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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentineJ.com

·Friday, February a, 2006

ALONG THE RivER

Tough··rookies prepare for one final test
DETROIT
(AP)
downs in the regular season.
Steelers tight end Heath His touchdown receptions
Miller started to get worn out were tied for third among all
toward the middle of the sea- tight ends.
son, when the hits and the
The Steelers ended up getextra games started to take ting a steal in the 6-foot-5,
their toll.
256-pound Miller when they
That will happen to a rook- drafted him late in the first
ie. Seahawks linebackers round. · Miller
slipped
Leroy Hill and Lofa Tatupu 'because he was recovering
must know the feeling. too.
from a spans hernia, but he
But once the playoffs fit
perfectly into the
rolled around, they got ener- Pittsburgh system.
gized. Now all three are playHe started off fast, cmching
mg for a Super Bowl champi- all six of his touchdown passunship, something few play- es .in his first ·seven games.
ers get a chance to do, let The only other rookie tight
ends to do that were
alone in their first year.
")'here was a point in there Raymond Ghester of the
when it was · rough. but the Ratders ( 1970) and Eric
playoffs reall y buJ!t my ener- · Green of the Steelers ( 1990).
gy · level back up and I
Miller fmally scored aga in
haven't looked back," Miller when he caught a touchdown
said. "We had a few days off pass against Denver in the
and my body fee ls great right A,FC championship game.
now."
Tatupu has anchored the
Miller had 39 catches for Seahawks defense with his
459 yards and six touch- aggressive P.lay, finishing

second to Chargers end
Shawne
Merriman
for
Defensive Rookie of the
Year. The 6-foot, 238-pound
Tatupu led the team with 105
tackles, while Hill was. tied
for third with 67. Tatupu
added four sacks and three
interceptions, and broke up
10 passes.
Of course, Tatupu is used
to the ·srotHght . He won the
nationa championship last
year at Southern California.
"I would like to say that's
alii know. But like 1 said, situation, circumst;mces, they
worked well for me and I am
just gratefu I to be here,"
Tatupu said.
STEE-RIKE!
Detroit
Mayor Kwame · Kilpatrick
rolled a strike on hts first
attempt at Jerome Bettis'
Superbowling charity event
Thursday night, putting pressure on The Bus when he
arrived soon thereafter.

Bettis. who has rolled a
300 game, said, "Hold on I
Let me get my ball!"
Bettis left the 10 pin standJn?,He ~as supposed to thro~

'

tote Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ alit·~ l'uhlishin~ ('u.

SPORTS
• High school basketball
action. See B section

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PITTSBURGH - They
wear black and gold to work.
for weeks, they paint their
·face s. and when their
favori te team · announce s a
pep rally, 30,000 men,
women and children shpw
up on a weekday and stay for
hours chanting and cheering
high lights of a ga me already
played.
They're
Pittsburgh
Steelers .fan s.
"Look at them, they're the
great.est fans in ihe wor ld ,"
Mayor Bob O'Connor sai d,
as he shook hands and
waved to people downtown.
"If you cut me open , I
bleed black and gold," one
woman told the mayor
before hurrying away.
Earl ier
Thursday,
· O'Connor joined thousands
for an afternoon Steelers
ral ly that Closed otie city
block.
Pittsburgh is in the grips of
St'eelers frenzy.
Steelers co,ve rage dominates local TV new scasts. A
"Welcome
to
Steelers
.Country" banner stretches
across the City County
Building. Below. a Terrible
rowel dangles from the statJle of late Mayor Ri chard
!=al iguiri. . "Go Stee lcrs"
signs adorn windows of government officeS. Nea rby, an
~atery offers· "the Steeler sub
-·
tender rib- eye steak,
grilled mushrooms, onions,.
wrapped with an egg. and
ioppcd
wit h
melted
American cheese." ·
· Restaurants and supermarkets sell Steelers cookies.
cup'cakes &lt;\nd Other blackand-gold comestibles.
· Even area churches join i~.
In a northern suburb,' a
~hurch sign offers good
wishes for quarterback Ben
Roethlisberger. Just west of
ihe city, a sign in a church
building reads, ·'Go Steelers.
Beat the Seahawks."
· Steelers fans· can't ge t
enough of the mania.
· On SatUrday. the ~rowd
outside a city store se lling
black-and-gold trinkets got
~o large that police closed a
~hree-block area to traffic .
Soon , . an impromptu pep
rally and block party broke
out.
to
Thousands
came
Thursday's .rally de cked tn
Steelers appare l. Sotl)e came
in wheelchairs: many had the
team logo painted on their
face s and mothers.. cart ed
their children in .strollers.
Even a' pet . dog had a
Steelers scarf around its
neck.
An experi in fan s' behavior said people do · thi s
because they want to belong
to ·some thin g bigger than
them selves.
" Fan s think there's thi s
greatne ss with at hl e te ~ ... -,ai d
Allyce Najimy of the C~n ter
for the Study of Sport in
Society at · Northeastern
University in Boston .
''With sports. it'&gt; easy f[1r

people to coq1e toge ther.
That' s why they paint faces, .
buy uniforms ," she said.
"S ports highlight tradition
and hi story and sen timent
with people . This team
might make history, and
(fa n&gt;) could say, ' I w.as
there. "'
· Jamelle Moultrie, '35 , of
Pitt sbu rgh. says she was
born a Steelers fa n.
" I was raised on foot ball.
It 's
hereditary."
said ·
Moultrie, adorned in blackand -g old bal)oon hat ' and
corsage. Terrible Towel , two
Steelers T-shir.ts and large
button celebrating "The
lmmaculate
Tackle ,"
Roethlisberger's shoestrin g
tackle to save a certain
touc hdown in the Jan. 15
AFC
Divisional
game
against Indianapolis.
"Every ye ar, I acc umulate
stuff. I just love the blackand-gold." she said:
When Pittsburghers cheer
l'or the black-a nd-gold, they
mean the Steelers, al though
baseball 's Pitt sburgh Pirates
and
NHL's
Pitt sburgh
Pe11guins also use the; colors.
Then again, the Pirates and
Penguins haven ' t g iven fan s
here muc h to cheer about
lately.
No, this · is Steelets country. its residents members of
"the Stee ler Nation," which
incl udes 975 Stee lers bars in
the. U.S. and 70 abroad,
acco rd ing to the Greater.
Pittsburgh Conve ntio n &amp;
Visitors Bureau.
" We love our Stee lers,"
sa id Elaine . DeHaven of
Pittsburg h. as she snapped
photos of the Chri stmas treeturned-Stee lers Terrible Tree
in the count y courthou se.
"They're rough and tough
lik e the city." she . sa id .
"They give thi s city heart .
It 's awesome ."
"The spirit of the team it 's th e attitude of the people
who (,ive here," said Sherry
Guzewi cz. 45 , of West
Newton .
But · she was n't thrilled
about running into a co uple
of Seahawks fans on her way
to the rall y, especiall y when
they yell ed in support of
their team.
" How
dare
they?"
Guzewicz s.aid. " It was very
upsetting." ·
SPRING VAllEY CINIMA7

446-4524 MOVt[ HOTLINE

FRt 213/06 - THURS 219/06
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30 PM.•
MON-THURS, AND AT 12:30 PM
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATtNEES

'STADIUM SEATING IS N.OW
AVAilABLE
WHEN A STRANGER GALLS
PG13 1:30 3:30 7: 30 &amp; 9:30
BIG MOMMA'S HOUSE 2 ·
PG13 t :20 3:20 7:20 &amp; 9:20
THE RINGER (PGI3)
t :tO 3:10 7:10 &amp; 9:10
HOODWINKED (PG)
1:15 3:t5 7:15 &amp; 9:15
- GLORY ROAD (PG)
t :OO 3:1 0 7:00 &amp; 9:10
UNDERWORLD EVOLUTION
(R) t :30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30

$1.511 • Vol. 40 . No.

:.!

.

Commissioners expect FutureGen site selection
BY BRtANJ. REED
BRE EO@MYDAILYSENTtNEL.COM

POMEROY
Meigs
County · Commissioners
ex pect a state commi ttee to
select a preferred Ohio site for
the FutureGen plant sometime
this month , Commissioner
Mick Dave nport said.
Officials in Athens a.nd
Meigs counties have joined
together in an attempt to
attract the resean:h-baseq
faci li tv to an Ohio River site
in Meigs County, near the site

~

In Steel City, 'football
·frenzy affects .every .
part of fans' lives·.
BY RAMESH 5ANTANAM

l'nlllt'l'o~ • ~liddlt·,,...-t • (,allipolis • l'dwmwy :,, :wo6

.

AP photo
Pittsburgh Steeters fans attend a pep rally for .the football
team in downtown Pittsburgh on Thursday. The Steelers meet
the Seattle Seahawks Sunday in the Super Bowl in Detroit.

. '

Flavors of the Week: Hot and sour
Thai chicken soup with lemon grass, 01

a gutter ball, and I would roU

the strike and be the herot
the NFL's fifth-leading rust(~
er said with a smile.
;
NOT CLEARED FOR
TAKEOFF: Whether the
Pittsburgh Steelers win ot
lose the Super Bowl, there's
one place their fans won't be
welcome .to celebrate or commiserate:
· - Pittsburgh
International Airport.
•
Allegheny County Airport
Authority
officialS
announced Thursday · then~
will be no public event to
welcome the Steelers back to
Pittsburgh the day after th~:
game. Instead, the team will
be escorted off their plane tq
an
area
. undisclosed,..secured
.
of the airport.

LIVING

A new approach:
Meigs Alternative School
tackles students' need, Cl

chosen by American Electric · attract the plant here.
Power for its proposed $ 1 bil Three sites in Athens
.lion IGCC·clean-coal plant .
County are abo being proFutureGen is a $1 billion, posed as potelllial loqtions.
near-zero emissions facility hut the Meigs County site is
that will use integrated seen as more viable .because
sequestration and hydrogen of its proximity to the Ohio
production in a research- Ri ver. Other proposed Ohio
·
based power plant.
sites inclttde ;t fo ur-co unty
At hens and Meigs offi- area near Cmiton . and a site
cial s joined together a year promoted by Clermont and
ago to promote so uthe aster n Hamilton counties.
Ohio as a site for th&lt;! plant.
sa id
Ohi o
Davenport
·and hope the proxim it y of University would be ex pectOhio Uni versity to an Ohio ed to operate some type of
River location wi ll serve to research faci lity in the county

near the plant. if the · Meigs
County site t'; chosen.
Bctausc the plant is rescarchuri ve n and planned l'or ex perimental purposes. a nearby
uni ve rsity wi ll strengthen Jny
site under consideration.
Davenport '&gt;aid .
Ohio Unive rsity operates
the Ohio Coal Research
Center. which brings together
multi-disciplinary· teams to
research l'uel diversi ty &lt;tnd
the production of en,·ironmentally safe and reliable
electric power. The ce nter

.also manage&gt; the Ohio Coal ·
Research Consortium for the
State of Oh io\ Ai r Quality
De velopment Au thority.
There are 211 ,ite' aero" the
Un ited States 'ying f•&gt;r the
pla nt.
and
the
Ohi b
Dc.partmcnt of Energ) expect.\
to· tlnalite a "short lis t" of
potential -;ites by mid-2006,
and announce a preferred &gt;ite
by the middle nf 2007.
When operati onal. the pro:
toty pe wt ll be the cleanest
foss il fu e l tired power pl ant
in the world .

Stabbing
suspect
in custody
BY KEVIN KELLY

KK ELLY@MYDAILYT ~ tBUNE . CD M

..
....

.,..

·~

'

2006 CHEVY TAHOE

82B,Biill~
V-8 5300, Power Windows, l'ow&amp;r Locks, lilt.

. 9rd Row Seating, CD Player

2006 CHEVY COBALT
LS COUPE

811. lllill•

'

• Gallia County l,.ocal ·
Schools prepare for bond
sale. See Page A2
• Ohio University students.
staff restore hurricanedamaged photos.
SeePageA2
• Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
• ca study. sign ups
are closed at 70,000.
SeePage AS

Fiont Wheel Drive, Air Condilionng. AM!FM Stereo

'

'2:1,BiiB· 'Jllilil*
'Jl,llil*
'
.

V-8, AllomGk, Air Condillo~

Page AS
• Robert' 'Bob' Carrico
• Harold J. 'John' Evans
• Louise A. Johnson
• Kathryn Mora
• Ray Perry
• Deborah Lynn Petry
• Helen Sayre
• Nancy Shaw
• Larry R. 'Dobie' Thomas

INSIDE

.

• CIBY S0.1/2 Tl EXT.CAl 410

0BITUARIFS

WEATIIER

2lil CIYY SIIYERADO 214 T8l EnW 40
All (omtliontng'

CHESHIRE
A
Gal lipol is man so ught by
au th orities in the all eged
stabbing nf another. man near
Cheshire is now .in custod y.''
Donald Da\'i d Craigo. 30,
512 Fifth Av~ .. was arrested
by Gallia County sheriff 's
deputies and Gall·ipo li s City
Poli ce at -US p.m: Frida y
on the I 000 block of Second
Avenue after he allegedly
dudcd iwtho rities for several hour, .
Cra igo has been charged
wi-th felon iou' assau lt in
connection with the incident
that &gt;e nt Brandon Blocke.
23.
Columbus.
to
a
Huntington. W.Va .. hospital
with injuri es arising from
the alleged stabbin g.
Galli a County sherifl".s
Cl1ie f Deput y Capt. John
Perry 'aid Craigo is ex pected
to lle Jhn char~ed wt th robbery and ~ id naj1p in g in connection with the incident.
Pern ,ai d the sheriff\ ·
lan McNemarj photo
l1lf1ce rcnnveLi an t:mergency
For nearly 30 years, Ron Strauss, of Ga ll ipolis, has been collecting Pittsburgh Steelers memorabilia. Having grown up in c·all th rou~ h LJ-1- 1 at 9:32
Ambridge, Pa. , a suburb of Pittsburgh, a love fo( the Steelers, Penguins and Pirates has been ingrained into him since child-' a. m.' Frid&lt;l) frLH11 ·a femal e
hood. His Stealers gear witt decorate his living room as he and his friends root for the black and gold as they take on the Seattle rcqu ~~t in g .~ . . .., i:•it anci: 10
Seahawks in ·Super Bowl XL Sunday in Detro1t.
Che,hi re To11 n, hip.
Th e ,·;il ler. later ident ified
ct' . Mi c· lw lle Smt th. 22.
Syracuse. infurmed dcputi6
she h.td hcen in the c'O IJlpany
oft"'' rnaks who were idcnj tified a' Craigo and Blocke in
"It's going to be a great
Tickets can be purchased at a 1e hi.d c . An argu ment
BY ·IAN McNEMAR
every five minutes from noon
tMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTR tBU NE.COM . . until 7 p.m.
·
event both days." said R.W. the Galli a Count 'v Conwntinn
.
enstted bet\\ een b~tween the
The lirst 'Prize to be given Boggs. of the Children 's and Visitors Bureau .
me n. "hll \\Cre identitied as
Mega away at noon wi ll be a 2(X)5 Center of Ohio . ··'Thi s is
GALLIPOLIS Only 10.000 will be sold. her fnc nd' .
·Bash 2006 is planned for Honda Goldwi ng motorcycle. going to pull a lot of people Those purchasing tici--ets for
Crai~o. ridin~ in the vehtJune 26 and 27 at the Gallia Some other prizes include a into southern Ohio. It's going Sat urchiy must be 18'ycar'- de·, back ,c'at . allegedly
County Junior Fairgrounds ·laptop computer. 2006 R~tro to be huge .
old. Those with tickets n~eu st:tbl:&gt;cd Blockc num~ r o u ~
with proceeds of the event to Mustang. dining room set.
" I think people that wait not be present towin .
time' wi th a knife. Perry ' aid .
benefit the Children's Center Ruger Red Labe l shotgun. until Ma y will probably not
Smith told deputies that
The committee has bee n
of Ohio, loc.ated in Patriot 2006 Bayliner, two plasma be goi ng to the event."
C
re~i
£n remm·cd her from the
planning the event since
and Kill &gt; Hill .
Tickets for Friday\ event Aug ust 21 Kl5 and hopes that 1. ,· eh i ~·k and kft the sce ne
televisions. 2006 . FLSTFI
Friday will feature a well Black . Harley Davidson are $20. Tickets fo r the June ' this fundraiscr will give the with the iniurcJ man still 111
known national recording Fatboy, 32 foot Travel Trailer 27 drawing's are $100 each. center the fund, needed to 'help 1 the \'ehtck: P,·m said.
artis t that · is yet to be Camper. one karat diamond Ti cket holders ma) bring build a school fo r the chi ldren.
The' ehtde ·" ,i, later fo und
anmlllnced by the Mega .Bash tennis bracelet, Suzuki 4x4 guests for an additiona l $20.
b!
deputtes on St ingy Creek
imprOve exi:"!ling programs and
.commi ttee. ·
Roctd. a dead end road near
ATV. Remington 1187 Super however. everyone attending improve faciltties.
Saturday's
activities Magnum and over $200,000 the eve nt on June 27 must be
Che,hire .
Crai£0
had
·Please see Bash, 'A l
alle £etlh tled llll fc)o t and left
include cash and prize raffles in cash.
18-years-old .
Bl\&gt;~'ke in the "·hide.
uallia C\'Unt\ EMS tran&gt;ported th e ,·ictlm to a nearl'' Iandin£ '''ne. " here he
"·,t, ri-:~eJ u1, h1 lle :tlth \~t
.tnd fin\\ n t\l the tra.uma
BY BETH SERGENT
re$ign but if th at's what you ·Hatfield and Donna Peterson. found it diffi,·ult to del&lt;&gt;tc c0nter &lt;tt Ce~ht'II ' Huntin~l\lO
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYS ENTt NEL .COM
The bulk of the debate ,ur- the tii1K' h~ kit nc,.,.,,an tn Hn,pital
want to do ." ,
Hat,fi eld
and counc il. th e ' fai r bo&lt;~rd. · hi,
Dugan turned in his keys n\unded
. Ho ,r ltal oiliL'Iah npec1
SYRACUSE - The- belea- and other Items and left the P~ ter~n n ·_. . COIICCrn.,
·
that job and farnih .
Bhx· ~,· 1\l 'un i\C. hut Jtu nell
gue red Syr&lt;Kuse Police Force meeting.
Cunningham w~L' not \..eep ing · Cuu nL·tl th;111kcd .Bu c ~ le\
lllltl1cdi.Jtcil
ha'e the 'wtus
h~1 s been hack on the heat
Dugan's resignation lea\'(!:"! theni in the loop a' far ,t, dec i- fur hi&lt;.. -.en il'L', partiutl arl~ ii1 t~f hi, ~ l 'ndiuun. PL' IT\ ... aid.·
' ince Jan. R but at last week\ Ryan Hill as the ' onl y police- si ons made concc-rmng thc helpin g t'P "L'CUI"L' · FL'Lkra l
loallta
C"ui11' · L&lt;&gt;cal
·Syracuse Vi II age Count: il man on . the syracuse beat. p&lt;ilicc
\1 -tnaCl'lll\.'llt
departm ent. EmL'f'L!\.'11('\
S,·h·mh
Sup,;n nt~nJcnt
meet ing · Syracuse Police Dugan and Hill were brought Cu n i1in~ham stat,·d that :ts ·A.!..!L'Il ~., -nlnn.~..·,· t'&lt;~r the
Charle~ h .uh cllntirnwd that
Chief l).cvin Dugan resigned , back in January after tem p\1- mavor he w.h in d1ar~c of the L,~ndoi1 Pn,11 rqiair.
leaving on ly one officer left rary approp1iations were made pollee Jcpw1 ment Cn~ lll' JIIl1&lt; Ul · BuL·Uc\ ·.., \kpanurc ,.:rc~th&gt; Ri1er \',, Jk \ l! ie h Sch"''l
\\ "' 1~ h. ~L·d ~.f1 ''' n i\ 11 -~t period
to do the job.·
to reinstate the police J{Jrce hut Mtke Jacks &lt;tiso spo~e up. in o11l cmpl ! ·CPLHlL'll .... el.lt- lh~ll the of.t1mc ''hlic Ilk '-L'i.trL·h ''a"
Duga n stated that he was onl y on a part-t ime basis.
L'LI ITL'I\1 l'llll lll'i) ' \\ j]j h;l\l' ~()
. . uppon oft 'u n111 ngharn.
und01'\\ ..l\
resigning effecttve immediNo· dc cisio'n at last week·,
Aft~..·.r Du~an ·, rc-..i!.!rHtllon.
da\' t" ftll. Aft~r th .u JO da1'
"L'rnn· th,· .t.h tL·c "t ihe
atel y due to conllict between meeting wa·, made as 1&lt;.1 if CoutKi lm;u] Kenn" i'lucl-.k-1 cxril\' .' • the nWI'!ll' th~·n •het ill', Jq'.trtmenl. t\1,·~
himsel f and Mayor Eri c Hill will be.:ome a fu ll-ll nw t urned in h~-.. r~·..,IL!I1,1titlll. :lJ'lPl'lllh \Oilll'll!h.' tn lhL' "L\11
tll\lU:.!hl II \\ PUJd l-x· -.,afl' \~)
Ourin~ lhl' rqwlar l '&lt;'UllL'd
Cunningham .
offi cer or chief. or if anothc1' ~·t'fc\Ztiv~ im ml!diatd~ . due h1
"'L'IH.(thc . . tud ~. ·nh hP!lll.:? ;ll l ht~
·' It \ not worth the hassle part -time &lt;&gt;lli l:e'r will he council nict.'linl.!.., uinflictin1! lllCL'llll':.!. lOtHh.'il ~ ~llld lh\.' rcl!ul.1r tlllll'_-· "hl' ,:tid ·
fnr S7.50 an hour." Dugan brou ght into the \'illagL' \\ Hh hi-. 10h anLi dutic.., 1lll th~ ma\ ll! ~l . . o ~IL' ~ IHl\\ ledt:!eJ . .t nd
\ttL' r-,.._hn,,l ]'radiL'\.'' :\l
· th&lt;~it~,·d .lud ~,, h L·d \\'·. Cn!\\
o..,a id tll counc il whom he abo . pu licc 1kpartment.
~l L'ig'- c·Olllll~ J-- .11r f·h l&lt;il'd .
.
.tnd K' "''' Crcd
. thanked fo r their su pport.
\\'hen Bud.lc\ llri~Jnalh III lor h1..., L"(lorh Ill &amp;r~HH.!liH! R\'HS
Du gan\
rc~ i g n a t ion
\
Jtddk
~L'il''''l \\·e~C ,,Jtk'l'ieJ
" I di d not as k yo u to sparked some debate hetwccn n.·1oin~d ~,.·ounL·il- 1~ lilPllth·., a ~,'tlllli11Ulllt\ ... en 1\.'L' \~~,r~ ·· tllr t h~ .tlh:l'llnPn. I--' an' ..... ud .
re,i grr.'' C'unil ingham cl ari - Cunnin gham ·
and a~t,, Ill' \\ ~~.., J\.'llrcJ hm lw. . ,·rei\ l&lt;l hl'IJl rt,· ~ up l.iner
fieJ
.
"You
dun
't
ha
ve
)I&gt;
... ~lll'l' l'l' lllrnL' d In \\ ur~ and
thn;u~lll'lit the' ill . t ~e. ·
Please see Stabbing, Al
Counci
lwomen
Jcnn1
1

Mega Bash planned for June

I

.

Syracuse police force back, sort of

'21l :;:;g· . '22 :;:;:;·
J

.

'

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Call 372·2844
Toll Free 1~aQ0·822·0417
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INDEX .
4 SE&lt;.'TIONS -

· Around Town
Celebrations·
Classifieds
Comics .
Editorials
Movi es
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

24

I'AGES

A3
C4~5

D Section
insett
A4

A3
As

A2
ll Section
A6

t 2006 Ohio \'~Ill') Puhliothing Cu.
_ !, -

-· - ~-

-~ ~-- ---·--------l.---

'

,

•

�PageA2

REGIONAL

6unbap limes -i&gt;entinel

Sunday, February 5,

Gallia County Local Schools prepare for bond sale.·Local. Briefs .
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Officials
of the Gallia County Local
School Di strict have been
working to prep;1re for their
$43 million bond issue. The
bonds are expected to be so ld
on March 7, 2006. The is.sue
was approved by voters last
November to provide funding
for improvements to the district's facilities .
· The di stricted issued short-

Shawnee Lane, . Gallipolis.
Residents are invited to attend
this seminar if they have
questions or would like specific information about the
bonds.
..
An official statement that
describes the bonds and the
school district may be
obtained from the dis trict
treasurer's office. For more
information, contact district
treasurer Sandra Foster at
446-79 17, or Season good &amp;
Mayer at (KOO) 767-7207.

term notes in December and made special arrangements to
January so that projects could make bonds available to ariy
begin whi le the long-term local residents who are interbond issue was prepared for ested in purchasing them. The
market.
Seasongood
&amp; bonds will be sold in miniMayer, an Ohio firm that spe-, mum
denominations of
cializes in public finance , has $5,000 with maturaties ra ngbeen engaged by the district . il)g from one to 28 years.
to serve as underwriter for the Interest on the bonds is
issue. They are assisting dis- · exempefrom both federal11nd
trict officials with the prepa- Ohio income taxes .
ration of an official statement
A semi nar will be conduc.tand the establis hment.of cred- ed on Monday, Feb. 27 at 6
it enhancement for the bonds. p.m. in the Galli a County
The school district has Local School's otfices, 230

Ohio University students, staff restore hurricane-damaged photos
ATHENS
&lt;AP) ·
Photojournalists at Ohio
University , are
he lping
re store streaked·. stained and
moldy . family photographs
by
Hurricane
damaged
Katrina.
About three dozen students
and faculty members at the
school abou t 65 mi les south- ·
east of Columbus . have vol -.
unteered to repa ir digita l
· copies of the pictures damaged when the storm hit the
Gulf Coast in Augmt.
"It 's abo.ut helping them
get bac k one little thing that
they lost." said Eric Wright.

21. a senior from Kansas.
"Pictures are such an integralpari ·of family history. We
have pictures like tliat in my
fami ly. and they mean a lot."
The vol unteers from the
School
of
Visual
Communication were recruited for the project by Rebecca ·
Sell. an Ohio Un iversi ty
graduate who v\'orks as a photographer for The Free
Lance-Star
of
Fredericksbu rg. Va.
While coveri ng the hurricane and its aftermath for the
newspaper. Sell said she was
touched when she saw fami-

lies retrieving ruined photographs from the wreckage
of their homes.
"It's the firs t thing they talk
abo ut, how they lost their
photos," she said.
Sell ' retu rned to Pass
Christian. Miss., thi s week
with the . newspaper's photo
assignment ed itor. Dave
Elli s, who came up with the
idea for what they call
Operation Photo Rescue.
They spent the week in a
trailer, making digital copi es
of the more than 500 photographs they received fro111
about 90 families.

Sell asked her alma mater
for help. The vo lunteers
repair the cornputerized
photo files using a program
· that allows · them to copy
undamaged bits of·the photo
to cover up blotches and
streaks.
Although Se ll and Ellis·
packed up to leave Friday,
they plan to continue their
work by accepting five damaged photographs per person
through the mail.
"They lost , everything.
They are so happy that they
can at least hold on to these,"
Sell said.

Grandpa Al Lewis, actor/politician/restaurant owner, dies at 95
90th birthday, a ponytailed
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
Lewis ran as the Green Party
candidate against incumbent
NEW YORK - · AI Lewi s. Gov. George Pataki. Lewis
the cigar,chomping patriarch campaigned against draconof "The Munsters" whose ian drug laws and the death
work as a basketball scout. penalty, while going to court
restaurateur and pol itical can- in a losing battle to have hi s
didate never ec lipsed hi s role. name appear on the ballot as
as Grandpa from the televi- "Grandpa AI Lewis."
sion sitcom. died· after years · He didn't defeat Pataki, but
of failing health. He was 95.
managed to collecl more
Lewis. with hi&gt; wife at his 52.000 votes.
beqside, passed away . Friday
Lewis ,.,as born Alexander
night, said Bernard White. pro- Meister in upstate New York
gram director at WBAI-FM , before his family moved to
where the actor hosted a week- Brooklyn, where the 6-foot-1
. ly radio program. White made teen began a lifelong love
the announcement on the air . affair with bas ketball. He
during the Saturday slot. where later became a vaudeville and
Lewis usually appeared.
circus performer, but his
. ·"To say that we will miss career didn't take off until
his generous·. cantankerous, television did the same.
engaging spirit is a profound
Lewis,
as
Officer
understate ment ... White said. Schnauzer. played opposite
. Lewis. sporting a some- Gwynne's Officer Francis
what cheesy Draqrla ou tlit. Muldoon in "Car 54, Where
became a pop culture icon Are You?''- a comedy about
playing the irascible fat her- a Bronx police precinct that
in-law to Fred Gwy nne's aired from 1961 -63. One year
ever-bumbling
Herman later, the duo appeared togethMunster on the 1964-66 tele- . er in "The Munsters," takiitg
vision show. He was also one
of the stars of another clas·sic
TV comedy; playing Officer
Leo Schnauzer on "Car 54,
Where Are .You'"
from PageA1
But Lewi s' life oft the
small screen ranged fa r
beyo nd hi s acting an tics. A . "We hope it will become a
former ballplayer at Thomas successfu l · annual event,"
Jefferso n High School. he Boggs said.
achieved notoriety as a basThe Chi ldren's Center of
ketball talent scout fami liar Ohio has been in ex istence
to coac hing·greats like Jerry for six years. The center takes
Tarb nian and Red·Auerbach. in tro ubled ju ve niles from
He operated a successful Ohio and West Virginia and
Greenwich Village restaurant. gives them each opportuniGrandpa's. where he .was a ties to make posi ti ve
regu lar presence - chatting improvements in their lives .
with customers. posing for
Their program involves a
six to 12 months residency
picture s. sign ing autographs.
Just two years short of hi.s ~vith live parts in the program
Bv LARRY McSHANE

Bash·

Lip residence at the J ictional
1313 Mockingbird Lane.
The series. about a family
of clueless creatures plunked
down in middle America,
wa·s a success and ran
throu gh 1966. It forever
locked Lewis in as the memorably twisted character;
decades later, strangers
·would greet him on the street
. with shou.ts of "Grandpa!"
Unlike some television
stars, Lewis never . com- .
plained' about getting. typecast and made appearances in,
character for decades.
"Why would 1 mind?" he
asked in a 1997 interview. " It
pays my mortgage."
Lewi s rarely slowed down ,
opening his restaurant and
. hosting his WBAI radio program. At one point during the
'90s, he was a frequent guest
on the Howard Stern radio
show, once se nding the shock
jock diving for the delay but- ·
ton by leadin g an undeniably
obscene chant against the
Federal
Communications
Commission .
that make up the life experience: Work , education, recreation, voluntary religious services ·and individual and
group counse ling.
The Children 's (:enter of
Ohio's boys horne is located
) n Patriot and Kitts Hill for
girls and is .partially funded
by the United Way of Gallia
County.
..
For more injormarion 0 11
Megc1 Bash 2006, 1•isit
W'rvw.megabash.nt:t on th e

Web. ·

'

· ·

Visit \1W\L childre'nsi:enteroh,cum for more ill[urmil rion on rh e Ch ildren :S Cemer
of Ohio.

He al so popped up in a
number of movies, including
the acclaimed "They Shoot
Horses, Don ' t They?" ·and
"Marri ed to the Mob." Lewis
reprised hi s role of Schnauzer
in the movie ·ren\ake of "Car
54," and appeared as a guest
star on tele"ision shows such
as "Taxi ," HGreen Acres" and
"Lost in Space."
But in ~003, Lewis was
hospitalized for an angioplasty. Complications during
surgery led to an emergency
bypass and the amputation of
h1s right leg below the . knee
and all the toes on his left
foot. Lewis spent the next
month in a coma.
A year later, he was back .
offering his recollections of a .
seminal punk band on the
DVD "Ramones Raw."
He is survived by his wife,
Karen lngeni.hron-Lcwis. three
sons. and four grandchildren.

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

'Singing
Valentines'
offered

Colum bus. .
In 2005, each of the 13
troopers honored recovered
at least five stolen vehicles
~nd arr~s ted suspects in connection with each theft. A
certificate, uniform ribbo n
and Ace license plates for .
display on his cruiser were ·
presented to each trooper.
In 2005, troopers recovered
889 stolen vehicles, . worth .
over $6 million, and apprehended 699 suspects tied to
vehicle theft in Ohio.

GALLIPOLIS - Are you
looki ng for an unu ~ ual way to
surprise yo ur friends or loved
ones for Valentine's Day'l
Colony
The
French
Chorus, a local chapter of
the women's barbershop
gro up, Sweet Adelines
International, will honor
your spec ial valentine with
a serenade of love so ngs by
its quartet, pre se nt them
with a flower and take a
photo with them to serve as
a lasting momento of this
POMEROY - Tuppers
spec ial occasion .
Plains-Chester Water District
Appointments fo r these wili i'nterrupt water service
·'si·nging Valentines" will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on
offered on Saturday, Feb. II , Tuesday on Rocksp rings
and Monday and Tuesday. Road, from the intersection
Febr. 13 and 14.
of Flatwoods Road to the
Appointment times will be intersection ·of Kingsbury
confirmed by phone prior to Road, Eastman Ridge Road,
the visit to your valentine's Hemlock Grove Road and
home, business, nursi ng Cook Road.
home, hospital, at civic, club
Once serv ice is restored,
or .church function s, or other all of the area will be under
site you designate around the a boil advisory until 4 p.m .
Gallia. Meigs. Mason and on Feb. 8. Customers should
Jackson county areas. ·
boil their cooking and
For more informarion and drinking wate r before conto purchase a si11gi11 g
Valentine, crmtatt Bev at suming it.
446-2476 or Su:y ar 992or
o11/ine
at
5555,
w ww.fre11cheal o11ych oru s@ y
SYRACUSE - In Friday 's
alwo.com.
story apout efforts to reopen
the London Pool, the article
read it was unlikely the pool
would reopen this year even
if repaired:
However, that statement
GALLIPOLIS
. Sgt.
was
not a certainty and the
Jobn R. Silvey and Trooper
Robert J. lucks of the State pool could reopen this· year.
Highway Patwl 's Galli a- · The recent fund -raising
Meigs Post are among 13 of efforts by local citi zens are
their .fellow troopers to be happening because th ey
honored with the Ace Award want to reopen the pool ·by
for excellence in auto larce- this Memorial Day weekend. This .goal is dependent
ny enforcement.
Col. Paul D: McClellan, the on how much money is
patrol superintendent, pre- raised for the reopeni.ng as
sented the awards in. a well as bo.w quickly the
Thursday
ceremony
in repairs progress.

Water service
off Tuesday

Clarification

Local troopers
earn honors

Stabbing
from PageA1
Deputies were assisted by
the. Gallia-Meigs Post of the
State Hi ghway Patrol and
the probation department of
Gallipoli s Municipal Court
in the sear.:h . They we re
also joined by Virago. the
· K-9 unit from the Gallipolis
Pol ice Department , and his
handler.
Sgt.
Matt
Champlin, to help in trl!cking the suspect.
The Washington Count y
Sheriffs Department lent aid
by conductin g an aerial
search of the area with its
helicopter. and Middl eport
Fire Department was also on
the scene.

Your
Choice

'/, crrw .

OH

Gallia County calendar
Community
events ·
Monday,Feb.6
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
- Sign-ups for Point Pleasant
Girls Softball League, 6 to 8
p.m., Point · Pleasant High
School cafeteria. T-ball, ages
4-6; slow pitch, 7-9; fast pitch,
10-12, 13-15, 16- 18.
Tuesday, Feb. 7
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Clinic Retirees will meet for
lunch.at the Holiday'.Inn. noon.
GALLIPOLIS . Free
immunizations at the Gall ia
County Health Department,
499 Jackson Pike, 4 to 6 p.m.
Children in need of immunizations must be accompanied by
· a parent or legal guardian and
bring a current immunization
record with them.
Thursday, Feb. 9
GALLIPOLIS
A
Farmer's Update will be held
at 6:30 p.m. in the C.H.
McKenzie Agricultural Center.
A panel of local a~ricultural
specialists and techmcians wi)l
be on hand to answer questions
about upcoming programs and
facilities.
GALLIPOLIS . - Galli a
County Chapter of the Ohio
Retired Teachers Association,
Grace United Methodi st
'Church. The meal will be at
noon, with meeting and program tb follow . ·
Saturday, Feb. 11
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Girl Scouts have
scheduled a Snowball Dance,
with a registration deadline
of Feb. 6. If you are a regi stered Girl Scout, of ahy age,
Md are interested in attending. contact Cathy Parsons at
446-724 7, Charlene Wade at
446-9346 or Sherry Fraser at
446-2689 for further details.
Sunday, Feb. 12
RIO GRANDE - Learn

how to complete college
financial aid forms .at College
Goal Sunday at the University
of Rio Grande. Bob Evans
Farms Hall, 2 p.m. This event
is free and open to the public .
Call740-245-7278 to register
or for more information.
Monday, Feb, 13
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Sign-ups (or Point
Pleasant
Girls
Softba ll
League, 6 to 8 p.m. , Point
Pleasant High School cafeteria. T-ball. ages 4-6; slow
pitch, 7-9; fas t pitch, 10-12..
·13- 15, 16-18.
Tuesday, Feb•. l4
GALLIPOUS - Ga lli a
County District Library ·
Board of Trustees, 5 p.m. ,
Bossard Me!)lorial Library.
Mon&lt;lay, Feb. 27
POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va.- Sign-ups for Point
Pleasant Girls
Softball ·
League, 6 to 8 p.m., Point
Pleasant High School cafeteria. T-bal l. ages 4-6; slow
pitch, 7-9; fas t pitch. 10-12.
13-15, 16-1 8.,

Regular
meetings
GALLIPOLIS
The
Cou nty
Airport
Gallia
· Authority .Board meets at
6:30 p.m. , . on· the first
Monday of each month at tl)e
Airpo('l terminal building.
GALLIPOLIS
American Legion Post 27
meets on the first and third
Mondays of each month at
7:30 p.m. Dinner on first
Monday begins at 6:30p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Democrats meet on
the first Monday of the
month at 6 p.m. at the second
floor meeting room of the
Gallia Count y Courthouse.
For information, · call 3677530. Everyone invited. ·

.

.

• All eligible participants whose questionnair~s are accepted will be processed.
With more than 67,000 questionnaires on.hand,
participation in the CB HealthProject' has

.
exceeded everyone's expectations. Brookmar, Inc.
'

CS HEALTH
I,I~C)JI:CT

wishes to express its sincere appreciation for the
ongoing community cooperation and support in
completing.this project.

•

Conducteid by:

BROOKMAR, INC.

l~nt Hoatth Pro,ect Coo•t1tnB~ors , a~ the t~ ot collecting hea ~h w1lorrnabofl and blood teslmg

417 Grand Park Drive, Vienna, WV 26105
1-800-551-7658 • www.c8healthproject.org

Public meetings

Card shower
GALLIPOLIS _ James C.

•

County Commissioners regular meeting, 10 a.m., instead
of I p.m.
Friday, Feb. 10
NELSONVILLE
Workforce
·.Region
14
Investment Board. 9:30 a.m ..
Inn at Hocking College.

