected.
(2) 19, 27, (3) 5

A~nn=

I

97 Ford Explorer XLT with
trac contrpl, V6, tully loaded, 1994 Dutchman 22 ft.
9-15 mo. Reg . Angus Bulls
.
R
4x4,
red, $4,500. Call camper. sell-contain~ w/
air.
"Sleeps 7.
GoOd
and He1 1ers. eg. 4yr. 8 u11 (740)«G-Q350 _
and Bred cows.· (7401446· m;~..;.~;.;;;.--...., Condition. S4,000 or would
trade fo"r smaller camper
9856.
TRUCKS
(3041675·4510
IURSALE
Angus Bulls, two X-breds, 4 ·--iiiiiiiriliiii;;._.l
heifers. Excellent breedinQ
Slate Run Farm. See 1999 GMC w/extended cab, ·28 ft. Eagle Jayko camper,
www.-s lat erun far m.com , loaded, 305 eng1ne. auto excellent condition, used
transmission, 67,000 miles. only a few ti mes. $8,000.
1740)286·539S.
good clean. solid truck, Call (7401446·3438
BlaCk Angus bulls· for Sate, excellent condition, $8.500.
i ,200 lbs. Call (7401256· (740)44 1· 1014.
F!'lr sale Century 8 ft High
1520.
- - - - - - - - Boy Fiber . Glass Popper.
2001 Dodge Ram truck E.:cellent shape asking
For sale: Boer Goats. Born 2500 SLT Heavy Duty. $250 (3041773·6076
in January, very limiled num- springs, camper special, 1Qber. Champion bloodlines on ply tires. $7 .500. ~all Ed
both sides, also several (740)367-0624 .
purebred breeding
age ~------~
males. Professional breeder. 98 Ford Ranger E.:ICab 4X4
HOME
(740)245-0485 after 6pm. · 6995.00, 91 Ford Ranger · -·ihiiti'RioiiiOii\ioi'EMliiiiili;viiiirs_.
ExtCab 4X4 3215.00, 99
Performance Bull sale. Boyd Ford Ranger ExtCab 4X4
Beef Cattle selling 65 Angus 6995 _00 , 99 Chevy 510
BASEMENT
&amp; 15 Polled Hereford Bulls. ExtCab 4X4 7995..00. 99
. WATERPROOFING
All . A I
Sired.
At
Dodge Dakota Club Cab Unconditiona l lifetime guar6:~ 0pm , Monday 3 ~6106 at 4X4 8495.00 , Riverview a ntee LOcal references fu rthe New OK livestock
Au(:tion on the AA Highway,. Motors ·2 Blocks Abo~e · nished. Established 1975.
M
·u
KY 16061584 _ McDonalds. Pomeroy, Oh1o. Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446aysvl e.
·
740-992-3490
0870. Aoge.rs Basemen!

r

Auction

OlHO UNIVERSITY
SURPLUS AUCTION
Athens, OH
Saturday, March 11 - 9:00 a.m.
Ohio University surplus item s wi ll be sold at public auction .
NOTE: Each qu a rter is a completely n'ew batch of surplus ite m s
to be sold . ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD AS IS/NO GUA RA NTEE &amp;
NO RETURNS. Visit the WEB si te for a complete listing :
www.ohiou .ed u /su rplus, dick on Surplus Information, then
Su rplus Inventory ii1 Stock Item s. Many photos of equipment
and i_tems can be viewed on the OU Surplus web site. Preview
the week befo re - call 740-593-0463 fro m 8:00-4:00 for further
in formation . DIRECTIONS:, Rt. 33/50 Ia Athens to Rl. 682 exit,
go through light at Rich la nd Avenue, turn left at The Ridges and
follow signs to Building 9. SALE ORDER: Computers, printe rs,
technology equ1pment will be sold firs1 beginning at 9:00 a .m .
until finishe d . Two auction rings will be condu cted begirming'at
11 :00 a.m . Vehicles 1vi ll be sold at Noon.
VEHICLES: 1997 Ford cargo va n - w /33,75 1 miles, 1995 Chevy
cargo va n w/38,554 miles, 1995 Ford s ta ti o n wagon w/69,380
miles.1992 Ford cargo va n w /139,774 miles,
APPLIA NCES : ·Kenm ore washer, electric s tove; Rop er &amp;
KenmOre refrigerators, Kelv iftator. freezer, large lighted display
h ood , Samsung / Welb ilt/Tappan / Litton / Amana microwaves,
general floor scrubb~ r, Pfaff sew_in g m ach ine w I ta ble ,
RESTAURANT EQUIPME N T: 5'10 gallon /1·5 gallon stainless
s teel hot /cold therma l containers, 3-stainless s teel plate warmer
carts, ]-stain less steel brea d cart, 3-plate carts, cart w /shelves, 4NCR cash registers, ice machine, ice cream machine, BeverageAir cooler, Bunn restaurant coffee maker, Vulcan stainless steel
commercial table to p stove, Bakers Price. stainless ' steel
commercial tab le top oven , Hobart s tainless s teel crisper I moiste~
1able top oven, Alto-Shaam Halo/ Heat stainless steel system,
Sunroc Soft Touch water jug dispenser, Precision s1ainless steel
food warmer cart, sta inless stee l cart, tray cart · ~ / 11 containers,
jet Spray machine, box of g lass tra ys, ?-boxes of miscellaneous
g lasses, 4-boxes of glass dishes, 4-boxes miscellaneous bowls, 11·
boxes of saucer plates, serving utensils, s tacks of food trays, resin
countertop &amp; hook boa.rd,

VCRs, Sharp/Sony / Mitsubishi / Zenith TVs, Sony 25" video
monitor. Navitar Xenon s lide projectors, 3-IBM typewriters, 8lrack s tereo receiver w / speakers, Sony reel to reel system, 4- .
Micro timef clocks,
·
OFFICE &amp; HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS: 28+ m e tal &amp; wood
d esks, assortment of office chairs, 30+ late ral &amp; Vertical file
cabinets' (2-anhque oak verlical file cabinets). g lass display case,
small wood &amp; metal carts on wheels, foo1 res ts, wooden study
·carrels, large display bmrd , wood podiums,
wood cabinets,
metal storage cabinets, large oval conference table, computer
Jables . assorlment of wood !abies, so fas, end tables, several brass
lamps, compartment mailbox cabinets, a~d other i tems.

s+

MISCELLANEOUS: wheel chair, 5-osc illoscop e m ac hines, unit
pulse generator, plexiglass door, 2-wood door s, Phaser detection
system, m a ilbox w / pos t, m iscellaneous PVC pipe, and other

items.

®nllipohg 11Bntlp \!rribun~
(740) 446·2342

Chevy Colorado Ext. Cab
'05. Auto, 2WD, wlbedliner.
excellent condition. Ke lly
-Blue Book $14,600, wilt sell
tor $13,00). {304)523-11.79

The Daily Sentinel ·
.

