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                  <text>_Page 86 • &amp;aturba!' l!:imel -&amp;rntinel

Saturday, May 3, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, wv .

Ex-wife caught unaware
in couple's snare·of deceit
DEAR ABBY: My ex-wife,
"Jan," and I woric for the same
company. Before I filed for
divooce, I secretly began dating
her co-woricer, "Carol." After
the papers were filed, Jan
moved out and, being upset,
needed someone to talk to. She
chose Carol to confide in.
Carol, not wanting to expose
that we were lovers, gave Jan a
sympathetic ear. At one point,
Jan told Carol that she was her
"best friend." Carol would
SOill\ltirnes call my wife to find
out what her plans were on a
particular night so our paths.
wouldn't cross if she and l were
out on a dale. Jan unknowingly
baby-sat for Carol's children so
we could sneak out ·
Carol eventually broke up
with me and wants to remain
friends with Jan. Jan still does
not know about our affair. This
5eems like the ultimate form of
deceit.
Should I tellllly ex-wife what
really went on - or keep my
mouth shut? •• TORN
BETWEEN TWO EX·
LOVERS
DEAR TORN: Confession
is gCK)d for the soul. By all
.means tell your ex the IJUth.
You'll be domg her a favor. She
thinks Carol is her friend
instead of the opportunist she
really is. A person who will
betray you once will think

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
•

nothing of doing it again. (You
should know!)
DEAR ABBY: I am a 47year-old divorced mother of
two boys. My ex split four
years ago, and for the past two
years I've been dating a wonderful man I'll call Ron.
My 80-year-old mother met
Ron early on and says she cannot stand him. She can't. give
me a reason, but insults him to
his face, which is every bit as
insulting to me. I love Ron and
want to marry him, but Mother
is making it impossible. She
constantly makes demeaning
remarks about him to my boys.
Ron is urging me to limit the
amount of time the kids and I
spend with Mother. However, I
am an only child and she never
lets me forget I'm "all she has."
Abby, I love Ron •• and so do
my boys -- but Mom is making
all of us miserable. Help! CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE

INTEXAS

ACROSS

Commer·
clala
4 Lounge
7 Jazz's
home
i1
·humbug!"
12 Sapporo
'
sport
13 Wacky,
DEAR CAUGHT: Now is time to talk to your husband's
to Juan
the time to be strong and· nip doctor. Changes in personal 14 Ms.
Thurman'- .
this in the bud. Tell your moth- hy$iene can be a symptom of
15
Quick
cut
er that you and the boys are no senous depression. Your hus16
'Lawn
longer all she has. She has Ron, band's whole identicy may have ·17 Monotony
too. She can accept him as the been tied to his job .: and now
19 Outlawman you love and be part of needs help. He need~ a men~l
~ursuers
your "one bi~ happy family," or and phys1cal evaluatiOn by his 21 abokov
novel
she can risk 1solatmg herself by doctor. Marriage and .indiv1dual
putting him down and tl)'ing to counseling could also benefit 22 Fast lets
23 Thin
control you. The choice IS hers. you both. Please don't wait.
Dear Abby is written by 26 ~ancakes
DEAR ABBY: My husband,
lu
"Gene," retired ·10 years ago. Abigail Van Buren. also known
symptom
During his long career, he wore as Jeanne Phillips, and was 28 Electric
fish
a suit and tie every day. founded by her mother, Pauline
29
airport
Although Gene was never a Phillips. Write Dear Abby at 31 Paris
Hoagies
slave to fashion, he showered · www.DearAbby.com or P.O! 35 Corporate
and shaved, used a deodorant Box (j9440, Los Angeles, CA
YIP
and put on clean underwear 90069.
37 "Biondle"
~ld
every day.
39 French
Since Gene's retirement. his
monarch
attention to personal hygiene
40 Blushing
has deteriorated. He showers,
shaves and changes his clothes
only once or twice a week. I
have to constantly change our
· bedding and use room freshener on the pillows, sofa cushions,
etc.
I have tried presenting myself
as a "role model." telling my
husband how good it makes me
feel to be clean and start ''fresh"
. No matter what
every day, hoping he 'II get the
message. But he thinks I'm direction you turn
being obsessive. Abby, .what "OU can always
should I do? - WANTING A :t
CLEAN GENE IN A LAS ,
VEGAS SUBURB
DEAR WANTING: It's ;L__,!;!,g
1

.

marshal
Caterwaul
Tal
language
Cancel
Sheltered
Mad. staffer
Besides
Composer
-Rorem
Droop

54
56
57
58
59
60
61
62

20

DOWN
23
24
25

Touch
Knight's
wile
3 Upstream

1
2

26

27

~awner

4
5
6
7

8
9
10
12
18

yanmar,
once
Yves' pal
Easy win
Joyce novel
Browned
bread
Farm units
Mortar
trough
Atelier
In

30

32
33

34
36
38

Aberdeen
Columbus
sch. ·
Insect
Law: Lat.
Percent
ending
Join forces
Exercise
room
Thing,
In law
Internet
addr.
-choy
Female rei.
Get
wrinkled
"Becket"
actor
Gloating

41
~~:!"-'~

BY BERNICE BEDE OsO\.
. Speculative enterprises
could be especially appealing
to you in the year ahead, and
you may venture into several
at the same time. However,
the results should ·be favor·
able if you don'ttake on more
than ~ou can manage.
TAURUS (Apnl 20-May
20) - Your weakness for
beautiful things could get the
best of you today. so even if
you dec1de to stay home and
watch television, stay off the
shopping channels. Your re·
sistance is too low .

GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
- Nothing is gained by re·
hashing volatile domesuc is·
sues with someone· in your
family . Anything either of
you say to the other will be
taken as an offense and bnly
fuel the flames further.
CANCER (June 21 -July
22)- Normally you like do- ·
ing things for others, but to·
day their demands might ap·
pear to be a bit extreme to
you and make you feel like
the fall guy for their own

.

needing to issue orders, be as

tactful as possible in how you
handle others. Resentment
could run rampant.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
-Because you're not apt to
be too lolerant today of mdividuals who do not wholeheartedly support your views,
you could easily press your
opinions on them and inv·ite

Dec. 21)- No one enjoys a
good debate better than you.
but today it might be wise to
avoid one. You could carry
things too far and put a valued
relationship in jeopardy by
your zeal to win.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19)- Should you deem
your workload to be a bit
heavier than usual today, your
repugnance could cause you
to compound the condition by
making everything you do .
. harder than it needs to be.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- If you are not mindful
of your conduct at all times
when engaged in a social in·
volvement today there is a

Jom Unlllll

~ . ~~e .

1stDOWN

·~

2nd DOWN

• 11

Answer
to
· previous

o.dOOWN

. 90

Word

41hDOWN

• 121

an argument.

· SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Try nol to give away
the .store today just to make a
deal. Be profit conscious at all
times ~nd keep in mind the
bottom line. If things aren't
adding up right. walk away
from the stratagem.
SAGI'ITARlUS (Nov. 23·

A

®

E.@
AVERAGE GAME 160-170

JUDO'S TO.TAl

-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Gallia County

;--.,::"""""1:::--T~

-

DIRECTIONS: Mi... a 2· to 7·ltlner Vo'O!'d from lhlilleltlrs on each yardllne.
Mel polniS to each wore! or lel18f using sc:ormg dlredloM !'It right. Seven.letlttr
wolds gtl a 00-polnt bonus. AM words can beiOLild in Webster'&amp; New Wolld

mag~ ·

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~ Wr\~TS 1\l't:

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..;1 ~1 1\-1\~Q

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IIJI'I\T l ASSORBEP
fRO'I. GOING

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AIIOur IT

~A. 'BI:~R?

ALiffiE G&gt;IRL.

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JUDD'S $0LUT10N TOMORROW

Cor.egt Dictionary.

ReALLYI&lt;NC1ol/

·candidate
selection
on tap in
_
city primary

tn

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant. May 4. 2001

Gallia County

Gallia County

Gallipolis charter
changes worry
ex-solicitors

A sign . announcing the repaving project on 1.8 miles of Jackson Pike from Holzer
Medical Center to Mitchell Road greets drivers along the busy Gallia County road.
Shelly Co. will start planing the road in earnest Monday. (Kevin Keliy)

Resurf~cing

begins Monday
on port1on of Jackson Pike
BY KEVIN KEUY

Administration with a the early 1990s. Such pro·
local match from . the ject3 cofue with a guaranGallia County Engineer's tee the ~ road's condition
Office.
will be good · for about
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Assistant
€ounty eight years. As of now, the
For anyone who traverses
Engineer
Craig
Barnes 1.8-mile section that will
Jackson Pike in the Spring
said
the
project
has
been get a 3-inch overlay is in
Valley · area of Gallia
in
the
planning
for
the poor condition, he added.
County,
watch
out:
"On a scale of I 0 with
Resurfacing of the heavi- past three years, from
about
the
time
the
county
10
being the best , it's
ly-used siretch between
its
last
major
repair
probably
at 4," he said.
did
Holzer Medical Center
project
by
sealing
cracks
.
"When
you
get this
and Mitchell Road starts
m
the
surface.
money,
you
have
to sign
Monday with removal of
"When you ask for fed- an agreement that the road
the old surface.
era!
money, you do it will have a useful life of
Thornville contractor
when
you get it," said eight years.
Shelly Co. will be han"If it's well-constructed,
dling the $363,000 pro- Barnes.
Barnes
said
the
road
ject, 80 percent funded by
Please see Pike, A7
the Federal Highway underwent resurfacing in
News editor

PieiH ... C.ndldm, A7

~

Sl.lS. Vol. 18 , No. 12

BY KEVIN KELLY
News editor

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio
Voters in Gallipolis will go to
the polls Tuesday to choose
candtdates for two sears on the
City. Commission this fall and
decide the fate of two amendments to the city's charter.
The commission seats are
held by J. Gary Fenderbosch
and' Richard A. Moore, who are
the five-member panel's presi,
dent and vice president, respec·
lively.
'
Moore, who served as a commissioner from 1980 until 1988
and was elected again in 1999,
is seeking 'a second four-year
term. Fenderbosch, also elected
in 1.999, opted not to seek a second term .
Also on the ballot are Joe G.
Giles, John H. Saunders, Aaron
J. Stanley and Douglas J.
Wetherholt. Wetherholt served
as a commissioner from 1974
unil 1978, and ran for the commission in 200 I.
The other candidates are
mounting their first runs for
office. Saunders is the son of
· former Commissioner Howard
Baker Saunders, and the brother
of another commissioner, Dow ·
W. Saunders, who served 14
years on the panel and was
appointed last week to serve the
remainder of Celestine M.
Skinner's term as commission~er. Skinner resigned April 23.
The top four vote-getters in
Tuesday's voting will see their
names on the Nov. 4 general
election ballot. ·
Officials have placed two
amendments to the city charter
on the ballot. Changes to the
charter must be decided by the
voters.
.
The changes will allow O[?Cn
campaigning by commission
candidates, now restricted
under the charter's current lan-

~~UeRJ'~{ ~~~~ =

by JUDD HAMBRICK

253

lf

Bv KEVIN Kruv
News editor

AVERAGE GAME 155-165

Scrim-

,
1

strong likelihood you could
do something rather foolish in
front of your friends .
·
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20)- All you' ll get today is
the opposite effect of that
which you desire if you try to
force your will upon your
family members. Neither
·harsh tactics nor phony tears
will work.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - Little things that nor. mally wouldn't bug you
might raise the hair on the
nape of your neck today.
Watch yourself so that you
don't step out of character
and react in ways you'd re gret.

WORB SCRIMMAGE"e SOLUTION
BY JUDD HAMBRICK
Fe..,.

U.S., Britain discuss
role of U.N. in Iraq, A5

t

cry
Woodshaving
tool
44 Mover's
rental
(hyph.)
45 Throws
hard
46 Piled
the oars
48 Pitcher
Nolan50 Troubles
51 ,Wine valley
52 Deep bell
53 Fll!;!ht dlr.
55 Bullring
cheer ·

•

shortcomings.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Although you might enjoy at·
tending a social gathenng to·
day, better check out who else
has been invited. Should
someone who you find dis·
tasteful be included, you need ·
10 be _prel'ared.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- People in general are a bit
touchy today, so if you find
. yourself the head honcho

Master
gardeners, Dl

43

Astrograph
Sunday, May 4, 2003

Inside

'Garden

A walk through
history, Cl

Legen~ary

53

11
-,

ltalneand

Tempo·

Has a chat
Nope
(hyph.)
46 Wand
47 Mood
49 Seeping

42.
44

"

'Solid thought'

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Two ame ndments to the
Gallipolis city charter
appearing on Tuesday's pri·
mary ballot "sho~ld not be
passed," in the opinion of
three former city solicitors.
But the current solicitor,
Douglas M. Cowles, sai d
the propo sed amendments
are only bringing the charter in line with today' s realities .
Voters in Gallipolis will
decide changes in the charIer allowing for publication
of summarized ordinances
in the local newspaper and
giving Cit'y Commission
candidates the right to campaign openly.
Under the current language, ordinances are pub lished in their entirety in
the newspaper. Faced with
increasingly tight budgets
m recent . years, city officials are looking to reduce
costs by publishing slimmaries of ordinances.
The full ordinances will
appear on the ci-ty's
Internet website, or be
available for viewing, ·as
they are now, at the City
Building and
Bossard
Memorial Library.
Since the charter's passage and Gallipolis' switch
to a city commission-city
manager form of government in 1917, commission
candidates are prohibited
from door-to-door canvassing for votes or advertising.
They are allowed to
answer questions from
individuals and groups, and
can have up to three statements on their candidacies,
each not to exceed I ,500
wotds, published in the
newspaper.

But for R. William
Jenkins, William N. Eachus
and Richard C. Roderick
Jr., all former solicitors -·
the individual s who inter~
pret the charter for cit~
officials - the amend~
ments pre all problematic. ·
"When the charter was
developed, it was written
by Henry Cherrington and
the thought that went into it
was very solid," said
Eachus. who served as
assistant solicitor and as
solicitor from 1974 to
1984. "When you move to
change it, you have to think
about it very carefully."
Jenkins, who was solicitor from 1962 until 197,3,
sa id the provision allowing
for ordinance summaries to
appear in the newspaper
won't work.
Newspaper publication
allows for the widest distribution of the information,
l)e said, and people may not
go out of their way to
peruse full versions of ordi·
nances on a computer or at
the library.
"Those of us who were
there before as solicitors
read these documents, and
other lawyers we deal with
depend on us to read them,"
Jenkins said. "If you're
going to read them, you're
going to want to do it in the
comfort of your home and
in your newspaper."
He believes that abbreviated ordinances are prone
to abuse if critical information, such as employee
salaries that appear in the
annual appropriation ordi.nance , are not included.
"This is something that
should not be passed,"
Jenkins said.
Please see Charter, A7

~

~~~~~~~~~~

Meigs County

Inside
~W

"40li.'RE BE'IN(r ~WEET

• Deadline for FEMA,
See page Al
• March of Dimes raises
S35,000, See page Al
• Prosecutor says Taft
should allow inmate to be
executed, Sel! page A5

""' " ANO DE•OTED, ~NO I HAlE
TO KEEP REn11NOINI1
Of ~OUfl.

50

WI"'~E lf

MO POTENTIAL .

T\1 1 ~~~

OOoi'T IAI)RK

Q~ICKLY 6ETWEE~

U5.. .

Index
4 Sedlolis- J2 hpa

YOV'Vf
GOT
MAIL
0

"

Calendars
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Region
Sports
Weather

.I 'flOSffl&gt; A CAilllltll

rffJ'
i::fY .

I

.•

PIGfON

WITt4 A.

PA~flOT.

· A4

cs
03-5
insert
A6
A7
A2
81-8
A2

c 2002 Ohio Volley Publishins Co.

Poets share work ·at URG.Meigs Center,
J. REED

Poetry" at the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College Meigs
MIDDLEPORT, Ohio Center.
As almost any student of
The third-annual event,
English literature knows, held Wednesday, joined the
poetry is one of the most published poets, aspiring
intimate and personal ere- and "hobbyist" poets and
lovers of poetry for . an
ative writing styles.
evening of reading, listening
Poetry can tell stories of and interpretation in honor
love, war, and history, con- of National Poetry Month.
veying emotion and pathos
"This is a small way to
like no other genre. But the celebrate poetry in our hves,
works of three loc.al pul&gt;· and to provide a forum for
lished poets tell other, more those who are interested in
70f!lmon stories in the same hearing poetry, writing it,
mumate style.
.
. and appreciatin~ our !anCathy Lentes of Rutland, guage at its best, ' said Gina
Jack Hart of Pomeroy, and Pines, director of. the Rio
Judy Klare of Athens shared branch .
Lente&amp;, the featured poe[,
some of their published
work w1th other poets and has been featured in a numpoetry enthusiasts last week, ber of regional poetry magadtiring • "An Evening of zines and journals, and was
BY BRIAN

Staff writer

recently published in "I
Have My Own Song for It:
Modern Poems of Ohio," a
bicentennial collection of
contemporary Ohio poems.
"Writing poetry is about
paying attention to ordinary
moment s and interpreting
those. moments in mie's own
voice and from one 's own
life experience," Lentes
said, before reading several
of her selections.
In "Passing Poems," ·
Lentes, a creative writing
·volunteer in local schools,
tells about a true-life experi. ence, in which middle
sc hool
students
in
Middleport were caught redhanded: Passing line s of
verse back and forth like Judy Klare of Athens. a 2000 Featured Poet at the University
love notes in a science class, of Rio Grande/ Rio Grande Community College Meigs Center's
"Evening of Poetry, " shares some of her published poetry with
Please see Poets. A7
fellow p&lt;)ets and poetry lovers. (Brian J. Reed)

This FREE support group is sponsored by the Arlhri~s Foundation and Holzer Medical Center
I"'TI-ltON\~~ ~

M:. ~ Nol fiCO~..,.

FOR 1\ Bi\BY 51\\U:.I l CAll IT
t-116t\WI\~ F.Oe&amp;.i!,~

I

,..!X)t.liCOMPL"--N"IoJ€: \JE.I:£ WC~
TOGt\ t-IER f\T "LL C»&gt; !&gt;U&lt;.I\
51-\DRT NO\ I( E. ...

I"I'\Or-'11'\1\ fl~ 1\ 1/ER.~

1:\U:,'I'

"'

~\Ill. Oiillt:n.,~OU ~ !

Monday, May 12 and 19, and Wednesday, May 28
6:00 PM • Holzer Extra Care • 2881 Slate Route 160
.Topics discussed will indude... pain control, exercise, relaxation '
.

·

depression and doctor/ patient relationship.

JOice a more cxlive role in your health!
For more information, Or to register, call Todd Tucker at (740) 441·9216

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

www.holzer.org

�.'

•
PageA2
A
_6_u_®_a~~-~_tm__~_·6__tn_u_·n_d______________~~•~C~~~~·~~~~~----' --------------s-un_d~ay,~M-ay~4-,2--oo3
Ohio weather
MICH.

•

official deadline .
Staff. writer
Ac cordin g
to
Dale
Shipley. Ohio EMA coordinating officer, Tuesday,
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio May
13, is the final day to
Only two weeks remain for
apply
for disaster assisresidents of Gall ia and
Meigs counties affected by tance for .all those affected
February 's ice/s .1ow storm by the severe winter storm
who have ye t to apply for in the disaster-des ignated
state/federal disaster assis - counties of Adams. Gallia,
Jackson, Lawrence. Meigs,
tance .
Officials with the Federal Pike and Scioto.
"Don't assume you aren't
Emergency Management
eligible
for H·ss ista nce.
Association (FEMA) and
Ohio
Emergency Even if you have in surManagement Agency are ance , you don't hav e to
urging both individual s and wait for a settlement before
business owners who have you apply," sa id Shipley.
"We don't want to mi'ss
not .·applied for disaste r
anyone
who has been
relief to do so before the

BY TONY M.

PA.

I Mlonlfleld ,lW/81' ·l •

,,..

W. VA..

KY.

0 2003 AccuWoaltler, Inc.

- • -Showtn
. . . . - ·'. ' .
'* .
.. ·f/!i!!t
.- ., '' -. '- ' .
,. .
Pt. Clo!xiy Clcuctf
T-ttorms
Rain
Aurriae
Snow
Ice

LEACH

affected by these weather important
tn at people
events i.vho may need help remembe r that the deadline
in the recovery process ."
for reg i s teri~g is May 13,"
Shipley added assistance said Ron Sherman. FEMA
that is avai lable to disaster federa l coordinating offi .
victims include grants to ce r.
help pay for temporary
Those wanting to apply
housing , home repairs and for assistance can do so by
other seriou s disaster relat - . calling the FEMA Helpline
ed expenses , U.S. Small at (800) 621-3362, 8 a.m.
Bu sin ess Admini stration to 6 p.m., Monday through
(SBA) low- interest di saste r F,riday. The .TTY number
loans for individuals ·and for. the heanng or speech
bu sinesses to repair or impaired i&gt; 1-800-462·
replace .damaged property, 7585.
and disaster unemploymen t
Helpl ine representatives
assisiance.
are ava il able to answer
"FEMA will conti nue to questions about assistance
process existing assistance or chec k the &gt;tatus of a
applications . However, it is call er's app lication.

Associated Press
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The
state Parole Board says Gov.
Bob Taft should allow a death
row inmate to live, but the
prosecutor whose office won
Jerome Campbell's conviction believes his execution
should go forward as scheduled on May 14.
Friday's decision marked
the first time since Ohio
resumed executions in 1999
that the board has recommended clemency.
Campbell, 41, has maintained his innocence, claiming DNA testing on his
bloody tennis shoes suppOrt
his claim. .
·
The board wrote in its ·6-2
ruling that Campbell 's attorneys "presented credible evidence for the majority members of this board to question
any sustained confidence or

.~

March of Dimes event raises over $35,000
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - More than 500
people from Mason , Gallia
and Meigs counties participated in the March of
Dimes
Tri-County
WalkAmerica April 27,
raising more than $35,000
to help prevent birth
defects and mfant mortality
throu$h research . . · .
"Th1s 1s the most ded1cat.ed group of volunteers I've
had the pleasure to work
with," said Mi ckiAnne

West Virginia weather
. Sunday, May 4
· AccuWeather.com forecast for dautime conditions 1ow1hiah temoeratures

. Henkel s, the Charl eston based community director
for the March of Dimes .
"There are so many people that made this walk
sucli a fun and great event,"
she added. "In all. over 30
teams and s.everal individu- .
als from the area came out
to hel p save babies. That
says so much for the ·community."
Monies co llected through
the annual fund-raiser ·will
support research, public
and profess.io nal education,
and other needs for infants,
such as testing, clot hing

categorie s).
and therapy.
• Top sneaker sal es
Awards wi ll be pre sented
at a banquet set for thi s Fruth Pharmacy.
month. Among the award . • Best T-s hirt de sign
Guidi ng Hand Schoo l.
reci'pients will be:
Spec ial vo lunteer and
• Top team overall sponsor award s wi ll also be
Fruth :Pharm acy.
• Top walker - Linda presented at the banq uet to
Ealey of Fruth Pharmacy several groups. companies
(adult) and Andrea Strauch. and ind ivi dua ls.
Fund-raising efforts for
American Electric Power
· the March of DinH" s co ntin ·
(youth) .
ue throug hout the year.
• Most improved team Guiding Hand School and Anyone interested in learn in g more abo ut the March
WBYG -FM (tie) .
of Dim es and how to help
• Most team walkers Fruth
Ph armacy
and save infant s can contact
Guidin g Hand School (two Henkel s at (800 ) 313 ~ 2911.

...

- . T1101m0

Rli1

Flunloo

Snow

loo

Chance of rain re enters aria
BY THE ~SSOCIATED PRESS

A high was to bring clear
skies to the area Saturday
night. Lows were in the 40 to
45 degree range. There may
be a little frost Sunday moming.
·
Sunday will see plenty of
sunshine and a mild east to
southeast wind ·with highs in
the mid 60s to lower 70s.
A warm front moving into
the Ohio Valley from the
southwest will continue with
the warm temperatures on
Monday, but w1th increasing
chances for showers, perhaps
a thunderstorm Sunday night
andMonday.
.
·

WEATHER FORECAST

· Sunday... Areas of fog or
low clouds early, then more
sun than clouds. Highs in the
lower 70s. Winds becoming
southeast 5 to 10 mph.
Sunday night. .. Increasing
cloudiness again. A chance of
showers and thunderstorms
after midnight. Lows near 50..

Chance of rain 30 percent.
· Monday... Showers
and
thunderstorms likely. Highs
in the upper 60s. Chance of
rain 60 percent.
Monday
night ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Lows in the mid 50s. Chauce
of rain 40 percent.
EmNDID FORECAST

Tuesday ... Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers and
thunderstorms. Highs in lhe
lower 70s. ·
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
A chance of showers and
thunderstorms, mainly at
night. Lows in the lower 50s
and highs in the lower 70s.
Thursday... A slight chance
of showers during the day,
· otherwise partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 50s and
highs in the lower 70s.
Friday... Mostly clear. Lows
in the lower 50s and highs in
the mid 70s.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP).Trustees for · Ohio State
University voted Friday to
approve a 9 percent tuition
increase for curreni students,
and a SI00 surcharge per quarter for new and transfer students.
The tiered tuition plan is the
same that Gov. Bob Taft recommended- and the Ohio House
approved - in the upcoming
two-year budget that takes effect
July I following the Senate's
passage.
Trustees said the tuition
increases are meant to ensure
the university can continue
strengthening academics lll)d
minimize the impact of budget
woes on current students at a
time when state support is sluggish.
The tuition increases mean
that beginning next year current
undergraduates from Ohio will
pay $5,658 annually, while an
incoming student will pay
$6,474 a year. Thition for nonresidents will increase by 6 percent, to $f5,645 a year for current students and $16,461 for
new students.

****

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"ev il.''

The

ho&lt;1rd

said,

though, that Clardv was holding back information hoping
to get a deal from prosecutors
on · a ; robbery charge.
Proseuctors later dropped the
charge.
Roseman was let out on
bond after testifyi ng against
Campbell and had hi s case
unti l
after
continued
Campbell's trial. the board
said.
·

\"IUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(A P) - West Virginians
hoping to meet the Iraqi
lawyer who helped U.S
commandos resc ue pri soner
of war Jessica Lynch will
likely have to wait for more
tha i],_ a month, said a
Wasnlngton lobbyist who
has hired him .
Mohammed Odeh a].
Rehaief will undergo an
operation on Monday and
then begin Engli sh immersion classes, said Jim Pruitt
of the Livingston Group, a
lobbying firm that hired alRehaief and sponsored his
successful bid for asy lum in
the United States.
"We're going to be pretty
protective of him on the .
health issue for a while,"

~;

Pruitl said , declining to
reveal treatment details.
Pfc . Lynch, a 20-year-old
Army supply clerk from
Palestine , W.Va., was captured March 23 after her
507th
· Maintenance
Company convoy was
ambushed in the southern
Iraqi city of Nasiriyah. She
was rescued from an
Nasiriyah hospital on April
I after al-Rehaief gave U.S.
Mari ne s a tip abou t her
whereabouts.
Pruitt said it would likel y
be a month before the 32·
year-old al-Rehai ef, who is
staying with hi s wife and 5year-old daughter in a
northern Virginia home,
grants
interview s
i.n
English.
·

Szechuan House:

~n;~·

All You Can Eat Buffet:
Eat in or Carry-out

~'

****

Adva(Jce -'!uto 'Parts of Point
· . Pleasant
A/coW! BOokstore
Anna Meade
Appalachi&lt;Jn Wax Works
Bessie Simmons
Bob Evans, Gallipolis
Bob Evans, Rio Grande
Burger King, Gallipolis .
C C. Caldwell Trucking
Corral's Farrqgo,Gallipolis ferry
Charmkhael's F:orm &amp; Lawn Inc.
Cheryl Hiiiely
Comfort Air of Gallipolis ·
Denise Gibeaut
Dolla.r Plus of Gallipolis
Domino's of Paint Pleasant
Dorothy Gore
East of Chicago Pizza, Gallipolis
Evening Star Candles.
Ceramics &amp; Crafts·
Fantastic Sam's
First American Cash Advance
fruth Pharmacy. Gallipolis

General Nutrition Center
Gino's of Point'Pieosont
Go Mart · Gallipolis
Hamilton Chevro~t
Heart's Aglow Candles and Gifts
Mabie McQuaid
Maynards Quilts and Fabrics
McDonalds of Gallipolis
Michael &amp; friends
Middleport Department Store
Mitch 's Greenhouse, Middleport
Ohio Thunder Instant Bingo
Parkfront Diner &amp; Bakery
Ponderosa Steak Hause, Gallipolis
Rentway of Gallipolis
River Cities Accounting
Rome-Proctorville food Fair
Supreme Car Wash, Gallipolis
The Purple Turtle
Tanya Clickenger
·
Tri County Vending
Weaving Stitches Gift Shop
Wicked Concepts, Middleport
WYVK FM The frog

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161 Upper River Road • Gallipolis 446·7227

a4m 44~-4m a

We accept personal checks

1NlERNH ACCESS SINCE 1994

Sunday/ May 4th thru
.Thursday May 8th

7.:27 p.n1. Nightly
Spewd~S~

Rick Webb Trio

52 Weeks. .. ............ '200.20

This advertisement brought to you by The Ohio Valley Bank
'

•

-

"!'l!:"

CRUS

Outai&lt;M County

(

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13 Wf8kS ................ '50.05
28 Weeks ......... .. .... '1 00.10

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I WIHI •1.110.00 PURCI-JAI:' I
WITII A•moo I'IJI!Cfl~~ I
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Hours: Mon·Thur: 11:00 am-10:oo pm

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13 Weei&lt;s ......... ...... . '29.85
26 Weeks ... .. .... ....... '59.70
52 Weeks ............... ' 119.40

·

:

J.F-. - " . - - - ~
~: $1.00 0~~ : : ~ 2.00 0~~ : : $ g,OO 0~~ :

Malt Subecrlptlon

Ohio V.lley Publlahlng Co.
Published ·8YIIry Sunday, 825 Third

•

.,

45631 '

oyr..,.ttnn:

Defense
attorney
Elizabeth Agar discounted
inmate testimony, sayi ng
that inmates hoped to ,gain
br.eaks rn their own sentence s in return for their
testimony. ·
" Believe me, none of
these indivi~t.ials came forward out of tbl:! goodness of
their hea~ts,'''~e s~ '
Sh,e satd there · i~ .Jio evidence that Were was
involved in fhe: planning of
the Tiot or knew it was
about to take ·place. She
also said he did not control
any rioters.
"Once a mob starts rioting, no one. is in control,"
she said.
The trial was recessed
after opening statements
and· will resume Monday.
Were ts serving a sentence of 15-to-65 years for
aggra,vated robbery and
felontou s assa ult convictions .
Three other inmates have
been convi cted of killing
Vallandingham. Two are
awaiting execution, wbile
the third received a life
term for the slaying but was
sentenced to death for the
killings of two inmates.

Jb file fD/Iowl~~g bus#neues far their
domlllons to GALLIPOLIS CAREER COLUGE
fW our elfhfll annwl Allmlnlsfrotlre l'l'ofess#onttls
. Appred«&lt;on Dtly celebration.

Avenue. Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Second·class postage paid at
Gallipolis.
Member; The Associated Press, the
West VIrginia Press Association, and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
Poati!UIIter; Send address correc·
lions to the Gallipolis Daily Tribune ,
825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH

was that he was innocent or
the conviction was not as
firm ly based as you want,"
BoCliker said.
·
The board also questioned
the testimony of two witnesses at'the trial , Ronys Clardy
and Angelo Roseman , who
we're serv ing sentences for
di ffe rent crimes in the same
jail as Campbell.
The board said the jury was
led to believe that Clardy's
only motive for testifying
against Campbell was to put
him in prison because he was

Iraqi who helped
·with Lynch rescue
not visiting for awhile

Lunch Buffet $4.•95 11;00 atn . g:go ~r n
Dinner Buffet SB.95 g:•:w pm. 9:go ptn
Sunday All Day Buffet $6.95 11:go atn. 9:go prn

CINCINNATI (AP) -An
Special Prosecutor Steve
inmate on trial a second Tolbert sai d in opening
time for the death of a statements that three gangs
prison guard has been planned the riots.
described as a leader of the
"James Were .was the r-j'Q.
. 1993 riot at the Souther'h I ' lieutenant for the · leader
Ohio Correctional Facility. of one , of tho se gangs,"
A prosecutor told jurors . Tolblifl V!id.
Friday that James Were, 46,
He ~41 jurors· they would
of Toledo, was resp()nsible hea'i·~ere's voice on tapes
for the de!lth,. of,~·guar!;Y- ;!~~e· "~·~fr?.~ { re~~fde~s
Rlll!.ert V:alland!ngh)lm dur- •'!~lied,, by atJ.tb6ntre,s&gt; tn'l,
rnfi he 'l l-da)' s1ege at tlie tu,.-flels under ;the prison . .
Lucasvple pris~m. '
,
"~ will.hea~ fNere s~ing ;
We.re s attorney told .the that It IS t1me fot, the 'hardHam1lton County Co11_1~on liners to ,'~ke· over,"' said
Plea~ JUry t~il.t there 1s no Tolbert . .
. ,.'
,
p~ys1cal evidence thll); be
' Tolbert said " an ·inmate.
killed the guard .
also will testify that he saw
Were was convicted in Were with , ot~er inmates
1995 and sentenced to takmg Vallandmgham from
death for the ag~ravated a . cell .and · into. a shower
. murder of Valland1.ngham. where he was strangled.
The gu:ud and ~me mm~tes" . :·He ... saw . officer
:-vere killed dunng the not- VallansJ.jnghaJ? bemg stran•
mg.
.
·
gled by two mmates under
The Oh1o Supreme Court the comP,~and an~. direction
ruled last year that Were of James . Were, Tolbert
,
must be retried becau~e .he .said. :',~ 'T'
~as n~t given a hearing the
Tolbert al so said that
fmt time on whether he yvere acknowledged to. an
was mentally competent to mmate wh1le o~ a bus gomg
stand tnal.
b.ack to l..:ucasvllle after the
Judjle Fr~d. Cartolano, nots .that he d1~n ' t want to
wh&lt;? 1s pres1.dmg over the retur~ to the pp son because
retnal: ruled m January that off1c1als knew he had killed
Were IS competent.
the guard. .

~unbap mtme~ -~entinel
.
Correction Polley
OUr main conCern in an stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an 8f'ror In a
s1ory, please call one of our newsrooms.

County Common Pleas judge.
"This man was killed in
cold blood and a knife was
left sticking in his wrist. Mr.
Campbell deserves !o die for
what he did," Allen said after
the board's decision.
Taft is expected to decide
Campbell 's fate next week.
Hi s lawyers will review the
case and make their own recommendation.
"We don't want to make a
mistake of law or fact, certainly, when we oppose a ·
death-penalty sentence," Taft
said . "I' ll go into the paroleboard review, the facts before
the parole, board, what they
based their decision on, and
any other information that 1
can get on the case."
Ohio · Public . Defender
David Bodiker, whose office
represents Campbell, said he
was delighted with the decision.
"What we have to assume is
that the strongest evidence

Inmate on trial for leading
riot resulting in guard's death

approves
tuition
increases

..........
__

reliability
in the jury's
recommendation."
T h e
board recomm ended
that Taft
reduce
Campbell 's
sentence to
Campbell
life
in
prison without the possibility of parole in
the Dec. 23, 1988, killing of
Henry Turner, 78, in
Cincinnati. The board indicated it had no reason to believe
Campbell was innocent but
said JUrors might have spared
his life had they received
information that was revealed
later.
.
But Hamilton Count y
Prosecutor Michael Allen
said the execution should go
forward. The case was prosecuted in 1989 under Arthur
Ney Jr., now a Hamilton

West Virginia

Ohio

osu
SU,., Pl. Cloucli Cloucli

Sunday, May 4, 2003

. '

BY JoHN McCARTHY

Mason County
Staff report

Ohio ··w.

Prosecutor says Taft should
allow inmate to be executed

v •

Sunny

'

Ohio

Deadline for FEMA assistance for
ice storm recovery drawing near

Sunday, May 4

INO

iunba~ ltm~ ·itntintl

,Page A3

.

�PageA4

LoCBI News·

Sunday, May 4, 2003

POINT PLEASANT- Mason
County Area Gospel Choir
rehearsa~ 7 p.m., Church of
Christ in Christian Union. All
Monday, May 5
~'- members- please bring music.
HENDERSON - Henderson
POINT
PLEASANT
TCI.vn Council meeting, 7:30p.m., Reception for Mason County
tc&gt;Nn hall.
retired teachers, 4:30 to 6 p.m.,
Tuesday, May 6
Mason County library conferGALLIPOLIS FERRY- Akzo · ence room. Sponsored by
Nobel Community Advisory MCEA. light refreshments and
Pare! meeung, 7 p.m. TopiCS for wonderful memories will be
discussion ....;11 be review of April's served
plant tour; and the Wide Area ·
· Tuesday, May 6
. Rapid Notnication System.
POINT PLEASANT- QuiHs
Employees
and
citizens
from
the
'N'
Th'1ngs, .,.oo, 5 :30 p.m., Mason
.
.
stmound1ng communities are County Courthouse Amex.
invited to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - QuiHs
7
Wednesday,
May
'N'
Th.
9 30 a.m., Mason
POINT PLEASANT- Mason
lngs, :
County Courthouse Annf,!X.
County Tourism Committee Salad luncheon. Please bring
meeting, 8 a.m., MOv'C.
..
salad to share with othe!s.

Clubs &amp;
Organizations
Monday, May 5
NEW HAVEN SmrthCapeharl American Legion Unit
140 Auxiliary ....;11 hold nomination
ol officers. 7 p.m.. Legion. All
members urged to attend.
POINT PLEASANT - Mary
Kay cosmetics meeting, 6 p.m.,
£Nery Monday, Point Pleasant

Woman's Club.

POINT
PLEASANT
American Legion Auxiliary Post
23 meeting, 7 p.m., American
Legion.
.
POINT PLEASANT- Point
Pleasant Kiwanis Club meeting,
6:15 p.m., Melinda's Restaurant.
For information call 675-7314.
Wednesday, May 7
FLATWOODS-West Virginia
Association . of Retired School
Employees Annual Leadership
Conference,
Days
Inn.
RE9stration begins at 11 a.m.

to 9 p.m. Bossard Memorial
Library. Call 446-8555 to register.
Sunday, May 11
GALLIPOLIS - Piano students of Allen B. Strart will present their annual spring recrtal
at2 p.m., at Ariel Theatre.
Admission is free.

Tuesday, May 6
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County District Library Board of
Trustees meeting, 5 p.m.,
Bossard Memorial Library, 7
Spruce Street, Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - Red Cross
disaster training class, Family
Services
Emergency
Assistance, 6 to 9 p.m. Bossard
Memorial Library. Call 4468555 to register.
Friday, May 9
· GALLIPOLIS
Holzer
GALLIPOLIS Musical
Clinic retirees' luncheon, noon,
''You're a Good Man, Charlie
in the conference room on the Brown" presented by Gallia
ground.. floor of . Charles E. Academy High School Choirs,
Holzer Ambulatory Surgery B p.m., Washington Elementary
Unrt.
School. TICkets are $5 each.
GALLIPOLIS Monthly Reserve tickets by calling
meeting of the TRIAD/SALT Annie Roach at 446-2252 or
Committee, 1 p.m., Gallia Roberta Wilson at446-2151 .
County Senior Resource
Saturday, May 1o
Center. Open to all men and
GALLIPOLIS Bossard
'1'/Cmen 50 and older.
Memorial Library and Gallia
GALLIPOLIS Regular County Master Gardeners
meeting of the Gallipolis Lions plant exchange, 9 a.m. to noon,
Club, 6:30 p.m., cookout at Bossard Memorial Library, 7
Fortification Hill.
Spruce Street, Gallipoli~.
Wednesday, May 7
GAL,LIPOLIS Musical
GALLIPOLIS - 2003 Senior ''You're a Good Man, Charlie
!?rom, 12:30 to 3 p.m., Gallia Brown" presented by Gallia
Cqunty Senior Resource Academy High School Choirs,
«;:enter. Sponsored by the River . 8 p.m ., Washington Elementary
Valley High School Beta Club School. Tickets are $5 each.
and National Honor Society.
Reserve tickets by · calling
Thursday, May 8
Annie Roach at. 446-2252 or
: GALLIPOLIS
Gallia Roberta Wilson at 446-2151 .
County
Bicentennial
GALLIPOLIS - Walk. for
Commission meeting, 2 p.m. , Autism, registration 10 a.m.,
French Art Colony, 530 First walk 11 a.m., Gallipolis City
Avenue.
Park. For information, call Scott
· GALLIPOLIS - Red Cross Short at 446·8598, Leslie
disaster training class, Family Henry at 441-9516, or Candy
Services
Emergency Ulbrich at (740) 992-6887.
Assistance (continued}, from 6

Community
Events

Todd Chester is the banquet
speaker.
POINT PLEASANT- Rotary
meeting, noon, Moose Lodge.

· School &amp; Sports
Sunday, May 4
. MASON - Annual Mason
County Special Olympics Golf
Toumament. beginning at 8:ro
a.m., Riverside Golf Cll.b, hosted

t7y the Bend Area CARE. Among
the hole-irKJile p~ is a 2003
Mustang. Interested spoiiSOf'S

or

golfers may call 773-5354.
Friday, May 9
GALLIPOLIS FERRY
Beale Elementary SdlOOI's anrual Spring Carnival, from 5 to 9
p.m., at the school. Games, face
painting, bld, cake walk, and
many other activities. The Kings
and Queens will be announced at
6 p.m. An auction ...,;n be held at 7
p.m. Join in the funl

Dinner is 5el\led at 1 p.m.; si:'ON
starts at 2 p.m. The menu con-

sists of spa!flel!i ....;th sauce, oole
slaw, roll, homemade dessert,
and a beverage. The cost of the
OOner and si:'ON for students is
$5 per person; adu~ tickets are
$7. Tld&lt;els for the si:'ON only, are
$5 for adults and $3 b' stuldents.
POINT PLEASANT - Cub
· Srout Pack 25811o.Yer sale, next
to the Ohio V'alle'f Bank.
POINT PlEASANT- Special
gospel rrusic t7y the Williams
Famiy cA Richmond, Ky., Gospel
Bluegrass Bats. Proclaim, Joe
McCloud, and Deanna Stewart.
from 1 to 4 p.m., during the
Steam and Gas Engine ShcNI at
the West Virgin,ia State Fanm
Museum.
MASON -

County

Annual Mason

~

Olympics Golf

prizes. No smoking or aloohol
pemlitted. Donations of $5 per
couple and $3 for singles. All proc:eeds go ll7Nard future activities
at the center.
LETART- Jem session, 6:30
to 10 p.m., ....;th oountry. gospel,
and bluegrass musiC. Letart '

Monday, May 5
SOLJTHSIDE- Chubs weig1l
loss support group, wel!tJ-ins at
5:ro p.m. fobYed t7y a .Short
meeting,
£Nery
Monday,
Southside Community Center.
1lles:Wf,May6

$1 donation
' at the door

Cancer Support G~, 1 p.m.,

Pioneers 4-H prc:Nides

·

COliC es

MASON

Community

~I NT PLEASANT - Cub MasOn Un~ed Methocist Cll.uth.
Srout Pack 258 t1ower sale, next All area cancer patients, families,
to the Ohio Valley Bank.
. and Caregivers invited.
GALLIPOLIS FERRY Beale Elementary School's anrual Spring Carrival, from 5 to 9

LETART- HELP Diet Class,
Letart Community Center,Wf!iiJ!ins 1rom 5::Il to 6 p.m., tllloNed

p.m., at the school. Games, face
painting, bld, cake walk, and
many other activities The Kings
and Queens wil be announced at
6 p.m. An auction ...,;11 be held at?

Alool'xllics Aroorrymous meeting,

upport

E&gt;-Tea
· Joilthn
in the&amp;tunS!

H

Toumarnent, beginning at 8:30

Sunday, May 4
a.m., Rivefside Golf Club, hosted
POINT
PLEASANT
0, the Bend Area CARE. Among
the hole-irH:lne prizes is a 2003 cmreaters Anonymous meeting,
Mustang. Interested sponsors or 5 p.m., fMJr1! Su1day, Buxton
. golfers may cal773-5354.
Conference Room on the g:ound
floor of the Pleasant Valley
Friday, May 9
POINT PLEASANT - Darce Hospital.
Sunday, May 4
POMEROY, Ohio-Alcoholics
to rnJSic 0, the Rocky Mountain
MASON - The Wahama Bcys from 7 to 10 p.m. at the Point ·Anonymous meeting, 7 p.m. ,
Dinner Theater presents "Dance Pleasant
Senior
Center. fNf3ry Sunday, in the basement of
to the Music;' featuring the Concessions available, SQ/50 the Sacred Heart Catholic
Wahama High · School Choir. drawing, cake walk, and door Churd1 on Mulberry Ave.

Fun&amp;
Fund-raisers

Support Groups
GALLIPOLIS Military
Families Support Group meets
7:30 p.m. £Nery Sunday at New
Life Lutheran Church, 170 New
Ute Way off Jackson Pike. For
information, call446-4889.
12-step
GALLIPOLIS Spiritual Support Group meets
6;45 p.m. !Nefy Tuesday at
New Life Lutheran Church, 170
New Life Way off Jackson Pike.
For information, call 446-4889.
GALLIPOLIS Grieving
Parents Support Group meets
7 p.m. second Monday of each
month at New Life Lutherao
Church, 170 New Life Way off.
Jackson Pike. For infonmalion,
call 446-4889.
•
Coming
GALLIPOLIS Together, support group for
those how have lost loved
ones, meets 6:45 p.m. second
and fourth Thursday of each
month at New Life LuthEiran
Church, 170 New Life Way off
Jackson Pike. For infonmalion,
call 446-4889.
ATHENS Survival of
Suicide support group meets 7
p.m., fourth Thursday of each
month at Athens Church of
Christ, 785 W. Union St.,
Athens. For inlonmation, call
(740) 593-7414.
GALLIPOLIS - Parkinson
Support Group meets at 2 p.m.,
second Wednesdiay of each
month at Grace United
Methodist Church, 600 Second
Ave. For information, call
Juanrta Wood at 446-&lt;l808.

Birthdays

GALLIPOLIS -

Ruth Miller

...,;n celebrate her 90th birtihday

1 to 4 p.m., May 10 at Good
News Baptist Church, George's
Craek Road. Everyone wei·
come; no gnts please.

Card showers
Irene King, ,;dow of the late
Dr. Harry King, formerly of
Gallipolis, will celebrate her
97th birthday on May 2, cards
can be mailed to Madison
8645, Fredericksburg Road,
San Antonio, Texas78240.
Ruth M. Miller will celebrate
her .90th birtihday on May 10.
Cards may be sent to her at
727 4th Ave., Gallipolis, 45631 .

Regular
meetings
GALLIPOLIS
Bold
Directions Inc, social group
·meets 3 to 7 p.m. each Tuesday
in The Cellar at Grace Un~ed
Methodist Church, 600 Second

Ave.
GALLIPOLIS - Mid-Ohio
Valley Radio Club Inc. meets 8
a.m. first Saturday of each
.month in basement of Gallia
County 911 Center on Ohio
Route 160. Licensed amateur
radio operators and interilsted
parties invited. For infonmation,
call 446-4193.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipollis
Rotary Club meets 7 a.m. each
Tuesdiay at Holzer Clinic doctors dining room.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
County
Chamber
of
Commerce coffee and discus-

Meigs County Calendar
Public meetings

Syracuse Village Hiall.

Monday, May 5
RACINE - Racine Village
&lt;;ouncil meeting in regular session, 7 p.m., council chambers.
CARPENTER -Columbia
Township Trustees will hold
their regular monthly meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Columbia Township Firehouse.
SYRACUSE
Sutton
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m.,

Tuesday, May 6
ALFRED
- Orange
Township Trustees, 7:30 p.m.,
home of the clerk, Osie Follrod.

Clubs and
Organizations

Oklahoma

o, a short meeting.
POINT

PLEASANT

noon, rear of the Prestera Center.

FLATROCKclothing
gMrawffi,
9 am. to
1 p.m.,c~ooet
each
Tuesday, Good Shepherd United
Methodist Church.

Card Shower
Saturday, May 10
Ardath Brinker ...,;n celebrate his
90th birthday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
the Letart Communrty Center.
Gards may be mailed to him at
Box 22, Letart 'IN 25253. (No
gifts, please.}

134, Order of Eastern Star,
practice for officers for inspection, 2 p.m. '
.

"

' ~nday,May5

RACINE -Annual inspection of Racine Chapter 134,
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30
p.m. Refreshments follow. •

sion group meets 8 a.m. each second Thursday of each
Friday at Holzer Medical month at Red Rooster
Restaurant. For information,
Center.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia . 446-5074.
GALLIPOLIS
Bold
County Right to Life meets 7:30
p.m., second Thursday of each Directions Inc. invites you to a
month at St. Louis Catholic social group that meets £Nery
Tuesday from 3 to 7 p.m. in The
Church Hall.
GALLIPOLIS - New Brew Cellar at Grace United
Coffee Hour, 10 a.m. each Methodist Church.
CHESHIRE- Gallia County
Tuesday in the community
room at Gallia Met Apartments, Board
Mental
of
R~tardation/Developmental
Buckridge.
GALLIPOLIS - Choose to Disabilities meets the third
Lose Diet Club meets 9 a.m, Tuesday of each month, 4 p.m.,
each Tuesday at Grace Unrted at the Guiding Hand School.
Methodist Churclt Use Cedar
THURMAN ThurmanVega Parish Thrift Slore open
Street entrance.
GALLIPOLIS - French City 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday and
Barbershop Chorus practice, Friday, 10 a,m. to 2 p.m.
7:30 p.m. £Nery Tuesdiay at Saturday. Clothing artd houseGrace
United
Methodist hold goods available.
Church. Guests welcome.
E-mail community calenGALLIPOLIS - Gallia Area
Ministries Association meets dar !tams to ..-sOmydal11 :30 a.m., first Wednesday of lytrlbuna.com.
F•x
each month at New Lne announceme~rts to 446-3006.
Lutheran Church, · Jackson Mall !tams to 825 Third ~ve.,
Pike.
Gallipolis,
OH
45631.
GALLIPOLIS Holzer Announcements miiY aleo
Hospice Gallia County Dinner be dropplld off at the Tribune
....;th Friends, meets 6 p.m., otllce.

U.S., Britai-n drafting resolution limiting Officials face
U.N. role in · lraq to humanita~ian relief obstacles bringing

charges in bombing

BY MATT KEU.EY
Associated Press

Bv
WASHINGTON The
United States plans to set up
an international military
force in three regions of Iraq,
with Poland and Britain controlling two zones and U.S.
forces the third, a senior
Bush administration official .
says.
' Six European countries
have agreed to provide
trOOP.S for the · international
stabtlization force, the official said Friday, speaking on
condition of anonymity. .
The · United States and
Britain also are preparing a
Security Council resolution
that gives the United Nations
a role in humanitarian relief
in Iraq but not peacekeeping,
the official said.
The !lraft resolution would
limit the U.N. role to helping
with refugees and displaced
people, reconstruction and
humanitarian assistance, the
official said. The United
States and Britain agree on
all but a few of the fine
details of the resolution , the
official said, though there is '
no timetable on when it
would be introduced.
. U .N. offi~ials are already
m lraq.provtdmg humamtanan rehef. U.N. Secr~tar~General Kofi Annan satd thts
week that the body has no
interest in policing a postwar
Iraq, although it could contribute to the political res uscitation of the country.
Defense Secretary Donald
H. Rumsfeld discussed the
resolution with British Prime
Minister Tony Blair and
Defense Secretary Geoff
Hoon on Friday as he ended
a tour of Iraq, Afghanistan

AVE. •

Come where you get savings, not fr- glfta.
camel .............................................................................................$28.34/ctn.
Winston ....................... ,.~................................................................ $27.34/ctn.
Salem ..............................................................................................$28.34/ctn.
Kool ................. .. ............................................................................... $26.96/ctn.
Misty ..............................................................................:................ $24.33/ctn.
Pall Mall ........................................................................................ $24.33/ctn.
Dorall OO's .....................................................................................$22.33/ctn.
Monarch .................................. ,... ..................................,................$20.32/ctn .
USA Gold .......................................................................................$20.S8/ctn.
Red Man Chew ............................................................................$19.99/ctn.
Red Man Golden Blend ..,......................................................... $20.99/ctn .
Taylor's Pride ................................................................................ 18.99/ctn.
Levi Garren Chew ..................................................................... $18.39/ctn.
Mail Pouch Chew ...................................................................... $15.99/ctn.
Star Chew ..................................................................................... $13.99/ctn.
Beechnut B.2 Gl F(18) .............................~ ................................... S24.99/ctn.
Morgan B2G 1F..............................................................:..............S11.56/ctn.
· Copenhagen/! 0 can roll .................................................................. $28.79
Skoal/10 ca n roll ........................................................... ................... $28.79

OKLAHOMA CITY
Prosecutors want to bring
jailed Oklahoma Cily bomb-

U.S. Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld, right, gestures as he answers a question at a
news conference with Britain 's Secretary of State for Defense Geoff Hoon at London's
·
Heathrow Airport Friday. (AP)
and the Persian Gulf region.
official said, though it was
En
route
back
to unclear when that would be.
Washington, Rumsfeld said Those troops will work to
he hoped the United Nalions restore and maintain order
would play a role, but he did and supervise humanitarian
not discuss the draft resolu- projects such as the restoration outlining that role.
tion of water and electricity
who
joined ·and delivery of food and
Hoon ,
Rumsfeld in a news confer- medical aid.
ence at London's Heathrow
The six nations contributAirport, also did not memion ing troops are Italy, Spain,
the draft resolution but said Ukraine,
Denmark,
the
"we are right to be optimistic Netherlands and Bulgaria ,
about the way forward" in the
official
said .
Iraq.
Representative s of those
International
stability countries will meet with
forces will be sent 10 Iraq as British officials May 7 and
soon as possible, the U.S. Polish officials May 22 to

Stoker5 Can ..........................................................................$12.99/llb. bag
Zig Zag Rolling tobacco .......................................................................$6.99
King Edward Little Cigar ....!......................................................... $6.89/ctn
Silver Creek LCB2G 1F......................................: ...................................$2.97

Cioarette smoke contains carbon monoxide

•

detenmine what forces each
country will contribute and
whether they will be put
under British or Polish command.
The U.S. pan of the stability force will be comprised of
American troops. While that
portion is likely to consist of
a division - about 20,000
- the troop strength of the
other two sectors has yet to
be determined, the official
said.
The international staBilization force would be under the
U.S. war commander, Gen .
Tommy Franks.

cution of McVeigh suggesting a key prosecution wiiness
had given false testimony.
Authorities . say the. April
19, 1995, bombing was a
twisted plot to avenge the
FBI . siege at Waco, Texas,
exactly two years earlier.

ing conspirator 11erry Nichols
to trial on state murder
charges, but the process is McVeigh
and
Nichols
fraught with hurdles . and worked side by side preparpromises to be complicated . 'ing the 4,000-pound fueland costly.
and-fertilizer bomb that·
NiChols, 48, is already in deslroyed the Alfred P.
federal prison serving life. Murrah Federal Building.
without parole, but prosecu- killing 168 people.
Nichols was at home in
tors hope for a state conviclion that could send him to · Herington, Kan. , the day the
the death chamber. They also bomb exploded. But prosecuwant to eliminate· the possi- tors accused him of helping
bilily that he could ever sue- McVeigh deliver a getaway.
cessfully appeal his federal car to Oklahoma City and of
case and gain freedom.
working wilh McVeigh to
A . preliminary hearing pack the bomb inside a Ryder
begins Monday to determine truck on the day before.
Prosecutors are expected to.
whether there is enough evidence to bring Nichols to·trial introduce telephone records,
on 160 state murder charges. receipts and other evidence to
The state case could be show thai Nichols used an
hampered by sorile of the alias to buy two tons of fertilsame legal issues that have izer and helped Me Veigh
delayed the hearing seven steal explosives from a rock
times since Nichols was quarry.
brought to Oklahoma from a
The district attorney'S:
federal prison in Colorado in office also has an agreement
January 2000. Among the with Michael Fortier, the star
obstacles are evidence issues prosecution witness in the
and the difficulty in seating federal trials. to testify in the
an impartial jury.
state case under immunily.
"I expect it will be long and Fortier is serving a 12-year
drawn out, exhaustive and sentence for failing to notify.
costly," said attorney Stephen authorities of the bomb plot.
Jones,
who
defended
Nichols was convicted of
Oklahoma City bomber conspiracy and involuntary
Timothy McVeigh.
manslaughter charges for the
The hearing could also be deaths of eight federal law
complicated by revelations, enforcement officers in the
first reported by The bombing. The state charges
Associated Press, that the involve victims who were not ·
Justice Department received pan of the federal prosecua letter before the 2001 exe- tion.

81"tirj

· l'lanl ._change

Sponsored by
Bosaard Memorial Library
&amp; Gallla County Master Gardener•
at Bos•ard Memorial Library
7 Spruce Str-t, Galllpolle, OH

Annuals, Perennials, Herbs,
Seedlings, Houseplants, etc.
Bring a plant &amp; a friend!!

BirtHdays
CHESTER - Ethel Orr, formerly of Chester, ....;11 celebrate
her 98th birthday on May 4.
Cards may be sent to
Northview
Senior
Living
Center, 267 North Main St.,
Johnstown, Ohio 43031.

Bums

""'"!Sa~
Rho~lda Buih
Sarah Cade .

. K(llly~
Cli!lstle Carilp!:lell
Angela Cantrell
Oeneda Carl
Qonnie Carleton

Viall
Brenda Vickers
Beverly Voss

.,

Q.rYata1 Wagner

' ~Wallace

Deborah
Pi I ill illlir:J)'Illl~l~._cyHoll~crAir
C......a (HFIII'HS 26), w1 gM )'llUiblolulll) FReE 1 040 lenno•
GIIFUfi!IOtorCB29Eiec*lcFumectr FREEII! OftlrGood Ma,1·20.

Collfiiiiiiii~IOIIUiiililll'i11 Ooo1ghoo""" ~ - - l o l h t
ullliel. A-Lennoxlf'28 Holll'lnp.,..., .,.,,... ,... Prapn,
&lt;». .. Elalc........ akllrHollf'llr1&gt;1-.g rrontqblll ~
In 1111111 !01 till 1iU OODIIng blllloOII Aellyl1 Tlillllllt DEALII Call

Mlchtllll

IOdlytl WEOM.YHAYEt51'11EEI'UIIACUTOGNIAWA't1 .

Linda

F1nt American Cub Actvanoe
1.9 Ohio River Piau
GaiUpoUa, Ohio 4Sft3J.
740o44..1tl04
Near Jtroaer, Behind T._ BeD

s