Youth events

·clubs and
organizations

Church events

HEALTH AND
LIFE
CALL JERRY

accept this. I like and respect
DEAR ABBY: My husband
you
very much. We plan to
and I .adopted a beautiful
live together, and if you
baby girl in an open adoption
would like to be part 'of our
14 years ago. "Sara's" birth
lives, we would like that,
mother, "Chris," was trapped
too.''
Then shut your mouth
in an abusive relationship.
Dear
and hear what the woman bas
We promised to exchange letAbby
to say. She may pleasantly ·
ters and pictures when Sara
surpri se yo u.
was able to communicate,
DEAR ABBY: Do you
and have done so since Sara
think it is inappropriate· to
turned I0. Sara and her birth
leave ·a family ga therin~ if
mother talk on the phone four
he
wanted
me
to
..
another
family member bnngs
asked
him
if
· times a year.
.
.
talk
to
her,
and
he
said
yes.
a
child
or him self ~ to the
Although the "open" agreement is not legall y binding, How do I make her under- gatheri ng with a highly contawe have kept our word. stand ? I love Ga rrett very gious· sitkness? This is causHowever, over the past year much and know in my heart ing a rift between me and my
we have become concerned we were meant to be together. husband's family. - DEBBIE
about the effect this is having I feel God brrug ht·hirn back IN HAMILTON, OHIO
. DEAR DEBBIE: Let me
on our daughter. Sara is sad into my life.
I
am
42
and
Garrett
is
43,
answer you in . this way: For
and moody after contacts
with Chris. Chris also sends so it's not like we're kids. I someone with a contagious
poetry about the adoption, · respect his mother very much illness to put others at risk of
which upsets Sara. It 's pretty and know her son' wants her catching it is se lfi sh and
heavy stuff for a 14-year-old. acceptance. Any advice yo u inconsiderate. You have
Chris has rebuilt her life. could o(fer would be .appreci- every right to protect yourself
obtained hi gher education. ated. - DESPERATE TO by leaving the gathe ring. In
fact. I recommend it.
.
married and has two toddlers. BE HAPPY IN ILLINOI S
DEAR DESPERATE: Say
Dear Abby is written by
Despite this, it seems she's
still mourning the loss of her to Garrett's mother: "I love Abigail Van Buren, also
frrstborn. We understand this, your son and feel in my heart known as Jeanne .Phillips,
but feel it's unfair to unload that we were meam to be and was Jou11ded by her
this ·burden on Sara: Sara together. I want and need to mother; Pauline Phillips.
Dear Abby at
cried when she saw photos of be with him. He has struck Write
out
twice
at
marriage
and
is
www.DearAbby.conr
or P.O.
Chri s' two small sons.
afraid
to
try
aga
in
~
and
at
Box
69440,
Los
Angeles,
CA
Should we limit · or sever
the contact? - NO NAMES least for now; I' m prepared to 90069.
PLEASE IN THE NORTHWES\
DEAR NO NAMES: From
Rio Grande and Oak Hill Banks
my perspective, .the letters,
photographs and the quarterly phone calls are excessive.
And for ·the birth mother to
Rio (irandc vs Wilhcr!'nrcc
send "heavy" poetry in an ·
effort to offload her guilt and·.
Tucst!av, l·chruan 7th
pain at plaCing her child for .
Wolllcn \ : Cl :OO 1) .111
adoption is selfish. Because
the contact with her birth
~kn\ : X:OO p.lll.
mother is depress ing your
d11Ughter in stead of being
All Area Youth Basketball Teams - - uplifting. it's time to ask Sar~
and their coaches attending· will be recognized at halftime'
what she thinks - and take
(gi rls dunng
halftime. boys dunng men 's halft1me)
your cue from her.
. DEAR. ABBY: After 20
years of marriage to an abusive
n1an, I finally divorced him.
One nigh t I was feel in·g ·
depressed: so I contac ted
"Garrett," an old high schoo.l
sweet.heart. We .e nded up
rea lly clicking. Garrett has
heen married tw ice. Both hi s
ex-wives were unfaithful and
treated him shamefull y, so
he's afraid of marrying ag&lt;lin.
Garrett says he loves me
and we plan on mol'ing in .
toget her. The problem is hi s
mother, who is very reli gious.
She will nave a hard ·time
accepting our arrangement. I

UNDERW,ORLD EVOLUTION
(R) 1:30, 3:30, 7:30 &amp; 9:30

Sign Up Online! www.LocaiNet.com

114 Court Pomeroy

Birth mothers regret begins
·to weigh on·.teenage 4aughter

'

2006

Monday, Feb. 6
Tuesday, Feb. 7
RACINE
Racine
Myers, formerly of Gallia
TUPPERS PLAINS
County, will be celebrati ng Village . Counci l, regular
Tuppers
Plain s
Youth ·
his 89th birthday .on Feb. ·9. meeting, 7 p.m., Racine
Ba seba ll /Softball
Cards may be sent to him at Municipal Building.
Association, monthlv meetRUTLAND Rutl and
Apartment · 227 Kin gston,
ing. 6 p.m.. firehou sti.
464 Jamesway, Marion , Ohio Council nieeting, 6 p.in . ·in
Saturday, Feb. II
xillage council chambers.
43302.
. SYRACUSE - Syracu'e
SYRACUSE
- Sutton
BIDWELL
Claude
Youth Ball League. baseball
Winters celebrated his 88th Township Trustees, regular
sign-ups, 9 a.m. to I p.m..
birthday on : Jan. 30. Cards monthly meeting, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse
Fire Station.
Monday, Feb. 6
may be sent to him in care of Syrac~se Village Hall.
RACINE
Racine
RUTLAND
- Rutland
Holzer Senior Care Center,
Chap
ter
134:
OES
regular
Township
Trustees
meet
in
380 Colonial Drive, Bidwell,
regu lar session at 5 p.m ., meeting, 7:30p.m. Mock iniOhio 45614.
tiation. All officers asked to
Sunday, Feb. 5
RIO GRANDE - A card Rutland Fire Station.
attend.
Refreshments.
LETART
FALLS
Letart
· shower is being held for Mrs.
Go,pel
BIDWELL .
POMEROY
Meigs concert by the Forgivers 4, at
Peg Oliver George, a long- TQwnship Trustees, 6:30
Band Boosters to meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Poplar
time resident of Rio Grande, . p.m., office building. .
who .has terminal ca ncer.
RACINE
Sou1hern 6:30p.m. in the band room .
Ridge Free . Will Baptist
Tuesday, Feb. 7
Local
School
Board,
6 p.m. ,
Cards may be sent to her at
Church.
MIDDLEPORT
1107 Railroad St. , Baltililore, special session to pass resoluCOOLV ILLE - Healing .,
tion to process and interview Middleport Lodge #363, and
Ohio 43105 .
Miracle s &gt;ervices .
F&amp;AM , month ly business ' Evangelist Ken Greene. Ill
LONDONDERRY - A treasurer candidates.
meeting; 7:30 p.m: Lodge a.m . and 7 p.m. at Faith
Tuesday, Feb. 7
~a rd shower is being held for
. POMEROY
- Orange officers to report at 6:45 for Harvest Church. ·
Raymond Diehl, who will
celebrate his 9 1st birthday on Township Trustees, 7:30 meet ing with district deputy.
- Drew
POMEROY
Feb. 19. He is a resident of p.m., home of Fiscal Officer All members urged 19 bring Weoster Post 39 American
E·agle · Township. Vinton Osie Follrod.
non-perishable food i.tems for Legion will celebnite Four
County, · and has been
the Grand Masters Food Chapl ains Sunday at 9:30
VVednesda~Feb.8
engaged in farming all of life.
POMEROY
Meigs B ~nk Program, Ali Master a. m. at Sacred Heart .Church.
Cards may be sent to hini at County Board .of Health, reg- Masons
invited . Members should meet at
533 10 Eag le Mills Road , ular meeting. 5 p.m., confer- Refreshments.
church at 9:15 a.m ..
Londonderry, Ohio 45647. , ence room Meigs County
MIDDLEPORT
GALLIPOLIS Mar§ · Health Department.
Middleport .. Comrnunity
P lowers will celebrate her 93rd
Thursday, li'eb. 9
Association, 8:30 a.m. ,
SPRING VALLEY CtNEMA7
446-4514 I.KI'.' •f H(IT: lf!F
birthday on Feb. 16. Cards can
POMEROY
- Meigs Peoples Bank.
be sent to her at 1821 Chatham
FRI213106 - THURS 219106
Ave., GaUipolis, Ohio 11563 1.
BOX OFFICE OPENS AT 6:30PM ,
BIDWELL
Evelyn
. MON·THURS, AND AT 12:30 PM
FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES
.Smith will be celebrating her
•STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
84th birthday on Feb .. II .
AVAILABLE
Cards may be sent to her at
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380 Colonial Drive , Bidwell ,
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AGENCIES, INC.

----- - -- - 1

Swiday, February 5,

Meigs County calendar

"This ad sponsored by the
Holzer Center for Cancer Care'

992-6677

"Healthcare in Your
.Own Backyard"
pCtperotlon for Childbirth
,
Sunday, February 5 from 2:00 pm - 6:00 pm at the Holzer Medical Cen'ter Education &amp; Conference Center tn
Gallipolis. Call (740) 446-5030 to reg ister or for more inlormati6n.
·

Holzer Canter For CompretJenstye Welcibt Loa• Support Group
Monday, February 6 frqm 10:30 am until11 :30 am at the Holzer Medica l Center Education &amp; Conference Center
Room AB rn Gallipolis. An additional support group meeting witt a lao be held at 6:30 pm featuring a opedal

video preseotatloo for those who are unable to attend the morning aesslon. For more information . please
call (740) 446-5825 .

'

Dlebalu $alf-Menagamant C!a11u fGIIflpolla} .
February 6, 7 and 9 (Monday - Wednesday) from 4 :00pm-7 :00pm in the Hospita l's French 500 Room _
Call (740) 446-5971 to r&amp;gister or for more information about th ese free classes . Please.have a prescription from
your ph ysician to attend .

Sum!cal Weight Loaa !nformarlonal Meeting
Monday, February 6 from 5:30 pm · 6:30 pm at the Holzer Medical Center Educatiop &amp; Conference Center Room
AB in Gallipolis, If you are contemplating gastric byp·Sss surgery. you are encou~aged to attend this informational
session to learn about weight loss surgery at the Holzer Center for Comprehensive WeiQht loss. A support grciup
of the Center begins after the informational meeting at 6:30 pm whe re potential patients can hear test1m0n1als from
patients who hav~ had the surgery., For more information, please call (740) 446-5825.

an

Frftftdgm Fmm Smoking
GaiJIQolisl - Sessign 5- ihe New You
Monday, February 6 at 6:00pm at the HMC Tobacco Prevent•on Center. located at 2881 Jackson Pike in
Gallipolis. Session Five will cover stress managemen1 and weigh! control . Registration tor this program !.s ·
currently closed. Those who are pre-registered are welcome to attend. For more information about
upcoming Freedom From Smoking classes. call (740~ 446-5940.
'

.

.

.

Video 'lhtwjogl ·
Monday, February 6 at '6 :30 pm at thE!, Holzer Medical Center Education &amp; Conference Center Room AB
in Gallipolis . A video of an actual gastric jly-pass surgery will be faat·uracl , with an experienced surgeon
on hand to guide viewers through the procedure,and entertain questions For more mform atFOn, please

Ho!zar Contgr for Comprabansiya Weight Loss Suppgn Group Cfearurloq Special

call (740) 4,16-5825
freedom From SmOking fin Pomt!fOvl - "Thinking About Quitting "
Thursday, February 9 at 6:00pm at the Pomeroy, Ohio. Library. All are· welcome to attend th1s FAFE 8-week
smoking cessation program developed b)"' the American Lung Assoc•ation Call (7 40) 446-5940 to reQtster or for
more informatiOn .

Youth Basketball Ni ht

• The resources available to the C8 .Health Project will allow up to 70,000 eligibl~
participants. When that numb~r is reached, no more questionnaires will be accepted.

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

2006

Holzer t;to~JJ!Ce Dinner with Friend• (Galli« County! .
Thursday, February 9 at 600 pm at the Golden Corral in Gallipolis. For more Information . call (740) 446-5074

or toll free at 1-800.500-4850 ..
Community CoffBB
Friday, February 10 from 8:00am · 9:00am in .the HMC Educat•on and Conference Center Holzer MediCal
Center invi.tes all to an informal and ongoing community coffee promoting con....,ersation between area leaders 1n
business. community service , educa tion , government and pr.Fvate enterprise . Sponsored by the HMC ChaplainCy
Services Department . For more information. ptea.se cal l (740) 446-5053.-

Qlgbatas SYppgrt Grgyp

0n Gallipolis! ,

Sunday, February 12 from 2:00pm-4 :00pm 10 the Holzer Med 1cal Center French 500 Room. Gues1 spea kpr
will be Sh?-ron McNabb, AN .. from the Holzer Health Hotline . CaJF(740) 446~5971 to reg1ster or for more
information .

1

Diabetes Self-ManagiO'HHlt C!a11u t.Jacklon. ·o nlol
(~onday · Wednesday ) from s ·oo am · 12 Noon at Hol zer Med1cal Cen ter , ·Jackson
m the Education Room, located just inside the Ma1n Entrance ot the Hosprtal. For more 1nformat1Qn . please

February 13, 14 and 15

call (740) 395-8500 or (740) 446-5971 .
Freedom From Smgklng On Ga1UooU1I . Snea!on 6 ~ Steytng Off
Monday, February 13 at 6:00pm at the HMC Tobacco Prevent1on Center . located at 2881 Jackson Pike 1n
Gallipolis . SesS1on Snc will cover exercise and assenive com.muntcatJon Registration for this program Is
currently cloeed. Those who are pr•reglatered are· welcome to attend: For more Information about
upcoming Freedor,n From· Smoking classes, call (740) 446-5940.

'
pa rent• WtJo Hiya Loat a_CJlllil.Suppon Group
Monday, February 13 at 7 00 Pm·at New l 1le lutheran ChuidJ on.Jac M.. son P11i:.e 1n Gall1pohs Open to the pubhFactiFtated by Nancy Ch1ld s and Jack1e Keatley If you are Interested in attending. please call prior to the
meeting. For more ~nformation . call Nancy Childs al (740) 446-5446 idayl or 1740) 446-4066 (evemng). Jackie

Keatley al(7401 446-2700. or the Lutheran Chur"h al (7411) 446-4889

·

•

�OPINION

6ttnba~ Qttme~ -ieiutnel

Sunday,' February 5, 2006:

READERS'
.

Christians
face hostility

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publistling Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Diane Hill

Kevin Kelly ·

Controller

Managing Editor

Letters w the editor are welcome. Thev should be less than

300 words. All lerra.\' are subject to ~diting and must be
signed and . indwh' cuidress and telephone number. No
unsigned letrers will be pub/is/red. Letrers should be in good

laste, addressing issue,'!, nor personalities.

TODAY IN HISTORY
.

.

Today is Sunday. Feb. 5. the 3(ith day o£.2006. There are
· .. ·
.
329 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Feb. 5, 1937, President
Roosevelt proposed increasing the number of justices on the
Supreme Court ; critics accused Roosevelt of attempting to
"pack" the high court.
On this date: In 1881 , Phoenix was incorporated.
In 1897. the Indiana House of Representatives passed, 67-0,
a measure redefining the area of a circle, etlectively declaring
the value of pi to be 3.2. (The bill died in the Indiana Senate.)
In 1906, lOO years ago, actor John Carradine was born in
New York Citv.
In 1917. Mex ico's constitution was adopted.
. In 1940, Glenn Miller and his orchestra recorded "Tuxedo
Junction" for RCA Victor's "Bluebird" label.
In 1958, Gamel Abdel Nasser was formally nominated to
become the first president of the new United Arab Republic.
In 1962. French President Charles De Gaulle called .for
Algeria 's independence . .
In 1973, services were held at Arlington National Cemetery
for Army Lt. Col. William B. Nolde, the last American soldier
killed before the Vietnam cease-fire. ·
In 1981 ~a military jury in North Carolina convicted Marine
Pfc . Robert Garwood of collaborating with the enemy while
·a ·prisoner of war in Vietnam. (Garwood was dishonorably
·
discharged.)
In 1994. white separatist Byron De La Beckwith. was convicted in Ja9kson. Miss., of murdering civil rights · leader
Medgar Evers in 1963. and was immediately sentenced to life
in 'prison. (Beckwith died Jan . 21, 2001, at age 80.)
Ten years ago: John C. Salvi Ill went on trial' in Dedham,
Mass., in the shooting deaths of twu receptionists at abortion
clinics. (Salvi was convicted and sentenced to two life terms;
he was found dead in his cell iri November 1996, an apparent
suicide.) Actress Elizabeth Taylor filed for divorce from Larry
Forte·nsky, her seventh husband.
Five years ago: Four disciples of Osama bin Laden went on
trial in New York in the 1998 bombings of two U.S. embassies
in Africa. (The four were convicted and sentenced to life ·in
prison without parole.) Flanked by a jumbo refund-check stage
prop, President Bush asked Americans to get behind his proposed tax cuts. A disgruntled former factory worker killed five
people, including himself, at an engine plant near Chicago .
One year ago : Togo President Gnassingbe Eyadema,
Africa's longest-ruling leader, died after a fatal heart attack;
he was 69 . Steve Young and Dan Marino were elected to the
Pro Football Hall of Fame.
·
Today's F:lirthd~ys: Comedian-actor Red Buttons is 87.
Country singer Claude King is 83. The Rev. Andrew M.
Greeley is 78. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Hank Aaron is 72.
Actor Stuart Damon is 69. Financial writer Jane Bryant Quinn
is 67. Television producer-writer Stephen J. Cannell is 65.
Actor David Selby is 65. Singer-songwriter Barrett Strong is
65. Football Hall-of-Farner Roger Staubach is · 64. ' Singer
Cory Wells (Three Dog Night) is 64. Movie director Michael
Mann is 63. Singer AI Kooper is 62. Actress Charlotte
Rampling is 60. Actress Barbara Hershey is 58. Actor
Christopher Guest is 58. Actor Tom Wilkinson is 57. Actorcomedian. Tim Meadows is 45. Actress Jennifer Jason Leigh is
44. Actress Laura Linney is 42. Rock musician Duff
McKagan (Velvet Revolver) is 42. Rock singer Chris Barron
-(S pin Doctors) is 38. Singer Bobby Brown is 37. Country
singer Sara Evans is 35. Actor Jeremy Sumpter is 17. ·
Thought for Today: "The greater the .philosopher, the harder it is for him to answer the questions of common people." Henryk Sienkiewicz, Polish author ( 1846-1916).

. LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 wards. All lerters are subject to editing, musr be signed,
and include address and telephone number No unsigned letters will be published. Letters .should be in good taste, ·
addressing i.ysues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals wi/11101 be accepted for publication.

~unbap

m:tmes -~enttnel

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(USPS 436·840)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Publtshed

e9e ry S unday

825

and 'others in the public
square.
• When Justice Antonin
Scalia
addressed · the
Mississippi College of Law
10 years ago he gave his priDear Editor:
vate views that "Devout
If you felt unwelcome by
folks in their environment, Christians are 'destined to be
would you go there, or want regarded as fools in modern
to live there? Very likely the society." "We are fools for
answer is "no way." If you Christ's sake," he said. This
were isolated arid told to stay caused a storm of protest
·away from certain places in from the sophisticated
life, would· you wonder why world. , To think that a
this , had happened? As Supreme Court justice, who
astounding at it may seem are "supposed to be the most
this
is . happening
in secular among us," would
America, ti)e land of the free make such a speech. In other
and the home of the brave. words, Chdstians keep your
Our founding fathers wel- faith out of the public
.comed God into every square .
.• The NBC-TV series
avenue of life, including the
"The
Book Of Daniel ,"
public square. One. does not
have to look far into history, insulting to Christians,
a
so-called
or view the inscriptions on showing
Christian
family
is
depicted
national buildings to realize
the dependence they felt as drug-taking, alcoholupon Almighty God.
. swilling, sex-obsessed buf.The direction our country foons. After 678,394 folks
is taking is quite different complained .to NBC, they
today. Leaving · God out ·of canceled the series.
• Intelligent design is not
the equation, except when
miners are trapped beneaih welcome in schools because
the ground, is all too com- it infers that God had somemon today. Some examples thing to do with our being
are · conunon knowledge to here. Some schools have
ev'en changed "Silent Night,
most of us:
• Banning Christmas in Holy Night" to "Silent
America by many stores, Night, Winter Night" for
schools, public properties, their "hOliday" programs.

where home carrier service iS available.

Mall Subscription
Inside County
13 Weeks ............ .'32.26
26 Weeks . ,
'
.. '64.20
52 Weeks .... . ...... .'127.11

Outside County
13 Weeks ,. . .
. . .... '53.55
26 Weeks ............ ' 107.10
5? Weeks ........... .'214.2.1

Page&amp;J:

'

VIEWS

:l?;lunbap a::lmr!l-:l$tntmel • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport: • Gallipolis

2006

'

Obituaries

Deaths

He was~ self emplo&gt;;ed Antique Dealer. He wa' a mem ber
of the Addison Freewill Bapti't ~hurch in AdJiM&gt;n and al'o
was a World War II veteran while servin~ in the U.S. Army .
Harold J. 'John' Evam , 75, ul' Long Bottom, passed away
Robert '· Bob" Carrko. 51, of Galli polis, pa&gt;sed away Friday
Preceding him in death are his parenb and a daughter Kathy
Friday in the comfort of his home while surrounded by family. Jo Perry and 4 brothers.
in Hult.er Medical Cemer. Gallipoli1 .
Harold was a logger and owned a timber business. He was
Funeral Arrangement' will be announced later by the
He survived by hi' wife Belly J. Perry : three suns and
a member of the Tuppers Plains VFW and served in the U.S. daughters-in-law, John E. and Teri Lynn Perry, uf Patriot. McCoy-Moore. Funeral Home. of Vinton .
Army during the Korean War.
.
Rodney D. and Debbie Perry, of Vinton , and Raymond A.
He was born on Feb. 26. 19.\0 in Chester to the late William Perry, of South Point ; 10 grandc hildren. sjx great grandchi lEverett and Nora (Wallace) E\alh.
dren and three sisters.
In addition to hi s p&lt;irents. he'"" preceded in death by his
Services will be II a.m. Tuesday at the First Church of the
Kathryn Mora. 72. of Pomeroy, passed away Saturday at St.
brothers, William Evans, Raymond Evans and Norman Evans Nazarene ·in Gallipolis witll Pastor Boh Fulton and Pa,tor
Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg. W.Va .. after an extended illness.
and sister Minnie Pullins.
Eugene Hannon officiating.
.
Arrangements
are incomplete and will be announced by .the
He is survived by hi s wife, Virginia (Brinker) Evans, of
Burial will follow in1he Addison Reynoh.b Cemetery. Friends Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy.
Long Bottom; ·daughters and sons·-in-law, Linda (.John) may call at the Willis Funeral Home from 6-8 p.m. Monday.
Damewood, of Reedsville, Melinda ·'M indy" Evans, of
There will be a military flag pre~e ntation at the graveside
Pomeroy, Kimberly (Hoss) Varian, of Clifton, W.Va .. , Diane conducted by area veteran volunteer groups.·
(Dave) Arnold, of New Marshfield, sons and daughters-inPallbearers will be Chris Perry, Jeremy Perry, Jason Perry.
law. Terry (Audrey) Boggs. of Mason, W.Va. , John J. Evans, · Nathan Stanley. Bobby McClaskey, and Jack Sexton.
I Deborah Lynn Petry. 47. of Mason , W.Va ., died. Friday.
of Long Bottom, Troy (April) Boggs, of Long Bottom; sisPlease vi sit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail I. Sh~ was the former wife of Charles R. Petry of Mason.
ters and brothers- in-law, Della Coleman, of Reedsville, condolences.
Services will be I p.m. Monday at the Foglesong-Tucker
Ruth (Charlie) Long, of East Liverpool , Janet (Walter)
Funeral Home. Ma1on. with Pastor Greg Collins officiating.
Lunger. of East Liverpool. Paui'(Avone)l ) Evans, of Racine,
Burial will be in Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Letart. W.Va. Friends
special fr iends, Gene (June) . Whytsell, of Parkersburg,
may call from II a.m. to I p.m. Monday at the funeral home.
W.Va., and 15 grandchildren and a special grandson and
Nancy Shaw, 69, passed away peacefully at home Tuesday
caregiver, Tr(Jy Boggs Jr.
.
&amp;fter
a brave two-year battle with cancer.
Visitation will be from 6-8 p.m. Monday at the FoglcsongShe leaves behind loved ones Carol. Paul. Bev. Penny,
Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va.
Helen Louise Sayre. 84. of Point Pleasant. W.Va .. died
David,
Peggy and Michael, and grandchildren Nicholas.
Graveside services will be at II a.ri:l. Tuesday at the
Thursday
at Cabell Huntington Hospital.
Joshua,.
Jeremy,
Carl
,
September,
Sydney
and
Kelley.
Rainbow Ri gde Cemetery in Long Bottom with Rev. Dave
·
Services
will be I :30 p.m. today at Deal Funeral Home in
Nancy
loved
and
gave
to
others
in
any
way
she
could.
Dailey officiating.
Military graveside rites wi ll be performed .by VFW Post Through her cook ing . sewing, knittin g and . bears. · she Point Pleasant with the Rev. John Sallaz officiating. Burial
'1926 , of Mason, W.Va., and American Legion Post 140, of touched many live&gt;. Truly a remarkable wun1an. Nancy will will follow in Leon Cemetery in Leon. W.Va. Friends may call
at the funeral home today from 6-8 p.m.
be greatly mi Ssed.
.
New Haven, W.Va.
'
.
· A private memorial service will be held ai the convenience
'
·
of the family. Thre will be no calling hours.
The family requests memorial donations be made to Meigs
County Council on Aging, Home-Delivered Meals program,
Louise R. "Mickey" John,on, 77, of G[dlipolis, passed away 112 .E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or the
at 7:10a .m. Friday at her Cedar Street home.
Pomeroy United Methodist CJ:mrch, 112 E. Second St.,
"It looks like these changes
Bv KEN THOMAS
Born Aug . .14, 1928. in the Kerr Community of Gallia Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
are goi ng to reduce the risk to
County, she was the daughter of the late David and Margaret
Arrangements are under the direction of Birchlield Funeral
.
.
car occupants, but it's too early
Jane Turner Pickens.
.
Home in I&lt;utland.
WASHINGTON - Design tQ say exactly how much," said
She was a homemaker. a gmduate of the Holzer Hospital School
changes in sport utility vehi- Adrian . Lund. president of the
of Nursing and a member of the St. Louis Catholic Church.
cles and pickups have reduced Institute, which is funded by
.She was a loving mother. grandmother and great-gnmdmother.
deaths in cars struck by the the insurance industry.
. Mickey was pre~eded in death by her husb~J,nd, Lowell Vance
Larry R. "Dobie" Thomas, 63, of Pomeroy, passed away large vehicles. a study says.
Fifteen automakers, repreJohnson on Aug. 9. 2000: her sisters. Julia Prose. Mary Ann
The number of cleaths of senting nearly all of the U.S
Thursday
at
hi
s
residence,
after
an
extended
illness.
Wood, Margaret P. Margoles and her brother Eugene Pickens.
He was born Feb. 14, 1942, in Middleport, to the late Harry driver\in cars caught in side- market. voluntarily agreed in
Surviving are her children, David Vance (Sharon) Johnson,
impact crashes with SUVs 2003 to improve compatibility
··
of Atlanta, Mark Elliot John son, of Point Pleasant, W.Va , " Hook" and Marie Krautter Thomas.
He retired from the Ohio D!!partment of Transportation . He. dropped nearly 50 percent between
vehicles
by
Julianna Turner (Barton) Guillou, of Palo A.lto, Calif.; Brent
when automakers lowered September 2009. The changes
was
a
32nd
Degree
Mason
Valley
of
Columbus
Scottish
Rite,
Harbour (Rebecca) Johnson. of Gallipolis. Caroline Lousie
the height of SUVs or added
(David) Zurn. of Atlanta. and Elizabeth Kinzer (Edward) Past Master of Pomeroy Lodge No. 164 F&amp;AM, with joint impact-absorbing bars below involved redesigning the
Grskovich, of Chicago: grandchildren, Terrence Patrick membership at Middleport Lodge No. 363 F&amp;AM, Past the front bumpers. said the front-end . of SUVs and pick·
Johnson. Timothy Vance Johnson, Bethany Aileen Johnson, Secretary, Evangeline Chapter No. 172 OES, Past Ambassador report by the, Insurance ups to better match up with the
Kelsey Brianna Johnson, Hayl1e Rebecca Johnson, David for Meigs County Scottish Rite, and a Kentucky Colonel.
bumpers of passenger cars,
He was an avid golfer and enjoyed helping with the youth Institute for Highway Safety. and improving head protection
Geoffrey Zurn, Michael Eric Zurn. Elise Rose Grskovich,
, Autqmakers agreed in 2003
Luke Nicholas Grskovich and LTana Rebecca Johnson: and summer golf league ·at Pine Hills and · also the. Tri-Valley to improve the compatibil_ity by installing side air bags . .
Junior summer golf leagues. He was ·also a member of the
·great-grandson. Gabriel Pastor Delgado. · ·
.
The st udy, ftrst reported in
of v.ehicles amid concerns that
.
.
Mass of Chri stian Burial will be at IO 'a. m. Tuesday in the First Southern Baptist Church.
Friday
edit ions of The New
He was preceded in death by his parents and a brother-in- SUVs or pickups dangerously York Times, found the greatest
St. Louis Catholic Church with Monsignor William R.
ride up atop cars in crashes
law, Hobart Cozart.
.
Myers officiating .
He is survived by his wife, Donna Thomas of Pomeroy; a and threaten pa)senger C()m- benefit in design changes
· Internment will be in the Mound Hill Cemetery.
partments. The study wa£ the when asuv strikes the side of
Friends may call · from 6-8 p.m. Monday at. the Cremeens son, Michael (Lori) Thomas of Coolville: a daughter, first to examine death rates in a car. In such a case. the risk of
Melinda (Jon) Karschnik uf Pomeroy : five beautiful grandFuneral Chapel.
children,
Brandon ,, Evan, Brvan. Erin .and Shane: and several cars involved in crashes with a fatality dropped by 47 perA prayer service will be recited in the chapel at~ p.m. Munday.
SU\'s and pickups that com- cent to 48 percent. For side
·
·
In lieu of !lowers. memorial contributions mav be made in nieces and nephews.
Services will be I p.m. Tue&gt;day at the Fisher Funeral Home ply with the agreement versus· crashes involving pickups and
Mickey\ men]Ory to the charity of ohe's chpice.'
in Pomeroy. Ofticiating will b.e the Rev. Lamar O'Bryant. vehicles that do not yet meet cars, the'death rate dropped by
I percent to 9 percent..
Burial will follow at Gilmore Cemetery in Pomeroy. the guidelines.
.Visitation will be held from 2-4 and 6-R p.m. Monday at the
funeral home.
.
A Masonic service will be conducted at 7:45 p.m. during
oses, Cfoo Soon (fade
Ray Perry, 80. of Gallipolis. died Saturday at the Holzer
by
Middleport
Lodge
No.
~63.
·
·
.visitation
Medical Center in Gallipolis.
.
. (Jtocofates CJZ_apidl1' (Disappear
Online condolences .may be sent to www.ri-;herfuneralHe was born nn Dec. 29. 1925 in Lavalette. W.Va .. to the
homes.co m
late Han1n and Angeline ClaY. Perry.

Harold J. 'John' Evans

offer alternatives to abortion
through the assistance of the ·
Crisis Pregnancy Centers,
which are located in variou~ ­
areas, and through the adop-'
tion program. We walk for~
the babies to ' fight birth
defects, why not let O~f.
voict&gt; .be heard for that smaH ,
cry that was never given the
opportunity to be heard L
The Mason County Right
to Life Organization meets'.
monthly 01i the first Monda}!
night at fi p.m. at various "
Dear F;ditor:
.
chur(h
locations. The next'
I ain extremely pleased to
have a pastor such as Pastor meeting will held Feb. 6 ~t.;
Alvis Pollard of the First the Wesleyan Holiness
Baptist Church, Gallipolis, ~hurch dining h~ll. ~300
Ohio, that showed courage, Lincoln Ave., Point Pleasant: ·
strength and divine wisdom W.Va. The Gallia County·.
on Jan. 22 by sharing 'God's· Right to Life meets the secWord regarding abortion on ond Tuesday of the month at '
Sanctity of · Life Sunday. the St. Louis Catholi'c
. May God work in the minds Church, 85 State St.,".
'
and hearts of other church Gallipolis, at 7:30p.m.
Partial bir,th abortiom·_·
pastors and leaders to have
Five
more seconds and they ·
these same bold characteris. 'would go . to the cradle,
tics!
Jeremiah
I :5 states: instead of the grave. Jesus
"Before I formed thee inthe .states in Matthew I 0:28 :
belly I knew thee, and before " And fear not them which
thou camest forth out ofthe kill the body, but are not able .
womb l sanctitied thee, and to kill the soul: but rather
ordained thee a prophet unto fear him which is able 10 ,
destroy both smd .and body ;
the nations."
The Right to · Life in hell."
God save America!
Organization believes in the
Leota Sang
.
sanctity of life from concepPoint Pleasant, W.Va . .
tion to natural death. They

At a time such as this,
. with the world seemingly
· spinning out of control, do
we really think it is a good
idea to make God feel as
unwelcome as we are?
. Bob Weedy
Logan ·

Taking a
stand

... OF THAT lAST TOUCHDOWN?

SHOW

Sunday, February 5,

' '

THE

REPLAY!

~~
' ..

' '

Roben'Bob'Canico

Deborah Lynn Petry

1

Nancy Shaw

Helen Sayre

Louise R. Johnson

Design changes reduce deaths in
vehicles struckby ·suvs and pickups

Larry R. 'Dobie' lbomas

Ray Perry

CJZ

GIVE THE GIFT OF MASSAGE
Cfo CBrlna SmifiZs and (JtiZers

U.S. orders expulsion of Venezuela diplomat

.Auto scifety made easy
Automobiles are a mixed
underpants on our noses."
blessing. On the one hand,
Speaking · of underpants,
they provide us with benefits
another automotive safety
that were undreamed-of in
issue is raised by a report
the "horse-and-buggy" days.
from the Fort Myers, Fla.,
For example, any 'time we
News-Press, written by
·Dave
get hungry, we can simply
Denes Husty and sent in by
Barry
hop into the car, pull up to
alert Teader Elaine Belling.
. the drive,t,hrough window of
This report states that police.
a •fast" food restaurant, purresponding to an · earlychase a tasty hot meal, spill
morning burglar alarm, saw
our coffee on our thighs and L(ntiJ ·this can be done, the . a man running away from a
sue a major corporation for public should be made ' lingerie store . . The man
millions of dollars.
aware of the danger via pub- jumped into his car and
On the other (or "left" ) lic:service TV spots featur- drove off, but according to a
hand, automobiles can be · ing graphic filmed demon- police spokesperson, his car
very dangerous. The modern strations showing exactly was so full of assorted
car is a complex and power- .. what can hapiJen when auto- women's underwear ·that
ful machine; if we do not mobile antennas are'rammed "apparently some of it got
treat it with proper respect, it way up the noses of actual . wrapped around his head or
.could ·put a radio antenna Tobacco Institute stienlists.
the steering wheel, causing
way up our nose. This actuAlso, everybody should him to lose control." The car
al! y happened to a man in wear nose plugs. l'think this smashed i.nto a palm tree:
Gresham, Ore., according to is a good .idea anyway, · the man then jumped out and
a news item from The because let's face it, nostrils dove into a lake, pursued by
Portland Oregonian that was are disgusting. l mean, &amp; police dog, which he
sent to me by many alert think about it: Right in the attempted to drown. Three
readers. The article · states middle of your face, plainly officers then jumped in and
that the man, who. wound up visible to everybody, are apprehended the man, who
in the hospital, doesn't know these holes, leading directly was charged with various
exactly how it happened; he into one of the grossest offenses, including-and I
was · talking with some areas of your entire body, wish to ·stress that I am not
friends, then turned to leave, with ugly little hairs and making any of thi s upand "the next thing he knew God knows what else fe&amp;ter- "attempting to kill a police
the antenna on his 1984 ing in -there and poking out dog'."
·
· Fiero was up his nose." The at the least opportune times,
What lesson can we. as
article states that the antenna · so that you'll be ·giving a motori sts·. learn. from thi s
"pierced his nasal mem- crucial .bu s'i ness presenta- incident? We can learn that
brane, · his sinus membrane tion, thinking that you're if we are the type of individand entered his brain cavity, really . impressing some .ual who for whatever reason
where it destroyed his pitu- prospective clients, when in is likely to be driving with
itary gland."
fact the reason they ' re all women 's linge rie wrapped
The question is: What are watching you so intently is around our head , then we
we, as a nation, going to do that they have a betting pool should make it our business
about this problem? The going on how long it will to drive .in areas that do not
praetical solution, of course, take you to realize that contain palm trees .
is for the government to you're sporting a booger the
Our final automotive
order a mandatory recall of size of a cocktail olive.
safety issue comes. from . a
all cars ever made, so th~t
In the worcls of the late S.t. Petersb.urg Times artic le.
they can be refitted with . Winston Churchill: "We will written ·
by
Roger
antennas made froin a safer, know that we have evolved Clendening II and alertly
softer,
less-penetrating into a truly civilized society . se nt in by Luann Prosek,
material. sucn as chees~. when we start .wearing little concerning a young man

On Thursday, President tion. This is not reciprocity:..
she said. "It is very important
Hu~o Chavez said Venezuela
was expelling u.s. naval to clarify that the situations
·'attache John Correa for are not at all comparable."
The tit -for-tal expulsions
alleged ly passing_ secret
information from Venezuelan marked another chapter in the
military . officers to the steady ·decay of u,s.Venezuelan relations under
Pentagon.
In . Caracas, a se nior Chavez. who has wamed
repeatedly that Washington
Venezu~lan Foreign Ministry
to
invade
official. Mari Pili Hernandez. has · plans
criticized the expulsion of Venezuela.
The U.S. ambassador to
· Figueredo. ·Whereas Correa
William
lmd engaged in spyi ng, she · Venezuela,
conBrownfield.
expressed
sa id . Figueredo had done
cern ove.r ihe deterioration m ·
nothing wrong.
·
"Thi s . is a political retalia- rel~tion s.

Bv GEORGE GEDDA
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

whose car would not start .
because the catalytic con;, .
verter had clogged tip. 01),
case yoq are unfamiliar .
with automotive terminology, I should explain thai 'a ·
"catalytic· converter" is'
apparently some kind of
thing in a car.)
The man. who was 'late for '
his job at a Sears auto center,
wanted to fix the co·nverter
by drilling a hole in it.l:lut he
couldn ' t find a drill. So, as a~ ·
.traine~I automotive prates- ·
sio11al. he decided to make '
the tole by shooting the con- :
verter with a .22-caliber rifle. :
This repair technique worked :
flawlessly. in the sense that :
the man got out of the hospi - ,
tal the very same day.
Apparently the bullet hit a
. bolt, and the man wound up :
with me.tal frag ments in hi s ;
thigh. The emergency-room ·
doctor advised the 'man to ,
leave the fragments in there , '
but when the man got h(lme '
he decided (I am still not •
making any of this up) to
remove them himself, using •
a knite and a pair of tweez: '
ers. He told The Times th at :
this operation · was success- ;
-ful. He also said that hi s car •
· started . although two day' :
later the engine blew up.
But that is not the point. ,
The point is that if you, after :
shooting your car for what-:
ever reason land I can think
of many) . find that your :
body contain' metal frag - ;
mems, you know where to ~
go for prompt. no-nonsen se ,
tremment: Your local Sears
auto ce nter. They can abu ,
give you a good deal Otl bat-,
teries. tires and brain '
surgery. Happy motorin g. ,
and take that. bra,siere off .
your head.

WASHINGTO N
Res ponding to Yene1.uela's
. expulsi(in uf a L .S. naval
officer fFom Caracas. the
State Department on f'riday
declared a sen ior Vencl.llclan
diplomat . persona nu11 grata
and gave her 72 hours to
leave the United State., .
Spokesman
Sean
McCormack
said Jen;·
Figueredo Frias. the embassy
chief of staff. has been
ordered to leave.

..

Before Your
C8.HEALTH
• PROJEa
Appointment••• .
•

•

•

READ THIS
BROCHURE!

Pick o.ne up today at a senior
center, library, . or PAR MAR Store
.
in the affected water districts only.
'

"

"I lament. and my government laments , that bilateral
rcl ati'ons ha vc reached this
point.'' Brown'field said in an
interview with Globovision
TV "There are many seriou.s
and
important
issues
between our government s
that perhaps (leserve more of
our time ...