For Sale ·1985 3/4 !on Ford
Truck, 460 Engine, Standard
~KC
Golde n Retrieve rs For ,sale S'x5 round bales o1 Trans, 4-Wheel Drive, Heavy
f irst shots and wormed, hay, $17.50. Call (7401446· Duty, complele Truck , for
· ~ight goleil in color. $250 ...Call
parts w/no title (304)7739777.
6076
(7401286·9808

Auction

scanners, Ce_rwi n Vega · &amp; Altec speakers, Kenwood radios, 5-

r1D

Waterprooling.

Auction

COMPUTERS &amp; . TECHNOLOGY EQUIPMENT: 70+ Gateway
compu lers, Dell Optiplex, Canon · 9800, Compaq Prolinea 575,
N e tDala CPU, !Mac.s, 15+ Apple PCs, 100+ Printers (Apple, HP,
Canon, Nee, Epson , Brother, Lexmark), 4-Panasonic desktop
editors, . Sharp computer projection panel, Xerox/Tektronix
560 / Gemicom 4840e / Toshiba 5540 copiers, graphics plotter,
Pitney Bowes I Epson / Canon /Sharp I H P I Brother fa x machines,
15+
Apple /Ca ren / HP /U m ax/Visioneer / Epson / Microtek

F15

l

SUPPU~

The
Meigs .
Depairtment of Job
and Family Services
Is soliciting proposals
from qualified lndlvld·
ualslflrms with extensive experience In
providing
human·
resource, personnel
management,
and
labor relations servtCes to assist the
Department In the
administration ·
of
these
Department
programs.
·The successful ven·

Public Notice

..._ . . ~iiiiiiiiiiliiiii'·-~_.1
.
..,
1988 Full size Bronco, parts
Only, 3oz., auto,· set · of
33.:12:50, 36x1 4:50 used.
'call (7401379·9887.
.

·r

/VANTEO:
Responsible
.,arty to . take on smal l
~nthly. Payments ·on High
Definition Big Screen TV. 1"tlQO 398 3970

r:
·-------.,1

Public Notice

dor
Is hi
~xpecled
h
h J J to
of
1 ave
h Ja 1 9 deeve
t d .
n cat 1un 1 rs
Jec of
11 anr •
ng
s a e c v so V·
lee· laws, state ·p ubllc
seclo·r labor relellons
laws, state and federal
" employment laws (eg:
dl
I I
I
I
24ft. Pontoon boat. 48HP
scr m nat on aws,
lh
F
II
engine. Nearly new trailer.
e
am y
an d
740 446·1543.
Medical leave ..Act,
AlJIO PARI'S &amp;
the
Fair
Labor

riw--·---_.1

Cileel Buildmgs
Last
'chance fo( all 2005 pnces
'before steel goes up. Save
~housandsl
3 sizes lett·
125x48-and-20x26.
Call
,-6day to take advantage,"h
,000..222·6335/ext .1558

BUII..)JING

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids
are
being
accepted for lhe slate
oH the roof of the old
freight depot ·In Dave
Olles
Park .
Approximately 2000
places will be sold as
one lot. No bid lower
.t han $2000.
Bids wlll'be accepted
un111 March 13 2006 a1
4:00 pm. Bid opening
.will be on March 13,
2006 at S:OO p .m. The
VIllage has the right
10 reject any and all
bids.
Anyone wanting 19
look at the slate can
contact Mayor Sandy
lannarelli at 992·270S.
(3) 3, 5, 8 , 9

l!-nd $150.00 a MO{lth . Wide
Selection, low down pay·
ments. M&amp;J Auto. Monday·
to
FARM
I .Salurday, 2:00·6:00 PM.
EQun&gt;llrnlrr
7 40·338·9693-or· 740· 7 42·
2662.
· BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
SIONS, Double bolted. All
load Traillload Max Trailers- 96 Buic~ : LeSabre 97,000 types_ (740 )2 45!5677 or
Goo sen e c k s I 0 u m ps i mi.. needs body work and (740I64S· 7400
Utili ties.
Carmichael radiator, ne;w tires,· battery,
E ui ment 740 446·2412.
bl'akes and rotors, $1,500
CAMPERS &amp;
oso. (740)446-9632.
MmoR HOME&lt;;

~,unday. (740l446-7300

'

s

,\11\l'lfHh.

l'lEW AND USED STEEL
:Steel Beams, .Pipe Rebar
'for
Concrete.
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
~'rating
For
Drains,
·:Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;l
~rap Metals Open Monday.
~Tuesday.
Wednesday &amp;
~iday, Bam·4:3Qprry . ClOsed
•Thursday, Saturday &amp;

". . ·

r

1993 Dodge Shadow. Runs
MOltJRC\'CI.~
gooct, stereo WJCD. 5
4 Wm» ....:NS
speed, $700.00 , 30 mpg., ' .........iiiiiiiiiiiiii--r'
740·416·1472 or 740·992· 1964 FLHTC· 1340CC:
1493.
19,000 miles, BIK/silver
- - - - - - - - $7,500 Firm. (740)286-7212
1999 Olds Eighty-Eight .LS. or (937 )515•8670 _
Well maintained, loaded,
newer tires, eJ~:cellent condi· 1995 Harley Davidson Dyna
lion, 127K miles, asking Wide Glide , 20,000 m1les,
$4,000._(740)245·5934.
loaded, l'nust See $12,000,
(740)992-n58
2001 Grand Jeep Cherokee
Limi ted, wh ite . new tires. 1999 Harley Davidson Ultra
t;Jxcellent cOndition. $12,500. Classic. Loaded, Excellent
(740)446-4060 or (740)367- condition, 29,000 total mites.
_n_6_2_
. - - - - - - Price $13,500. Call 740·
949-22 17 until7 pm.
2001 Pontiac Grand Am GT, 2003 SuzUki 4WD Vinson
loaded, 28K miles garage 500 ATV with 34 mi tes.
kept $9,800 (304)882-2356 $4900 _
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPMENT.
{740)4462002 Suzuki LX 7 4 .:4, PW, 24 2.
1
PL, CD. BO,OOO (moslly highway) miles. $8,500 OBO. 89 Honda Goldwing wltrallCeiiiF {740)20&amp;-0495
er, 8cyl., 45,000 miles, very
- - - - - - - - good shape, well main·
2003 Dodge Neon, stan- . tained, Cover, ·extra lights
d8rd , air, tilt, runs great, and
chrome
$7 150
brand 'new tires, 57,000 (740)441·5540.'
'
.
OBO.
ml' las.
4.ooo
17401256 ·9031. (7401256· 99 Harle"' Fal Boy, 9,400
1233.
t.
miles, lots ol Chrome and
- - - - - - - - - extras. (7401446·9954.
'
77 Olds Cutlass . doe.s not
~r~
BoATS
&amp; M(Jf{)K.'S
run 080. Handmade CILib·
house with porch . As~lng ~---FOIIRiiriiSiiAriiLiiE-_.1

I \tnt 'I 1'1'1 II ...,

0401446-4782.