~~~~~~~:: : :~: :-:.: ~: : : : : : : .~: : : : : :-:~: : : : : ::~:: : : :~: : : : : : : : ~L-~~1~

TIM TALLEY

Associated Press

Sunday, May 4
RACINE - Racine Chapter

-SMOKIN'
ROBS
1515 EASTERN
GA• 'IPOUS. OH

Sunday, May 4, 2003

!

Gallia County Calendar
Meetings

Page AS

Nation • World.

6unbap limes -&amp;tntinel

Washington

Mason County Calendar
Public Meetings
&amp; Events

..

OR C:ALL J......300oCASB JI'Oil THE JA)(:ATION
NEAll YOU!
111 ,1 \ill&lt; 1~c·:~n;

•

i:A$H.ADVANCE I••

Tanya

('i.Rll
,IIII!rNM_IIII._..,t-.- .....IIR _ _ _ _ _ _ ,. .

~~:::.:-~-"._...

... _

_ .. __

C.t~r••·~

• ·

•

.............. ""-" .......
Clti•7KII

'

Lori Crarn&amp;ar

Go First jol' the U:l.s!J You Ne«l

~-.· nr.c.lllllt.~:m. ·.fl:.lr•.u
._._C:..,.... _. _______
_

•

Teresa Coon
Vanessa Cooper
Angl Cox
Loretta Cox
Sheila Co~art
Paula Crace
Beth Cremeans
Carol Cremeans

lui ,

•10Qa21 «&lt;I

Nora Hager
Susan Hall
Faye Hammond
bavld Hammons
Ollrte Haner
Carol Harold
Julie

Mldklft .

Sherrie Might
Joanna Millllr

AnnaMilcheM
Usa Mitchell

Mollohan
BethMoonty

Stephanie

PMtiiY Moore

'llj·,,

�•
•
,
PageA6
0
~·==••='=q~C=U.==d~-A~tnti==ad~~------------~'~~~~Jt~I==I~I~I~I~C~I=I~I~----------~~
- -------s_u_nd~ay~·-M~ay_4,_2__oo\ _
\

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio
· www.mydailylribune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Carl Esposito
Publisher

Bette Pearce

Andrew Carter

Managing Editor

Asst. Managing Editor

Letter.• 10 the ediwr are welcome. Tire&gt;· should be less than
Gil! subject to editing and must be
J
signed and include address and telephone number No
umigntd letters will be 1111blished. Leuers shuuld be in goo&lt;!
taste. addressing issues. not personalities. ·
J11e opiniuns expressed in the column bdoH' are the consensus of the Ohio Valin P"blishing Co.:, editorial board.
unless othenvise noted.

JOO words. All lellers

. --

~

~~
---- -

NATIONAL VIEW

·#

Saving lives
Fine option enlightens
. youth on smoking dangers
• The News Tribune, Tacoma, Wash., on teenage smoking: Think of it as a "drug court"' for underage smokers.
In Washington state. minors caught with tobacco products face fines of nearly $100, when court costs are thrown
in. But the Puyallup, Tacoma and Peninsula school districts
have turned those fines into the suck of a carrot-and-suck
strategy. Instead of paying the fine. teenagers are allowed
to take a course on the health effects of tobacco use.
And it's working. In Puyallup, roughly half the students
who take the course stop smoking ; others report that they
smoke less. In Tacoma, the program appears to be contributing to a significant drop in the rate of smoking among
middle- and high-school students.
This education program is funded wi~h grants from the
state's tobacco-settlement payments. It 1s hard to 1magme
the settlement money being put to better use. The classes
are far more likely to change behavior than mere citations
-which most police officers consider a low priority in any
event. And health lessons are bound to be more effective
than suspensions, schools' traditional response when students are caught with tobacco on .campus.
Tobacco use is an addiction rooted in adolescence. Any
educational program that prevents thi s is saving lives.

TODAY IN H.ISTORY
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Sunday, May 4, the I 24th day of 2003. The.re
are 241 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 4, 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire
on anti-war protesters at Kent State University, killing four
students and wounding nine others.
On this date:
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on presentday Manhattan Island.
In 1776, Rhode Island declared its freedom from
England, two months before the Declaration of
Independence was adopted.
In 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, a labor
demon stration for an eight-hour work day turned into a riot
when a bomb exploded.
In 1927, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and
Sciences was founded .
In i 932, mobster AI Capone, convicted of income-tax
evasion, entered the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
. 'In 1942 the Battle of the Coral Sea , the first naval clash
fought entirely with carrier aircraft, be'gan during World
War II.
·
·
In 1945, during Wqrld War II , German forces in the
Netherlands, Denmark and northwest Germany agreed to
surrender. ·
In i 96 i, a group of "Freedom Riders" left Washington
for New Orleans to challenge racial segregation in interstate buses and bus terminals.
In 1980, Marshal Josip Broz Tito. president of
Yugoslavia, died three days before his 88th birthday.
In 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and PLO
leader Yasser Arafat signed a historic accord on Palestinian
autonomy that granted self-rule in the Gaza Strip and
Jericho.
Ten years ago: The U.S. handed over control of the relief
effort in Somalia to the United Nations.
Five years ago: Unabomber Theodore Kaczyn~ki was
given four life sentences pius 30 years by a federal JUdge m
Sacramento, Calif., under a plea agreement that spared him
the 'death penalty. In Vatican City, the commander of the
Swiss Guard, Alois Estermann, and hi s wife were found ·
shot to death in their apanment; a Vatican inquiry concluded that a corporal , Cedric Tornay, had shot the couple and
then turned the gun on him self.
One year ago: A Nigerian airliner crashed in the northern
city of Kano just after takeoff, killing a total of 154 people
on the plane and the ground. War Emblem, a 20- I shot,
scored a down-to-the-wire, four-length victory over Proud
Citizen in the Kentucky Derby.
Today's Birthdays: The president of Egypt, Hosni
Mubarak, is 75. Jazz musician Maynard Ferguson is 75.
Opera singer Roberta Peters is 73. JlUIZ musician Ron
Carter is 66. Rock musician Dick Dale is 66. Singer Tyrone
Davis is 65 . Singer-songwriter Nick Ashford is 61. Actor
Paul Gleason is 59. Pop sin ger Peggy Santigiia (The
Angels) is 59. Country singer Stella Parton is 54. Actorturned-clergyman Hilly Hicks is 53. Singer Jackie Jack son
(The Jacksons) is 52. Country singer Randy Travis is 44.
Actress Mary McDonough is 42. Comedian Ana Gasteyer
is 36. Rock musician Mike Dirnt (Green Day ) is 31. Rock
musician Jose Castellanos is 26. Singer Lance Bass ('N
Sync) is 24.
Thought for Today: "Love is blind; frie·ndship closes its
eyes." - Anonymol.(s.

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV ·

Obituaries

Local Briefs

Joy L. Martin

KCHS banquet
set for May 24

NEWARK , Ohio -

Joy

L. Martin, 73, ·or Newark ,

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

•

Sunday, May 4, 2003

•••
OUR READERS' VIEWS
How come?

pollution and water pollution Ohio Housing Trust Fund group of volunteers serving
to
continue unchecked.
through an increase in the with him in Sarajevo,
- I
Paul
Stinson
Bosnia, in the spring of
recordation fee.
Dear Editor:
Cheshire,
Ohio
An
increase
in
the
county
1998 . He is a humble and
Does anyone understand
fee
is
not
a
"hidmodest
person. If it were
recorder's
how big busi nesses operate?
Dedicated
funding
den tax," nor does it compro- not for the picture of our'
Why do they spend millions
mise revenue s used by standing in front of these
of dollars on equipment and
Dear
Editor:
Ohio's
counties, as asse ned bombed-out towers, 1 would
. then not operate that equipOur
state
has
a
good
track
by some county recorders. not have remembered our
ment? What is the rationale
record
of
helping
communiThe
proposal calls for the acquaintance.
for their actions?
ties such as Gallia and Meigs proceeds of the increased
1do remember why he
Case in point: AEP Gavin counties with support for
portion of the county recor- and there came to Bosnia.
Plant. I was told last year shelter and housing pro- dation
fee to be used to crethat they spent $7 million on grams. Managed by the Ohio ate the dedicated funding They came to spread the
the Unit i SCR to insure the Depanment of Development, source for the Ohio Housing message of the gospel, and
unit operated properly and these programs cover. the Trust Fund.
brought a $10,000 gift to the
safely for the 2003 ozone spectrum of housing needs.
The balance of the recor- Roman Catholic orphanage.
season, only to be told that
From emergency shelters dation fee would remain in This was indeed a noble and
Unit i will not operate this for the homeless such as county coffers. No funds needed gift. As a result of
ozone season - information Serenity House, to afford- currently collected through the civil war, there were
given by the Ohio EPA . .
able housi ng for families, the the recordation fee .would be many homeless orphan chilWe have watched the SCR disabled and the elderly, our taken from local communi- dren. This orphanage was
units being added to the state's shelter and housing ties. .
indeed a home of love.
Kyger Creek Plant over the programs are making a posiWith an uncenain econoThe Dupin Ministry is not ·
past several months , and tive difference.
my, now is not the time to only doing a good job
were told the first unit would
Housing programs are a reduce state suppon for this preaching the word, but livbe test-fired in February. The' sman investment and create most basic human need. I ing it through its sound
test did not happen, accord- jobs for Ohioans. Every ·$10 urge our state lawmakers to financial management and
ing to Ohio EPA. I am told million invested in the state's support affordable housing generosity. It has the patenthat the testing wi II occur on housing industry equals programs by creating a dedi- . tial to do great things in our
or about May i 5, but the 3,000 new jobs and more cated funding source for the
community, and we in the
Housing Trust Fund.
SCR units will not operate than $74 million in wages.
Hilda
Stotts
Christian
community covet
during the 2003 ozone seaAs our lawmakers deter.
Executive director your participation and supson.
mine the future course of our
If AEP is the good neigh- stat~ 's budget, we need to
Serenity House Inc. port.
John E. Jackson
bor/environmentally con- encourage them to continue
cerned corporation that they this investment. Currently,
Pastor
In support
claim to be, why do they lawmakers are considering a
New Life Lutheran
operate this way? We know proposal to provide a dediDear Editor:
Church
the dangers of allowing air cated revenue source for the
I me.t Clyde Dupin and a
Gallipolis , Ohio

On to the next enemy cif state: The fire ant
Almost the first thing that ·
female phorid tly swoops in
happened to me when I
on a fire ant and, in less than
moved to South Florida was
a tenth of a second, injects an
that I got attacked by a fire
egg into the ant's midsection.
am. This was my own stupid
When the egg hatches, the
fault: I sat on my lawn.
maggot crawls up inside the
Dave
ant,
and - .here's the good
I thought this was safe
Barry
part - EATS THE ENTIRE
because I had come from
OF
THE
CONTENTS
Pennsylvania, where lawns
ANT'S HEAD. This poses a
are harmless ecosystems conserious medical problem for
sisting of 93 percent crabgrass (my lawn was, anythe ant, which, after walking
way); 6 percent real grass; ant venom, and then around for a couple of weeks
and I percent cute little crit- watched, with a merry twin- · with its insides being eaten,
ters such as worms, lady- kie in each of his 5.684 eyes, has its head actually fall off..
bugs, and industrious worker as I leaped up and danced At that point, it becomes a
on
"The
ants who scurry around car- wildly around, brushing use- contestant
lessly
at
my
hand,
which
felt
Bachelorette."
rying objects that are 800 as though I had stuck it into a
times their own weight. toaster-oven set on "pizza."
No, seriously, at that point
(They don ' t USE these I'm sure the other ants had a the
ant
is deceased.
objects; they just carry them hearty laugh when ~rnie got Meanwhile,
inside
the
around. That's how industri- back to the colony and com- detac hed head, the maggot
ous they are.)
municated this story by turns into a tly, and, when it's
Your South Florida lawn, releasing humor pheromones ready, crawls out and goes
on the other hand, is a ("Then this MORON puts his looking for more ants.
seething mass of predatory HAND down' Yes! On the
You can see an amazing
carnivorous
organisms, LAWN! Ha ha! Must be from video of phorid !lies in action
including land crabs, alliga- Pennsylvania.")
a·
t
tors, snakes ranging in thickThat happened 17 years http://www.cmave.saa.ars.us
ness from "knitting needle" ago, and my hand just recent- da.gov/fireant/news i .htm.
to "thigh of Anna Nicole ly finished healing. So 1 am The video, which has a sound
Smith,'' lizards the size of not a fan of fire ants. This is track of wild, jungle-style
small dogs, and giant hairy why I was excited when 1 drum music, shows female
spiders that appear to have read a story by Jennifer flies -zipping around fire ants
recently EATEN small dogs. Maloney in the Miami like tiny lighter planes , givand are now wearing their Herald about a
U.S . ing the ants FITS. The video
pelts as trophies .
Department of Agriculture also shows how, when a fly
But the scariest South program, right in my neigh- isn't fast enough, it gets
Florida lawn-dweller is the borhood, to control fire ants turned into Purina Ant Chow.
fire ant, a quarter-inch-long by releasing a wondrous little
On a recent Friday, I went
insect that can easily defeat a creature called the decapitat- to watch University of
full-grown human in hand- ing phorid fly. This is an Florida Extension Agent
to-hand combat. That's what amazing fly that kills fire Adrian Hunsberger. and
happened to me. I sat on my ants via a method that, if Miami-Dade County biololawn, put my hands down insects wrote horror novels, gist Ruben Regalado, release
and YOW a fire ant - let's would have been dreamed up phorid !lies on the grounds of
call him Arnie- injected me by the fire-ant Stephen King. Baptist Hospital in Kendall.
'-'&lt;ith his Special Recipe fireWhat happens is, the JTo stan the procedure, Ruben

stuck a shovel into a fire-ant
mound and turned over a
bunch of din. Immediately,
fire ants charged out and
began scurrying angrily
around.
"They're looking for whoever disturbed their mound,"
said Adrian.
"I HAD NOTHING TO
DO WITH DISTURBING
YOUR MOUND," I shouted
at the ants. "RUBE~ DISTURBED YOUR MOUND.
I AM HERE AS A JOURNALIST."
•It's imponant to maintain
your objectivity.
While the mound was,
swarming, Adrian opened a
vial and released a bunch of
phond flies. The !lies, which
are almost invisible - Iittle
swooping specks - immediately went after the ants. At
least the female !lies did.
Presumably the males,
observing the Universal Guy·
Top Priority, tried to mate
with the females.
Anyway, I think it's a terrific idea, using natural enemies to attack fire ants. To
the
Depanment
of
Agriculture, I say: Gooa
work! To the female phorid
!lies, I say: You go, girls!
And to any fire ants that happen to be crawling on this
column, I say: REMEMBER,
l. DID NOT DISTURB
YOUR MOUND.
(Dave Barry is a humor

columnist for the Miami
Herald. Write to him in care
of The Miami Herald, One
Herald Plaza, Miami,

33/32.)

•
•

Fla.

formerly of Shade, died
Friday, May 2, 2003, at her
residence.
She was born November
i 5, i 929, in Henderson.
West Virginia, daughter of
the late Wilbur Dewell and
Helen Johnson Jones.
:she was a homemaker, a
IP48 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School. and a
member of the Shade
United Methodist Church.
She is survived by her
ch1idren, Wdham D. and ,
Kathl~en
Martin
of
P1ckenngton , John E. and
Judy Martin of Athens ,
Jerry L. and Kathy Martin
of Reynoldsburg. Timothy
G. .and Patt y Martin of
Charleston. West Virginia,
Peggy Lea and Malcolm
Grueser of Shade, and
Penny
W.
and
Paul
Galloway of Newark; 15
gra ndchildren and several
great-grandchildren; and a
sister, Juanita Shamblin· of
Point Pleasant .
She was preceded in
death by her parents; her
husband of ove r 53 years,
· William C. "Bi ll .. Martin, in
, 2002; an infant daughter,
Amberetta Martin; and a
brother, James Jones.
Services will be I i a.m.
Wednesday, May 7, 2003,
in the Fisher Funeral Home
in Pomeroy, with Pastor Jim
Stewart officiating. Burial
will fo llow in th~ Shade
Cemetery in Shade. Friends
may ca ll at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8
p.m. Tuesliay, May 6, 2003.
Friends may register and
se nd condolences online at
www. fi sherfuneralho mes .c
om

CHESHIRE, Ohio
KygerCreek
Alumni
Association's alumni banquet is Saturday, May 24 at
River Valley High School.
Doors open at 6 p.m. and
the meal will be served at 7.
Ail reservations will pay
at the door. Alumni are
asked to· notify family,
friends and classmates on
the date and time of the
event, as no invitations
were semthis year.
For reservations or informarion, call Becky Meaige
at 446-3194.

Alumni slate ,
annual dinner
MERCERVILLE, OhioPlans are being made for the
annu al Mercerville/Hannan
Trace alumni dinner,' set for
Saturday, May 24 at Hannan
Trace Elementary School.
Doors will open at 4 p.m.
for visitation, and dinner
wit i be prepared and served
by Margaret Hall at 6.
The meal is $15 per person. Reservations must be
made by May 17 . For information, contact Margaret
Myers at 446-0827.

Free child
immunizations

them balloon to four, " Hart
said, before reading some
of his poems , many of
which focus on rural life.
from PageA1
"So many petals drift into
just after leaving a crea!ive the forms, that I admit
defeat, and mix them in ,
writing ·session:
suppose
i do, small matter
The notes, Lentes said,
were "folded like intricate with so much concrete ,"
!lowers," oT!ending a sci- Hart read from ·';Under a
ence teacher ''unused to Cherry-Tree," a poem about
working in concrete under
academic passion."
She also read a poem - what else? A cherry tree .
Klare, who has 374 .pub about men who "loiter for a
lished
poems to her credit,
living," gossiping and
laughing over cups of cof- read selections published in
fee at the local McDonald's "Appalachian Heritage," an
- a writer's refuge for anthology of poetry publish~d
by Berea (Ky.)
Lentes.
Hart, a playwright and College, and a poem tified
novelist as well as a pub- "That Old House."
"That old house, almost
li shed poet~ is a professor
of English at the University lost to use in the woods of
of Ri o Grande, and edits our own fairy-tale worlds.
"S hip of Fools," a small lit- If we could find it', its garerary magazine which dens, its trees unchanged , a
showcases local poets.
gi ngerbread smell tantaliz"Most of my poems are ing air ali around. Would it
two-line works, but some of seem the same?"
'

Pike
from Page A.1
it's pushing to get l 0 years
out of it," Barnes noted .
Jackson Pike, also known
as County Road 35, is the
old portion of U.S. Route
35 that came into the county's hand s when .the new
four-lane opened in i 992. A
recent average traffic count
for the section of Jackson
Pike west of Mitchell Road
found 5,952 vehicles use
the road each day.
"You can imagine that's
double in the area where the
resurfacing occurs," sa id
Barnes .
The project is expected to
take about a week, depending on the weather. Barnes
said Shelly will work one
lime at . a time, so that the
other two lanes will be
open. Traffic will be maintained and it's expected
Shelly crews will work
until dusk.

ca·ndidate

Buckeye Hills
ceremony
May 22

from PageA1
--what bother&gt; me about
summarie-s is that they can
be manipulated and, deceptive ," added Eachus. "I can 't
understand why they would
want to take the full version s out of tfie new.spaper
where they will be read by
more people ."
,
"I' m sure it's being proposed to save money, but
government has to be
open," said Roderick, who
was solicitor from 1973
until 1974.

Avoiding the
negative

Cowie, , who 'ucceeded
Eachus as solicitor. said the
amendment arose as city
government. buffeted by
revenue challenges, a lower
share of local government
funding and the specter of
"Expect some delays," even less state assistance,
Bartles said. "It will be an looks for way&gt; to save
inconvenience to traffic, money. ,
but there should be only
He pointed to the cost or
short delay s.
· publishing a revision of the
"A lot will depend on the ci ty zoning code in 200 I ,
weather and how quickly it done a' a tabloid and di sis done," he added.
tributed through the new sBarnes said the engi- paper to city residents. The
neer\ office has been noti· cost to the ~ity was more
fied funding for a simi lar than 53 ,000.
resurfacing of Jackson Pike
The Internet has created
west from Mitchell to the another avenue for accessintersection with Ohio in~ information , Cow les
Route 588 has been sa1d, and the city luoks to
have its website join with
approved.
He expects that project the proposed GailiaNet , a
won't start for another three link of all Gallia County
years. Like the current job, . local government agencies
planning on paving that now in development.
"Of course, if they need
st ret£h will be done by
to have the full text of an
engineer's staff. r
A traffic count on Jackson ordinance , they can use a
Pike will be cond ucted compu ter or go to the
sometime this year with an library," Cowles said.
eye tDward a speed limit "Again. it's a new day as
reduction. The speed limit far as technology is conwas reduced to 45 mph on cerned.''
The so li citors said the
Mitchell earlier this year.
A similar speed reduction iment of what came to be
on McCormick Road will known as the "silent camalso be studied, Barnes paign" for commission candidates was to ensure the
said.
race is nonpolitical, and
skirt the tendency toward
Internet website, or viewed at
the City Building and
'
Bossard Memorial Library.
Former city solicitors R.
William Jenkins, William N.
'1
'~ . . .•
Eachus and Richard C.
Roderick Jr. have also voiced
.
I ..
opposition to this amendment. Their concerns are
.
,,. '
detailed in an artiCle in
';.i. ,.
today's edition.
· The . primary will be.
observed only in Gallipolis'
five voting precincts. No
;l111o- Owner.~ lnsurunce
countywide candidacies or
issues were filed for the priLife Home Car Business
mary.
7k~~~~ ...
Polls will be open from
6:30 a.m. until 7:30 p.m. at
INSVRANCE PLUS
the . following voting locations: Ci ty I, St. Peter's
:H;ENCIES. INC.
Episcopal Chu rch; City 2.
II ... Court Pomeroy
Gra.:e United Methodi st
Church; City 3 and 4, Firsl
Churd1 ol' the Nivarenc; and
Ci ty 5, the water treatmenl
plant.