MLZER

MEDICAL CENTER

",.,.,. Certificates
For
Valentine's Day
Mark Hasseman LMT, MMP
Please call lor information:

740.446-7 460 • 740-388-8002

He

Special Screening
Available .
l.ipid Prolill'
flu, ,, ,,.,·,un,•
·' "'' '''''"·,·, ·
• 1, ,~, tl Ch, •k~kr t~ l
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• lr t~ h cL' t hk '-

For this special screening...
You must PRE-REGISJE}l
by Monday. February 13
CALL (740) 446-5055.
. Screening includes a

tO-HOUR FASTbeforehanJ

-· . . .

I~( .
.....,.BROOKMAR,
.. ,........... ,............ .......................
.. ., ........

Giff Certilicates Available al
Back To Health Chiropractic
750 First Av.e . • Gallipolis. OH

Fai•·

. . Blood Pressure Screenings

W Choiesterol &amp;

Glucose

Screenings ('ion-Fasting) ·
. . Body Fat Analysis

4f Heart Healthy Food
. Information
WSmoking Cessation

.

·

.Cardiovascular lnstitut~ Info
WAnd Much :\1ore!! ,

Special Presentation at t t :30 am
~3y Michael Swanson: DO. Cardoothoracic SurgeOn
and Michael A. Englund. 'oo. Cardiologi!t.

bnth fftlnt the Hol zer Cardiova.'CUiar lnstirute

"'Heart Disease Update"
·A hox lun clr . pro.l'idl·d In Pfi:er
PhMIIhi L'&lt;'ufh ·aJ, 11 ill ll&lt;! u\'(lilah/i•
.to rhosl·' H'ho uftend th(' pn-:.\enlatitm .

Corducted I&gt;!

...............

,

~

·

)

417 Gr'nnd Pmk Drive. Vienna. WV 26 105

1·800
551 7658
. 1-304-865-4205

For more mformation . please VIS&gt;!

www.cBhealthproject.org

Limited number of appointments
available- call toda\·!
.
ln1 m o n iul n llll ~ lfl ll ll, r ;.tllllh· ( ni!IIIIUIII I'

Free and Open to the Public
Door Prizes Available
lh·.•llh .11 n l \\d li H"' ' lh·p , ttllll t lll .t1 1- l H 1 J l 1

-;-·

~~-'

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OHIO
(RASH INVESTIGATED

6unbap Itme~ -6enttntl

Page At)

Sunday, February 5, :zoo6

C8 study signups ·
are closed a~ 70,000

A two-car accident at
the intersection of Third
Avenue and Grape
Street in Gallipolis was
investigated by city
police Friday. Officers
said Amanda N. Chafin, ·
23, 3326MIII Creek
Road, Gallipolis, -was
eastbound on Grape at
11:40 a.m. when she
pulled onto Third into
the path of a southbound car driven by
Susan E. Clark, 47,
2259 Neighborhood
Road, Gallipolis. and
collided. Chafin was
transported to Pleasant
Valley Hospital by the
Mason County EMS for
minor injuri~;s, officers
said. Both cars had dis·
abling damage and
Chafin was cited for failure to yield while pulling
from a stop sign:

' TiM MALONEY
BY
TMALON EY@MYDAILYR EGISTER .COM

ticipated, he said.
Participants from Mason
and Meigs counties comVIENNA, W.Va.- The C8 prised less than 30 percent of
Health Project took its last the pw·ticipants combined so
questionnaire
Thursday far. As of this week , 5,164
evening, and had closed the people have been processed
link to the questionnaire on the through the Point Pleasant
Web site by Friday morning. trailer, while 5,944 had gone . The total number of partici - t~rough the Pomeroyrruppers
pants eve ntually will be just Plains trai ler.
under 70,000. Dr. Paul
By contrast. the trailers in
Brook s of Brookmar. Inc . the larger population bases to
said Friday.
.the nonh handled far more
So far.· a total of 42.000 people. To date, the Belpre
people have gone through the oftice has processed 14.129
process of completing the people , while 15,022 have
health questionnaire and giv- gone through the I:.ubeck
· ing
a
blood
sample. location .
So far, a total of $16.1 milAppointments .cu rrentl y are
scheduled all the way through li'on has been paid ou t to parApril, and· the C8 trailers in ticipants, $400 at a time . Of
Point Pleasant ' and Pomeroy · that. $2.06 million was paid
should close sometime in the out at the Mason County trail summer, Brooks said .
cr. and · $2 .3R million in
By then, a science panel Pomeroyffuppers Plains.
appointed
to
determine
After announcing Monday
whether -C8 makes people morning that only 2,300 ·slots
sick will have a definitive, remained in the study, the
massive sample from which submiuing of questionnaires
to make a ruling. Brooks is quickly picked up from ·150
calling the C8 study an '·over- per day. the average for the
whelming success," and said. past several weeks, to 600 or
a lot of the credit goes to the 700 per day this week until
participants.
the open slots expired.
At the outset of the study.
Brooks explained that the
Brooks expressed concern total number of participants
about possible fmud and par- will he less than 70,000 as a
ticipants' abi lity to bring the few may not be elig ible.
proper registration. It . turns Anyone who has submitted a
out neither were much of a questio nnaire but' not .yet·
problem. which is to the cred- scheduled an appointment
it of the communities that par- wi ll be contacted, he said.

Kevin Kelly/photo

Report shows officer hit by
fellow officer's bullet during raid
Borgenschutz
suffered
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
police officer who was shot · minor injuries from the bullet
when a SWAT team raided a that hit her bulletproof vest.
{'olice said Wilson, 45,
retirement home was hit by
another officer's bullet, fired on the officers afterthey
knocked on hi s door at the
according to police repons.
Police
Sgt.
Michael Eastland Manor assisted livWoods had originally said ing facility.
He was charged with feloOffice'r Jane Borgenschutz
was hit by a f:!ullet from niou s assault, and other
retirement home resident charges against him are pend"
Gregory Wilson, who was ing·,.schwab said.
arrested Sunday after police
Residents called police
said he threatened residents after the y said an armed man
was threatening people,
with a gun. ·
.However. an investigation pol ice sa id.
Wilson was transferred to
showed that Borge nschutz
was struck after a shot fired Franklin· County Jail on
by one of the other officers . Friday after being treated at
ricocheted . and hit her, Grant Medical Center for a
spokeswoman Office'r Belly minor gunshot wound tn
hi s arm.
Schwab said Friday.

Local Weather
Sunday...Cioudy with a 40
percent chance of snow
showers. Much cooler with
highs in the lower 30s. West
winds around 15 mph wit h
gusts up to 30 mph .
Sunday
night ... Mostl y
cloudy. Cold with lows in the
lower 20s. West winds 10 to .
15 mph with gusts up to 15
mph.
·
· Monday ... Partly c'loudy.
Highs in the mid 30s. West
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Monday
night
and .
Tuesday... Mostly
clear.

1

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&amp;unbll!' uti me~ -~tntinel

Inside

Bl

, Defender~ win' again, B2
Blue Devtl s rally to beat Logan , B2
Lady Defenders win third straight, B2
.
Southern falls to Trimble, B3
Panthers ton powerful for Raiders, BJ
H.S. Scoreboard, B4

Sunday,February5,20o6
•

Eagles
rally at
.Miller

I

Runnin' Rebels
crush St. Joseph
South Gallia' s
Waugh scores
l,OOOth point

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM ·

CORNING - For three
quaners
Friday,
Miller
appeared to ha vc the best of
both Eastern and Nathan
Cozart. ·
The Falcons led 39-30 headed into · the
final period,
and the hosts
had also held
Cozart, who
a v e.r a~ e s
Y/.9 poltltsper-game, to
JUSt II over
that
same
span.
But ' · you
Rawson
know what
they say. looks can be deceivmg.
The Eagles used a 25· 11
fourth quarter surge, including
a dozen from the senior southpaw, to rally · back for an
impressive 55-50 victory in
. Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking Division· action.
EHS ( 10-6, 5-4) went on a
·I0-0 run over the opening 2:45
of the fourth to establish its
first lead (40-30) since midway through the first period.
then never trailed the rest of
the way in securing the club's
third consecutive triumph.

Please see Eagles, Bl.

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MY DAILVTRIBUNE.COM

MERCERVILLE ·Curt
Waugh scored 17 points and
became the third boys player in
South Gallia basketball history
to surpass · the I ,000-poirit
plateau for a career during
Friday' s 92-55 thumping of
lrontoo St. Joe.
Waugh joined Jason Merri ck
and Josh Waugh. hi s brother. in
that prestigious club with 24.2
seconds left in the first half
·after making the ·. first of two
free throw attempt,.
After a public announcement
to recognize the feat, Waugh
sank tl)e second charity toss to
give the Rebels a convincing
43-19 advantage.
The game was never in doubt
the rest of the way. South
Galli a ( 13-3) led by as many- as
42 points (73-3 1) with six minutes left in the contest.
Afterward the S&gt;nior poiin
guard spoke about hi-s great
accon'tplishqlent, as well as the
irony of it.
" It means a l.ot. I never
thought of my se lf as much of a

· scorer. but I guc's I got to a
thousand." Waugh· commented .
"My brother did the same .
thing. made his I.OOOth point
on a foul shot. That\ pretty
cool."
Waugh al\p had team-highs
with four ass i st~, four s te a l~&gt;.
three offe nsive rebounds and.
two blocb in the triumph .
SG HS
coach
Donnie
Saunders , who has coached
Waugh the last three seasons,
had nothing but praise for his
floor general.
·-r m rea ll y proud of Curt.
rIll proud of what he has
accomplished. and he ha' defi nitely helped me accomplish
some things here. at South
Gallia." Saunders sai d proudly.
··curt has been a big part of this
program since he was a fresh man. He has been a leader ever
since ."
And every good leader
makes the people around him
better. as the Flyers (7.9) found
out.
The Red and Gold shot 50
percent (29-of-58) in the victory. including 6-of-14 from
three-point le rritory for 43 percent. In fact. the Rebel s had
on Iy one quarter w,here they
failed lo shoot 50 percent.
· SGHS con nected on just 6nf- lli 'hot attempts (38 per"

Please see Rebf;ls, Bl

· Bryan Walters/photo

South Gallia's Curt Waugh puts up a shot between St.
Joseph defend~rs Ryan Waginger (30) and Clay Crum (22)
during the Rebels' 92-55 victory on Friday in Mercerville.
Waugh scored his 1,000th point in the win and ·south Gallia
improved to 13-3 overall .
\

"

0

Lows around 20. Highs in the
upper 30s.
Tuesday·
night
and
Wednesday... Partly cloudy.
Lows in the lower 20s. Highs
in the mid 30s.
Wednesday night and
Thursday ... Mostly cloudy
with a 40 percent chance . of
snow showers. Lows in the
mid 20s. Highs in the mid 30s.
Thursday night and
Friday...Mostly cloudy with
a 30 percent cha.nce of snow
showers. Lows in the upper
20s. Highs in the upper 30s.

These are just a few of the many sen·ices .
af Pleasant Valley Hospital \rhcrc ~·ou will ·
find millions of dollars \H&gt;rth of tccllllolo~y.
.medical and technological sp~cialish
and dozens of options, all to !real ·
_just one nmdition ... THE l-It ·\L\\ 0\E.

Local Stocks
ACI- 85.01
AEP -36.10
Akzo -48,30
Ashland Inc. - 64.08
BLI-13.44
B()b Evans- 27.07
BorgWamer - 54.77
CENX- 35.74
Champion - 4.28
Charming Shops 12.48
City Holding- 36.55
Col- 49.01
DG -17.20
DuPont - 38.90
Federal Mogul -:- .36
USB- 29.30
Gannett - -62.31
General Electric 32.85
GKNLY- 5.25
Harley Davidson 52.45
JPM- 39.53

..

Kroger - 18.63 .
Ltd. - 23.16 .
'
NSC- 49.24
Oak Hill Financial . 31.97
OVB- 25.10
BBT- 38.63
Peoples- 29.02
Pepsico - 57.34
Premier .:_ 15.72
Rockwell - 64.49
Rocky Boots - 22.97
Sears - 119.44
Wai·Mart - 45.49
Wendy's - 58.17
Worthington - 19.90
Daily stock reports are ·
the 4 p.m. closing
quote&amp; of the previous
day's transactions, provided by Smith Financia.l
Advisors. of Hilliard
· Lyons In Gallipolis.
'

J\l

1 1_

~:\ Hl,Lt

~""

~~·

Gallipolis
2145 Easlern Ave.

'

(740) 446-2407

'

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.

'

.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'Cia!~~¥ illo illll010111140fl11Y I RtrrililfJ Cnt ROCI"'l tl«p II if ~ lt.n II iliff illtray &lt;Ills ~II red ~ '"""'"" ~ !ti!IIIICI fldtral telecoro ,.,..,, $bit 111C1 Ffti&lt;JIIJIMtlet
s.nteo clilrjn; llld ""~""'"' ca~1111r·lmtd and r . --us..t still IIICI
CirliiNI.Tllal•• .n ot"''"' IO"'..,.m~oqui&lt;ld eurus.

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

CoWirap 11"" av!llaole '" 011 mas.~ &lt;X!I'~Ie map~ stores lot o.t11ls.lionited-tlmelf1or. Olhlr coojrfjons 1M rtStn~IOnS!oP~- ~ co~racl aoo ~~• ~~~ broclu~ ~~del !ill. Up to 136ICIIVII&lt;&gt;II toe
'llll''" Equrpmen1 once '"d ""tab' ''~ may"~ by moM brty T!rninltion feo , ~ '' cal»&gt;le&lt;l mtill 30 d8l',lll!l!ahe1 $111 So,..'~"'' impo" lll&lt;litonol te...lllos 1o1 cakul~ol based oo
pnq, at uoaciiVated eQuipment Rllllll Carj, Pr&lt;e10l NOOa 6101"""'"' be lore 110 rna~- • reo.teearn ' "' ~ioge DOJICha"- aM 11!!' ""''"1"""011 pe&lt; p11or&lt; '" $99 99 ar&lt;l $69 99.respe&lt;ti-lely.
IW ot M R!ZR bel"' d~a package DOJ•hase "d 2 I"~"""" ''"""""' " 1219 99 Pnce ~ BIICIIWR bel"' ISO ma~l -rn ll!late c!ld. data p!Ciage pun:hase. aor1 1-year servrce '1""'"11"
1199 99 AIIOll 11}-11 wee~s 1(1 rebatecild R!IJ~e "'d not "''l abi! at !II locat&lt;&gt;IS ~'" be wstorner to 30 wnso:ulll'e day! . Mv~ be oo.tmao.l b) ll20/01. t$999 mm1mom data o.Wge DOJ•ha,.
reQtJ~red Ci!p¥ Nation: C1ngul~r res'.rtts I~ nght to termmate rwr Y.lMCe rile~ thanW% of :Mir u$age OYer ltllft CMsecutive brltint eycles tS on Cr ~tui iHMned $)'Siems CusiOiler mu'&gt;t ill use~
·• PIOCIImmol•lh Cmgul!l w,l!lm' Oll~ued roammg d~&gt;bas•, 111 ha~ 1• •1~1 addllss ar&lt;l l1" mthe ••• ••h(h sub~tnoliOfliS made 01006 Cmgu11rWirO&lt;ss ~I
llseMd

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2520 Vallcv.

DriH~

• Pumt Pbbant. \\\ • 201-bcd Lll· ilit\.

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301-675-tfJtfO
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OHIO VALLEY CHIUSTIAN

PREP BASKETBALL
Blue Devils rally
to beat Chieftains
'

Sunday, February 5; 2006

65 I CROSS

L\NJ~S CHIUS'llAN

46

to grab the two point victory.
The g_ame began like it .
LOGAN - It's not over would be the tight battle it
until it 's ov·er. Coaches drill ended up being as th e .team s
this phrase into the heads of played to a narrow 13-12
players all the time and edge after one quarter uf
sometime s, coach is right.
play. .
Down 45-36 with 3:26
Gallia Academy finally
_,...:.,...., remainin g began to pull. out front in
in
the the second eight minute s
game , the with an 1! -9 edge as the
G a I I i a Blue Devils took a 23-22
Academy lead over the struggling
Blue Devils Chieftains into the break.
From there , Logan began
(8-7)'put qn
an tmpres- to pile un points with !2 in
sive perfor- the third quarter and II in
m a n c e , the · fourth , as Gallia
scoring · the Academy
could
only
Haggerty
f(na l
II muster !2 total points in the
in two quarters combined until
points
the contest while holding tlie II point run the team
the Chieftains scoreless on put together over the last
their way to a tight 47-45 three minutes of the game.
Gallla Academy was led
victory Friday night · in
by Haggerty with his 18
Logan.
Jayme Haggerty paced points, !2 of which came
the Blue Devil surge with from 3-point land, followed
his game-high '!8 points to by Jeff Golden With nine
help push his 'team past point s, Shawn Thompson
rival Logan in the closing with eight points , Shaphen
seconds .
.
Robinson with six points
Another interestin g fact and Travi s· Stout with four
in the game was that points.
Ha ggerty's missed free
Logan . was paced by
throw with only two sec- Lucas Wright with 15
, onds left on the clock points, Clayton Frederick
marked the only free throw and Jon Neff with eight
attempt on the evening by points. Alex Wallace with
the team, !;JUt it didn't mat- . seven
points , Andrew
ter as Gallia Academy McKee with five points and
erased the nine-point d~ficit John Ruff with two points.

PageB3

PREP BASKETBALL
Christman conquers Southern Junior High Basketball Roundu.P
iunba~ lim~ -itntintl

BY

Sunday,Februarys,2oo6

Scorr WoLFE

that the 41 -3 3 halftime lead .
Southern changed up its
defense at halftime and limited Christman to just six, but
Chaz Mahl er and Anthony ·
Dixon pick~;.d up the pace
with nine and 12 points
respec tively in the seco nd
half. Southern played well
overall, but the offense sputtered in the second half. After
three rounds Trimble led 5945.
.
Southern made a mini-runlate in the game, but it was
too little too late. An 18-1.0
finish from Trimble ·finished
off the game at 78-55 .
Southern hit 21-of-58 overall, hitting 13-of-35 two's, 8of-23 three's, and 5-of-8 ill
the line. Southern had just 22
'rebounds (C rouch 6), 16
assists (Pape 7, Sellers 5), no
steals, 12 turnovers and II
fouls.
Trimble had 44 rebounds ·
(Christma·A 15),. 19 assists.
four steal s. II turnovers and
12 foul s.
Southern dropped the
re serve
game
39-38.
Trimble' s Kacey Cruse had ·
II , Taylor Russell ' nine, and
Adam Mulford five. For
Southern Kreig Kleski had
13, Bradley Brown nine,
Chris Burkhammer six and
Weston Roberts four.
South ern goes to Ohio
Valley Christian on Tuesday..

SPORTS CORRESPON DENT

STAFF REPORT

SPORTS®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Brad Sherman/photo

Ohio Valley Christian's Drew Scouten (40)'makes a quick move to the basket as Cross Lanes Christian's J.K Fallin (5) looks
on during boys bas~etball action Frjday· at the First Baptist Church Activities Building in Gallipolis. The Defenders won their second straight game. 65-46.
. .
.
·
.
.
·
.

.

OVCS girls take ·
down Cross Lanes

Defenders win another
Long delay doesn't ·
phase OVCS in win
over Cross Lanes

The' rest of the contest he's consistent. He's been 13 or 14
was played straight points every nighi."
through, with only a . Zach Weber added nine points and I0
three-mmute
break rebounds for .th e winners .. Richard
between the second and McCreedy dished out four assists and
thtrd . quarters and the scored five points .
regular one mmute
~ross Lanes was without leading scorBv BRAD SHERMAN
before the final pe~wd. er Jo~h Brotsky, who had to sit out the
ssHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .coM
When play finally game after receiving two technical fouls
.
.
resumed, the Defenders e.~rlier in th.e week. Along with King,
GALLIPOLIS - Anybody who has
mcreased the lead. to J.K. Fallin helped pick up the scoring
tried the popcorn at Ohio Valley Coughenour se~en after four qutck . slack with II points . Micah Moles and .
Christian knows it's delicious. But perpotnts and held a ftve- Steven Cumberledge chipped in six and
haps it was more than .just a ·buttery
pomt edge startmg the five respectively.
snack during the Defenders' 65-46 boys
thtrd quarter-. and that
With the win, OVCS (4- 15) 'earned a
basketball victory oveF. Cross Lanes
was when OhiO Valley season split with Cross Lane s (3-11 ),
Christian on Friday.
Ct hnsakttant really began which won the earlier rrieeting 50-49 on
0 m· e 1 s move.
· o t·t· the han d of Brotsk y.
It ·may have a Iso b.een a momentumC
L
, C ·b a buzzer-beater
1
..
f
t
ross
anes
a
e
F
.d
.
.
.
. h 1.
sustamer, o sor s.
.
King, who led all scor- . n ay s ~~7 came JUSt one ntg _tater
A popcorn spill before the game eveners with 23 points, made OVCS had a\ engcd .another earher loss
tually resulted in a 40-minute delay in
a pair of free throws to - defeaung Hannan by 28 pomts m
the second quarter. as well as the elimicut the OVCS lead 'to Ashton, W.Va. Before. that. the
nation of a traditional halftime - meanthree. Burleson's team, Defenders had dropped 14 tn-a-row.
Carr
though , answen;d with
But wtth the end of the regular season
ing the final minute s of the second quarter, a·s well as the final fwo quarters, an 8_2 run to go up by double figures.
drawmg_near; and the postseason . tourOhio Valley Christian's Drew Scouten nament JUSt ar~und the corner. 11 appears .
were played consecutively.
Ohio Valley Christian, which led by scored eight of his team-high 19 points that Burleson s t_eam ts at last ~ettmg .
j ust three when play was halted. took in the third quarter as the Defenders healthy and peakmg at the nght.ttme.
advantage of the unusual si tuation and built a nine-point cushion headed into
"The biggest key right now is, we' re
outscored the Warriors 41-25 the rest of the final stanza. He also had 11 almost !00. percent back," he said of his
the way en route to its first back-to-back rebounds to complete a double-double. team, which has been ,banged-up all
wins since early December. . .
"Drew had a really good game," said yeac"Other than Garrison (Salisbury),
"I think we loos.ened up. We were Burleson . "Because (Luke) Stinson got who ts probably _not gomg to see any
really tight in that first quarter - both in fo ul trouble early. it was a situation time thi s season ... everybody's back to
. teams . were tight," said .Ohio Vall ey where Drew stepped up.''
·
almost 90 percent and it"s showing.
C~.mtta.n coach Bill Bu rleson,
. . Stinson. who haclto deal with King in
''We can push them in practice. now
I thm~ that httle delay, and then wtth the post , eventuall,y fouled out and harder, Now we can turn up our de tense,
bastc.ally no halftune, we ne ver lost our scored just one point.
we don't have to lay back in a zone and
momerytum ." .
Brandon Coughenour and Zack Carr protect. And the bench play - they're
There was 3:06 remaining before half- added 17 and 14 points respectively for coming on and giving me big minutes
time when a referee stopped the ga me the winners. and the backcourt duo was and being contributors.
" In practi ~e, a lot of times we had two
after he noticed butter being tracked all key in helping OVCS pull away in t~e
over the floor. A fan had spilled some fourth period.
or three starters sitting' out to keep them
The two combined to score 16 points healthy. y,/e had never reall y ge lled, and
popcorn on the baseline ju 't pri or ·to tipoff.
during .that final span as the Defenders· the last couple of nights we ' ve gelled."
Officials mopped both end., of the outscored Cross Lanes 24-14.
Ohio Valley Christian plays host to
floor, but when attemp ts to dry the 'sur-.
"Brandon. in the last two"and-a-half Southern in the regul ar season tinale 'on
face qui ckly fai led. it was announced to three weeks. has really turned his Tuesday. The Defenders face Adams
that the re wou ld be a 20-minute ga me on. He' s attacking a lothetter," County Christian in ACSI District play
impromptu halfume.for safety reasons. explained Burl eson. "And Zack Carr. on Feb. 18.

Eagles
from Page BI
The Falcon s I H-9. 7-61.
which led 2X-1Cl at halftime.
made just hal f of the ir 14. free
throw attempts 111 the 'econt.l
hal f. That 'pe ll also included a
5-of-!0 performance in the
final eight minutes.
.
· The Green and White w nnected on 23-of-47 ticld gn"l
attempts . .for 49 percent ,
including .3-of- 11 from th reepoint territory for 27 pcrccn1.
The gue,ts were also sligh.tly
worse ·at the stripe with" o-ol·
14 outing for 4.1 percent.
Conver,ely. MHS me~de 20of-43 attempt.\ lor 47 percenl.
including 3-of-15 lrom heh ind
the arc for J1 percen t. Miller\
'biggest leau of the nigl~ t \\'a'
15 poinh. 2X-J.1. late 111 th e

second quarte r.
The Eagles had 15 turnovers
Cutart fini shed wi th a in the win. two less than the
game- high 23 poinh. and also opposition.
added team-hi ghs of seven
Eastern led 4-2 with 5:30
rehounds, six a'&lt;;ists arld two left in the opening frame and
blocks tu the winning cause.
held on to that lead until Miller
Kyle Rawson followed with tied the ga me at I0 with two
13. points. while Mark Gue."
minutes lt:ft. lhe hosts scored
and Natha n Carroll chipped in ju st before the butzer for a 12eight and three points. re,pec- 10 lead after eight minutes.
tivelv. Derek RoLISh. Michael
Miller salvaged a split with
Owen. Bryce . Honaker and a .J 1-27 victory in the junior
Alex McGrath rounded out I he var... ity out1 ng .
"t;oring ,with t'.-vo apiece ,
Kyle Hite and Joe Browning
. Dustin Householder paced both led .Miller and all scorers
Mi ller with 17 markers. and with 10 points apiece. Daniel
Kyle Fisher contributed a dou- Bu c ~l ey paced . Ea"em with
ble-double 10 !he loS\ with !6 eight markers.
poinh and I0 rehounds. ·Shane
The Falcons led 30- 11 at the
Lunipg wa ... nL;xt v.ith nine break.
Easlern return; · to ac ti on
poim.;.
The Falcons claimed a 22- Tue&gt;day when it host&gt;
,IY rehoundin g edge (Jveral l. Alexander in a Tri -Val lev
non -league
hul both 'lJIIads li mshed the ·Con ferenc e
C\ en ing wit h 'even·olfensive matdmp. Game time " .,lated
for 6 p.m.
ca rom c.. .

Chesapeake slams River Valley

Lady Defenders win third straight
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN®MYDAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

CROSS LANES. W.Va.
·- Ohio Valley Christian
doesn't . make. or even
attempt, many 3-pointers;
Sarah Jenkin s thade a rare,
but important. one on
Friday.
Jenkins. who is most
effective in the post ,' nailed
three
a
from
the
wing at the
third quarter buzzer
to give the
L a d y
Defenders
the · lead ,
then Ohio
Valle ,y
C hri st i a n
Burleson
was able to
hang ·on in the fo urth for a
40-36 girl s .basketball victory over host Cross Lanes
Christian. ·
·
The win · was the tliird
straight for coach Chris
Burnett 's team , which
improved to 7- 11 on the
year. The Lad y Warriors
fe ll to 5-8.
Sarah Burleson · led the
winners with I0 points - a
career-high . . Included in
that total · was a pair of
clutch free throws witb 35
seconds remaining that put
her tea m up 39-36.
Cross Lanes was unable
to answer. then Ri chelle
Blankenship split a pair of
charity tosses with four
ticks le ft to make it a fo urpoint ga me and seal the

victory.
OVCS ri1ade ju st 3-of-9
free throws in the fourth
quaner, but was perfect the
rest of the game, fini shing
13-for-19 on the night:
scored · nme
Jenkins
point s and grabbed I 0
rebounds in the victory.
Blakenship and
Kristi
Dav is each scored eight
points and Kalee Edmonds
went for five to go along
with I 0 board s.
Danielle Duff shouldered
the lion's share of the
offense for Cross Lane s. as
she scored 20 points . Katie
Monk added nine while
Sarah
Garlo.w
and
Courtney Clark chipped in
four and three respectively.
Holding Monk to nine
was key us she had burned
the Lady Defenders for 30
points in their earlier me~t ­
ing. won by Cross Lanes
52 -47 . back. in
late
December.
The game was close the
entire way, with neiJher
team ope nin g up much of a
lead. OVCS staked claim to
an 11-9 lead after the firs t
quarter, but CLCS was able
to cbme buck and take a 1918 lead into halftime.
Ohio Vallev Chri stian
narrowly won· eac h .of the
final two quart ers to avenge
the earlier loss on its home
floor.
Ohio Valley Chri stian
will really have itS winning
streak tested on Monday
when
it
travels
to
Proctorville . to · face
Fairland .

Registration now open for
Entrance into the following Programs: ·
'

Practical Nursing
Surgical Technology
Pharmacy Technician

~dlkad~·
... .
·~

Buckeye Hills·Career.Center
for information contacl the Adult Center at 7-U&gt;-245-5334
rinanCial aid is m ail able for those who qualify

.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

CHESAPi::AKE
Cbesapeake moved one step
closer to its II th consecutive
Ohio Vallev Conference title
thanks to ·a lopsided 77-2~
boys basketball victory over
River Valley on Friday.
The
Panthers
( 14-2)
improved to 7-0 in the conference and can wrap-up the
championship with a win at
· .
Fairland on Tuesday.
River Valley (7-!0), on the
other hand, fell to 3-5 against
the OVC.
It was the second time
Chesapeake beat the Raiders
by a huge margin thi s season .
The Panthers won the earlier
meeting 92-38.
P.J. Rase and Ju stin Porter
each scored 16 for the win-

Morrow

ners t.o pace
five Panthers
in double fi gures.
Je ff
Thornbur g
and
.Zach
Morri so n
each tall ied
II
whi le
T y I e r
Shoemaker
went for t'o.

Br

ya n

Morrow made five of the
Raiders· nine tiel.d goals un
Friday. including a trio of 3- .
pointers. The jf!nior fini shed
with a team -high 13 points
while Ryan Henry's live was
the next highest total.
Scot Ward, Tyler Thompson
and Jan Lewi s all chipped in
two for th e' Silver and Black.
Much like the first meeting,
Chesapeake jumped out to a

•

big .early lead and never
looked back. Norm Persin 's
troops led !9-6 after one.
quarter and were up 43 -9 at
ha!i'time.
The third quarter s aw the
Panthers extend the lead even
further - 'to 45 points enter- ·
ing the final stanza.
Bench players wrapped up
the
fourth ,
a
quarter
Chesapeake won 15-7.
Chesapeake enters today's
sec tional tournament draw .
looking for a No. I seed in the
Di visio n. !II Rock Hill sectional. Meanwhile River
Valley, also in D-Ill this seasoh, appears to be one of several teams jockeying fur middle position s of the I0-team
Athen s bracket.
River Valley plays host to
South Poi n~ on Tue sday.

Bolin's buzzerbeater lifts Meigs
NELSONVILLE - The
Meig s seventh grade boys
basketball team traveled to
Nel sonville Thursday and
came away with a hard-fought
46-44 victory over the host
Buckeyes.
Meigs tral!ed 20-14 at halftime, but rallied to take a
three-point · lead entering t~e
final stanza. lhe game was
knotted at 44 .with 5.9 seconds
left when Cameron Bolin
rebounded a Nelsonville- York
miss and drove the length of
the floor to hit the game winner as time expired.
Bolin paced the Marauders
with 22 points while Heath
Dettwiller and Jon McCarthy

also reached double fi~ures
with II and I0 respecl!vely.
Austin Sayre chipped in three.
Connor Swartz, Nicholas
Ingels, Aaron Maxson, Joelan
Nutter, Ryan Payne, Daniel
Stewart and Brddley Young
round out a Meigs ream that
fini sh7&lt;1 the re~ular season 5·8.
Metgs begms post-season
play Feb. II at Southern High
School against Symmes Valley.

South GaJiia 8th
graders beat Southern

McDaniel and Hall each
scored II and Harrison added
I0 for the Rebels. Curti'
Hulbrqok and Bryce Clary
chipped in three and two
respectively.
. Michael
Manuel
led
Southern with 14 fo llowed by
Jordan Taylor with eight.

SOuth Gallia 8th grade
girls fall to Southern

RACINE .- South ·Gallia's
eighth grade · gi rls basketball
team lost at Southern on
MERCERVILLE - .A.J . Thursday by a 59-40 count.
McDaniel, Matt Hall and - Hailee Swain scored 18
Bnindon Harrison all scored points for the Lady Rebels (8in double figures as · South 3) and Jamine Waugh added
Gallia's eighth grade boys J 4. A li sa Johnson followed
basketball team beat visiting with six and Crystal Adkins
Southern 37-34 on Thursday. · chipped in two.

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from Page Bl
cent) in the opening stanza, .
and still led 18-6.
.In the first half. the hosts
were !5-of-30 from the tloor
and led 45-19 at intermission.
Conversely, St. Joseph hit
9-of-29 attempts before
break for 31 percent . ISJ shot ·
30 percent overall from the
Jloor and 15 percent from
behind the arc. ,
Nine players re'ache.d the
scoring column for the
Rebels, led by Josh Wright's ·
game-high !8 points. Aaron
Phillips joined Waugh with
17 markers, while both Tyler
Porter and Tyl er Duncan
chipped in II apiece. Dewey
Cantrell also added six to the
triumph .
Seth Williamson, Steven
Call . and Michael Pope
rounded out the scoring with
.
four each.
SGHS also shot 82 percent
at the charity stripe and outrebounded the Flyers 40-36.
Following Saturday's 5933 setback at Miller,
Saunders was pleased to see .
hi s team rebound in a positive manner.
'"We wondered how we'd
respond to the Miller loss and
we really worked on that all
week ," said ·Saunders. " I
thought everyone that played
tonight really responded ."
And since Friday was the
final · game before the
Division IV sectional drawing thi s weekend, the hope' is
that · this lop-s ided outcome
Bryan Wal1erslphoto
will make for an easier road South Gallia's Aaron Phillips (33) releases a short jumper
to the Convo .
over Ironton St . Joe defender Alex Swar ts (32) dur ing the
··we needed a good win first half of Friday's contest in Mercervi lle. Phillips and the
right before the draw ing this Rebels won ·92~55.
. Sunday if we me gomg to ge t
a hi gh seed." . sat? Waugh. swee p with a 4ll-36 vic tory 111 points.
South Gall ia rettirn &gt;. to
'" Hopefull y ton1ght s wm wtll the junjor varsity tilt. Dewey
Cantrell paced th e Rebels ;~.:tio n Tue,dav whe n 'it travhelp us."
The Rebel&gt; \VOn the previ- with 16 marker- . SGHS led els 111 Putnam 'cou nt y, W.Va ..
for a . wnt est with Teavs
oU·S matchup at Ironton St. 2K- 18 ·at interrni;sio·n.
Joe's, 68 -65 . back in January. . . Ca le b Bla&lt;:kburn led St. Valley Chmtian. Tip-off "is
South Gal lia claimed a Jne's and all scorer&lt; with 17 ,luted for 7:30p .m.

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Nathan R1mmey 0 2-2 2, Lasse Bartel 0

SOUTH GALUA 92,
IRONTON ST. JOE 55
IRONTON ST JOE (7 9)
'
Chad Harvey 5 3-4 14, Michael Ba1sden 1
2 A
Sch b
0
Cory Lewis 2
crane w~ 0 o 2. J ,
Add"15 0
0-o
ay Wag1nger
rum
• 1 2·3
· eremy
Q-0 O,· Ryan
4, AleK Swarts
5 1-1 11 . Ale~ Brown 1 2-2 s, Ryan Staton
5 ~ 1 21 69
.
3 2-4 8, Jared Laber 2 1·2 . ota s·
111655
sOUTH GAUIA (13-3)
Tvter Porter 4 3·4 11. Ryan Galger 0 0-0 0,
Josh Wnght 7 3-6 18, Seth WIH1amson 1 2·
2 4, Aoben Coury 0 0·0 0, Dernck Beaver
0
0, Justm Tnplett 0 0·0 0, Curt Waugh
T
5 5-7 17, D ewey Gantrell 2 2. 2 , 6 , y1er
Duncan 4 D-0 11 , Aaron Phillips 4 9-9 17
Steven Call 1 2-2 4, Michael Pope 1 2·2 4,
Josh Skidmore 0 0-0 0 Totals 29-58 28-34
92
St. Joseph
6 13 i2 24 - 55
SOuth Gallla
18 27 23 24 - 92
3-polnt goals-4SJ 2· 13 {Harvey, Brown),
SG 6-14 (Duncan 3, Waugh 2, Wright)
Total rebounds--ISJ 36 (Harvey 8) , SG 40
(Wnght 9). Oftens1ve rebOunds--ISJ 17
(Harvey 7), SG 11 (Waugh 3) Ass1sts-lsJ
6 (Wa~mger 3) , SG 8 (Waugh 4). StealsISJ 9 (Addis 2), SG 15 (Waugh 4, Wnght 4,
Duncan 4) . Blocks-tSJ 2 (Baisden .
Crum), SG 5 (Wa4gh 2) Turnovers-ISJ
22. SG 16 Team fouls-ISJ 25. SG 16 JV
scor&amp;-SG 4a, ISJ 36.