2004 Chevy Trailblaze r
4WD w/tow pkg .
Kelly
Bluebooks 0 $22,000.
many extras 10,500 miles,
excellent condition, garage
kept. $1? .900 (304 )675 _
1408 .
~l!r--""'!""'!_ _...,
4X4
FOK SALE
.__ _iriiriiiiiiiiiiiiro-

1990 F250 7.3 liter diesel.
4x4
speed, $6,000:
2002, 5 Yamaha
TTR 125L.
just!ike new, $l,SCO. A•dinci
·
gear available. (740)388 8__oo_-3_9:-1-·5_2_27:-e_xt_._c_548
_ _· ."8J:i
~_·~-----:358

Yorkshire Terrier puppy;
CKC registered, beautiful, 4
MERrnANDJSE
mo. ·old , ·Jemale, 3 1/2#.
.'
· $700. (740)742~2803
:16ft. Goldstar factory trailer,
M
I
G,SOO!b axles $900.
•·-USiu•&lt;;!~
~3 model 600 Series Ford L~--""'ililliii'Kil"li=iiil';,o,".,J.
ldump tr.uck,·, ready to go,
) 2,500. {740 )379.235 , .
Baldwin Orgasonic "Organ &amp;
bench. Excellent condition;
'-ppllance Warehouse 101 . perfect fqr home or church;
New and Gently Used $250; 740·446-7711
~ppliances
w/Warrantly,
~ashers,
Dryer&amp;, Musical equipment. Guitars,
~Refri~Jerators . Located next Processors,~eyboards,
~o the Downtown Ripley Post drum machine. amp, etc.
~Ice. Open M-F. 304-372- ~(7!1.4:"0;.l44~6-~97;.0;.;;9;.
. ·,....-,.....,
1
8 186
·
FOR SALE '
par sate: 4 Ne.:tel Cup tick·
-ats, 4 Busch tickets. Bristol
_._
ring Race. Call (740)256· Commercial Property· &amp;
·
·
, 04.
Building for Sale. 9.9 acres.
·
M h'
Amb ros1a
ac me 1nc.
JET
A
B
2 ox 254 2Point
, AERATION MOTORS
PIoute
easant, Wv
555 0
~epa ired . New &amp; Rebuilt In (304 1675·1722.
1 -7_2_o4_._ _
7:30· _s_15_o_._17_4D_36_7.,.
rStock. Call Ron Evans, t4;00pm
·
84 Mercury Couger
5.0 runs
)ltl0-S37·9S28.
Fire Wood . Seasoned .good. $500 OBO. (740)379·
Hardwood
SpH!
and 2930
~obile Home Lo~ lor rent
Delivered. Call 740-949· - - - - - - - 111exl to Methodist Church in
93 Saturn SL2, 4 doors,
2038
~anauga. PriVate, w/carport
auto, Clean, $1 ,000 down

MlscF:1.LANrous

AKC Boslon Terrier puppies.
5194 .
~ brindle, 2 black and white.
$4CHJ. Ready 3/ fS/06 . Call Shelle,d Corn $3.50 per 50.
F40)441- 104.7
12% All Stock $5 .40 per 50.
Other liveslock teed avail·
f\.KC ·cocker Spaniels. able 740·698-09t 1.
}nalel'femeles, vet checked ~~...;..;.;.;~.;.;.~-..,
end shots U1d. $300·$J 50
ll&lt;\Y &amp;
.,
(40· 767-4875
GRAIN
.

.

(740) 992-2155.

~oint

fllragnnt

l\~!Iistrr

TERMS: Cash or check w / pos itive I.D:, Master Card &amp; Visa
Credit Cards accepted
Checks owr 51000 mus t have bank
authorization of fund s availa ble. Food will be available . Not
r es pons ible for loss or accid ents.
OWNER: Ohio Universit\'
WEB: \.Vww.uhiou.edu / s~trplus
,
Clic~ o n S utpii\S lnf9rmation. Surp lu s lnven ton· in Slac k Items
.
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
· AUCTIONEER: John Patrick " Pat" Sheridan
APPRENTICE AUCTIONEER: Kerry Sheridan Boyd &amp; Brent
King licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio &amp; WV - Member of Ohi~ &amp;

National Auctioneer's Association
Email : ShamrockAuction@aol.corit WEB: www.s hamrock-

(304) 675-1333

auctions.com
PH: 740·5924310 or B00-419·9122

BULLETIN BOARD

•

•

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI .

'•

Briaal Registry
Public Welcome

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
Fo_r Computer, Professional, Individual
and Business Tax preparation.
ASK US ABOUT
ELECTRONIC FILING
446· 8677
736 Second .

Gallia Co. Conservation Club
the following ilems:

Meeting

JJ116717
JJ154400
1127714
1072514

Wed. , March 8th
Dinner at 6 :30 pm

•

152"543

1510802
11202037
11021815.
1035333
JJ135211
JJ863708
. 1273891
11231850

..

available at

·

Tope's Furniture
Galleries
151 2nd Ave. 740·446-0332

• Canon

little as 2 days .

30-40% off

446-8727

Tawney Studios
'

CHANNEL
MARKER
CONDOS
'

.

Avenue.

· North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps

2

Sold to the highest bidder · as-

'

warranty

'

•
•
•

•

•Pentax IQZ • Kodak • Nikon

Get your refund in as

'

.

11200051
3rd

Electronic Tax Filing

•

13~52

Annex , 143

now

35 mm Camera Closeouts

&amp; m ay be seen by calling the
Collection Department at1 -888-441 -1038. OVB reserves t~e right to accept I reject
any lind all bids, arl!l withdraw items from sale prior to sale Terms of sale: CASH OR
is,

,~:·

Very good ml•ed hBy· 1999 Dodge 'ourango, tully
square bales. (740)446· loaded, exc"ellent condition,
2412 or (740)645-Q608.
113,000 miles, $8500 OBO.
(740)384-6384 leave message.

Auction

'

DODGE DAKOTA SPORT
GMC SIERRA 4X4 TRU~K
FORD CROWN VICTORIA
ROCKWOOD 23 Ft TRAVEL TRAILER
BUICK LESABRE
DUTCHMEN 26 FT TRAVEL TRAILER
HARLEY DAVIDSON MOTORCYCLE
KAWASAKI2X1000C2 MOTORCYCLE
FORD EXPLORER
CHEVROLET CAVALIER
FORD EXPLORER
DODGE STRATUS .
DODGE RAM 1500 TRUCK
CHEVROLET TRAILBLAZER
DODGE RAM 1500.QUAD CAB

These items are ava ilable at the Ohio

Wiseman is a House/Sold Word.