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio The Gailia County Health
Department will provide
free immunizations on
7,
Wednesday,
May
Thursday, May 8, and
Tuesday. May 13, at the
County
Health
Gallia
Depanment at 499 Jackson
Pike, from 4 to 6 p.m. Also,
the WJC office will see
·clients by appointment during the evening hours.
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio Additional services such
Elizabeth A. Williams, 88, as: blood pressure checks,
of Gallipolis, died Friday and pregnancy tests wi]l be
evening, . May 2, 2003, at offered during the evening
from Page A1
Holzer Senior Care .Center. hours at the health depart. She was born January 23, ment. Children in need of
1915 , in Guliia County, immunizations must be · guage, and pu bliration of
daughter of the late Elmer accompanied by a parent or ordinance summaries in the
S. and Maude E. Lloyd legal guardian and bring a local newspaper.
·
Officials
believe
the
charNiday.
current
immunization
ter's Section 4 now limit$ the
In addition to her parents, record with them.
rights of commission candishe was preceded in death
dates, although three former
by her husband, Paul
city solicitors are arguing
Williams, whom she maragainst
its passage because
ried in 1937 at Gallipolis,
the amendment violates the
and who preceded her in
nonpartisan nature of the
1967, Also preceding her
commission
race and may
are two brothers, Merrill
a
tendency
toward negallow
and Lloyd Niday.
RIO GRANDE, Ohio
Elizabeth taught elemen- The annual senior certifi- ative campaigning. (See
Gallipolis charter, page
tary school in Gallipolis for ~ate cere mony of the Gallia- Al).
five years. Later, in acidi- Jackson- Vinton
Joint
The proposa l to publish
tion to being a mother and Vocational School Di strict ordinance "u mmarit"" hil"i
homemaker, she helped her ha s been set for 6:30 p.m. been taken as " .:ost-,a ving .
husband m his local Thursday, May 22 at measure hy the cil) . Under
acco unting busine-s .
Buckeye
Hills
Career the proposed amendment ,
She was a member of Center.
full text' ol ordinance' ca n
Grace United Methodist
The ceremony will be be accessed on lhe city''
Church, where she was a held
in
the
center's
member of the Abigail amphitheatre. In case of
Circle . She was also a 60.- rain, the ceremony will be
year member of th e Order moved to Lyne Center at the
Look
Monday.
of
Rio
of Eastern Star Chapter No. University
283.
Grande/Rio
Grande
She is survived by two Community College.
Buckeye Hill s student s
children, Jack Williams of
COUE'ON
Gallipolis, and Ann (David) will receive a career-techniStraley of. Dubuque, Iowa; cal certificate of completion
and two grandchildren, and a Career Passport. The
Todd Straley and Amy Career Pass port is a credenWill be given in GALLIA COUNTY by
Ehmeke.
tial iool that documents speServices will be 2 P·rTl· cific occupational skills,
&amp;ftD~~M HEARING AID CENTER
skills
and
Tuesday, May 6, 20° 3• in academic
the . Waugh-Halle_y- Wood employability skills of stuFuneral Home, _ wtth Bob . dents who complete a secPowell off1c1a11ng. Bunai
h · 1
. f
. M d H'li ondary
career-tee mea
wt 11 o 11 ow 111 ou n
1
·
· Oh ·
Call Toll Free
an
appointment.
IO.
Cemetery. Friends may call . education program m
The
l!!!s
will
be
given
by
a
Licensed
Hearing
Aid
Seeciallst.
at the funeral home from 5
Scholarshtps and. other
-Anyone
who
has
trouble
hearing
or
understanding
to&gt; 8 :m . Monday, May S, awards w1il also be g1ven to
conversation is invited to have a illf hearing test to see If
io03.p
student s dunng the ceremollhls
problem c11n be helped! Bring this coupon with you for
, To send a condolence to ny. Parents, family mem your ~REE HEARING TEST, a $75.00 value.
tlle family. please visit us at bers, fnends and commumUMWA•UAW;ARMCO, AND ALL OTHER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
www.timeformemory.com/ ty members are mv1ted to
WALK· INS WELCOME
.. .
whw
attend the program .
L

Elizabeth A.
Williams

Charter

Poets

attack . or negative ca mpaigning .
"What we do now is, th e
candidate is only prohibited
from door-lo -tloor cam paigning, " said Jenkin ·..
"They can answer any quc'~ions pu\ to th em. h wa s not
a
shut-the-q1n d1date-up
move.,,
Candidates being allowed
to advertise in media open &gt;
the door to attack ~ poisonin g I he atmo sphere of local
government, the form er
solicitors said.
"We don ' t need more of .
Jim Humphreys and Shelle y
Capito," said Jen kins , refer·
ring to the negative ad campaigns run by th e two candidates for Welt Virginia 's
Second
Co ngressional
Di st ri ct that blanketed area
radio and teievi,ion in 2000
amJ 2002 .
'' I understand the origin;, I
purpme of thai prov.isi on '
was for 1hc per,o·n to stand
. on their repuwtion wi th out
mud-slin gi ng,"'

snid

Cowles. ;,But how i's a lessknown person to run und er
this current provision?"
Cow le s said the Fir ' t
Amendment allows citizen '
the right to campaign for
office openly, "and thin ~ ,
have changed. I agree. I
don't like partisamh 1p
entering into it , but it
should be changed to refk cl
each commission cand idate's individual rights." '
The former so licitors s&lt;~id
they are not opposed to
charter amendments, whi ch
have .been made perindica l-.
ly over the years, but.
argued that more thou gh t,
and input needs to enter the.
process.
A charter amendm ent
com mittee once exist ed .
where the • charter wa&gt;
reviewed and changes,_
which must be approved by. the voters, were put on 1he
ballot when n!!ces sar y.
During Eachus' tenure.
suc h changes re sulted in the
expansion of the commis-.
sion from three to fiv~.
members in i 978.
"What needed revising
was
revised,"
said
·
Roderick.

.
Find historic

••'tnthe

Inc.

region, page C1

992-6677

ing Clinic Dates:
Jun• 27, July 25
(614) 221-6331

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Page AS • &amp;unba!' l!:imrl&amp;tntinrl

..

•

Inside:

Sunday, May 4, 2003

Middleport, Pomero)', Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

iunba~ limti ·ienttntl

Reds win at San Fran, Page 82
Eastern, Southern girls win, Page 83
In The Open, Page B7
·

Ho zer c lnlc went

Page Bl
Sunday, May 4,.2003
\......

Redmen hoops
camp openings
still available

to our
'

•'

'I

'

•

ARod lifts .Rangers over Tribe

CLEVELAND (AP) RIO GRANDE, Ohio Alex Rodriguez came
Openings are still available
through in the clutch again
for boys in grad,es 5-9 who
for
Texas, hitting a twowant to be a part of the
run
double in the seventh
University of Rio Grande
inning in the Rangers' 6-5
Big Red Basketball individwin Saturday over the
ual camp, June 8-12 . The
Cleveland Indians, who
camp will have an emphasis
have dropped nine of 10.
on offensive and defensive
Rodriguez doubled with
fundamentals, team play· and '
two outs off Jose Santiago
· (0-1) as the 'Rangers won
work ethic.
The camp also features the
for the first time when
only triple elimination tourll•ailing after the sixth
nament in the country.11f'The
inning.
Triple" begins on June II at
Rodriguez, who is batnoon and will run through
ting .555 ( 15-for-27) in his
midnight.
last six games, is also hit·
ling .555 (5-for-9) with
The camp staff consists of
two outs and runners in
Redmen
coaches/players·
scoring
position this seaand area high school coachson.
es and will have eight playTe~as
first baseman
ers per staff member.
Rafael
Palmeiro
went 1The cost of the individual
for-3
and
remains
two
camp is $250.
homers away from career
For more information or to
No. 500.
register, contact Rio Grande
Jay Powell (1-0) pitched
Assistant Men's Basketball
two innings for the win.
Coach Ken French at (740)
Ugueth Urbina pitched
245-7294 or 1-800-282the ninth for his ninth
720 I , ext. 7294. · Make
save.
checks payable to the Big
Matt Lawton homered
Red
Basketball . Camp,
and had three RBis for the
University of Rio Grande
Indians. '
Basketball Office, Rio
•
INDIANS
6,
Grande, OH 45674.
RANGERS 5: Ellis Burks
· hit a two-run double in the
eighth inning- his second
of the night - as the
Cleveland Indians snapl,ltd
an eight-game losmg
streak Friday with a 6-5
win over the Texas
Rangers.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
Alex Rodri~uez hit his
Academy athletic physical
1Oth homer m the first
forms may be picked up at
inning for the free-swingthe athletic director 's office
ing Rangers, who lead the
beginning Wednesday.
majors with 55 homers.
Forms must be completed
Burks, who brought the
and signed by a parent and
Indians to 5-4 with a douturned into the AD's office
ble in the sixth, did it again
by May 12.
in the eighth off ugueth
Beginning May. 14, athUrbina as Cleveland won
for the first time iri 17
letes that have turned· in
games when trailing after
completed and signed phys·six
innings.
ical forms will be measured
for height and weight and
Cleveland Indians' John McDonald slides safely into third base with a triple as Texas Rangers third baseman Hank Blalock
,........ Tribe, 81
takes the late throw in the fourth inning at Jacobs Field Saturday in Cleveland. (AP)
given a blood pressure test
by the school nurse during
gym class and study hall.
•
Physicals will be given 7
a.m., May 17 at the Holzer
Medical Center Clinic.
· Physicals and preliminary
tests will not be givin to
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)- with the Jazz.
that he would get over it.
anyone who doesn't have a
When
Jerry
Sloan
joined
the
Stockton
wouldn't
defini"I love him to death, but if I
completed
and
signed
lively
say
he
was
retiring,
but
could
see him right now I'd
UtahJazzasanassistantcoach
si~ned physical form on file
in 1984, his biggest question made it clear that was his like to shake him," Malone
wtth the medical history
about
a skinny rookie named intention. Utah's season ended said.
section.
Associated Press
Stockton's
statement
John Stockton was his durabil- Wednesday night with a loss
ity.
to the Sacramento Kings.
marked the first major tum of
"We were still concerned
"I would be very surprised. I . what figures to be an eventful
Tim Duncan of the San Antonio Spurs has won the balabout how would he hold up. can't think of what would offseason for the Jazz.
loting for the NBA's Most Valuable Player award, The
Shows how much we know as · change my mind at this point," Malone, who becomes a free
Associated Press learned Saturday.
coaches," Sloan said Friday. Stockton said.
agent this summer, might not
Duncan becomes the first player since Michael Jordan in
"Little did we know that he
Stockton, who rarely opens return if the Jazz do not pay
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
1991 and 1992 to win the league 's most coveted individual
- Scott Lewis pitched into
would play and be as effective up publicly, spoke !Jriefly with Malone what he feels he
award in consecutive seasons .
as he's been all these years. He reporters before his emotions deserves.
the eighth inning · and .Paul
took over. On the verge of · · "I don't want to say somejust did what you told him."
The San Antonio Express-News was the first news orgaFarinacci drew a basesnization to learn of Duncan's selection, reporting the news
loaded walk to force in the
Stockton, the NBA's career tears and his voice startin~ to thing that I regret. I don't
on its Web site early Saturday. A basketball source with
go-ahead as Ohio State beat
leader in assists and steals, crack, he cut the interview know what I'm thinking at this
knowledge of the final vote totals, speaking on condition of
Michigan 2-1 Friday night.
told Sloan and Jazz owner shert and quickly ducked out point," Malone said. "I'm still
anonymity, confirmed to the AP that Duncan had indeed
Larry Miller that he was plan- of the Delta Center.
shocked right now."
Lewis (8-0) allowed one
won the award.
ning
to
retire,
quickly
ending
'
Stockton
had
not
told
his
Sloan
also
is
considering
run, five hits, walked one
~peculation
that
had
grown
teammates,
even
forward
Karl
retirement,
but
didn't
want
to
An official announcement is to be made Sunday on ABC.
and struck out eight in 7 l/3
throughout
the
season.
Malone,
who
spent
18
seatalk
about
anything
other
than
Duncan hid the Spurs to the league's best record,' 60-22,
innings to match his win
"I think I'm finished," sons taking .thousands of pass- Stockton on Friday.
while averaging 23.3 points and career highs in rebounds ·
total from last season.
Stockton said in the Jazz lock- es from his pick-and-roll part"In my opinion, John
(12.9), assists (3.9) and blocks (2.92).
·
Matt Davis got five outs
room.
"I
informed
those
ner.
·
Stockton
was
the
greatest.
I
er
He beat a number of worthy candidates, including
for his eighth save as the
and
that's
the
direction
Malone
said
he
heard
the
had
the
opportunity
to
see
guys
Minnesot.
a 's Kevin Garnett, Orlando's Tracy McGrady,
Buckeyes (29-12, 15-6 Big
I'm
headed.
I
just
said,
'I
think
news
on
television
while
what
he
was
about
every
sinAllen
Iverson
of Philadelphia and Kobe Bryant and
Ten) took the opener of the
time
to
move
on."'
inside
the
arena
for
the
team's
gle
game,"
Sloan
said.
"He
it's
Shaquille
0'
Neal
of the three-time defending champion
four-game series.
Los Angeles Lakers.
·
The 41-year-old point guard final meeting of the season. gave it every single ounce of
Michael Penn ( 1-7) gave
15,806
assists
and
3,265
He
said
he
was
disappointed
energy
he
had
every
time
he
had
Writers
and
broadcasters
from
the
29
NBA
cities voted
up two runs and three hits in
slf..als
while
playing
I
,504
of
that
.
Stockton
didn't
deliver
stepped
on
the
floor
because
on
the
MVP
award,
sending
their
ballots
in
at
the conclu6 1/3 innings for the
1,526
possible
games
·
all
the
news
personally,
but
added
he
enjoyed
playing."
sion of the regular season.
Wolverines (22-19, 9-1 0) .
He struck out five, walked
five and set u~ the tiebreakin,g run by httting a batter
with one out in the seventh.
Penn hit Jedidiah Stephen
with his tOOth pitch - the
final one he made. He was
rc:placed by Tim Leveque,
who struck out Drew
BY HANK KURZ, JR.
Rescue crews sawed the roof off hi ~
Anderson but ·then allowed
Associated Press
Pontiac, and the Danbury, Conn ., native di d
two singles to load the
not appear to be moving when he was lifted
bases.
RICHMOND, Va. - Winston Cup driver from the car strapped to a body board. He
Farinacci worked Leveque
Jerry Nadeau remained in critical condition was being given. oxygen through -a bag, and
for a walK, bringing in
Saturday, one day after crashing hard into a his neck was in a brace. Hi s uniform
Ste~hen to make it 2-1.
wall ·during Winston Cup practice at appeared to have been removed when he was
Fannacci drove in Ohio
loaded a short time later onto a helicopter
Richmond International Raceway. .
State's other run with a sacand
taken to the hospital.
The 32-year-old driver was in intensive
rifice fly in the first.
Hunter said Nadeau was wearing a HANS .
care at Medical College of Virginia
Brock Koman had an RBI
device,
a head and neck restraint made
Hospitals with head, lung and rib injuries,
single for Michigan in the
in October 200 I - eight months
mandatory
NASCAR spokesman Jim Hunter said.. He
first.
after the death of seven-time Winston Cup
~ave_ no specifics ab&lt;Jut the extent of the
champion Dale Earnhardt.
·
IDJUnes.
The accident occurred a few hours before
Nadeau was injured during the final pracRescue crews work to extract Jerry Nadeau from his car after
the Busch series race on the track Friday
tice
for Saturday night's Pontiac Excitement
a crash during practice for Saturday's Pontiac Excitement 400
night. The event had a record I 4 cations
at Richmond International Raceway In Riohmond, Va .. Friday. 400 when his car skidded entering the first flags for 93 laps.
E-mail your Sunday sports
Nadeau was taken to a local hospital by helicopter and was turn, spun and slammed into the wall
news to sports@mydailytribetween the first and second turns.
PluH ... N•d•u.B1
reported to be In critical Condition. (AP)
bu~ by noon Saturd~y.

Gallia Academy
sports physicals
announced

.ll.i!f.

r

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it

•

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Stqckton plans to retire

Source:- Duncan
wins MVP award for
second straight year

Buckeyes edge
Michigan, 2-1

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After practice crash,.Nadeau
still in-critical condition

band.

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740.446.5'411
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Page 82 • &amp;unbap '~time~ : &amp;entinel

Sunday, May 4, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

. . Sunday, May 4, 200~

'

~unbap 'ltitn£S · :%&gt;rntinrl • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

83

!
r

I

·Graves show's he's a
Youth Cheerleading .
starter now in Reds win
'

BY GREG BEACHAM

Associated Press

Prep Softball

Co.llege Football

Eastern girls pound Federal Hocki~g . Alabama trustees
to hold on to t9p spot in TVC Hock1ng ·meet to decide
Price's job status
I

SCOTT Wou=E .
Sports correspondent
BY

SAN FRANCISCO - ·With every pitch
working and 'every San Francisco hitter
struggling, Danny Graves capped an extralong day at the ballpark with the longest out·
ing of his career.
Graves pitched a career-best seven scoreless innings for his first win of the season,
and Jason LaRue homered as the Cincinnati
Reds beat the slumping Giants 5 ~ I Friday
night.
· Barry Bonds hit'his 622nd homer in the
eighth, but the Reds already were well on
the way to their third straight victory on the
strength of an outstandin~ performance fr.o!"
Graves (1-2), who waned out two ram
delays on a couch in the Reds' clubhouse
·
before he had even thrown a pitch.
When the clouds finally relented, Graves
made another impressive start in a game that
ended shortly before midnight.
"It's weird, because everythin~ I threw
was working for me," Graves satd. "It's a
definite confidence-builder for me. If you're
going to stay here 'this long, you might as
well win."
.
Graves allowed at least four runs in each
of his first five starts this season, but he
dominated the Giants in the cold, wet weather at Pacific Bell Park. He allowed six hits
-· all singles- and didn't allow a runner to
reach third base .
"When I looked up at my .Pitch count, and
it said I 0 I, it kind of took the breath out of
me," the former reliever said. "I said, 'OK,
that's enough."'
. .
. In his lOth straight start a.fter begmmng
~is major league career wtth 363 relief
appearances, Graves struck out five while
lowerin~ his ERA from 7.81 to 6.23.
"T~at s more what I expect out of D~nny:,"
Cincmnau manager Bob Boone satd. I
don't think that's a fluke. That's two (starts)
in a row where he's ~it his spots and had
command of everythmg. He s got some
velocity, tooY
· Sean Casey started the .scoring with an
RBI double m the fifth. Adam Dunn, Jose
Guillen and Ryan Freel also drove i~ a run
apiece for the Reds, who won m San
· Francisco for the first time in two years.
The Giants had another dismal offensive
~ay despite getting 10 hit.s. San ~rancisco
has scored j\ISt 1,1 runs m tts last stx games
- five on Wednesday night.
· "We know the power is there somewhere,
but we haven't seen it excert for Barry,"
manager Felipe Alou sai~. " hate to start
juf\lping people left and n_ght. You have ,to
wait. I hate to change the hneup. Maybe I II
&amp;tart a couple of fresh guys just to add a little extra ingredient."
· Bonds hit his ninth homer of the season
for the Giants, who still are .off to their best
start in 30 years despite losing five of six.
Bonds launched an 0-2 pitch from reliever

Tribe
from Page 81
Rookies Jody Gerut and Trav.is Hafner
homered for the Indians, who avotded thetr
first nine-game slide since a 10-game skid in
1979.
Dave Elder (1-0), recalled from Triple-A
Buffalo on Thursday, got one out in the
eighth. Cleveland's bullpen had been the only

Nadeau
from Page 81
"Those of us that sit behind the wheel, you
kind of know that there's an assumed risk,"
Tony Raines said after finishing third in the
race. "It's always unfortunate, but it's kind of
a part of the business.
"I hope everythi~g goes all. right,. .but Y?U
can't think about 11 because mdectston wtll
get you in trouble," out on the traek, he said."
Nadeau 's wife, Jada, was attendmg her
grandfather's funeral in Spartanburg, S.C.,
when contacted by NASCAR. Driver Johnny
Benson's team sent a plane to pick her up, but
it had to tum back because of severe weather
in the Spartanburg and Charlotte, N.C., areas,
Hunter said.
A second plane, this one sent by NASCAR,
brought Jada Nadeau to Richmond at about
I I p.m., and she stayed with her husband until
3:30a.m.
1
NASCAR impounded the car and was planning to transporr it to its research and development center in Concord, N.H., for further
·
·
testing, Hunter said.
Investigators already have ruled out early

h i t e
reached an
errors, and
K a s s
Lodwick
smashed
a
grand slam
home run, the
score 7-0.
Eastern
six
added
more runs in
the
fourth
·when · with
one
out
Holter doubled, White tripled, and Kass Lodwick
walked. Katie Robertson reached on an
error as did Brandy Bissell, then Becky
Taylor slammed a two-ru.n single and
Jenny Armes had an RBI tnple, the score
W

STEWART, Ohio
Outscoring
Federal Hoc king 14-1, the Eastern
Eagles maintained a hold on the league's
top spot by defeating the Lancers 14-1
Friday night at ·Federal Hocking High
School.
Eastern is now I 5-2 overall and 12-2
in the league with one game remaining.
• Eastern scored first in the first when
Alyssa Holter delivered a one out safety
by reaching on an error. She came home
on a Krista White hit ball that was mts. played and Kass Lodwick singled.
Eastern scored six times in the second
inning when Morgan Weber doubled,
and after two out Jenny Annes had an
RBI single, Casey Smith, Holter, and

13-0.
Eastern was led in hi tting by Armes
with a triple, White a tripl e, Lodw ick a
four-run grand-slam home run. a
Robertson singl e. Morgan Weber a dOLIble, two singles by Brandy Bisse ll , and
two singles By Becky Taylor.
.
Robertson gained the wi n with seven
strikeouts and four walks. Andrea Moore
was the losing pitcher 'with two strikeouts and one walk .
·
·
Coach Pam Douthiu 's c lub continued
its winning days as it approac hed to urn ament play next week. Eastern 1s 1dle until
its Sectional Championship game
Wednesday against the wi nner of the
Crookwille-Mill er ga me.

Eastern
1
- t4 10 a
100
6 o6
Federal Hocking ooo 001 o - t 25 .
. WP·Robertson and Sayre; LP·Moore and Wolle.

Tornadoes down Miller to .improve to 14-4
BY ScoTT Woi.J'E
Sports correspondent

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Danny Graves runs for
cover as rain delays the game against the San
Francisco Giants during the first Inning Friday
In San Francisco. The start of the game had
been delayed by rain. (AP)
Felix Heredia onto the arcade atop the rightfield wall in the eighth.
. .
Giants rookie.Kurt Ainsworth (3-2) ts wmJess in three straight starts after be.ginning
the season with three consecutive vtctones.
He didn't make it through the fifth inning
against the Reds, walking · six batters and
, . .
aHowing four hits.
"I should have pitched better, Amsworth
said. "It's ridiculous to throw that many
pitches (102). I thought the game would get
called and I kind of lost my focus, but
there'~ no excuse · for walking guys like
that."
The game started 52 minutes late, and
there was another 36-minute delay after
Ainsworth struck out ·the side in the top of
the first. A hard rain bounced off the tarpaulin and sent fans scurrying for shelter, but it
gradualJy subsided.
Ainsworth wasn't sharp, but he stayed out
of trouble until the fifth .. Felipe Lopez
walked, stole second and scored on Casey's
double to the right-field wall.
LaRue hit his third homer of the season on
former Cincinnati reliever Jim Brower's
first pitch of the sixth. Dunn had a run-scoring smgle later in the inning. In the seventh,
Guillen tripled and scored on Freel's
squeeze bunt.
orie in the majors without a victory.
Danys Baez pitched the ninth for his fourth
save and first since April 9. The converted
starter had blown his last two save tries and
had a 16.63 ERA in his previous five outings.
Rookie reliever Billy Traber kept Cleveland
close with 3 2-3 scoreless innings.
Texas starter Joaquin Benoit blew his
chance to make the rotation with a disappointing spring training and made five starts
at Triple-A Oklahoma before being recalled
earlier in the day.
'

speculation that the accident was caused by a
stuck throttle or a blown tire, he said.
Nadeau was racing in the clear when he lost
control of his car.
·
Earlier, Nadeau qualified 12th for the race.
Busch Series regular Jason Keller was to
rnake his Winston Cup debut dnvmg
Nadeau's backup car Saturday night.
Nadeau, a one-time winner in his sixth full
season on NASCAR 's top circuit, earned his
only victory in the final race at Atlanta in
2000.
His best season in Winston Cup was 200 I,
when he had four top-five and I 0 top-! 0 finishes in 34 mces as a Hendrick Motorspons
teammate to four-time series champion Jeff
Gordon. Nadeau finished 17th in potnts.
After parting ways with Hendrick
Motorsports last season, he landed in a ride
with Petty Enterprises in June and was on hts
way to an easy victory in Sonoma, Calif.,
when a ·gear broke in his car with two. laps
.
left.
It was just another bad break in his Winston
Cup career: He ran out of gas while leading
on the final lap of the. 200 I season finale in
Atlanta. A few months earlier, he'd been
dominant in the inaugural race at Chicago
when he lost his motor.

Hannan Trace fifth and sixth grade cheerleaders have recently wrapped up their season ,as
champions. They received 1st place in both the Southwestern and Bidwell Cheerleadmg
Competitions. The fifth and sixth grade cheerleaders are advised by Mrs. Karen Waugh and
Mrs. Donna Bevans. Front row, left to right, Chelsea Watson, Stac1e Cummons. Ha11ee
· Swain, Kirstie Bertrum. Back row, Katie Fellure, Jasmine Waugh, Kelsey Wells. and Lindsey
Johnson.

Bv ScoTT Wou=E
Sports correspondent

The Hannan Trace Instructional Cheerleaders recently completed their season for 2003. The
Instructional Cheerleaders coached by Leanne Hornsby received third Rlace 1nt .he
Southwestern Cheerleading Competion and first place at the Bidwell Cheerleadlng
Competion . Front row, left to right, Racheal Johnson, Tabby Estep. Pa1ge Sanders. Lex1e
Johnson , Madilynn Dennison. Back row, Allie Hornsby, Rachel Ell1s, and Meghan Ca ldwell.

TUSCALOOSA , Ala.- Mike Pri ce's future as football coach at Alabama was put in the hands of school
trustees Saturday.
.'
About 100 people, half fans and half media, gathered
in a room at the Bryant Conference Center as trustees
started a meeting called by university president Robert ·
Witt.
Price - yet to coach the Crimson Tide in a game and his wife arrived shortly before the meettng began . .
Witt was to give the trustees' athletic committee Iu s
recommendation on whether Price should be pumshed
for his behavior on a trip to
"We had more Florida last month for a pro-am
golf tournament.
fun playing
According to news reports,
Price
paid for private dan ces at a
football this
topless bar and, the next mornspring than I ing,
a woman ordered about
$1
,000
of room service and
have since I've
charged it to Price 's hotel bill.
been here.
The school' s inve stig ati on
also
could be expanded to
Everybody on
accusations that Price
this team feels include
bought drinks for students. The
the exact same Tuscaloosa News reported
waywedo.We Friday.
The 57-year-old · Pri ce has
declined to comment about the
all want him
detail s of the reports. Six playhere:•
ers met with the coach in his
-Alabama ·quarterback office Thursday and expressed
Brodie Croyle support for him .
"We---had more fun playi ng
football this spring than I have since I've been here,"
quarterback Brodie Croyle said. "Everybody on th1s team
feel s the exact same way we do. We all want htm h~re.
Price agreed to a seven-year contract worth $10 mtllion
after leaving Washington State in December, but he ~as­
n't signed the deal. It has a clause saymg he can be f1red
for any behavior "that brings (the) ~mployee mto public
disrepute. contempt. scandal, or ndtcule or that reflects
unfavorably upon the reputation or the high moral or ethical standards of the University."
Price expressed lofty ambitions 'upon his hire after
leading Washington State to its second Rose Bowl of his
14-year tenure.
.
.
.
" ! want to be the second-best coach m the history ot
Alabama football, " he said. "If I could do that .' I think
that would be wonderful.
" It probably isn ' t going to be, done the way Papa did it,
the way Coach Bryant dtd tt. It s gomg to be the ;-vay I do
it. To walk on the same sidelines that he walked ts a huge
honor.''
The university hired Witt in late January from TexasArlington .
·
.
.
.
If Price loses the job, there would be little t1me lor _a
new coach to put in his system and assemble a stalf.
Price has two sons on the Alabama staff: offen s1ve coor. dinator Eric and quarterbacks and kickers coach Aaron .
Price also has two assistants with 'head coaching experience: Defensive coordinator Joe Kines was head coach
at Arkansas in 1992, and tight ends coach Sparky Woods
had head coac hing stints at South Carolina ( 1989- 1993)
and Appalachian State ( 1983-88)

Gaining
experience Doup sutfered the loss with no
throughout the year, the strikeouts. three walks. and
sophomore hurler looked like seven hits against him . Miller
a veteran. Miller, however, had four error and Southern
scored single runs in the fifth one.
.
Southern is idle unti l
and· sixth innings, but in the
seventh .. Brown took over by Monday when . it play s at
striking out the side to pre- Federal Hockin g.
serve the Tornado win.
.
Miller
000 11 1 0 - 364
Southern hlifers . were Southern 1 2 1 0 0 0 ' - 4 7 1
Brown 2·3 with a double, and WP-Cole Brown and P)lolson, LP·Doup and
singles by Justin Connolly, · Hook.
Adam Ball, Curt Crouch, Joey ..----.,-------;:---="---:=-::::--;:----:;::-7;"":i'l:~:;:-;;~7\:;--:--=J
Phillips, and Je~emy Yeauger.
Miller hitters were Hook 23 with a home run, and singles
by Jordan Doup, Jeremy
Paige, Dustin Mitchell , and
Nathan Brown.
Brown had ten strikeouts,
four walks, and scattered six
hits in picking up the wm.

Iowa State coach Eustac.hy
suspended for NCAA violati~n

SILVERADO ....... LIKE AROCK
I ' fM

2000 JEEP GRANo

CHEROKEE LAREOO

'18,180

RACINE, Ohio - ..Behind
the great pitching of sophomore hurler Cole Brown, the
Southern Tornadoes claimed a
4-3 Tri-Valley Conference
. boys baseball win over the
Miller Falcons Friday night.
Southern is now 7-12.
Southern jumpe~ o~t to a 10 lead in ~he first mmng when
Jordan Htll walked, stole second, and scored on a Jeremy ·
Yeauger . single.
T~e
Tornadoes scored two more m
the second when A9am B~l
reached on an error and Justm
Connolly singled him home.
An error on Tommy

Theiss's hit ball advanced the
runners and a sacrifice fly by
Hill pushed the score to 3-0.
In the third frame, Cole
Brown Jed off with a single
and stole second. Brown then
advanced on a passed ball and
came home on an Adam Ball
sacrifice fly, the score 4-1 .
•Into the fourth inning
Brown had just faced two over
the minimum number of batters. In the fourth though Chip
hook jumped on the first pitch
and rode it far over the left
center field wall for a solo
home run, the score 4-1.
Brown then struck out two of
the next· three batters and
retired the side in order.
Brown was sharp all night
long.

BY JOHN ZENOR

Associated Press

On Most
.ZOO.J

Pontiaes
fl Buicks

College Basketball

K·18004X4

111211, .,.., auto, air, till ,
.,.....
..~ldoweCD.
locke ,- _, AMIFM.
eport .., .....

Miller
100
0 11
4 - 762
Southern
224
300
x - 11145
WP-Rachel Chapman and Katie Sa')lre: LP-AII1er and
Alicia Ferguson.

Brown's pi~ching helps Southern edge Miner

111111,-.alr..... cruioe.

~--'-·-"·
'18,130

added three in the fourth , and Miller
added single runs in the fifth and sixth to
.
push the score to II.-3. .
Miller pushed across lour runs m the
seventh. Kelsi Brown walked. Rachel
Bentley reached on an error, Courtne y
Wright reached on an error, Bray
walked, and a third error let in a couple
more runs on an Altier hard hit ball.
Fanchon Clikc then doubl ed before
Chapman struck out o~c and ¥Ot Erica
Manring to fly out to Emdy Hdl tu end
the game, the score II · 7. .
.
Southern hitters were Pullins 4-5 wnh
two doubles, Katie Sayre 3~3. Chapman
2-3, Ashley Roush a doub le. Alihlee Hill
a double, and singles by Bri gette Barnes,
.
Joanne Pickens. .and Holly Dutt~ .
Miller hitters were Fanchon Ghck wnh
a double and sin.gle, Kelsi Brown a double and triple. and singles · by Ashley
Hinkle and Leslie Altier.

Prep Baseball

2000CHEVY

co. . , . , -· ve. ·

RACINE, Ohio - Keeping amid tlie
Tri-Valley Conference Hocking Division
race, the Southern Lady Tornadoes
claimed an 11-7 conference win over the
Miller Falcons Friday night at Star Mill
Park.
Southern is now 14-4 overall, 8-3 in
the TVC. Miller i's 4-12 .
Senior Rachel Chapman picked.up h~r
14th win of the season by scattenng stx
hits, walking three, and fanmng stx batters in a hard week of work.
Chapman has been the Southern workhorse in what has been a great season.
With four league games remaininjl.
Southern hope to push above the 15-wm
mark behind their star hurler.
.
Leslie Altier suffered the loss despite a
good effort. She 'fanned one, gave up 13
hits, walked six, and gave up II runs.
Altier pitched well but timely SHS hitting and a couple MHS errors came at

times that allowed SHS to take advan·
.
tage.
Miller went up 1-0 on a smgle by leadoff hitter Ashley Hinkle, a steal, a 4,3
ground out by Emilie Bray, and a smgle
by Leslie Altier. Southern then came
back with two runs to take a 2-1 lead on
a leadoff double by Deana Pullins, a
Katie Sayre double , · and a Rachel
Chapman single, the score 2-1.
SHS came up with two in the second
for a 4-llead. Emily Hill drew a twoout walk and Dean Pullins drove her
home before Katie Sayre delivered her
s~cond RBI hit.
In the third inning, Southern plated
four runs, once again with two outs.
Joanne Pickens singled, ·Ashley Roush
and Holly Duffy walked. Emily Hill
reached on an error that drove in a couple runs. and Deana Pullins had a tworun double , the score 8-1.
Southern seemed to breeze right along
behind Chapman's pitching. Southern
subbed fre.ely in the interim, but Miller
hadn' t thrown in the towel. Southern

GENE JOHNSON
CHEVROLET .
7 40-446-3672

AMES Iowa (AP) - A week that began a good staff that can do that."
on a tum~Ituous note for Iowa State's basketIowa State announced the NCAA saneball program ended the same way.
lions which included a reprimand for
On Friday, the NCAA ordered coach Larr.Y Eust~chy, several hours after students rallied
Eustachy already suspended by the univem- in support of the embattled coach:
ty for his' behavior at late-night parties, to sit
Several basketball players JOmed a~ul
out one game for a secondary rules violation. 300 stud~nts ~ear!ng ~ro-Eustachy T-shtr~s
Eustachy was found to have twice paid :. and carrym¥ stgns outstde the offtce of umJa ers for making free throws - $20 to .one versity Prestdent Greg.ory Geof!'roy. .
ppla~er after a game and $10 to five others at Associate athletic dtrector ~til Smtt~. the
·
actt'ce
university's compliance coordmator. satd he
apr
·
· 1allons
·
·on Feb· .19 ·
The
nalty might be moot, however, learned of th e vm
Smith's report t~ the NCAA satd Eustachy
becausfathletic director Bruce Van De Velde
has recommended that Eustachy be · fired gave ~20 to a player who made a key free
because of his after-hours conduct, whtch throw m a 74-70 vtctory over Ba,Ylor on Feb.
was first reported Monday.
I. Eustachy had satd h.e should gtve the playThe Des Moines Register ran an account of er $10, the report satd, but no .one on the
rt'es that Eustachy attended in Columbia, coachmg staff had a $10 btll .
.
.
K{ 1 d Manhattan Kan., and printed pho- • Administrative assistant .Bob Sundvold had
to~·~f~ustachy kissing and being kissed by a $20 bill and that was gt ven to the player,
oun women on the cheek.
whose name was blacked out m the report .
y Va; De Velde said the violations, which
"Eustachy repone~ that he dtd not thmk
Iowa State reported to the NCAA, .had noth- anything about provtdmg the money to the
·
t do with his move to terminate younjl man because he was exctted about
~Jsta~hy who earlier this week said he was winmng the game," the report satd.
bein tre~ted for alcoholism.
On Feb. 13 , the report said ftve players
B~ Van De Velde said they were still trou- were given $10 each for wmmng free throw
bling beCliuse someone else in the athletic contests at prl!cllce. It satd Eustachy tor a
department and not Eustachy, reponed them . trainer the money should be taken out o . tre
.,
·
' cern me that it came from sec- players' meal money so II would not be 11 eIt
did
con
been
gal. But the tramer
and the
.
.
d dmisunderstood
d
ondary sources, , he said · "If it hadn't
d'
red it could have led to maJor vtola- money was never e ucte .
.
The five players, whose names also were
.tscove •
~~~~s.don't know for sure how the NCAA blacked out, ad.mitted in separate mtervtews
would have perceived it, but it sure helps th~t they recetved the money. the report
w~ you can self-report. Thank God I have satd .'/,

f

4 Door,
Automatic, .
CD, Tilt

Cruise,

V-6 Engine,
Low Miles

P. Windows
&amp; Locks

900
White

·so at 4.99%,

Only 19,000
miles, V6

Engine,
Aluminum

Wheels

'' .

�..

•

'

.

Sunday, May 4, 2003 .

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Plenant

Browns get good
riews on rookie back
Bv ToM

WITHERS

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Associated Press

IRVING, Texas (AP) - Bill Parcells finally took the field as the Dallas Cowboys' coach
friday, and he didn.' t take long to set a tone for
how he plans to do things.
When one player wasn't paying attention,
the entire offensive unit had to run across two
football fields and touch a distant tree before
returning to try the play again.
: "That 's the way I do things. It's nothing
new," Parcells said. "The point of it is they
need to pay attention . That was just for
emphasis . There are a lot of reasons they can
run to the fence. Get used to it, you will see
quite a bit of that."
Missing from the helmets of the 19 rookies
was the Cowboys' famed star logo, a decal
l"arcells said they will have to earn.
: "It's the rookies , they ' re just numbers right
11ow," Parcell s said.
And when there was a break during the onehour. 45-minute practice, rookie ~ornerback
and first-round draft pick Terence Newman
from Kan sas State - the fifth overall pick in
last weekend's draft - was fetching water for
Parcells.
"
It's a job Parcells says Newman will keep
for the next year - until there is another first round pick .
For the first time in more than three years,
si nce his last season with the New York Jets in
1999, Parcells was back on the field coaching.
· " It was fun ," said Parcells, a head coach for
i5 NFL seasons. · .
'· Parcells see med at ease Friday, the start of a
three-day minicap in which 46 players took
part. In addition to the rookies were 25 veterans, including quarterbacks Chad Hutchinson
, and Quincy Carter.
: Wearing a navy blue Cowboys T-shirt,
Parcells paced the field throughout the practjce. At times he yelled orders to players, and
a~ other times stood with his arms crossed or.
hands stuffed in his pockets just observ(ng
~ile his assistants ran drills.
, ··Parcells was hired Jan. 2 to rfPlace Dave

n

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guys trying out, took physicals and to took
part in their first practice as pros Friday. ·
New faces mixed with some familiar ones
in the Browns' locker room as several of the
club's vet~rans were at the facility working
out.
Defensive end Israel Idonije, who played
at the University of Manitoba, tightened the
snaps on his shiny orange Browns helmet as
some fellow rookies - all wearing gray Tshirts - scribbled down notes before practice.
·
"It's awesome, " said ldonije as the 6-foot6, 275-poun\ler taken in the CFL draft on
Wedne sday scanned the Browns' spacious
locker room . "This is the NFL."
The newest Browns were awed by the
opulent facilities at the team 's training complex.
Thompson's college didn't have enough
money to hire a strength and conditioning
coach and barely enough to afford some barbells and plates for the weight room. ·
Thompson said he was blown away when
he saw the Browns ' strength room for the
first time .
"I was like, 'This is nice, man '," he said.
"This might as well be a sports club."

Campo, who was fired after three straight 511 seasons. ·
He was the type of proven coach that owner
Jerry Jones was looking for in hopes of returning his .team to prominence. The Cowboys
won the last of their five Super Bowls- three
for Jones - in 1996 and haven 't had a winning record since 1998.
'
Parcells took the New York Giants, New
England Patriots and New York Jets from losing records to the playoffs' in two seasons. He
has a 138- 100- 1 record in regular-season
games, and is 11 -6 in the playoffs with two
Super Bowl wins for the Giants and an AFC
title with the Patriots.
Jone s watched the practice from the sideline, finally getting an up-close look at how
the coach he gave a $17 .I million, four-year
contract handles things on the field .
"I thought Bill demanded the full concentration," Jones said. "Considering that some of
these guys had never been together as a team,
I was impressed with how the practice went."
Jones said he liked Parcells' . idea about
removing the star logo, and the running punishment for the offensive unit.
.
"Bill 's from the old school, and this probably points that you can get players to do it the
old way, and the old way 'is a good way,"
Jones said. " He's won championships doing it
that way and I was pleased with his first practice ."
· Parcells said the weekend minicamp is primarily an orientation foJ the young players, as
well as an opportunity for his coaching staff to
work together on the field .
Reporters weren 't allowed to talk to players
after the first practice.
When asked what will determine if his first
minicamp is a success, Parcells said he doesn't expect to classify it as that - no matter
what happens the next two days.
"Oh, I'm pretty sure I won't be saying we
had a good ca.mp," Parcells said. "It's just like
chaos right now. It's hard to get a feel on
everything."
Except that Parcells is already in conttol at
Valley Ri)llch.
~·

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CELTICS

Tearn leaders

Pts. allowed per game

Martin

22.3 · PPG Pierce

97.8
-91.2

Martin

10.0 RPG Pierce .

9.2

9.2 APG Pierce

6.0

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New Jersey

Kidd

25.8

Jefferson .545 FG% McCarty .510
Collins
Kitties

.846 FT% Pierce

.889

.421 3PT% Delk

Schedule (best-of-7)
Game 1 May 5 at Ne~ Jer~ey 7 p.m.
Game 3 TBD at Boston

TBD

Opp. TO per game
r "
• 13.3
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Game 4 TBD at Boston

TBD

Game 2 May 7 at New Jersey 7 p.m.

Game 5* TBD at New Jersey . TBD
Game 6* TBD at Boston

TBD

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'

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,.'

- - 90.5
-106.8
85.2
-100.5
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loi.lll.o.-ll!olll.ll!o.l • 403
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.463

Only

Gallipolis Hometown Uealer ·

GENE JOHNSON
CHEVROLET
,
7 40-446-3672

Power Steering, 'nit Wh•eel,
AM/FM Stereo, •nd More!!

Turnovers per game
__...__·. 18.5
-12.0
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16.2
-15.8
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----.;.,; .,o

.524
.533

SOURCE: Associated Press

"

San Antonio won series over
Phoenix 4-2
Los Angeles won series over

.'

hp!!dition

Duncan 18.7

PPG Bryant

RQat Ait, Thltd

$H?,4-95

Los Angeles

San Antonio

4.X4, XLT,

4X4- Loaded

Tearn leaders

.Pts. allowed per game

s

. (5) L.A.
LAKERS

Tearn comparison Road to the Conference
Semifinals
San Antonio 1 "·' 'I

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WESTERN
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76ers 107,
Hornets 103

The Portland Trail Blazers
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Pistons gave themselves
another chance to avoid one of
At New Orleans, Iverson
the league's most dubiou s capped hi s 45-point perforpostseason distinctions.
mance
by
scoring
The Philadelphia 76ers were Philadelphia's final six points
the only team to close out their - including a key straightseries in the three Game 6s awav bank shot with I0 secplayed Friday night, with onds left.
·. 110, OT .
.
" I
Allen Iverson scoring 45
Iverson had been held to 30
~~~:
points in a I07 -I 03 victory in points or less in Games 2-5..
San .Antonlo 99, f'hoenlx 86
New Orleans.
"After that first game I had
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. a.tunt.y, April 2t
Mllwaukee 119, Naw Jeraey
face the Orlando-Detroit win- talking about what they were
114, OT
•
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New Orleans 99, f'l&gt;iladetphia
It appeared a few day s ago about is keep fighting and
85
'
.
.
that the Magic would be the something positive will come
Utah 107, Sacramento 104 .
winning team in that series, out of it," he said. "Obviously;
$1111UY, April I?
Boeton 102, fndl- 92
•
but things have changed for I wasn' t dead in the water,Jt's
t:,A. lrikere· 102/ Minnesota
those two teams almost as just not as easy as people think
97.
much as they have in the to score 55 points night in and
, 9,rlando 100, Datroit 92
Dallas-Portland series.
~11(198, Dai!M, 79
night out."
PJ~oenlx es, Sen AniQnlo 84, '
Chauncey Billups broke out
Keith Van Horn had I 8
' i ' Mailday, Aprtl28
·
?f
his.
3-point
Sh&lt;J?ting
slump
points
and 18 rebounds, and
Ftllladelphla 96, New Orleans
tn
a
btg
way,
making
more
3·
Derrick
Coleman added 16
8"1
..
pointers in the fi_rst quarter points for the' Sixers.
. tfiiCtamento 99 U18h 8l!
than he .h.ad all senes and finCoach Larry Brown told his
tshmg
w1th
~
.
career-htgh
40
players
to give Van Hom a
San AntoniO ~. Phoenix 82
pomts
as
vtsttmg
Detrort
beat
standing
ovation when he
t~~· Botton 88, OT . ·
L.~. ......... 120, .MJn~
Orlando I 03-88.
came into the locker room after
90 . ' ·'' .
( '
' .( '
In Portland, the .Trail the game.
•
'Nellneltt,, Ailrll30
Blazers scored 37 pomtsm tlje
Jamal Mashburn, playing his
New Grleana 9 ,Pnuadelphla
64
m
the
second
game with a chipped
second
quarter.
and
. 91
'
first half, openmg a huge lead bone in his right middle finger,
OetrQ\t911, 0~ 67
PorUand 103, OallaJ 99
that held up as they. pounded scored 36 points to lead New
Saclamento 11 1, U\Bh 91,
the vtstbly shaken Mavencks Orleans. The Hornets were '
~ctamento wins Slll'jl!18 .4- f ·
125-103.
.
hurt by 14-for-23 free throw
. :.'J]Iurldly, May 1..•
Game 7. of. the Magtc- shooting, missing five of eight
BostQn 110. Indiana 90;
Botton wtna·serles 4-2
.
Pistons senes ts Sunday at in the final period.
. New Jersay 113.
12:30 p.m. EDT, to be fol101, N.""'( Jersey wtns B&amp;j1es 4- .·
lowed
at 3:30p.m. by the Trail
2
'"
'
Blazers-Mavericks
game.
San An!OniO 87, Pl'loenbl 85,
Portland
is
trying
to become
san Antonio wins Sillies 4-2
LA: Lakers ' 101, Minnesota
the first team in league history
85, I.Oa ·Ar\gele• wtns sertes.+l ,
to come back from a 3-0
2
AI Orlando, Fla., Billups
deficit
to win a series. The
Friday, Mty 2
Blazers became just the third shot 7-of-14 on 3-pointers ·Detroit 103, Orlando ~8,
including all five tries in the
team to win three straight
serk!l! 1Je1;13-3
.
. '' .
first
period when Detroit
. · Philadelphia , .107, •· New ·•·
games after losing the frrst
seized a lead it would never·
Orleana 103, Phlladelf)hla wins
three.
series 4·2
relinquish .
"Some teams would maybe
Portland t:;!5, Dallae 103, ,
.
Billups entered the game
B&amp;rle$ dad 3-3
•.
want to give up," forward
shooting
14 percent 14-for-28)
Today'a GatMa
Bonzi Wells said. ''But we just
from
behind
the arc, but credOrlando at Oetrolt, 12:30 p.m.
told
ourselves
if
we
take
it
one
Portland " Dalla$, 3:30 p.ll!.
.
game at a time, why can't it be ited a healed left thigh bruise
us? Why don't we be the team for his turnaround.
· coHFEAINCE 8EMII'l"Shooters shoot," said
NALS.
to make history?"
Billups,
who beat his previous
(8Ht-of•7)
The winner of that series
MQnclay, ..., 6
will advance to play the scoring hign by four. "I'm just
Boeton at New Jersey, 7:00
p.m. .
Sacramento Kings in a sec- continuing to stay aggressive."
Richard Hamilton added 22
LA. lakenl at San An10nlo.
ond-round series beginning
points, and Ben Wallace had
9:30p.m.
.
. .
·
Tuesday night.
Wt&lt;l~,~~~ty7 · .··
his
fourth double-double of
Two second-round series
Boeton at New JeiMy, 7:00
the
series,
tying his career high
will begin Mo!)day night, with
p.m.
with
20
points,
grabbing 17
L.A. Lakera at San An10nlo,
Boston visiting New Jersey,
9:30p.m,
· and the defending champion rebounds and blocking five
shots.