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o-o

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GIRLS 8A9KEI0ALL
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN
CROSS LANES

40,

36

OHIO VALLEV CHRISl)AN (7-11)
A1chelle Blankenship 1 6·10. 8, Sarah
Burleson
3 4·4 10, 'Kalee Edmonds 2 1-1 5,
1
Sarah Jenk1ns 4 0·2 9. Knsll Dawis 3 2·2 8,
Julie Hussell 0 0-0 0, Lindsay Carr 0 o-o 0,
Andrea VanMeter 0 0·0 0 Totals 13 13·19
40
CROSS LANES CHRISTIAN (•
")
~
Courtney Clark 1 1·4 3, Katie Monk 4 1·3
9, Sarah Garlow 2 D-O 4, Oanielle Duff 8 3~ 4 20, Shelby Huffman 0 0.0 0, Katie
1 Outline 0 0-0 0, Kendra Stone 0 0.0 0.
Totals 15 5,- 11 36
OVCS
11 7 ' 13 9 - 40
CLCS
9 10 11 6 - 36
3-Pa~nt Goals-QVCS 1 (Jenkins). CLCS
1 IDuH)

OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN 65,
CROSS LANES CHRISTIAN 46
CROSS LA ES (3 1 )
Caleb King~ 7-a 2~ J .K Fall1n 5 1-2 11 . I LOGAN 60, POINT Pl-EASANT 53
Steven Cumberledge 2 1. 2 11, Caleb 1 POINT PLEASANT (8-10)
George o O·D o, Brandon Harper o o-o o, 1 Tnsta VanMatre 7 4·5 22, Anna Sommer 5
Micah Mole 2 2 •2 6 Daniel McCormick 0 1• 0·0 11 , Char B1bbee 3 4-5 10, Jody Hartley
2 1' Nick Clark o 0·0 0, Jon Edwards o 0-0 2 3·4 8, Melissa Ad~ons 1 Q-0 2 Totals- 18
0 , Dustin Harper 0 0-0 0 Totals 17-47 12· 11-14 53.
16 46
' LOGAN (nfa)
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN ( 4_15)
' AMa Kelly 6 4-6 20 Cory Whito10 2-2 22,
Brandon Coughenour 6 2·3 17, Michael 1 Stephan10 Evans 4 t-2 9, Darby Mullen 2
W1II'1ams 0-0 • MICh ae 1 rig hi 0 0 . 0 0 • 2-6 6, Amanda Green 1 1·1 3. Totals- 23
Kyle Scouten o O·O o, Nathan Brown 0 0·0 10 •17 60
0 ZackCarr61 -214.ZachWeber41-49, Point
15 7 18 13 -53
Henry Patr1ck o O·O o. A1chard McCreedy o 1 Logan
15 14 10 21 • - 44
5-8 5, Luke Stinson 1-2 1, Drew Scouten 1 3-Pmnt Goals-Pomt 6 (VanMatre 4),
8 3-3 19. Totals 24 13·22 65
Logan (none).
CLCS
9 13 , 0 14 _ 46
OVCS
14 1J 14 24 - 65
Ohio High School Boys Baokotboll
3-Pomt Goals-GLCS O·B (none), aves
Friday's Results
Akron Firestone
A~ron North 70
4-11 lCoughenour 3, Carr) Fouled OutS
23
{K
9)
Akron
Manchester
68,
Tuscarawas Val. 55
Stinson Aebounds-ctG
tng
,
Akron Springfield 50, Crestwood 46
OVCS 28 (0 Scouten 11 ) Ass1sts-CLCS
10 (tMree t1ed w/2), OVCS 10 (McCreedy ~~~~~J~~~::;;:~ ~. Teays Valley 54
4) Steals- CLCS 6 (Cumberledge 3) .
Ameha 62 . Loveland 51
·
aves 9 (Weber 3) .• Biocks--C LCS {none) , Andover Pymatuning Val 72, Maplewood
aves 3 (Weber 2) Turnovers -CLCS 20, 62
16
OVCS
·
Apple Creek Waynedale 64. Smithville 54
Arlington 73, Arcadia 58
, EASTERN 55, MILLER 50
Ashland 62. MansfiekJ Madison 58
.
EASTERN (1o-G, 5-4 TVC)
Ashland crestv1ew 59, Ashland Mapleton
Bryce Honaker 1 0-0 2. Nathan Cozart 8 4· 52
6 23 Alex McGrath 1 0-0 2, Michael Owen
Ashtabula Lakes1de 48,
Ashtabula
1 0-0 2 Mark Guess 4 0-3 8, Nathan 1 Edgewood 45
Carroll 1 1-2 3, Kyle Rawson 6 1-3 13
Austinburg Grand A1ver
Heartland Chr.
Derek Roush 1 0-0 2 Totals 23-47 6-14 49
55
Bay V1llage 54 Fa1rv1ew Park 52 ·
MILLER (8-9, 2-6 TVC)
BeavBr Eastf.lm 81 New Boston 59
' Shane Lumng 3 1·2 9. Jacob Elng 2 1·2 6
Beavercreek 61, K8ttenng Fairmont 50
Trevor Mclean 0
0 Kyle Ftsher 8 0-2 ! Bedford 82, Maple His 42
16. Cody Bawer 1 0 -2 2 Dustin
Bedford Chanel84, Cle. Central Cath. SO
Householder 6 5·6 17. Totals 20-43 7-14
Bellbrook 77, Preble Shawnee 44
50
Beloit W. Branch 58, Lou1sv1He 41
Eastern
10 6
14 25 - 55
BeJ1(shlre 99, Fairport 28
Mill
t
50
er
12 16 11 1 Ber~n Hilancl 85, W. Lafayene Ridgewood
3-point goals-E 3-11 (Cozart 3). M 3-15 56
(Lun1ng 2, Elng) Total rebounds-E. 19
Bethel 52. Covington 43
(Cozart 7), M 22 (Fisher 1O) Offens1ve 1 · Bexley 61 , Lick1ng Hetghts 59
rebounds-E 7 (Cozart 2), M 7 (Fisher 3,
Bloom-Carroll 50, canal Winchester 47 '
Householder 3) Ass1sts--E 10 (Cozart 6),
Bloomdale Elmwood 56 Kansas Lakota 42
M 3 (Householder 3) . Steals-E 9 1 Bluffton 69, Mcguffey Lippe, Scioto VaHey
(McGrath 3), M 12 (HousehOlder 4)
41
Blocks-E 2 (Cozart 2), M 1 (F1sher 1). ' Boardman 57, Uniontown Lake 53
Tumovers-E 15, M 17 Team fouls....-E 11 .
Botk1ns 59, Anna 51
M13. JVscore--M41 , E27
1 Bowling Green 73. Whitehouse Anthony
Wayne 54
1
CHESAPEAKE•
Brecksville 71. Amherst 65
Brookfield 50, G1rard 45
RIVER VALLEY 24
.Buckeye Valley 76, River VaUey 66
RIVER VALLEY (7-10. 3-5 OVC)
Burton Berkshire 99, Fa1rport Harbor 28
Jason J,ones 0 0-0 0, Ryan Morrow 5 0·0
Caldwell SO, Old Washington Buckeye Trail
13 lan Lew1s 1 0-0 2, Michael Cordell 0 0- 53
0 0, Tyter Thompson 1 0-0 2, Ryan Henry
Cambndge 45, Byes\lllle Meadowbrook 40
1 3-6 5. Scot Ward 1 0-0 2 .Totals 9-32 3-6
OT
24
Canal ~ulton NW 92, Alliance Marilngton 43
CHESAPEAKE (14-2, 7-0 OVC)
Canf1eld 49, Salem 41
Zach Mornson 5 1-2 11 . M1ke Stapleton 1
McKinley 60, Massillon Perry 34
o-o 3, Caleb McComas 1 o-o 2, Tyler Canton
Cardinal 59, Kirtland 43
Shoemaker 4 2·2 10. Just1n Poner a 0-0
Cardmgton 56, GaliOn Northmor 53
16, P.J Rase 7 1-1 16, Jeff Thornburg 4 2Cardinglon·L•ncoln 56 Galion Northmor 53
2 11, Kyle Full9r 1 0-0 2. Brent Aansbonom
CarliSle 59, Madtson 50
3 0..2 Totals 34-61 6·9 77
Carrollton 48 Canton South 46
A.Vallay
6 3 B 7 - 24
Castalia MarQaretta 59 Oak Harbor 53
Peake
19 24 19 15 Cedarville 76, N lewts'burg Triad 71
3-Pomt Goals-RV 3 (Morrow 3), Peake 3
Cedarville 76, Tnad 71
(Stapleton . Rase, Thornburg)
Chesapeake
Cheshire RIVer Val 24
ChilliCOthe 65, WesteTVllle Central44
GALLIA ACADEMY 47, LOGAN 45
C1n . Christian 52, St Bernard 49 ,
GALLIA ACADEMY (8-7, 4-4 SEOAL)
, C1p. Elder 57, C1n. Moeller 50
C1n . Finneytown 62, Cin Taylor 46
Trav1s Stout 2 0-0 4 , Sl:lawn Thompson 4
C1n . Hughes 67, Cin Western Hills 40
0-0 8 Jeff Golden 3 0-0 9, Jaymes
C1n LaSalle 67 St. Xav.er 48
'
1-laggerty 7' 0-1 18, Brad Caudill 1 0.0 2,
Alex Kyger 0 0-0 a. Shaphen Robinson 3 1 C1n Lockland 78, Ctn Country Day 41
C1n Made1ra 68, Deer Park 52
o-o 6 Totals- 20 0-t 47
Cin Mount Healt~y 58, Cin Aiken 52
LOGAN (4-12, 2-7 SEOAL)
C1n Northwest 52, C1n Turptn 46
Kevm Call 0 0-0 0, Clayton Fredenck 3 2·2
Cin. Prtnceton 69 M1"ord 47
8, Jon Neff 1 6-8 8, Andrew McKee 2 1·2 5,
Cm Purcell Manan 42.. Cln Roger Bacon
Lucas Wright 6 1·2 15, Jon Farrell 0 0-0 0,
JOhn Ruff 1 Q-0 2 Ale• Wallce 3 1-2 7. 37
Cm Read1ng 48, lnd1an Hill 40
Totals- 16 11-16 45.
Cm SEWen Htlls 63. New Miami 39
Galha
12 11 9 15 - 47
Cm Snroder 84, Day Sllwers BO
Logan
13 9
12 11 - 45
Cm. Taf162 Day Belmont 56
3-Pomt Goals-Gallla 7 (Haggerty 4) ,
Cm Woodward 72, Day, Meadowdale 66
Logan 2 (Wright 2) Rebounds-Gallla 16
Cm Wyommg 65 Manemont 49
{Thompson 7) Logan 32 { Neff 8)
Assists---Gal11a 14 (Robtnson 4) Logan 5 . Circleville 50, Fa1r11eld Unton 46
Clayton Northmont 50, Vandalia BuUer 45
(Fredenck 3). Steals-Galha 7 {Haggerty
Cle. Heritage Chr 55 Faith Chr. 52
3) Logan 4 (Fredenck 2) TurnoversCle Lutheran West 97, Ober1m 44
Galha 8. Logan 20 Team Fouls~ Gallta
Cle. Orange 57, Chagin Falls 53
12, Logan 10
Cle St Ignatius 80, Cle RhOdeS 63
Cle VA-SJ 53, Parma Holy Name 50
TRIMBLE 78, SOUTHERN 36
Col Beecheroft 64, Col Whetstone 54
SOUTHERN (2-15, 1-7 TVC)
· Col Bnggs 49, Col Independence 48
Patnck Johnson 1 4-6 6. Jacob Hunter 0 oCol Brookhaven 79, Col East 38
0 0, Josh Pape 2 O..Q 5, Wes Atffle 2
6,
Col Centenn~al 83, Col. Linden 58
Corbin Sellers 8 0-o 17 Brad Crouch 5 0-0
Col DeSales 61 , Col Watterson 44
14 , Weston Counts 0 1·2 1, Jes se
Col Marion-Franklin 76. Col Eastmoor
MCKmght 3 0-0 6 Totals 21 5·8 55
Academy 63
TRIMBLE (12-5, &amp;-2 TVC)
Col Tree ol L~e 48, Mans Chnst1an 41
Man Chnstman 15 1·1 31 . Blake Fouts 0 1·
Col Walnut Ridge 50, Col South 48
2 1 Anthony Duc.on 7 0·0 16, Mark 'Col West 84, Col. Afncentric 83
Christman 3 0-2 6, Kacey Cruse 0 0-0 0,
Coldwater 56, Mana Ste1n Manon Local41
Joseph Dunlap 0 0-Q 0, Andrew Noglak 0
Collins Western Reserve 58. Plymoutl1 44
0·0 0, Chaz M~hler 5 0-Q 11 , Adam Mulford
Columbia 67 Brooklyn 63
0 Q-0 0 . Man Young 2 2-2 6, B Barren 3 0Columbian 65, Norwalk 59
0 7, Andy Davidson 0 0-0 0 Totals 35 3-7
Co ntlnental49, Lima Tempte Chr 36
7a
C&lt;Jnvoy Crestview 55. Paulding 28
Southam
1&lt; 19 12 10 55
Coshocton 44, Warsaw Rwer V18w 42
Trimble
25 16 18 19 - 7B '
Cndersv1lle Perry 64. MariOn Cath 35
3-Pomt Goals-Southern a (Crouch 4
Cuyahoga
Falls
CVCA
50,
Riffle 2, Pape $ellers) . Tnmble 4 (Otxon 2, Newcomerstown 20
Mohler, Barrett) '
·
Cuyahoga Valley Chr 50, Newcomerstown
20
HANNAN 69, WAHAMA 57
Dalton 51 , Jerbmesvtlle Htllsdale 48 OT
Day Dunbar 77, Cln Withrow 68
WAHAMA (1D-6)
Brenton Clark 7 1·5 18, ·casey Hamson 7· Day Jefterson 92, Day. Chrishan 44
Day Oakwood 40. MUton -Unlon 38
0-2 16, Brandon Fowler 4 2-2 10. Clay
DeGraff Riverside 49, Waynesf19id Goshen
Roush 4 2·2 10, Kev1n Wasonga 1 0·0 3.
·
Kameron S~yre 0 2·2 2 . Bran don Russell 0 47
Delphos St John's 62, Fort Recovery ' 42
0-Q 0, Keitt; Pearson 0 0·0 0, Gabe Roush
Oetta 51 . Bryan .46
D 0-0 o . Totals 23 5-11 57
Dola Hard1n Northam 69, Cory-Aawson 53
HANNAN {&amp;-5)
Dover 52, New Philadelphia 34
Ryan Cante rbwry 4 9- 12· 1B. Wesley Gue
Doylestown Chtppewa 67, W. Sa~em NW
6 4-7 16, Kevin Blake 5 3-3 14 , Aaron
Payne 3 3·4 9, Joe Kinnard 3 0·1 6 Jared 55
Dresden Trt-Valley 60 , Zanesville W
Taylor 1 1-4 3, Justlrl Eastman 1 1·2 3.
Mus~1ngum 38
Patnck Flora 0 0·0 01 Totals 23 2 1·33 69
Dubhn Coftman 54, Thomas Worthington
Wahama
22 14 8 13 - 51
42
Hannan
16 9
29 15 - 69
Dublin Jerome 43 BJQ Walnut 38
3-Pomt Goals- Wahama 6 (~la r k 3
E. Palestine 66, Convo~ Crestview 61
Hamson 2, Wasong a). Hannan 2 (Blake
Eastlake N 69, WdkJughby S 59
Canterbury)
•
·
Elgtn 75 Sparta Highland 44
Elida
51 . Defiance 35
LOGAN 78, POINT PLEASANT 46
Elmore WOOdmore 84, Millbury Lake 72
LOGAN (11 -2)
Elyria 70, Brunswick 62
Brantz O'Brian! 0 0·1 0 Coiy Williams 1 0Elyr~a Catn 58, Lake Cath 52
0 2, Chns Robertson 5 0·0 11 C 8 Green
Christian
81 . Chr1s11an
Emmanuel
5 0-0 10, Jeremy Sheppard 3 0· 1 6, Bran Academy 30
Campbell 3 0-Q B. Ryan HaUght 8 3·4 19,
Fatrbanks 87. A1~mont 63
Cory Eplin 0 2-2 2 . Billy Tomblin 1 0-0 2, Fa1rborn 67, Mtamisb!Jrg 60
Ethan McCalli st er 0 0·0 0 , Pat RoOJnelte 2
Fa1rf1eld Chr 70 Northside Chr 57
0-0 4, Jonathan Bevtns 2 0·0 4 Greg
F1ndlay 42, Napoleon 26 ,
W11i1ams 2 0-0 4, Wyatt Able s I 0·0 2 ,
F1ndlay Ltberty·Benton 48, LeipsiC 34
Pat"ck B 2 0·2 4 Greg Adams 0 0-0 0
Foslona St Wendelln 60. Hopewell-Lo udon
Totals- 35 5·1 o 78
55 OT
POINT PLEASANT (2-16)
Franklin-Monroe 62. Ansonia 36
Stephen Walker 2 0·0 4. Will Slone 4 D·O 8 ,
Fredencklown 60.~,_ Centerburg 47
Jay Ellis 0 0·0 0, Kenryy Durham 0 0-D 0 ,
Fredicktowrt (i(). Ltenterburg 47

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Gibsonburg 57, PembetV!IIe Eastwoot147
Graham
Northwestern 55
Grsndv,·ew 47, MIHersport ..
Granville 51. Hebron Lakewood 3-t
Greeneview 52, Mechanicsburg 34
Greenfield McClain 69 Cllnton-Massle 27

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Cots
Cots
COts
Cols
33

Dublin Coffman 61, Thomas Worthington
16
Dublin Scioto 71 , Grove City 45
Falrtiold Cflrisflan 48, NortnSide Chnsl1an
17
Franfort Adena 58, Piketon 45
Gahanna Cols Academy 56, GroveportMadison 25
Hilliard Da\lidson ~7. Westervitle N 60
Lancaster 42, Htlllard Darby 40
Maryswllle 45. Mt. Vemon 38
Maumee 52, Holland Spring. 32
Mt Gilead Gilead Christian 55, Grove City
Chrta!an 48
Pickerington N. 58, Powell Olentangy

..__ny 29
11'•

....

L::~ Indian Lake s:J, Urbana
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 66 , MiddletoWn 47

•w

Li

,..._

I

Westerville Cent 52, Chillicothe 39
WesteJVIIIe S. 53, Gro\lo Ci1y Cent
Crossing 48
WhitehOuse Anthony Wayne 73, Bowltng
Green 40
Williamsport Westfall 43, Chillicothe
Southeastern 35

I .

Mans. Sen1or 69, Millersburg W Holmes 50
W.Va. prep bllaketballscorea
Mansfield Ontario 58, Lucas 55
Friday's Reaults
Manon Elg•n-75, Sparta Highland 44
Gl~o
' MaSon 57, Glen Este 53
Buffalo 45, Poca 42
Massillon Jackson 72, AuStintown Fitch 38
Calvary Chnstian 42, Ra 1nelle Chnstian 36
McConnelsville Morgan 79, New LeXIngton
Charleston Gathollc 47, Wheeling Central
63
·
36
Medina 44, Parma Valley Forge 35
Guyan Valley 34, Hamlin 30
Mentor 65, Shaker Hts. 58·
Hedgesville 86, Hancock 24
Metamora Ewrgrean 42, Swanton 30
Herbert Hoover 63, Wayne 37
Miami Valley 50, Troy Christian 49
Huntington 60, Parkersburg South 54
Middletown FenWICk 59, Monroe 55
James Monroe 47 Bluefield 41
Midpark 52, Westlake 27
p
Mifflin 68, Northland 53 ,
Logan 60 • Potnt leasant 53
Mineral Ridge 50, Berl1n Center Western
Magnolia 55 · Oak Glen 29 '
Reserve 42 1
Martinsburg 48, Jefterson 40
Minford 69, Waverly 62
Meadow Bridge 55, Valley Fayette 34
M te 49 St He
5
Montcalm 58, Fayetteville 32
ms r
• ·
nry 4
Ohio Valley Chnstian 40, Cross Lanes
Mogadore ·F•eld 62, Norton 61
Morral R1dgedale 57, Mt G11ead 41
Chnstlan 36
Mount Vemon 83, Marysville 61
Parkersburg 42, Ripley 41 , OT
Mt. Blanchard RIVerdale 60, N. Robinson
Phelps, Ky. 65, Matewan 20
. COt Crawford 40
P1keVIew 91, Mount Hope 17
N Baltimore 61, Old Fort 51
Richwood 48, Gl'flaler Beckley Chnstian 32
N. Csnton Hoover 39, Canton GlenOak 38
South Charleston 49, St Albans 42
N. Ridgeville 58, Avon 54
Summers County SIS . Greenbner East 51
New Albany 55, Col. Academy 34
Tug Valley 51. Scott 38
NewBremen68,Parkway52
V8n43,Sherman34
New Concord John Glenn 74, lanesvjle
Y)lood County Chnstl8n 37, Grace Chnsllan
Maysville 53
34
.
. New Richmond 60, Clennont NE 58
Boya
New Washington Buckeye Central 57, 1 Belfry, Ky 74, W1ft1amson 62 .
Bucyrus 52
Berkeley Springs 48, Paw Paw 44
Newark Cath 45, Berne Union 41
Beth Haven Chnst1an 92 Elk Valley
Newark Catholic 45, Berne Unton 41
Christian 67
'
Newbury 54, Orwell Grand Val 45
Bishop Donahue 68, Valley 49
Nonh ~lmsted 58, A\lon Lake 56
Braxton County 78, Webster COunty 53
Northridge 56, Brookville 50
Bridgeport 65 Philip Barbour 63
Ohio Deal 50, M_uskl~gum Chnstian 43
Buffalo 73,&lt;C~val51
Olentangy 80, P~ekenn~ton Central73
Cameron ~ Paden Crty 44
Olentangy Liberty 45, PlckeHngton North
Clay County '64, Roane County 51
43
Doddridge County 71 Ritchie County 48
Olmsted Falls 65, Berea 63
East He.rdy 85 HarmS.n 41
Oreqon Strttch 65, takeslde Danbury 46
Fairmont senior 43 . Elkl(lS 25 game
· OrrvW!e 61, Lexington 54
.
'
Ottawa-Glandorf 48 Van Wert 44
ceased due to InJury In 4th quarter
()_ttoville 57, Kalida 54
'
Fayetteville 55, Greenbner West49
Oxford Talawanda 74, Franklin 58
I Gilmer County 54, Win ~o_unty 53, OT
Painesville Harvey 70, Con neaut 27
Greater Beckley . Chnstlan 63, ~alley
Pandora-Gilboa 52, Van Buren 29
Faye~e 57, OT
Parma 65. N. Royalton 62
Hamlin 74, Guyan Valley 64
Parma Padua 54, Cle ND-CL 44
Hannan 69, Wahama 57
•
Perrsyburg 68, Sylvania Southv1ew 52
Harts 93, Chapmanvt!le 70
Philo 55, Thomvme Sheridan 53
Herbert Hoover 48, Wayne 46
Pleasant 53, Jonathan Alder 44
Huntington 82, MH!ersburg, Ky. 62
Revere 48, Cloverleaf 33
Ironton, OhiO 71, Capital 58
Reynoldsburg 73, Westlana 64
Jafl186 Monroe 67, Liberty Raleigh 52
Richfield Revere 48, Lodl Cloverleaf 33
Keyser 70, Musselman 41
A1chmond Hts. 61 . Wickliffe 48
LeiNis County 46, Buckhannon-Upshur 32
Ridgedale 57, Mount Gilead 41
Logan 78, Point Pleasant 46
Ridgeville Chnstian 56, Middletown
Man 64, Gilbert 47
Chnstian 42
j Morgantown 46, North Manon 44
R1nman 61 , Norwayne :S3
Nicholas County 68, L1berty Harrison 66
Rtverside Stebbtns 56, EDgewood 52
Notre Dame 74, Sotrth Hamson 53
Russta 68. Fort Loram1e 46
Oak Glen 49, Tyler Consolidated 46
S Charleslon SE 48, W. Liberty-Salem 46
Oak Hill67, PikeV1ew 50
S Point 39, Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 36
Parkersburg Catholic 38, Williamstown 34
Sandusky St Marys 48, Sandusky Perkins
Parkerstiurg South 81, Jefferson 64
1 45
Petersbur~ 76, Pendleton County 39
' Sea'!lan N Adams 62, Lynchbu~lay 51
Pocahontas County 51 , Midland Trall43
1 Sebnng McK1nley 70, Jackson·M11ton 41
Shady Spnng 65 Summers County 64
Shadyside 63, Barnesville 58
Southam, Md. 47, Tucker Counly 44
Solon 56, Cuyahoga Falls 28
Steubenville Ohio 74 Brooke 71
SpenceMIIe 82, Ven Wert L1ncolnwle~, 65
Tolsia eo, T~ays VaMeY Chrlstian 36
Spnng . Emmanuel Chr. 81, Chnslian
Trinity 92 Clay-Battelle 50
Academy 30
•
Spnng. Kenton Ridge 75, Greenan 60
Va~ 60 · Sherman 50
Spnng NE 54, Spnng Cath Cent 27
We~r 59, Edison Ohl~ 55
Spring. Shawnee 49, Tecumseh 46
Westside 61' Mountain State Academy 66
Spnngboro 53 Day Carroll 43
J'' Wheeling Park 82, Mart1nsburg 67
St Marys Me~rlal 59, Lima Shawnee 54
Winfield 78, Sisso~~lne 57
St Pans Graham
Spnng NW55
Wood County Chnsban 57, Grace Chnshan
Steubenville 74, Brooke. WVa., 71
38
Stow 52 Akron Hoban 65 ,
Woodrow W1lson 80, East Fairmont41
1 Sugarcreek Garaway 50, StrasburgI Franklin 43
Sycamore Mohawk 49, Carey 44
I Sylvama Northv1ew 74, Rossford 58
Tallmadge 56, Med1na Highland 50
Thompson Ledgemont 70, Ashtabula SIS.
John and Paul 39
Tlffm Calvert
Betts\lille 43
lippecanoe 53, ~llefontame 34
I Tot. Chnslian 62 Tot. Ottawa Hills 46
To/. Libbey 70, Tol. Bowsher 55
Tol. Maumee Valley 59, Tal . Emmanuel
' Bapt1s1 58
I Tal. Rogers 69, Tol. Waite 51
1 Tol. SCan 77, Oregon Clay 41
Tol . St Francts 55, Tot Cent Cath. 47
Tot. Sl$rt 73, Tol Whllmer 62
Tri-county North 63, National Trail 33
Trotwood Liberty Chr 95, Grove C1ty Chr
65
! Trotwood-Medison 71 , Spnng s 51
I Troy 70, Spring N 49
1 Tuscarawas Cent Cath 67, Malvern 52
t Twin Valley Soultl 52, Mississ1nawa Vall~

I

I

I

1

I
I

n,

I

Soya Bllketball
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
·
SEO ALL
Marlo~a
7-1
10-5
Warren
7-1
15-2
Jackson
5·4
9·8
Gallla Academy
4-4
8·7
Logan
2·7 . 4·12
A1nens
D-8
2-16

Olrla Baaketblill
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO ATHLETIC
SEO ALL
8-2
14-6
Warren
7•3
14--4 I
Logan
6·3
13-4 J
Jackson..._
6·3
9-10 ~
Mar1ena
2·8
7-11 111
Gallia Academy
0-10
1-18 NU
Athens

TRI-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio Dlvlalon
TVC
ALL
Alexander
7-1
14-3
Belpre
5-3
12-5
9-7
Nels-York
5-3
5-3
9-B
Vinton Co.
&amp;-11
Wellston
2-6
1-16
Meigs
D-6
Hocking Dlvlolon
ALL
TVC
12-5
Fed Hock
6-2
5·2
12·5
Trimble
10-6
Eastern
5-4
9-6
Waterford
4·4
a-9
Miller
2-6
2-15
Southern
1·7

TAl-VALLEY CONFERENCE
Ohio Dlvlalon •
ALl '.,.
TVC
a-1
15-4
AleKander
10-9 ~
6-3
Belpre
10-1
5-3
VInton Co
5-4
11-1"'
Nels·York
1-7
3-13- '.-'1
Wellston
1-a
4-14 •
Me1gs
Hocking Division
ALL.,. ..
TVC
17-2'-.
a-1
Trimble
124".
6-1
Waterford
4-5
8-10\.:
Eastern
4-14w
4-5
Fed Hock
B-1 QN
3-5
M1ller
o-a
Southern
8·9:~

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE
OVC ALL
7-Q
14·2
Chesapeake
5-2
10-6
Falrtand
Rock Hill
4-4
9-a
4-4
8-8
South Point
~-5
7-10
R1ver Valley
D-8
5 12
Coal Grove

'

--

OHIO VALLEY CONFERENCE

South Gall•a
Hannan
Wahama

ovcs

;_;
ALL ••
13-4 •
13--4 , ,

OVC

South POint
Coal Grove
Fairland
Rock H1ll
Chesapeake
River _valley

a-1
7-2
6-3
3·6
2·7
1-8

9-~"'

6·1 .;
5·1 ..,,
' 3-1· ...

OTHERnNDEPENDENTS

OTHERnNDEPENOENTS
ALL
13-3
8-5
1D-6
4 -15
2-14

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2006

Wahama
South Galha
Point Pleasant

-

A~\ ~ .

e-9

.It

8-10

ovcs

It '

7-

AP State Basketball Polls §
Point Pleasant

1-1\f\'l~

Hannan

• • lol'-1

...

How the top ·10 teams in the boys ·poll fared

,
'

COLUMBUS (AP) basketball poll fared

How the top teams 1n the weekly Associated Press state

Submlned photo

boys :
'

Pictured above are those who participated and conducted the skills clinic at the University of R1o Grande on Jan . 8.

DIVISION I
•·
Can. McKi,nley (14·2) beat Massillon Washington 83-66, beat Massillon Perry 60--~. ;
No 2 Cm Elder (16-1) lost to Oak Hills 62-51 , beat Cin MoeUer 57-57-50
,
No 3 Mansfield ( 15-D) beat Millersburg W. Holmes 69·50.
• ·
No 4 Solon (14-Q) beat Cle Hts 69--48, beat Cuyahoga FaUs 58-28, plays Mentor ~ ;
No 5 Tol St Francis (14-1) lost to ToLScott 66-61. beat :rol Cent Cath 55-47.
,
No 6 Lancaster (13·1) beat Htlllard Darby 59~7
No 7 W. Chester Lakota W (16-1) beat Middletown 61·51, beat Fairfteld 81·34.
No 8 Tol Scott (14·1) beat Tot St Fraoos 66·61 , beat Oregon Clay n-41
No 9 Spnngboro ( 15·2) beat OKford Talawanda 52-49, beat Day. Carroll 53-43.
No 10 C1n St. Xav1er ( 12-4) lost to C1n La ?aile 67-48

No.I

Reynoldsburg 64, Galloway Westland 33
Spring. Emmanuel Christian 53, Chnstian
Acadtmy 31
•
Sunbury Big Walnut 49, Dubl1n Jerome 42
Syt\lanla Norttw~ew 40, Rossford 28
.
•~·~"
Sytvanla .auuu 1v1ew 58, Perrysburg 43
U~r'Arlln~ton 54, Newsrl&lt; 51

New Pai11

Llman,MortonH~ng53
Bath 60 Cell 48
Ll~aa SeniO
· r n' Manon"" Ha-ng 53
'
lUI
Little M1ami 69, Goshen 82
London64, Mioml~race82
1'
Lorain BrookskUI 63 lake Ridge ~
Madison Chr. 58, Sheldnah Chr. 46
Magnolia Sandy Valle)' 69, Bowerston
ConaHan Valley 43
Manchester 68, Zoarvttle Tuscarawas
Valley 55
'

lndeper}dence 61 , Gals Briggs 37
Mifflin 54, Cots. Northland 47
S 84, Cots. Walnut Ridge 37
Whetstone 84 Gals. Beechcroft 62,

QT
OelawareHayes64, WortMingtonK11boume

so.

~e;l~~raiT~ounty N 63 •

Frld8y'a Aeeulta
Huntington 54, Chillicothe

Chlllk:o1h0 Zllno Trace 51 , Balnbrtdge Poln1
Valley 46
COis Atncentric 69, Cots W. 29
Co~ Brookhaven 47, Cols. E. 30
Cols Centennla!70, Cols. Linden--McKinley
57
Cols, Eastmoor 89, Cols. Manon·Frank.tin

sa.

n,

n,

OhJo High School Glrtl Baaketball

Greenwich S. cent. 62• NorwalkSt PauiS8
Grove City 68• Dublin Scioto 53
Hamilton 65, Cln. Colerain 61
Har;nllton Township 65, Logan Elm 60
Hamler Palrl&lt;:k Henry SO, Montpelier 34
Hannibal
River
Sarahsville
Shenandoah 53
H 1
Wa
T
32 H 1
3
&amp;viand
yne raoe ' ogate 1
Hawken 62, Cuyahoga His. 45
High Street Chr. 53 ZanesVJie Chr 41
Hilliard Davidson 55 , WesteJVille North 48
HillsbOro 59, Madison PlainS 31
Holland Spring. 53 , Struthers 45
H
43
64 F8lrl
ous10n63.
' Nordonia
awn 56
Hudson
H
55 Cl de 44
In:~~~ 87 , Beachwood 52
tndlanLake53, ·Urbana49
Ironton 71 , Capital, W.Va. 58 ·
Ironton Rock Hill
ProctoNille Fairland
49 .
Jamestown ·
Greenevtew
52,
Mechanicsburg 34
Johnstown 74, Loudonville 48
Johnstown Northridge 57, East Knox 44
Kenaton 65, Perry 29
Kent Roosevelt 65, Ravenna 43
Kidron Chr. 73, Mans. Temple 70, OT
Kings Mills Kings 61, Ham1tton Ross 40
Kingsway Chr. 56, Mentor Chr 31
Latayene Allen E. 48 • Delphos Jefferson 41
Lakeview 63, Newton Falls 42
Lakewood 54, Cleveland H1s. 51
Lancaster 59• Hilliard Darby 47 •
1 Lancaster Fisher Ceth 67, LlbertV unton :29
Lebanon 55, GreenvUie 35
·

o

I

Willard 84, Beii8YUO 55
Wlltiamsburg 59. Eut Clinton 55
Wlh'nlng10n 75, NOMOOd 70
Windham 82, E. canton 56
Wooster 6(), Bellovlle Claar Fort&lt; 57
Wooster Trlway 78, Navarre Fairless 43
Wortnlng1on Chr. 58, Roody 48
· Worttl!ngton Kllboume 83, Delaware 47
Xen~ Christian 57, Yelow Springs 44
Youngs - Chaney 105, Beaver Local 56
lanes. Rosecrans 78, LouiBVIIIe Aquinas
58
Zanesvlle 74, E. Lillerpool 40

Gahanna 56. Groveport 55
Gallon 54, Footoria 58
Galllpol~ Golio 47, Logan 45
Gortield His. Tnnity 41
Geneva 59, Je«erson Area 34
Genoa •-ea 65, ~ont~•ny Ot~ 62
rv
11 "'¥'"'
-w"'
Georgetown 79, Batavia 50
Germantown Valley VIew 61 , Eaton 56

o.

0
S1ephen Browning 2 2-3 7, Bobby
Errett 7 5-6 19 To1sls- 1a 9-11 46
Logan
15 32 17 14 Point
a 14 15 9 - 46
(B
C •••II
3-Polnt Goals-Logan 3
rett amlA""
2) . Po1nt ·1 {S tephen Browning) Fouled
0 ut- (none1 A!bounds-Logan 42 (G reg
Williams 10), Point 32 (Bobby Errett tO).
Assists-Logan 7 (Cory W1!liams 5), Po1nt
S
C I
7(JoshStover4). tea!s-Logan14( hrs
Rob1ortson 5), Point a (S1ephen Browning
3) Block&amp;-Logan 2 (Jonathan Bev1ns,
Wyatt Abies), !)o1nt {none) . Team FoulsLogan 13, Point 16

oa o

4

(). I Fremont Rosa 55, Sandusky 40

I o 0, Josh Stover 3 o-o 6, Steven Perry 0 o-

•

-·-..

Area Leaeue Standines

High School Basketball Scoreboard
Bars BASKETBALL

Sunday, Febru,ary 5,

Sunday, February 5, 2006

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

.

DIVISION II
No 1 Akr. SVSM (18) (13-1) plays L•ma Sr Sa1urday.
"'
No 2 Greenfield McClam (t7..Q) beat Clarksville Cllnton-Mass1e 69·27
No 3 Willard (14-0) beat Bellevue 84-55, plays Fremont Ross Saturday.
No 4 DC\y Dunbar (14-2) beat Cm Withrow
No 5 Akr. Buch1ol (14-0) bea1 Akr: Ellet 105-45.
No.6 Cin. Taft (14-2) beat Day Belmont 52-56, plays C1n Western Hills Saturday
lPI"
No 7 Wooster Trlway (16-D) beat Akr Manchester 90-55, beat Navarre F.airless 78-4--av
No 8 C1n Wyom1ng (16-Q) beat .Aeadmg 53--52, beat C1n . Manemont 65-49
:
No,9 lipp City Tippe&lt;;:anae (16·0) beat Bellefontaine 53-34.
-..
No.10 Day, Cham1nade-Julienne (12·3) beat St. Bernard Roger Bacon 48·40

n-68

-

DIVISION Ill
.
No -1 C1n N College Hdl (16-D) plays Oin. Summit Country Day Saturday.
No 2 Johns1own (17-0) beat Loudonville 74-48
No 3 Bellaire (15-0) beat Wheeling (WVa ) Park B5-B2. OT
No 4 Rocky R1ver Lutheran W. (14.0) beat Lorain Clearv1ew 87-42.
No 5 St. Henry (13-2} lost to Mmster 49-45, plays Russ1a Saturday 1
No 6 Chesapeake (13-2) beat Cheshire Al\ler Valley 77-24 .
No 7 w L1berty Salem (13-3) ki)st to S Charleston SE 48-46, plays Botktns Saturday
No.8 Versailles (14-2) beat New KnoxvMie 71-53, plays Ansonl8 Saturday
Nn 9 Cle ·VASJ (1 1-4) beat Cle C~ Cath 72·54, plays Parma Hts Hoty Name 53·50
No 10 Collins Western Reserve (14·1 ) beat Plymouth 58-44.

BY DAVE

How the top 10 tea!"'s in th~ girls poll fared
COLUMBUS (AP) - How the top teams In the weekly Associated Press state gn1s ba;-. ~
ketbalt poll tared
'
.
DIVISION I
No 1 Ctn Pnnceton {1J.&lt;l) beal Uberty Twp Lakota E 76-28 plays C.n Colerrun Saturday.
No 2 Sylvania Southvtew ( t 6-0) beat Anthony Wayne 62·40. beat Perrysburg 58·43
No 3 Avon Lake {15-1) beet N Olmsted 35·23, plays Brecksville Saturday
No 4 Cln Mt Notre Dame {16·2) beat Cin McAuley 57-53
No 5 Stow-Munroe Falls (15·2) beat Massman Wash1ngton 63-47
No 6 N. Can Hoover (15-2) beat Youngs Austintown-FitCh 63-19. ·
No 7 PICkenngton &lt;;ent ( 13-2) plays Lew1s Center Olentangy Saturday
No 8 Chardon (15-1) beat Euclid 49-33 plays Jefferson Area Saturday
No 9 Dublin SciOto (15-2) beat Grove C1ty 71-45
'
No 10Amherst Staple (15· 1) beat Brecksville 51-41 , plays Elyna Saturday

.

,

.

No 1 Morrow Little Mlami (17-0} plays Sc1oto McOermon NW Saturday.
No 2 Louisville (17-D) beat CarrolltOn 60-42
No3 Washington C.H. M~&amp;mt Trace {15-1) beat Greenlteid McCiatn 50-42 plays
HillSbOro S8tulli8y
No4 Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesurt (15·1 ) beat Rocky Rwer Magnif1cat 60-38, plays
Shaker Hts Hathaway Brown Saturday
No 5 Warsaw R1ver View {16-1) plays Cambndge Saturday
"
No 6 U1JCB (17-Q) beat Johnstown-Monroe 61--43
No 7 Cols. OeSales (13-2) beal Cots. Hartley 80-58. plays PICkenngton N Saturday
No 8 Shelby ( 14-2) •• ~lo
No 9 Cots. Eastmoor (15-4) beat Cols. West 96-55. beat Cols Manon-Franklin 89-45
No 10 Kenertng Alter (15-2) beat St Bernard Roger Bacon 66·38, plays Day
Cham1nade.Julienne Saturday,
DIVISION Ill
No t S Euclid Regina (1 7-Q) plays IMG Academy, Fla Saturday
No 2 Pla1n City Jonathan Alder (14-1) plays Wonhington Chnstian Saturday
No 3 Ironton {14·2) beat Galhpo11S Ga111a 58-42
No 4 Garfield His. Tnnity (13·3) beat Chardon NDCL n-57
No 5 Carey {15-1) beat Fostona St Wendelln 61·38.
No 6 Cle. Cent. Cath (12·3) plays Garf1eld Hts TnMy Saturda~
No 7 Mt Blanchard RIVerdale (16-Q) beat Bucyrus Wyntord 48·34.
No 8 Coldwater (12-4) lost to Mana Stem Manon Local57·42
No 9 Swgarcreek Garaway (15-2) beat Gnadenhutten Indian Valley 34-24
No tO Apple Creek Waynedale (15·3) lost to Doylestown Chtppewa 53·48 . OT
DIVISION IV '
No 1 Cols. Africeotr~ {17-0) bOat Cols W 69-29
No 2 Hamler Patrie+: Henry ( 16-Q) beat Van Buren 64·42 , beat Montpelier 68-42
No 3 E. Can. {14-2) lost to Atwater Waterloo 60-4B
No 4 DnoVJMe (16--1 ) beat Elida 62-45, plays LetpsiC Satun::lay
No 5 Newark Cath. (16-1) beat Grandvtew 67·31
No 6 Bertin Htland (13-2) beat Malvern 75·13, plays Newcomerstown Saturday
No 7 New R1egel ( 15·2)1ost to Bascor'n Hopewell-Loudon 50-43 .
No 8 New KnmNIIIe (15· 1) beat Versatlles 50-46. OT
No 9 Jackson Center (14·3) beat Sidney Lehman 62 54. piays Anna Saturday
No 10 PI Loramie (16-1) belit RUSSia n-38, plays BotkinS Saturday

Bartrum named to
first-ever Pro Bowl
HARRIS
SPECIAL fO THE TIMES-SENTINEL

DIVISION IV
"
No 1 Onovllle (15-Q) beat Kal1da 57·54, plays Le1ps1C Saturday
No.2 lancaster Fisfler Cath ( 14·1) beat Balt1more Uberty Union 67-29
No 3 Worthington Christian {141) beat Cbls Ready 58-48
No4 Russia (13- 1) plays plavs St. Henry Saturday
No.5 Ada (13-1) plays Kenton Saturrtay
No 6 S. Webster ( 12·1 ) plays Portsmouth Clay Saturday.
No.7 """"" Ft;;Je (16-1) bee! N Lma S Rarge 64-57, bee! B&lt;m C&lt;ner Reserve ~
No.8 Cle Hts. Lutheran E (11 ·3) plays Cornerstone Chnst1an Saturday
' ,
No 9 Holgate (11-4) lost to Hav1land Wayne Trace 32·31, plays Van Wert Saturday
'
tjo 10 New Knoxv1lle (13-3) lost to Versailles 71·53.