,anges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
lepalrs on major brands In
&amp;h
t
h
op or a : : :
.
.
""''""~

Public Auction·
March 11, 2006
10:00 a.m.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE INC.

st Floor of the old Warehime Building in
Gallipolis, OH 45631
Everything else is still the same:
PHONE NUMBERS:
Office: 740-446-3644
Fax: 740-446-3725
MAILING ADDRESS:
P.O. BOX 359
WEBSITE:
WISEMANREALESTATE.COM
AS ALWAYS:
Wiseman Real Estate
Since 1943
...
.
-

t

Ohio Valley Bank
'

CKC, 15 w~ old male, standard 'Chihuaht,~a puppy,
lonn-haired.
fawn and wh;te.
S
w
~32_s_(::.74_0.:.I9_92_:·58.:_18:.___
-::
Full blooded FlatTerrier puppies, black/tan, very cute, 6
wks. old. (740 )256 · 1997:
Full blooded Aat Terrier
pups. $75 each. Call
(740l245·906f.
- - -- - - -- Registered Border Collie
pups. Wormed &amp; 1st shots.
Imported blood lines, know
for hearing ins1inct and classic colo_rs. (740)379·9110.

if"hompsons App liante &amp;
t!lepalr-675-7388. For sale,
..
automatic
te·con d1t1oned
\Nashers &amp; dryers, refrigerators, gas and electric

740-388-8115
Website: www.lemleySIIuction.com
Cash/Approved Check Only
No Smoking in Bldg .
••Gun s will be available for viewing from ·
2:00pm until they sell at 6:00pm
Announcements made day of sale takes
prece dence over printed material.
"Not responsible for accidents or lost propenl
Jose h Woodall. Executor
"

Move-in Condition.

Auction

We will be selling the e s tate of
David L. Woodall
Probate C~se #051 089
4 pes . .of marble top Queen Anne style
tables, solid oak dining table w/4 chairW.'
beautiful oak china hutch w/fancy
carvings, 6 fl. s olid oak grandfather clock,
Queen Anne Writing Desk w/chair, walnut
bookcase, lighted curio cabinet. fa ncy 4
pane l walnut room divider, 3 Gone With ·
The Wind style table lamps (handpaintedf
large early American Dresser w/mirrof ,
and ma1ching night stand, Cole man
Cartographer World Globe on stand, love .
seat, coffee and end tables. 4 place setting
of Wilton Columbia Pewter w/several ·
service pes. , Fostoria, D~press ion glass,
Warren Kimble Americana Clilna, 54.
volume set "Great Books of the Wes tern.
World"". 4
volume ··world Famou ~ ·
Orations (1906l. wall clock. several nice
pictures , other books , kitchen items , mi sc.
linens, G.E. Microwave, Kenmore washer
and dryer. Kenmore 15 cu. ft. Upright
· freezer. bookshelves, s terling silver pes. 4
pe·. wicker porch set. concre!e yard items,
cedar porch swin~. lots of misc. glassware
and what-nots, other misc. furniture. rrtis.c .
tools, much more ...
Guns... Reminglon 7MM with Nikon
scope, .410 ga. shotgun, Remingto11 .223
rifle, . 22 cal. HoJllet single shot rifle.•
Russian 7 .62 x 39 rifle wlknife &amp; s heath.
Remington Brazil long 22 cal: rifle. 12 ga.
Model 37 12 ga. pump shotgun , Ru ssian
12 ga. rifie, Springfield 20 gauge Model
67-F shotgun .
Auctioneer: Leslie A. Lemley

only

(7401~88·9338 .

r

Auction

todaV

(740) 385-2434
It's been jive years since you .
were called away;
But we still miss you every day.
Children, Senneth, Glenneth,
Landis, Jieniece &amp; Cledith

Middleport, Ohio ·

740-992-9553

3 Bed/2 bath incl. Delivery &amp;Set

Melp Blgla School Cl8u alllll

'95 Skylme V1n yt ishtn g1e
S1691rrc. Call (7 40)3859948.

461 S.' Third

?,., .t~ 1'"'1

Holly and families.
ar. 2 stor y unatlache
cation
email
~======~
JHoooer2360@peoQJ.e~.
c.Q _
arage, gas well/flee . gas,
m or call
(740)2 45Rutland .
OH
Cal 0037/(304) 675-7624.
Announcements
Announcements
Announcements
740 )7 42 -3 230 .
fl'p pOintments ·only Cod
Quiet . rural . 1ocat1on. Jus1
306.
mtnutes lrom Gallipolis/Rio
"Grande. Spacious 38RI2Ba.
SAVE THE DATEl
large LA; OR. ~itchen Wr'bar.
Saturday, May 27,2006
pump. no smoking
' Family picnic in the allernoon, adults only gathering in the evening.
1-"" Moon .F. HuML'i heat
please. no indoor pets.
You "''ill receive more information this·spring. •• we hope to see you there!
. HJHS~LE
$500/month includes water.
If you are a 1991 MHS graduate or know of one, update addresses
(740)379-9445.
at mhsclass 199 I @holmail.com
' 16•80 mobile horne 3 bedroom. 2 Qalh. heat oump.
5J&lt;8 deck Very OICf!l
Real Estate
. Real Estate
Real Estate
Reel Estete
. (740)388-9170

2006 1s· w1de Spectal Pnc€
$1B1 tmo Call (740)385·
7671

Old Glory Auction

Associated Training Services
2323 Performance Pkwy
Columbus, OH 43207
· www.atsn-schools.com
03·11·1697T

Thrner

Stlfa &amp; chair $1 00; sectional
Wend recliners $100; ref rig·
~Utor $100 ~ Console TV
f.100; RCA stereo $75 ; Ab
x;:Bunger $100; boo~ shelves
E100 each. Phone (740)441b988 .

r

NEW MERCHANDISE SALE

800-383-7364

On Their Birthdays ..
Auguslli
3/4/22 . 12/20/83

AKC Labrador Pup pies, 3
chocolate. 2 black. 1st
wormer &amp; Dew Claw
removed $250 (304)675·
3840 No answer Leav 8 Message
-:-:::-::-----"--AKC Pomeranian puppies. 4
males &amp; 1 female $350
ea'ch . (740)388·8642.
_ _:.__::.::.,:.:...::.:...::::____
AKC registered German
Shorthaired Pointers. Vet
checked, tst shots, excellent blOOdlines. Call anytime

o"