Pistons 103,
Magic 88

All times EDT

SOURCE: Associated Press

4iijlll

Los Angeles Lakers playing at
San Antonio.

¥ttwaukee -

~Sieelils S.,!Mipa. Silfmilro49ers Seat11e8eahms Stlou~Aams Tarflllrfllmnlls TennesseeTrtans ~Arlili!
Soli
•
,.
So!&lt;
,.
So!&lt;
So!&lt;
..
4 11
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1 ·-~II'
I 00. &lt;1510 1 llo- tJ!po 7 Wlln '"'
I . . . lpo
1 Oilllld 13110
lpo
H iDCit 1111

Associated Press

·.. ~ ;JI;":.'tt::.~kee It

,~;;

*if necessary

.

Pistons, Trail
Blazers force
Game ·7s;
76ers advance

'1

.433

Turnovers per game
··-..' . 16 •0
•·1 &lt;""
-12.5

Total rebound pet.
.568
.457

.

Daltu 96, Portland 86
s-.mento 96, Utah 90
$\~f~Uy, APril 20
Orlando 99, OatrOit 94
LA. Lakera 117, Minnesota
98
. .
· PhMadelphla 911, New Orleans
90
, ~~on&lt;Yy, April a1
San Antonio &amp;4, PhofniK 76
lndlan,11 69, Boston 77
Sacramento 108, Utah 95
Tueedlly, April 22
Mliylaul&lt;ea ·86, New Jeraey 86
Mlnneaole 119, L.A. lakllra
91
w.ctneaday, April 23
Phll~la ao, New OrtellllS :
85
Detroit 89, Ottando n
Dallaa 103, Portlancl99
Th!f"ldBII, April 24
Boaton 101, Indiana 83 :
New Jef'8eV 103, 'Milwaukee
101
~
Mlllna~ta 11&lt;1, L.A. Lakl!fa

New Jersey won series over
Milwaukee 4-2

-

Field goal pet.
.462
.431
Opp. FG pet.
.459
.388

Oiimd Aailels ~~ Eages

7 11 r.r.. Ulrn
IIWII -· 14 ,~ t15~

Ill

l iJII
IIJII
lP'II
lpill

a..

New YOII Jets

OT

Points per game
102.2
-96..8
' .

'

fMni llollhils Mi1ne&amp;:ila ~ New &amp;9rd fiaaiJis New Oflm Sail~ New YOII: Gianls
¥1 "-- 1,. - 1i&amp;wfllr IIJI So!&lt;7 IIU. . I pi~ • 1 iS. 4.15pll ,.7.Lillt lllfi

CONFERENCE
SEMIFINALS

91111

Soli

So!&lt;

"J
~~
( ) -seed
EASTERN
(6) Boston

Tearn comparison Road to the Conference
Semifinals
New Jersey 1
1

"'
2 B't'E
i •'-~Cir '~'~

I!"""'nd•llop t~ 0 ......
:llil'liMfi IJill
:ll liS..
lk
C.
llllllla l,rt
! li.M
11 t.lftlda lpm
~ IIC:..
21 t1ilwl lpm
n 111111n
2B CIMIIM I Jill
2e iCilirlli

Flfi8T ROUND
. Cleet-ot-7)
lllrtunlolv,Aprll11
New Jeraey· i09, MllwaUIJ,ee
80
•
Botton 103, lndlaNI100
Phoenix 96, San Antonio 95,

Playoff statistics

Detroi1l.klls Giee18ayPm!s Hou~onTexans !~Colts ~Jagli/S KmsCittCiiefs
So!&lt;