DMSIONII

Photo courtesy or the Philadelphia Eagles

Meigs High graduate Mike Bartrum pulls in a three-yard touchdown pass from Donavan McNabb against Kansas City back
on Oct 2. 2005. Bartrl!,m has been selected to play m the Pro
Bowl on Sunday, Feb. 12 m' Honolulu , Hawaii.

.'

..

HONOLULU , Hawai i Meigs High School graduate
and former Marshall AllAmerican Mike Bartrum has
been named 10 ·the NFC All
Pro team. This will be
Mike 's firsl Pro Bowl
appearance and he will be the
team "s long snapper.
"I feel honored to be representing
my
leam
in ·
Honolulu: · M1ke S&lt;iiU fro m
his season home in New
Jersey. '"I" 111 very fortunate to
make the team. but thi s isn't
JUSI for me. 1t for my teammates , my family and all my
friends who supported me
during my career. It will be a
ve ry special experience. honors like thi s uon 'I come very
often and I plan to make the.
mosl of it. "
Bartrum has been regarded
as lhe best long sna pper m
the NFL for the past several
years. Fox Sporls an,tlyst
Daryl Johnston named Mike
to hi s All Lunch Pail Team
Plus for the third t;me 111 the
three years, he was named lo
USA Today 's "All Joe" Icam
This honor is a tnbule to the
guys who are rel;ed on da} in
and day oul 10 do the d;rty
work ror their teams.
This pasl season. Bartrum
had two re.cept1on &gt; for SIX
yards, and both catches went
for touchdowns . For h1s
career Mike has II reception s for 65 yards and six
touchdown s. He also had
three tack les this season to
g;ve him 32 for hi s career
On top or .thai. Burtrum handled kickoff uuues 111 two

games while All-Pro David
Akers was sideli1\ed 'wilh
injuries and served as the
team's emergency quarlerbuck late 111 the season after
mjuncs took 1t's toll on the
Eugles.
This season was the first
time that Bartrum played on
a team that fini shed wilh a
losing record. " I don'l ever
remember being part of a los~
tng season. thai includes h1gh
school and cq llege:· M1ke
said
''[' ve been very
blessed." This· is the. first
team 1hat the 12-year veteran
has played on thai has n't
m.;de the playoffs.
His greatest contribution
mav be in the locker room ,
where the young players look
up to htm . "When you come
to h1m . he will · share his
knowledge, he IS one of the
un spoke n leaders of the
team," Eagles full back Josh
Parry said em I ier this ye~r
about Bartrum . "He won "t
force hiniself on you, bul if
yo u ask him something. he
"ill g1ve you greal guid~
anee

The Pro Bowl will the·
beginn1ng of a very busy
monlh for Mike. He plans to
return home from Hawaii on
Feb. 13, and on the 15th, he
will undergo surgery to
remove bone spurs from his
ankle 1n Baltimore.
Despite the surgery. plans
are already being made for
the annual football camp that
he hol(ls with Troy Brown.
The· qmp i~ slated to be on
May 20 in Huntington .
Det.;i] \ will he announced at
a Inter date
I

Rio hoops teams give back to
community with skills clinic
BY

annual basis, we would like any time you have an oppor~ girls coming, but the par~
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINEL
tO COntinue tO do this," tunity to give back to your em s, I think one of the most
Smalley said.
community and working important things that we
RIO GRANDE - The
Players and coaches a like with younger individuals, I achieved with that clime
University of Rio Grande felt that the clinic was part th111k 1s always a good thmg, was bnnging the parents to
women's and men's basket~ of their responsibility to
"We came in and we vol- that environment and being
ball programs learned up to.· give back to the commun ity. unteered our time. we able to talk to them about
host
a
. Basketball
"For me 1 ihought il was a played with them. had a how to be parenls of young '
Fundamental skill~ clinic great experience," said good time and we let them ath)eles and what to
for boy s and girls m grades jumor guard Brind1 Kandel , uboul the bu siness side of expect ,'- Smalley said. "It's
3-8 at the Lyne Center on from Fredericktown . '' It college
athletic s."' not a win at all cost mentalJan. 8.
was a chance for our leam 10 Williamson said. "That yo u ity. n's learning the fundaThis special clinic was a reach out to the _community. hav~ to go to class and mentals. ' 1t"s supporting the
part of the Cha1)1pions of to be role model s for · the you've got to be dedicated student, bein g involved m
Character initiative spon: younger kids who came in lo your sport in order to be the acti vittes and also trying
sored by the NAJA and here . ·
s uccessfu I."
to look at It from the perwhich RID Grande is heavily
"Fo r any young chi ld, I
Smalley added a sl1gh1ly speCIIVC of play versus my
involved in .
know when I was young, 'to slant as to why hi s program son or daughler being a star
Both programs wanted to be around college athletes was a part of the clinic. ··we athlete and keeping it in perbe a part of' teaching the was just amazing," · Kandel look at this as a. means of spective
skills of basketball, but also added.
''That was our g1ving back lo the commu"We ~ant the parents to
1h!! skills of playing with chance to give back and nity," Smalley said. "What know and understand where
game with grace, dignity kind of forget about our- we- try to do, is not only tiie co'aches are coming
and character.
selves for a l,ittle while and work on the skills of basket~ from- and to try to bridge
Rio Grande ass1stant really focus on someth ing ball. but lry to- incorporate Ihat gap," .Smalley added.
men ' s coach and NAIA that matters and that 's help- the importance Of goal-selAdmission consisted of
Champions of Character ing k1ds uul and help them 11ng and academics and how bn ngmg one . canned or
liai son
Ken
French learn the game."
boxed food ilem for the umthey relate to each other. "
explained the reasoning the
Senior center Tiffani e
"'We had a great turnout, versity's Champions of
event was held. -·one of the Hager, from BidwelL also nol only individual boys and Characler Food Drive.
reasons. it was done is that felt like she was givmg
we jusl want 10 provide back. ·-ror me. 1t's jusl kind
something to nol only 10 the ot nice 10 gtve back to the
.
.
youth of our community, but cummumty, working . w1th
to the parents."' French said. kids. that" s what I want to
Mid-Winter "Super Sale"
--we try 10 pass the message do. so for me to able 10
of how imporl ant be1ng work with the kids was just
involved in athlelics is . and a blessing:· Hager ·.said. '' I
what 11's all about. how 1t JU'St look forward to workInstalled Up to 101 U.l .
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Re gg ie Williamson. a
French added. "We got a lot sen ior forward on Ihe men' s
of good feedback from the 1eam. from Columbu s. OH .
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parlicipants, you ng athletes shared si m1lar views. -- I
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that were involved and we lhmk It was a v.onderful
got a lot of good teedback event to rerlect Champions
.from the parents as welL of Character:· Williamson
because the messaQe was to said. '·Espec i ~l l y workmg
Pomeroy, Ohio
\lith younger kids. I think
both of them ." . ~
Rio Grande women" s
coach David Smalley said
Adult Davtime
Cfasses at Mason County Career Center
Ihe event was not deS1gnt'd
•
to be a onc-.11me occurThe following daytime classes are al'(li/ahle at no char~e·
rence. 'This is somclhing
·.
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WILLIAMS

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Valley VIeW 61 EatOn 56
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Jdh!lo,11 h,uhlt~ .tpi"''J ~l1 ndH11'n t.&gt;r

�Page 86 • i;lunba1' ~in~ -i;lrlttinel

Sunday, February s, zoo6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Hannan sneaks
uponWahama

Cl
ANfiEIS

WRAP-UP
Gallia Academy's seventh
grade Blue Angels basketball
team recently completed their
season with an 8-6 record. In
front from left are Samantha
Barnes and Katie Dunlap. In
second row are Hannah
Cunningham, Kari Campbell, ·
Morgan Leslie, Amanda
McGhee, Sarah Eberhard and
Mary Townsend . In back are
Tori Tackett, Aubree Ward,
Heather Caldwell, coach Ga~ry
Len Adkins, Ca)'tlyn Tackett,
Melissa Long and Morgan
Daniels.

Meigs Alternative School tackles students' need

SubmHted photo

STORY AND PHOTOS BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDA ILYS ENTINEL.COM

P

OMEROY We Centers, and other .agencies
have alt been in situ- providing medical and psyallOns at one t 1me or chiatric services , as well as
another where ·we've · outside ed ucational guid-'
experienced the feelitlg that ance." said Taylor.
The original SEM School
we just didn' t quite "fit in."
When we have that feel- was located on Mulberry
ing of not "fittin g in ," usu - Avenue in . ·downtown
ally there are two alterna- Pomeroy. When the group_
tives for most Of us - we outgrew that facility and as
can either change direction . renovation was being comand · move oil, or we can pleted on Meigs High School
in the summer of 2003, the
drop out.
When schools see studen ts Meigs Local Board of
who seem not to "fit in" and Education offered' to the
it 's apparent they lack the SEM Alternative School the
skills to be academically or use of two modular classsocially successful in a reg- rooms located on land adjaular classroom. administra- ,:ent to the high school.
The location opened up
tors now have the option of
new
things for the students . It
referring them to an alterna-.
meant
that they could interact
tive school.
The Meig s Alt ernative socially with students at the
School. where Southern, . high school and coulq particEastern and Meig s students ipate in so me regular classes
i::an be brought together for a otlered there. as long as their
basket of educational and behavior wa sn't disruptive ,
social assistnnce. was devel- while still rece iving support
oped several years ago tfndcr and monitoring at the SEM
the k adcr,;hip of Dr. John School.
Being ab le to do that
Costa111o, superin tendent of
. the
Ath ens- Meigs means that some stude nts can
get the credits they need for
Educational Service Center.
The prograt\ls are ge ared high school graduation .
.not only toward· offering Taylor noted that several .stu"s pecial · assistance to aeade- dents have achieved that goal
mi.:ally challenged stu- only because of the support
dents, hut toward· providing they received from the alterthem with needed social native school.
"In the past five years, we
and psychological services
provided the support which
from age ncies.
allowed
six or seve n kids to
"It dearly is detrimental to
a community to dismi ss kids graduate who might not othfrom high school becau se erwise have attained that,"
they don "t conform to the said Taylor.
·'Many of these kids have
stereotype of what a regular
big
issues:· he added. "Some
hrgh school student looks like
or act s ·like," wrote an· have social anxie ties, they
Athens-Meigs Educational can't handle crowds. they get
into trouble and keep getting
Service Center superv isor.
'·A community is be.tter. into trouble. and what we
served if young people are want to do is help them conguided to di scover their trol those issues:·
The SEM School is actualown talent s and abi lities
and to contribute in ways ly two separate schools .with
them selves. fou r classes funded through a
unique to
Sometim es it takes a lot of Work Force Inve stment
Grant and financ ial assistime to reac h · that goa l. tance from the district s based
Sometimes it takes a different pe r'&gt; pective to teac h that on enrollment.
The reg ular · SEM classes
goal. Sometimes it takes have about 20 to 25 stupeople · who have special dent s in two classes, with
gi fts to· see fhe hidd en some go in g to ,th e hi gh
capacity in young individu- sc hool for classes and then
als who are unique or difcomi ng back.
The other sehoul of two
ferent or difficult .'" (h e
supervisor continued.
cl asses has 20 kids who
"The alt ernative schoo l
have emotional distur- .
~rovide s _a'positive _alte.rna- . bances with an individual
uve envtronmen t . to&gt; .stu- educational plan in place.
dents who are at. nsk of Some . of them also take
bemg.suspended orexpelled · clas ses at the high school.
or_ those \:tth a ht sto~~ot Many of these students
mappropnat e
tJehd tor come back year after year,
whtch may . con!f t~ut e to sllid Taylor.
ac adem1 c !,allure .
sa 1d
Fenton Taylor. who has
been coordinator of the program since it w~s organized
in 1998.
·. "The goal from the beginning was to establish an edttcational program where more
effective services cou ld ·be
offered to those student\
~nique with one ormultiple
· problems. such as behavior
issues. ()r lack of social skill s.
or academic ability."
Taylor listed one of the
greatest strength s of the alternative program as the co llaboratio n among the man y peopl e and age ncies choo sin g to
share the resp6nsibility for
working with this g roup of
yo un g people.
"These include the parems. man v of whom were
\earchin g i·nr workabl e program s. the Mei gs Coumy
ht V&lt;'I tile
Co urt.
t·he
Depa rtment of Job s and
Fam il y Serv1 ces . Wood land
·

·

Banner semester for
Rio Grande -athletes
get otT study tables, we also
hav€; what we call . extreme
study tables for studentlathRIO (JRANDE- It was a letes that fail 10 maintain a
banner semester for the 3.0.
University of Rio Grande thi s
"We're preny ·focused on
past fall semesier in the class- what we want to get accomroom. Three members of the plished in the classroom and
Redwomen volleyball team .the ·majority ·of our kids as
garnered American Mideast well."' Smalley said.
Conference and NAIA All ,
Junior guard Brindi Kandel ,
American Schol ar Athlete from Fredericktown, said that
awards aitd the women 's. bas- she applies pre ssure on herketball · and softbai l teams self to excel in the classroom
achieved outstanding team and al so attributes the success
grade point averages. · ·
in academics to the standards
Senior Lynnette Kiesling pur in place by Coach
and juniors Jessica Veach and Smalley.
Lindsay Urton all earned
'There is a lot of personal
AMC and NAJA Scholar pressure that college athletes
Athlete awards .. Kiesling is have to put on themselves to
majoring in Early Childhood succeed. es pecially with the
Education, Veach majors in time restraints we're under
Pre-Veterinarian and Urton is with sports," Kandel said.
··coach Smalley does a really
an education major.
Volleyball coach Patsy good job with emphasizing
Fields was happy for the three how· iillponant it is to.achieve
- players and said that they are academic goals as well as
. the type of student/athletes sports goals.
she aims io bring \nto her pro"You ' re a student first and
gram . "We look tor the good 'an at!Jiete. second," Kandel
students, because you know added. ..He does a really
those are the ones who are good job of keeping track of
going stay with us fpr four · us. keeping track of 'our
years." Fields said. "They all grades: he's stays on to~ of it
three have been great stu- and does a really good JOb of
dents. they're gQod role mod- helping us out as well."
els, not only in our progra m.
Softball .coach David Pyles
but qlso for the un iversi ty.
said what hi s team accom'They've been great .kith plished in ti1e classroom is
rem arkable. "Our team GPA
for us.'· Fields added.
To ac hi eve an NA IA All- for the fall was 3,69 ; that is
American Scholar Athlete just outstanding, when you
award a StudentJathlete must consider the time that these
be a jtinior or se nior and girls have to put in for train- .
achieve a minimum 3.5 grade ing. conditioning and travelpoint average.
ing and sti"ll to maintain
The softball team achieved grades of th at level, that's an
an outstanding 3.69 team extremely high grade point
grade point average and the avcra·gc for a student that is
women's hoops team record- not in v.o lv ~ d in any thing,"
ed a 3.3 1 team GPA.
Pyles said. "For a team to
Women' s bas ketball coach have a GPA of that. is just an
David Smalley said that he :OU"tanding accompli shment.
look s for well-rounded stu" I think it 'peaks very hi ghdents . m the recru 1t1ng ly of the cali ber and the type
process. ··we look for qu - of girh we ha ve on the team,"
dents who can get it &lt;.lo ne in Pyle' added . "We expect, I
.the classroom as we ll as on think would be the ri ght
the basketball court."" Srnallev word, our girh to do well and
said . 'T in very proud an{i it they"re not. we d(J anything
plea,ed of the gro up tha t we .:an to gO'o ut dur way to
we 've put together thi -. -.ea - help them ."
·
. son as we ll as 'cason; in the
Pyle&lt; also ;a id that an
past.
importance i• pla ced on acad"That's a tribute to · their ernie-. in his program . "We
abili ty to wo rk hard in the 1tress to the -.e girls that their
classroom a\ wel l a, on the degree and the succe" in aetlcourt.
. .
demics il going to carry them
Smalley said he ha -. pro- much further than ,oftball
gram1 set in p!aGe to help the ever will in life." Pyle\ said.
student/athlete with the acad- "We do \t ress tha t and we do
ernie side . "We have manda- wan t the girh ·to make good
tory stud y table' for all ne w grade' and· we' re ve ry proud
and incoming peo pl e in our 11f the fac t that they arc makprogram ." he said. ... If they ing good grades and doing
maintain a 3. 0 GPA the pre vi- well in the cl assroom : ·
ou; 'emestcr then they can

Sunday,February5,2006

SFASON

Wahama. for the second time this week, suffered a massive
meltdown in allowing its opponents an enormous offensive
spurt. Coach James Toth 's White Falcons gave up a 24-2
scoring spree to Roane Count)' on Wednesday before Hannan.
sprinted to a 26-2 edge on Fnday.
Wahiima shot a dreary 28 percent from the tloor for the
oame with the White Falcons !l\lnnecting on a dismal 16 per~ent during the second half WHS recorded 42 rebounds and
committed 12 tumovers with Clay Roush grabbtng 12 boards
with Brenton Ciark collecting II rebounds . · ·
Clark paced Wahama offensive ly with 18 points with
Casey Harrison total ing 16 and Brandon Fowler and Clay
Roush I0 pomts apiece.

BY

'

Local Sports Spotlight

ASHTON, W.Va. - Coach Danny Dewhurst's. Hannan
Wildcat basketball team erased m1 11 -point halftime deficit
with an amazing 26-2 scoring burst to open second half
action and hand neighboring Mason County foe Wah_ama a
69-57 hardcourt setback Friday evening on the Wtldcats
home tloor.
The White Falcons threatened w blow the game wide open
and turn the contest into a runaway with several charges during the opening half bur the Wildcats rallied with a sturdy
second h~lf finish to avenge an earlter se&lt;tson loss to. tls
Mason County rivals. Hannan Improved to 8-5 tollowmg
the victory wh.ile WHS dropped tis .second stratght outmg to
fall to 10-5 on the season.
Ryan Cantereury. Wesley Gue and Kev in Blake all scored
in double ti " ures for the Wilddus whtle Aaron Payne JUSt
missed double digit scoring for Hannan . Canterbury tallied a
team hiuh
18 points .on the. evenit1g with Gue addmg 16,
0
Blake 14 and Payne mne.
The game was actually decided at the free throw line where
the Wildcats cashed in on 21 at 33 attempts. Hannan shot a
respectable 44 percent from the llodr while grabbing 39
rebounds and committing 18 tumovers m the contest. The
host team outscored Wahama by a 44-21 margin over the
final 16 minu~es thanks in .part to a 17-of-26 effort from the
free throw stripe.
. .
Gue led Hannan on the boards with 12 rebounds wtth
Canterbury collecting 10 rebounds· for the Wildcats..
.
"I'm really pleased with our intensity and stmTIJna
tonight," first year Hannan coach Dan Dewhurst smd following the come-from-behind win. "We weren't mentally pre"
pared in a loss t.O Ohio Valley on Thursday but tomght we got
some huge effons on the part of several players. Ryan
(Canterbury ) really steppe(! it up and we finally got Wes
(Ciue) back from tm injury after he missed three games tor
us.''

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Meigs Alternative School coordinator Fenton Taylor, !.eft, assisted by Tony Dugan. teacher. work with students enrolled in
the Meigs Alternative Sc.hool.
He described yet another
gwup of students "who
can't make it here" and need
home instruction .· That's .
where the district pays for a
tutor or go to their homes or ·
meet with them at the
library so that they can
maintain credits. Currently
there are two students -in
that category.
Parent cooperation and participation are a big part of the
program. as is the assistance
of providers of special servtces .
"These kids. need a lot of
help and we're here to make
that as easy to get as possi - ·
ble," said Taylor.
He noted that once oa week
he and case management
workers get together and talk
about the students and their
issues. "That keeps all of us
on the same page."
As for Taylor's appraisal
of the pr6gram, he says he
sees "real progress.... He
described the program as
being "at the peak now with
the .kids doing really well,"
attributing that to the work
of his staff of three teachers
and thre~ aides and a shortterm suspension person, and
lot s of assistance from participating social and mental"
health agencies.
"Progress comes in bits and '
pieces, · sometimes we 're just
buying time, but some of the
kids make it and that's what
we're all about.:· concluded
Taylor.

Above: Fenton Taylor. coorcli- ·
nator of the SEM Alternative
School talk~. with Sue Lemley,
left, and Melinda Minshall of
Syracuse ; a student's grandmother and mothe r res pectively, at an apprec iation banquet
held annually for parents and
service providers.
Left: Located on the M.eigs

High School campus, these
two modular un its are used
·as classrooms for students
from Eastern , Southern and
Meigs districts enrol led in the
Meigs Al ternative SchOol.

.

.

.

Eye Examinations and Q:mplete Eye Care
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Dr. Reaves is oortified by the American Board of

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Lisa H. Reaves, MD ·
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CLINIC

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.iunbp·limes -ientintl

YOUR HOMETOWN

Prominent African-Americans were visitors to Gallia
BY JAMES SANDS

In 1898, Prof. J H..Lewis of
Gallipolis said that the four
greatest African-American
men of the 19th century were:
'Frederick Douglass, Robert
Elliot(, J.M. Langston and
Blanche K. Bruce. The latter
two of those four men \isted
are ·known to have be6,n frequent visitors to Gallipolis.
Douglas was the great preCivil War abolitionist and l ~c­
turer, Elliott was a newspaper
editor and congressman from
South Carolina. and Langston
a congressman from Virginia
who had also lived in
Chillicothe.
The people of Gallipolis
thought so much of Bruce that
when he died on .March 17,
1898, a large . memorial service was held March · 29,
1898, at John Gee AME
Church to honor the memory
of Senator Bruce. Ainong the
things remembered about him
was that on Feb. 14, 1879,
Bruce became the first black
person to preside over a session of the U.S. Senate.
Bruce was elected to the
Senate by the Mississippi legislature in 1874 and took
office ·on March 5, 1874. He
served one term which lasted
to ·.1881. After Bruce left
office it would be 85 years
·before another AfricanAmerican w&lt;;&gt;uld serve in the
U.S. Senate.

Page C2.

Blanche K. Bruce was born
to slave parents in Farmville,
Va., in 1841. As a lad he was
tutored by his master's son.
who also taught Blanche how
to run a priming operation.
Bruce followed hi s master in
the printing business to
Mississippi and then to
Missouri. From the late 1850s
to .1864, Bruce taught school,
attended Oberlin College and
worked as a ·porter on a
steamboat which plied the
Mississippi River.
In 1864. as a free man,
Bruce started the first school
for blacks in the state of
Missosuri at HannibaL In
1869, he moved to Mississippi
and established himself as a
prosp~rous landowner and
newspaperman. Over the next
few years. he rose to prominence in the politics of Boli var
County, Miss.. serving as
sheriff, tax collector . and
supervi sor of education.
During these years in
Mississippi politics, Bruce
became acquainted with two
people with past and· future
Gallipolis
tie s.
Daniel
Webster had grown up in
Gallipolis.
leaving . · for
Vicksburg, Miss .• after the
Civil War where he served as
a noted attorney and popular
Republican orawr. Charles
Armistead was . born in
Mississippi and also became
an attorney, moving to
Gallipolis in the 1880s and

staying here until his death
about three decades later.
While in the U.S. Senate.
Bruce fought to have generous grants of western land
given to freed slaves. He also
begun a movement m desegregate the U.S. millitary That
would not become reality
until the days of Harry
Truman. When Democrats
regained
control ·
of
Mississippi politics, Bruce
was removed from' office.
Due to threats from the Ku
Klux Klan ; Bruce was unable
to move back to Mississippi.
He served a number of
.appointed positions in and
around Washington until his
death in 1898.
One · of Bruce's most
memorable appearances in
Gallipolis was in September
· of 1884. He was a speaker at
the
Emanci pation
Proclamation ce lebration
held at the fairgrounds in
the daytime and in the
evening at a Repuplican
rally held in the Betz Opera
Ho use.
The
Galfipolis
Journal newspaper said that
the place " was crtlwded
almost to suffocation.~
According to the JQurnal.
'"Mr. Bruce is a largy nutbrown, fine looking man and
he is perhaps the foremost
colored man in the United
States. He held hi s audience
and got in his work."
In 1884, Brqce was '"

State drafts new
sewage disposal rules

charge of the exhibit on black
achievement at the World's
Cotton f'xposition in New
Orleans. [n 1888, Bruce
not be suited for the install aBv STEVE SWATZEL, R.S,
would receive II votes for
GALLIA COUNTY HEALTH
tion of a septic system.
vice president
at the
DEPARTMENT
In other worqs, .the properRepublican
National
ty
ma y not be developed
Convention that nominated
Jhe
Ohio
Department
of
unless
a public sewer is
Harrison and Morton.
The Bruce memorial in Health has drafted new accessible or the property is
1898 here was 1ed by Prof. sewage disposal regulations changed to allow for a nonLewis. The hymns, "Lord of based on an Ohio law passed discharging septic system. It
The World Above ," ··consider by the state legislature. The will be vital to check with the
Ohio · General health department to evaluate·
The Lilies" and "Nearer My !25th
Assembly
passed
House Bill the site for sewage treatment
God To Thee" were sung.
Prayers were offered by the 231 establishing the authority prior to b,uilding a home or
Rev. George Mason. The Rev. ' for the Ohio Department of buying property. Developing
Sydes read Psalm 90 and Health to· implement regula- property with soils conta inspeeches were given· by lions standardizing the sit- ing a high percentage of cl~y.
Mayor
Merriman
of ting, designing, permitting. · a shallow depth to bedrock,
Gallipolis, the Rev. LV. installation; operation, moni- or other restrictive conditions
Bryant and C.F: Armistead. . tbring, maintenance and will be very difficult and will
The Gallipolis Tribune abandonment of sewage require a lot of planning.
reported, "Mr. Armistead paid treatment systems servi ng These properties will need .to
and eloquent forceful lawyer- homes and small non-resi- be evaluated by the health
like tribu te to the deceased. dential facilities. ·
department or a soil specialis!
Living in Mississippi, he had
·The legislature required the to determine the best areas
enjoyed a personal acquain- new regulations be adopted available for sewage dispostance with the Senator for statewide by May 6, 2006. al, which will determine the
twenty-five years. and he However. the effective date size and overall development
learned to honor him because for the regulations will most of the property.
of his personal worth and his likely be Jan. I , 2007. The . The proposed sewage di svalue as a true American citi- draft versions of these rules. posal regulations require
zen of broad views and aspir- l\fe currently under review by more stringent standards for
ing liberal ideas. Mr. local health departments. installers, cleaners and serArmistead's eulogy was . planning boards, develop- vice men of · septic systems. ·
splendid and greatly enjoyed." ment agencies and other Homeowners wanting to
(James Sands is a special building entities. In comp'ari- install their own septic syscorrespondent
for . the son to the current sewage dis- tern wilt' need the same certiSun.daj Times-Sentinel. He posal regulations, this draft ticat ions. or testing required
CUll be COIItacted by writillg version lakes a significant . for a li censed installer.
to 1040 Military Road, turn of direction in how Everyone involved in the
Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)
household waste is treated in planning. design, installation
and operation will need an
Gallia County.
The need to update the law understanding of soil types
and the regulations governing and how they relate to treatsewage disposal in Ohio was ing sewage. Specific soi l conpointed o,ut by the Ohio ditions are required to,permit
them with meals and teaching Department of Health. They the install~tion of, a septic
them .about the everyday life, estimated that nearly 25 per- system. Existing septic sysand culture of Mexico.
cent 'o f the more than I mil- terns in use prior to the effec"It's just a wonderful expe- tion household' sewage 'dis- tive .date of the new sewage
rience," Hale Elliott said. posal systems in Ohio are disposal rules 'will not ' be
"The people who go on the failing , that's 250,000 failing affected unless they were not
trip get so much out of it. lam sewage systems' These fail ed . installed accordingly to the
really looking forward ,to this system1 discharge up to older regulations, or they are
summer's trip to Mexico." .. 900,000 gallons of untreated found to be creating a publi c
Those on the trip also have sewage into Ohio's waters health nuisance. ·
the option of spending a little every year. Also, the · Ohio
Homeowners wilt be
extra .and traveling for a time Department of Health did not expected to maintain these
to Acapulco, ·in addition to have legal authority to review existing systems as. they were
the many other destinations .
For information on the cost the sewage programs opera!-' installed. This means. any :
of the trip. as well as other ed by the local health depart- mechanical parts, such as an
information about the jour- ments for compliance with aerator motor. will need to be
ney to Mexico, call Hale state regulations. This dispar- working as designed. If these
ity in the law created wide- systems are found to be failElliott at (800) 282-7201.
For additional information spread difference s in how ing or creating a public health
on other. trips and special counties designed and per- nuisance, the health departseptic ·system s. ment may order the homeevems ar Rio Grande, as well mined
in owner to· alter the septic sysas information on the wide Significant · changes
sewage
treatment
technology,
tern according· to the new ·
range of academic and proand
increases
in
development
sewage regulations. Thi s will
fessional programs offered by
tlte . institution , log onto and population ·are more rea- add a tremendous amount pf ·
sons for .changing the current cost to the repair of the sys\vww.rio.edu.
sewage disposal regulations. tern. If you have a septic sysThe new sewage .treatment tem now, make sure the sysregulaiions will change the tem is. in compliance before
way sewage is disposed of the new regulations 'become
·in Gallia County and the rest ..effective. A licensed . septic
of Ohio. Septic system s system in staller. cleaner, scrinstalled after the new rules viceman or the Gallia County
become effective wi II no Health Department can assist
longer be allowed a direct you in determlmng the condi di scharge. As of right now, tion of your septic system. ·
homes sites that have very
If rou hare anr questions
poor soil condi tions or are regarding the I'I'OfWSed rules
one acre or less ·willtypical · or sewa,rw disposal .\·ystems
ly have an aerobic sewage please contact Ste\'e S&gt;mt~el
treatment. system in sta ll ed or Stuart Lent.~, director uf
that discharges treated water elll·iro11111ental health at 740to a ditch, a stream, or a 441-2018.
The
Ohio
drainage-way. When the Department of Health· Web
proposed se wage regula- site ha., tl1e draft \'enion of
lions become effec ti ve . . /he proposed nt!es m·ailabie
SOffie neW home SiteS may {1/ \\'\1'\V.Od/whio.gur.

many other places. ·
The trip will inGlude stops
During the trip, students in Mex ico City and the·
learn about the Mexican cui- Pyramid of the Sun and the
ture, Jearn Spanish and have a Pyramid of the Moon. The
unique opportunity to ·explore visitors will be able to see
thi s hi stone country.
these amazing pyramids, and
"This year is going to be Jearn .about the proud hi story.
the be st trip yet," Hal e
.Also on the trip. the traveiElliou said.
·
· ers will stay in the village of
Groups and families as Cuetzalan , a place that looks
well as individuals· are invit- much like a Mexican village
ed to go on the trip. People of from I 00 years ago.
all ages and walks of life
"Cuetzalan is just an
come together to immerse incredlb.le place.'' Hale
themselves In the language Elliott said. ·
and culture of Mexlco, and
The travelers will be able
lifelong friendships are often . to visit shops and restaumade on. the trips.
rants, talk with the people in
If the travelers want to earn the village and learn about
college credit on the trip (and the culture.
.
travelers are also . welcome
During the trip, the travelwho do not want to take the · ers will stay in hotels. for part
class for credit), although of t.he journey, but also stay
they all attend classes, keep with host families part of the
journals and take part in time. The host familieS' will
numerous activities that are · treat the travelers as part of
fun and educationaL
their own families ; providing

:Uberian soldier - after 14 years of war
Bv SMITHSONIAN
MAGAZINE

Lodge donation

His· name is Joseph Duo.
He is 28. He dropped out of
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
the 1Oth grade to join the
army early in Liberia:s civil
. July 20, 2003: Another day war. After the fighting ended
:in Liberia's 14-year civil war. and Taylor tled into exile in
: Rebel s were closing in on August 2003, Duo was out of
;the government of President a job, with no means of sup·Charles Taylor. From a bridge · porting hi s wife and children.
:leading into Monrovia . the
Hondros found thi s out last
:capital; a band of child sol- October when he returned to
;diers in Taylor's army were . Liberia to cover the country 's
·returning rebel tire. Their . first postwar elections. He
:commander, shirtless and asked hi s Liberian assistant
:dreadlocked, spotted a news ·about the soldier. The man
·photographer in the vkinity drove"him to a squalid senle·and fssued an order in Liberian ment at the edge of Monrovia;
patois: "Oh ·good, white man, where Duo emerged from a
you come ·or bridge'"
concrete shack, a shitt on his
Chris Hondros, a photogra- back and dreadlocks gone. .
pher for Getty Images News
After sharing their impresService. complied , dodging sions of the day they first
bullets along the way . As met, Hondros suggested they
Hondros approached the sol- return together to the bridge,
Submltled photo
diers,
the
comman der now bustling with traffic, and Tina Peck, left. of the Inpatient Rehabi litation Unit at Holzer
grabbed a rocket launcher Duo agreed. Standing at the Medical · Center, accepts a donation froin Don Holcomb of
and fired. As the rocket deto- same spot he'd stoqd in 2003, Vinton Masonic Lodge:131 to assist with its operations. The
nated amid a group of attack- Duo grinned shyly for a post- donation was col I eete~ by lodge members from fund-raisers,
ing rebels, .he turned towards war portrait.
including two · pancake; breakfasts and a dinner, held during
Hondros, leapt and i"ued . a
When the rain began to fall, · · 2005. The lodge regu larly conducts fund-raisers throughout
battle cry. The photographer the men ducked under an the year for worthwhile causes.
awning. Duo asked Hondros:
clicked his shutter.
The
resulting
image ':How do a man join with the
appeared on front pages and U.S. Marines?" ..
in magazines from France to
Hondros, taken aback ,
Japan to the United States. lt . made it clearthat Duo had litwas plastered on train station tie chance of ·meeting the
benches in Amsterdam and Marines· education. language
discussed in an gallerie s in and residency standards.
Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS
Colorado, No rth Carolina Seeing Duo 's di ?appointand Pennsylvania. It became ment. Hondro' asked if he
SportsMedicine Grant &amp; Orthopedic Associates
a defining image of Liberia's wanted to go to school. Duo
protracted strife.
sai(l yes.
"Sometimes a picture capWithin a 'few days.
lures thing s that people Hondros had enrolled Duo in
For initial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
respond to." Hondros tells night school. paying $86 for a
joint replacement, we offer office hours at :
Smith,onian magazine. "Thi s year's tuition - a prol)ibiti ve
3554 U.S. Route 60 East.
is a picture of fighting' that · sum for almost. all Liberians.
Barboursville, WV.
shows &lt;;orne of the uncom- Wl)en HomJros left the coun.
l
fortable realities of war."
. try, Duo assured him he
·The commander has hi s would not let him down.
Our next clinic date is Friday, Feb. 17.
own respon., e to the picture:
Hondro~
retu rne d
to
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
"I was happy at that time Libe ria for November's
because I wa' defend·ing my runoff election,.
whe n
for an appointment.
country." ne says, s·peaking · Liberians
cho se
Ellen
'
through an interpreter. But he John son -Sirleaf as th eir prc\"
· doesn 't like. to look at that idem .. the first woman to be
Specializing in total joint replacement
image now. " It gives me the elected head of state, in modmemor'ies of war.:· he says.
7rn African hi story.

The ·
Joint Implant Center

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is YOUR local site for

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PageC3

Co.M MUNfl'Y

Sunday,February5 7 2006

Rio Grande plans Mexican trip for summer
RIO GRANDE - Area
residents will have an oppor·tunity to travel to Mexico this
summer ·as part of a program
offered by the University of
Rio Grande/Rio Grande
Community College . .
Rio Grande offers trips to
several foreign ' countries
every summer for graduate
an.d undergraduate students
in several programs. Some
'trips are also open to area res. idents who are. not students at
:Rio Grande.
: The Mexico trip has
. :vroved to be a very popular
:Journey in recent years, and
-Professor Karen Hale Elliott
:is currently planning for
:another .trip thi s year.
: The Mexico trip will take
-place from June 29 through
.:Aug. 5, and will feature stops
:in Mexico. City, the historic
·village of Cuetzalan, the
:Pyramid of the Sun, .and

"

'

PROC

·Sunday, February5, 2006

OU playwrights sweep
theater category

G HEART MONTH

SubmlttH photo

Dow Saunders, seated, president of the Gallipolis City Commission, recently proclaimed February as American Heart Month.
Holzer Medical Center will sponsor a number of activities throughounhe month. including the annual Heart Fair that will take
place on Valentine's Day, Tuesday, Feb. 14 from i3 to 11:30 a.m. Standing are members of the 2006 Heart Month Planning
Committee at Holzer· Health Systems, from left, Teresa Remy, MHA. BSN. RN. administrator for Holzer Senior Care and LongTerm Care at Holzer Health Systems; Bonnie McFarland, RN, BSN, director of Community Health and Well ness at Hoizer Medical
Center; Karen Stocker, RD, LD, directof of Nutrition Services at Holzer Medical Center; and Jennl Dovyak, director of Community
Relations at HMC. For more information about Heart Month· activities, call McFarland at (740) 446-56(9.

ATHENS - Three m~m­
bers of the Ohio University
School of• Theater's MFA
Playwriting Program swept
the 10-minute play category
·at the Region Ill Festival of
the . Kennedy --' Center
American ·College Theatre
· Festival at Illinois State
University, Jan. 10- 15.
Gradu.ate student Laura
Jacqmin of Shaker Heights
won the · 10-minute play
competition for her play
"Lucky." Merri Biechler 's
"Brace for Impact" and
Mark
Witteveen 's
"Champion" finished second
·and third, respectively, in the
same competition. Thi s is
Witteveen 's second . time
achieving high marks at
KCACTF. Last year, his play
"For and Against" won top
award for Region ·· 111 and
was performed at the
Kennedy Center.
The trio attended the festival · where their plays were
workshopped and given
staged readings. The. winning
plays were chosen as the top
three in a five-state region
that includes Michigan,
Wisconsin, Illinois, Indiana
and Ohio.
In· March, these play s will
compete with the top plays
from the seven other regions
of the KCACTF. The results
of that competition will
determine which four plays
from across the country will.
be performed at the Kennedy
Center in ApriL
Started in 1969 by Roger
,, .

, . . .

.

L: Stevens, the Kennedy
Center 's founding chairman, \he KCACTF is a
national theater program
involving I 8,000 student'
from colleges and universities. lt has grown into a network Of more than 600 academic institutions, where
theater departments and stu-.
dent artists showcase their
work and receive outside
assessment py KCAC'I:F
respondents.
In January and· February of
each year, eight regional festivals showcase the finest of
each region's entered productions and offer a variety
of activities, including workshops, symposia 'and regional-level award programs . The
Kennedy Center and the
KCACTF national committee selects a panel of three
judges for each regional festivaL The se judges, in consultation with the arti stic
director, select four to six of
the best and most diverse ·
regional festiva l production s
to showcase in the spring at
the Kenneay Center. all
expenses paid.
Since
Its
inception.
KCACTF has given more
than 400,000 college theater
students the opportunity to
have their worlt critiqu~d.
improve their dramatic ski lls
and receive national recognition for excellence. •More
than . 16 million theatergoers
have attended approximately
10,000 festival productions
nationwide.
,

.. .