Auction

Job Placement Assistance

"------_.1

This newspaper will not
· knowingly accept
advertisements for real
estate which Is in
2 bedroom apar tme nt in
violation of the law. Our
Centenary, au utilities paid
reacle.rs'are hereby
e.:cept electric $325. Call
inrormed that all
(740)256-1135.
dw811ings advertised in
this newspa~r are
3BA Condo at Hilton Head
' a\Uiilable on an equal
for week of May 6- 13,2006.
"::op::po:rt~u:":;1~y~··~·:
..:·~
Includes golf package. $900.
_
i 'iSESiii·li-_.1 Call (7401441 ·0197.
C,Ollntry
hOm€ 1n :.JaCkSOn r.10--liHiiOiiU
~
FOR RF."lf
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
Co. Seven rooms 1.5. bath,
MENTS AT. BUDGET
hardwood fl oors, full base· 1BA Cabin. ·all uti lilies paid. PRICES AT JACKSON
ment. 2:5 car garage. 11.27 Between Rio Grand,e &amp; ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
acres. lwo barns. mature Jackson. (740)441-011 7
Drive from $344 to S442.
, pine trees. Pnce $149.000
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
{937)515-8670 or (740)286- 3 Bedroom House in New
740-446-256f;l.
Equal
72 12_ .
Haven
· $375/monlh,
Housing Opportun ity.
$350/deposit.
No Pets
' Five bedroom
3.5 Oath
1304 )882·3652
house in QUiet neighborh ood
near PomerOy. Hardwood s room &amp; LA. 1 ba1h &amp; show- -;=:::C:a:r:d:o:f:T:h:;:a:;n:k::s;;
floo rs . oak doors and tn m, t!r, refrigerator, propane · 11
fireplace , 2 car garage , range, propane heat &amp; air,
We would like to
deck 2 k1tchens, 2 livin9 outside building, no inside
thank everyone
rooms, storage "room. 3.000 pets.
$450/rem .
sq. feet $164 .900 Call $450/depo~it
(7 40)379- who has shown us
·740-416-4765 after 4:00 2254.
love and .•upport
PM.
---~--,___..,
7 acre country tlome. 3 bed: through the loss of
room. 2 fu ll baths. wid,
refrigerator, range, electric &amp;
our son, }Ohfl:
water paid. free yard mowDenver (JD)
ing, propane heat &amp; woodCurtis. A special
burner, newly remOdeled
thanks go~s out to
monthly plus deposit, cal l
Ptistor John
between 9-2pm at (740)674695 t
Gilmore &amp; Rev.
Across !rom Wai-Man. 38R,
Dewayne Stutler
Newly remodeled. 3 or 4
LA,
kU
..
bath.
TV
room,
W(D
for
the wonderful
bedrooms. central air, full
central
geis
service they
basement. hardwood lloors, hookup,
detached garage. large cov· heat/cool, back porch/yard
No pets .. $450/month -plus
provided.
ered patiO, fe11ced back
utilities
.
$450/deposil.
referWe
will never be
yard . close to schools. Point
ence.
m1nimum
1yr.
lease
able
to tell
Pleasant ,
$69 500
Phone
[740)446-9772
(740)709- 1382
weekdays 9am-5pm.
fVtry~ne how
www.orvo.com
much we
Applications are now being ,
Home listings.
accepted, lor small farmappreciate all thai
L1st your home Oy calling
house near Aro Grande.
you have done
1740)446·3620
$400/month plus utill ti9s.
for us.
One bedroom . Background
Vie~ ohotos/1 nio online.
C hec~ will be preformed.
Thank you
Sec
.
9eposit
reqwed.
Mike
&amp; Julie
~ome ot Distinction 3 beCI
Available April 1st. For appll·
Fleming
oom. 3 bath, 2 acres.

2004 16x80 Clayton vinyl
siding. shtngles, 3 bedroom,
2 bath, mb wal~-in closet,
eJCcellent condition 740-3799189

Auction

-========

l Og

1987 Oakwood 14•70 2BR ,
2bath. If\ excellent condition.
Ready lo move in . set Up pn
private
lot.
lot
rent
$125/month New professtona.lty lflSlalled carpet arid
vrnyl tliroughout. 8.:20
porch/room addti!On. 16}(24
ga rage·. Worlh · $21 .000 .
must sacrif1ce lor $14.000.
(740)645-1968 or (740)6453440.

' 1998 21' Marada MX-3
&lt;Gold Packa&amp;el Runabout Boat
• Mercruiser V-6 Engine
with just 110 hours of use.
• Custom tops, trailer and
accesson es.
• Stored inside for Winter. ·..,
• EXCELLENT CONDITION
$10,499
Call after 6 pm • 446-4066

Jlulldozers, Backhoes, Loaders, Dump

Robert
Mobile home spaces in Moctern 1 bedroom apt. No
3/6/50 • 12112/80
22 acres, wonderful view, Country Mobile Home Par ~. pets . $265 'month , $200
We cannot send a
• ridgetop property, close to ;.17"4..
01;,;38
;;;5;.-4.;;0;.1;;;9·~---. deposit. {740)446·3617 . ·
main highway pertect tot 4·
APARJ'MENJ'S
Birthday Card . .
One · s~ aPartment, close to Your hands we cannot.
wheeler trails, (740)707FOR RENT
Holzer
Hospit!lll
'f"/D
touch. But God will
2109
hoo~up . OeposiVreferences
send our message to
1 and 2 bedroom ·apart- required. (7401446·0834.
ments, furnished and unfur· - - - -- - - - the one we loved
n·ished , · security deposit Twin Rivers Tower Is acceptso much.
Need to sell your horrie? required, no pets, 740-992· ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
late on payments. divorce. 2218.
Father. Daughters.
job transfer or a death? I 1BA apt 4 rent. Stove/refrlg. apartment, call. 675-6679
Gmndsons, Brothers
EHO
can buy your home. All cash
and quick closing . 740-416· water/trash/sewer pd. $325
mo.
!7401367·7015. - - - - - - - - - 3130.
17401446-4734. .
In Memory

t

Announcements

Refrigerator wh!te Whirlpool
$125; refrlgeratorwhite641n.
high 28w., washer GE $95,
dryer GE $95, range 301n
$95. Genes Appliances 76
Vine St., Oal!lpolis. OH,
J?40)446·7100 or {740)7091101 .,

BOAT FOR SALE

Training For Employment

r

All

New Berb'tlr carpet $6.951 _ _ _ _..:,._ __
yard. Ramanents starting at
Announcemtntl
$25. Mollohan Carpet, 76
Vine
St.,
Gallipolis,
(740)446·7444.
'--'------New Couch &amp; Loveseat,
$450. Call Mollohan Carpet
(7401446·7444.

Operator

0617.

":W
j
5

SHOP tHE
CLASSIFIEDSI

;================:;
Heavy Equipment

. In Memory .

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Alver'side
Apartments ln Middleport.
From $295-$444. Cali 740992-5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.

BEKfroom furniture quality
five piece set $950, Recliner
$125, Curio cabinet $125.
(740)256-t428. See
bc-sales.com,for pictures.