1411$IIIJIF

tl!jl'll

IS IINJ.Gni. 9p!!1

~ - - 9pn

IJ'II

Ill
5 .. 011111 lp!l

•*

~~~~

Soli

SOl

i_,

Parcells finally takes
field
as
Cowboys
coach
..
STEPHEN HAWKINS

1! iilLIII !lfll
li ._Orll-. lp111
28 B'tE

7 ifiliu9! IIIII
11 QMW I~

So!&lt;

(2) New Jersey
NETS

Caroll1a Panlhels ChK:ago Bears Ciailali Bfr9llS c~ 1!raM1S

Ill&lt;
"'
Ill&lt;
"'·
lilt.
2 QIW
! ~t15prr 2 ....._ 1111
l 8'I'E
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t . , _ 1111
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a d.I.Oii t~ 11 '
t l5pn i
It ala...! l pt~t
1e IINII'C'.WI Ijlll
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~ lb..I jill
If ........
~ llllo 1111' ~-II!~ ~ IIIII
'"
~ ~ ·~
0 • 1101
~ 11Qi9 1111
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ll S.Jm:iaiiJII
ll'dtGin I ~
~ .........
k
Dec.
IlK.
k
~
1 i!iri,..U!!II
1 e;.-. tlliJII
7 ~ IIJII
J lY..- t iSPII 7
14 CINII tl5~ 14 itl"dnp:* lpm
M IIOI!ird, li'&amp;IJII 14 i:l'trmee 1111
14 ll.lm:t
21 11S. ti~JIII ~ •lf1111BI'f 13JJJII ~~ ·~ ~~
21 Iiiii'
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a! PIMir; rllp~~ · ,'l711NewEf9ro \:llpll 3!. IIN.tGin

lb.
211 51111
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BY

Buflalo Bi~

Arlzn Crlhls Allanta Fakoos Balmle RaYens

n --

BEREA, Ohio - Looks like that ques tionable Cleveland Browns' draft may have
gotren a lot better.
Rookie running back Lee Suggs, one of
several surpri sing selections by the Browns
in last weekend's draft. said Friday he may
be able to play this season following shoul. der surgery.
·
The Browns, whose seven picks were
widely panned by most NFL experts,
thought Suggs had a torn rotator cuff and
woulcj be unable to play until the 2004 season.
·
However, Cleveland team doctors told the
Virginia Tech star he only pas a partial tear.
which should shorten his recovery time fol lowing arthroscopic su rgery. ·
'There's a reali stic possibility this could
not be as significant a setback as any of us
tho ught," Browns coach Butch Davis said.
Suggs doesn ' t know when he' ll be ready.
but judging by his ability to quickly bounce
back from major knee surgery, it might be
sooner than anyone expects.
" I just want to get out on the field and
play," said Suggs, who rushed for I ,325
yards and ~2 touchdowns last seaso n after
recovering from a torn knee ligament. "I
want to prove a whole lot of people wrong. "
Davis said team physician Dr. John
· E!ergfeld was encouraged by MRI re sults
apd surgery will likely be scheduled for midMay.
Davis took the news on Suggs with guarded optimism.
" I still have certain re servations until they
go inside," Davi s said. "That' s not trying to
put a damper on the situation at all. I'm just
trying to be realistic. I' m not a surgeon.
Once they get inside, · they might find it's
slightly more torn than expected or slightly
less."
Suggs ' stock slipped in the draft after he
didn't work out at the scouting combine and
had a sub-par performance during an individual workout.
He said his shoulder was hurting so badly
- he injured it in a January bowl win over
Air Force - that he was unable to lift
weights and he paid fo r it.
Now Suggs wants to make the teams who
didn ' t believe in him pay.
" I know I'm not a fourth-round draft pick
and so do some of the teams that passed on
me," said Suggs, who hplds the NCAA
record by scoring a TD in 27 straight games.
"They were scared because of my shoulder.
But now I have a chance to prove a whole lot
of people wrong."
So do some of the Browns' other rookies.
The club was given poor grades following
last week's draft, which included Davis taking linebacker Chaun Thompson from tiny
West Texas A&amp;M in the second round and a
long silafper, Ryan Pontbtiand, in the fifth. ·
" But i we all go out and play well, then
everyone will say they had a· good draft ,"
said center Jeff Faine, the club's first-round
pick.
Faine. along with the other draft picks, 23
free agents sig ned earlier this week and j ust

NBA Playoffs

D

~unba).' lnnr!i- &amp;rntinel • P~ge BS

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

2003 ·National Football League schedule
Soli

. Associated Press

Sunday, May 4, 2003

Ch!!tOIU!!! '00 Gtand
S!pott
Ch!!tokee 4X4

31.8

· 4 Doo•, 4X4

White, CD, loaTh"

Duncan 16.0

RPG O'Neal

15.3

Duncan

5.2

APG Bryant

6.7

Duncan .521

FG% Fisher

:531

'9'1? Buick
LI!S!abtl!

Jacksol) .833 . FT% Bryant

.865

$6,900

$9,900

Ginobili .409 3PT% Fisher

.618

'02 Chevy
, Vllntutl!

'9'1? rotd 25'
Box Ttuck

$9,900
Cleon, !lh.. pl

I

Von, l&lt;aot AC, CO

·-Schedule(best-of-7)

Game 1 May 5 at San Antonio 9:30 p.m.
Game2 May 7 at San Antonio 9:30 p.m.
Game 3 TBD at Los Angeles
TBD
Game 4 TBD at Los Angeles
TBD
Game 5* TBD at San Antonio
TBD
TBD
Game 6* TBD at Los Angeles
TBD
Game 7* TBD at San Antonio
All times EDT
•n necessary
AP

W~,500

Dodg!! Tl&lt;
~hntr

Bod, 4X4,
~h ..pl

2 To Ch... • ~ .. ml

$14-,995

$~,4-00

'99 Toyota
Carmy LI;

'00 Buick
Centuty

$16

W'"''"'Y· !lAV[II

$11,900
'011-londa
Accotd !)(

'9'1? Dodge
Catavan

CD, 4-0oo•

Choir&lt;, Roo• AC

$~

$11 795
'97

Geo PAettO

2 Door, AulD, AI•
51,000 mil"

'00 Ch tyg let
~ebtingJXi
1nh•"ntt

bl!!

'00 Ch!!VY
lrnpala
Nlco!!

$
.'01 Cht!VY
fAa I ibu

$9,200

$~,900

'97 S!atutn
~L2

'97 Buick
Cenfuty

'9'1? Ch!!VY
!Aonttl Catlo

2 Doo•• Rod, l:po•ty

loco IT,.do, N1,.

$5/~95

mils, ~~~ctmy

Wo ..., loodod

VB,loodod Up!!

$4,995

'02 Dodge
lntttlpid

'02 Buick
C!!ntury
~OCIO'Y

•-'-''-1'-1

~qntOO:f,

loathat, ~0,
local r .....

'02 Caddy
DeVille
17,000mlleo,
~tlctoty

Warranty

$27

'01 rotd
Tau tug
p.,., S.or, ~oct. w..,.,,l
$~,500

'99 l&lt;ia
S!pottage 4X4

'95 rotd
r150XLT

51,000 !All ..

~h~tp!

I

$5,995

$5,695

GALLIA AUTO SALE

r

�'

'

Page 86 • ·~unba!' m:iul£!i -~rntinrl

Sunday, May 4, 2003

Pomeroy • ·Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

'

Outdoors

Jpunbap ltmeS.·ientintl

..•••
-.-..
"

~

NASCAR TOP 10

Winston ·
Cup Series -Wks. in
· Driver

1.

Points top 10

Matt Kenseth

1473

9

/ 2.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. ·1429

7

' 3.

Jeff Gordon

1321

6

4.

Kurt Busch

1305

9.

5.

Jimmie Johnson

1266

10

6.

Michael Waltrip

1234

10

7.

Ricky Craven

1205

7

8.

·Bobby Labonte

1201

3

9.

Kevin Harvick

1173

8

1149

4

,--------~~~~~---------------

Steve Park (1) hits the wall after colliding with Stacy Compton (14) during the Carolina Dodge Dealers 400 race at Darlington
Raceway in Darlington, S.C., in this March 17, 2002 photo. Until now, one of the most difficult questions facing doctors who
treat race drivers for concussions has oeen: How do you know when a driver is healed and ready to return to a race car? Now,
thanks to Mark Lovell, a Ph.D. and director of the Center for Sports Medicine Concussion Program at the University of Pittsourgh
Medical Center, there is an almost foolproof way to know. (AP file)

New test helps determine driver
.readiness after concussion
BY MIKE HARRIS ,

Associated Press
Concussions' are a fact of
· life in automobile racing,
where crashing into a concrete
wall at high speed is relatively
common.
Until now, one of the most
difficult decisions facing doctors who treat race drivers for
concussions has been knowing when a driver is well
enough to return to a race car.
Now, thanks to Mark
Lovell, director of the Center
for
Sports
Medicine
Concussion Program at the
University of Pittsburgh
Medical Center, there is a
new, important tool.
It's call ImPACT, which
stands Jor Immediate Post·
Corlcussion Assessment and
Cognitive Testing. That's a
formal way of describing a
computer test devised by
Lovell and Pittsburgh Steelers
team neurosurgeon Dr. Joseph
Maroon, in conjunction w1th
several of Lovell's former col- NASCAR driver Steve Park prepares to strap his helmet on prior to happy hour practice
leagues at Henry Ford Health . Saturday, April 26 at the California Speedway in Fontana, Calif. Until now, one of the most dif·
System in Detroit.
ficult questions facing doctors who treat race drivers for concussions has been: How do you
"Before we had tests ·like know when a driver is healed and ready to return to a race car? (AP file)
ImPACT, a lot of it came
down to what the athlete told year, all the Indy Racing rules. You have to look at the sensation. From an emotional
you," Lovell said. "You' d ask: League drivers will take the overall situation- the physi- stand~int, that's really what 1
"Do you have a headache') Do test as part of their physical cal conditions, how they' re struggle with the most. "
you feel nauseous? Do you for entering the May 25 feeling, the tests, what a scan
Olvey said the test. is espefeel dizzy?' They generally Indianapoli s 500, Formula shows and more.
cially important for people
sa~ 'no' to all of those.
One has the software and
"If somebody doesn 't feel who have ·had multiple con'One thing we know about plans to implement the pro- right in their head, they're cussions.
athletes is they' re very, very gram as soon as possible, and smart enough to know they
Steve Park, who missed the
competitive. So we weren't NASCAR is studying it.
shouldn't be out there for their last eight Winston Cup races
absolutely positive we were
Gary Nelson, managing own safety and the safety of of 2001 and the first four
always being given an accu- .director of competition for others."
events of 2002, flew to
rate picture "of how they were NASCAR, said some drivers
Gil de Ferran, who missed Pittsburgh in February to take
feeling. With a test like are using it on a volunteer last year's IRL season finale the ImPACT test.
ImPACT, you can't cheat it. " basis.
because of a concussion, was
Park said he ·wishes he had
The test, which takes 22
"As with everything, we injured again last month in known about the test before a
minutes the lirst time and a lit- take a look at it and try to Phoenix. This time, he came crash, 'at Darlington in a
tie Jess in subsequent uses, understand everything about it away with another concussion Busch Series car, that ternmeasures memory, reaction and move in a conservative and fractures to his neck and porarily left him with blurred
time, mental speed, informa- way," said Nelson, who works lower back .
vision and slurred speech.
tion processing, anticipation out of NASCAR's new
He has been out of the car
"I'm not going to put it on
time and other functions of the research and development and recuperating but expects the shoulders of NASCAR to
brain affected by concussions. center. "But it certainly looks to be cleared to drive in the make it mandatory, but racers
The idea is to administer the promisi ng and, if we feel it Indy 500. De Ferran said he's should understand the importest while the subject is will serve a purpose, we will thankful there is now a test tance of (the test)," Park said.
healthy _ at the start of the recommend it to our teams." such as ImPACT to assure him "Once I learned the imporseason, preferably. That sets a
Other series have not taken all is well before he goes back tance of it after I was hurt, I
"baseline" with which to mea· such a cautiou s approach.
to racing at speeds of more was so mad tliat I didn't have
sure further tests after a head
"We have a database on our than 200 mph.
this done beforehand.
injury.
drivers," said Dr. Steve Olvey,
"The thing that I like the
"I think people who haven't
"I started doing this stuff director of medical affairs for least about crashing is actually been injured think of it as
with the NFL back in the late CART. "The IRL's all in there, the head injuries," he said. "! something · that 's not that
'80s, doing concussion man- and Formula One is going to guess you ' r~ still sr,nart important but, if you' re ever
agement work," Lovell said. start that very soon and we'll enoullh to realize that you rea hurt, you'll certainly be glad
"I realized a long time ago, have that in the database, too." btt d1m, and that ts not a fun that you have taken the test."
along with several of my colOlvey . said concussions
leagues, that the only way we have been a big problem in
were going to make this type auto racing for a long time.
"We had no ~ood way of
of evafuation practical was to
create computer soft ware for really looking at It and judging
it so it could be used not just who had too many concusin professional athl etes but sions and who was in trouble
also at the college and high because of it," Olvey said.
school level."
He added that he and IRL
Lovell said the ImPACT test director of medical services
is used by about half the teams Dr. Henry Bock have surin the NFL "and the rest are mised throu,gh the years that
kind of transitioning to it." He certain drivers likely had had
said the NHL has been study· too many head injurie~ . "and it
ing it and is using what Lovell explained their deterioration ·
calls a "paper-and-pencil toward the end of their careers
approach" that he developed and voluntary early retire)'ears ~go. ImPACT is already ment."
tn use m 350 h1gh schools and
Bock, who also oversees the
100 colleges.
medical facility at the
Motor
Lovell said nearly 7,000 Indianapolis
people have taken the test, Speedway, said ImPACT is a
mcluding 600 to 700 who great tool but there is no foolhave taken it again after hav- proof test for determining if a
ing concussions.
driver is ready to get back in
J n auto racing, CART has the car.
been using the test since last
"It's not a perfect test," he
See Sunday Puzzle on 40
~ ·d . "There's no hard and fast

10. Elliott Sadler

11. Tony Stewart (1142); 12. Rusty
Wallace (1140); 13. Sterling Marlin
(1135); 14. Mark Martin (1082); 15.
Jeff Burton (1064); 16. Robby Gordon
(1053); 17. Dale Jarrett (1039); 18.
Ricky Rudd (1 038); 19. Terry Labonte
(1038); 20. Joe Nemechek (1026);
21. Bill Elliott (1 005); 22. Dave Blaney
(1 000); 23. Greg Biffle (997); 24.
Jamie McMurray (996); 25. Ryan
Newman (980); 26. Kenny Wallace
(980) 27. Ward Burton (961 ); 28.
Jimmy Spencer (91 0); 29. Johnny
Benson (91 0); 30. Steve Park (894);
31. Jeff Green (892); 32. Joh.n
Andretti (863); 33. Jeremy Mayfield .
(849); 34. Jerry Nadeau (844); 35.
Ken Schrader (782); 36. Todd Bodine
(759); 37. Casey Mears (741); 38.
Kyle Petty (734); 39. Mike Skinner .
(727); 40. Jack Sprague (700); 41.
Tony Raines (661 ); 42. Larry Foyt
(336); 43. Derrike Cope (215); 44. .
Mike Wallace (211 ); 45. Brett Bodine
(201 ); 46. Christian Fittipaldi (1 07);
47. Hermie Sadler (68);,48. Hideo
Fukuyama (64)

Now~

Have you started working on your
wildlife food plots yet?
Wildlife food plots are an increasingly popular weapon · in the
landowner's wildlife management
arsenal, and benetit l;&gt;oth game and
non-game animals and birds alike.
So why should you plant wildlife
food plots? For hunters, the reasons
are obvious, quality . food plots help
attractand hold wi ldlife, and provide
essential food that wildlife need to
·remain healthy. For people into qualtty deer management, wildlife food
plots are an important part of a strategy that may also include harvest
management , and mineral supplements to en.courage the growth of tro·
phy deer.
·
There's even some speculation, but
no hard facts that I have seen, that
indicate food plots can even help
reduce damage to farm ·crops by
wildlife by providing an alternate
source of food.
If you want to plant food plots, I
suggest about three acres of food plot
- per I 00 acres of habitat. So if you
have 40 acres, you' II want somewhere between one and one-and-a·
half acres of food plot. You can also

mals can lorage.
Don't worry if your food plot isn 't
perfect ly square or round, any shape
wi ll work, you can even plant in old
logging roads or irregular-shaped
areas.
What you plant in your food plots
is detem1incd largely by what you
want to accomplish with your food
plots.
IN THE OPEN
Do you want lO attract primarily
deer, or a 'variety of wildlife ?
go in with neighbors to create addi·
Do you want the food to be availtiona! acres of food plots.
able during the spring and summer,
You'll want to determine where . or during the winter?
you want to locate your food plots.
Are your sites shaded or sunny?
Secluded spots are best, and severYour local seed dealer can assist
al small plots in key locations appear you in your selection or offer recomto work better than one or two large mendations, or you can purchase preplots. The use of several smaller plots packaged food plot seed.
helps spread the wildlife throughout
Actually puthng in the food plots is
the enure habitat, and allows more fairly easy, if you have access ·to the
stand locations for hunting or view- proper equipment. Otherwise, you
ing wildlife.
may be in for a Jot of work.
Also seek locations with nearby · The best way is to use a tractorcover, preferably with cover on .two powered cultivator to expose the soiL
or three sides. Do not plant food plots
I prefer to.mow the area and apply
near roads where wildlife can be hit an herbicide like Roundup about a
by cars or targeted by poachers, or week before cultivating the soil.
where cattle or other domestic aniBroadcast the seed in· the rates recommended by the dealer, then use a

Jim
Freeman

the
National
Wild Turkey
Federation make a special effort to
emphasize safety among spring
· gobbler hunters.
CHARLESTON,
W.Va .
Here are their recommendations:
Perhap s more than any other form
• Never walk while you are callof hunting, turkey hunting require s
ing
to attract a gobbler. A nearby .
strict attention to safety.
hunter
could mistake your call for
In order to succeed, turkey
hunters must conceal them se lves another turkey. ·
• Set up lo call with your back
in head-to' toe camouflage and sit
again
st a large tree, rock or stump
in tlte woods making turkey
that is at least head-high and
sounds.
Done properly, it can be done shoulder-wide. Mak~ sure to have.
safely. Done improperly, it can be a clear fteld of VISIOn; about 40
yards ls best. Never set up in a
an invitation to tragedy. .
.
· Every year, the West Virginia thtcket.
•
Ne-.:er
wear
red,
wh1te
or blue
Division of Natural Resources and

while turkey hunting . These colors
are found on all turkey s, and wearing them might make you a target.
• Wear blaze orange while
walking to and from your hunting
spot. Any bagged bird should also
be wrapped in blaze orange before
being carried out of the woods.
• If another hunter approaches,
don't make turkey sounds to alert
him or her to your presence. Call
out in a loud. clear voice instead.
• Never try to stalk a turkey or
sneak up on a turkey sound.
• Never knowingly interfere
with another hunter by trying to
call in the same gobbler.

· • Always assu me that any sound
or movement is another hunter
until proven otherwise.
• Know your firearm, its safety
features, operation and capabilities. Practice safe gun handling.
Never point the muzzle ai anything
you don 't want to shoot.
· • Use ex treme caution when
using a gobbler call. Never use it
while hunting crowded public
lands.
• Use extreme caution with
decoys . Never carry a decoy
uncovered. When yo u set up ,
se lect a sight line that allows SO to
100 yards of visibility, then posi-

lion your decoy about 20 yards in
front of you, facing away from
you.
• Don't allow peer pressure '"the thrill of the hunt to cloud you r'
judgment.
• Know your target. Almost all
shooting incidents that occur during turkey season result from
hunters who fail to properly identi-.
fy their targets. If it isn' t a bearded
turkey, it's not a legal target. Make·
sure to identify your target as a.
turkey - complete with beard before you release your gun 's safety and place your finger on the
trigger.

COMMUNITY

AUTOMOTIVE
Norris Northup Dodge

City o' ,Point Pleasant

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

www.pointpleasantwv.org

Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Mason County Chamber of Commerce

www.tumpikeflm.com

llilww.masoncountychamber.org
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce

BUSINESS TRAINING

~verybodys

www.meigscountyohio.com

1n Las Vegas!

www.mydailytribune.com

'

Holz~r

Medical Center

The Daily Sentinel

www.holzer.org

www.mydailysentinel.com

Holzer Clinic

·~·~--

NEWSPAPERS
Gallipolis Daily Tribune

MEDICAL

www.holzerclinic.coni ·

Paint Pleasant Register

· www.mydailyregister.com

Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES

ENTERTAINMENT

Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com

Charter Communications

www.charter.com
Herbalife Independent Distributor

Vi1it your West Virginia Lonery Retailer

and find out how you un be a flmt slww

INTERNET SERVICES
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james T. jones

Meadow Bridp:

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· Wlllilm Sampson

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Tunnelton

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Cross Lanes

May 111 200)

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Benwood

AGRICULTURE

WELLNESS &amp; WEIGHT LOSS

Watch Saturdoys at 7:30 p.m.

joseph Agostini

'

Camo-clad hunters need to .be careful:

www.gallipoliscareercollege.com

100

...

cul tipacker'ilr roll~r to npke sure you
Hunters swtewide harvested 3.'i 2il
obtain good s~cd-to-soil contact.
bearded wi ld turkeys on Monda y, tJ~&lt;:c
If you don 't have a mller, use your opening day of Ohio's spring t ur~ cy:
tractor or four-wheeler to pack down hun1i·ng season , which is open;
th · ~oi L
· 'tatewiJe through May.. 25.
•'here are also ATV-drawn di,ks
Ashtabula County led 1he &gt;late on,
and food plot planters that are mar- Monday with 18 I wild turkeys
kcted to wildlife enthusiasts. but my taken .
experience - and the experience of
Othe r lOp counties . indutled·
others - has shown that some of Harrison with 126. Athens with 125 ..
these devices m'ay be too light. to Guernsey wi1h 118, Meigs with I()'J; .
work the soil found in our part of the Jackson with 105, Coshocton and·
country.
.
Richland with 104 each and'
To determine your fertilizer and Columbiana with 103. Hunters irr
lime.requirements, submit samples of Gallia County claimed 79 birds.
·
soi l taken between four and six inch• FISHING REI'ORT: Fishermen.
es deep to your local Ohio State at the RaL·ine L&lt;Kk&gt; and Dam are tak-:
University Extension Service. lf you lng hybrid striped bass on big shinc1i
don't obtain a soil sample, apply and creek chub., , s:Jid Rick Durst t!l:
about I 00-to-200 pounds of 19-19-19 Rick's Bait in Letart Falls.
fertilizer and I ,000 pounds of lime to
Anglers fishing in Ihe tail race
the acre.
below the dam are also catching
I hope you enjoy watching your hybrid striped bass on heavy lead
new food plot ~row, and see plenty of spoons. Fishermen are also repm1ing
wildlife using n.
catche ~ of sauger on jigs, minnows" .
Meigs among top turkey count ies and nightcrawlers.
Meigs County was ranked tifth in the
(Jim Frl!eman is wildlife speciali~t
state in the munber of turkeys killed for the Meigs Soil wzd Wat er
the opening day of Ohio's spring wild Comervatirm District. He can he
turkey season, according to the Ohio reached weekdays at 992-4282 or ur.
Division of Wildlife.
jim-ji-eeman@oh.•wcdnet.org) .

Gallipolis Career College

.,.. At-home

...

-

W.Va. Outdoors

BY JoHN McCov
For the Associated Press

BlueStarr Network

www.bluestarr.net

For more information
about the
opportunities
Buckeye Hills
Career Center
.offers, please call
,

.(740) 145·5334

I

Sunday, May 4, 2003

the time to work on ood plots

AP

SOURCE: NASCAR

Page B7

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I

�Sunday, May 4, 2003

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant

Program aims.to -help youths
become hooked on_fishing

Weekly Ohio fishing repo~

FINDLAY, Ohio- Junior high health
teacher Diane Shankland is hopirig a
program aimed at getting youths
mvolved in fishing will help steer her
students in Toledo from destructive
behavior.
''The kids in my school are smoking
both cigarettes and marijuana, and that
really upsets me. If I cal) start small and
· introduce just some of them to the joys
of fishing, perhaps I can reacli them,"
·
she said.
· Shankland recently attended a one-day
certificatioll seminar for the national
program "Hooked on Fishing, Not 011
Drugs," which is sponsored by the
Alexandria, Va.-based Future Fisherman
Foundation. The drug prevention prol;lram combines instruction in sport fishmg and environmental conservation.
The seminar offered at the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
Division of Wildlife District 2 headquarters is orie of five held during the year.
The workshops that ended this month
were open to educators, drug·counselors,
police and others who work with chil-

W.Va. Fishing Report :

.

•,CHARLESTON, W.Vo. (AP)- Tho- bitt end lmlll jlga. Try th8 taifwatn fQt
VlrgiNa ftShlng report rtloued TIIYIIdly by oome ti'CHit ftlhlng ICUon. Saugoyo and
oyo 111 bolna plctiOCI up on 1101llle Division ol Natural-:
EAST LYNN - Lo1oo II Ill oummer ...,.
BEECH FORK - Lalol ~ Ill IUI1'IIIOI'
racraarlon law~l. L.alce and tallwatltr 1111 Ilion - · 1..1111 ond 111 clear.
clear. Lllrgemoo1h ltld opolt8d biU ... ltoNng tor largomooth ltld opot·
lod II belt dl.&lt;tng tho oaoly morning
being co~h1 along tho ohorollt 100 lhnlWing buubeila and . . . - duMg and 1a18 ....,lng lloUro using
tho early morning and 111o -*'~!Ill­ and buzzbollll. Wllloyo and
Fori&lt;. Jigo tipped wit1 mlnoowo ... bolng wll be caught- Uling minnowo1
IIShed In Slandlng llmbor to Cl"lll'l'll. and gnb-4lppld 1101 _, rocky wt111e walloyo and oougeyo con bo ...q,. tho liM. FloNng tho bottom wtth while fishing min,_. and gnb-tiiJpod jlgo 11vor lind Jilgl*&gt;a-. will proYido ong11r1
o1 - . . .. While tie along rocky a..... FloNng mhMMII with and minnow lype lu... ln tho"""" - w l l .,.. II pnMdlng ol trout. ongilrl
proyide catchea ol l'rlbrld ll1rtpecl bill. L111ng m1Mow- and gnb-4lppld
are Ill&lt;·
Deep water fial1ing wtth rolghlcoo-. ltld lng IOJf1l ni&gt;o
wolloyo.
II.D. IAII.EY- 1..111111 Ill OUJM1It' recredllcl&lt;enliwr is -forcotftoh.
II
- Lak8 11 clear and BLUESTONE-Lil&lt;lllll - - Ilion _ , - - Lak8 and . . cicJI.&lt;III, milky. Roll w1 ooon be -'"II for tho
Spring Is heiV, and fish will be ~ng 1o ~ opawn, Cf&amp;llllle orw -"no
opawn. Crappie are ellowlng up """' llruC- ......,..lllndng - a n d lwulll pllaO and
ture such as or bnllh plloo. wl hit omol mlrwiOWO. For ortlflcilll, They ... hitting smell mlnoowl Of -- · In and ~ Spollod Bass may be cough! oil rocky pcinlllnd .,. hilling p111t1c jlglln croyfllh - .. The
wll bo lound olong tho rocky
uolng llvo bolt .nd art&gt; lflOIIad llclals such u apl11118fba11J ond plllllc dnlpo polnta . _ onoth·
- - Anglero should look for pcinlllhll Of gaoCf opal Hyl&gt;rtd llolpOd bola wil be
haw some CCMif ouch oo 111u1!'411, logo ..- moldng 1 mcx;k -"111 run upotrwom In
&amp;ada SOme hybrid lltltpod biU """ April and May so ongllra n11rf """" 10 con11101r llforto In tho upper lalol. Tho
be caught uolng lofliO Angloro trout In tho IIIII are pnMdlng
ohould try 8IX* ouch ootho rnout11 of ~ "' up , . ElluelltoM Arm .. . _ good lolling.
S'TCNEC(W.LAI&lt;E-lalcaloll""""""'
lloh, though moolly - · 1111 .....
r\JIW uponom.
and '*&gt;udy. Flllilng hal
BURNSVILLE - Ullce II Ill ...,.,.. _ , gaoCf -.-.g - IJTIOit ptuga
recreation lowel. Loloo and
orw and pou- llcm thoro.
n cloudy. Bass have m&lt;Mid l n 1 o - - moving tnm 10 opewn. 1ly
tor apewnii!Q. The water 'tlltl'1plr8tuN II In p1o1t1c» and iubtiOuo. A low walltho low 60s whicl1 II pulling tho tloh on tho oyo and Cl"lll'l'll.,. baing pickld up oround
move. Coapple and bluegill a., being co.QII fllh - . ualng 1111 bolt and Mill jtgl.
around structure and fish altractorl on iYI
SliJNEWALL JAcKsoN - L.al&lt;l II Ill

Will'

-lind 1•

aroond-"""* _..'II

rou-• -

a-

111-.

l'ymatunlng Lak8 (Ash1abula County)Thlo 18 starting to up" """
ang1e&lt;s calehlng croppiOI, pen:li. ~
Rooourooo.
and ni&gt;o omaJmouth baal.
~CINTRALOHIO
••
soOnfWESTOHIO
HooYar Raoar)lolr (DoiiMMI &amp; Franl&lt;in
PDDii Lake ( - Couity) - Arlglors
~~ - White bus 1n1 """"'o up are calehlng criiClPiO off of the Sugar
Big Walrut ~for spawning durJ'Q tho Creek fiShing p~er: Fioh allvo rnlnriaN on a
last haH of April and llle flnJI ol May. Theoe No. bait-holding hook under • flsh generally ........ B-12 lrdles and Ka&lt;ip the bait tJur lo ftyo laot deep. GOOd
can be 18ken on small Jloa "'
b:allono lnctudo 1110 pier, ahorellno. and
Try llahi'og tor saugoyo ua1ng ot1c1&lt; balta 1rom a boot or canoe.
and mlrwiow 1rr1tot1no U.. along fieCoosar C-l.ake (Warren County)and ca.,._ \\1ili rlpnip. Ar8aa 11th Anglers are caEiilng crapploo'around thO
brueiT; shorellno CCMif and """*"*d boat dOdai and along tho ,_
ptoceo to crap- ShorelnO brush. UN boat CIUIOII to
pies and
10 ~limit
got 1n1o ..,. o1 1110 more . , _ .....,.
i&lt;no&gt;&lt; Lak8
Couity) - Tho ooodv with oubmergod &amp;horolne brush and
shoreline OCMIJ!I are good tocallono " 1111&gt; debris. Fish W&gt; water allout 10 to 15 1aot
tor largemouth baoa at this lme of year. deep ua1ng a small IIIIa mnnow on 1 No.6
Most of~ fish mouuro 12 to 16 ncn- llnowi"' hook. a amal1/8"' 114 ounce jig
os.·Thls wu ono of tie lOp baal touma· ' tipped wtth a mlmow bou"'*' eJJ:Nif
In Ohio lalt year .. - - along tho bottom.
mined by Olilo Bass Anglers Sportoman
Grand Lak8 St. Marys (AugiaiD and
5oc1o1y data. Use jigs and m1nnow1 In Mercer ~~ - AnglerS are cao:nlig
'brushy areu to- CJlll&gt;l)lea. Uoe shrimp c:lianna and bullhood catliah. Fish aromd
Of right crawlanJ 1llhed along the botlom
tho boat docka. llahing plero. c:liaMOio and .
t o - channel catlloh. CNar 11 ,000 year- along tho ohoteaOOJtfourtollvofoet doop
Nng channol catllsh ...,.., n 1o1 010ng the boltom uttng ear1hWomio. nid
2002. S9me cotfloh wolgh up lo
and glzzartf ehad bait·
tan pounds. Ten lioJoepowor 1m1t.
ad onto a 210 long-1hlnked hook.
NORTHEAST OHIO
51" liful angloro floh for catlloli W&gt; the
Stoelhlad (Aahlollula County) - Tho - o f Ilia laloi.
- - run In ConnNut C!OOk and
IIOUTIIEA8T OHIO
AShtabula River Ia juot about owr but dieJac1&lt;aon City - r (Hammortown
hart! anglaro 1111 otil plcldng up a lew of Laks, Jacklon Couity) oondlthe laloi roo rair'bow trout.
ttono .,. clear and at normal pool. w.er
KllbJck c - (Holmes CountyJ - In temperatu,. 11 62 ~ Fishing for
tho tribularlaa of lhla creek, anolorl are trout al 1111 ilka II vorv good - . Ullno
llndlng some Northam Pl&lt;a
ba.vlln. ap1nnar balta or f't!wlr8IOt.- flohlng ~
Lllrgo mlnoows and cllubO a"'llle bait of good all CNOr Ilia laloi, pNilmld areu aro
cfiolca.
on tho pol1&lt; aide and ,_the 'drda:
Charles Mill (Ashland County) Seneca Lak8 (Noble and Guernoey
V/i&gt;OJS" to hybrid o1 white basa and oounllaa) - Walei' CMdlttoo• .,. striped baal) up 10 1o incl'oas long are and normal. 8Qot ang1a1a are caleliing 16
being caught hera on livers. 11y to 18-lndi ......... when llohlng elf Ilia
worl&lt;lng tfie area cal"" "Fim.rman'o poinls ki 8 toot oiWIItor. Boot mirthod II to
Point" and- toward tho ......... Oeoent olowly bounoo """"" oil tho bottom.
sized tugllla ""' being caught here on White beoa ""' bolng caught on jlgl and
WBX _ , . and crapploo can be loo..&lt;id
IIMolor lalla llahed aroo.m dMp II!!"*"
aroundtholrOOtOpl,bltlngonligoandmln- along State Route 313 a n d - the
nowo. Channel catllsh oro bolng caught a1 Owl8 Neot.
various BpOI8 llfWid tho - - SlviJ'9,
Wla Creek ( - Couity) - Fishing
nlgl'l cr-. ltld INor are ..-,g catfloh tor- basa juot- tho oroo '"'*&lt; h
up to 22 lnchllln length.
emptleo Into Soneca Lake Ia lllfY good
Mentor Lagoon (Lake County) and ShoUld really plcf&lt; up within the noxt
Anglers here are plcld'iQ up cmpples, or ao Anglero are ut1n11 laad-lioedtugllo and buiMeds alOng wllh both ad 11a1 with yolow o r - tv.lll8r Iaiii.
largemouth and smallmouth - MUaldngum RIYer twaohlnalon COuntyJ
Goarod River (L.al&lt;o Coooty) - Moot of - Flohermen In tho Oevola ~ """' aro
the WBIIryM haw rf'OIIId 1M of lhla , cao:ntng 14 " .18-lneh oaugoyo on ittte
but the WarrMr water hall turned on the green a&lt;wMe jigs. Beat mo4hodla 10 wade
bess fishing with smallrooutho being_, out and call up ln1o tho rl(lldo. A few cat·
from around the Pipe Bridge to the fllh are- being cought on clilci&lt;Bnllvor.
IJnirl:7rel hole " the lcMer part olthe - OliO liVER
Headlands Beach BIVakwell (Lalce
Woahlngton Couity - The 8010 ollho
County)- tJmltS ol jumbo sized peiCh oro rlwr ki downtown Marlatto noar lhe
being - . , hlra 1rom beyond tho lght- LBfayetlo ~ Ia procM:Ing excellent
Largo pen:li In . . - JUJibere catchlo ol Olrlped bess on~ cnw.1ers.
are - bolng _ , by shore liahermor• Angiarlare using carot1na rigging, cutlng
11cm the short wall on tho Falrpoot lido.
1M and letting tho bill oil on t h o - -A
Ber1ln ~r (Porllgo County) low catlloli are also being cought In tho
Anglero hara ""' plddng up crapp1so by area on c:hldoin U\wl. At WilloW laland, s
fishing minnows In tho bruShy aroas In tow smalf oougeyo are being caught on
about 810 121oet o1 wator. ~ llohlng ama11 jigs lnd sma1 crank bolto. Water
hera lo O&gt;lj)liCied 10 plcf&lt; up In tho noxt oou- ""' llltlor .. 8J8 rormal and ~lure lo
pte o l -.
54 to 55 do9MSNimlsila · Laka (Summit County) - , Molgii County- The lalwllora ol both
Mlnoows sre wortdng hero for Cfllllllos and Aacino Loci&lt; and Dam aro
and largemouth baSS. Soma crappl88 are producing '*&gt;&amp; catch8o ol aaugar. walleye,
runfiir9 1210 131ncheswith beoa upiO 14 wtolta bea8, and hjtlrid llriped-. Moot
lnchas. Bluegllls are biting hera on wax angi8r&amp; a"' uolng ligo lnd tw1otar ta11e for
-ms. with a low ol the 'gllla In the 7 to 8- bait. A low omallmouth baal are -being
lrdi range.
e&amp;q\1 below tho at Racine.
Walcllorn (Star1&lt; Countyj Charviolcalllali are bolng C0!.911 on o;liiCI&lt;·
Crapplao aro being - . hera on min- an llvora 111 ~
nawa flohod under botobero. Bass can be
Scioto County- Condtlono In IIIIa aree
found hera wtth IIUCCOSSiul"anglers using ... Ill normal pool and 81 """"""· Hybrid
Sjlln..... and crank balta.
atrlped baSS ... being """"" at the """'
Mahonlng Allier (Starl&lt; County)- Somo lkJonco ol tho Scioto and Ohio Rillen on
smaller bass ... bolng pldoed up ~- rigged with. oinkafiO lc8op
here On ~OS and minnows from the them on boftom.
Alliance Water 0epar1ment - . . 1o Bortln.
Brown County - Angiarl are C8IChlng
Whle SUCCOISia opotty ~now, tho noxt hybrid lltltpod lnd-boa and flathoail
ralnlall ShoUld bring a good run ol catfloh. Uoo cut ball. small
baso.
............. 01' auface Ueo .. belt. Whllals
MoaQulto Lak8 (TMJibull)- Good num- currontly a good oolor cliolca tor or1lflclol
bonl ol crapploo arv being ca~¥~~ - - lu.- Fish tho belt ofowly along the bc*xn
Tho walleye are still biting for both l&gt;oC or oil of tho bottom In one 10 10 faot
fllharmen lnd thooe fllhlng llcm liiora deep. Wlian using a hook. chooae a No.2
along the rocky ,.,. ...... l.afliOmOUth boll-lioldlnQ hook. Good fllhlng locations
bea8 are stortlng to tum on and a low include at ihe - · ao:hlngo ol the Ullo
north8m pike are also bong caught here. Tine Mile Creek

_,

Page Cl
Sunday, May 4, 2002

IUmmer recreation level. Lake and tanwater and sunfish win· be more active In these
aiV clear. Fishing hal been good. Sass are areas. Smallmoulh basa CIIJ1 be caught
atortlng to move Into Shallow wattr for uolng CJ1Illkbalt8 or tube jigs along the
_,tno.lly plootico and llw belt. Coapple sho..tlne.
and bluagli are hot r1g1t now for live min·
OHIO RIVER - Anglers are catching
nowo, jigs. and red worma.lly tho tallwatero white baSS, hytlrtd atrt!'"" bau, walleye
· for tho bell trout fishing action.
and ..ugeye while using minnow· and
SUMMERSVILLE - Laka Ia approxl- grub-tipped llga In thelallwater alVa&amp; of the
mal81y 4 1aot below """"""' recrMIIon lock and dam project~ ol the Ohio Rlwr.
- - 1.a1&lt;t and llllwateo are clear. Water Sho..tlno llahlng is getting beHer during the
f8n'4'0111Urala In the upper 50s. Flohlng IIIIS early morning and late &amp;Wrtlng ror black
boon fllr In tho laka. Coapple and bluegill baas while throwing buuballs and
hawt rncMid Into fish attrac:toro and ohore- crankbaits. Bank fiShing Is good for caHish
ine atructtn. Report ol waJoye and catflel1 and lreShwater drum while using night·
bolng caught llcm thoro. Also, amallmoutll crawlers.
being pickld up around drop ons and
KANAWHA RIVER - Angloro fiShing the
brldgoo.
shorelines of llle Kanawha Rl110r '"' •n!OY·
SUTTON - Lll&lt;l lo about 2 112 lee! lng some giVat catches ol black bess
below IUJMiflr NICJOOIIon - Laka Ia throughout the river while ftlhlng early
cteorlfld ~ lo ll~tly cloudy. Fllhing mooning and late owning with c.rankbalts
In tho laka and tollwotero II good. A low and buzzbahs. Uta IMlJiing bank fishing
largemouth aro being ca~ht on oplmor- with nlghtCI'Ilwlor&amp; haa pnwen wlll for cadio/1
boiia lnd plaatico. Crappie and bluegill fish- and fnlshwstor drum. Tho lollwaler area of
lng Ia rNIIy getting good around structure tho lock and dam project~ Ia a great place
using alight line and micro-jlga. Live bait Ia to catch whits basa, black basa, walleye
also -.,g great. The tempera· and ..ugor.
tura ol lh01alc811 53 degrea&amp;. The lallwatar . MONONGAHELA RIVER - Water tom- - o n ,\p&lt;il22 with trout. Spinners perature Ia 60 degroes. Seugor and walleye
and poworbalt are worl&lt;lng tho boot for . are being caught in tho Morgantown lollwa·
trout.
taro on both banks. When flows are noonal,
TYGART -Lake Ia approximately 3 feet start ftlhlng about an hour bofoo&gt; ounaet
......, oummor recreation leYel. Lake and becaU&amp;O oaugor and walleye wll begin
Ill-er ore clear. The lake will be at the feeding at dual&lt;. During high flows, llle fish
oummtr lowl ooort 'TWo courtooy boat will be active throughout the day. Jigs with
c1oc11a lnatalled at tho Doe Rill I&gt;Oet minnows &amp;IV particularly good balta, but 3ramp oecently. Walleye havo finished Inch ptllllllc grubs will also be prt&gt;ductMt.
spewning and wiN bo acattered throughout Fishing succ:eos will be lncroulng for all
tho laka . .Stan ftlhlng for walleye at dar1&lt; species as water temperatures rtoo. The
when they"""" Into Shallow water to food. water temperature In embaymonta will
Walk tho shoreline and cut largo oapelas Increase lastar then the main rlwr, ao
ot 3-lncli ptasllc grubs. The hGadl of eovot1 largemouth baaS and ~unftah will bO mora
will warm futtr than tho main !alee 10 basa activo In thooo areas.

e

""*"'-

atructuroo=

A walk through history

a or

'

With Bicentenn~al project,
historica.l society hopes to
keep ·local heritage alive

mont-

-tiger"""""'

'

w-

Staff writer

Entrance to the John Gee Black Historical Center, located at 48 Pine St. in Gallipolis.

Adamsville village, located off of Ohio Route 588 near Rio Grande.

to one biy oustoma1
PLUS... $1,000 Grand Prize
Dramg on May 15thn

0urName

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.

BY MILLISSIA RUSSELL

1

ana

May 1st thr~ May 15th
We will give away $100 a day

'

I

I

dren.
More than 1,500 public school educators
Greg Bronnell, a retired Toledo ele- and city and county park district employmentary school principal, who also ees have been cert1fied as instructors and
attended the seminar, said day trips fish- are offered free rods and reels for classing with his father top his memories of room use.
his early years.
"We typically train about 200 a year,"
"My plans are to load up a couple of said Marc Sommer, aquatic education·
school buses and take a bunch of kids to coordinator for the Department of
a pond or even Lake Erie. I want to do Natural Resources Division of Wildlife.
Toda~·s youth, especially those in the
something to give those kids a chance
like I had," Bonnell' said.
·
inner Cities, are at a greater risk of falling
The program dates to a letter written in in with the wrong crowd and endirig up
1986 to the Future Fisherman on the streets abusing drugs, Sommer
Foundation.
said. ·
"Fishing has helped keep me off drugs.
"Self-esteem, · values, positive role .
I think if more kids my age learned how models and responsibility. These are
to fish, it would keep them off drugs, some of the most important elements of
too," wrote then 14-year-old Matthew life we want children to experience," he
Deakins of Dunnellon, Fla.
said in his instruction. "If a teacher can
The program, funded in part by the provide this for one student, it may be
Sportfish Resoration act, wh1ch includes the spark to keep that student from faila lO percent excise tax on the sale of . ing in life."
.
fishing equipment, import duty on recre- ' Shankland said she has enjoyed many
ational boats and marine fuel.
fly-in fishing trips to Canada, but when
Upon receipt of Deakins' letter, the she related stories of her trips, students
foundation saw an opportunity to work . would look on in wonderment.
"I realized they could not relate to
with the nation's youth to combat drug
use and teach the benefits of fishing.
what I was describing to them. Not .only
HOFNOD. as the program has become that, _but also most of them probablY,
known, has since spread nationwide.
would never have such an opportunity, '
Ohio's program began in sp,ring 1993. she said.

For the Associated Press

Food, Page C2
On the Book shelf, Page C3
Celebrations, Page C5

I,

•

COlUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tho weekly
fiShing pr&lt;Mdod by the Oilllalon ol
~ o1 the Ohio Deportment o1 Natural

I

BY BRUCE H. 'DAWSON

Inside:

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CIIDII
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'27.34,.
Salem
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Deral
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IIIII
'28.34,.

GALLIPOLIS - Members,
of the Gallia County Historical
and Genealogical Society have
recently
completed
a
Bicentennial Project .they are
hoping will help educate the
general public about our area's
history.
The project, a slide show, is
named "Gallia County's
Secluded
Historical
Landmarks."
'"We feel that many organizations ·and local schools will
want to use this slide"presentation to enhance their programs
and
curriculum,"
said
Historic&amp;! Society Education
Committee member Charles A.
Murrdy.
The Education Committee
has selected and researched
several landmarks located
throughout each of the county's
fifteen townships to "show and
tell'" about Gallia County's
interesting heritage, Murray
said.
The Education Committee
chose this project because, not
only is 2003 the 200th anniversary of Ohio, but also the 200th
anniversary of Gallia County.
"It's a dual celebration for
Gallia County since it was
founded on April 30, 1803, and
throughout the past200 years, a
legacy of interesting local history has developed." he said.
"Hisltlry, especially local histO:
ry. can not always be recorded
in history books, and for this
reason these slides unfold an
interesting story consisting of
people, events, and landmarks
that enable us to better understand our local heritage.
Secluded
Gallia's
Landmarks include:
The swne water towers historical marker and· water
wwer located on Mill Creek
Road, just north of Second
Avenue.
Built from hand-carved
sandstones from the adjacent
hillside, these three towers
once enabled a gravity-fed
water supply for the Ohio
Hospital for Epileptics founded
in 1891.
They ceased operation in
1950 and were later refurbishecl.
The John Gee Black
Hiswrical Center Historical
Marker
The historical center, located
at 48 Pine Street in Gallipolis,
was the former John Gee
African Methodist Episcopal
Chapel, organized in 1818.
For 180 years, religious followers held services het;e, but
these came to an end in 1997.

Sllollar Frlandlv
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The historic Wickline's Grocery, located on Market Street in Bidwell.

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Photos by
Millissia
Russell

r=RI~NDLY
The Rife 'Millstone Marker, located at the Addison Township
townhouse.

••'

Bidwell historical marker.

,

In 1868. this structure was
named after John Gee, an early
black pioneer of GaUia County.
In June 1998, the John Gee
Black Historical Center was
established as a non-profit
organization. It became a cultural and educational center to
insure·the preservation of traditions, culture, craft, music and
an of the black Americans in
southeastern Ohio.
The Bethel Methodist
Church in Ohio Township
This church, near Eureka,
was first organized in 1831
with the present building being
erected in 1866.-,
It was once part of the
Eureka Methodi&amp;t Charge consisting of Clay Chapel, Eureka,
Onio Chapel and Bethel, and it
remained an active Methodist
congregation into the 1970's. ·
The Harrington · Mill at
Northup and the Northupyilh
Falls
Northup, located about five
miles southwest of Gallipolis
on Lincoln Pike, developed
because of the water-powered
gristmill, which once operated
there.
Northupville was named
after Daniel Northup. a
Revolutionary War soldier.
When he moved to Gallia
County in 1804, he became one
of Green Township's early pioneers. His grave can be seen in
the family cemetery, located
just off Yellowtown Road,
south of the, village,
_ .
The Rife Millswile Marker
and Bulaville "School and
Townhouse
The Joseph Rife gristmill
was establislied on Campaign
Creek at Bul~ville in the year
1808.
One of the gristmill's burl
stones, which was used for
grinding wheat and com into
flour, lay on the property of
Earl Shaver for over a century, ·
and in 1992, he donated it to
the Gallia Coun!y Historical
Society for historic preservation.
The 600-pound stone is now
displayed in front of the
Bulaville Townhouse.
The Addison One-Room
School
In the early 1900's. there
were at least 173 one-room
schools in Gallia County.
. Most of these early schoolhouses have long since disappeared, but the one located m
Addison, built in 1872, is still
in existence.
In 1935, the Addison oneroom school and the Bulaville
one-room school consolidated
and ·built a two-room school
building between the two villages. However, the Addison
building had to be used again

when the student population
became too great for the tworoom school.
This one-room schoolhouse ·
i:ldison between
the railroa and Old Ohio
Rout 7. It a' later sold to the
Addiso ownship trustees.
The Roush Cemetery and
Phillip Roush Memnrinl
This small cemetery is located on Ohio Route 554 on a
knoll, at Lucky Bend, between
Cheshire and Kyger.
Its oldest ~ve known at this
time is Phillip Roush, who died
in 1820. He and his brother
Jacob, who died in 1830, were
both
veterans
of
the
Revolutionary War and their
families became pioneers of the
Cheshire Twp.
There are also several Civil
War and War of 1812 veterans
buried in the cemetery.
The Kygenrille Methodist
Church
The church, located in present-day Kygerville on Ohio
Route 554 in Cheshire
Township, boasts a tall steeple
and long, narrow windows,
toppled with pointed arches,
wh1ch are symbolic of the faitl!
of its founders and villagers. It
was built in 1884.
Kygerville, known · today
simply as Kyger, was named
after Kyger , Creek. which
meanders near the village.
The
Morgan
Raiders
Hiswrical Marker ·
This historical marker sits by
the JX!St office in the village of
Vinton.
During the Civil War, a
Confederate cavalry, led by
Brigadier General John Hunt
Morgan, passed through Gallia
County and..reached Vinton on
July 17, 1863. The rebels plundered the town searching for
horses and food, and then
burned the 120-foot covered
bridge behind them as they left.
The Vinton
Swinging
Bridge
This brid,ge is built on the
abutments of the original covered bridge that was burned by
General Morgan during his
raid.
The bridge connects the village of Vmton with the Vinton
Community Park on Ohio
Route 325. In recent years, the
annual historic Vinton Bean
Dinner has been held at this
location.
The Ewington Academy and
Hiswrical Marker
The Ewington Acade01y was
erected in 1859, and offered
high school level educatil'm
during the time when most
people attended one-room
schools and completed their

Please see History, C4

•

�Page C2

I

iunba!' lim~ ·itntintl

Sunday, May 4, 2003

•

Re·membering the 'Dean
of Am~ric~n Cui·sine~
'on his 100th birthday
.

.

I

. PORTLAND, Ore. (AP)He elevated the standard of
American
cmsme from
frozen vegetables and· large
portions of meat, and in the
process made cooking a joy
and steered a nation toward
its varied culinary heritage.
James Beard, the author,
teacher, mentor and chef
whose Oregon childhood
memories inspired his passion for good food, would
have turned 100 on May 5.
His friends don't plan to Jet
the milestone go unnoticed.
The Beard Foundation,
from its headquarters in· his
brownstone in New York
City's Greenwich Village,
plans celebrations throughout
the cer.tennial year. It . will
kick off Monday with a
much-heralded banquet at
Manhattan's
Marriott
Marquis hotel.
In deference to Beard's
native state, one Oregon chef
a month during the centennial year will be invited to the
four-story brownstone to prepare a meal.
"Beard raised our consciousness when we had a lot
of awfully bad food," said
Portland chef Greg Higgins,
honored by the Beard
Foundation last year as the
top chef in the Northwest.
"He had an incredible love
and appreciation for great
ingredients," Higgins said,
and tried to instill that in others.
Not that American cooking
was bad.
But at the beginning of the
20th century, Higgins said,
Americans "went to large
amounts of meat, and in the
end fine dining got stuck in
that rut. Old-guard European
chefs were cooking dated,
out-of-style food. It took
James and Julia (Child) to
kick-start" a change in habits.
"In the mid- I 970s, things

Of Alzheimer's and
the British Empire

Quick cooking

Beverly
Gettles

Bowtles With Cricken and Fresh Tomato Sauce is a a tasty,
rustic-style, one-dish dinner alia Ita IIana that can be made
start-to-finish in less than half an hour. The easy-to-make
fresh tomato sauce also has an Italian flavor, from its
green peppers and black olives. (AP)

Bowties with
chicken and fresh
tomato sauce
•

0

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Quick CQOking does not
mean skimping on substance, nutntion or color.
The following recipe for
chicken and pasta with
fresli tomato sauce can be
made start-to-finish in less
than half an hour.
The cook can then put on
the table a tasty, · rusticstyle, one-dish dmner alia
ltaliana- especially if you
refer to the bowtie pasta as
farfalle . The easy-to-make
fresh tomato sauce also has
an Italian flavor, from its
green peppers and . black
.olives.
(Preparation I 0 minutes,
cooking time 15 minutes) ·
11tablespoo_n. olive oil
11, pounds
boneless
chicken breasts, cut in linch pieces
2 green Italian frying pep!lers (sometimes . called
Cubanelles) or I small
~een bell pep~r. c~t in 1mch pieces (abOut 11. cups)
2 teaspoons minced garlic
I teaspoon Italian season.
.
ing •
I teaspoon salt
1, teaspoon freshly ground
black pepper ·
I pound fully ripened
tomatoes, coarsely chopped

(about 2 cu·ps)
1, cup sliced black olives
31, cups bowtie pasta
(about 8 ounces)
Optional garnish: grated
Parmesan cheese
In a large skillet (prefer. ably nonstick), over medium heat, heat oil. Add
chicken: cook, surnng
often,, until browned, about
5 minutes; remove to a
plate. Add peppers, garlic,
. Italian seasoning, salt and
pepper; cook and stir until
peppers are almost tender,
about :;· minutes. Add tomatoes and olives:' cook and
stir until tomatoes soften
and mixture is hot, about 5
minutes.
Stir in reserved chicken;
heat only until hot.
Meanwhile, in a large
saucepan, . cook pasta
according to package directions: drain and transfer to a
serving bowl. .Stir chickentomato mixture into pasta.
: with
grated
Serve
Parmesan, if desired . .
Makes 4 servings.
Nutrition information per
serving: 492 c&lt;l)., 49 g pro.,
8 g fat, 55 g carbo.

Chocolate chip cookie, All-American ·treat, countless versions.
NEW YORK (AP) There was nothing quite like
plunging a warm, sooey
chocolate chiJ? cookie mto a
big glass of nulk after school,
or before bedtime, or any
time you could get your
hands on one.
Now that you're grown up
- well, old enough to bake
cookies for your own children- you've been trying to
replicate the experience.
Why else would there be
hundreds of recipes for such
·
a simple sweet?
You can make them with
nuts, rolled oats, bran, raisins
or peanut butter. If you're
adventurous enough, you can
even have them with zucchi-1

bottom of the glass once all
the cookies are finished.
There •s an art to making the
milk last until the cookies are
gone.
Others delicately nibble
around the chips, saving
them for last. Some just can't
wait, raiding the refrigerator
to eat the raw dough.
Chocolate chip cookie
devotees even take their rituals to the bakery, asking for
glasses of milk or for cookies
of a certain temperature.
In the 1930s, when Ruth
Wakefield, owner of the Toll
House Inn in Whitman,
Mass. , replaced baker's
chocolate with chunks of a Nestle's chocolate bar in her
m.
recipe for Butter Drop Do
The cookies can be made cookies she never expected
crispy or soft and chewy, or a the chocolate to retain its
of
both. shape as soft morsels. She
combination
Testament to the wide variety expected it to melt in. Her
of preferences, commercial accidental invention became
brands crowd supermarket popular with the inn's guests.
Soon after, when Wakefield
shelves with a style for
and her husband made a deal
everyone.
Eating them is a personal with Andrew Nestle to print
the recipe for her cookies on
experience, too.
the
back of his candy bar (the
Dunkers dip their cookies
into a glass of milk, pushing chips didn't arrive until
the limits of the breaking . 1939), Toll House Cookies
point. They get either the per- quickly captured the hearts of
fectly soggy bite or, after the dessert lovers.
Probably more Americans
initial disappointment of losing a chunk, the thrill Of have attempted to make a
scooping out the mush at the batch of chocolate chip cook-

ies than any other dessert. It
is the All-American treat.
And in All-American fashion, they're everywhere.
Doubletree Hotels serve
them to their guests at checkin (you .can also mail order
them, of course); Midwest
Express prepares them at
high altitude for their passengers; specialty stores like
Mrs. Fields and David's
Cookies enchant customers
with the smell of fresh-baked
cookies, and Ben &amp; Jerry's
second most popular flavor is
their Chocolate Chip Cookie
Dough Ice Cream.
·.
During the 1992 presidential campaign Family Circle
magazine sponsored a bake. off between first lady
Barbara Bush and · Hillary
Clinton (Cli nton's recipe
won) that made national
news.
Sentimentality aside, there
is a good reason that so many
moms personalized their
chocolate
chip
cookie
recipes.
The answer lies in the
dough, ~ccording to Tish
Boyle, editor of the magazine
Chocolatier and author of
"The Good Cookie," (John
Wiley &amp; Sons, 2002).
All chocolate chit? cookies
are
a
derivatiOn
of
Wakefield's recipe. No mat-

Among many of th e elderhis pretty wife, Katherine,
ly, Alzheimer's di sease has
and his se rene life in
become more feared than
London.
arduous jourcancer. I have read several ·
ney takes several months , by
exce llent hooks on the subway of Europe, the Red Sea,
jccl , but Eleanor Cooney's
through India and into exotic
bitter and funny ' Death in
Burma.
slow motion : My mother's
At one point Drake states,
·descent into Al zheimer's,' is
"We
are here to bring them
the best told from the careculture
and religion. They
COLUMNISJ
tak er's point of view.
already have a culture and a
Mary Durant, her mother,
Sometimes
was hip. cool, funny, elegant mother 's mind is descending religion ."
and talented. She was a nov- into darkne ss. Maybe, in the Westerners are arrogant in
eli st. married three times, a end, only love lasts.
their encounters with 'forvery social and pleasant and
Daniel Mason . only 26, iii eign' civilizations. The lovebeloved mother. She was hi s debut no.vel 'The Piano line ss of the flowers and
widowed after her third mar- Tuner,' weaves a fascinating trees and rivers, the fasdnariage, a 23 year idyllic union tale of the Briti sh in Burma tion with the music and stowith a· wonderful man named · in 1886. Edgar Drake is the ries and customs, the attracMike , also a writer. Together tuner of pianos. specializing tion of a lovely Burmese girl
they had retraced the traveh in rare and expensive Erard - all these put Edgar Drake
or John James Audobon, the grands. The Briti sh War
wonderful illustrator or Office commission' him to under their spell. This is a
America's birds. and jointly travel to Burm a to repair one strange and unusual book,
beautifully crafted and it will
written a book ahout him.
of the pianos for an eccentric
take
you to another place and
Now Mary's children real- surgeon.
Dr.
Anthony
ize someth ing is wrong, and Carroll , who has set up u sort time which can never be visthey come to close up her · of benign ' Heart of dark- ited again - except through
exceptionally
Connecticut house and spirit ne ss .· He treats and soothes Mason 's
her away 10 li ve near the the natives and their war- descriptive writing.
au thor in California. She lords with medi cine , poetry
(Beverly Gettles is a
lives with the dau ghter for I 8 and . music and is vital to retired librarian and schoolmonths. What follows is a British control of the area.
teacher living in Gallia
journey which has no happy
Drake is reluctant to leave County.)
end.
Cooney
says,
·'Alzheimer's is death in
slow motion and it has the
ability to kill love while the
per.son
you
love still
breathes." With Alzheimer's
you get not only short-term
memory loss. You get agitaStore Hours
tion. paranoia, delusions, •
M!;Jnday-Sunday
hallucinations, depression,
BAM-lOPM
anger, guilt and despair. She
tries coping with booze,
298 Second St
Valium and black humor and
Accepts Credit .Cards
berates herself for failing her
mother. ·
Prices Good Sun 5/04 Thru Sat. 5/10
The daughter states, "I
grieve for her exactly as if
she'd died. She's gone, I've
lost her, but I'm responsible
for her living, breathing body
and the g ho sts inside her
head ."
Mpry is stubborn, combative and is expe lled from one
nursing home for attacking a
·caretaker. She is put on so
much
medication
she
becomes like a zombie. At
one ppint they have her in a
'vest' resembling a straightjacket. In searching for a
nursing
home , Cooney
describes how difficult it is
to find the 'right fit' for the
patient. Some homes are like
hospitals, some are like
country, clubs but they .ar~
16
v_ery.
very
expe ns1ve.
Cooney taRes her back to live
with her again. This does not
'last. Mary's condition continiJes to deteriorate.
Cooney finds her sal vat ion
in writing. She is also a no""
elist. Money is tight,
patience is in short supply,
11
and her significant other is
amazi ngly tolerant, She says,
"I understand just how flimsy is th e infrastructure of
cognizance, where our rea16
son, memories and identity
lie . It's everything, but it 's a
delicate and finicky synaptic
souffl e. Once it falls, nothing
will make it rise again·."
Perhaps the most pleasant
sections of the book deal
with the author's love ly
memories of her mother
when she was whole and of
1he good times th ey had
together. There is a strong
bond there, which cannot be
broken, even . though her

ter .what is added or adjusted, ·
the basic ingredients always
include flour, eggs, sugar, a
leavener, fat (usually butter)
and, of course, chocolate
chips.
The sli,ghtest manipulation
of these mgredients, without
adding extras, is enough to
create a differe!lt cookie each
time.
In searching for the cookie
of your youth it's best to start
with the Toll House recipe even if you don't use Nestle
chips, which is something
both Boyle and Weekes sug~est as a simp)e way to.
1mprove the cook1es.
The most often debated
aspect of the cookie is crispy
versus soft and chewy, and
there are minor adjustments
you can make to achieve the
desired result.
Usin,g melted butter will
help g1ve the cookies a soft
texture. ·
Longer cooking times at a
slightly lower temperature
will make a crispier cookie.
Don't like your cookies to
spread out on the sheet and
become thin and crisp?
Replace some butter with ·
shortening and the cookie
will retain its shape more.
Simply leaving the cookies
on the baking sheet after they
come out of the oven will

keep them from becoming
Sift together the flour, bakcrisp, too. Moving them to a ing soda and salt into a medi- .
rack allows air to circulate urn bowl. Set aside. ·
around the cookie.
In the bowl of an electric
·
·
h
ddl
If you're enamored of both
camps and desire a crisp out- m•xer, usmg t e pa e
side with a soft inside, try attachment, beat the d&gt;utter,
adding some corn syrup.
sugars and vanilla extract at.
Weekes won't share her medium speed until creamy,
· about 2 minutes. Beat in the
bakery's recipe.
Boyle's recipe for Sour eggs one at a time, beating
Cream
Chocolate
Chip well after each addition and
Cookies shows how you can scraping down the sides of
give the cookie an exciting the bowl as necessary. Add
new flavor with only minimal
additions.
.
the sour cream, mixing until
Sour Cream Chocolate
blended. At low speed, add
Chip Cookies
the dry ingredients, mixing
2 cups all-purpose flour
just until combined. Using a
I teaspoon baking soda
· wooden spoon, stir in the
l teaspoon salt
raisins, nuts and chopped
. }, cup ( 11, sticks) unsalted chocolate.
butter, softened
Drop the dough by rounded
·l cup granulated sugar
bl
f
h
~ cup firmly packed dark ta espoon u1s onto t e prebrown sugar
.
pared baking i/leets, spacing
l tablespoon vanilla extract the cookies 2 inches apart.
2 lar
Bake iwo sheets at a time, I 2
i, cu:~~!!~ream
to 15 minutes, until golden
I cup raisins
brown. Switch positions of
I cup coarsely chopped the sheets halfway through .
toasted walnuts
baking so that the cookies :,
12 ounces bittersweet bar brown evenly. Transfer the :
chocolate·, chop!?fd into i.- cookies to wire racks and ·
inch or smaller p1eces
Position two racks near the cool completely.
center of the oven and preMakes about 58 cookies .
heat the oven to 375 F. Line
· (Recipe from "The Goad
two baking sheets with Cookie," John Wiley &amp; Sans, .·
parchment paper orfoil.
2002,., $34.95)
·

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"The Man With ' the Golden
Arm" and "One Flew Over ·
the Cuckoo's Nest." They 're ·
all edgy, often disturbing
books: ·
Frey's . prose is raw and
brutal. At times, tie uses
stream of consciousness to .
relate his fears. frustration
and the challenge of kicking
several addictions all at once
and by himse lf. He often
does not use punctuation and
repeats mantras like, "I am
an Alcoholic and .( am a Drug,
Addict and I am a Criminal"
throughout the book .
The journals Frey kept as
part of his treatment served
as important road maps to
writing the book.
He says he was careful in
his approach. writing one to
two polished pages a day,
seven days a week for I0
months back in 2000. It
yielded him about 550 pages,
150 of which were cut from
the tina! version. His writing
experience came from the
years he spent after treatment ·
working as a screenwriter in·
Los Angeles and Chicago.
(His credits include 1998's
"Kissing a Fool," starring
David Schwimmer and Jason

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Doctors at Hazelden sewed
up his cuts and gave him new
teeth . Because he was an
addict, all work had to be
done without anesthesia,
including the roo! canals.
It was a rough time in
Frey's life, but also a time he
felt needed to be told . His
first book, "A Million Little
Pieces," chronicles · those
hazy first days at the center
and his eventual release two
months later.
Frey grew up in ari affluent
home in Ohio and later
Michigan. His father was an
international businessman.
He started drinking when he
was lO simply because he
saw adults doing it and it
seemed like a cool thing to
do. By 15, he knew he had a
problem but didn't want any
help and he didn't want to
stop.
His editor at .Doubleday,
Nan Talese, almost passed on
his manuscript because she
thought it was just another
addiction memoir. But after
reading a few pages, the grim
subject matter fascinated her.
Talese said that "A Million
Little Pieces," which has an
initial print run of 50,000
copies, fits in well with titles
like "The Lon~ Wee;kend,"

p OWELL'S

13th Annual

Thursday, May 15 • 6:00 p.m . . • Tickets $20.00

New YORK (AP)-:- For a
man who once fell off of a
fire escape and crashed to the
pavement below, writer
James Frey looks pretty
good.
.
He sits in a West Village
coffee shop, a J. Crew vision :
crisp white shirt; cropped,
curly hair; a good smile with
sparkling teeth.
He pulls back his lip and
points out a few faint white
lines on the ' inside of hi s
mouth. "That's where all the
stitches ,were," he says. "My
nose. is still . crooked but
everything else has pretty
much healed."
Ten years ago, Frey, who is
now 33, ended up at the
Hazelden drug and alcohol
rehabilitation center in
Minnesota with a broken
. nose, a hole the size of a
nickel in his cheek l\lld several broken teeth after he fell
from a friend's fire escape
when he was high.
He still isn 't sure how he
got up there, because he has
no memory of the two weeks
he spent before going to
Hazelden, with its wooded
grounds and walking trails.
At the time, his list of addictions included everything
from alcohol to crack to glue.

The

were not."
His first book, "Hors
d'Oeuvre and Canapes," in
1940 is still in print. A year
later
came · "Cook
it
dutdoors," the first book to
take a serious look at backyard barbecue grilling, something Amtricans once did
because they had to, but now
were .starting to do because
they could.
·
think he
steered
"I
Americans toward their own.
heritage," said Judith Jones,
who was Beard's editor at the
New York publishing_ house
Alfred A. Knopf for many
years.
"A:fter the war there was an
enthusiasm about good cooking, particularly French
cooking, and Julia (Child, ·
whom Jones still edits) awakened people's appetites,"
Jones said.
"But Jim was already there.
He focused on the .extraordinary heritage we have as
Americans. He was a real
force in getting people to
admit it was a pleasure to
eat."
Americans, she said, were
finally casting aside Puritan
attitudes and love-hate relationships "about food.
"And Jim was very important in getting rrien to appreciate -cooking," she said.
"Before him it was treated as
sort of a sissy thing."
Beard died in 1985 at age
81.
Jones said she is confident
his influence will outlast him.
"Americans are very fickle," she · saiq, "They always
go for th~latbt hot star chef.
But I very much thillk his
influence will last. Once it is
awakened, ii will not go
away. The pride in . our own
produce, the making of 'our
own cheeses, those influ•
ences will be with us forever.
We can't go backward." ·

Sunday, May 4, 2003

·James Frey chronicles his .
former addiction in new book:

'

•

really took off."
a still-limited audience.
Beard's cooking schools, in
But Beard, with his tradeNew York City, Seaside on mark bald head, bow tie and
the north Oregon coast and ample girth, more than surSan Francisco, helped launch 'vi ved it. By the early 1950s