--,------------:-'--------:----:--.-'--·- .-·'-- ,. ~'PROOOTO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
Area Agency names community services director ,,;;~;~.:·t:Sinday .Ti~ei""sentinel

RIO GRANDE ~. Pamela
K. Matura, executive director
of the Area Agency on Aging
District 7 Inc., (AAA 7) has
&amp;nnounced the appointment
of Vicky Abdella, RN. to the
new Community Services
Department as Community
Services director and a mem- ·
ber of AAA 7's senior management team .
The AAA 7 Community
Services Department currently includes the following ~rograms: Care Coordinauon,
National Family Caregiver
Support,
Service
·coordination,
Electronic
Resource Directory, "Making
A Link," Residential State
Supplement . ·
Provider
Development,
and
Community Service O,utreach
Programs serving participants
in Adams, Brown, Gallia,
Highland,
· Jackson, ·
Lawrence. Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vinton counties.
Abdella has 22 years of
nursing e~tperience as an educator and administrator with
the past 20 years spent in
homecare. Her experience.
includes· working in 'hospitals, home health care agencies. health departments a11d
medical equipment companies. She has .worked with
regulatory agencies at the

VIcky AbdeHa
Sll!te and federal levels and
has worked · cpoperatively
with community agencies
throughout her career.
Abdella has experience with
public speaking at the local,
stale and national leveL She ·
holds an associate degree in
nursing
·from
Hocking
College, and is acertitied trainthe-trainer to be a program
coordinator or primary instructor for nurse aide tmining and
competenc;r evaluation program from Columbus State.
Community College. She is a
certified information and referraJ specialist for aging and has
completed on-line coursework
for Project CARES (Caregiver
Adaptations
to
Reduce
Environmental Stress) from
the National Resource Center

.

on Supportive Housing and
For complete listing of pro- ' 7&gt;,
• 't
•
· •' .
·
·
Home Moditication of the grams from the AAA7 Inc.,
· "' ·
'·
·
University
of Southern visit www.aaa7.org of the &lt;Jcj: ' ~~s.~1be. tf!day ~ ?92·2155 or 446-2342
California.
web or call (800) 582-7277.
_ _..,.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Abdella has'attended numerous contiituing education seminars jn the field ofaging. ·
For the past six years,
Abdella has been with AAA7
Inc. as a PASSPORT
(Medicaid . waiver) case manager, and then as supervisor of
the National Family Caregiver
Support Program, where she
worked to assist . with the
development and implementation ofthe progmm that now
assists over 500 caregivers in
the agency's service district.
AAA7 Inc . administers
progtams for older adults
funded 'by the state and.federHiring full-time, part-time, perdiem and float-pool nurses.
al governments. Federal
funds managed by the
Starting pay for new graduates $20/hr.
Administration on Aging and
the CMS (Center for
Hourly wage adjusted for years of experience.
Medicare and Medicaid
Excellent Benefits!
Services), as well as all state
funds, are received through
Openings in:
the Ohio Department of
Aging. The agency contracts
with agencies and then chanRehab
nels funds through this netEmergency Room
work of service providers.
Med/Surg
These agency . providers
Surgical Floor
PCU
include senior centers, community action · agencies,
home health agencies, health
Please contact Kenny Coughenour: 740.446.5205
departments, etc.

HEALTH SYSTEMS
·Gallipolis I Jackson

Now hiring RN's

Increase In houriV waaa scala and shm dntarendal.

ccu

�CELEBRATIONS

PageC4

~

SUilday, February 5, 2006

p,•ge Cs

CELEBRATIONS
Sunday, Fcbruarys, 2oo6
Books about Valentine's Day, for those:
who adore it and those who Clbhor it

&amp;unbap- Ott me~ -&amp;enttnel

Bv RON BERTHEL

the an cient art of bibliomancy, that is, cotl\Ui ting a randoml y selected page of a
To some, Valentine's Day book to divine an answer.
means love and kisses. To
In "Orac le," answers are.
others, it's a day th~;y'd just derived from several sources,
love to kiss off.
including numerology, astrol· But whether Feb. 14 sets ogy. the tarot and crystal ball.
your heart ablaze or si mpJy, Each answer is illustrated by a
gives you heartburn, you can woodcut. "Happily Ever
probably relate to at least one After" (Simon &amp; · Schuster),
of these recent books.
on the other hand. offers a colWhat is love? More than lection of Charles Addams'
350 answers to that tougl) cartoons with ironic and darkquestion are in "Love Is ... a ly comic view s of Jove and
Wild Ride" (Abrams). 'This marriage "to Chill the Hean of
chunky hardcover is a co)lec- Your Loved One.''
tion of Kim Casali's popular,
work
Addams, whose
syndicated "Love Is ... '' car- · appeared frequently in The
toons that feature a childlike New Yorker magazine, died in
and usually. naked (but inno- 1988. This book's !50 cartoons
cently so) couple.
include classiCs as well as pre·Answers to an infinite viously unpublished pieces
Mr. and Mrs. Sonny Harris
number of' questions about from his personal archives.
'
love - which the reader
And even Prince Charming
must supply -· · are offered and Cinderella aren't ''living
. by "The Oracle of Love" "happily ever after," or so they
(Simon &amp; . Schuster)· by tell th~ir marriage counselor.
I'
Georgia Routsis Savas.
Your man ·might go from
LONG BOTTOM - Sonny and Mary Ann Harri s .observed Readers' "questions of the "dud" to ·'dude" when you
their 50th wedding anni versary with a celebration last Sunday h~art'' are resolved through comp~re him to the rogues'
following morning worship services at the Long Bottom
United Methodist Church.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Harri s were married on Feb. 3, 1956, in
Racine by the Rev. John Elwood. They have three children.
Michael (deceased). Timothy and Cynthia (David), and
three grandchildren. Steven and Katelynn Harris, and
Emmalea Durst.
Family and friends of the couple enjoyed a noon luncheon
following prayer hy Bruce McKe lvey. A three-tiered anniversary cake was se rved. The Harris's daughter and friends of the
church hosted the event.
,
Allending were Margaret and Patty Grossnickle, Terry Lynn
Headley and grandson. Dot and Jim Stout, Marlene Putman.
Charlie and Sheila Brown. Loren and Glenda Benedllm, Mary
Scarberry, Sylvia Webb , Dale and Pauline Barr. Nancy
Moose . Ernie Griffin , . Brian. Tonya, Karissa and Zack
Connolly. Eloise Connolly, Juanita Wells, Abby eausey,
Morgan Beringer. Tina. Taylynn and Tessa Rockhold, Abbie
Hawley. Warren .. and Connie Connolly. Jean and Jamie
Starcher. David. Cy ndi a'nd Emmalea Durst, Angela and Julia
Poole, Timmy Harri s, Bruce, Teresa and 'Miranda McKelvey.
Mary Price. Florence, Jeff. Kim and M.arria Wyers, Janet
Conno.lly. Gayle Thomas. Paul Wttaley and Debbie Clark, and
Ron ~1nd Mary qrace Cowdery.
·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

50

.

Mr. and Mrs; Joel Harris

SETTLES-HARRIS
WEDDING .
'·

MIDDLEPORT -· Britany Lynn Settles .and Joel, Tyson
Harris were married on Dec. 31. 2005, at the FlfSt Baptist
Church of Middleport.
Pastor Mark Morrow of Syracuse. frieli.d of the bride, performed the double-ring ceremony.
·
The hride is the daughter of John C. and Dianna L. Settles
of Pomeroy, and the ·gnnddaughter of Everette and Lucille
Schwartz of P.oint Pleasant, W.Va., and the late Earl and
Blanche Tavlor Settles of Steubenville. ·
The groom i ~ the son of James Jimenez of Columbus and
Shonda Johnson of Gallipolis. the stepson of Paul Johnson. of
. Gallipolis. and the ~randson of Helen Harris of Gallipolis.
Lindsay Haney ot Bidwell was guest registrar. The late Lola
Fisher. an aunt special to the bride, was honored with a table
display featuring red roses, a large white wedding candle and
her picture . Chris Workman of Gallipolis was an usher.
The bride, escorted to the altar by her father and given in
marriage by ·her parents, wore a strapless, white satin and
sheer illusion lace gown enhanced with beads, sequins and
crystals and had a deiachable train. The bride's ipatching
three-tiered. cathedral-length veil adorned with beads, sequins
and crystals fe ll from a tiara headband. She wore red and
white crystal rhinestones· in her upswept hair with matching
necklace and earrings, and he( mother's antique red and white
crystal rhinestone bracelet.
·
She' carried a cascading bouquet of red roses with white, red
and·silver satin streamers. ·
·
Rhonda Neece of Pomeroy was matron of honor, Jill Raffan
of Gallipolis was a bridesmaid, and Joy Se~Jes Hagglund of
Meadville, h., sister of the bride, was a bride matron. They
wore matching full-length, bright red satin dresses, halter style
with beading along the V-neckline, and red rose silk bouquets.
Junior bridesmaids/tlower girls were Chelsea Danner and
Ashlee Adkins of Gallipolis, sisters of the groom. They were
attired in matching full-length. off-the-shoulder, bright red
·satin dresses with white marabou trim and carried matching
draw-string purses containing red silk rose petals which they
sprinkled on the tlo0r going down the aisle. .
The groom wore his United States Air Force dress uniform.
His father. James Jimenez of Columbus. was ser\ior·best man,
and Jeremy Evans of Gallipolis was junior best man ..
· Groom sman was Nicholas Hagglund of Meadville, Pa.,
brother-in-law of the bride. All of the groom 's attendants wore
black tuxedos with matching red satin vests and Windsor ties
and rose boutonnieres. Honorary ring bearer was Josiah
Johnson of Gallipolis, baby brother of the groom.
.
The mother of the bride was attired in a full:length champagne satin. spaghetti-strap dress with iridescent bodice and
jacket. The mother of the groom wore a bright red, two-piece
·
dress suit with detailed embroidery.
A red and white color scheme was carried out in the church
decorations. Pews were marked with red and white bows,
roses and ribbons, and tall red and white candy cones were
used :im the four front pews. Clear light and candles. illuminated the church.
·
Before exchanging vows. the couple observed the custom of
communion a.nd prayer fo llowed by the song, "When I Fall in
Love" by the bride '; father.
A reception busted by the bride's parents was held at the
Pomeroy Publ ic Lib~ary. Nicholas Hagglund was master of
cerenJQnies for toasts to the newlyweds. · Guests enjoyed a
small buffe] of finger foods and shared the three-tiered wedding cake topped with a chin·a bride and groorn in Air l'orce
dre ss uniform . The bride's mother and father provided the
cake and buffet. Metallic curtains, banners and balloon bouquets decorated t)le reception area, along with a tall Christmas
· tre'e decorated in red bows.
·
·
The wedding guests joined in dancing following the couple 's first dance. Jeremy Evans of Gallipolis was the OJ. The
event concluded with a release of red, white and silver "Just
Married" balloons.
A rehearsal dinner was held at the Wild Horse Cafe.
The 'bride is a 200 I graduate of River Valley High School
and a 2004 graduate from Gallipolis Career College with two
associate degrees in computer technical support.
The groom is a 2004 graduate of Gallia Academy High
School ' and is currently serving ·in the medical field with the
United State Air f'orce stationed at Travis Air Force Base, Calif,
The couple will celebrate a delayed honeymoon trip to
Hawaii . They will be making their hoine for the ne)(t two
years at Mi sawa Air Force Base in Japan.

Dennis Dodrill Jr. and Nichola Elliott
Robin Barringer and Gregory Carter

..

BARRINGERCARTER
ENGAGEMENT

BIDWELL - · Mr. and Mrs. Chris Elliott ar~ proud to
announce the engagement and upcoming marriage of their
daughter, Nichole. to Dennis Dodrill Jr. .
·
··'
The bride-elect is a 2002 graduate of River Valley High School·
and will gradua!e May 6, 2006, from the Univeu;ity of Rio
REEDSVILLE- Bobby and Joan Barringer announce the Grande with a bachelor's degree in E&lt;trly Childhood Education•. ·
engagement of their daughteJ;, Robin Sue, to Gregory Levon
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Dennis and Ginger
Carter, son of Walter and Trudie Carter of North Carolina.
Dodrill Sr. He is a 1996 graduate of River Valley High School
Grandparents of the bride-elect are Ferra Lou Barringer and and is currently employed by New River Electric.
.
the late Ernest Barringer, the late Lou and George Layne, and
The June 10,2006, wedding will take place at the Ewingtm1
Albert Roseberry. The prospective bridegroom's grandparents Church of Christ ip Christian Union at 6:30 p.m.
are .the late Adolph and Mary Bailey, and the late Beurley Lee
and Lyden May Carter.
·
Barringer graduated frqm Eastern High School and now
works for Carter's Trucking, Goldenway Home Care and in
her church while . ·attending Beaufort Community College.
Carter . graduated from Johnny Wikerson High School and
owns and operates his owh trucking company, preaches, plays
keyboard for church events, and teaches.
A wedding date has not been set.

Mr. and Mrs. John Oliver Kall

KAlL
ANNIVERSARY

H·YSELL-PICKE.NS ~
ENGAGEMENT ...-...
-~

••

~

POMEROY - Heather Lynn Hyse ll and Christopher~
Steven Pickens of Columbus, both former residents, announce
their engagement and approaching marriage.
~-:,
The pride-elect is the daughter of Gary Hyse-ll of Pomerof
and Tammy Hysell of Columbus.. She is a graduate of Meigs
High School, clas&gt; .of 2003. works at Old Navy and attends
Columbus State Community College:
Her fiance; son of Steve and Dreama Pickens of Pomeroy.
graduated from Meigs High School in 2001, is employed at
Lowe's and attends Columbus State Communit-y College.
The wedding will take place on July 7. 2007 . in Columbus.
Jamie Birchfield and Heidi Bryan

BRYAN~

Season.• ~

BIRCHFIELD
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS - Heidi Bryan and Jamie Birchfield are
HOUDAY~
announcing their engagement and upcon1ing wedding. .
. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Debbie Bryan. and Dave
and Pam Bryan of Gallipolis. She is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and the University of Rio Grande.
She is employed by the Oak Hill Union Local Schools as a
fifth grade teacher.
'
' rr~:;:r,m;;r,;liiiiiiiTET.rniiiiiirrr.7m~Tiiiiiru:r.r;;:;i1
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Kenny and Mary
Birchfield of Patriot He is a graduate. of5outh Gallia High
School. He is employed by Gallipolis Developmental Center.
The w~dding will be held on May 27, 2006, at Mercerville
Missionary Baptist Church.

....

POOLS INC.

Dan Smith for
Overbrook Rehabilitation Center
Well its close to my home, its right here in the
county. It's a good facility. A lot of people that
work in there are localpeople. I enjoy going
in there seeing my mother. Its just a nice
place to go. W'ith their care. Mom came
around and she has been with us three
Chri~tmases now. She gets her medicine !Jn
schedule and have really brought her around .

Sunday
Times-Sentinel
Dan Smith and Donna Jean Smith .
with Dan's Mother Stella Snlitll
A 2 year resident

333 Page Street

CHESHIRE- John Oliver' and Roberta (Allensworth) Kail
of Cheshire will observe their 60th wedding anni~t;rsary on
Thursday. Feb. 9, 2006.
They are the parents of two daughters. Sandra French of
. Reynoldsburg, and Mary North, deceased. They have four
grandchildren, Lance, John, Tara and Tom, and four greatgrandchildren. Janson , Maty, Zachary and Stella.
· John retired from the Kyger Creek Power Plant and
Roberta was employed for se«eral years by the Kyger· Creek
School District.

Chris Pickens 11nd Heather Hysell

Keeping Gallia,
Meigs &amp; Mason
· informed

Gallla • 446-2342
Meigs • 992·2155
Mason • 675-1333

ELLIOTT-DODRILL
EN .G AGEMEN1 . "

HARRIS
ANNIVERSARY

ga llery found tn
"51)
Boyfriend s Wor1e Than
Yours" I Blootmhu r\ 1 l11
'Justin Rae?. The1e ~LI\' _:_
strange, rude. cmb~lrr.;"ing
and downrigh t uangerous are exampl es of men t·h;ll
even the mother lll&lt;"t Je,perate for grandchildren ·would
not want her little ~ ir l to
bring home .
.
'
There·~ "Thriftv." recuenilable bv hi s ' c l earancc~r&lt;lck
khakis 'anu 'denims ll'om la't
year; the "Man With Cat&lt;'
who will make sure your date'
will ne ver be "j ust the two or
you"; and "H y pochondri ~ll'
Hal" ·(Jook for the .. ~~" ma.1k
and old Y1K sur vi\'a l ki t" in
his closet!'. Also on the do'
not-call Jist are "Stalker.· :
. "Backhanded Cnmplimenter."
"Comedian''
and
"Your
Boss.'' There are even two
· blank pages reserved for h:tdcatch · No . 51.
"Your
Boy friend·...
· "'The Men 111 Your Li l'c :

740-992-6472

Middleport, OH 45760

Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Swisher

SWISHER
ANNIVERSARY
CHESHIRE Mr. a11d Mrs. Gordon Swisher of
Homosassa, Fla .. will be celebrating their 55th anniversary on
Saturda y, Feb. I R. 2006. at Suncoast Baptist Church,
Homosassa, at 2 p.m.
.
Gordon and Sophia were married Feb. Ill, 1951 , at
Gordon 's parents' home at Cheshire . ·
Gordon is the youngest son ?t the late Erman &amp; Vesta
(Shaffer) Swisher. Gordon farmed wtth hts father and brother
Daniel until Daniel and Gordon bought the John Deere dealership from William Vancq in 1969. In 1975, Gordon and
Sophia bought Dame! out. He contmued wnh John Deere unul
he sold OLtt in 19l'l7. They then moved to Homosassa, where
.he enjoys his yard and ga rdening. _
..
, ..Soph ia is the youngest daughter ol the late Robert Earl and
Callie (Mi tchell) Roberts. Sophta was workmg at G.C.
Murphy Co. at the time of their marriage .. She worked a short .
while for the Pcacoco Coal Co. at Che shtre. and then tor the
Evans Grocery Co. at Gallipolis, Middleport and Point
Pleasant. W.Va .' She left the grocery company in 1970 and
worked at the John Deere dealership. Sophia enjoys reading,
church work and 4uilling .
· ·
They have one son, William K. of Little Kyger Road.
Cheshire. William is married ·to Carla James ot Teens Run
Road. Crow n Ci ty. They have one daughter. Lauren Ashley,
and one so1 1. Jo rdan Keith .
Well -whhe rs· may send cards to 6760 W-Ost-West St.
Hoimmtss". f:la . 3~446.

Celebrating special
days with you! .

HEALTH
You deserve quality medical c.are in familiar
surroundings-wher~ you feel at easeclose to home.
Through the O'Bieness Health System, a regional · network
of doctors, nurses, technicians, support staff and modern
facilities, you and your family have convenient access to
advanced technology and healthcare service's .
At the cornerstone of our System, is O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital. Out team can care for you at severallocalions
in our region .
'

· Our commitment to meeting community need and
providing individualized care is ongoing . We are growing
to provide accessible, advanced healthcare for you progressive caring close to .home .

Progressive
Caringfor

SoutheasternO·

.

h.10

Sunday Times-Sentinel

.www:OblenessHealthSystem.org

Subscribe today • 44f3:.2342 or 992-2155 ·

55 Hospital Drive • Athens, Ohio • (740) 593-5551

T11nck ,,

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trcct ~mcrgent) con ... ulta -

ti!ln hcln11 ihl' dinner tuble :
or

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room.

Thi~ ·

hrigilt-pi tl' r~t"uc &lt;&gt;f' u book ·
originall\ pubJi,hc~ in Great .
Brita in in 1'16X i' an A-to-Z.
t:! uidt.&gt; on do/L'Il"' of '-'"'reel\ ,
ol lnaiL'nL"'"'

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Chu rm . 11 ~ """ to ld . i.'
'om~thing "u ·man mu't po'- ·
~c"..,·· to . 'lllL'tC~d: ''life \'.uuld

be

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dull inuccJ 11ith a ·

. hu\hanlJ \\ ho j.., Jacking in it.'' ·
Su~~~~..·
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whu~,c man

v.omcn·
.. ..,non; . . like a .

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'acuum ck·ancr" · Sleep on
the li\. . in~ H)(i!H -..o!J,. Oth~r
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boyfr i ~nu'
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and blind 'd;JLes.
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paliellCL' .111~ paj;.un&lt;l ..... flower-.. unJ dl dlll nnd .... time and

money. adultc·r: and fi delity.
and lo\e tllld k,j..,..,c,.

�'.

'

:· iunbap m:lmes -ienttnel

PageC6

ENTERTAINMENT

Sunday, February5,2006

Dl

&amp;unbap tltimtf -6tntlnel

INSIDE .
Down on the Farm, Page 02

·ftt the m·ouies:
Suriday,Februarys, 2oo6

Meg . meanwhi le, has
AP MOVIE CRITIC
found herself the target of the
· persistent playboy Lord
Fabu!'ous clothes. luxurious Dar'lington
(S tephen
settings and Oscar Wilde's c~mpbe ll Moore. too young
bon mots dripping from the to take a part Ru pert Everett
mouths of the idle rich: "A would ordinarily play). He's
Good Woman" sounds like ir a lot more fun than her cutehas all ihe makings for a but,boring husband so she
delightful , dev il ish escape.
should probably just go
Unfort unately,
Wilde 's ahead and have an affair with
words often land with a thud. him.-since that's what all the
as many of the film's stars are bored socialites suspect she's
distractingly miscast.
doing anyway.
.Helen Hunt as a notorious
Everyone sirs around gossip·
fe mme fatale? , Scarlett ing about everyone else
Johansson as an innocent because. ·as one character puts .
. newlywed? It's all imposs ible it~ "My own businessbores me.
to accept.
I much prefer oiher people's."
Working from Wilde's play
Which is fine with
''Lady Winde rmere's Fan,'' Da rlington, whose philosodirector Mi ke Barker and phy is: ''Do yo u know w h~t I
wri ter Howard Hi me!s tein find worse than being talked
have moved all the scandals
and misunderstandings from a b o u t~ Nor being talked
Victorian Londo n drawi ng about at all."
Yes .. it's Oscar Wilde's.
rqoms to 1930 on the Amal fi
Greatest
Hit s - but they
coast, presumabl y ro take
advantage of th e dazzling don't al ways have the great·
est impac t.
Italian·sunsets.
Hunt's de li very would
Hunt's Mrs. Erl ynne has
traveled there from New York clang if her flat American
in search of her Iatesi wealihy ·acce nt ·didn 't already make
man to latch onto, aod finds her stand out among the monthe handsome. much younge'r eyed Brits, and her features
Robert Windermere (Mark are simply too strong for us
Umbers), a fi nancier who's 'to acce pt her as a serial mi srecently married the idealistic tress to the obscenely rich.
Johansson, meanwhile, has
Meg (Johansson). She appears
rhe
opposite problem: She's
to seduce hi m in no rime ar all ,
luring him ro her horne and too. va-va-voomy for her role,
and would .have been a better
happily taki ng .his money.
BY

CHRISTY LEMIRE

fit as the sexpot. She's all lips
and curves, which serve her
perfectly in a tilm like "Match
Poi nt." And !hat famous ly
husky voice! Whe.n she coos
to her husband upon arriving
at iheir summer villa, "I feel
like a princess in a fairy tale,"
you can almost hear her straining ro take ii up an octave.
Tom Wilkinson is lovely
and perfect ly sad, though, as
a tubby aristocrat who goes
qy the nickname Tuppy and
genuinely loves Mrs. Erl ynne
for who she is. He gives the
most believable perfor mance
. in the entire picture, ami
when he's gone. "A Good
Woman" is worse.
''A Good Woman," a Lions
Gate Films relea~e, is rated
PG for thematic material,
sensuality and language.
Running time: 93 minutes.
Two stars out of four.

.Flavors of the Uleek

Quick cooking: Hot and sour Thai chicken soup with lemon grass
Hot and Sour Thai
Chicken Soup With
Lemon GraSs

BY THE AssoctATED PRESs

AP Photo

In this photo provided by Li ons Gate Films, Meg Windermere (Scarlett Johansson) courts the
attention of a notorious playboy. risking her marriage in 'A Good Woman.'
.,

Th~

Area's Most Comprehensive Medical
Imaging MRI is Now Available
Advanced Technology

Close to You
·'

HOLZER
CLINIC
Jacue»n
(7.0) 395-8854 '

~.ailll)()ll-.

:(7.0).446-5289

This classic Thai soup,
known in Thailand as
dtom jiw gai, could well
earn a place as ·your
favorite comfort food at
this time of )'t!ar. In this
case, it also earns points
for being comfortingly fast
to prepare.
The soup should be
.
.
equally hot, sour and
salty, recipe developer
P~m Simmons say s.
You can start by using
the combination of ingredients that she lists here,
although she points out
that the soup can be easily adjusted to suit your
family 's preference in
seasonings. If you don ' t
have any garlic chili pepper sauce around, any hot

.

/Wedical Excellence.
.. Loca/Ca~ .

AP TELEVISION WRITER

NEW YORK - In no par, ticulll.\ order. here are some
things Jill Hennessy loves:
• Motherhood.
· • Comedy Central's 'T he
Daily Show," which (along
with "Sesame Street'' and
"Dragon Tales") is about the
onl y TV she has a cha'nce to
watch.
.
• The sensory delight o(
robust, stinl&lt;y cheese.
.
• Getting back to Manhallan,
like now to publicize her TV '
series, "Crossi ng Jordan: ·
Hennessy is~ also pretty
fo nd of "Crossing Jordan,"
where she plays a headstrong.
sassy medical exami ner
whose
derecri ve
work
extends beyond autopsies.
Th.e NBC series, in its fifth
season, airs 10 p.m. EST
Sunday, and despite to ugh
competitio n (like thar upstart
ABC hit ·'Grey's Anaromy"l
ir has rounded up viewers as
dogged ly as Jordan tracks
down ki ll ers.
"S he's dysfunctiona l but
also very strong, pro-active.
comedic - yet dark ... say&gt;
Hennessy. nibbling from a
gloriously overripe c.heese
plate whose aromas cou ld
make Jordan's corpses stand
up and salute .
'At 36. Hennessy is a TV
veteran. A welte bnmette with

· · .,..,.,.......

4 cups chicken broth , homemade or
canned
·
12 ounces boneless, skinless chicken breast or thigh
4 quarte N ize slices of ginger root
I teaspoon brown sugar
4 stalk s lemon grass (see note)
2 limes
3 tablespoons minced shallots
2 tablespoons fi sh sauce .
I to 2 tablespoons garlic chili pepper sauce
2 tabl espoons chopped cilantro

Everywhere

Home Equity Rates
.

.

......:]

.

.

..

.

~

~ .

,o
~'-..

At Farmers Bank.
•

·q,

AP Photo

LOW-FAT COOKING:
Garlic-herb crusted beef roast

Jill Hennessy took the le~d
·on 'Crossing Jordan'· and
loves her headstrong heroine
an al to voice and a larkv manner, she got her show~biz start
in her nati ve Toronto doi ng
improv comedy. But she firs t
won notice after coming to
Manhattan and landing ·the
role of Claire Kincaid. the
brainy, stra ight-arrow assistant district attorney on "Law
&amp; Order.'' She played Claire
for three seasons before
departing a decade ago
(whereupon, in a .scene that
traumatized her fans, Claire
djed in a car cr.1sh).
Hennessy returned to series
TV in the fall of 200 I after
several years· success in television and iheatrical films. Even
so. "Crossing Jordan." which
is set in Boston but filmed in
Los Angeles, initially presented her wi th a comrlex mix of
hopes and misgivings.
"On the one hand . you
worry. 'Oh . it' s going 10 ger
monotonous. I'm afraid of
stagnut ing ,'" she explai ns
during an· interview at' a
Gfeenwich Village trattoria.
''Then production starts, and
it's a constant day-to-day
evolution: 'OK, what docs
the network want, what do
the creato rs want, how do the
actors feel~ '"
Henne,sy had sig1ied on
expecting a quirkier, more
comi c show led by Jordan a; a
' ki lled but ,;crewball brand of
heroi ne. She wanted "Cros.1ing
Jordan" to cross genre lines .

·

(Sta rt ro finish 30 minutes)

This photo provided by the
Cattle men· s· Beef
Bo ard s hows.
Garlic-Herb
Crusted Beef
Roast. This is·
made us ing lean
beef rump that
needs nothing ·
more than a sim·
pie seasoning rub
before it goes into
the oven . This rub
that's loaded only
with garlic and
·
he rbs doesn't
include any extra
oils or fats. and
th is means a se rv·
ing has a mere 7
gr.ams o f fat.

AP Photo

FRAZIER MOORE

·

Add to a medium soup pot; broth,
chicken. ginge~ and brown sugar.
· To prepare lemon grass. remove all
but bottom 5 inches of stalks. Place 8
. ro 10 outside sheaths into soup po! (it's
used like bay leaf). Mince the bottom
sauce you ' re used to 2 inches of the tender inside.leaves and
using may be substituted. set a~ide 2 to 3 tablespoon s.
But be warned, Simmons
With ;1 potato peeler. peel6 strips of
adds:
Other
sauces , rind from one lime and add to broth.
Taba sco, for example , (Make sure to use only outer green
may he hotter. So taste rind - not. any inside white pith,
and check your season- which is bitter-tasting.) Bring broth to
.
AP Photo
ings carefully.
a boil and turn down to a simmer. Thi s photo prowided by Andre Prost shows Hot and Sour Thai Ch icken Soup With. Lemon Grass. This cla ssic Thai soup.
· In this adaptation of the Cover.. and cook at 'an active simmer known in Thai land as Dtom Ji w Gai, could well earn a ptac~ as yo~r favorite -comfort food at this time of year - Thai
recipe for American fo r 15 minutes.
comfort food , in th is case, which also earns points for being comfortingly fa st to prepare. The soup should be equally
home cooks, six strips of ·· While chicken is: cooking, grate hot, sour and salty, the recipe developer s ays. ·
·
·
lime peel replace the . rind (arid no pith) of remaining lime
Put chicken and any accumulated Serve small bowls of chopped cilantro do, you do not ne'ed to buy more
Kaffir lime leaf that the . .ro measure I teaspoon and set aside .
orig. inal calls for. If you Then juice .limes, to measure out 3 juices back into seasoned broth . .To and garlic chili pepper sauce on the lemon grass than for the basic recipe:
the pot, add minced lemon grass, grat- side for added garrtish and spice.
use some of the upper stalks for seatablespoons j uice; set aside .
can find Kaffirlime leaf
When chicken is cooked through, ed lime rind and juice, shallots, fi sh
Makes 4 servings as a starter, 2 soning IRe broth. instead of di scarding them.
.
locally, .Simmon s says, re move from b.roth to plate, and sauce ancl garlic chili pepper sauce. servings as a main course.
Note : You may double ihe recipe to
(Recipe f rom A Taste of Thai/A ndre
use two or three leaves shred with rwo fo rks. Strain broth of Bring back to a simmer and sprinkle
. with cilantro . Serve immedi.ately. make 4 main-course servings. If you f'rost)
any solids.
instead or the strips.

In this l:mdated publicity photo released by-NBC. Jill Hennessy
stars as medical examiner Dr. Jordan Cavanaugh in the network's
dramatic series "Crossi ng Jordan," now in its fifth season.

BY

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

BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

· In cooking. as in other
aspec" of life, more can be
less. Smart ·cooks know hi gh
. qu ali ty ingredient s need
fewer fr ills.
Take' this example : tean
beef rump roast needs not hing
more than a simple seasoning
rub before it goes inro the
oven. How about a rub that's .
loaded only wi th garlic and
he rb s~ Clearly, such it rub ·
· does n' t include an y extra oils
or fats; and th is means a serving has a mere 7 grams of fat. ·
More
good
point s:
Remember that the beauty of
. a roast is rhat once it's in the
oven. no attent ion is needed'
until it's time to check the
temperature near the end of
roasting time. Also. thi s roast
is easy ro carve because it 's
boneless. Finally: Leftover~.
if there are any. m;~kc deli, cious sandwiches.

Garlic-Herb
Crusted Beef Roast ·
•
•

Eye Mal~.eap

•

.4-ppedzen aad

.

• DOOR PRIZES!!
~

.I&gt;

o. Mascana and E) diner
o

Two (2) F.:ndermoloj!:ir Tre'a tm4'nts

)

&amp;

seasoning
2 teaspoons dried basil
leaves, crushed
2 teaspoons· dri ed thyme
leaves, crushed
·
I teaspoon dried parsley
leaves·. crushed

•olfer avaiiable for home equity loans of minimumS 10.000 or more with a loan to value rar1o of 80% or less. The advertised discount
5.75% APR,Irate Wi~
ll ange after the first 12 months. Without this d1scoun' the rate would nave been 6.75% APR based on 1;1 r1me rare
as published in th
Street Journal. Rare is suqject to change annual ~. As of I 0 17 .05. and Annual Percentage Rate (APR) ranged
From. 5.75% to 6.7 . erms are for I0 years. Minimum month~ paymer:tt.,_00% of balance or SI 00. whiChever is greater APR 'or
home equity lines will ncit exceed 18%. Customary closing costs for ft~mination search, title exam and recording f~s w111be at
least S193. Please consult your r.3.!&lt; advisor regard1ng deductibility. of Inter~ AdvertiSed .APR based on loan amount of SI0.000
Annual membershp of $50 Is 1mposed an annive.rsary. waived first year, . TranSaction fee of SI0 1n excess of five advances per month.
Property insurance will be required. Financi ng is suqjecno credit approval. Some restrictions apply.

17

~

\,

0 '

0

~·

f7

, .8

--

Fo Fa-rmers ·Bank

(S tart to _fii1ish I 3(4 to 2
114/wur.l)

Nutrition information per
·serving (116 of recipe): 203
I boneless beef round rump cal.. 35 g pro., 0.5 g ca rbo.,
roast or beef bottom round 7 ll fat, 186 rug sodium, 92
roast (~ 10 ~ pountl\ 1
. mg chol.
Sa lt and grou nd black pep( Rec ifli' del'&lt;'lope£1 for AP
per
mur-tes.r Cau/~nw11 :,· Ba f'
· Board
· u11d
Natioll&lt;li
For the Ruh :
2 teaspoons gar!ic -pcpper Cattleme11 :5 8&lt;'&lt;'/'Associatiml)
·c - - - · _, _ _

.. DISCOUNTED INITIAL RATE/ APR

One Year Fixed Discounted Rate! ·

Hear oven to 325 F
Combine rub ing red ients in
small bowl; press evenl y onto
all surfaces of beef roast.
Place roast on rack in shallow
roasting pa n. Insert ovenproof meat thermometer so
tip is ce ntered in thickest part
of beef. ncit resting in fat. Do
not add water or cover.- Roast
in 325 F oven I 1/2 to 2 hours
for medium-rare done ness.
R ~ m ovc roas t when meat
the rmometer registers 135 F.
for medium-rare. Transfer
roasl to carving · board; rent
loosely' with aluminum fo il.
Let stand 15 to 20 minutes.
(Temperat ure wi ll continue to
rise about I0 F to reac h 145 F
for medium-rare.) Carve
rbast into th in sli ces.; season
. wit li·sa lt and black pepper, as
desired. ·
·
Makes 6 toR servings.

.

~

Member FDIC

• Pomeroy . • Mason • Gallipolis • Tuppers Plains
992.2136
-~--

773.6400

446.2265

667.3161

�•

iunba~ m:ime~ ·ienttntl

DoWN oN THE FARM

EXTENSION (ORNER
:A sweet way to increase fann revenue
HAL KNEEN

special sessions for them at
no cost. The workshop begins
: Are ~ou interested in pro- at 8:45 a.m. and conti nues to
: ducing honey on your farm or 4:45 p.m. Over 6SO people
·increasi ng your yiel.ds of attended in 200S, so make
fruits and vegetables?
your
reservation early.
You may want to rai-se Reservations are $30 per per:honey bees . The 28th Annual son and are needed before
: Beekeeping Workshop will Feb. 28 . Reservation materi ·be held March 4 at Fisher als may be picked up at the
:Auditorium
on
Ohio extension office or by going
·Agricultural Research and on line www.beelab.osu.edu.
'several homeowners called
·Development Center campus
·in Wooster. The workshop is to inform me tha.t honeybees
·sponsored by Ohio State · were already roaming around
. University Extension and the their yards &amp;nd barns.
with
Tim
Beekeepers S p~a!Cin g
: Tri-County
·
Miklasiewicz,
Ohio
·Association.
The workshop sesswns Department of Agriculture
:vary so both, the new or apiary speciali st, he informed
·potential beekeeper and me that the bees are searching
e1.perienced beekeeper ca n for suppl ks of pollen to cre· have a fun and educational ate food for young larvae due
to the warmer than normal
day.
Sessions include Mite January weather. Corn dust or
Control, Extracting Honey, soybean meal in animal feed
Mead Making, Bears and ·will attract bees if no flowers
Other
Pesky
Pests, are available. Some bees may
Gardening For Honeybees, also pick up cement du st
Modern
Beekeeping which has .no nutritional
Equipment, Cooking With value, just because it is simi:Honey, and a series of ·three · lar in size. As cold weather
returns, the hone y bees will
Basic Beekeeping session s.
If you have children remain in the hive.
Remember to register your
between 5 and 12, there are
BY

J •

'.

beehives before May' as
required under ·the state of
Ohio statute. Forms are available
from
the
Oh io
Department of Agriculture by
&lt;:ailing (800) 282- 1955 or the
Extension oflice. If yo u are
finding or buying used beekeeping equipment. remember to have ·the local bee
inspector look at them so we
can be sure American Foul
Brood disease is not present.
The .bacterial spores call
remain dormant and viable '
for several years.

•••

The · groundhog . saw hi s
shadow, so according to legend. winter should last silt
more weeks. If you are i nt~ r­
ested in gardening and want
to assist others, . co nsider
becoming a Meigs County
Gardener.
. Maste r
Informational meeting is
being held today at 2 p.m.
Feb. 5 at the Meigs County
Extension office located riext
to Holzer Clinic in Pomeroy.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
County Agriculture and
Natural Resource Educator,
University
Ohio . State
Extension Senice.)

Burdell, Carter start terms at ~WCD
GALLIPOLIS
Lawrence Burdell of Bidwell
and David Carter of Patriot
were , recently elected super- ·
visors of'the Gallia Soil and
Water conservation District
(SWCD-) , and were sworn
into office by Ohio Supreme
Court
Justice Terrence
O'Donnell during the 63rd
annual meeting of the Ohio
Federation of 8oil and Water
Conservation
Districts
(OFSWCD)
held
in
Columbus, Jan. 1'7- 18.
.Elected to a three - y ~a r
term, Burdell and Carter join
Merrill Baker, Joe Dailey
and Noel Massie in admin'
steriilg the Gallia SWCD's
natural .resource conservation programs.
The Ohio Federa tion of
Soil and Water conservation
Districts was organized in
1943 to further the natural
·resource conservation mi ssion of the state's 88 countybased SWCDs. As subdivisions · of state . government ,
soil and water conservation
districts haye legal authority
to assist landowners with a
wide range of soil, water,
woodland and wildlife conservation objectives.
Another important goal is
to provide information and
edqcation programs on natural resources and management
topics for county residents..

\

Meat goat
·marketing
program set
GALLIPOLIS - A meat
goat marketing progra m will
be held Saturday, Feb. 18
with registration at 9:30 a. m.
· at the OSU Newark Campus.
The event will featu re presentations on niche marketing of · meat, marketi ng
trends, group sale opportunities, a buyer and seller network. and a producer panel.
Featured speakers will
include the foll owing OSU
Extension Educators: David
Mangione, Jeff Fisher and
Tony Nye, as well as Dr. Paul
Kuber, an assistant .professor
of animal science at OSU
Exte nsiqn.
A lunch and handouts will
be included in the registration
fee of $20 for the first person
from an operation and $10
·for the second. Four producers will share their success
and fai lures while marketing
chevon.
·
•
Reservations are · required
by contacting Amy Fov ar~ue
at OSU Extension Lickmg
County at (740) 670-5323 or
fovarg4e 1@postoffice.ag.ohi
o-state .edu. The deadline for
reservations are Feb. 15 .