2 Whirlpools
Wllher,
..._
FOR RENr
• Kenmore dryer, burgundy
recliner, red cook stove,
warm morning coal/wood
Downtown Office Space- 5 burner, entertainment cenroom suite $650fmo; 1 room ter. Call (7401441-11959.
office- $225/mo.; 2 · room --~----:------:-:-:-::--:-::--:-:-:--suite 52so1mo. security
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

r.:i

.:.....o:.......:...-=-=---48A. Foreclosure. only

U\.I'UIA:I

i-.r--::-...--.,1

references.
Stop ren Ung Buy 7 bedroom deposit,
foreclosure $18,000. For list- (7401446-9209.
utilities. Allrequired.
spaces very
deposit
You nice.
pay
ings 800·391·5228 ' ext.
EIIMI!Or. Call (7401446-3644
CONVENIENT~Y
~OCAT·
1709
tor appointment
ED &amp; AFFORDAB~EI

rade ol house 1n town o

lf16

HOUSEIIOIJl
Goool

acres, approiC. 1,900 sq. ft. 3 ;.,n;;;e'-A~ocC.re•.-M
"••o_
=o•"• '. "
• o"mMle, -:ol~~--~-...., Townhouse · apartments,
bdr, 2 baths. 2 car garage.
BR. 2BA, LA . Kitchen,
M
H
and/or small houses FOR - - - - - - - - ' inaster txlr. is 281(24 with a !Deck&amp;Buildings. Air. See a
OBILE OMES
RENT. Call (740)441-1111 Retail and office space availjacuzzi
tub
S 125.000. 76 Osllel Ad.will con side ___
1-UR RENT
tor ,application &amp; Information. tlble in downtown Point

(740)446-7029

Sunday, March 5, 2006

6, tully

furnished,

424 2nd Ave.

446·1615

..

Sign-ups for summer' b aseball and
softball for Green Ball Association
on Tuesday. March 7 , 2006
from 6 -8 pin in the
Green Elementary Art room.
All p layers must registe-r Jo play.

The Medical
Shoppe
has move.d to
better serve you.

Spring Valley
Plaza
Next door to D o minos P izza

446-2206

row ocE~an view.

Openings from May thru Sept .
446-2206 M on thru Fri .
or leave message

CERTIFIED CHECK.

·- -- ----·- -

'·

-----~----------------------------------------------~----'-,7·

-

'

'

�PageD6

FARM. GAR.DEN

iunba~ limes -ienttnd

Iran issues warning as
U.N. watchdog prepares
to discuss suspect
nuclear program, A2

Sunday, March 5, 20o6,

Bluebeny School Advance counter-cyclical .payments availabl~
set f~r March 13-14

•

PIKETON - Ohio State
University E:»tension and
Michigan State University
Extension are joining forces
to provide Midwest b,erry
growers with an intensive
two-day training on berry
production and management,
with· a specitic emphasis on
blueberries.
The Ohio Berry/Blueberry
Grower Training Program
will take place March 13-14
at Ohio State University
South Centers at Piketon in
Piketon : Sessions on March
13 will run from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. Sessions on March 14
'will run from 8 a.m . .to 5
p.m. Cost of the event is
$100, which includes sessions. notebooks with topics
translated in Spani sh. handson field practice to take
place in early, summer, and
catered.Junches. ·
Those who are unable to
attend the training program
may receiv.e a video of the
program, along with the notebook and handouts for the
registration fee.
Research specialists from
both universities will be on-

hand to discuss a wide variety of topics.
Topics
will
include
Integrated Pest Management
of insects , diseases and
weeds, plant growth and
development, insect and disease growth and development. weeds and soi ls,
cross-cultural
education,
principles of scouting, food
safety. pesticide safety and
regulations, use and management of insecticides,
• fungicides and herbicides;
leadership training, soil and
. plant ti ss ue sampling techniques, and monitoring and
management of insects, diseases and weeds.
Atten'&lt;:Jees with Private
Applicator licenses may cam
Applicator Recertification
·credits.
, For more ;,~fonnatirm ~ or
.to regisre1~ contact Brad

.GALLIPOLIS
The
2005
second
advance
counter-cyclical (CC) payments that producers ]]ave
requested may now be
issued, according to Tom
Woodward, Area Committee
Chairperson.
·Producers enrolled in the
DCP may receive countercyClical payments as authorized by the 2002 farm bill.
Producers ·are ·eligible for
· counter-cyclical payments
when effective prices fall
below target prices as specified in the 2002 farm bill.
The effective price equals
the direct payment rate plus
the higher of either:
( I) the national average
market price received by producers during the marketing
year; or

(2) the national average
loan rate for the commodity.
Second Advance 2005-crop
counter-cyclical
payment
Rates: The 2002 Farm Bill
allows prodl\cers to receive
counter-cyclical payments in
three installments:
· • The first in October (up to
70 percent of the total projected rate , less any amount
received in the first payment):
and
• The final payme1it after
the end of the marketing
year, which varies by commodity.
USDA issued the first 2005
counter-cyclical partial payments in October 2005. lhe
total projected and second
partial payment rates for 2005
are based on supply, demand
and price forecasts from

USDA's
report,
World
• Wheat, barley, and oatsAgriculture Supply
and May 31, 2006.
.
:
Demand Estimates. USDA
• Corn, grain sorghum and
issued the report Feb. 9, 2006. soybeans- Aug . 31, 2006. '
The total projected and secThe 2002 Farm Bill
and partial payment rates for requires that any overpay• ·
2005 corn are $0.40 Total ments to producer~ must b~
$0.28 Seco'nd Partial Rate.
repaid. Most producers in ouP
Producers of oats, soybeans counties choose not to
and other oilseeds are ineligi- ·receive the advance counter•
ble for second partial counter- cyclicalb'ecause of the provi~
cyclical payments because sions that they may have to
.effective prices of the com- repay. With the 2005 crop
modi ties are equal to or more · corn mar~eting season tlU.i
·· than their respective target far &lt;dong, the producers can
price.s.
come in now and get tht;
2005
Counter-cyclical- advance for the 2005 crop .
Payments: ·USDA determines and not worry as much ab~ .
final counter-cyclical pay- repay1ng .
ments after the. end of the ·Fur additional information;,
marketing year for each com- please contact ihe Farm '
modity. The end of the 2005- Service Agency ar 111
06 marketing year for each Jackson Pike o1· call (800)
.~ommod it Y. is:
;39 1-6638 or 446-8687.

Buffalo too powerful
for \Vhite Falcons, Bt

tne
. Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
CENTS • Vol. 55, No.