a generaiion of great chefs The New York Times had
and taught them the value of recognized him as the dean of
fresh, local and in-season.
American cooking.
"It is wise to appreciate . The title stuck.
what is in season for what it
He wrote 22 cookbooks,
is," Beard wrote in an article many still in print.-He was an
for the then-upstart magazine adviser to the 30-book TimeBon Appetite, in the 1950s. . Life Foods " of the .World
"There was no holy " series that began in the
untouchableness about him ," ' 1960s. He made sure a vol Child, who knew and worked ume on the Pacific Northwest
with Beard for years, said was included.
from Santa Barbara Cali f.,
Beard was 'bOrn in Portland
where she is recovering from on May 5, 1903, to a qstknee surgery.
iron English mother who. had
' "If you read cookbooks by run a hote 1· and boarding
people like Fanny Farmer house and a usually absent
you felt these people were father. His early memories
ur.tight and you felt he was- include trips to Portland's
n t. He liked good, simple • public markets. long-since
bulldozed, which overflowed
things."
For decades before Beard with the · fresh local produce
came along and until "The and other products of the
Joy ofCooking" appeared in Willamette Valley and· the
the 1940s, American kitchens earms tha.t surrounded his
as often as not were ruled by city.
Farmer's "1896 Boston
It began his "lifelong affini-.
Cook ty for the small farmers and
Cooking-School
Book," a collection of recipes suppliers who produced the
intended to be more safe than things he loved.
interesting.
All his life he recalled the
"I think what he con- markets. and his boyhood
tributed was simply the joy of summers at Gearhart on the
cpoking," said Child, who north Oregon coast and its
hosted "The French Chef," abundance of fish, clams,
the devilcmay-care and wild- oysters, crabs and the crawly popular television cooking fish he pulled frol!l the
show beginning in the early Necanicum River.
1960s.
"He used to say that a good
But it was Beard who host- hot dog was just as good as a
'ed the first televised cooking good truffle - ihat good is
show, in the 1940s, even good," reGalled 81-year-old
though it didn't last.
. Marion Cunnin~ham of
Beard was a prolific writer Walnut Creek, Cahf., Beard's
of books, columns and maga- assistant for years.
"He did not like people to
zine pieces as he struggled in
the 1930s and 19~0s to gain try to be fashionable abo11t
recognition in the jealous, food, although he didn't mind
rough-and-tumble food com- people servin~ those things,"
munity of New York City, · she recalled. ' He did not like
where an increasing number some things being what we
of aspiring chefs and food called in those days 'highfawriters clashed for a share of lutin,' while other things

n the BooksheH

iunbap tEtme£S -ientinel

Page C3

White Bath., nssue

79¢

j

�I

.

Health lt.Fitness

BY Col£EN MuiPHYSMmt, R.S.

The mosquilo season is upon
us and Wesl. Nile Virus is a
growing concern each year.
Whal was once a disease
unknown in the United States
---, has become
a part of our
lives during
w a r m
we at her .
What is it all
ab o ut ?
What
do
you need to
k n 0 w ?
What
is
MurphySmlth being done''
What can
you do'l
West Nile Virus is a type of
virus called a tlavivirus that is
transmined through the bite of
an infected mosquito. WNV is
not spread person-to-person. or
through contact with birds. It
can cause a fonn of encephalitis
in
mammals.
Predominantly: humans. birds.
and horses. It is common in
Africa, West Asia, Eastern
Europe ..and the Middle East. It
was identified in New York
City in 1999 and has spread
rapidly since then. At the end of
2002 West Nile Virus was
found to some degree in the
entire contiguous United States
except Arizona, Nevada,
Oregon, ;md Utah.
The Cenlers for Disease
Control in Atlanta, Georgia
reports that Ohio had 441
.human cases of West Nile
VIrus illness and 31 deaths in
2002. It is probable that many
more people were infected but
showed mild or no symptoms
of the disease. ,Only 20 percent

History
from Page .C1
fonnal education at the end of
eighth gmde.
Approximateiy 60 pupils
attended the academy each
year during its existence from
1859-1901.
In 1927, after the village's
one-room school burned,
school was again held in the
building, and it continued for
public education until 1948.
The building was placed on
the National Register of
Historic Places in 1982.

Adamsville VIllage
This replica log cabin village
was named after its pioneer
founder, Adam Richabaugh,
who was a veteran of the
Revolutionary War.
Another settler, Nehemiah
Wood, migrated here from
Vrrginia and constructed a card·
ing miU in 1806. He also established the Adamsville Post
Office in 1816 and re-named it
Rio Grande.
Just west of Adamsville, on a
knoll, is a log church and a family cemetery where the founder
is buried. ' ·
· The UniversiJyofRio Grande
Historical Marker
This historical marker ·commemorates the original ten acres
of land donated by Nehemiah
and Pennelia Atwood for the
purpose of establishing Rio
Grande College.
·
Through the efforts of this
couple and Rev. lm Haning, a
Baptist preacher,. the college
opened for instruction on
September 13, 1876.
The marker is located on the
campus' west side, adjacent to
Ohio Route 325 in Rio Grande .
Anniversary Hall
At the preserit time, the oldest
building on the URG campus is
Anniversary Hall. It was erected
in 1927 at a cost of $52,fXXJ.
Since its establishment it !las
served as one of the school's
main classroom buildings, and at
one time, it housed the library.
It was named in honor of the
fiftieth anni versary of the college, which was celebmted a
year earlier.
·
The
Homestead · and
BicentenniJJJ Bam
The Homestead is a pioneer
home ·located behind the Bob
Evans restaurant on the outskirts
of Rio Grande.
Built around 1825, this early
brick house was erected by
Nehemiah Wood.
Bob Evans and his famil y
lived on this !'ann between 1953
and 1970.
Gallia County's bicentennial
bam, representing 200 years of
history and progress, · is also
located on the Bob Evan's Farm.
Alumni Memorial BeD Tower
The Alumni Memorial Bell

Page C4.

/

Mosquito Trivia
How many apeclaa of mosquitoes are there?
About 2700.
How fa&amp;l can a moaqulto fly?
Approximately 1 to 1.5 miles
per hour.

How fir do BOmSII'O'Cfli'nlely?
Sah Marsh mosQuitoes migrate
75 to 100 miles.

How dO moaqunoaa flnd new
ho&amp;la?
By sight (they observe movement): by detecting infra-~ radi·
ation emined by warm bodies: and
by chemical signs (they are
attracted' by carbon dioxide and
lactic acid, !'moung other cheml·
cals).

How much daes a mosquito
weigh?
About 2 to 2.5 milligrams.

How far oway can a moaqullo
smell a potential hoal?
20 to 35 meters.

How much blood doas a
moaqidto drink per bite?
About 5-millionths of a liter.

What does moaqulto sall¥8
and r.. polson have In com"mon?
They both contain anti-coagu·
lants: chemicals that prevent
blood from clogging.

How many are resistant to at
least onelnaectlclda?
More .than SQ.

of people will become ill.
Fewer will develop encephalitis or meningitis as a result of
infection. Treatment is support·
ive only. There is no magic pill:
The real key is prevention.
Mosquito control comes in
many fonns. Probably the one
that most people think of is the
Gallia
Counly
Health
Department's mosquito spraying program. You may have
heard or seen our pesticide
operators in trucks out in the
evenings during mosquito season. We use an ultra-low volume cold mist spmyer. This
type of machine uses very
small amounts of a low toxicity
pesticide and spreads it out
over large areas. In short, we
use the smallest amount of the
safest pesticide that has proven
to be effective in our area. This
kills the mosquitoes on contact,
but is non-residual. That is to

say, it kills the mosquitoes
quickly and breaks down
quickly so that humans. anirnals, and the environment are
less likely to be harmed by it.
We also treat some bodies of
stagnant water with long-la5ting briquettes and pellets.
Again, we try to choose the
· products that are the most
effective and the least likely to
harm people, animals, or the
environment.
There are other mosquito
control measures that everyone
can institute ... no licensing
required' Mosquitoes breed in
stagnant water, even small
amounts can produce thousands of mosquitoes. Look
around your yard for areas
where stagnant water lies and
eliminate them. Flower pots,
low spots, cans, tires, birdbaths,
animal water dishes, toys, wading pools, and sand boxes. The

list is endless. Eliminate these
items or their water-holding
ability. Dump excess water out
of plants, fill in low spots or
holes the tlog has dug, change
water in bird baths and &lt;mimal
water dishes every day, cover
pools and sandboxes, dispose
of tires or store them in water
proof areas. Make sure roof
gutters drain properly. Remind
and help your neighbors to
eliminate breeding sites. If
mosquitoes have nowhere to
breed. well. you won't see
many mosquitoes' Don't help
them multiply'
Plan activities and yard work
before dusk, which is when
mosquitoes are most likely to
be biting. If you must be .PUt
after dark, wear light-colored
clothing that covers you well,
and use DEET-containing
insect repellents.
Mosquitoes in this area transmit diseases other than West
Nile Virus. St.
Louis
.Ence'phalitis and La Crosse
Encephalitis, for example.
. These diseases have been more
common than WNV in the
past, biii the symptoms are the
same. Only labomtory tests can
detennine the difference. The
same vigilance io mosquito
population control and avoidance has been very imponant in
le'ssening the occurrei1ce of
these diseases. The point is,
there are multiple rea&lt;;ons to
combat the mosquito population. Working together, the
public and health agencies can
have an impact.
For inore infonnation, contact the Environmental section
of the Gal1ia C\)unty Health
Department at 441-2018.

,
Tower, located on the center Wickline, has owned the store travel, without jeopardizing the
green of the Universiiy of Rio since the death of her father, who safety of the farm animals.
Grande campus, stands 40 feet purcha'ied the store in 1944.
Hanger's cows, horses, and
tall and houses a 25-a~St bronze
The Bailey Chapel and Mad sheep used the north pa~sage­
bell carillon.
Ann Bailey Historical Marlrer way, and the public traveled the
The tower was built through
Bailey Chapel is located in road that passed through the
private donations 'of alumni and Harrison Township off of Ohio south passageway.
friends in recognition of the Route 218. Behind the church is
Today this landmark remains
University's I25th year of oper- the Troner family cemetery, a the only construction of its type
ation. It was ofticiaJly dedicated landmark and reminder of fron- in the area. This distinction
on September 13, 2001.
tier woman "Mad Ann Bailey." makes it one of Gallia County's
The Springfield Baptist
Bailey's first husband was rarest landmarks.
Church
killed at the Battle of Point
Morgan Bethel Chun:h and
The Springfield Baptist Pleasant in 1774 and after that Lambert Land Menwrial
Church was established in 1852. time, she vowed revenge against
In 1843, the Lamben slaves
During the mid-1850's, most the Indians that led the attack.
from Vuginia were given their
buildings in rural Springfi9d
Bailey abandoned the natural freedom. The group came north
Township were constructed With dress of a woman and donned and settled on 256.5 acres in
either chinked logs or with walls men's clothing instead, as well Morgan Township. They later
framed of wood, the walls of this as a rifle and a tomahawk. She established Morgan Bethel
church, however, were erected became renowned for her skill Church, which burned in 1995.
with bricks, made from clay on with her rifle and often rode as a A new structure now sits in its
the premises.
messenger between fo$.
place.
The church also once served
After the Indian troubles set·
On September 14, 2002, a
as a temporary jail during the tied · along the Ohio frontier, memorial was erected and dediCivil War. Confedemte prison- BaiJey, and her son by her ftrSt cated to the original settlers.
ers were kept ovemight during husband, moved to Harrison
Peniel Church and The
their
transport
between Township.
Peniel Ty Capel
Gallipolis and Oak Hill.
Sevei".!l years after she died,
This church, located in
BidweU Historical MJzr/cer
her remains were moved to the Greenfield Township in Peniel,
This historical marker sits on ''Tu-Endi-Wei" ' park in Pt. one of the early Welsh settlethe site of a fanner train depot
Pleasant, W.Va, where her first ments. The church, built in 1874,
When the railroad business husband was killed and a monu- has a cemetery behind it and a
carne to Gallia Ci&gt;unry in 1880, ment marks her grave site, TY Capel - or house chapel,
part of the right-of-way crossed which is adjacent to her adverwhere meals were served after
Charles Heatley's property. At sary, Chief Cornstalk.
the service.
the time, there was no village at
The Cora MiU
Rull's Hand Ouved Door
this site, but the nearest village,
The Cora Mill located in the
In 1859, §CVeral Gennan famPorte(, was a mile east.
. village of·Cora, was erected in
ilies
immigrated to Gallia
.
The village was original!~ 1835.
.and senled in the
named Heatley, was in 1892, 11
It is the last remaining gri~t• County
Gerrilan
Hollow
area of Walnut
was renamed Bidwell in hooor mill on Raccoon Creek and was
Township;
located
between
of John Bidwell of Califomia, a used for grinding grain for more
Pabi01
and
Cadmus.
One
of the
Prohibitionist candidate for than a centwy.
President of the United States.
The First Tyn Rhos Log pioneers, Christian Run, was a
By 19()6, the railroad business Church and Tyn Rhos Marlrer skilled woodcarver, and some of
coupled with the efforts of severLocated on 1Yn Rhos Road in his wad&lt; can be observed on a
al land speculators, created a Peny Township, · early Welsh present-day log home, owned by
business hub for the growing inunigrants built the church in Lloyd Myers.
Tile door has been preserved
community.
1841.
·
as
an anifact of the German
Bidwell once claimed a tile
When· the congregation outinfluence
in the area. It., is
factory, general store, post grew the small structure, they
office. a two-room school, two built a larger, framed building designed with hex signs and
churches, a bank, hotel, livery across the roadway where they other icons of Gennan customs
and culture.
stable, flour mill, cream station, ·now worship.
Guyan Township Sandstone
two doctor offices, a dentist, and
One of the special events held
Cellars
a funer-.11 home.
lluuughout the history of Welsh
During pioneer days, comFor many years, special excur- churches is the Gymanfa Thelie
.
mon
cellars were dug fro·m a
sion trains arnved from feature religious singing and ser·
hillside, lined with rocks, and a
Columbus, bringing hundreds of mon.
door
was placed at the entrance.
visitors to the ·annual Bidwell
Present Day Tyn Rhos
At
least three cellars, located
Bean Dinner and Emancipation . Church
in
Guyan
Township, are handProclamation Celebmtion.
ryn . Rhos is one of several
WICkline Country Store
Welsh churches still in cxi ;tence carved by sculpting a room
At the tum of the twentieth in Southeastern Ohio. This land· inside the indigenous sandstone
century, most every small, rural mark is an icon representing one in the area. This was accomcommunity in Gallia County of the major ethnic groups that . plished by using a hammer and
has impacted the history of chisel, and, in some instances.
had a country store.
using dynamite.
: Local fanners took eggs and Gallia County.
The St. Nicolas Church
•
Hanger~ Twin Tunnels
buner to the nearest store and
This church, established in
traded their produce for dry
When the Hockin~ Valley
goods or items they could not , Railroad Company butlt a rail- 1873, is located in · Clay
provide for themselves on the ·. way through Gallia County in Township.
Tile grave-yard is the restingfjllT!l , but, as time progressed, 1880, its right-Qf-way divided
transportation became easier and David Hanger's farm into two place for some yellow-fever vicfaster and local citizens traveled sections, causing a dilemma on tims of the 1878 epidemic, and is
greater distances to the larger- how to provide a safe passage- still used for burials.
It is one of the few log churchpopulated centers where more way for his livesiOCk to pass
safely between his two fields es still remaining in Gallia
stores were available.
· One such store has withstood without traveling onto a public County.
the changes of time roadway or crossing the railroad
For more infonnation on the
slide show, or the landmarks,
Wickline's General Store, locat- tracks.
ed on Market Street in Bidwell.
The company built a double contact the Gallia County
lis present owner, ~oanne trestle by which the train could Historical Society at 446-7200.
..

.

.

•

See
Monday's ·
paper for
Kid

Scoop

HOW ":" 1~ 1l ~5U~
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AND
DAREDEVIEL (PG I 3)

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D11 ,.,, dream 111
owning"'"' oaJJ h11me?
Gallia-Meigs Community
' Action Agency is offering free
homebuyer education classes
for anyotte interested in pur,chasing and maintaini11g
their own home.
Topics covered during the Classes
lndude:
•Budgeting
•Financing
&lt;recllt Issues .
•Shopping for yor home
•Insurance
•Legal Issues
•Home Maintenance
•Working with Real Estate Agents
For more information about attending
these free classes, call
(740) 992·6629 or (740) 446·1018

Som ething Wonderful
Happened to Mary and
It Could Happen To YOU Too!

Sunday, May 4, 2003

Engagements

Anniversaries

Eddy- .
Drummond

Smiths 50th

Camp 25th

GALLIPOLIS
FERRY,
W.Va. - The Rev. Thurman
and Mrs. Joy Smith will
observe their 50th wedding
anniversary May 9, 200 3.
They were married May 4,
1953, by the Rev. George
Anderson in Gallipolis Ferry.
The Smiths have six chil dren,
Jud y (Raymond)
Pennington . of Gallipoli s
Ferry, David (Nancy) Smith
of Greenville, S.C.. JoAnna
(Roger) Niben of Henderson.
W.Va., Daniel Smith of
Gallipoli s Ferry, Mary
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Smith
Fielder · of
(Leonard)
Gallipolis Ferry, and Mark hosting an open house. rece ption in honor of their parent s
Smith of GaHi{Xllis Feny.
They 'have etght grandchil- from 5 lo 7:30 p.m. Friday,
dren and three great-grand- Mav 9. 2003. at the Akzo
Club House in Gall ipoli s
children. .
The Smith children . are · Ferry.

HUNTI NGTON. W. Va.Jeffery and Te'resa Camp will
observe their 25th wedd ing
annive rsary May 4, 2003 .
Tre coup le, better known
as Pete and Terrv. were married May 5. 197'8, at the
Salem Chu rc h in West
Co lum bia. W.Va. bv the late
Rev. Hoschar.
·
The couple will ~e celebrating their anniversary with
famil y and friends at the
home of Tharun anti Joanne
Ca mp.
Jeffe ry is a co ns-truction
wo rker with · Local 543.
Huntington. Terry is a homemaker.

BIDWELL, Ohio - Traci
Marie Eddy and Adam Scott
Drummond announce their
, enga~ement arid upcoming
marnage .
The bride-elect is the
daughter of Wayne and Laura
Eddy of Bidwell. She is the
granddaughter of Eleanor and
the late Gene Wellington and
Jewell and the late Harry
"Bud" Eddy of Bidwell .
She is a 2002 graduate of
River Valley High .School
and currently attends the
University of Rio Grande .
She is employed by Wal-·
Mart, Gallipolis.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Tim and
Jeanette Drummond of
Vinton and the grandson of
Buster and Dorothy Meeks of
Vinton, Dorothy and the late
of
Arthur
Drummond

Tracl Eddy and Adam Drummond

Cheshire. and Kenneth and
Sue Higley of Gallipoli s.
He .is a 2000 graduate of
River Valley High School
and currently attends Rio
Grande Community College.
He is employed by Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
The wedding is planned for
Nov. I, 2003.

Davis-Gilmore

15' Row!d .......... ..

Page CS

Celebrations

Sunday, May 4, 2003

.

West Nile Virus season: What to do?
Gallia County Health Depl.

•

,

\

VINTON, Ohio - Larry
Gilmore and Amanda Davis
announce their engagement
and upcoming wedding.
The bride-elect is the
daughter of the late Mitzie A.
Davi s and Dennis W. Dodrill
of Vinton. She is a 2002 graduate of Rio Grande School of
Nursing.
The pfospective bridegroom son of Georgill L.
Gilmore · and Okey H.
Schartiger of Middleport.
The wedding will be at
I :30 p.m. on May 17, 2003,
at Living Water Church.
Reception will follow at
their home.

Larry Gilmore- AmMda Davis .

Avis-Parry
COOLVILLE, Ohio
Meghan Elizabeth Avis and
Matthew Glen Parry, along
with their parents, happily
announce their en~agement
and upcoming mamage.
Meghan is the daughter of
Tom and Judy Avis of
Coolville. She is the granddau~hter of Doyle and Doris
Jusuce of Huntington, W.Va.,
and Doris Avis of Racine,
· Ohio, and the late Aoyd Avis.
She is a 2000 graduate of
Meigs High School and is
scheduled to graduate in..
December
from
the
University of Rio Grande.
with a bachelor's degree in
early childhood education.
is
currently
Meghan
employed
with
ElderBeennan in Parkersburg.
Matthew is the son of
Chuck and Glenna Parry of
Coolville. He is a 2000 graduate of Federal Hocking High
School. His grandparents are
Jeff and Eileen Rutter of
Athens, Ohio, and Zeta Clegg
of The Plains, Ohio. He is
currently employed by Right

M - Parry and metlhan Avta
Hand Builders in Coolville
and is also a volunteer firefighter.
·
Meghan' and Matthew will
exchange wedding vows at
2:30 p.m. May 24, 2003, at
the Belpre Park Gazebo in
Belpre, Ohio, with Bishop
Mike Cox and the Rev. Rod
Justice officiating. A reception will be held at 4 p.m. at
the 19th Street Church of
God Family Life Center in
Parkersburg, W.Va.

Learn about Master
Gardeners .in today's
Home &amp;Garden section
See Garrie Wood's story on Page 01

I

Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Camp

Bridal Reeistry
• Li ... l Y'lur

Flowers create
sweet-smelling
wedding day ·.
(WMS)
Selecting the
right flower for your wedding
is an art, and extending its
scent throughout the wedding
party and the entire event is
pure genius .
What's the best flower for
your wedding? Consider the
location, the time of day and
the season. Yves Rocher, an
innovator in botanical beauty,
offers tips on how to add
"scent-ual'' intrigue to your
wedding day by selecting the
flower that best suits your
style and weaving its color,
its scent and of course, the
flower itself, into all aspects
of the day.
• A French country weddin~ in summer is the perfect
setung for lavender. Honor
the tradition of "something
old, something new, somethin~. borrowed, something
blue ' by adding sprigs of this
time-honored
blue-hued
bloom to complement your
bridal bouquet and headpiece. Finish the look with
Yves Rocher's Pur Desir de
Lavande fragrance, part of a
collection of five single no'te
fragrances . Your lingering
scent will make guests feel as
though they are walking
through fields of fresh lavender every time you near.
• If a chic, black-tie affair
suits your style, then seduce
your guests with the intoxicating red rose. Tnis queen
among flowers hides a spicy
rich aroma within the velvety
fle sh of her petals. Unleash
its sweet rapture by scattering
these petals down the aisle
for the nuptial procession .
Create more majesty by having bridesmaids wear Pur
Desir de Rose perfume to
infuse the room as the wedding party makes its entrance.
This irresistible elixir and its
luxurious bath and shower
products make wonderful
bridesmaids' gifts as well.
• Is the garden of a
Victorian mansion your fairytale setting ? Then pick
blooms of mauve lilac directly from the tree for an
antique-style mother!of-thebride corsage. Invite Mom lo
relax before her daughter"s

• No

pn:fcn.::ncc~

gu~s~wnrh.

friend~

• You

&amp;

for

f&lt;~m il ~

n.;;.'t! l'.C

your

: l'a\ untc lhing ~.

wedding by lu xuriating in
Pur Desir de Lilas invigoratj ng shower gel and heavenly
perfmne as she dre sses for
the day.
• And if the bea~h at sunset
is your nuptial paradi se. then
create a feminine, all-white
wedding illuminated by the
provocalive pearl wings of
the white lily. Have bridesmaids and bride wear varying
shades of white dresses and
pin a single lily on the lapel
of each groomsman . Include
the lily's powdery, vanilla
.scent at each table by wrapping Pur Desir de Lys glyc·
erin soaps in tulle and placmg
on each chair as a party favor.
The sense of smell .evokes
more memories than any
other sense . Keep an imprint
of your wedding in the memory of your guests forever, by
a ssociating your special day
with your favorite floral
elixir.

Tart
/Surnet&lt;
1J!J!JL $15. 00 f.AC!I
(R.g f26! 5 ea)

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Gllls lor o 00
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5' Rollback Glider

Wheelbarrow Planter

Rollback Heart
Double Lawn Glider
with cedar roof

Large Wagon
Wheel Planter

4' Arc:h Top Arbor

Small, Medium lr Large
Gazebo Feeders

Mary lost 9l lbs and attended Weight Watchers mcelings regularly&lt;
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May 4, 2003 through May 31,2003
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with Cushion

American Windmill

•

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Pomeroy, Oh 45 769
(740) 992-5724

CHOICE!

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Chemials • Chlorine I Non-Chlorine Supplies lR::.
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4' Plain Bench

Water' Pump Planter

Fiower Baskets
with Wooden Handles

'

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�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant'

Inside:

Sunday, May 4, 2003

-

'

.

Classified ads, Pages 02-7

Risky business of buying diamonds
Bv MIWSStA D.

Mr. ind Mrs. Benjamin M. Brown

Brown wedding
LETART. W.Va.- Maura H. Clark of Letart, W.Va., and
Benjamin M. Brown of Stewart, Tenn., were united in marriage August I0, 2002, with Pastor Steve Winegardner of the
First Assembly of God Church in Erin, Tenn., officiating.
Leslie Rueff of Virginia Beach, Va., and Tiffany Moore of
Richmond, Va., friends of the bride, sang prior to the ceremony. The bride was escorted down the aisle by her mother and
father, Brent and Amanda Clark of Letart.
The ceremony began with a welcome from David Brown,
father of the groom, along with praise and worship provided
by Tiffany Ewton of Houston, Texas, and Ashley White of
Leesburg, Va., friends of the bride. The couple exchan~ed
vows that they had personally written, with the groom singmg
his vows as an ot:iginal song acco_mpanied on piano by Gabriel
Dowdey of Harnsonburg, Va., fnend of the groom.
Scripture from I Corinthians was read by David Rig~s of
Thomasville, Ga., friend of the bride. A:fter exchanging nngs,
the couple partook of the Lord's Supper and received words of
encouragement from the pastor.
A reception was held at Royal Oaks following the ceremony.
The wedding party consisted of bridesmaids, Meredith
Davis of Stow, Ohio, Tiffany Ewton of Houston, Jennifer
Wilson of Corpus Christi, Texas, and Susan Brown of
Tennessee Ridge, Tenn. The matron of honor was Barbara
Davis of Stow, aunt of the bride. Junior bridesmaids were
Madelaine Anderson and Merritt Anderson of Harvest, Ala.
The flower girl was Margaret Anderson of Harvest. Serving as
groomsmen wc:re Gabriel .Dowdey of Harrisonburg, .Bradford
Clark of Letart, and Jacob Winegardner of Erin. Brother of the
groom, Bradley Brown of Tennessee Ridge, served as best
man. Junior groomsmen were Brenton Clark of Letart, and
Aaron Davis of Stow. Ring bearer was Mitchell Anderson of
Harvest. Cory Anderson and Christian Anderson of Harvest,
carried the bread and wine. Jarret Davis served as usher. Erin
Fields of New Haven, W.Va., and Amber Fields of Mason,
W.Va. -~w~re~l_guesJs, while Samantha Del Villan and
Michelle Def Villan of Middlebrook, Ohio, handed out programs.
Followina_fi.,_honeymoon in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., Orlando,
Fla.,.and cfilise"fci "tlie Bahamas, the couple now reside in
Harris~:mb~~.
.
.
BenJamtn IS the sort of Dav1d and Lmda Brown of Stewart,
and the grandson of Grady and Pat Wallace of Stewart, David
and Karen Brown of Muncie, Ind., and Wynell Watters, of
Charlene, Tenn. He is currently serving in the Air Force and
stationed at Sugar Grove, W.Va.
.
Maura is the daughter of Brent and Amanda Clark of Letart,
and the granddaughter of Mel and Sally Clark of West
Columbia, W.Va., and John and Mary Del Villan of
Ala. She is employed by
the
Rogersville,
Harrisonburg/Rockingham · County Community Services
Board, and is pursuing a master's degree in counseling from
Eastern Mennonite University.

iunbap limes -ientinel

I

Page Dl

stones have no inclusions visible by 'color to be called fancy, then it is gradStaff wrUer
magnification.
.
ed in a scale of co)ors ranging from
VVSI, VVS2- Very, Very Slightly Colorless to Light Yellow, "D" through
"Z". A diamond with a "D" color is conGALLIPOLIS , Ohio- Buying a dia- Imperfect - · These stones have very sidered to be colorless. If the color is
mond can be risky business, that 's why small inclusions which are very difficult more intense than "Z", it is considered
10 see under magnification.
educating yourself is so important.
VS I, VS2 - Very Slightly Imperfect fancy.
"It's important to note that in shopCut refers to not only the shape of \1
. ping for a diamond, a diamond is not - These stones have small inclusions . diamond, but its proponion and finish,
JUSt a diamond, there are many different which are s lightly difficult to difficult to factors which determine the sparkle of
things to consider," said Dan Davies of see under magnification.
the diamond.
SI I, SI2 - Slightly Imperfect Paul Davies Jewelers in Gallipoli s.
The goal, in terms of extracting the
The most imponant things- to remem- These stones have inclusions which are greatest beauty from a diamond, is to
fairly easy to see under magnification or
ber?
have light enter the diamond, disperse
visible to the naked eye.
· The three Cs, say diamond ex pens.
the light as it bounce s inside the dia ~
II , 12, 13 - Imperfect - These stones mond, thereby producing the differen.t
Clarity. Color. Cut.
The clarity of a diamond refers to how have inclusions which range from eye- colors and sparkly effect, and finally
clear the diamond is, explained David visible to very easily seen to the naked returning as much light to the eye as
Tawney of Tawney's Jewelry in eye.
possible .
The color of a diamond has the second
Gallipolis. The clearer the diamond, the
And, of course, the most important
biggest impact on its price, after carat C of all is cost.
higher the price.
Actually, most diamonds have weight, and diamonds come in every
Only you can decide how much you
· want to spend, so do your researcli
"imperfections" in them. The clarity color of the rainbow.
scale is a measure of the severity of
Most diamonds have at leas.t a trace of and talk to your local jewelers and tap
those imperfections.
yellow or brown, and with the exception into their extensive knowledge .
FL - Flawless- These stones have of some natural fancy colors, such as
"We seem to be selling larger and
no imperfections inside or on the outside blue, pink, purple, or red, tlie colorless · larger diamonds now," said Davies.
of the stone under magnification.
grade is the most valuable.
"Men are really wanting to go all
·
IF -. Internally Flawless· - These
Jf a diamond does not have enough out."
RUSSELL

Sunday, May 4, 2003

.

Master
g8rdeners
learn
a
little,
•
g1ve a little·to communities
training to future master
Currently.
gardeners.
Staff writer
Meig s has 20 active mas·
I
ter gardeners.
POMEROY, Ohio Master gardeners have
Anyone who has been traveled to orchards ,
through Pomeroy has to
notice the greenery. Little greenhouses and private
splashes of.color from var- gardens to learn about all
ious flowers are disbursed pha ses of gardening .
According to Kneen , the
throughout Main Street.
gardeners
have been 10
Although the downtown
commercial
greenhouses
beautification project was
started severa l years ago to learn the differences
by John and Sarah Fisher, between commercial garit is the Meig s County dening and personal garMaster Gardeners takin g dening. Some of the com:
· time to add a little beauty mercia! greenhouses !hey
have visited are Bob's
to Pomeroy now.
Greenhouse,
Mitch's
Over the next few
weeks, canna bulbs will be Greenhouse , Norris and
planted along with 30 flats Son and Rou sh Brothers.
Since the program is all
of annual plants. The
plants were donated by about volunteering and
Bob' s Market, but the education. Meigs master
hands that carefully place gardeners have several
them will be the few th at projects they work on
can be called master gar- throughout the ·year. They
host a spring and fall plant
deners .
exchange,
and a spring
Through local Extension
offices and agents, the garden party for members
master gardener program and guests to demonstrate
teaches volunteers about gardening techniques.
The master gardeners
gardening. For 50 hours of
training , each student have regular informational
donates back 50 hours booths at the Meigs
upon completing training . County Fair, Big Bend
"It is' used as an educa- Town and Country Expo,
tional program," said Hal Meigs. County Garden
Kneen, Meigs County· Club Holiday Show, and
Extension agent.
recently at the Racine
The Meigs County Flower Festival.
Extension Office works
Several master garden- ·
with Athens in providing ers attended the WSAZ
Bv CARRIE

"With so many minutes,
even the offer is a grand slam."

• Offer includes nationwide long distance

.

'

ANN

WooD

'

Home and Garden Show,
joining with 70 other master gardeners . from the
region to man an informational booth and answer
gardening questions.
Master gardeners work
with 4-Hers and junior
garden club membersi n
their proje cts and w th
informational talks.
They also judge. he
annual Riverbend . Arts
Council Fourth of July
home beautification contest.
Master gardeners have
worked over the years
with .schools to teach stu- ·
dents about plant care.
· During the Asian Lady
Beetle infestation, master
gardeners took phone calls
on how to deal with the
pe sts . Last year, the gardeners handled up to 60
calls in one afternoon.
Kneen said the program
uses all of the educational ,
resources in the area,
pooling from the Ohio
State University, Ohio
University
Botany
Department and Hocking
College.
For more informat~on
about the master gardener
program · eall (740) 9926696.

Alice Wamsley works on preparing flower beds on Main Street in Pomeroy. In the next week
fresh annuals will be planted ·along with the existing perenials. (Carrie Ann Wood )

.

• Ask about our multi-state regional calling plans

a

Nokia' 3585
for 19.95

Audiovox' 9500
by Toshiba'
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(Phone price after
130 mail-in rebate)

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Audiovox' 8500
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(Phone price after
130 mail-in rebate)

Currently greenery around Pomeroy comes from hostas and other perennials planted by the
Meigs County master gardeners . (Carrie Ann Wood)
For businesses with

ten or more Hnes. please call877-947-5729.

I
llddoV'
llddoV'

Bruce Horaley Ill and Teena Johnaon

Johnson~Horsley

engagement

-·
--

Cla:othl

-

1.0Wtllllq

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio- Charlene Johnson of Gallipolis and
Ed Johnson of Bidwell are pleased to announce the engage- .
ment and upcoming marriage of their daughter, Teena Lee, to
Bruce Perry Horsley III, son of Bruce Horsley li of Amelia,
Ohio, and Lena Horsley of Highland Heights, Kentucky.
Tee'na is a 1993 graduate of GAHS and a 1997 graduate of
the University of Cincinnati with a bachelor's degree in
J&gt;yschology. She is currently employed with CVS/pharmacy.
Bruce is a 1992 graduate of Kings High School in Cincinnati
and is working on an engineering degree from Northern
Kentucky University.
He is currently employed with Cinergy/CG&amp;E Co.
A May 24, 2003 wedding'is planned and will be held at First
Baptist Church in Fort Thomas, Kentucky. The couple will
reside in Southgate, Kentucky.
·
,,

{X)4) 255-2758
wei-Mirt. ~145 EastemAve..
(7 40~ 441 - 1066

TWO wt1i RaciO. 13041252-4075
TWO Wt1Y RldO. 1304) 327-6757
Tile ce&lt;I..W Grot.l&gt;.
(740) 702-.4872

'""""""-·
---...

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GN(sEio&lt;:trork&lt;
(30&amp;1 us-mo
{740) 820-2151

-·
...........

...........

---MI.-

wa-Mar1. 100 wanwt Dr.,
U40l28U%ol
518 N. .leffEnon St, Ste. 'il,
(304) 645-5727

Will-Mart 520 N. Jeffersal St.,
1300)645-5890

,., cell.W Group,

130012!D-n'l7

· C&amp;CU40)456-3333

~""""'"""
U40)
456-3282
,., Ce&lt;lular Group,
(740) 456-11722

OOOC01ni1JW5ervlcss,
(304) 465-12,(2

--·

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011&lt; ....

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RloOrlndo

Bosttln-

Wol-MM,Center, (740) 456-1 325
\Nai-Mst, 1556 E. MtWl St.,
(304) 465-~7
Pine Place, 1233 StBffml Ave.,
(304) 487-3855

Home Entertalnmeot Plus,
(304) ~

Bt&lt;1cq(740) 355-1111
Futufe Tech CQrlllUter 5eNk:es,
(304)425-2709

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Wii-Mart, 201 Gn\asy RlltJe lt:l.,
(304) 431 -3454
SUiiHI.,i..... 1016 VWI 5l, (304) Sn-6922

Princeton"

Sueun•;Ae• Wai-Mirt200wel St.
~

--

(304)

872~290

W~-Man. 900 W Emmit A"'..

{740) 947-{)069

Pike CO&lt;.mry Pawn Sholl
{740) 947-7 107
SC&amp;E, {704) 94H52S

SUilhr••* 5til' Satellite.
(304] 872-4444
I

!.

.

I

-~- 1 D J N . - D r..
PlaZa, Ste. 132. 004)255--3990

The beautification project gives subtle details to the river town. (Carrie Ann Wood)

•

Lula Toban and Jan Cleek. from left to right, are doing·a demonstration on how to force paper . Lula Toban, above, helps at the wsp;z Home and Garden Show in Huntington . Master
white bulbs durlng ·the Christmas Flower Show at the Meigs Conty Senior Citizen Center. Gardeners are on hand to answer gardening questions and· to pass out literature about
gardening problems. (Shelia Curtis)
(Peggy Crane)

..

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�Page 02 • itunbap 1rimts ·ittntintl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis, Ohio • Point Pleasant, WV

.'

• Gall

BY JAMES
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
Every year, termites invade;
the homes of more than 2million Americans at a cost of
more than $2 .5 billion in
structural damage. Annual
structural damage caused by
termites is accelerating much
more rapidly than the rate of
inflation . In fact, termites
cause more damage each year
than tornadoes, hurricane!&lt;,
floods and fires combined.
COAST FORK
And while homeowners insur--4~5---------ance protects against damage
caused by storms, floods and
fires, it rarely covers damage ·
caused by termites. However,
homeowners can protect their
greatest financial investment
and reduce the chance of a
termite infestation by scheduling an annual termite inspection.
Today's Homes
Results from a recent surMASTER
lNING
vey of entomologists at the
SUITE
20'0 X16'6
Entomological Society of
14~ X16'3
America found that cJs percent of these insect experts
believe that weather patterns
have a direct effect on insect
populations, with 85 percent
agreeing that termites are the
most . affected. This spring,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOAA)
forecasters expect wetter.than-average conditions in
southern states and warmer•
than-average conditions in
northern states. Since insatiable termites thrive in warm,
· BED2
BED3
moist
conditions, these anticimx11il
12'3 X11'0
pated weather and climate
patterns will provide an ideal
environment for wood-borinl!
COAST FORK (406·05\ .
insects to wreak havoc nationOVERALL
DIMENSIOI'JS:
60'·0'
X
64'·0'
GARAGE
' .
LIVING:
2167
square
feet
wide.
21'9 X24'9
GARAGE: 573 square feet
"Termites do not fare well
in dry, cold weather; that'.s
why they forage inside
homes," says Byron Reid,
PhD , a Bayer Environmental
Science termite development
A traditional exterior covers of the right side is the master wards the rear of the home is manager. "While future
the modem and spacious inte- suite. It is enlarged with a bay the breakfast nook. This is a
rior of the Coast Fork ( 406· window overl09king the view rounded area, totally made up
05). This 2,167 square foot to the rear. The master bath of large windows, ideal for
home WOIJid be ideal to over· has a large walk-in closet, coffee by the view, reading
look the ocean, a lake, or the twin sinks with a sky li ght the paper, or watching the
BY MORRIS
mountains. The rear area is overhead. and a large shower, clouds. There is a door openlined with large windows . bench and linen , closet. The ing to the deck.
AND .lAMES CAREY
.
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
The rear deck, with a spa in- entire suite exudes roominess
All in all, the Coast Fork
Q.
William asks: In a recent
cluded, adds to the attractive- ands comfort.
would be an ideal home for
le
you wrote ·on 'range
artie
ness. Imagine sitting in the
The living room has a cor- retiring to the coast, or to
spa, watching the oceim ner gas fireplace, a large win- overlook a lake, or even that hQO;ds for the stove, you menwaves hitting against the dow, and sliding doors to the gorgeous mountain view that tioned that the squmel-cage
shore, or snow on the moun- deck out5ide. On the hall side some properties afford. · It has fan operated better than the
tains.
of the livinl! room wall is· a all the amenities that would conventional blade type. I
would like to upgrade to that
The garage entrance is on display case for trophies or make retirement a pleasure.
and would like to know
type
the side with windows facing pictures.
For a study plan, includfng
the front of the home. Entry
The dining area also has a scaled floor plan(s), eleva- if you could give me a prodinto the Coast Fork is set large window overlooking the tions, section(s), and an artist uct name or source?
back. The dining and living view. There is a pass-through rendering, ·send $24.95 to
A. All you have to do is ask
area is directly in line with the opening by the cooktop for Landmark Designs, 33127 for a range hood that has a
front door with a skylight easy access to getting food to Saginaw Road East, Cottage squirrel-cage fan instead of a
overhead. For those who the dining table. The kitchen Grove, Ore. 97424. Please bladed fan. According to our
work at home, an office to the is very open and designed for specify plan name (Coast sources, practically every
left of the entry would be eas- ease of use. The sink has win- Fork) and the number (406- manufacturer that makes
ily accessible for clients.
dows above it to allow 1ight 05). A catalog featuring hun- range hoods offers a squirrelTo the right of the entrance and to view the scenery. dreds of home plans is avail- cage model. Nutone, Broan,
is a small hall leading to the There is a corner area that has able for $14.95, or save by or- :Viking and Thermadore are
two bedrooms and the bath- shelves for putting those dering both for $29.95. For JUSt a few.
. room . The bedrooms are a many cookbooks or the fancy faster processing, call (800)
great size, with large wall dishes that may need to be 562-1151 or visit our website
Q. Cindy asks : We want to
closets. The bath area has two displayed.
put in a spa or a hot tub. I
at
thought that they were one in ·
sinks and a tub. The balance
Beyond the eating bar to- www .Iandmarkdesigns.com.
the same until we be.gan to
shop. What's the difference?

.

Coast Fork ideal for .overlook

weather conditions in top ter- windows.
• Keep gutters free of leaves
mite markets will be ideal for
colonies to .experience a and other debris. Downspouts
population boom, it does not must drain freely and away
mean that homeowl)ers will from the house, at a distance
.
necessarily see the increase. of at least three feet.
Termites are silent destroyers
• Do not keep wooden items :
and will be at work within the close to the house. For exam- .
house. That's whyit's so im- pie, firewood should be stored :
ponant to have a trained pest away from the home. , .
• Because termites need
management professional
only the width of a piece of
(PMP) inspect your home."
Termites are silent destroy- paper to gain access to a
ers . Because you may never house , make sure that all en- ·
see these behind-the-scenes try points, like cracks in the :
workers until it is too late, it foundation or utility openings, :
is important to get an annual are sealed. You shou ld also · '
termite inspection much like caulk windows and doors an annual doctor' s appoint- favorite stomping grounds for
·
ment. Termites are sometimes termites.
visible during swarm season,
• As a rule of thumb, moni- when clouds of flying ter- tor those areas of the home :
mites ("alates" or "swarm- that are chronically damp 'or :
ers") can occur both indoors where wood comes in contact - ,
and outdoors. You may also with the structure.
• Schedule an annual checkfind small piles of papery
wings that these alates have up or inspection at least once
left behind on windowsills' or a year from a pest manage- .
floors. Other warning sign$ . ment professional (I:'MP), :
include sagging floors, crum- trained in detecting and de- •
bling drywood, tiny holes in stroying termites. Many com- :
walls or other wood surfaces panics conduct an initial in- :
and piles of . sawdust-like spection free of charge.
wood residue. Bubbled paint
For more home-improveor visible mud tubes over ment tips and information
concrete and soil might also visit our Web site at
be signs that termites are pre- www .onthehouse.corn.
sent. Homeowners must be
proactive, rather than waiting .. Readers can mail questions .:
for these si~ns to occur.
to : On the House, APNews- In addition, homeowners Features, 50 Rockefeller
should be armed with the fol- Plaza. New York, NY 10020,
lowing simple tips to remain or e-mail Careybro(at)onthetermite-free and avoid the house.com . To receive a copy
worst kind of damage:
of On the House booklets on
• Limit the supply of JllOis- plumbing ,
painting, :
ture to the foundation.
heating/cooling or decks/pat- ·
• Prevent shrubs, bushes ios, send a check or money
and vines from growing over order payable to The Associvents or touching the house. ated Press for $6.95 per bookRake, bag or bum leaves im- let and mail to: On the House,
mediately.
P.O. Box 1562, New York ,
• Wood mulch can also at-· NY 110016-1562, or through
tract termites. When usi.ng these
online
sites:
wood mulch in a flowerbed or · www .onthehouse .com or apgarden, avoid contact with bookstore.com.
siding or frames of doors and

...

Requested range model available

...

Make home environment-friendly

BY DAVID BRADLEY
But the removal of harmful
FROM THE HOME
products applies largely to
SERVICE STORE
new construction. Owners of
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
older
homes need to be parWhoever said "Don't sweat
ticularly
cautious ;~bout the
the small stuff' apparently
didn't refer to homes and the · lingering aftereffects of now•
banned products. If you conenvironment.
template
major plumbing or
It is the accumulation of litother
repairs
in an older
tle eanh·-rriend ly steps that
home,
ask
local
experts to
mark today' s eco-conscious
gauge
the
potential
for harmhome. A plastic bottle recyful
items
in
place
since the
cled here, a gallon of paint
home
was
built.
disposed cleanly there, and
Sosnik says the biggest·plus
you've made a good start tofor
the environment m the last
ward saving energy, reining
10
years is the widespread
in dangerous matenals ancl re- adoption
of local paper, plasducing pollutants.
tic
and
glass
recycling efforts.
According to The Home
Homeowners
can take adService Store, ·homeowners
vantage
of
gas
stations that
are far more environmentally
and lubriaccept
motor
oil
aware than they were even a
decade ago. Manufacturers cants from cars as well as oil
have made concerted efforts from lliwn mowers, trimmers
to label product boxes with and snow throwers.
lawn mower batterinformation for consumers iesRiding
are
usually
accepted, too.
about energy use and savings.
Many local governments set
Mark Sosnik of HSS says up seasonal recycling locahomeowners can create their tions
for safe disposal of
· own version of an Environ- household solvents, paints,
mental Impact Statement to
other liquids.
guide their in-home environ- and
Ceiling
fans are popular
mental effort.
cooling , alternatives. A fan
"Homeowners should assess the energy usage of their can cut summertime
home, have a plan to dispose
of household chemicals. arid
keep an e1e on overall conservation,' says Sosnik.
Most homes already have a
leg up on environmental issues. Legislation has removed
asbestos and lead paint dangers of bygone decades and
action has been taken now to
ban treated wood products
that comain poisonous arsenic
and formaldehyde . Treated
wood should never be burned.
Cut dispo~al wood into manageable sizes for disposal in
trash containers.
fJ
- - -----·-·'- -·---..

~rnm[p

temperatures 4 to 8 degrees,
and when the blade rotation is
reversed in winter, heated air
is forced downward. Programmable thermostats are
common in most homes. New
light bulbs generate less ~eat
with less electricity.
New construction gives
homeowners a chance to get
off on the right environmental
foot. In cold climates, large
southerly facing windows al·
low solar heat. In warmer areas, large roof overhangs protect from the hot sun. Radiant
heat systems that warm objects rather than heating the
air are best installed during
construction phases.
"Don't forget about ventilation," says Sosnik. Proper air
circulation helps remove
moisture that can contribute
to the growth of mold in ducts
and damp walls .

•••

.

i

(The Home Serv1ce Store
manages home maintenance,
repair and improvement tasks
in more than 130 markets nationwide and can be found at
www.TrustHSS.com.)

11rnrn

rnrun~~o~omD~~m
c

A. Hot tubs are wooden
barrels and spas are fiberglass
shells covered with acrylic or
other plastic materials. However, some hot tubs have
acrylic liners and some spas
arc freestanding. with wood
skirts. Tubs and spas have
other differences too - maintenance required, durability,
operation and overall appearance.
Tubs have a rustic and natural appearance: they blend
well with decks, gardens, and
patios. They are, however,
harder to clean and maintain
than spas because of the texture of the wood and the angles and corners that are typical in· their design. Spas present more design options than
hot tubs do an() are available
in a broad range of colors.
Their hard, smooth surfaces
make them easier to clean.
Suppoit equipment and installations are similaF, and both

are available as freestanding
packages or as separate components that require assembly.
In either case, most building
departments will require a
permit for installation.
Be prepared for additional
installation expense and
maintenance costs. There are
some costs you might not be
aware of. You will need at
least one additional 110-volt
elei:.trical circuit, perhaps
even a 220-volt circuit. Make
sure your present electrical
system can handle whatever is
required. Also, some communities require a fence around
the area, and most will require
a loek on all gates. A. fence is
importan·t: it protects both
neighborhood children and
you.
Your electrical bill could
jump by $50 per month - or
even more. And, you must
chemically treat the water
·••
regularly.

Astrograph
Monday, May 5, 2003
..

8Y BERNICE BEDE 0sOL

Some very unusual connections that will prove to be
quite lucky for you where
your friends or associates are
concerned may develop for
you in the year ahead. They
might help you out both personally and careerwise.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20)- As some interesting information that comes your
way today may suggest, there
may be more to a project in
which you've been involved
than you think. Check it out.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
-- An important situation pertaining to Jour career could
be sllifte around today.
However. when the dust settles and everything is sorted
out, it is going to prove to be
to your advantage.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) -- Trust your ·first
thoughts today, because they
are apt to be your best ones.
Act on your inspiration,
which can be quite Imaginative and resourceful, instead
of picking everything apan.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -Should a unique venture pe
sugfested by a friend today,
don t be so quick to nix it just
because it is different. It
might hold more advantages
and benefits for ~ou than do
your everyday acuvities.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept, 22)
- It's always important to
you to ev alu'ate thin~s before
you make any decisions. but
tooay you might be so effecuve wuh fast calculations that

Pt. Pleasant, WV

'Orttbune - Sentinel - 3L\e tstet

Get your home termite-free ·
AND MoRRIS CAREY

OH •

Sunday, May 4, 2003

you may not trust your conch1sions.
LIBRA (Sept. '23-0ct. 23)
- Just because something
has always been done a certain way doesn't mean you
have to be locked into it. If
another way is suggested or
devised by a co-worker,
check it out.

ARIES (March 21-April
19) --Should an opportunity
pop up today to premature!~
close a tiresome matter, don t
dillydally over it. Your
chan~e may not come again
for some time.
Major changes are ahead
for Taurus in the coming year.
Send for your Astro-Graph
predictions today. Mail $2 to
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. Astro·Graph, c/o this newspa22) - Someone may be in- per, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe,
troduced to you today with OH 44092-0167.
whom you'll enjoy an instant
rapport. This new friendship
could tum out to be quite fortunate f()I'JIOU.
SAGITI'ARIUS {Nov. 23Dec. 21)-- A familNJ!ember
might be responsible for creating an unexpected development today that could result
in some extra material ·benefits for you.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22'Jan. 19)-- A person who has
been at odds with you pertaining to an issue of imponance
could surprise you today with
a sudden turn in his or her
thinking, which will now be
in harmony with yours .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19) -.., You could stumble
across something today that
you've denied yourself because of its cost, but that will
........ iti,.,,..,,.
now be within your price
1
range. Snatch it up while you
have the chance.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) -- Although you may not
think of yourself as being
rather lucky. today you'll
know your rabbit's foot is in
good working order when a
number of fortuitous situations comt your way.

Picture
Yourself
In A New
Career.

Search the
Help Wanted
Section in the
Saturday
Times- Sentinel

c

C L A S S ·1 F I E D

To

In One Week With Us .
.
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
m:rtbune
Sentinel

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Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446·2342
Fax us at: (740) 446-3008
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallytrlbune.com

Otffee 11o~O'
MondaY. thru Friday
····· . 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AD

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

\\\01 \f I \II \1 "i

t

PERSONAl$

Visit us at. 111 Court Street, Pomeroy Visit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
·
Call us at: (740) 992·2155
Fax us at (740) 992-2157
Fax us at: (304) 675-5234
E-mafl us at:
E-mail us at:
classified@ mydallysentl nel.com
classified@ myc:lallyreglster.com

Word Ads

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ads Must Be Prepaid

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Frld•y for In•ertlon
In
D•y'• Pap•r
•urod••Y In-Column: 1 : 00 p.m .
Sunday• P•p•r

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid .i.bbrevl•tlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
• 4-d• Should Run 7 Davos

POUCIES: Ohio Yalley Publishing rnwv• the right to Milt, r.j..:t, 01" ce,cel sny ed 11 eny time. Errors must bli reponiKI on th• flrlt dey of
Trlbun•Bentlnel·Regleter will btl reeponelble for no more th•n ths co.t of the 1pace occupied by the error 1nd only the fl,.t ln..nlon. We
l not
1ny Ice• or ••penH th1t rnutt. from tlw publle•tlon or oml11ion of 1n •dvenleem•nt. Correction will tMI nwde In the Jlr1t IYIIIIbll ed+tlon . • Boll ~...~. .~~;~
1
1r1 ..w•y• contld.ntl•l. • Curnnt r•t• cerd •pplietl. • All r•l
•dv.-11Mmlnts •r• IUbtlct to the FediHII F1ir Hou1lng Act of 1968. •
m
ICC!tpll onty help wt~nt.d adl rn.Ming I!!OE
W1 •Ill not knowingly Kcept 1ny advert l1lng In violation of the IIW.

~jll.·n--~-~~.~~~-~-~-AL.L~.:_, "''I-10_Hf_CL_I·.w·A·I\'·Il·!IJ-' ~r.·o-".EI•.•r.w.ANTEI)
__-_.11110 HFHW~

lhndllrd•.

r
r

r

EXPERIENCED
DRIVERS

800-282-2163

••t.t.

Thll

IriO M&amp;UuNFOOS I"'11&amp;J___'f.~..o::.·_ _.l~

11110 HFLPWAmFD 11110 IIFHWANrnD

Accepting applications or ELE M E ~TARY TEACHERS New Store Opening. We are currently accepting
positions applications for the position
resumes for part-time pa ra- The Christian Life Academy Management
medics, MCEASA PO BoK located in Jakson, Ohio is available with new shoe .of Meigs County Humane
34 Point Pleasant WV 25550 accepting applications tor store opening in Gallipolis. Officer. 20·25 hours per
or call 1·304-675·6134 for elementaryteachers lor the Exciling career opportunl· week. some low enloree·
more information.
2003·2004 school year. ties. Retail experience pre· men! e~rperience helpful,
- - -- - - - - Appl1cants· must be state ferred. Competitive benefit although not requ ired.
Attn : Work from hOme.
certified. Applications can package. Sales personnel Humane officer Classes will
$500· $1500/mo. PT
be picked up at the school also needed. E-mail resume be provided. Send resumes
SAT. May 10. Antique and
$2000· $4500/mo. FT ollice
located at 10595 to: gfmetzger@aol.com or to MCHS, PO Box 682,
.
H
ousehold
fu
rniture,
.
49
C- 1 Beer Carry Out permit
800 286 97
C
hill
iCOthe
Pike , M-F apply in person on Tue or Pomeroy, Oh 45769
women's clothing, tools,
for sale. Chester Township, mower.
4_1_1·_co_m__ between the hours of 9:00 Wed. 5/6 or 517 at Shoe
8nd
misc.
items.
564
__
ww_w
_
.r_e_tl
r
_e
Meigs County, send letters
305 Uppe r River
AVON! All Areas!'To Buy or A.M.and3.00 P.M. Formore Show,
ot 1nterest to: The Datly Shoestring Ridge.
Road,
Gallipolis.
EOE M/F.
infor
mation
you
may
contact
Sontinel. PO Box 729·20. ------------ Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· Steve Rhea, Administrator
675·1429
Ya
rd
sale.
Antique
dresser.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
No Layollo Hero Ill
cars &amp; trucks, tools, lawn -------~ at 740·286·1234.
- - - -- - - - - -~arn
an extra $420.·
mower rider &amp; all kind ot Elementary Teachers
Help wanted caring for the $1680/mon.
Look1ng to rent."2 Bedroom goodies.
NOW OFFERING
or larger, Mason Co. One 1451 Adamsville Road, The Christian Lite Academy elderly, Darst Group Home, Part-time, flexible schedule!
GREAT
located in Jado;son , Ohio ,is now paying minimu mwage, 1·800-695·9166 or visit
adult. one child. (304)675· Bidwell , Ohio
EMPLOYMENT
accepting applications for new shifts ; 7am-3pm, ?am· www.Nolayoff1Here.com
2291
May 5 &amp; 6th
elementary teachers for !he 5pm, 3pm·l1pm, 11pmOPPORTUNITIES!
74
2003-2004. school year 7am, call 740-992-5023.
NURSES (RNs)
YARD
SALE·
GtvEAIVAY
$47.00
per
hour,
PoMEROY/MIDDLE Applicants must be state
Are you tired of
certified. Applications can Individual with Secretarial, Columbus, OH . All Units,
your present job
be picked up at the school Accounting, and sales skills. FULL TIME (800).437·0348
To give away. 6 mo" old male 8 family sale, May 5·'6, 9am· office
located
at 10595 Send resume and refer·
and looking for
Yellow Lab. (740)992·3357. Spm, Skate-A-Way Rink, Chillicothe Pike. M·F ences along with salary Part time beautician, rent·a· ·
something
better?
(740)985-9996. Troyblll 6hp between the hours 01 9:oo requirements to: 4367 State station, call (740)985·4291
Window sashes. .,used tin electric
tiller,
Eastern A.M . and 3:00 P.M. For Route 160, Gallipolis, OH ---------..,---... processor,
. startworv
We after:
roofmg, misc. items !rom s tar 1tems.
Relired·Children· grown·
more mlormat1on you may 45631
• Up to $7/hour +
,pouse being demolished. car stereo speakers. ceiling contact Steve Rhea.
Extra bedroom-Empty Nest·
4'4;;6~·9;;;000
~---~.., fan, commercial venetian Administrato 1 at 740 .286 . Lost your Job? Need to want to stay at home. Foster
bonuses
Work? Let's talk ... The new Parents Needed: Become 8
cr
blinds, mountain bike, 4-tires 1234
1 •=AN·Cl
•
Full-time
and
I.AA"'tl
lJ~
(235·75-15). 2-weddmg -"''-'------ - -· Avon!
There
are Therapeutic Foster Care
part-time shifts
FOUND
dresses. S-10 truck toolbbK, ELEMENTARY TEACHERS "25.000 .. customers in our Giver for youlhs ages Q-18.
,, Ability to match
Avon, waterbed ralls, furni· The Christian Lite Academy area needing service. Earn You will receive reimburse·
KEYS FOUND on Court St. lure,· clothes,. toys, ,.lots of located in Jackson, Ohio IS $1 ,000+ Monthly by selling ment $30·$45 8 day plus
your current pay
near El Rod's, CALL : USE misc. ·
accepting applicat1ons lor a S20. of Beauty Products to 6 mileage and paid respite.
wage
HERBS IN STEAD at 446· - - - - - - - - elementary teachers for the "People. 5 days a Week! we are looking fQr homes In
• Paid training
1616.
Yard sale, Friday. Satu rday, 2003·2004 school year. Great for: Couples-Single Athens, Meigs, Gal!la, and
• Paid vacations
----------·Sunday. Darwin 681 E 112 Applica nts must be state M O ms- Fa m i I i e .s · surrounding
counties.
• Full benefits
Lost: Purse lost at cornfH on mile out.
cert111ed. Apphcahons can Handicapped. Plans to Fit Training begins May 2. cau
..
,.....;..;...
_____
.,
be
picked
up
at
the
front
any
Need. No S.tock Ups, No for more information or to
package
At. 160 · Need keys &amp; cell
WANT£Jl
ollice located at 10595 Door to Door. It will Work for sel up an initial meeting.
Phone. REWARD.446-3687
. m Huv
Chi'III.CO!he ·"Ike.
M-F You! $10.00 Start up Fee.' ·oasis Therapeutic Foster Call today for more
t"'
-- - - - - - - between the hours ol 9·.oo Call April. 304-882·3630 or Care Network-Albany-toll Information •bout
Miss1ng from 18 16 SA 554, Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. A.M.and 3.00 P.M. For more t·888· 748·3630.
free-1-677-325·1558.
starting a new
Cheshire. Female
Silve
r.
Gold
Coins.
informalion
you
may
contact
tanfwh1te Beagle. Very Proofsets. Diamonds, Gold Sle\le Rhea . Administ rator Part Time Oflice Help SALES POSITIONS OPEN
career with
Needed. Must have eKcel· Hardware &amp; or building
friendly. Call 367·7256 or Rings, U.S. Currency,· a t 740·286-1234 .
lnfoCislon:
367-0274.
.
lent computer skills, e~rperi· materials. Part" time &amp; Full
M.T.S. Coin · Shop, 151 Looking for good depend· ence
with WordPertect 10 time positions available with
SecOnd Avenue, Gallipolis, able dnvers at PillA PLUS and Quicken,
1-Bn-463-6247
excellent inter· growing, succesful local
740·446·2842.
Full or part-lime hrs.Apply m personal skills, and !he abili· company.
ext. 2454
Send resume or
I \11'111\ \II' I
person , I 044 Heckson Pike ty to multitask. Please call pick up appli
ation At O'Dell
..,IIHH I "
or Call : 446·0088.
Donielle a11·800·875-2673. True Value cLumber,
or stop by .
n YAROSAI£·
3rd &amp;
242
3rd Avenue
Vine Street. Gallipolis, Ohio
110 .
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis, OH
HfuWANilD
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED 45631.
1
~~~=~~~~YARD SALE· May 3rd &amp; May ..________.! ;~~=:::==~=~=~:;=~~~
5ththru9th. t 2mitesout Rt. Need 5 ladies to sell Avon
Medical Transcriptionist
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
218
(7401446-3358
wanted: Gallipolis Area;
RESTAURANT AND
full time position;
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
Excellent benefits:
MANAGEMENT POSITIONS
Requirements: High School Graduate :
The Wild .Horse Cafe '
..
Comprehenstve knowledge of medical
located
in
Pomeroy,
Ohio
is
now
terminology; Good typ ing skil ls; Computer
experience (Microsoft Word)
accepting applications for Kitchen
•
Brief
Descriolion:
The
Transcription
ist
is
Pleasant'Valley Hospital and
Manager; Executive Chef; Bar
di
rectly
responsible
and
accountable
to
Nursing and Rehabilitation Cehter
the Word Processing/Medical Records Managers and Bartenders, Dining
Registered Dietitian
Manage; for produci ng work that is neat Room Attendants, Bus and Dish
and
accurate and meets the standards set Tank Personnel and Host/Hostess .
Coni parahle salary &amp; benefits. Join our fami ly
forth for the Word Processing Center. The
of rrofession al s 10 he the f i!SOU I'CC . for
Transcriptio nist is responsible for adhering
·
community health scrviL:c needs.
to the format' established for specific types Send resumes to:
RcgisterL·d dietitian witll the commiss ion on
of dictatior\'.
' Tammy Hupp
Dietetic Registration. Llccr~scd dietitian with
Mail your resume to:
Wc!i l Virginia Board of Licensed Dieti tians.
51185 St. Rt. 338 Racine, Oh
Holzer Clinic
Human Relations
45771
Please ~ uhmit resu me to:
90
Jackson
Pike
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1562
clo Human Resources
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
or Fax to 740-446-5532.
2520 Valley Drl•e
Equal Opportunity EmJlloyer
Point Pleasant, WV 25550
WE'RE LOOKING FOR A FEW
or FAX to (304) 675·6975
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED
GOOD CARE GIVERS
www.p•alley.org
AA/EOE
Holzer Senior Care Center, a premier
Full Time LPN
long-term healthcare facii'ity has a few
HELP WANTED
HELP WAN'I'ED
WYNGATE OF GALLIPOLIS
select positions open and we ' re
looking for people who are dedicated
Wyngate of Gallipolis is increasing Staff! to providing quality services for' the
We currently have a Full-Time L.P.N .
elderly. ,
·
Posilion Available
If you are interested, please call
Positions available are:
Williams,
B.S.N
..
R.N
.
Peggy
Class A COL Required
BN- Unit Manager- Full time
at 441-9633
LrN · Part Time
Unior1 Company
STNA - Nlght,Sbift- Full Time
Wyngalc of Gallipolis is a licensed
• Paid Benefits
Assi&gt;ted Living Community. We provide
If you would like to become a part of
a service focused, home-like environment
• Home Weekends
Trot
for our residents. We recognize that our
Will Train to Haul Steel
employees are a key 10 our success.
Therefore, we offer great incentive
if Needed.
programs, staff training, competitive
Dilfrrma.
salary, 100% employee insurance benefit
Please apply in person l\t:
paid by the company, open door
380 Colonial Dr.
management policy, and pest of all Bidwell, Ohio 445614
WE AREA FUN PLACE TO WORK!
E.O. Employer
May 3 &amp; 5, 9·5, 34 Smithers
Ave. Ladies size 8·24 cloth·
LOSE WEIGHT WHILE ing, Christmas .i tems, bread
maker, icecream mak~r. pol·
isher. gli;lssware, CO's.
maternity, baby bed, clothes
andother baby items.