PROUD TO BE APART
· OF YOUR LIFE.
Tire Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sunday,February5, 2006

BY ROBERT W. PAWELEK
OSU EXTENSION
GALLIA COUNTY

(Note: This is th e second in
a series uf articles about sustailwble agriculture.)
Su stai nable agriculture
seeks in principle to sustain
econom ic viabilit y, environmen tal stewards hi p and
soc ial responsi bility. These
three . te nets · are to be
embraced as. one ·func tional
unit.
.
Decisions concerning a
sustai nab le
agriculture
should then enhance the environment ' and . the farmer's
economic situation and benefit the regional socie ty.
Holi stic Man age~ent gives
us a way to move forward on
these three tenets. It gives us
a way to design · agriculture
to truly mimic nature's priu. ciples Of sustainability.lt
gives us a way to make decisions that automatically take
into account the society, the
economics, and theenvironment before they are made.
Holi stic Management is a
decision-making
simple
framework that . can be
learned like any other skill .
People who mai)age holistically can realize an improved
quality of life and generate
real wealth, while at the same
time improving the. land and
community around th em.
They develop the ability to
ask the right questions and to
contldently proceed toward
the future they design for
themse lves.
Holi stic
Management is for anyone

who wants consistent· profit
fro m agriculture, a high quality of life and more time to
enjoy it. In short, it's a way to
have fun, make money and
conserve our natpral resource
base, al.l at the same time.
Holistic Management is a
process fo r sorting out al)d
making sense of all the tools
and choices that face us each
day. Once a person begin s to
manage holistically, he or
she· learn s what to say no to,
and what to say ye s to .
Being ·a proacti ve process,
holisti c managers learn how
to move beyond cri sis man agement and toward planned
prosperi ty.
They are able to manage
their l'inances wisely, have
more time for enjoyment, live
life according to their val.ues,
and gain the contldence of
knowing that their decisions
are improving the environment and the community they
live in leading to a better
world for their grandchildren.
As the name holi stic implies,
resources are managed in
whole units rather than as
parts in isolation from their
surroundin gs. In order to
have a clear description of
what is being managed, people begin · by definin g their,
whole. Thi s defini tion
involves a li sting of all · the
decision-makers invol ved in
management , the resources
they have to work with, and
the money available .
From there, a detailed
holi stic goal is developed.
The holistic ~oal includes a

values-based quality of life
statement, a listing of forms
of production that will make
the quality of life possible,
and a description of how the
land base needs to be far into
the future, in order to sustain
the production.
·
Defining the whole and
writing a goal is a powerful ·
exercise. People who have
wri tten goal s are much more
· likely to succeed than those
who do not. Since the holi stic
goal is based on the deeper
underlying values of the decision-makers, it empowers
them to ask better questions,
to ask the deeper questions,
to ask appropriate questions
from which. they can make
better decisions. Some examples include:. Why am I far ming in the tlrst place? What is
it that I' m trying to accomplish? What kind of world do
1 want for my grandchildren?
Building a farm plan on
these questi ons makes for a
powerful plan. The holistic
goal re main s the, centerpiece
of holistic manage ment and
is referred to' con stantly
when management decisions
are being made. The goal is
what dri ve s the decisionmaking, But there's more. In
order to sustai n a farm operation, profit must co me from
somewhere.
Most like(y. at leaH some
of the profit will come from
on-farm enterprises. ·
Nex t week. we will look at
the tool s' needed to implement holi stic manage ment on
the farm.

ACROSS

I Map klr I navigator

&amp;Equal
I0 Ane violin

15 P.O!I8SMI

18 Long-legged binl
19 Bed of atraw ·
21 Sll;lmled

22 Kelly or Krupa
23 Proclamallon
Submitted photo

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALL/POUS - United Producers I11c. market report
from Gallipolis for salts conducted on Wednesday, Feb. I.

24 Drug
.
25 ~w·•·

.n

28 Like h Sliwa
27 Fruity drink
28 Gathor after haMs!
29 Andrew- Webbor
31 Oislnc:linod lo33 Go by
35 Sculls
36 Sur1ace luster
37 Kilct&gt;en OWiance
36 Cautions. '
40 Malhematlcal

41

r,

oportiOi I

raveled on

42 Rang

44Cllantgod

.45 Eager

47 River vafley
51 PU8hld

52 Jaclwll*l
53 MiJdufttl Ol metals

55 - Vegas
56 Actress SopNa -

Feeder Cattle-Steady
275-415# St. $ 100-$ 160 Hf. $100-$ 141 425-S25# St.
$1OO-$ ISO Hf. $95-$ 130 550-625# St. $95-$120 Hf. $90$ 119 650-72S# St. $9S-$11 8 Hf. $90-$ 1OS 750-850 St.
$90-$1 08 Hf. 585-$95.

Cows-Steady
Well Muscled/Fleshed 545-$49 Medium/Lean $42-$46;
Thin/Light $ 10-$30; Bull s $50-$6 1.

96 Become smalet
99 Bl1na lbout
100 Ca1Chall abbr.
101 &amp;Jmptuous meal
103 Frosting
1l)5 Conllllner
I06 Dutdl or double
106 Fal
109 Not .... spey
110 l!ecomo ........
. 111 Woe ia met
113 -Dome
114 Rich dough
115 NotwllhsWdng
118 Wrinkled

~~~

..

124 llornolhlng eldslllnl .
125 Sped
128 l'lllplo lrults
1'Z7 Floor OOY8IIng
.
128 Ouanlity of firewood
128 llallr1oa
131 In 11"1 abundance '
133~

135BMrybevefeues
136 P1tllel
.
137 c- to mind
138 Destroy griiWally
t39 Statute
140 CommetiCe
141 Flfled wtth wonder
142 Ooctrfne

Cow/Calf Pai rs $625-$ 1, ISO; Bred Cows $3S0-$95 0;
Baby Calves $60-$350; Goats, $ 170-dn.: Lambs. $104dn.; Hogs, $5 1-dn.

Upcoming specials:
Fat cattle sale .thi s week at 9 a.m.
Ten Charqlais cows bred to black bull thi.s week.
For more information, call Brad at (740) S~4 -4 821 or
DeWay ne at (740) 339-024 1. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com

96 Eftact
97 Moe! ~ ral8d

3 ZoCiac eign
4 Bird ~legend
5 ExploeiYe
6 Sctlolelly 7
I . - - Howe

.. (hyph.)

stun

99 SCOIIIOh Hi!lhlal:&gt;de&lt;

9 Soli&lt;, a IIIX
10 Short ¥tcll_pleel

11 Mlltnn~

12 Eldllll'
13 Playing
14 Belfel~

en

.

Ki1tl 01 JuciN

16 Corilll ft~Mlriolg '
17 P-meel
19 ~ ICIIIkcw ia
20 Fie\ II 'ktg
22 "'*d
.
28 W&lt;lt.llded will home
30 C&lt;ll 01 meat
32 ~Ill dry
~ Tumonaptwt
36T......
., Arnal rountl
39SobeMI
.

-o Bectw••
rr-. ••1

42 01 • vocal group
43 Roman poet
44 - - balh (lo&amp;e

'

45 Sl1iMlg
45 ladd Of Aida
49 S«uuor .
SO Self

62 SpoMn
·63 FuN ol passion
85 Lad8
66 l"ow-&amp;haped '"'"
()1 WWII!W\icewoman
es Spanish paln!er
69 Smel
71 Hurthi remart&lt;

~-~~cake

53 Oak-ll&gt;be 54 l'lslonilh
.
57 F•-t:eachlng
59 W•YilSilels (hyph.)
61 Coolidge or
HaywOr1h .
53 Great suffering
54 Matador
66 Name, as a price
ro Raclwl
. 72 Century planl
74Sionder
76 Marl&lt; with a 001 ron
79 Male
' 80 The iace
82 Wrllilo fluids
&amp;I - lhel! auto
66 Skilr
87 Wen! quic1&lt;Jy
66 Singing YOice

73 J&gt;ermlt
75 t.umrmx

n=p

78 lrqulra
81 Language of lncla

83Houelng-

•&amp;4 Pesky bug ,
85 Spot on a card
87 SmocCh ike sill&lt;
90 App&lt;oach

92E' 94 Sit for apalnlet
95 Board
.
96 Yuletide drink

89 t.loldcoil11o0d
91 Mid oalh

HAS THE TOBACCO BUY-O UT
GOT YOU CONFUSED WHE N
IT COMES TO DOING
YOUR TAXES
CALL ANGELL ACCOUNTING
FOR AN APPOINTMENT
Our staff has attended the University of
Kentucky Tax Workshop and is ready to
answer your tax questions.

ANGELL AGCOUNTING
740-446·8677 '
736 2nd AVE. • GALLIPOLIS, OH 45631

'

·--

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

(304) 675-1333

Offtee llo~~
~
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
TC! Help Get Response .. ,

HOW IQ WRITE AN

rI

r

112 IQndled
113 ...,.. _ . , . ,
114 RainecfCll8 and

doge
.
tiS O.CO.- ltanSI«

116 - Gay
117 Scatter

118 IJgh1 ray device

119 Enghh~
1'21 Al*&gt;rldlrectDr

.
- Welol
122 Napped leather
123 .t.ong.plJrned bird
125 Cilylri l.mla
126 Farm tmplemenl
130 Toble00f8P
133 Encounlered
134 Anger

All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2

Monday .. Frld•v for In•ertlon

Bu•ln••• D•v• P'rlor To ·

In Next Day'e Paper

Publlc.tlon

Sunday In-Column: 1.:do p.m .

Sunday Dl•play : 1:00

'ridley

~or Sundaya P•per

1

POLICIES: Ohio V•ll•,- P...,.lthlng reterV .. tM rlghl to ltdlt, N)ect, or ctnctllny Mi Itt tny tlmt, Error• m~o~• be reponed on 1M flrll day of
1
Trlbune-s.ntlnei-Aegleter will be rupontlblt for no more thlln 1M coM of tM .,.c. oe'cup'-1 by the errOl' end o~IY ttM fh t lnMI'tlon. W• ehlll l
•ny lou Of ·~~~1\M tNt ,...ufts from tt.. publlcdon or omi•.Jon of •n .ctv.niHnMnt Corr.ctlon will be madti In thl ftr.t lvalllblt edition . • 8011 "':::"~:!;~
•r• 1lw1y1 confldentlll. • Cwrem
Cllrd lppllea. • All ....1 Mt.t. ~MI'Mn~.,. aubj.ct to ttM Fedw•l Felr Howlng Act of 1111. • This n
ICotp\11 only help nntM • •
·
... ndtlrct.. W• wtll not knowlngty ~CGeP~Iny tdvtrttllng m v1o11111on of the 11w.

• Ads Should Run 7 Daya

r

Thur•d•y for Sund•y•

• All ada must be prepaid*

• Shirt Vour Ada With A Keyword • Include Complete
De1crlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone NumtMir ~nd Address When Nnde_d
·

'

%~

11

116

IIFLPWAmiD

1

riD

IIFLPWANm&gt; 11

~=====: Jr~==:::::;
•
..

home. 14· 16 months old . Silver and · Gold Coins,
.. mo old mixed breed j:lup· 11ery
good
naiUred . Proofsets, Gold Rings, PrePi!'ts to good home. Call ·(740)446- 7595.
1935 U.S. Currency, Soli·

ATTENTION

(740)446.-3897.

taire Diamonds· M.T.S.
Shop, • 151 Second
Coin
Found Black remale puppy.
Aven
ue,
Gallipolis. 74Q-4465· 7 week-old Blue Heater .on Sand Hil l R d cal l 3042842 .
pups, tails docked 304·458· 675-2679

1860.

Distribution Center
Exp.ndl~g

Up to $13.00 to start

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

2 !1ogs. Call

To good home 1.5 year old
male Basset Hound. tri-col·
or, have papers can be AKC
reg~ste red . (7 ~ 0 )44 6·32 1 0 .

National Ol1trtbutor
expanding Itt operatlone In local area.

! buy Junk Cars (3o4)7735004

Warited
County;
Tokens,
Racine.
disport
6040

To Buy. · Meigs
Store Script, Sl ore
and currency from
flomeroy, and Mid·
Ban~s .
74(}..992 _
,

Company aeeldng 40 lo
50 m·an and women to
Ill eeverel poaltiona. No
experience necesiar;y.
Complete training .

provided.

iii(!IGF;;...;.;;;..;..._ __, Will buy Junk Cars for
YARD SALE
Scrap $60 .00. Call 740·

i
:;::;;=::==~
i
/2

~

591·8938.
I ' 11 ' 1~" \II

' I

"' I I&lt;\ I{ I "

YARD SALEG~~

•-•••••IIID

· HELP. WAJI(rw

I

Porch Sale-219/06, 9·? 150 .
.
2nd Ave. Childrens Items,
car seat, exersaucer, high 100 WORKERS NEEDED
chair, clothes , misc. spin· ·
Asse(llble crafts,
ning wheel. home decor.
wood items.

r
I

hOspital b&amp;d, in goOd
cond. 304·675 -6183
I:)Sed

·.r

--

~~-

. ·$75 Reward tor return ol
White Jack Russell Terrier.
Missing since 1/1/06 from
Bunce Rd. area . Please ca ll '
(7 40)446-4706 leave mes·

sage

A·~
u'" •Rll"' AND
Fl.EA. MAiuarr

c ross-Cre.;.;Auction

I

CLASSIFIED INDEX

To $480/wk
Materials provi ded. .
Free information pkg. 24Hr.
1 28 4649
_
.._ _._ _ _ _.,...,
·
A keyboard player needed
for
riew
Christia n
rock/praise' and worship
band
We are not teen8gers and we are seasoned
musicians. Great sound
system and light show Wi t~
fo~;~ machi nes will be · in
place. Studio recording with.
CD s'eles in· addition -ro live
ShOWS. 740-367·7129. Jim

su«a- .,..,- -8{)_

lo,High·Country Band !rom
Leon Feb·1oth .7pm · ·
Auction Satu rday 6pm .
Dealer Dave w/pies! cakes
door-prize on Sat 6pm.
$10 .00 off your bill Auctionear StepMn Reedy 1639
(304)550·1616

.4x4's For Sate ............................. :............:... 725
Announcement ... :........,.:.............................D30
Antlques .....................................................,.530
Aparlmenls for Rent. .................................. 440
Auction and Flea Markot.............................080
Auto Paris &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ......,........................................... no
Autos for Sato ............................,....... ..........710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supptlos ....................................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opporlunlty............................ ;.... 210
Business Trainlng ... .................... ....... ... ...... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .....................,.............780
CarHs of Thanks ..........................................010
Child/Elderly Caro ....................................... 190
Etectrlcai/Refrlgerallon............................... 840
Equipment for Rent .........................: ........... 480
Excavaling ..., ........................ :...................... 830
Farm Equlpmonl ..... ............. :................ ,...... 610
Farms for Rent .. ..............,. ...........................430
Farms for Safo ............................................. 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sate ........................................................ 585
. For Sale or Trooe .. ,...................................... 590
Fruita &amp; Vegetabtos ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ............................. ......:....450
General Haultng .. ......................................... 850 ·
Glveaway.......... :........................................... 040
Happy Ads ....................................................oso
Hay &amp; Graln:.......... ,....................:.................640
Help wantoo ......... :.......................................110 ·
Home lmprovemants...................................810
Homos lor Sate ................................. ........... 310
Household Goods ................................... .,.. 510
Houses for Ren1 .............:.......................... ..4t0
tn Memorlam ........... .......................... ........... 020
Insurance ........................................... .......... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equtpment ........................680
Ltvostock ................................................,..... 830
Lost and Found .... ....................................... 080
. Lots &amp; Acroage .......-..................................... 350
· Mfacettaneous .............................. :... ............ 170
Mlscettaneous Merchandise,........ ..............540
·Mobile Home Rapalr....... ..........................:.. 860
Mobile Homos for Renl ................ :.............. 420
Mobile ·Homea for Sale ................................ 320
. Money to Loan .............................................. 220 ·
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers ..........................740
Muslcallnslrumenta .................·............ ...... 570
Personats ..................................................... oos
Pots for Safe ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heatlng ............ :....................... a~o
Professional. Sarvlcot... .. .............. .. ............230
.Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ............................... 160
Reef Estate Wanlod ..................................... 360
Schools Instruction..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertlttzer ....................:......... 850
Situations Wantoo ....................................... l20
Space lor Renl .......................................... ,.. 460
Sporting Gooda............................... ............ 520
SUV's fOf Sato •..... ,.......... ............................. 720
Trucks for Sale ..... , ...................................... 7t5
Upholstery .... :......... ..................................... 870
Vans For Sale ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanlod to Buy: Farm Suppllos .................. 620
Wanted To Do ...... ............................ ............ l80
Wanloo to Ronf ............................................. 470
Yard Safe- Gattlpolls .................................... 072
Yard Sate-Pomaroy/Mfddle ......................... 074
Yard Safe-Pl. Plaaaani .......... ...................... D76

tJ;.

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~·
oddedtoyourclossifledods
.
1m .
· Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SOC for small
$1 .00 for Iorge

Display Ads

Dally In-Column : 1 :00 p . m.

GIVEAWAY
. . Female Black Lab to a good Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. 1i"
.._ _ _
_ _ __

toe Olllc4e

110 ~ lhe IOil

~

Oetultir~

Word Ads

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00

(740i256·6203.

.

' '

· l\egt~ter

104 C&lt;edll or Cllling
105 Jars
107 TurbuleniWIIerl .

t32 Ac:lreiiS - GWl&amp;r

45 Friendly nation

80~

Ga!IW. COYfttJ. OH

102 Mammal ci(Australia

8 Ardor

financ:lally) '

57 Make plea and
cakes ·
56 Ancient Greek

,..

I

tn,._..,_nsilrere

2" - ~

15

78 De Pltna or.

Back To The Farm:

1

Chnn -6mttnfl • Page D3

t~ter

- Sentinel - 3ae
C LA s·s I F.IE D

Givea way

. 93 Ughlweigl\l cord
94 S&lt;lft 004or

DOWN

Ott • Pt. Pleasant, WV

~ribune

Found near
Roosevelt
Beautiful wh ile indoor cat, schooi.R ipley Rd. young
blue eyes , very playl ul · ~ut male dog,White &amp; multi col~m i d , (740)992·6288
ored w/ chain colla r 304675· 1138
BOxer mix needs good
home. Great with kids. ------~"Mal e dog fou nd near HomeNeeds. to be loved. Call wood Dr., Bidwell . . Call
740·379·2 153.
(740i388·8624.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Ohio Supreme Court Justice Terrence O'Donnell , left, adml.nistered the oath of office to David Carter of Patriot as a Gallia
Coun.ty Soil and Water Conservation Distnct supervisor. Not
available fo r photo was Lawrence Burdell of Bidwell. \'lhO was
also elected to a te rm on the SWCD board in Nove mber.

• Middleport •

Sustainable ag is an holistic process

Subscribe today • 446-2342

-~·,·

Page D2

Company offers pey
lncreaaea wtthln 90
day I .
Rapid advancement to
management. FutVPart
time politlonsavallabte.
To achedule an lnterCllll .S un. Feb. 5th

v~.

12...
Mon. Feb. 6th 9-5

, -81)().511·5007

ECKHANDSI

lngra

a.rge Co. will be accept
ng appl ications at th
ept. tor · Employmen
ervlces 225 Sixth Street
lnt Pleasant, Wast VIr
lnla, on 21712006 throu
812006 from 8:00am ti

:OOpm. MUST H'AVE
ears hEtavy labor wor
xperlence (La. farming
oggln g, construction, etc.
enerous daily wage an
, xce'llent benefit package

Requlram8nts: .BS or BA In
Accou nting, Business Ad·
rflinjstration, o r Finance.
Proficient with PC , compiJt·
er softWare, and calculator.
t&lt;oowledge of current nel·
work and PC systems.

+ Benefits
CDL-A/S mos. Exp. Req.

'FULL· TI~

ClASSES

' COl TRAIN ING
' FINANCING AVoi, IU.BlE
' JOB PlACEloiENT

• ENROLLING NOW

An Excellent way to earn
·,The ~ ew AVon .

Contact
Sean M. Cullan,

(304iS75·1333 ext 20
Part•tlme position available
fo r a Support ·Grou p Facll i·
tate r fo r a-Women's Shelter
This is a contraCt position
for approxi mately four hours
a week. Applicants should
be familiar with crisis inter·
v entla·n techn iques and
group dynamics. lnreresteo
appliCants should sencl resume to: Personnel. P.O.
Box 454, Gallipolis , OH
45631 ·

Help Wanted

,,

-,...
..

-

-'-

~

•Freightliner Condos
•40 cents all miles

ALLIANCE

Blue Veluet Trcutsport

canBob at 800•852·2362

• Two week initial &amp;
orientation classes with
conti.nued ongoing

1-800-334-1203

CARPENTER. AND FLOORLAYER
APPRENTICESHIP OPENINGS

CARPENTER
CARPENTER
CARPENTER
CARPENTER

LOCAL 200
LOCAL 356
LOCAL 437
LOCAL 650

(COLUMBUS)
(MARIETTA)
(PORTSMOUTH)
(POMEROY)

• nie best management
team in the co untry.lo
assist you in sales.
SALES SUPPORT.••
• Superior sales su01&gt;0n.
i ncluding a full
time petSOnal sec•·e&lt;a•y.
full or pan time personallot assistance.
COMPENSATION ••

NOT LESS THAN 17 YEARS

APPLICANTS MAY ALSO APPLY THE FIRST
MONDAY OF APRIL AND MAY 2006. ·
APPLICATION HOURS WILL liE 9:00 A.M. TO
1t :00 A.M. AND 1:30 P.M. TO 3:00 P.M.

R.esidon tlal Tr ea1me nt Fa·
cility 1ak1ng appliCations lor
youth worker. Pay based on
expe rience . Pa1d Insurance
Call between 9:00am3:00pm
Monday·Fnday,

(740i379·9083

Halp Wantad

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL
SALES CONSULTANT
AI John Sang Ford-Lmcoln- Mercury we 've
es1ablished a 35 year reputation of hones.ty.
inlegrlty and outstanding customer servicebefore and after the sale. Wi th the honest
producls on the market and as the faslest
growing,,dealership in our region. we're adding sales professionals to help expand our
marke t penetralion and to help maintain our
·
extremely loyal customer base.
If you are a profess ional looking to &gt;tan a·
new career or maybe you don't feel you're
paid or treated as we ll as you should be and
if you're tired of working for someone who
isn't wor~ ing for you, give Brad Sang a call
loday 1-740-446-9800_You may al so app ly
in person at 195 Upper Ri"er RD ..
Galli pol is. Ohio
Monday-Friday

spifTs, Health c....

compensation aitd
mor~:!

fit

LIN C O LN

.MEI\CURY

Equal Opportunity Employer
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

PROFESSIONAL
DIESEL TECHNICIAN

TRAINING...
• 'tWo week initial &amp;
orientation classes with
~ontiriued ongoing

tlllinin_g ..
• The best management
team in the counb'y to
wist you .

Bonuses. Fla1Rat~.

WHERE : APPLY AT THE SOUTH CENTRAL
OHIO DISTRICT COUNCIL OF CARPENTERS,
JATC OFFICE AT t 394 COURTRIGHT AD;
COLUMBUS, OH 43227
,
(614)236-4205
.
WWW.UBCJATC.COM
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

1-866-300-6495

Disability, Long Ter m
Care. Great starting

EDUCATION: HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA OR
GED OR 1500 DOCUMENTED
WORK HOURS AT THE TRADE.
TEST:
TAKE Al'jD PASS THE
QUALIFYING TESTS AS
DIRECTED:
WHEN MAKING APPLICATION YOU WILL
I)IEED COPIES OF HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA.&amp;
TRANSCRIPTS,
OR
GED,
OR
150o
DOCUMENTED WORK HOURS AT THE
TRADE, AND BIRTH CERTIFICATE. MILITAf!Y
APPLICANTS WILL NEED A COPY OF THEIR
DD-214.
APPLICATIONS:
APPLICANTS MAY APPLY BEGINNING, MAR.
06, 2006; FOR TWO (2) WEEKS . MONDAY
THROUGH FRIDAY 9:00 A.M. TO 1t :00 A.M. &amp;
1 :30 P.M. TO 3:00 P.M.

Get Prepared, Call:

Conunission, bonuse s.

REQUIREMENTS:
AGE :

No Experience R!=qu•in:•~ 4
Excellent Starting
Pr.id Training
Excellent Bencftta

AdCodo: P3,43

Help Wantad

•$500 Sign on Bonus

TRACTOR· TRA ILER
TRAINING' CENTERS
WYT HEVILLE. VA

NOW HIRING
POSTAL POSITIONS

Tranaport ae6·293- 7435

' •Med ical Ins. it01 K
•Hometime on Weekends

. needed .

.Administr ative . ·Position.
Must be very detail oriented..
Word. Excel. Galhpt;~ lis area.
Con tact Kelty Services
(866)286·4717 ask·tor Lisa.

Transportation

•95% No.Touch

basis. Assis1 wilh special
projecl s and reports, .as

Qualified applicants may
send appiicalion to:
Hol zer Clinic
Human Resource
Department
. 90 JacksQn Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631-1562 •
tax IO (740i441 ·3592
' www holzetclj ojc com
Equal Opportunity Employer

Call (304)937·3410

Small Can ton, OH based
Refrigerated Carrier needs
Experienced OTR Drivers .to
run out of Jackson, 0~ .
" NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

Experienced light duty Local buSiness looking for
LOCII Conlpany
wre cker operalor. Clean
Secretary/Receptio nist.
Gallipolis based company IS
driving
record.
Call Must have good telephone seeking candidates tor full
{740)388-8545.
. skills &amp; good with the public.
and part-time poSitions
knowledge in co mputers ~ We otler competlllve salary
~
1;1 11 other off ice machines
and complete benefits
Hours: sam·5pm Monday·
package
Friday, 8 · ~ 2 Saturday.
Applicants mu1t send
Send resume to:
re.umeto:
Personnel
EXTRA 1 EXTRA 1
Local Business
M
A
P.O. Bolt n5
242 Third Avenue
otor oute 0 river
Gallipo.lis·, OH .4563,
Gallipolis, OH 45631
needed in the Leon area.
Pay over 51 ,000/month
Must have Reli able

Located in Mason County
near Buffalo WV.

: . . :--=..= =="--- -

Full l ime · teacher's assis·
tant $6.70/hr. send resume.
Reapon1lbilitlas : Prepare '--"
~
=""'
'"""
='m"'"'"'""''•"'
• '"'
·"""
"'-.J to. Early Education Station
2122 Jefferson Ave. Pt.
financial sta1ements. As~1 St
Pleasant WV 25550.
Acco unting Manager in var·
lance analysis using budget
!;Upporting schedules, tre ncl
Announcements .
A
niB
analysis. etc. ·Analyze and -:::::::::::::::..:::n:n:o:u:n:c:e:m:e:::::;
implement new ·accounting 1

systems. complete surveys
on a quarlerly and annual

Drtvera NMd8d:
·
COL Drl\lers willing to dri\le
for local ready·mb:-concrete
company. Experience Is
'preferred but not necessary
M&amp;d. insurance &amp; other
benefits available after wait·
ing period. Driver must be
willing to do pre-malnte·
nance on lrucks &amp; equip·
men!, yeu.d work &amp; other
·
mscell&amp;neous chores. Experience operating equipment &amp; extra skills such as
welding a plus. .

. ........._....!~ Drivers: Home Weekends!
lliiiO"E","M/"F"N"
NoW Hiring· OTR Dr ivers.
Desk Clerk needed. Please
.apply al Budget Inn , Jack· CDL·A, 1 year OTR experi·
son Pike, Gallipolis. No ence. E~cellent Pay, Medi·
ca i/DentaWislo n/ Life. Paicl
phone calls please.
Weekly/ Vacation . Morristown Drivers Service .· 1 •
Driver
ComplfW Driver . .:
BQ0.62
:.:....::::..:..
1-4306
=.::..::.'1
:.:33
.::..::._.....,.
Dedicated CuStomer out of Orivel'l;
the :Ashland, KY areal
Regional loads. Grei.t pay,
"Avg. $800-$1 ,000 per
company benefits .&amp; bonus·
wftk
es. CDL·A .w/1yr vert. trac·
"Home 3·4 timeS weekly
tor trt exp. reQ. Martin

AVON! All Areasl To Buy Or
86&amp;-713-2778
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304www.cratm11one.com
675-1429..
; - - - - - - - - , Drivers

ACCOUNTANT

118

At John Sang Ford -Linc ol n - Mcrc ~ ry we',·c
established' a 35 year repulation of honesty.
inlegrity and out"andmg customer sen·ice,
: before and after the sale. With the holiest
products on the market and as 1he fastest
growing dealership in our reg ion, we 're adding diesel technicians lo bencr service our
customer..Ford Service training preferred.
but notrequired.
·
If you are a profess mn al tec hni c tan ]CM.) kin g

to stan a new career' or maybe you don·t feel
you're paid or trealcd as wel l a&gt; you should
be .and if you·re tired of working f.or someone who' isn'I " ·orking for you. gin: Jim

,Thoma.s a ca)l today 1-740-446-9800 or
I-800-272-517CJ . You may abo apph 111
person a1 195 t.:pper Ri ver RD..
· Gallipoli s. Ohio Monda\'-Friday

Health Care. Di sabilrry.
Long Term Care aod •.
r1IOI'&lt;

Li N CO LN

.w.r atun

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

Page 04 • 6unbap 111mtS -6mttnrl
..,111.0-H·E-·W·
LP A-NTED
-""1
Guarding Angels Child Ca10
Center Is now accepting apphcallons for a Teacher's
Aide/Floater This pos1t1on IS
a part lime pos1t1on ThiS
position IS designed to assist the staff 1n meet1ng the
needs of ch1ldren II you are
sel! motivated, dependable
and enjoy working w1lh ch1ldren, lhen this could be the
p6sit1on for you . You musl
be at least 18 years of age
and have a h1gh school diploma or certification of high
school equivalency (GED)
by the stale board ot election. II. you are mte~ested in
this position . please contact
Becky Hess or Oama
Schultz at (740)388 -8671
for more information.
Help Wanted: Start your
Own Internet Business. For
detailS email

szmensar1@ aol com
HOLZER SENIOR CARE

CENTER NURSING
' OPPORTUNITIES
Holzer Senior Care Cente

's a 70 bed long term car
urs1ng facility located r
ural Gallia County whos
ission focuses on qualit
are for our resrdents. W
ave a position for :

sk us about our:
EW WAGE STRUCTURE

enefits InClude·
·Competitive Wages
• E)(perience Credit

•Regular Rate Increases

• Healthi Den talllife lnsur

r;1ce
•401k (after 1 year) ·

ro

W~1ID

lr...

.,r~.,.'0--·~-SALE---_.,I riO .!~~E

o..;;;,...;;B;;;l.lSINm;;;;;
__

OPI'olmJNm

The A1hens-Molgs Educatlonal Service Center has an
anticipated position lor a
Payroii/EMIS Clerk in the
Treasurer's Otf1ce. An Assoc1ate degree preferred in
Bus1ness Administration , or
3 years experience in a Fiscal Of" Payroll Office. This
pos1tion has Board ap·
proved benefits. Submil let·
ler ot 1nteres1, resume, and
.relerences to Bryan Swann,
Treasurer,
Athens-Meigs
ESC .. P.O. Box 684. Pomeroy, OH 45769. Application
DeaOline: Monday. February 13. 2006 at noon. The
AM ESC is an Equal Opportunlty Employer/Provider.

BeaU1IIul 4 br., 3 lull balhs.
2 car garage, fenced In lot.
completely ramodeled 304882 -2391

•NOTICE•
HlO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG

CO.

orne be part of the HOLZ
A difference; stop in an
ee us at 380 Colonia
Drive
,
Bidwell, Ohio or give Ste
hanie Trainer. AN . BSN.
ON or Teresa Remy,
MHA, LNHA, BSN, RN,
ystem Admin rs trator fo
Long Term Care a call a
740)446-500 1 '

tiNIOI CAll CFNUI

.,

Home Health Arde Classes-

Agency is looking lor people
rnterested in having a care~r rn the 'hcime health

field . Clas ses will la st 2
weeks and help with job
placement. Class start date
is Feb. 13th. Please call
(740)441-1377 "'(740)9920QQO 1br dwtails
Home Health Car~ of SE
'Ohio is ·Currently hiring
Home Health Aides . Com·
petitive wages. Cal! 740·
662-1222.

son at 170 Pinecrest Drive,

View photos/Info online.

eople -you know, an
OT to send mone
hrough the mail until yo
ave Investigated the of
erin .

"----liiiiilliilii•_.l

No

Now acceptiflg applications
tor waiters fwaitresses, bar-

·-------_.1
170

Ml~l..~

develop features, cover·
news events and handle
some local governme nt
reporting for da ily newspaper in southea.stern

Ohio. Experience prefer·
red, but entry level is ,
acce ptable.

180
·W ANTID
I
1l,, _ _ _T:,;o_Do
_ _____.t'.'
Are you in need of: A new
roof, plumbing fixed, framIng a building or any kind of
carpenter repairs if so give
The Handy-Man a call @
304-675-5857 .

, Send n!!iume an d clips to
Kevi n Kelly, Managing
Ed ito~ Ohio Va.Uey Pub·

lishing Co. 825 Third
Ave.. Gallipolis, Oh~o

Complete yard work and
smaN home repair. 20 years
e'R· Call (740)446·3682.

Seekmg lull ti me secetary
fParalegal exp reqUired
Please send resume &amp; requifem ents to EB1 200
Main St Pt .Pieasant WV
25550

krlawlngly

1968 Mobile Home. A.P·
prox. 10)(50. Needs work.
Asking $500.00 Mllst move
ASAP. 740-949·7"322 after
5 P.M.

1979 Schultz 14X70 mobile
home, 2' Bd., 1 Ba., CA.
Must see to appreciate.
$8,000 . 080. 740-9924146

2BA mobile home tor s81e
or land £ontract $3,000,
$1 ,000 down . (740)4464107.

Houses lor sale in" New- ·
Haven.4 br. on Mayo Dr.
$85,000 (remodeled)
4· br. on Haven Heights
$79,000 (remodeled)
3 br. ori Midway Drive
$130,000 (new ca nst.)
304-882-31311882-2728.

2006 16' 'wide Special Price
.$181/mo. Call (740)3857671.

Watch lor auction signs .

homes for sale. Day
(740)388-8513, Evenings
(7 40)388-8017.

suite, 314 bed .complete,

4 chairs, bakers corner cupboard, curio cabinet, coffee
table , magic chef microwave, bench, misc . single beds ,
dressers, slider rocker w/stool,

Sandra K. Cox
would like lo say thank you 10 all who
expressed 1heir love and sympalhy to us during

the loSs of our beloved-molher/grandmother.
Special thankslo our family, friends, neighbors,

co-workers, Rev. James Keesee, James Kee$Cc
II, -Donna Mulford,

Qualily Care Nursing slaff.
pallbearers, Holzer Hospice, Willi s Funeral
Home, Springfield Township Fire Depanment.
and our Galli a Cornerstone Church families.

God Bless all, from her children and
grandchildren

a

Card of Thanks

With everyone:\' lives' so busy, we
sometimes think that no one cares; but
the outpouring of love and support that
we have received during the loss of our
.beloved Tim hils been overwhelming.
We wish we could list all of you l&gt;y naine
but its not possible. We would like to
thank the Holiday Inn staff: Holzer ER,
Gallia Paramedin, Foster Trucking Co.
and their wondeiful dri vers, Re v. David
Dailey, Wlrite-Sclnvar~ed Funeral Home,
staff at Meigs Meniory Gardens and
espe,eiallyour wonderful friends
and neighbors.
May God richly bless each of you.

TV &amp;

Auto: ·2002 Chevy Cavalier, 4 cyl. ac , radio

STORAGE UNIT AUCTION
Sat. Feb. 11th, 2006.10:00AM

Attention!
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro·
grams 1or you to buy your
home instead of renting .
• 100% financing
: Less than perfect credit
acce'pled '
• Payment could be , the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Localors.
(740)367·0000

----Auction

Located at .Hartwell Storage at St. Rt. 7

CD . Very

heater, _set"car ramps, porch swing, lawn furniture , fence

For Relit 3 Bulldirtgs tor
Business Use. Located in
Pomeroy . Also, 2 Upstairs
Uniurnlshed Apt~ . in Pomeroy for Reni. Call 740-5897122.

charger, folding chairs, tool box, shop vac, misc. garden
hand tQols , tille.r , ladder, wheelbarrow

&amp;

"

Auctioneer: Dan Smith , Ohio Licence#13449 • WV 515
Cash

Positive IQ

Refreshments ·

~ : Auction starts at 11:00 a .m.· Car sells at 1 :00 p .m .
·" Not responsible lor accidents or loss of property

Auction

Auction

Auction

~

Public Auction
February 11, 2006
10:00 a.m.
The Ohio Valley Bank will offer for sale by public auction lhe following ilems:
*830705
PONTIAC GRAND AM SE
1999
*A33215
1995
FORD R.A.NGER TRUCK
1200643
CLEAIIWATER TRAVEL TRAILER
2002
HONDAATV
' .FORD ESCORT
SUZUKI XL7 ,
FORD TAURUS
FORD TAURUS ·
FORD E~PLORER
CHEVROLET CAVALIER
FORO EXPLORER
CHEVROLET 1500 TRUCK
TOYOTA TACOMA
CHEVROLET $10
FORO MUSTANG
DODGE RAM 1500 SPORT
FORD EXPEDITION
HYUNDAI Et.ANTRA

2003
2000

2003
2000
2000
1996
1991
2003
1990
2005

2000
2001
1998
2001
2002

U10593
*21~2

'

*106808
11163669

11231879

r

1#050660

11223453
#A42645

11100839.
M095601

1143776
11188239
m4791

tA13764
U55009

These items are available at the Ohio Valley Bank Annex, 143 3rd Avenue,
Gallipolis, OH on the date and time specified l!bove. Sold to the highest bidder "asis, where-is' without expressed or implied warranty &amp; may be seen by calling the
Collection Department at 1-888-441-1038. OVB reserves the rightto acC!Jpl 1reject
any and all bids, and withdraw ttems from sale pliorto sale. Terms of sale: CASH OR
~

CERTIFIEOCHECK.

Real Estate

Real Estate

Real Estate

'

Mortgage
(740)367-0000

Locators. 2 room furn1shed eHiclency
apartment , clean. downutilities
paid.
Stop renting Buy 4'bedroorn sta irs,
.
1orectosu re $15.000 Fo r 1740)446·1519.
listings 800· 391-5228 · ext. 2bd upstairs apt . stove ,
1709.
fridge, furnished, walerllrash
pa1d. S3251month plus deposit.
Three bedroom House 1n
Pomeroy. Rent IS $450 and 3bd house $350/monlh plus ·'
depoSit is $450. Referen- deposit. (740)446-7620 or
ces required Gas heat and 1740)441·9872.
MOHILE Hmt£S
tnR RENT

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE INC.

14X70 trailer 3 bedrooms.
Electric heat
$300.00 a
rnonth and $250 00 deposit
No pets
Hud approved.
740-742-27t4 •

OPEtl HOOSE SOtiDfiY
FEBRUARY 12TH, 2006. 1 TO 3 P.M.

2 bedroom mob1le home 1n
Ratme , $350 ma. plus 5350
deposit, yea rs leas·e. no
pets. no calls after 9pm,
(740)992-5039

60.

Owner: Hartwell Storage
Dan Smith Auc(ioneer: Ohio #13449
Posi!Ne ID

2BR apartments_ Starting at
$375/monlh. Locp.ted on SA
160, SA 850, Bob McCormick Rd . Call (7 40 )4410194 tH (740)441·1184.

20 Holcomb Hill
$179,900

=---..;.----,.

S)
1

r

2001 4dr V-6 Dakota automalic, 90,000 miles, 4WO.
NOTICE
$8.500. (740)339-1620.
The
2006
Annual
2001 Dodge Ram truck financial report of
2500 SLT Heavy Duty, Salem Townsh ip for
springs, camper special, 10 _
the
year
ended
pi~ tires. $7.500 _ Call Ed
December 31, 2005
(740)36Hi624.
•
;,___:__ _ _ _ _ _~ has been completed
and is available for
98 Chevy ext. cab 4114 , 350
public Inspection at
Vorlec 5-speed , $7 ,500
tho
Clerks , office
OBO. Must" sell (740)256·
26310 Legion Road ,
6772.
Langsville,
by
appointment.
A
copy
Chevy Colorado Ext. C8b
'05. Auto , 2WD, w/bedliner, of the report can be
upon
e~cellent cond ition. Kelty provided
Blue Book $1#.600, w111 sell request.
tor $13 ,600. (304) 523·1 179 Bonnie Scott;

Fun blooded Husky puppies
for sate $300-450, 4 males,
1 lemale.
Also AK C &amp; APRI Regis- ·
tered Siberian Husky stud
available tor
!(reeding
$250. Call(740)707- 1964 .
Jack Russell/Rat Terner
puppies. 3 males, 7 weeks

~~---AN-•n•QU•ES•'••·I old,
ta1ls docked, wormed .
sso each. (740)37g.9098

Buy or sen. Riverine Anti70
·MUSICAl .
ques. 11 24 East Main on
lN.••;TRUMENl~
SA 12.4 E. Pomeroy, 740SUVs
992·2526 . Russ · Moote,
Console Organ - Gulbransen
H)R SAU:
owner.
11 51kw double manual · L.~-----~:0.-.J
ML5cmANF..OUS ·Gre 8t for home or srllall 2004 Chevy Trailblazer
church $950, (740)256·
MERCHANIJISE
4WD wftow pkg
Kelly
1428. See bc-sales.com for
Bluebook s @ $22 ,000
All types of- parts for plumb- piCtures.
many extras 10,500 m1les.
lng, hot water heater, !au~ ·
excellent condition. garage
ke pt
$18.900 (3Q4)675cats. washer/ dryer parts.
1408
Aiso Heating &amp; .Cooling
tools &amp; parts . $1.700 firm.
~~;...--~~--~

r

L...,.;:Oiillliliilliiiiiiiio.-J

r

I

r

Ij

Call (740)441-1236 lor ep- " - ·
· -L•i•V•ESI'OC-,..K-_.1
pointment to view.
_
• ____
Bronco Spitfire Wood/Coal For Sale- Black Angu s bull,
Stove. 'Paid $1 ,200. Two aprox 1,200 lbs
Call
portable dishwashers. 74D- i740)44S-251 4.
74Z·0519.
II{ \ \ "i i,OIU \110\
lrlside/outside Sale. Feb. 3, ;;;;:;;;;;:;;;:;:::::;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;
·4. 5, 6 a1 the home ol 'the
Al!TOS
Late Kenny Stewart. 43724
FOR.SALE
Carr Road . From St.Rt. 7 in
Tuppers Plains..OH take St. $5001 Pol ice ImpOunds!
At. 681 West. Go Approx. 7 Cars fro m $SOO. For listings
Miles to Elk Run Ro ad. 800 _391 _5227 ext . 3901
Turn right Go 112 miles to - - - - - -- - -'the tee in road , turn right on 1987 Chevy va n make good
Carr Ao8d.
1st mobi le work van $800.
home on left. Everything 18fl. dual axle car trailer.
will be sold. 1994 Buick wire floor. New 1ire·s, · small
CenturY 4 door. Water bed, winch, gOod shape. $800.
dining room and living room ( 7401 ~ 79 _ 9297 .
tables and odds and ends. ~::c:::..:_:::::::.:c____
Tools computer w/printer. 1995 Chevrolet Lumina LS
other computer, and PC's. for . sale. Runs but needs
Call 740 -696-1227.
work, $500 OBO. Call
1740)446-7005.
JET
AERATION MOTORS
1995 Ford Crown Victoria
Repaired , New &amp; Rebui ll In LX 1351&lt; miles, good condiStock. Call Ron Evans , 1- lion, new lires, $2,600. Calt
800-537- 9528
(740)44; -9282.

r.1o

I

"----liiilliililii•.-J

Large womens clothing.
hospital scrubs size 3x-4x:,
baby clolhes &amp; household
items.304-675-2BO 1
New and Used Furnaces.
Installation
available_
(740)441·2667. '
NEW 1AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams , Pipe Re bar
For Concrete, Ang le, Channel . Flat Bar, Steel Grating
For Drains. Dr1veways &amp;
Walkways. L&amp;L Scrap Metals Open Monday, Tuesday,
Wednesday &amp; Friday, Bam4:30plf! . Closed Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Sunday.
(740)446-7300

(note time change from last week's ad)
3025

Ingalls Rd. • Gallipolis, OH
Directions: Approx . B miles soulh of Gailipolis Take St AI. 7 Soulh
from Gallipolis 10 Sl. At 218 to Ingalls Rd. on right Approx. 3 miles lo
auclion. (Righi pasl Jividens Farm Equipmenl)

602 Fourth Ave.

13 Garfield Ave.

1157 ·Second Ave.

$210,000

$99.900

$64,900

Training For Employment
Bulldozers; Backhoes, Loaders, IJump
Trucks. Graders, Scrape~s, Excavators

Train in Ohio

50%

p iano, dining labia w/6 chairs, farm kitchen table w/4 chairs,

Appliance
· warehouse
in Hendei'son, WV . Pre·
owned Appl icanes ·starting
at $75 &amp; up all under Warranty. also have Household
M1sc. Items starling at .9k

G.E. washer heavy duty
$95 : G E. dryer $95: refrigerator 2 dpor frost free
$125: Maytag washer like
new $165. GefleS Appliances 76 Vine St. (740)446·
7190 or (740)367-7886 . ·

&amp;

off Storewide

Now- Valentines Day

feather bed still

(excludmg Fossil &amp; Flyer merchandise)

there), cedar blanket chest, side board (buffet) 59 piece Silt of
Acquisitions

Depression Glass - Columbia Pattern, 'Harv.est stoneware, 3

1fi1 "

piece bedroom suite

vintage clothing, painting by local artist Earl Tope • .

AvA

&amp;

chair, fan ,

800-383-7364

Get your refund in as
little
1100 Second Ave.

1044 Second Ave .

$167,900

$69,900

many religious books, lamps and much more .

Website @ www.wisemanrealestate.com

2323

Performance Pk wy
· Cnlumbus, OH 43207
www.atsn-schnols.cnm

.

Gallia CountY Probate Case #0501073
Bonita Westerburg &amp; John Robert Bane ~r. Co- Executors
Alan K . Haley Auctioneer- (740) 794-0265

GALLI A
PERFORMING ARTS

David Wiseman, Broker • 446-9555
Carolyn Wa sch - 441-1007 ,Josh Bodimer - 379-2232
Robert Bruce - 446-062 1

Associated Training Services

Baton Twirling
Ballet, Tap; Jazz

Call 446-3644 .f or more info. dr check out our

Check websrte tor pictures .

Jennifer Sipple- 256-8 152

Locust St.

Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

7 40·245·9880

Jon Jones- 645 -0065
'

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE INC·
SEI/VING BVYERS &amp; SEUERS S/NCE '/943.

I

requested for proper·
ty, equipment and
vehicles. ·Coverage
will be for a three year
term
commencing
March 15, 2006. Each
bid shall be sealed
and endorsed with

the name of the bidder
and
plainly
marked
" Bid
for

bids and to accept the
proposal deemed to
be in t he best interest
o f the Gallia C o un,ty
District Library.
Deborah l. Saunders
Cler"k Treasurer
Board of Trustees of
1he Gallia Counly
Di strict Library
~ebruary 2, 5, 7, 10,
2006

~otnt ~lea~ant 1\.egt~ter·

_

2004 Jeep Liberty, excellenl
condition, less than 15.000 1980 Chevy Motorhome 23'
miles.
$17.000.
Call Travelcraft , 32 .600 m1les .
New Tires, Bra kes , Battery
(740)446-4028 .
&amp; Tune-up $3,300 neg .
94 Honda Accord , $700.
(304)675-4022
Cars from $500. Ford listings 800·391-5227 · ext.
1997 Hornet 23ft. 51h wheel ,
C548.
wlair,
awning. self -con BUilDING
95 Z-28 , 350 auto T·Top, tained . light weight. 56,000
SUI'I'LIDi
look's and ru ns excellent OBO. (740)245-9109 or
'
$5000.00. 92 · Corsica V-6. (740)441 ·7632
Block. brick, sewer pipes. 4 door auto $1800.00 . 740windows, lintels, etc . Claude 742 -4011 or 749·742 -5009.
Wmlers, Rio Grande , OH
10
Caval1ers, Sunlires . SatCall740-245·5121.
HOME .
,
urns, Ford, Chevy an.d
IMPN:OVF.MFNrs
PETS
Dodge Truck . ,Blazers _and
HJRSALE
Vans 1n stock. 3 months3.000 m1le Warranly. OualiBASEMENT
ty
ve.
h
icles
for
11
years.
AU
WATERPROOFING
2 Female Shar-Pei pups 9
UncondiiiOnal lifetime guarweeks old.
Shols and Prices listed on the Jehlcle. antee.
Local references fUrwormed $150.00. 74Q-992· No pressure sales. Cook . n1shed. Established 1975
9105. May call on Sunday
Motors (740)446-0103
Call
24 Hrs (740) . 446 -

The Daily Sentinel
~unbap ~ime£j -~entind

r

~-------------------~--------~--·I
Subscriber' s Name

'

-~

. Address --~-:_ _ _ _ __

City/State/Zip

Phone. _ _

"'
.

'

'

Mail or drop oft this coupon along
with a copy of your photo 10 to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O . Box 469. Gallipo lis. OH 45631

---------·-·---------- ---------

Attention

L1beny Ch a pe l Chu rc h
C r o w n Cr ty

&amp;

Christi

7 40-645·3836

HAIR SALON

Preac;h 1ng Jimmy C r e.me an s'

would li ke to welcome

fr Drn lron ! on C1 t y M ·ss1o n

Donna Roberts

Spec1 al s 1nge rs n1ghtly

446-2753 or 446-2754

Valentine's Day Specials
Februaty 10, 11

-·

DRINKS

FOR

$20

Chicken Breast, .Pollock
Florentine, Italian Past a Trio , Beet

Chev. Silverado

or Chicken Kabobs , Baked Steak .
Reg. Cab New,

12 Deep Fried Fanta il Shrimp ·

Air cond

OR CHOOSE

$14,820

2 FOR

$30

Prime Rib , BBQ Baby Back R 1bs,
14 oz. Char-Grilled Ribeye Steak
· These meals served w11h salad .

All rebates tb dealer

s1de , roll &amp; dessert

Eastern Ave •

The Parkfront Diner
&amp; Bakery
446·1251

'

\

4 -7 pm

8 oz . Strloin Steak, Smothered

446-2282

·--~-

&amp; 14 :

2 DINNERS, DESSERTS &amp;

Your Silverado
Sweetheart Sale

1911

11th

Services stan a! 7 pm

For appointment call

SMITH
SUPERSTORE -

Buy Now for

Feb

of STYLE STATION

her former patrons to join her.

446·8677

Trans,

.

. as she joins their staff

ELECTRONIC FILING

Auto

Stto -

Donna would like to inv1te all

ASK -US ABOUT •

06

Feq .
'

' .

------· --- ------

Revival

Attention

ANGELL ACCOUNTING
For Compule r, ProfessionaL' Individual.
and Business Tax preparation.

736 Second

Attention

Sharon , Beth , Pat

Gallipolis

, Joe Moore Apprentice Auctioneer

03-II-1697T

as 2 days.

446-8727 .

escape ladcter, china Cabinet, collector plates, ladder, records,

www_haleyauctions.com

•

Electronic Tax Filing

recliners ., lift c hair, newer Maytag washer, Westin House d,Yer,

Horse Drawn Fertilizer Spreader, Murray Push Mower

,Job Placement Assistance

'

processors , pots, pans, kitchen utensils, T.V., desk, 2 sofas , 2

Christmas items , knick knacks , radios, kids desk

waive informalities in

'

Walk-ins welcome

Items; Sunbeam mixer, microwave, lood

Eureka Boss vacuum, linens , book · shelves, shadow box,

Clerk -Treasurer al the
above address . The
Board reserv es the
right to reject any and
all
proposals. . . · to

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off or
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
~aUtpolis Jlatlp m:rtbune

·1

CMIPERS &amp; ,
M(JJOR HOMES ·

ding may-be obtained
at the office of the

on your home delivered
subscription!

I

~

of the Clerk-Treasurer
ol the Gallla Counly
District Libra ry of
Seven Spruce Slreet.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
beginning immediately
until
Tuesday.
February 14, 2006 a1
3:00PM . Bids will be
opened immediatel Y
thereafter. Insu rance
coverage is being

Insurance
on
Properties of the
Board of Trustees of
the
Gallia Co unty
District
Library " .
Specifications
and
instructi onS far bid·

Senior Discount*

· 1989 Ford Club Wagon
XLT-1T. 99k mi les, well
mainta ined. $2800 . Call
(740)441 -9282.
~:;()
MaroRCYCLES/
4 WHEELERS
t.-------_.1

·r

REQUEST
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed bids will be
received at the office

·If so, you qualify for a

2004 blue Pontiac Sunfire
30.000 mi. excellent condi- BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
tion. great gas m1leage. 5 SIONS. -AU t-ypes. (7 40 )245 .
speed. $ 9 ,000 (payoff). 5677 or (740)645-7400
(7'40)441 -

knn•. llrlilmd Hi~hllll \~our l 1

or older?

2003 Suzuki 4WD Vinson
500 ATV wilh 34 miles.
~4900.
CARMICHAEL
2001 VW Beetle , white, rea r' EQUIPMENT.
(740)446spoiler, sunroof, powe r 2412 .
dooi-s &amp; windows, 5spE!ed,
58 ,000 miles . (740)379- . 99 Harley Fat Boy, 9.400
2798.
mil~s. lois ot ChrOme and
2002 Dodge Neon' 49,00Q extras. (740)44r5-9954.
miles. 4 cyl .. · aula, air,
Davidson · 1999
$3 ,500 060. (740)256- Harley
XL883 Sportster w/extras .
1233
$5,500 OBO. Call(740i2452003 PT Cruiser. Powe r 5165
windows and locks. CD
00 Auro PARTS &amp;
Player, Very good condition.
ACCEliSOKI~
$7500.00 . (740)388-0140

black inlerior.
9665.

BID

luur Hi~hllll

Are you 65

VANS

846 Second Ave.
$149,900

Ford 900 Tricycle Tractor, Horse Drawn Superior .Grain Drill , .

National Certification
Financial Assistance

4x4

FOR SALE

" - - -·.:FiiOIIRIIiiSAiiiiLiiE'-_.1

DEADLINE 2:00 P.M. FRI.

Antiques; Early 1900's library table , R .S. Howard upright

&amp; Mise,

PUBLIC NOTICE
INSURANCE

~~.30

BULLETIN BOARD

11:00 a.m.

Household

Public Notice

l1uhlk \ ntkt, 111 '"''P'IP'r,.J

---------

Edition ol Gallipolis Daily Tribune, oil lamp, washboard, desk ,

Heavy Equipment
. Operator

Fiscal Officer
Salem
Township
Trustee
(2·) 2, 5

2001 Ford Expedition, Eddie Bauer Edition .•fully loaded,
moonrool,
running
boards, 67 ,500 miles. great
shape. red an d tan exterior,
,tan leather Interior. ask1ng
$19,500. Cal l 441 ~ 1417 af- ·
1er 5pm or leave message.
--------Black , 1994 Ford Fl50,
5.8L. short bed. greal con.dil ion. $3,500. (740)367c7,;;24,;5;.;·- - - - - - - ,

including rocking chair, fur caps from early 1900's, quilts, 1940
SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

PUBLIC
NOTICES

Auction .

BANE ESTATE AUCTION
SATURDAY FEBRUARY 11th

piece painted oak bedroom suite, 4

Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulaville P1ke. Washers,
dryers, gaslelectric ranges,.
refriger8.tor.s, mattresses,
couches, dmettes. che~ts,
much. more. (740)446-4782,
Gallipolis , OH, Hrs. 11·3 (M-

1999 GMC wfextended cab,
loaded, 305 engjne, auto
transmission , 67 ,000 miles.
good Clean, solid lruck, excellent condi!IOn, $8 ,500.
(740)441-1014

Others
Steel Buildings:
claim to be Factory Direct,
we ~AE Factory Direct! Offering HUGE discounts on
overstocked inventorY. lim:
ited # available
CALL
NOW!
1·800-222-'6335
,6000

&amp; up (304)675-7999

Apar tment available now
Riverbend ·Apts . New Haven
WV. Now acoepling applications for Hud-Subsidized .'
one Bedroom Apts. Utilities
1ncluded . Based on 30% of
adjusted Income
Call
(304)892-3121 ·available for
Sen1or and Disabled Peo·
pie. E.H.O

New FurMure $450 . Call AKC Lab pups , field and
(740)446· 7444,
waterfowl hu nting bloodlines, calm an d family on Thompsons Appl iance &amp; entad, excellent pups, e~ ­
Repair-675 -7388.' For sale, cellent pr1ce. (740)41"8.re-conditiOned automatiC 8388
washers &amp; (:lryers. refrigerators, gas and electnc ,rang- Alaskan Malamute puppies
es, air co nditioners, and for sale. Can't reg1star. bu t
wrmger washers. W111 do re- we have both parents.
pairs on major brands 1n (740)256·6414 or (740)645shop or at your home.
2381.

15
TRUCK.'i
0870, Rogers Basem en t
AKC German Shep . pups
FOR SAU:
Waterproofing.
Longaberger For sale_ Bas- top bloodline. ready. 2-26-06
$275(304)675-5724
2BA house lor rent $500 Beautiful 2-story lownhouse kets and Pottery Call 7401985 Chevy 1-ton dump
per mo. $500 depos11. tn ove rlooking Gall ipolis Ci ty 446-3168.
AKC Lab puppies Chocolate
GIT·IT-DONE
Kal")auga .
· no
pets. park: Kitchen , D.R. L.R .. Moving Sale- Quality bed - black . Price $100 . Call 'truck , new motor, cab &amp; All Types Home Repairs
pain t. Used daily. Ask ing
(740)44 6-41 07
25 yrs . Experience,
slud y. 38R. 2 baths. laundry . room . livingroom furniture. (7 40)446-1062.
$3,000. (7 40)258-1253.
Free Est1mates.
2BA . turnished .' no pets. ref- area. References required. console organ and more. Cocker Spaniel puppy, reg24 Emergency Servjce
istered. butf/lal'l colo r. $175. 1993 Ford Range r 4x4· ext.
erence $375 mo 5300 de· security deposit. no, pets . (740)256-1428. See
(304)675-3733 01
pos it, water , paid Ph one $900 mo. CaH (7 40) 446- · bc-sa les.com for pi clures ApproX'. 3 112 monlhs old cab, loaded V-6, automatic
(304)593·0 129
2325 or {740)446-4 425.
and 1nlo.
(740)256·6346.
$3500. 304-576-3231
(740)441-0S29.

Unit# 67, Unit# 73

Auction

...

electnc air 740·388-8277.

Will offer lor sale Unit# 49 , Unit #46,

Cash

1

Ohio Valley Bank

on Laurl Cliff Rd.

&amp; Unit #

-

;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i-:'::

I

Pomeroy, next to flea market

Unit # 94

&amp;

misc .

Owner: Mary Stobart Rob'inson

~-'-------­

..

r

t

Misc.: 14 HP Signature riding lawn mower, bottle gas wall

.

7BA. 5BA, Foreclosure,' only $18.000. For listings call
800-391 -5228 ext. F254

&amp;

3Br. Relridg &amp; Stove,Wash- BEAUTIFUL
APARTer &amp;
Dryer
included MENTS AT BUDGET PRI(304)576·2934
CES AT JACKSON ESTATES, 52 Weslwood Drive
Mobile Home Lot wlcarport from $344 to $442 . Walk to
ne~t to Methodlsl Church in shop &amp; movies Call 740Meigs Co . Jusl o11 SR33, Kanauga, OH . Private. Call 446 -2568 . Equal Housing
Cook Rd . nice 5 acre par- (740)446·4782 .
Opportunity.
cels, co. water, S21 ,500!
Mob
1le
home
spaces
in
Darwin, 5 acres with POnd
Coumry Mobile Home Park. CONVENIENTLY LOCAT$19,950' Danville, Red Hill
(740)385-4019.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Ad. 12 acres NOW $31~~00.
Townhouse
apartments,
Re"ed~ville, hlgh + dry 10 Newer 2 Bd . Am . trailer. and/or small houses FOR
acres, co. water NOW Central heal and air. Cov- . RENT. Call (740)441."1111
$t5,500! Tuppers Plain's. 20 ered porch and patio. Partly tor applicatiqn &amp; informaac:res $24,950, co. water! lurnished . $4,25.00 740·· tion.
Chesler 17 acres. $25.950. 243·5811 .
.,--------Gallia Co. Vinton , Dodrill
Garage Apt on Roush St.
Furnished .
Rd ., 5 acres $11,500: Kyge r Nice 14X70 two bedroom Mason.
. 7 acres $13 .500! · Rio with new carpet in Syra- $ 325/month + Ulililies, s1oo
Washer/Dryer.· utility/deposit. Ava ilable imGrande, 8 acres. co. Y1ate r, cuse .
NOW
$19.50q.
Call
and mediately {304)773-5054
{740)441-1492 lor free
AI•AJm\..-IOO'S
Gracious living . 1 and 2
maps to explore each si te or
FOR RENT
bedroom aparlments at Viivisit www brynerland com .
-lage Manor and Riverside
We linance!
Apa rtme nls in Middleport .
I and 2 bedroom apan- From $295-$444. Call 740REAL K-;rAn:
menls. furn ished and unfur- 992·5064. Equal Housing
WM'J'ED
nished . security deposit re- Opportunities.
House WV locatron, home &amp; qUired, no pets , 740-992- Large modern upStairs apt. ,
properly within 10 miles ol 2218 .
2 Br., near Tuppers Plains.
PT. Pleasant, ranch styl e 1BR apt close lo Holzer. no pets. $425.00 plus de·
1~00- 1600 sq . ft..cen tral . WID hookup. Depo$iUreter- posit.
740-985-4169 or
a~r/~eat. garage. prefer rural enc8 required . (740)339 _ 614·264-6409.
sett1ng please call 304-593- 0362 cell number.
Middleport 1 and 2 Bed3207
.
--~------ · 18A, nicely furnished apart· room furnished· Apts. No
Need to sell your home? mant , quiet area , suitable Pets. deposit, and previou s
late on paymenls . divorce, lor 1 adull , privale driveway renlal references. 740-992jop transfer or a dealh ? I w/carport , new WI D. 0165.
c,1n buy your home . All (740)446-4782.
Modern 1 bedroom apt.
cash and quick closing.
{7 40)446-0390.
740-416-3130.
1ST MO,N. FREE RENT
W1TH PAID DEP. NEW
New Haven, 1 bedroom unIH ' I \I s
· ELLMVIEW
furnished apartment, no
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
pets, deposit &amp; previous
NOW LEASING!,
rental relerences, {740)992·
HOUSES
SPACIOUS
'0165
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
HlKRENT
Nice one BR .unfurn ished
BOTH FLATS &amp;
ap~rtment. Range &amp; refriQ .
TOWNHOUSES
2 Bd. Am. house with large,
provided. Water &amp; QarbaQe
AVAILABLE
kitchen . Oft street parkin'g
paid. Deposit reQuired . Call
'ALL ELECTRIC
and storage.
ASking
(740)446-4345 after 6pm.
'CENTRAL AC &amp; HEAT
$425 .00. PoSSible HUO.
-sTOVE,
REF.
,
·
740~243-5811
' Pleasant Valley Apartme nt
'DISHWASHER
· Are now takinQ Applications
3 BedroOm house in Middle- 'GARBACJE DISPOSAL
for 2BR, 3BR &amp; 4BR .. Appli-wiND BLINDS
pori $450.00 per M Plus
cations are taken Mon~v
-cEILING FANS
$450.00 depoSit. No inside
thru Friday, from 9:00 A.M.·
-wATER, SEWAGE, &amp;
pets. 740-416-1354 or 7404 P.M. Otlice is Loca ted at
-TRASH INCLUDED
992-3194 .
1151 Evergreen Drive Point
PETS CONDITIONAL
3 Sr. Pomeroy, $375.00 pe r
Pleasant. WV Phone No. is
(304 )882-3017
mof).th plus deposil 740(304)675-5806 . E.H.O
416·4906.
Shadylawn Apartment Stu·
3 to 4 bedroom home in
d10 &amp; 1 bedroo m apartPomeroy, HUO available,
menls. Deposlt required .
$450 mo_, $450 depos1t, call 2 bedroom apartment Me1gs App ly at Johnsons Super(7 40)992·2979
County, very nice, ci~an, market in Gallipolis .
4BR house in town , near S425 ·per monlh plus deposit, no pels, re ferences re- Twin Rivers Tower is acschool , $700/mo., Ctepos1t &amp;
QUIJed. (740)992·5174
cepting applicatiOns for'
referneces required
No
wailing list tor Hod-subpets. (740)388·1 100
2 bedroom Apt. available in
sized, 1· br, &lt;lpartmenl, call
4br
in
Syracuse. Syracuse . $200 deposit 675·6679 EHO
· 5600/month &amp; Depos 1t w a- $350 per monlh rent. Rent
SPACE
ter/Sewer 1ncluded. No Pets includes waler, sewer,
trash . No pets . Suflic ient ~
(304)6 75 . 5332
mRRENT
c:.::xc.:.==----- · income needed to quality.
Anentlonl
740-378-6111
Downtown Office Space· 5
Local compAny ottering "NO
2
bedroom
apt.
WID
hookroom
suite $650/mo: 1 room
DOWN PAYM ENT' . proup. Wat er. trash, sewer pd. olfi~e- $225/mo .. 2 room
· $250/
Se ·1y d
grams tor you to buy yout
S4QO.
SUite
mo. ~Uri
ehome instead of re ntmg.
1 bedroom apt refrig, stove. posit required . You pay util, 100% linanclng
$325 , water. sewer, trash itjes . All spaces very nice.
• Less than perfect cred1t pd .
( 7401367 _7746 _. ~levat_or. oa_ll (740).446accepted
3644 1o
• Payment co uld be the (740)367-7015- (~40)446r ~ppomtment .
4734
Same as ren 1.
·

~:~~t~~~~ 7~~-~~~f::;

nice, approx. 58,000 miles .

Real Estate

~;;;;;A;u;ct;lo;n;;;~~~~A~u~c~t~io~n~~~

&amp; table
linens, &amp; etc .

Stand, floor

lamps, metal 'wardrobe , hall tree, sweeper,

1

Card of Thanks

The family of

3 pc . bookcase bedroom
table &amp; 5 chairs, .kitchen table &amp;

Household: Living room suite,

2002 Clayton
14,52
$148/mo.
Cell
(740)385-9948.

Great , location, 3b(, 3br;
1tacre, LA , FR. DR, many
extras (304)593-0852
·

Card of Thanks

22 acres, wonder1ul view,
- ndgetop property, close to
rnain highway perlect tor 4 ·
wheele r trails. (740)7072109 '

Located in Letart Falls, Ohio' at 22842 Bucktown Roads

Good dean, used, mobile ·

&lt;

(740)388-8375.
1996 Skyline 28x64, 3BA,
, 2BA . fireplace, cathedral
ceiling, $35,000. {740)7091166.

Auction

SAT. FEB.• 11, 2006 11 AM

'96 FleetwOod 3 BA Only
~169/mo . C•ll (740)3659948.

rAN:=~

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

For Sale- Lawncare BusinesS, all equip., 97 314 ton
Four Powerstroke Gra11ely,
260-Z Gravely Pro 50 16'
Country setti.ng in Gallia 1989 .Belmonl 14x70. New trailer, (740)742·8504 eveCounty! 3 bedrooms. 2 heatpump, furnace, hotwa- nings.
baths', fireplace. S85,000. ter tank . Musl be moved. _ _ __;__ _ _ __
(740)709-1166.
Very
clean.
$10,800.
Auction

curio cabinet, Jenny Lind rope bed (rope
, Will care for elderly.' I have
relerences .PleaSe call Beverly at 304-675-1064

Auction

The Titiwthy L. Curtis Famil)''

No land
south, $125,ooo.
contracts.
(740)709..()299.

J&amp;C Tree Service &amp; E~ca- , .
vating 25 years exp. Free
estimates 304 -67 5-2213

eccept

ad.,.rtlaements for, ..,
eetele which Is In
violation of 1ht law. Our
readers ere hertby
Informed that all
dwelllnga advertlaed In
this newapa~r art
available on an equal
apporlunlty baHa.

Card of Thanks

4bdrm, 2.5 bath, hardwood
floors, new' roof, approx
3,000sq.tt. Riverview. Rt.7

Ho'use Cle.aning Services or
Sitting with · Elderly in their
home. In Mason County
area Call (304)895-3217 to
leave message or lor information

1964 10X50 Rembrandt with
furnishings $1 ,000 0.8.0 .
(937)9~ 1-2111 days.

Thlt newspaper will not

3BA, 2 full bath , 1,900 sq.ft .
full basement , 2 car attached garage , 3 acres. Chester
Township, Easlern school
district. Off At. 7 near Me·
morial
Gardens.
Call
(740)985·432 1 after 6pm.

Computer Trouble Shoot
and Repair. Expert Service'.
740-992-2395.. '

45631. Phone (740)446·
2342 ext . 18.

MOBIU HOMES
~
FORSAUl

• Page OS