!lO

141

MONUAY, MARCH

ww\\ , mrdailysentinel.cum

6, 2006

·AEP fini~hes some preliminary site work at Great Bend

SPORTs·
.• Redmen take two from
Bears. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
. BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

GREAT BEND -Core
soil samples from American
Electric Power's· proposed
IGCC . power plant· site . are
now being tested, while
imother firm continues a
search for historic artifacts
in the area.
As AEP and . the pub! ic
await a decision from the
Public Utilities Commission
on the power company 's

Berge}'itrd
or
Charity
Crabtree at (740) 289-.
2071. or ·e-mail bergefurd. 1@osu. edu. Additional
i11.furmarion can also be
found by logging o111o
h rtp:l/so u rh cen re rs. osu. edu/
hart!.

proposed cost recoyery plan,
AEP continues to oversee
and perform site preparation
work, in order to keep the
proposed plant on a pre-construction schedule.
AEP
Spokesman
Jeff
Rennie sa id Friday the
drilling of soil core samples
was completed, and those
samples are now being tested. AEP is now overseeing
&gt;the completion of a stud;y of
the site's underlying geological structure . That is, ensur-

ing that the underlying geology can support the plant 's
·footprint.
An independent firm is
completing an hi stori cal survey of the 1,300-acre &gt;ite
near the Ravenswood, W.Va .
Bridge. That study determines that no signilicaht historical artifacts will be disturbed by the construction.
The se studies will be
required for the permitting
process throu gh the Ohio
Power Siting Board and

other permtttm g agencies.
including th e U.S . Arm v
Corps of 'Engineers. Wh'ei1
the work began la st falf.
Rennie said the preliminary
work is being completed
before the cost recovery plan
is· decided. in order to kee p
the five-year comtruction
plan on schedule.
The comment period on
AEP's· cost recovery plan
ended in October. and the
PUCO has not yet i&gt;sued a
final ruling on whether the

c11mpany can collect
construction co&gt;h before the
plant i' opera(i ona l - an
unu , ual re4ue.st for most
proposah .
AEP hopes the plant's
constru'ction can begin by
the end of thi' vcar. and that ·
it can be operatin g by the
m1ddle of 2010.
Rennie ' aid AEP knows
no more than the general
public as Ill when the PUCO
might rul e ''" the cost recovery plan.
pm~ e r

.Workshop presents Civil War lifestyle, gives
·previe~ of upcoming Morgan's Raid

Sight Center
hires teacher to
serve visually
impaired

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Br

·'

THIS WEEK'S FEATURES

0BITUARIFS
Page AS
• Wesley Earl Kelvington
• Harold H. Smith
• James 'Elmer' Kapp
• Ruth Louise Bowman
Sheward
. • Mary M. Swick
. • William Monroe
Watson

INSIDE
• Pakistanis flee unrest
after worst fighting in
volatile border region in two
years. See Page A2
• Birth announced.
.See Page A3
• Rankins announce birth
of son. See Page A3
• God's NET sets up prom
dress loan center.
See Page AS
• Kyger employee
receives service award.
See Page AS
• Council drapes charter
.for deceased member:s.
See Page AS
• Funding 'to clean up
pollution from coal mines at
risk. See Page AS

AP Photo
In this photo provided by Lee Reich, late winter is when the.
sap starts flowing in· maple trees , sap that ca·n be boiled down
into sweet syrup. A single tree could yield you over a quart of
finished syrup - a very special treat when you have collected
the sap and boiled it down yourself.

.MAPLE TREES ·SHARE
DIEIR SWEETNESS
·

BY

LEE REICH

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

Late winter is when the sap
starts I1owing in maple trees.
sap that can be boiled down
into sweet syrup.
Ideal conditions are sunny
days with tell)peratures ih the
40s. following nights when
the mercury dips into the 20s.
Even a single tree could
yield you over a quart of fin ished syrup - a very special
treat when you have collected
the sap and boiled it down
yourself.
Sun warming a tree con- ·
verts its ·starches. to sugary
sap. The tree pumps thi s
sugary 'ap at about 20
pounds per 'quare inch pressure up into the buds, down
towards the roots, and outwards towards the .bark.
Poke a hpllow tap - called
a spile - into the trunk. anti
out pour' some of that '"P·
It's that simple .
Buy spiles or make tradi- ·
tiona! ones from four-inch
length s of haJf,inch-thick.
hollowed out elderberry
stems. Sti Ck spiles into tight
~ol es that yo u drill in the
bark, each hole an inch,anda-half deep and pointed
slightl y upward. Don ' t make
too many holes, though: none
on a tree lei; than a foot
across. one for a tree a foot
across. an add itional one fnr
each additional &gt;ix in ch
diameter of. trunk.
No need to find a ; ugar

maple per s~ in order to make
maple syrup. You can also tap
sap from box elder, which is a
well as red
maple species,
maple ,
Norway
maple ,
wcamore maple, and silver
maple . Each tastes a little different. Not better or worse,
just different,
The sap from any of these
trees is only abqut 3 percent
sugar. so must be concentrated to make a tina! syrup of
about 63 percent sugar.
American Indians made thei.r
sisibaskwat !"drawn from
wood '' ) by skimming ice off
the frozen , collected sap. or
by repeatedLy dropping hot
rock s into wooden troughs of
sap. Large batches call for an
oLudoor kettle and fire. but
an indoor ; tove is fine for·
smaller batches. Just keep an
eye on the . sa p as it boi Is
because it tends to froth as it
nears ihe final stages.
The eas iest way t'o tell
when the sy rup is finished is
by taste and color. Finished
syrup is brown. thick. and
very sweet. If you prefer it
to be more quantitative,
;ri ck a. cand y thermometer
in your boilin-g sap. Finished
syrup will boil at 219
degree; Fahrenheit.
. Ortce you have drizzled
map le 'y rup over llapjac.ks to
yo ur heart \ content, what
else can you· do with it 0
Vermont Special is a punch
made from one part rhubarb
juice-. nne part maple sugar.
and two part\ rum.
·

as

2001 CIEVY COBALT
LS COUPE

2006 CHEVY

Front WhlllllriYa,
Air ConcMtionina. AM/fM Swao

.8 Way Powar Stat, Powar Windows,
Powar lcxh, Cruise, Tih Stttring

IMPALA LS

'19,81'

WEATHER

.
28 CHEVY SILVERADO
314 TOIIID RES. CAB 4WD
Vortec 6000 Engine,
Air CondiMonflllt

-

· 2007 CHEVY
TAHOE4WD
Yorje( V-8, Alr Cooditlonlng. .
AM/fM StMeo, CD Playw .
Details on Page AS

INDEX .
Call 3 72·2844
Toll Free 1 ·800-822-041 7
Visit us online at
www~tompeden.com

Take 1·77to Atpley
FAIAPLAIN Interc hange
(exrt 132) Turn North

on Route 21.
Dealership IS
3 miles on lert

' Tam, lavs, fdle fees extra. Rebate indudd in selt price of new vehicle filled
where uppltcuble. On approved credn. On stltded mOdels.
NOI responsiblt for typographicalerroo. Prices good IMrch 3rd through March 5th

2 SEcnoNs - 12 PAGEs

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

•

~·

•

·"

.....

....

._-~--

475 South Church Slreet, Ripley • Monday - Saturday 9 am - B pm • Sunday I pm - 7 pm

Calendars

A3

· Classifieds

83-4 .

Comics

Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather
© 2006 Ohio \'~tilt.!')

B Section

As
Publi~hintc .Co .