ll\egt~ter

The City of Point Pleasant is
accepting applications and
resumes through May 15,
20d3 tor the following positions:
•
1 Harmon Park Pool
Manager
{Part-Time
Summer)
2 Recreation Director (PartTime Summer)
3.Lifeguards at Harmon
Park Pool (Part-time summer)
Applications may be
obtained at the City Building
, 400 Viand St. Point
Pleasant West Virginia.
We are an Equal
Opportunity Employer. we
do not discriminate on the
basis of race. rel jgion, color.
sex, age, national origin or
disability.

Full Size Mattress Set New
in Plastic w/Warr. Sacrifice
$1 19, Cell "Phone 304·4 128098 or 304·552·1424.
King Size Pillow Top
Mattress set, New still in
PlaStiC, Sale 5299, Cell
Phone 304-412·8098 or
304·552-1424.
Queen Pillow Top Mattress
set, New in plastic wf\Narr.
Will accept S199, Cell phone
~04-412-6098 or 304·552·
1424.
------------HELP WANTED

VIllage Pizza Inn

Taking applica.lions lor waitress &amp; cook. Flexible Hours,
Top Pay, Paid Health
Insurance, Paid Vacation.
Full-Time, Part·Time."Apply
in person.3004 Jacll;son
Ave.

short-order cooks I
waitress must be dependable &amp; be able to work f lexi~
ble hrs.304-675·3010
want§:d

114J
Galllpollt CarHr College
'"" (Careers Ctose To Home)
Call Today! 7A0-446-4367.
1-800·214·0452
www gaUiPoliscareercollega.c:om

t90·05·1274B.

18x7 ff. overhead wooded
garage door. needs some
repair. Call: 446·1542
coUch $200.00, Recliner
$125.00, 19 in TV $50.00,
CoHee Table $20.00,
Kitchen Table and Chairs
$60.00', Freezer $100.0Q, ·
Car Carrier $60.00, ,Boat
Slalom Skies $50.00. 367·
7272
HELP WANTED

•

---~---­

Georges Portable Sawmill, ·
don't haul your logs to the
mill just call 304-675-1957.
--------------Want to Lease tabacco ·
quota to my farm 1n Gallia ..
County 740-256-1348.
HELP WANTED

Probation Officer

Truck Drivers, ·lmmedi1.te
hire, class ACDL required,
excellent pay, experie nce
required.Earn up to $1,000.
per week.Call 304-675·
4005 .

Res

Day Care Openings!

Fenced in Yard. Home
Cooked Meals. E~rcellent
Reterentes. Link Accepted.
Openings filling up fast
(304)882-2766

The fifth Judicial Circuit Court is seeking candidates for the position of
Probation Officer to serve in that
capacity in Roane and Calhoun
Counties. The s uccesslul applicant
will have a minimum of a Bachelor's
Degree in a relevant field such as
Criminal Justice, Social Work,
Sociology or Counseling. A Master's
Degree is preferred. In addition. the
candidate must be a self motivator
with a strong desire to work with adult
and juvenile offenders. The employing agency offers vacation, sick leave,
retirement and insurance benefits as
well as an attractive educational package. Entry salary will be commensurate with education and experience.
Interested persons , please forward
resume to :
John Ross Mellinger
Chief Probation Officer
Jackson County Courthouse
Post Office Box 800
Ripley, West VIrginia 25271
Resumes are to be received no later
than May 30, 2003. No telephone
calls please.
The West Virginia
Supreme Court of Appeals is an Equal
Opportunity Employer.

. HELP WANTED

HELP WANTED

Fresenius Medical Care
....---North America

Are you" currently working in health care, but feel 'you have the
potential to do more? Are you talented and motivated, looking
far an opportunity to prove yourself? Are you willing to work
, hard to gain new skills? If you answered "yes" you may be the
type of person we are seeking.
Fresenius Medical Care the world's largest provider of dialysis
services is seeking individuals that want to make a difference in
the lives of others. Although previous dialysis experience is a
plus, it is not necessary as we offer the most effective and comprehensive training program In the industry. In addition, we
offer a competitive benefit package including an excellent tuition, reimbursement program . But most of all, we offer an opportun ity to improve the lives of ESRD patients in your community.
'Due to our recent growth we are currently seeking' candidates
to fill the following positions In Gallipolis, Ohio.
Raglatarad Nur11- The appropriate ·candidates must be caring, well organized, dependable , and have a genuine des ire to
Improve the lives ESRD patients. OH license required ..
Patient Care Tech- Appropriate candidate must be well organized and dependable, have the desire to de liver the best quality
care to our patients . .
.
Phlebotomy or previous helathcare experience preferred.
Social Worker· Appropriate candidate must be well organized
and dependable. This' is a part-time position with very flexitile
hours requiring an MSW degree and current Ohio licensure.
Dietician- Appropriate candidate must be well organized and
dependable . .This is a part-time position requiring a regis•
tared/licensed dietician in the State of Ohio.
Please nnd your rnume to:
FMC Dlalyele Services Of Gallipolis
Attn: Laurie Mcintire
100 Jackson Pike
Gatllpolle, Ohio 45631
Fax: 74o-441-9301
EO,UAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER

,,
'

'

�·,
'

Page D4 • 6unba:p tl:bnes-6mttntl

'i~~) ll'lr,.or-'"""::H~!J\\1E)..;;;;;'

I'll
mgs

and

gullers

Cal!

(740)446-0151 ask tor Ron
or leave message.

Will stay w1th elderly person
in there home N1ghts only.
1304)675-1898
11'\\\(1\1

8USINI'Ni
0PI'OIITUNfTY
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends that
you do bustness with people
you know. and NOT to send
money through the mail unlll
you have in&gt;Jestigated the
offering.

ABSOtUTE GOLDMII'jDI
60 vending machines with
axellent loca11one ell for
. $10,995 1·800-6982.

BE YOUR OWN BOSS
Control your hours I Increase
incomet Full tra1ning. Free
Info.
{888)801·
1199 . ww~ . yourhomeca·

reercom

1

...

NEW STORE OPENING
Managemen1
positions
available with new shoe
store opening 1n Gallipolis.
Exclhng career opportunl·
ties. Retail eMperience pre·
ferred . Competive benel11
pacKage. Sales personnel
also
needed .
E-mail
resumes
to:
gfmetzgerOaot.com .
or
apply in person on Tuesday
or Wednesday. 5/6 or sn a1
SHOE SHOW. Walmart Shp
Cntr, Gander Drive, Mason,
WV EOE M/F.
MONEl'

r

'f!)

WAN

DEBT CRISIS!
Consolidation Is the Key to
personal loans, mortgage.s,
and other financial services.
Available up to $500,000.
Low Interest. 'cALL TOLL
FREE: 1-877-436-6297

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Uhless We Wm!
1-886-582-3345

•UR SAu·:

G)

Fine Furniture Appliances

majestically
: perct'led on the banks of tt'le Oh~ Rtver &amp; Chicka·
: munga Creek
4 Bedrm 's. 3Y, Baths. lt't'ing
• Am , Oinong Rm., Kllchen. Family rm . EncloSild
: porch. 2 car garage O~EN HOUSE May 1st H
:PM Mly 111h 1-5 PM R E. Term&gt;. $25.000.00

a

: down at time of
: sale: balance &amp;

po$&amp;eUion at
6·17•

• ~200;;3~
. Ptr!onl~~~·
• Prpptrty : Fr.
! Prov. Dining

•

: suite w~ble. 8
: chatrs, buffet.
: hutch &amp; tea cart Fr Pro.... Bedrm suite, EA ce dar
* chest on legs; assorted cha1ra tables lamps.
·%prints, full stze pool table; wiCker patio furniture:
refrig , washer &amp; dryer. Very 1ew smalls . be on time ! :
: Tenns: Cast"l/check wilD's; en sales final; all
:
:sold as-is.
CarolS. Wedge, Owner
•
Call lor Free Brochul'&amp;l
•
:
STANLEY SON, INC . (740) 775-3330 :
:
llJ
WWW.STANLEYANOSON.COM
:
: ~{~
Httl!)' M SI&amp;Nfy ttl, CAt. MRe AuciK:f!U(
;

In

95 Foreign

J.:-

1 Kllchen gadgel
6 Spinnaker
10~

15 Hack's vehicle
18 love
19 Tool tor a sculptor
21 Part 1ha1 turns

&amp;~E Broiler

22 Seaweed
23 Haggart!
24 ROCk salt

,.

99 Talk on and on
100 Sickly
101 Moral philosophy
103 OUt of practice
105 Complafne&lt;l
106 Hazan:! at sea

108 Lasso
109 The City of Ugh!
110 Fined

26 Blfng up

111 Remotely
It 3 Change purse items
114 Hackneyed
115

Commanded againsl

31 Mak&amp;void

118 Ught souroes

33Aimspool
3S Secondhand

119 Smile

36 Threadlike piece
37 Stephen King's.
~- Claiborne"

38 Having prop&amp;rty
40 Icy raln
41 Leggy bin!
42 Procedure ..,.
44 Gibe
45 Iridescent stone

120 Sttcky tru~
124 ' Tristan und - ·
125Men:handlse
126 Debonait
127 London's Btg-

12a caa

129 Think
131 lure

56 Sheer

133 Wear ostentatioUsly
135 On 1n yea"'
t 36 Engage In swordplay
137 Men:llant
138 Hesita~
139 Zodiac Sign
140 Impostor
141 Engendered

57 Ring out

142 Make dlailges to

47 Sto&lt;y
51 Orton,

tO&lt; example

52 Old instrument
53 Red gem

55 - West
58 NY player
60 Whefa Greel&lt;
fl118t Greel&lt;

62 CorTvnotion
63 Skipped
65 Oftlce big shot
66 wm. V8liely
67

That gl~

68 Pul cargo aboard
69 Mild cheese
71
73
75
76

n

Theater employee
Chronicle (abbr.)
Fros1

Fat
Chinese Chairman

78 Name tor a stranger
81 Proprie1or

83 Welltt1etCock
84 Simi
85 Putt oars
87 Allow

90 Chait-!Jack pari
92 For from Impossible

AUCTIONEER RICK PEARSON #66
773-5185 OR 773·5447

· 96 Mountain house
98 l'f1endly 1111tion

25 Aeprasenta1ion

27 - fooyong
28 WOOds or Gamer
29 Kind of orange

RICK PEA.RSON AUCTION
COMPANY

a

94 Wooct.olnd lnsln.Jnent

ACROSS

Auction Conducted bv:

i ' ":

•

33

Roll top desk, 3 pc. Waterfalls BR suite ,
cart, corner shelf, 2 old floor model
radio's, Kenmore slave w/extra oven on
Lady Kenmore washer, lg. collection of
C&lt;Jok.ie jars • Owl· Cat in basket· Bucket
several others, early Fenton , Fenton deer,
Fiesta, lg . "apple" watt bowl hairline crack,
German decorated bowl , Valley Bell
milk bottle, jumbo jars, McCoy, Roseville,
A .P. Donaghho Parkersburg, WV, stone
&amp; others, lg . collection of clown banks,
old Tim match holders, old clocks·
Regulators· Ingraham· Gilbert· Waterbury
and others, pocket watches· Admiral· New
Era, Jewell· H ampden &amp; Jewel· IllinoisWaltham &amp; Ingersoll, sm. Nascar cars in
packages, 1:24 scale die cast stock car
replica no's· 4·35-29, Winner 's circle high
performance die cast collectibles no. 3,
box baseball cards 1990's, Little play nurse
set, tin toy phone, sparky dog &amp; house toy,
sev. old wind up toys· Bartender· MonkeyIndian· Balloon man and others, sm. Tonka
fire truck, old camera, Longaberger basket,
lantern, sev. windup alarm clocks, old
antique bike free spirit &amp; other plus JC
Higgins Bike sells w/reserve, old meat
grinder, graniteware &amp; much more not
listed .
COINS
Two silver classics liberty walking half
dollar &amp; -mercury dime- Americana series
vanishing · classics collection• American
series Vester Year collection- 28 Indian
head penmes 1 683 &amp; up, Roosevelt
dimes· Mercury dimes· Buffalo nickels·
Jefferson nickels· Kennedy half dollarsBarber halt dollars· Eisenhower dollarspeace dollars· silver dollars.
GUNS
38 Smith &amp; Wesson pistol, model 101
savage arms 22 pistol- Cap &amp; ball pistol 32 Smith &amp; Wesson . Plus several gun
parts.

!

•

Center on Rt.

1

Ohio River Front Home

b~

fluctlon

AUCTION

'"II• to lito Hfllkut llddtr
lfiDr&lt;llt.. Of Prlct ltl

f

mason, wu.

AUCTION

.------------------,

PUBLIC A. UCTION
saturdav. May , o.
., . am
I 0:00

101 B8SUIDIIriV8, GIIIIPOIIS, OhiO
Owners. have sold home and will offer
. for
sale
the·
following
items.

=-=-:-:=::::-::----::---

Everything very well-kept!

Early American dining room table w /6 • "
chairs

&amp;

hutch ,

4

pc.

pine

early

American bedroom suite , sofa , misc.
upholstered

chairs,

4 · pc .

marble

coffee &amp; ' end tables.' oak coffee &amp; end

..

wall shelves, . RCA XL 100 27" color

TV, 13" RCA color TV, Home In terior, .•
brass

lamps,

lamps,

misc .

books,

Religious books , 52 pc. service for 6
set

desert

also

Rose

Desert

Franciscan

Rose

ware,

K 1tchen

pans,

dishes , glassware , Corning ware, pots

&amp;

pans,

knick

kitchenwares,

knacks,

quilt ,

Revereware,
bed,

bath

&amp; ·•

kitchen lin ens , craf1 items , Christmas
decorations,
machine ,
sweepers,
furniture.

old

small

games,

kitchen

lawn

sewing

appliances,

b9y · mower,

Craftsman

electric

eater, some lawn tools...

lawn
weed

·

Auctioneer: Leslie A. Lemley
740·245·9868

&amp; Bonded by State of Ohio"
Owners : Justine Melton &amp; Marilene Young
"Licensed

"

DOWN

1 Devtcelhat beeps

2
3
4
5
6
7
8

Saying

A cosmatic
Sea eagle
SoaJc, as flax
Humilialed

F811 poorly
Egyptian goddess

9 Tenm in !ennis

I 0 Stand tor a hoi dish
II Mr. Sf""'"'"
12
13
14
15
16
17
19
20

Type slyfe (abbr.)

Holiday drink
Cily In Fmnce
Underslandable

Play.ng marble
Exposes
Pursued

Mercy
22 Ftee1 of ships
28 Courtroom figure
30 Aidand -

32 Wallach Of WMney
34 - Day Saints
36 Chimney pipe
37 Sawyer of TV
39 Somy'sex
40 Costly fur
42 Speak lndlstinclty

43

Wltole

88
89
91
93
94
96
97
99
102
104
105
107
109
110
112
113
114
115
116
117

"

She (Fr.)
Make angry
Dolly material
Fertile place
Speechified

Job
Trudged
Harllor town

Corfl&gt;romise (hyph.)

·

Samovars
Potato s1ate

SIOri&amp;d
Pear or apple, e.g.

Tw1n Rivers Tower IS accept·
ing applications fo'r waiting
list tor Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
apartment , call 675-6679
EHO

Chauffeur
Craze ·
lHe's work
Drew, in a way

Whirlpool Washer, Designer
2000, $175; GE Washer,
$95; ClE Dryer, $95, Electric
Range, 30", $95: Frost ·Free
Refrigerator, nice, $150; GE
Ele&lt;:tric Range, nice, $165;
Maytag Washer &amp; Dryer Set.
liKe new, $400: Kenmore
Washer and Dryer Set,
$300: Drop Leal Table and 4
chairs, $165 ; Couch, $50;
King stze Bed , $l50; Full
,. size Bed. $150; Various
other pieces of furnitu re.
Skaggs
Appliances ,
(740)446-7398

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Anthony Land Co., Ltd.

Has Moved
&amp; changed Names
Due to the growth of
our Jackson Office
and Corporation
throughout OH, IN,
KY &amp; SOON NC we

119 Trlckery

hove reloarted to
Chillicothe, OH and
changed our nome to
be the same as the
rest of our
corporation's Offices.

Countrytyme
ALC, Ltd.

Basket &amp; Bear

BINGO

I '

6:00 pm

May 15

Trees
To ad appearances

Tickets $20.00

love god
Un.:orrrnon
Ururixed, as liQuor
Ot;ed
1·
SubScribers,

''
'

collectively

'

53 Folklore creature
54 Sloty
57 TranquHity
59 Lowered In rani!
61 Attire
63 Walker or Eastwood

I:A.I\JL)

3-STEEL SLOGS.
28JC30 was $8,900, sell
$3.890
36&gt;:48 was $14,900, sell
S5.950
48x1 00 was $26,900. sell
$12 ,900
Call Now! Tom (800)3927806.
-,-.,-,----Affordable. Convenient
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
Low Monthly Investments
Home Delivery
FREE Color Cata109
Call Today t-800-711 ..()158
www np.etsta.n.com

AI!I'O!l
American Cocker Spaniel
FOR SAI.F.··
Puppies. Buff color. Males &amp;
Females, 11 weeks old,
"~~
Shots, $100 .00 . 446-4233.
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas,
chevys,
etc!
Cute
Boxer/German cars/trucKs !rom $500 For
Sheppard m1x pupp1es. lislings 1·800-719·3001 exl
Shots &amp; wormed. 6 weeK- 3901
sold $50.00 379-29t5
i$5001 Pollee Impounds!
FOR SALE . Full Blooded Hondas,'· Chevys, etc! Cars/
Heeler Pups, $75 .00 each . Trucks from $500. · For hst·
740·379·2836.
ings 1·800· 719·3001 ext
390 1

Pure Beagle Pups $25 .00, 1973 Ford LTD run&amp;: well ,
7:40·379·2964.
new tires. new banery, new
dislributor. 446-2639.
Registered
Miniatu re
Ptnschers puppies. $200 1985 Oldsmobile Cutlass
BURN
Fat,
IILDCK each. Black &amp; Tan, Wifl be Supreme, V-8 , automahc ,
Crav1ngs, and
BOOST very sma ll Parenls on loaded. very tow miles ,
Energy Like
You Have Premises. Mother: 7tbs . garage kept .call evenings
Father: Sibs. (30M576·2002 304·458-1817
Never EMperienced .
WEIGHT· LOSS
Registered Norwegian Elk 1988 Camara. V-6, auto. AC,
REVOLUTION
hound
male 1 1!2 yr. old. T-Tops 89.000 mi good
New product launch October
needs
to
run $125.00 304· cond. 304-675·21 t 7
23. 2002. Call Tracy a1
882-3528
(740)441-1982
1989 S-10 $1.150., 1995
Beretta $2 .395 .,
1996
Homelite 240 chain saw. 18" Wanted- Russian Blue•k1tten Grand-Am $3 .295 ., 1995
bar, extra chain , just tuned ·or eel. (740 )843 · 52 53
Grand-Am $2 .795 ., 1 1998
up, Owners Manual Inc.
I \In I "I 1'1'1 II ...,
Malibu $5,395. 16 Others in
$125: golf clubs, cart, bag, 3
,\II\ I " ICH h.
stock Cook Motore 740·
woods, 7 itons, putter,
~103
-w-ed_g_e_.
-all _•c_c_e-sso-rl-es_,
$150, (740)742-3167

r.·O_,.,;ii;iF:iiARMiiiiiiii.iooo.r
v ...... -...,...,.....
~ar!TW."'' 1

1991 Grand Am, runs good,
new tires , aulomalic, a1r,
cruise , S,, 100.00 call after
5PM, 740-256-6290.
--------1993 Chevy Camara Z28,
Black. 379-2282.
--.,.-,------:--~-:1994 Corvette, White Red
leather, glass top $11,000
(740 I682·7512
c- _ _F_o_rd- Th_u_n-de- r-bi-rd-,-,k-e
1994
new condition., 75,000 miles,
(
Qg •
7401 2 7401

JET
AERATION MOTORS
1953 Farmall Super H. Runs
Repaired , New &amp; RebUilt tn good. $lSOO. (304 )895•3364
Slack Call Ron Evans , 1· - - - - - - - - 860 Ford Trac1or . new
800 . 537 _9528 .
ctulch, good metal , new
paint. Runs well $2, 700.00
740·379·2615.
Large swing set ; full s1ze C!'l:~.;..~:----,
truck cap: lo&gt;Je seat: older
WAmm
child's chopped 3 wheeler
B
'
TO UY
(740)965-3810
--------Leomirds utility trailer. 5x8.5 WE want to BUY 1obacco 1994 Saturn SL, 4-door,
ft. $700. (304)675-2462 poundage. Call: 245·5159 or dark blue, tinted windows.
91;o6;;;
0;.
home, (304)273-4608 work. i2i45jjo";;,
· - - - - - , auto, PIS, P/8, AJC Looks &amp;
ru ns 1 great. 68,000 m1tes.
LtYESTOCK
New &amp; Used Heat Pumps·
(3041P5·1469
Gas
Furnaces.
Free
1997 Ford Escort . amlfm
Eslomates. (740)446-6308
10 horses for sale, green
cass/cd, lots new, runs
broke painls, (740)992-3276
good .
$2800
080.
NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar 100% PUREBRED BOER (7 40)992·4276
For
Concrete.
Angle, GOATS Few kids for sale ~~-----1997 Olds 8B, excellent con·
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Some
adults.
Proven d1tion, 4dr, all power, priced
Grating
For
Drains, Champion Bloodlines. Gallia
at NADA bOok value less
Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L County gro wn. (740)245$200,
60,000
miles,
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
0485 attar 5pm.
(740)992·2529 &amp; lv. mes·
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
sage.
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed 2 Bred Registered Angus
Thursday,
Saturday &amp; hollers, Call; (740)256-1352. 1997 Toyota, Camry L.E.
Sunday (740)446-7300
auto, AJC, loaded, I owner,
mile$. $9,500.
AT Stud A.O H.A. 1998 56,000
Office Furniture
Palomino 16 H/H 12001bs. (304)882·3772
New. scratch &amp; Dent .
Very good Natured. See
Save 70% 1-80Q-527-4662 Fouls on Farm. Mare 1999 Pontiac Grand AM.
Argonaut 519 Bridge Street, Transportation Ava tlable. 4dr, V-6, loaded, p/seat, rear
47K.
$7995.
Guyandotta/Huntlngton. MIF L.F.G. Stud Fee $300. spo11er,
Riverview Motors, (740)992·
(304)675·6440
Shower stall , 2 bottle gas - - - - - - - - - 3490

i

r

L..-------P

sto&gt;Jes, antique bath tub.
tread mill , wejght bench,
play pen, potty chair,
(740)992·7781
Whlte 'e Metal Detectors

Ron Allison
588 Watson Rd
Btdwell OH , 45614
Phone (740)446-4336

Reg . Angus bulls· Top per· 20 cars For Sale , from
formance blOOdlines, Ma1ne $350.00 to $1,600.00. Open
Chi· Angus show heifers, M-F 9 to s, Sat. 9 to 3,
heifers, bred heifers and Closed Sun. Call: 388·9303.
crossbred bulls. Slate Run
Farm,
Jackson,
OH . . 2000 Dodge Dakota 4x4
(740)~86-5395
Sport V6. 5 speed, aor, 67k
miles, sharp. $11 .700 080,
74Q-339·3685 or 740·245·
Riding Horses For Sale
5347
388·8358

89 Mazda 626 4 cyl 5
speed, PIS, P/B, Atr. Looks
&amp; runs· good Pleuse Call
304·593·01 48 if no ·answer
leave message.
99
Plymoulh
Breeze,
loaded . liKe new. $4.400.00
91 BUick Century, new tires,
l1ke new, $2,450.00
740-379·2748.

r

1':':~;,;..;~~---,
ThUCK.Iil

FDR SAU::

1990 International Smgl e
A•le Dump truck, 466 DT.
Allts Chalmers DO Road
Grader. diesel engine .
(740)256·6147
1992 Ford Explorer, V-6, 4
dr. 2 wheel dr loaded, good
cond . will accept any reasonable offer 304·937-3631
96 Dodge Ram 1500 4x4 ,
Ex . Cab. $9,500. 304·675·
4838 Leave, Message
Ohio Valley Bank w11t offer
for sale by public auction a
1998 DODGE DURANGO
lrt20723 at the Oh1o Valley
Bank Annex, 143 3rd. Ave ..
Gallipolis, OH on 05/10/03
Sold to the highest , bidder
~as is-where is" without
expressed or 1mplied warranty &amp; may be seen by callIng the Coltec!Lon Dept. at
441·1 038. OVB reserves the
right to accepUreject any &amp;
all bids, &amp; Withdraw 1tems
frorp sale prior to sate .
Terms of Sale: CASH OR
CERTIFIED CHECK -

r

1996 Pontiac Mimvan, 7
leather.
passenger, all
pl seat , rear atr, loaded ,
$5495, RIVerview Motors.
(740)992-3490

I

1__992 H D. Springer Sott Tatl.
low miles. lots of chroma,
(740)992-6027
--------1998 KawasaKi 300 Four
Wheeler $2 ,800 740-446·
0425

CARD OF THANKS

Kevin Randy
Wolfe
The

f~mily

64 Format argt.rnent

68 Throttle

''

70 Pffvate ll)Om
72 Field or Kellennan
74 Approach
76 Racetracks
79 Polished
· 80Kicl&lt;ed
82 -, women and song
84 Disney and Whitman
86 Unwanled plant
87 Duo

Home Decorating
Open House
Sat May

10

8 am • 5 pm

&amp;~

'' '

'

aCUTE NBSUR~ TID.rtD

$500.00
Each night

CALt fOR oui

we

$12 C•T~IOG 01:
FRif !ioc"UII

start at 6:30
Packsare$5.0Dea.
niQht.
Everyone
Welcome

REAL ESTATE

ro the

m.:my people &amp;
friends for the
beautiful ilowers,
food &amp; prayers in
our time of great
Joss for our loved
one. We would
also like to give
special thanks to
OJiis Wolfe for ~ 11
his kindness and
help. aso Pastor
Btim Oel.wd.
Again we give our
special thanks
Sincerely,
Helen Wolfe

REAL ESTATE

For

Sale

Bank Foreclosure Property
3 Bedroom, 1 1 x2 Bath located
on 60/120 corner lot at 45
Riverview Drive Middleport,
DH. Call (740) 949-2210, ask
for Sheila for an appointment
to see. Priced at ~o~~:o,IJruu•.u••·

&amp; F~mily

446-2342. 992-2155. 675-1333
Ordnance Elementary

Quality Care Cleaning

GAT'S MEOWS

441-0755
5 Rooms &amp; Hall
S99.95

Gloria Oiler
St. Rt 325 Langsville
7 40· 7 42·2076

Call675·3103 or
675-6029

Chapel presents
Sunday Night
at the Movies!
Left Behind

II

to get your Cat's Meow

Legion

Mason Co. Career Center

all baskets hold an

Skills USA-VICA

Ohio River Bear!