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

POMEROY - A glimpse
HO EFL IC H@MY DAIL YSE NT IN El. COM
of life in the 1860s along with
a spirited preview of things to
· POMEROY Vi sually
come thi s fall when Morgan's
'impaired Meig&gt; Countians
Raiders ret~w to Meigs ·
now have a new teacher to
County was given to those
prov1de se rvice s to them '
attending Saturday's Civil
through a program initiated
War period clothing and culby ·the Southeast · Ohio
tural workshop.
Sight Center ·
Women in period costum ing
The prog ram is being
greeted guests who mingled
funded initially by a startamong display s featuring·.
up
·g rant
from
the
weaponry, military attire,
Osteopathic
Heritage
period clothing and underpinFoundation of Nelsonville.
nings .and fabri&lt;;S from which
M i &gt;ty D. Mayle has been
they could be made. along
hired as a new teacher ·of
with children 's toys of the late
the blind for the Sight
mid-1800s. and books on the .
Center located in Athe"ns .
Civil War years from the
She will. be serving individ~
Meigs County Library.
uals with visual impairment
Keynote speaker for the
in
both Meig s and Athens
workshop held at Meigs High
County. Her office is locatSchool and hosted by the
ed
in Bui Iding B on the
Chester-Shade
Historical
Ac'
e
Net
Bu sine " Incubator
. Association was Darrell
Campus at 94 Columbus
Markejohn who portrayed
Road in Athens.
Confederate Gen. John Hunt
Mayle ~rad uateu from
Morgan in Ohio's bicentenniCha~ene
Hoefttch/
photos
Ohio
. Uni';e rsitv · with a
al reenactment of Morgan's
of · Science
Raid through Vinton · and · Sixth Ohio Cavalry members, Mike Church, left, and Darrell Markejohn display uniforms and · Bache lor
weaponry
of
the
Civil
War
at
Saturdays
clothing
and
cultural
workshop.
·
·
Dcg
rfC
in
Child
&amp; Family
Meigs Counties three · years
Studie&gt;
.
During
college
she
ago. He will be leading the
\'Oiun teered at 'a local nurstroops again when the reenacing
home and an a'Sisted
tors return for Morgan's Raid
livin!!
facilitv. After ~radu­
II Sept. 6-10.
ation'
,he tibta'illeu ' three
"We're going .to do it
year~ uf ca~e management
again."
announced
experience.
coordtnatin.g
Markejohn . He noted t h~t
.
se
rvice;
fo
r
childre
n with
planning for this year's raid
di , abilitie' in Davton .
has been goi ng on for a year
She i' curren-tly taking
and that about 300 horsemen
courses at Ohio
gra
duate
from 26 states will be taking
Uni1·er,il\
and enrolled in
part. He said they will camp in
the Hadl e1 School for . the
Wilkesville overnight on Sept.
Blind · Ji~tance lea rning
6 and begin their 60-mile ride
program
for profe ,sio na1
1
from there the next day.
'tuJent1 . She i&gt; prc&gt;ently
He encouraged residents
rccc
i\' inu intcn:-.in: 0 11 -thcw~o live along the route to
jn
h
tr:tinin)! under · the
"get out and experience the
s upen "I n n
of
Susan
'event." The exact route will
Thtlumart
in
.
Dire
,·
tor·
of
be published when the time
ClieiH
Servi
ces
.
gets closer, he said.
--~1i't" ha' the &lt;kill s to
As for activities. Markejohn
hec o me
an
·excellent
$a id on Thursday eve ning
!
teacher.
"
'aiJ
Thngmartin
.
(Sept. 7) the troops will camp
1 "She i' 1 cry in;ightful and
overnight at the Joe Hall farm
pi,·k, up on the need' of
after a scrimmage. Friday
the cl ient. We are \erv
morni'ng the cavalry ~ill head
'ple :"ed tu ha1 ~ her on nu'r
out to Peach Fork Road,
'tall ..
where in an open space the
\la' lc "ill host an open
riders wi II conduct programs
hllu 'e on Frida\·. March 17.
for school chi ldren.
.
"Friday morning we ' ll ride Owen Blackwood and his wife display toys of the late 19th century: Blackwood spoke on play- from I I a.m . in : p.m. at
.her ''ff1.:e on Columbus
into Chester and that night things of children in that time period.
Rt&gt;ad . ~1e anwhile questions
there wi ll be a dance on the
I or rekrral-. f \1f ... en i("e.; for
Commons, and on Saturday Fourth Wi sconsin Infantry
we ' II move on to Bash an and Cavalry's role in the Civil
1 j, u.illl impaired intlilidu where another sc rimmage will War. He to ld of the liardships
ah ma1 he directed' to her
take 'place on an actual Civil they endured. not unwnimon
I-XtlO-lJn 1)-.141JO
War battlefield ." said the · for military personnef of that
Th,· Soulhea't Ohill Sicht
reenactor.· He noted that a time. of the years they spent in
Sch uyle r Cone
Center rn ..\then' ,erve, the
.barn dance will take place that Louisiana and of the Battle of
models attrre
hlind :n\J 'i'uall &gt; impa ired
ni~ht.
·
BatonRouge in 1862 .
111 \\'a,hin~t,&gt;n. Vinton.
Sunday morning the cavalry
Schuyler
Cone.
Ohi o
weapons carrred
\1,&gt;rgan. Pcrr1. Hnc+.ing .
will heatl east to Portland .University
Professor · of
:lfltl
FatrficlJ
Cllu ntie,
by Crvrl War cav'
where there will be a reenact- Fashion and Retail . presentl'tl
undn a ~ra nt frnm the
alryn.len .. for ·
mcn t of the Battle of clothin!! fa,hions of the late
OhH' Bur~ au of St•ri. i ce~
speaker Mrke
Bullington Island . He said 19th Century describing
Church. reenac- . tn r lh,• \. r, uall: lmpa rred .
cftons are being made in get women's dress"es a' dc&gt;igned
Till' Srght Ccmer i ' a
'tor. Cone. an OU
permission to reenact lhe bat- with ruffles anti ribbons.
professo r. ta lked · ntmpwl it C:tH n munit } -ba,ed
tie on the actu&lt;.tl grou nd where hraid' and bows. fashioned
llrpnrt:ll lon thai help, pcoabout wome n· s
it took place.
with ti ers and tucks worn with
pk "ith m.1c·ui.u de gcncraperrod clotllrng.
Mike Church. a memnc·r of la yers of petticoats. ami
lion. J r.rt&gt;etlc·" retinllpath:.
' cavalry un1t. tOjlped with cape.s·and ···ltl''ks
the. s·1xt h Oh 10
' ~ ..
and nt hl' r -...c\l."'re· e\e di..,orwhich is planning the Raid.
Li L Golowenski. a designd
dcr' lead nwre rndependent ·
'di splayed un iforms nf the and seamstress. displayed
. J t iC'
l),·pe nd lng lln the.
Union and
Confederate penod garments and prescntle' d of ' . . ._.n i~..· c..., needed
Snltliers ;ilong with the vari - eel C&lt;Histruct ion te ch nique &gt;,
llk·re r- ncu alh nc&gt; charge.
ous weapons ihey carried .
01her
panicip&lt;mts
anJ
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