Tractor Tug Pull

Bus Trip Gettysburg, PA .
9/27/03 - 9/28/03 Boyds Bear
Country, Antique Show, Pippin Fest
&amp; Factory Outlets (Tax free)
Margarel 576·3128
Fredda 675-5503
Only 15 seats available!!

· ArA"" ()nl"

Countryside Baptist

piece ($21.50 each)
No longer avai .lable through
Custom D esign

10, 2003
9:00am

The Tribulation Force
on Sunday, May 4th
at 6:30p.m.

Twilight Special
Sat.

May

Tractor Classes

CLIFFSIDE GOLF
CLUB
&amp; Sun.

after 3:00

Beautiful Home for Sale

$22.00 with cart

By Owner

Tee Time Required

4500,5500,6500,7500,8500,

In Spring . Valley on Oak Drive

For more info. Call

Buyer Needed

T.R. Ramsey 8g5·3656

441-1506

.

FREE MOVIE
FREE SNACKS
Everyone Invited!
845 Skidmore Road in
Kerr. 5 minutes past HMC

Serenit~

on SR 160

House .

serves victims of domestic

''
''

''

ANNOUNCEMENTS

KCHS Banquet Planned
The Kyger Creek Alumni
Assoc. will hold its
ALUMNI BANQUET

on
(KCHS) . Doors open a\6 pm
and meal served at 7 pm.
All reservations will be

Same People
&amp;
Same
Service

pay·at·door.
Please notify family, friends
and classmates of the date
and time, as there will be
no written invitations sent

'
''
'

· For

this year.
reservations or

information, call Becky Meaige
at 446·3194.

ALCOVE .

Countrytyme ALC, Ltd.

BOOKSTORE

NEW ADDRESS:
464 DeBord Road
Chillicothe, OH 45601

446·

·.·

''

7653

Two FREE d~~'oVi n_g~I_!!!9.D!tLly -ank
- ee
0
and 4 Tickets for a

22 -z·-.

Cincinnati Reds Game
No purchase neces'iiary
Stop in or Call for details

FOR SALE
The Mason County Ambulance
Authority Offers for sale by scaled
bid:
1- 1989 Ford Type Ill Ambulanc e
Box Style, Automalic, Diesel
1- 1995 Ford Type Ill Ambulance
Box Style , Automa1ic Power Stroke,
Diesel.
.
,
1-1995 Ford :rype II Ambulance
VAn Style, Automatic Power stroke,
Diesel
1- like new.. ~ooo Diesel power
stroke and transmission
combination with 9 ,459 certified
miles, removed from wrecked
ambulance and professionally
prepared for slorage.
All of the above items will have a
minimum bid.
To request. bidding lntormationcall :
Chuck Blake, Director'
304·675·1012
GAHS Music Departmenl
Presents
"YOU'RE
A GOOD
MAN ,
CHARLIE
BROWNI"
Fn ., May 9 and Sat, May tQ_ _

l---~

- a-:oopm·- .

at WaShington Elementary
All tickets $5.00 on salwe Moh~ · lhru
Thurs. 5:00 lo 7:00 at as mgton
Elem. or may be purchased at the
door Questions! Call446·2252
·Don't miss this line musical
entertainment!

Ohio River Cottages

violence call 446· 6752 or

Over

50

varieties

1·800·942·9577
Hot Tub Getaways

of'Bedding Plants

(740) 709-0545

Mother's Day Hanging

www.ohiorivercottages.com

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE

313 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
740·446·2673

May 10, 2003
9 : 00 am • 5: 00 pm

Red Hardwood Mulch

3 bags/$8 .00

Oj0

Mother'sa~ay Sale

Hea9quarters
by Juanita

Baskets

~~:sHoEs
Georgia, Carolina, Lineman ,
Chippewa
(Western)
J.
Chisholm, Durango. Texas.
Code West , H&amp;H , Laredo
is the last 9f the U . S .
made shoes .
Dealers Welcome
SWAIN FURNITURE
SHOES

&amp;

Cypress Mulch

4 bags/$~0
Top soil, peat

&amp;

potting soil

Open Sun. 12 till 5:00
Weekdays till 7:00pm

OHIO VALLEY
WAREHOUSE
Jackson Pike across from
Gallia Fairgrounds

The Olive Township

Fire

25% off Merle Norman
.Cosmetics 15% off

;A~J---~6:2o:L:Iv:E::;~==:::~-~ their
Redek~n,

I -1-G_Qid.w,~ll al'ld..Paui·Mitchell
Products .

C&amp;C Electric
Licensed Insured 24 Hr. Service
C
.
Residenlial ommercial lndustna l
Sam Fitzwater. President
Senior Citizen Discounts
740·446·7553 Cell: 740·645·0310

annual

Rib

Dinn

on Sunday May 4th
b'
Serving
11 :00.
meat,

·
·
egtnn1ng

M .e al will
baked

salad, desert,
for $6.00.
-

in"'"""'

and

\

t

•

elll£AR fOOl lOGS STAn AI $2 25

Slarburst

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

are available once again!

Middleport American

I '

I

lOCi SIO!NG, MltC R.IJUNG

of

Helen Wolfe
woulq like to gi1'e
our thanks &amp;
gr~titude

lOG KITS

l0G1WAU &amp; HAROWUE Kif ROM 53.300

per game

1994 Chevrolet Astra Van
130,000 new tires &amp; muffler,
runs well. looks· good, seating for 7, extended body·
Choo·Choo conversion 304·
675-3781 eveni ngs or 304·
675-7004 day $3000.00

MOTORCYO.ES

~~E.(UT

Paying $80.00

.----------

40

HOME
l\11'ROVEMENIS

BINGO

1993
G20
Che&gt;Jy
Conversion Van.
1999 25ft. Starlil camper wl
Royal Oaks membership
304·895-3742

1997 Ford Explorer , 4 door,
740·446-0425

MaroK HOMES

1998 17' F1sher bass boat , - - - - - - - - 60hp Mere. 72# Evinrude ANNOUNCEMENTS
tr olli[lg motor, very low hrs.
garage kept like new,
(740)742·2301 alter 5pm.
Special
Bass Boat 1994 Ranger R72
American
Duel. console, Ranger tra1ler
Legion
crome wheels w/ spare. '115
HP, Mercury Tracker w/
3props. motog01de TM , 2
locators GPS. Runs and
in Rutland
looks great $6,500.00, 446·
Post467
6970 .
S/S/03 - 5/7/03

Transmissions,, ALL
types, 245·5677 or 843·
0814.

$4 ,800.00,

"'"

~

,;,;,;;;,;,;;;,;;,;,_,.J

Budget Priced

V.ws&amp;
4-WDs

CAMPERS&amp;

1999 Big Bear 4x4 all lime, 1989 Prowler Lynx 5th Custom
Building
&amp;
good condttion. new t1res. wheel 18ft , EJCcellen1 Remodeling.
Free
$2700 (740)843- 1053
Condition (740)446·4213
Estimates. tor All Your Home
-------~- · A~:&gt; pa1r and Aemodelmg
1999 Honda 300 , 4 TRAX , 2001
Keystone Hornel Needs, (740)992-1119
very little usage, like new. Camper. 24 feet, Ex1ra Nice.
_7_40:..·2:.4:.::5:.::·5:.::9:.83::..__ __
(304)675-6436
2001 Yamaha Road Star,
Low Mileage, Lots of extras, 2003 Hornet Lite 24 QL
Light we1ght , tows eas11y,
740-256·6890
many options, $11,975.00,
Brand New 4-wheelers 50 740·446-9210 .
cc $1299, 100cc $1599. Will
sr !(\It I '
trade for a great deal Call i'::il"""-""":'~---,
{304)675- 1935
Iii tO
':--'--~-'---Honda 1994 Goldwing .__iiiiiiiliioiiitiiiitl.....
Aspencade GL 1500, crUise, ,
slereo. 15,000 mtles, excelBASEMENT
lent condtllon $9200 00,
WATERPROOFING
446·4395 or 446-9234 .
Unconditional lifet1me guarRoA'lS &amp; M()'I'OR'i antee. Local relerences furnished Established 1975. '
1-0H: SAU~
Call 24 Hrs (740) 446·
L.,_ _
0870. Rogers Basement
1991 Bay 1mer 18' . Mere· Watet proofing. 1
cruise 130 w/tra tler &amp; lull
canvas. eKcallen t conditiQn., - - - - - , - - - - asking $6.300. (740}992· C&amp;C
General
Home
2060
Ma1n1enence- Painting, v1nyl
----~---- sidmg,
carpentry, doors.
1992 28f1. Bayllner deck wmdows. baths. mob1te
boat w/ trailer 120 Hp, force home repair and more. For
motor w/lots o1 eJCtras, good f{ee est 1mate call Chel . 740·
con d $6 700 304-'675-8628 992·6323.

1993 Dodge Caravan, runs
good. looks good, asking
$1,650.00 Call : 446-9552 or
446-4122 .

t

7'6J

Man&gt;Hl'VCLI-:&lt;i

2001 Cavtler, 31,000 mtles,
good condition $6,500.00.
2000 Ford Ellplorer 55,000
miles 4 Wheel Dr~ve
$10.000. 740·441-03l7.

Mason County Fairgrounds

SAME 800# 800/213-8365
Phone: 740/663-4780
Fax: 740/663-4730
(

GOOd quality straw Volume
discount &amp; delivery avail·
able. Heavy square bates .
$2.85 per bale. (304)675·
5724
,.,_ _ _ _ _ _,..
II{\ '\"1'1 I I ~ I\ I It)\

BULLETIN BOARD

121 In lhe area ol
122 Not wordy
123 Stage direcUon
125 Eye signal
126 Top pertormer
130 Legume
132 Neighbor ollowa
(abbr.)
·
133 Mineral spring
134 -Chum

At new location: 5/2/03
New Compa~y
Name:

GRAIN

40

AI!I'OS
I'OR SALE

Weslem Indian

Saturday, May 24 at
ANNOUNCEMENTS

SUI,,.ID;

10

HAY&amp;

Tragic lover
118 Spear

River Valley High School
ANNOUNCEMENTS

1M'

Buuil!NG

Buy or sell. Riverine Block, Crick. sewer ptpes,
Antiques, 1124 East Main windows, lintels, etc. Claude
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 74G- Winters. Rio Grande, OH
992·2526. Russ Moore.
11

last

44 Tanlalize
45
46
48
49
50
51
52

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark
Chapel Road. Porter, Ohio.
(740)446·74"44 1·877·830·
9162. Free Est1mates. Easy
financing, 90 days same as
cash VisaJ Master Card.
Drive- a-.linle save alot.

PRE· Moving Sate:
Simmons
Queen
size
Beautyrest. Mattress &amp; Box
Spnng Set From Spare
Bedroom
NeW
2000
Excellent clean cond . $900
new, Now $275 .
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed· Very · Comfortable. large
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside contemporary
lent condttion, couch
$1200ellcelnew
Apartments in Middleport. Now $425.
From $278·1348. Call 740· TV Stereo Oak entertain992·5064 . Equal Housing ment ca nter with glass
owortunitles.
doors, adr'ustable shelves
storage. Holds ujil
Nice
Two
Bedroom tape/DVD
to 24 inch TV saoo new Now
Apartments, Large rooms. $375.
fully equiped kitchen, central Magnevox modilar stereo
heating/coolmg, washer/
Oryor hookup. (304)882· tuner/amp fou r big speaKers
in good condition. sounds
2523
gOOd. Great for fami ly or kids
Now Taking Appllcatlons- room. $250.
35 West 2 Bedroom Four-Foot high red tool box
wtth Several drawers ·on
Townhouse
Apartments,
wheels filled with collection
Includes Water · Sewage',
of
assorted tools. Good
Trash. $350/Mo., 74D-446Condition. taKe a11 $225.
0008.
By Appointment Only
One bedroom furnished Leave Message 740-448·
apartment 1n Pt. Pleasant. 6968.
Very clean and nice No - - - - - - - - Pels. Phone (304)675·1386 Tw1n Captian Beds, $50.00
each 304-576·2574 .
Pleasant Valley Apartment - - - - - - - - Are now ~akmc ApplicatiOns Used Furniture Store, 130
lor 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR ., Bulaville Pike. We sell
Applications are taken Mattresses,
dressers,
Monday thru Fnday, from couches,bunkbeds,bedroom
9 00 A.M.-4 P.M. Office is suites, Recliners. Grave
Located at 1151 Evergreen monuments. 740-446-4782.
Drive Point Pleasant. WV Gallipolis, Oh. Wanled to
Phone No is (304)675·5806. buy-good used couches,
E.H.O
mattresses,dressers .
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments, Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors, CA, 1
1!2 Bath, Newly Carpeted,
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
Pets, Lease. Plus Security
Deposit Required, Days:
740-446•3481; Evemngs:
740·367-Q502

r

ANTIQUES

I rownerMisaMERawmtsErLLAN~~~

Beech St. Middleport, 2 bedroom furnished apartment,
utilities paid, deposit &amp; ref8rences, no pets. (740)9920165

tables, double book case, floor lamps,

Terms Cash or Check with ID .

•
•
·~······~···········*··················

BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Gall
eQual
740·446·2568.
Housing Opportumty.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

AUCTION

located at the

---------

t

fl20

H~

•-""-llljrSija
AUCTIQN

i

SPACE

FOR RI-M

2218.
Bedroom Apartments
•
Starting
at
$289/mo,
Washer( Dryer Hookup, For Sale: Reconditioned
Stove and_ .Refrigerator. washers, dryers and refr1g{740)44~·1519
eral~rs
Thompsons
Appltance 3407 JacKson
3br. bath &amp; 1/2.$300 . a Avenue, (304)675·7388.
month + deposit &amp; refer- - - - - - - - - ence. (304)675-8806
Good Used Appliances,
Recondilioned
and
Apartment Available Now. , Guaranteed .
Washers.
RlverBend Place, New Dryers .
Ranges,
and
Ha&gt;Jen, VN now accepting ~efngerators, Some start at
applications tor HUD·subsi· S95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
d1Zed, 1 bedroom apart· Vme St ,' (740)446·7398
ment. Utilities ,InCluded Call - - - - - - - - (304)882·3 121 Apartment King Size Pillow Top
available for qualified sen- Mattress and toundation
ior/disabled person. EHO
Set, (7400441-0025

,_,. ''"

6unlla:p Grim~ -6mttntl • Page D5

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

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
mentS. furnished and unlurnuihed, securl1y deposit
required, no pels , 740-992- IIT.I"""~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Trailer, lor rent. $375 .00 per·
month $375.00 DepOsit On
Bulav1lle P1ke 367· 7272 or
441 -12 83.

----'-'-~---

r

APAKIMilM'S
FOR RENT

fiiR RE,_.I'

Newly redecorated tra11er in
Middleport. deposit &amp; reler·
ences requested , no pets,
(7&lt;0)992-5073 or 740-9925443.

Sunday, May 4, 2003
j4«&lt;

Monu~: ~lolllfS

MontLE. Ho~m;
mKRENT

fir

-

AUCTION

: cloSing

IH'\1\1 ..,

HOliS!:';
Brick Ranch Homo 3br. 2ba. Homo !rom $199/month Ohio Valley Bank will offer Bruner Land 740·441·1492
1 car Anached garage, 1 car toreclosure ho'mes 4% tor sate by public auction a Meigs Co Five Acres
mRRFNr
(3)FHA &amp; VA homes set up detached garage. lnground down, 30 years at 8.5% apr. 1997 UBERTY MH tl33217 adjo1ns ,tate la.nd $16,000
tor immediate DOS:iession all pool · On 1/2 acre lol. 4 listings call800·319-3323 at the Ohio Valley Bank or 3 acres $12,500. co 2 bedroom. 1 bath Quiet
within 15 min. of downtown Serious
Inquires. only. ext 1709.
Annex. 143 3rd. Ave ., water. Alfred SA 681 , 6 country home. Near Porter
Gallipolis. Rates as low ·as · (304)675-8051
'
Gallipolis. OH on 051HW03, acres 516,000 or on Carr no pets, rei required . $400.
6%. {740)446·3218.
New home- 4 bedroom, 2 Sold to the hlghe.st bidder Rd. 11 acres NOW $20,000! per 1 month deposit. 388BulaviHe Pike. 2 story. 3 Dr., bath liv ngroom, tamlly· •as 1
·s·W he re ·s·
1 WI'tho u1 Ches1er, Bas han Rd 19 8234 alter 8 pm .
1
213 acres Level Lot, 2 story 2 1/2 ba ., liv. room, dining , room , dining room den , expressed or Implied war- acres with barns $26,000 or Nice _, bodcoom farm
hOuse, B rooms. 2 baths. fem ., &amp; game room, 2 car modern kitchen, 2 car ran 1 &amp; may be seen by ca11- 7 acres $17 ,000 , co wa1er
45
porch and large decK. heat gar.. 3 car unanached, pool, garage, hp, all electric, with- lng the Collection Dept. at Danville 5 or 7 acres $9,5001 house, between Pomeroy &amp;
pump, recently remodeled, 1
acre
$175,000.00 in walking distance Pomeroy 441-1038 . OVB reserves the Galli a Co: VInton. Dodrill Athens, quite country set·
corner of Green tree of ~17_4_0:'..)44~6·_8_050
_ _ _ _ _ Gall Course, 3 acres, right to accepVreject any &amp; Rd .. 5
wooded
acres ling, available immediately.
Bulaville
Pk. $69.500. By Builder, affortable New $110,000.
call
Susan all bids &amp; withdraw ilems S,4,000 or 7 cleared, level call (740)593·7456 740(740)367.;7272
Stick 3 bedroom 2 112 bath , (7401985 _4291 , work 740• from sale prior to sale. acres $18,000, co. water. Off 707·0030.
2600 sq. ft . Home With 2 car garaQe. Corner lot 446-7267 .
Terms ot Sate· CASH OR Teens Run , 33 acres of C'lll!"'"'=":"--"!":'--breath taking view, nesseled Great Locatoon. Groen &amp; - - - - - - - - - CERTIFIED CHECK.
deer &amp; turkey $29,000! Rio
MOBII£oJ:!.o~rll}i
Cl.ly Schools. (740)446·9966 NEW HOUSE fo SALE
-I'll'-~~---...., Grande, ·a acres $23,500. ·--lliJFOiiiiRoi""'oiiiiN'iioo-r
on 12 acres w/ out building
r
Kyger 18 wooded acres
Debbie Drive $129,000.00
and pond . City school. 446 ·
BtJSINESS
$17.900 or 5 acres $8,500. 14x70 2 bedroom , Green
3 bedrooms. 2 baths
890t
AND BUJU)INGS
Call now for maps and other Schools . References and
(740)245·9268.
parcels
available for home· deposit required. 367-0632 .
3 Bedroom newly remad·
Rio Grande area. 2400
eled. 1n Middleport. call Tom
Ranch style bricl&lt; house, 5 sq.ft .. Office/ Commerc1al sites. hunting &amp; recreation. ~----:----:-'-------:---:
Anderson after 5 p m
bdrms, 3 full baths, 2-car BUIIdmg for RenU Lease. Owner financing with slight 3 Bedrooms $450.00. Also 3
992-3348
All realeatate achler1lalng
garage, fmished basement. Plenty off parking. (740)245· property markup. We buy bedroom house $450.00 +
land 30 acres &amp; up'
deposil 740. 446.4824
In this newspaper Is
2 frplce. hardwood firs. 5747
3 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 story
subject to the Federal
(740)992-5189
home m Pomeroy, 1 car
Lars&amp;
Fair Housing Act of 1968
Beautilul River View Ideal
•'
garage. fireplace , (740)992·
. ACREAGE
which m~~kes It Illegal to
MOBILE HOME'i
For 1 Or 2 People,
9492
advertise "any
f'ORSAI.E
References. Deposu. No
preference, limitation or
1 acre building lots: 3&amp; 112
Pets, Foster Tra tler ParK ,
3 Br. 1 Ba. Full unf1nished
discrimination based on
acres, and 5 acres tracts.
740-441·0181 .
1991
mobile
home
and
5
basement. new kitchen. new
race, color, relig ion, sex
plus acres with timber, local- Green Schools. Great toea- ·
windows, new vinyl. E&gt;Jans familial status or national
Mobile home lor rent, no
ed Nye Avenue. call lion. Rt 588 (740)446·9966
Heights area, $53.900.00, origin, or any intenHon to
pets, (740)992-5858
(740)992·2377
(740)367·0299 or 709-0299.
make any such
1.79 Acres Lot Stoneybrook
preference, limitation or
3 br home at 171 larial Dr
discrimination."
28x40 Do'Ublewide. 2 bed- Es tates, Sand Hill Road,
AUCTION
AUCTION
•Gallipolis OH .. appl only
room, 3rd bedroom optional, Point Pleasant. Land already
This newapaper will not
please 740· 446·9403 or
Cleared,
Ready
for
2 fu ll baths. total ele., large
knowingly accept
740-446-7845or 1·304·675·
front and back porch. 30x30 Construction Public Water
PUBLIC AUCTION
Adverllaemenla for real
3216
garage with office and star- 675-3524 or 675-5440.
estate which Is In
Serious
Inquiries
Only.
Sat.,
May
10,2003
10:00 a.m.
age area. 112 acre lot on
3-Large Bedrooms 2·1 /2
violation of the law. Our
Blazer Rbad, Addison
Located at Hartwell Storage _
baths. large open kitchen
readers are hereby
Township, $55,000.00, Call 1/2 acre lot, Tycoon Lake on
Informed that til
w/center Island, large dining
34055 Laurel Cliff Ad. Pomeroy, .
Eagle Ad . city water, $8500.
740·645·1322:
dweUinga advertised In
area . overs 1zed garage,
(740)247·1100
this
newspaper
are
Ohio.
Just off St. At. 7 &amp; St. At . 33.
covered lront porch. large
available on an equal
rear deck, 16M32 lnground
87 Gullshore 14.~~:70 , 2 bedUnit 53. 71. 75 &amp; 76 wi ll he auctioned niT Th e
Camps1te on
Raccoon
opportunity baaea.
Pool, and 12ft deck surroorrt 1 1/2 baths. 367·0632.
.CreeK Ad &amp; Barefoot Park,
following items. Chest uf drawers. refrigerator.
rounding pool area. 20&gt;:20
ale&lt;:. &amp; water on site $3000,
washer, beds,
m1crowa&gt;Jt.\
sofa. stands..
storage building at pool side FOR SALE BY OWNER
Cole's Mobile Homes
{740)286-8806
Numerous extras. Ultimate Reduced! Ready to move US 50 East, Athen s, Ohio,
Christmas decorations. Ohio State Jacket.
counlry living. Localed on 4. In! Sets on. 2 acres, 3 bed· 45701, 740.592·1972
Meigs Yearbooks, bicycle, toys. tools. trumpet.
Rio Grande area, 3 to 30
112 acres 3 miles from New , room . .bath and a half, LA, - - - - - - - - - acres lots, some restrictions,
sewing
box, lamps, childs gaml'~. CD's. video
Haven . (304 )882 . 2072
DR, kitchen, den with lire Land Home PacKages availwater &amp; electriC. {740)245·
tapes, household items. gas grill. picture!'~,
- - - - - - - --:- place.
and
sunroom. able In your area, (740)4465747
4
BEDROOM HOME .'4 Covered carport. 3 n1ce out· 3384
weight bench, TV. window a1r conditioner.
bath, only $14,900 For liSI· buildings. Located at 3863 - - - - - - - - linens
, anllque dishes &amp; many unopened boxe".
Wanled lo buy : Lot for
ings call 1·800-719-3001 Kerr Road , Bidwell, Ohio.
New 2003 Doubtewide. 3 BR mobile home. Gallia County,
Owners· Hartwell Storage .
ExtF144
Call : (850)982·7668 pr
&amp; 2 Bath. Only $1695 down with
water,ele .. sewage
(850)932-6959
Dan Smith· Auctioneer
4br. 3 baths~ storage build· ':--'-----:-------:- and &amp;295/mo: 1·800·691 · hookup. 740-446-9209.
Alan Haley Apprentice
6777
1ng, fenced yard. C/A, For tale by ownert in
Lot
for
sale
In
Racine.
Ohio #1344 Ohio #0245
Modern appliances. All Addison overlOOking river, 1 - - - - - - - - Eiectnc,
Good 1/2 acre, 3 br , 1 ba., din. rm. New 3br/2bth. Only $995 (740)992·5658
Cash .Positive I D
No eats.
Netghi)Qrhood. Pt. Pleasant. kit , lull basement, in ground down and only $197.47 per
Call {304)675 -6515 Jafter pool. fruit trees {740)446· month . Call Harold 740Spm.
4526
385-7671

AUCTION

Pool Table

r

Sunday, May 4, 2003_

10

55 acre farm on SA 554. 3
bedroom , 2 bath house with
basement. 2 barns. 10 acres
pasture. Spring ted li&gt;Jestock
tank. Good hunttng Stocked
pond. Free gas $125,000.
Call (740)367-7266 be1ween
9am &amp; 9pm.

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f~~ ~ I riO ~ I M~s~ l.,t.·__ALmsi iCliFAi i i i~i iE-pl

10

;;;;;;,

Will pressure wash homes.
trailers, decks, metal bUild-

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

•

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Page D6

.

• 610., .Ctad ·6t11ttntl

Pomeroy •

Mlddl~port

Sunday, May 4, 2003

• Gallipolis • Point Pleasant .

Protect spring ·flowers for next year

••

POMEROY, Ohio - Daffodils,
tulips and hyacinths have
bloomed and now are in decline
around the· yard. Do not braid, tie
up or cut the foliage until it has
completely dried up. This is the
time these bulbs form their bulbs
for next year's bloom. The leaves
left alone will allow photosynthesis (manufacturing of sugars) to
continue through May. Early cutting of the leaves will reduce
plant strength . and therefore
bloom quality next year. This
September, apply a high phosphorus and potash fer.tilizer like 6-2424 at a rate of three pounds per
100 square feet. Remember that
daffodils, especially, like fall
moisture to develop an extensive
root system. If we have a dry
Fall, supplemental watering will
improve flower size and number.
0 0

0

Beef producers are you con'

•

.

••

Hal .
Kneen
cerned about horn flies and face
flies around your livestock?
William Shulaw, Ohio State
University
Extension
Veterinarian, suggests holding off
placing of ear tags onto cattle
until fly numbers reach an economic threshold of approximaiely
100-200 flies per animal. Earlier
treatment is not cost effective as
the drug contained in the ear tags
or sprays is gone or below effective killing concentration by the

time fly numbers peak in late control. Unfortunately, current
summer. Removal of ear tags research has indicated that popushould be based on manufacturer li!tions of some beneficial insects
"
recommendations.
(such as dung beetles) may have
Horn•fly hiys its eggs only in their life cycles adversely affectfresh manure. Feed additive lar- ed by using these systemic
vicides or insect growth regula- dewormers.
tors can be used to control horn
Whatever control measure you
~y populations. These chemicals use, make sure to follow label
work by preventing the develop- directions when applying.
ooo
ment offlies in manure. They are
administered in feed, loose minerFarmers, are you looking for a
al or block form, and all animals market for the produce or food
in the group must consume the products that you grow on your
recommended dosage for effec- farm? Have you ever thought of
tive control. Remember that adult attempting to market to the gov· horn flies may fly in from neigh- ernment and its various institubors' fields, so to be effective, an tions? Plan to attend a small busientire area or region needs to be ness
workshop,
"Marketing
treated. Note that other fly Agriculture to the Government
species that breed in manure may Workshop" being conducted on
not be controlled with an insect Thursday, May 8 at Ohio
growth regulator. There are sys- University's Voinovich Center
temic dewormers that may pro- located
in Athens,
Ohio.
vide some measure of hom . fly Registration begins at 12:45 p.m.

Workshop begins P{Omptly at I
p.m. and continues to 4 p.m. Cost
. of the workshop is $10 per person
and includes lunch and all conference materials. The sponsors for
the
event
include:
The .
PTAC-Oh1o
. Appalachian
Umversity,; Lawrence Economic
Development
Corporation
Procurement Outreach Center;
Ohio State University Small
Business Development Center
and Ohio State University
Cooperative Development Center.
For further information about the
workshop or to obtain a brochure,
contact Sharon Williams at
Appalachian PTAC at (740) 597by
e-mail
1868
or
sharonw@voinvichcenter.ohio.ed
u.
Hal Kneen is the Meigs County
Agriculture &amp; Natural Resources
Agent, Ohio State Univenity
Extension.

..

Chec:k
'

I

·.

.

;

,.

•

..

.....

12FT. x36 11
.COMPLETE
SWIMMING
POOL
•
•
•
•

Sturdy Steel Wall
Winterized Liner
Complete Filtering System With Hose
Galvanized Steel Ladder

"

·'

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
5 0 CENTS • Vol 53 . No . 180

Students, teachers laud new school Pomeroy ·mayor
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

Staff ~riter

ROCKSPRINGS
Officials at the newly-completed Meigs Jun.ior High
School conducted an open
house!· Sunday to showcase
the $11 million state of the
art facility.
Parents, leachers and Stl)dents turned out to see the
new building, which will be
open for classes Tuesday.
Superintendent
.Bill
Buckley said the last hurdle
before the school can officially open is approval from
the state fire marshal.
The new 70,000-square
foot b!Jilding, located on the
hill overlooking Meigs High
School, includes 15 regular
classrooms, three science
labs, seven special education
classrooms, one computer .
lab, life skills classroom,
music room, art room,
library, gymnasium , cafeteria, plenty of storage rooms, Roger and Mary Gilmore show their son Darbi a book written about poet Edgar Allen Poe at
administrative space anq the new library during the open house Sunday for the state of the art $11 million Meigs
nurses ' room.
Junior High building. (J. Miles Layton)
The 7 .000-square foot
gymnasium will seat 500,
His father, Roger, was very hall.
and the 3 ~000-square foot
The library has lots of
cafeteria and kitchen area is pleased with the building,
is
more
aesthetically
saying
it
space
for expansion. Meigs
more than adequate to
to
walk
through.
He
pleasing
Local
district
librarian Mary
accommodate the 940 stunoted
the
angles
and
vaulted
Lou Moegling said boo~ are
dents attending the school.
ceilings.
on
the way.
The first floor measures
Amy
Perrin,
an
eighthShe
said the school is
51.000-square feet·, the secgrade
writing
teacher,
was
amazing.
ond floor measures 18,000"I am proud of the taxpaysquare feet, and an equip- putting the finishing touches
ment mezzanine measures on her classroom in the new ers of this district for supportbuilding.
ing their students to have this
800-square feet. ·
"I
am
very
excited,"
she
which is as nice as
facility
Darbi Gilmore, a fifth "It
is
a
whole
different
said.
anywhere
else in Ohio," she
grader, will attend talented
environment
from
what
we
said.
and gifted classes in the new
are
used
to."
building for the remainder of
Perrin said she appreciates
the school year. Next yeru: as
the.new
equigment, the better
a sixth-grader,. he will attend
Writing teacher Amy Perrin
and 'just the fact that
'
l
ighting
the middle school.
puts the finishing touches on .
''It is much"beiter than the every grade is closer V,~gether
her classr'bom before her
other one," Darbi said after makes It more convement."
students
arrive Tuesday. (J.
Each grade has its own
the tour.
Miles Layton)

~rom

Royalty

Save
$100
3PC. SWIVEL .ROCKER
&amp;TABLE SO

• Removable Cushions
• Sturdv Steel Frome
• Tempered Glass Top Table

The 2003 Meigs High School prom king and queen were

announced Saturday night. Hollie Ferren: daughter of T.J. and
Vicki Ferrrell of Middleport was named queen and Marc Barr, son
of Mike and Marge Barr of Pomeroy, was the king during ·A Night
to Remember, • which was this year's theme. (J. Miles Layton) ·

Index

FASHION PHOTO
BARBIE OR KAYlA

Save

2 Sections - 12 P111es

•

67%

Calendar
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports

AS
63-S
66
66
A4
AS
AS

c 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

UQUID LAUNDRY DETERGENT

"'"""' rnyd•oly, •·nlm o· l u.rn

MONDAY. MAY 5. 2003

Cody Wo•vor, Pomeroy Elem.

Blaettnar dies
BY

J.

MILES lAYTON

Staff writer

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Mayor
John - William
Blaettnar, 70, died at about 6
a.m. today at his home. on
Wright Street.
Council president Victor
Young III, who assumes the
responsibi Ities as mayor, said
Blaettnar was a devoted public servant. '
"This will be a big loss for
the village," Youn~ said .
"His main prioilty was the
village. John.was good for the
village."
Blaettnar served the village
with distinction for many
years. He was first elected as
a member of village counci I
in 1992 "and immediately
elected president of council.
He became mayor a year later
when Bruce Reed resigned.
Blaettnar served for three
years and ran again in 2000,
serving until his death.
During his ·tenn in office,
Blaettnar was behind several
major projects including an
upgrade to the village water
system. The mayor said on

many occassions that the· project wou'ld attract business
and industry to the village.
Blaettnar also established
the new position of village
magistrate early in his second
term in 200 I.
The new position was the
first of its kind in the county.
Kathy Hysell, clerk-treasurer, said the village will miss
Blaettnar with whom she
worked for many years.
Beyond village government, Blaettnar served his
community in many ways. He
was a longtime member of the
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department alongside his son
Rick, who is now the fire
chief.
Blaettnar was an active
member of the Trinity Church
where he served as a member
of the choir and church coun- ·
cil. He also was a member of
the Drew Webster American
Legion Post 39.
·
Blaettner is survived by his
wife, Eleanor; son, Rick;
three daughters, Elizabeth,
Mary and Cathy, and several
grandchildren.
Funeral arrangements are
pending.

--dJ.~~--

Middleport cashier
music, teddy bear fan
BY BRI-ll J. REED
Staff writer

MASON,
W.Va.
Friends of Kim Roush know
she's a heavy metill music
fanatic and a teddy bear collector.
Roush, of Mason, also is a
licensed cosmetologist, but
she works full-time work at
Vaughan's Supermarket as a
cashier and closing manager.
"1 like my job because I
COLUMBtJS (AP) - The mother of an Army nurse
like
my customers, especial·killed in 1969 in Vietnam says the pain of· losing her daughly
my
regular customers,"
ter doesn:t go away.
Roush said.
''After 34 years, you would think this would come to an
end,'' said Kay Lane, whose daughter was one of 12 people
"In a job like mine, you
inducted into the Ohio Military Hall of Fame du'ring a cerreally get to know your cusemony on Friday on the Statehouse lawn. "It's really hard
tomers, and their habits, and
for l)le to attend ceremonies )ike this."
they get to know me, too. In
First Lt. Sharon Lane was 25 when the hospital where she
fact, some of them even lend
worked was hit by a rocket barrage. A dinic recently was
a helping hand. like gatherestablished near the site where she was killed in Vietnam by
ing carts from the parking
lot."
the Sharon Lane Foundation, a nonprofit organization
founded by a fellow nurse.
While Roush always has a
It was fourth induction ceremony for the military group
friendly smile for the grosince it began in 2000. Three of the 12 were inducted
cery customers she sees
posthumously.
every evening, the Wahama
One honoree was William Smith Jr., 85, of suburban
.High School graduate only
Worthington, who won the Bronze Star with a "V" for valor
really cuts loose when she's
for his actions on June 6, 1944, during the invasion of the
on .her own time - especialNormandy coast of France.
ly if there 's a concert to
·"Three and a half years of my life- all of that has come .
attend .
to this," he said, referring to the length of his Army service
"Poison is my favorite
in World War II.
band
of all time," Roush
He said that when he landed on Omaha Beach, "The only
said. "( go to see them every
thing I was thinking about was where to put that next shell
year, and this year's concert
and how to keep my head from being shotcoff."
in June will be the sixth time
To qualify for the Hall of Fame, inductees must be either
I've gone."
born in Ohio or conscripted into the military from Ohio.
·1 98 D
· h
Whl e
egrees mig t
They also must be awarded a certain military honor such .
be at the opposite of the
as the Medal of Honor, the Distinguished Ser.vice Medal,
musical spectrum in terms
the Silver Star, the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Bronze • of style and material, the
Star with a "V" for valor, the Air Medal with a "V" or a
pop group afforded Roush a
Joint Services Commendation Medal.
"bru ~ !l- with- greatrres!l,"The names and biographies of Hall of Fame memben are- Wlien she and a friend met
in a pennanent exhibit at.J.he_Motts- MilitaryM'ilseum in
them as a prize in a radio
contest in Charleston just a
"
it for recognition," said James Bolen, an
few years ago.
inductee from Springboro, near Dayton. Bolen was an "We were sitting at Burger
Army staff sergeant in 1968 when he rappelled from a heliKing,
just. across the street
copter while on a reconnaissance mission.
from the radio station , and

Military Hall of Fame
recognizes fallen
nurse, 11 others

Roush
we heard that there was a
contest to find (band member) Zach Tyler,". Roush
remembers. "We chased him
through Charleston at 80
miles ?.n hour, and we got
tickets to their concert,
where we met the whole
band.
"My friend had to dig her
hands into pizza dough to
get the tickets, and she said
later it was the first time she
ever saw me speechless,
because ordinarily I'm such
a loudmouth."
So Kim Roush likes to
talk, and she likes music.
What else makes her tick?
She 's·crazy about her collection of teddy bears "too many to count"- and
she never tires of watching
Linda Blair in her favorite
movie,
the· 197 0s-era
"Roll~r Boogie." .
She s_also &lt;i_QQllng aunt-to
her _ . year·old
nephew,
Chnsttan . Mykol Powell,
and a. dotmg human to her.
pet shth tzu, Cocoa Puff.
.fo:'lickey Mouse memorabtha and tnps to the beach
~re ~I so, lops on her
favontes hst.

LARGE 300 Oz.

lUI

111111 ill I

May is
The Inpatient Rehab Unit at Holzer Medical Cenler is sponsoring a Stroke Education Program

•s,.rtla• Now"

When: Every Monday - Friday
Time: 3:00pm-4:00pm
Where: HMC Inpatient Rehab Unit
!tam Men About Focts one/ Figures of Strol&lt;e
Mobility one/ Daily Living

o

Discover the Holzer Difference

Undenlonding Changes 0 How Stroke Affects
How Strol&lt;e Affects Communication, Cognifion and Swallowing
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Modicol Management anr/ Recurrent Stroke ,.,_,lion

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Community is invitedl

for_.. inlahiNiiau abaut it.. daN, or abaut fho lnpalieo~ RoiNb Un~ at Holur Modica! C-, &lt;all

f7•o' ••6-5070

WWWohoJzeroOrg

.

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