~~~~~~~~~~

FOR SALE

llke new

i

.

~unba!' f!rimt&amp; -~tntinel

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

MOBILE HOMES

Mobile Home 12-65, 2br, all
Electric Cheap (304)67510
used
homes
under
pr~nca 1 llmlt1tlon or
$3,000 .00. Mus1 Gal Call 3927 before 9pm.
dlscrlmlnatton based on
Elaine 740-385-0698 .
r1ce, color, rellglo,n, •••
Rental Property for Sale.
familial statue or n1tlonel
1970 Hillcrest on 50X225 lot
origin, or any Intention to , 16x80 homes starting at Harrisorwille.
Currently
$25995.00
.
Includes
vinyl
make any such
Renled . .$15,000.00. 740siding/ shingle roOf. Call
pre,.r.nct, llmltlltlon or
742·4011 or 740-742·5009.
dlecrimlnetlon."
Russ 741l-385-2434.

3-4bd, partial brick house,
7acres. 646 Sand Hill Ad.
Gallipolis Career College
PI.Pieasant. Needs some
' (Careers Close To Home)
repa1r. $75.000. (740)388Call Today! 740-446-4367,
8366.
1-8QfJ-2 14-0452

t274Jt

3368

Fair Housing Act of 1818 .
which makn It llleg•l to
ed11ar;tlea "eny

5555.

tenders. drivers, and bus- .
boys. Pick up applk;ations at '
· Lesilge Mini Storage
For all your storage needs
KNICKERBOCKERS
2407 ·Jad&lt;ison Avenue
f
r
o
m
Point Pleasant WV
5x10,10~10, 10x20.20x30
·open interviews will be boats.AV's. campers, cars,
conducted on 217 from 5-8 trucKs, fenced outside parkp.m.
ing, 1st mon. tree with 4
month le8se Hours 8am dark 304-762-1117 or 304!Reporter
638-5981 or 304-762·2014.

General Assign ment
Reporter to write and.

"'*

~ncealed Pistol Class All. 3 br/ 1 bath, 1.5 acre lot in
S ates F~b. 11 2006, · Po mer~. new roof, leave
$75.00 . . 9.00am. VFW _Ma· message 749-517 _5388
son wv. Ph . (740)843- . _ _;:_'_ _ _ __

and Schools

New Haven, WV, 4 Bedroom,.2 Bath, 2 Car Ga- .
rage, Outbuildings, Close to
1own. PRICED TO SELL!
Code 6506 or call (304)882-

All f..t
.ctvertl1lng
In this ~·p•per It
. subject to the Fedel'll

3 Bedroom , 2 Bath with
Fireplace in Rio Grande
are'a, 8 acres m/1, it0x60
barn, $120,000. (740)7091166.

www galh~ISCil!l rstHcolit:lge com .
Accreoiled Mamber Ac_cradoling
COUI'lCII for lnc:IGJ;lendent Colleges

(740)441-3120

recommend

TIRED OF GAS PRICES &amp;
COMMUTING?
CAREER DISTURBED?
Christian Owned Company
Otfenng A Home Managed
.BIJSiness. Part time or Full
lime. Futl Support and
Training. Fully f1nanced opportunity if qualified.
1-800-946-7572 Pin 00 (If
no
answe r, please leave
The Athe ns-Meigs Education al Service cEmier is
seeking a HEAD STAAT
MONE¥
BUS DRIVER in 1he TuproLoAN
pers Plains area in Meigs
Coonty. Minimum of High
School diploma or equivalent requ ired.
Requires
COL with school bus classi·
rrow Smart. Con tac
licalion. Previous bus drivhe
Ohio Divis1on of Fi
ing experience and Working
ancial Institution's Of
wl1h preschool children preice of Consumer' Affal
ferred . Ability to lift 30 lbs.
EFORE you retlnanc
Musl be willing to participate
our home or obtain
in drug/a lcohol testing. ·
oan. BEWARE of r!
Preference given to quali·
uests for any large ad
fied present or past Head
ance · payments of fee
Start parents and employr insurance. Call the Of
ees.
This position has
ice of Consumer Affai
Board approved benefits
oil tree at 1·866·278
Submit letter of interest, re3 to learn it the mort
sume. and references to
age broker or lender i
John D. Cos,tanzo. Superinroperly licensed. (Thi
tendent, Alhens-Meigs EduS
a publiC service an
catiOnal Service Center,
ouncement from th
P.O. Box 684 Pomeroy, OH
hio Valley Publlshin
45769. Appliccition deadom~ny)
line: Noon Feb: 10. The
AMESC is a,n Equal Opporlunity Employer/Provider.
The Athens-Meigs Educational Service Center is
seeking a HEAD STAAT
TURNED DOWN ON
TEACHER AIDE
in the
Tuppers. Plains area in SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win I
Meigs County. Minimum of
1-1388-582-3345
High School diploma or
equivalent required. CDA
HI \I I " I \ II
and prev1ous experience in ..,,...--...- - - - ,
early childhood setting pre- r10
HOMES
!erred. This position has
FOR SALE
Board approved benefits.
Submi1 "letter of interest.
resume , and ieferences to 112 Pleasant Street, 3 bed·
John D. Costanzo, superin- rooms, 1 1i 2 baths, New
tendent, Athens-Meigs Edu- Central AC, New Windows.
cational' Service Center, New Wate r Tank, Gas
P.O. Box 684 Pomeroy, OH Budget $88 (304)6754034
45769.
·Application deadline: 1995 Ooublewide 3br. 2ba
Noon Feb. 10 The AM ESC 'wfattached GaraQe, BreezeIS an Equal Opportunity Em- way, ~ Barn, 1.56 acres,
Sandhill
Rd., $72,000
Ployer/Provider.
·
(304)895-3068

Housekeeping and laundry
positions available at Arbors
o't Galli,OOiis. A)Jply in per-

It

WWW.OrYb-COm
o~ Mom• Llstlnga.
list your home by calling

hat you do business wit

r~1

•Unrlorm Allowance

Gallrpolis . Absolutely
Phone CaliS Please.

HFu

Sunday, February 5, 2006:'

'

Advance Notice
,
Eq uipment
Cor)signment AuC11on
April 8th

in Rio Grande

For 1nfo

Call 645-2061

�I

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

'

•

Protesters torch Danish
mission in Beirut
as violence escalates
over caricatures, A2

Sunday, February 5, 2006

HOLZER CLINIC

Procter &amp; Gamble steps
up innovation pa~e, A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

·Bringing you the latest Healthcare News

!)0 ('1-.1\TS • Vol.!)!), No. I:!:!

Meigs E-911 funds in state escrow pending plan

SPORTS

Holzer Clinic Introduces ·New Technology

Bv

BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL&lt;;OM

• Steelers win Super
Bowl. See Pa~e 81

the charge began in August , is onl y county in the state withremiued to the Public Utilities out 911 serv ice, or concrete
Commission of Ohio and plan s lo initiate the service,
POMEROY - State ,legis- deposited into the Wireless · and therefore, 'the funds set
lation passed last year could Government Assistance Fund. aside fro m Meig s County
be a financial boon to Meigs · The PUCO estimates Meigs wireless customers will sil in
County 's 911 service, if vot- ·County's proceeds from the escrow until the end of 2008.
ers can be persuaded to help fund at $29,978.69. There is. · En hanced 9 11 . or E-9 11 ,
finance the service through an however, a catch. In order to allows 911 to improve the
added tax or fee .
begin receiving ·those month - effecti ve ness and reliability
House Bill 361, which ly disbLtrsements, a county of wireless 911 scrv i c~ by
became law in May, 2005, must first amend its county - ·providin g 91 1 dispatchers
sets a 32-cent monthly charge wide 911 plan for the provi - with addi tion al information
on all wireless phone num- . sion of wireless enhanced ser- on wireless 911 call s, includbel's in Ohio. Collection of vice. Meigs County is the ing their locati on.

'

Ruth M·. a 72 year old femal e has been hospitalized six times in the h st five years because of
recurring anemia and obscure intestinal bleeding.
During · this time she has unde.rgone numerous
invasive scope tests which revealed no abnormalities and she continues to require iron therapy and
oc.casional tran~fusi.ons to remain well. This new
.technology oflercd at Holzer Clini c may lead t? a
diagnosis and possible treatment for her problems.
The tec hnology. · wireless video capsule
endoscopy (VCE) for the first time allows physicians to visualize the entire intestinal tract and to
identify diseases particularly in the 22 foot length
of small intesti.ne that previously could not be
diagnosed or required surgical exploration-of the
open abdomen. The patient swallows a tiny camera about the s ize of a. kidnev bean which then
passes through the entire intestinal tract takitig
video pictures as it moves along. During the
course of the study approximately 50,000 images
are transmitted to a recorder worn on a belt. A
physician, typically a gastroenterologist trained in
the proc,edure can then review the video in about
60 minutes and determine if there are ·small bowel
diseases causing bleeding, anemia, or other
· symptoms.

.

'

W\\W.m~dail~••·nlinl'l .•·um

MONil \ Y, I'EHRUAKY 6 , :.!006

cannot obstruct the bowel unless there is a stricture which then requires surgery to remove
capsule and fix the stricture. A capsule can
be retained due to slow transit time through
bowel. A retained capsule usually causes
symptoms and is detected on th e video .\\.the:n
reviewed . Plain x-rays of the abdomen can
obtained after several days to see whether
capsulepasses spontaneously. If it does not,
gery could become necessary to remove it.
far, experience reveals a 5% retention rate wit
less than' I% of cases requiring surgical retrieva l.

In
November.
Meigs vtce .
Count y voters rejected a proCommissioners have pro·
posed 50-cent monthly sur- posed running the 911 service
charge on conventional tele - from the sheriff \ department.
phone customers, which using · a ·specially-trained
would
have
gene rat ed deputy t\) administer it. A
approximately $35,000 pe r. similar arrangement in. Vinton
year for 911 operations ..· County has proven adequate
Commissioners
said fo r the county's needs and reiThursday they will appoint
ative ly inex[lensive td opernew 9 11 committee to review ate.
the county's 911 pl an, develSheriff Roben Beegle said
oped by a previous commit - last year he is wi lling to work
. tee, and to recommend fund- with commi ~sioners to proing alternatives for the ser- vide support for a 911 service.

a

PVH sponsor$ Gold Wz11gs and Ribs Festival

The only definite contraindicatioris to the procedure are patients who are nonsurgical candidates,
who refuse to entertain the idea of surgery. or who
are known to have strictures.
Findings identified as a
result of VCE can then
be treated . If Crohn 's
disease is found, the gastroenterologist will give ·
medications to improv~
the condition. A gastroenterologist 'who performs VCE will also•
work with a surgeon 'as
part of the team.
In
some p&lt;~tients, the .finding of active bleeding
will require intraoperative endoscopy ·or surgical· remova l of the
involved bowel.

Wirel e~s capsule endoscopy has revolutionized
eval.uation of the ·gastrointestinal tract. The
·Given Pill Cam wireless capsule was developed
four years ago and is only now nioving out of tertiary care centers to smaller communities like
Athens, Gallipolis, and Jackson. Those who
should receive the test are people with unexplained intestinal bleeding, chronic diarrhea, ane- · The technology requires
mia, and patients suspected of having Crohn's · regular upgrades and the
di sease. Initial experience with the capsule sug- fee to the patient is gengcsts that it may reveal the source of unexplained erally around $400 and
' bleeding or anemia in 50-75% of patients being ts covered by n:w st
tested. and it is rapidl y replacing x-rays as the insurance companies.
' best way to identify small bowel Crohn' s disease.

Preparation ·includes nothing by mouth for six
hours bcforc.ihe procedure and sod ium phosphate
bowei prep ..The capsule is swallowed with water
at a physician's office or ambulatory surgery center, and a recorder is attached to the patient with
an adjustable Velcro belt system.. Thepatient then
goes .about their normal d~y for the next seven
hours but returns for removal of the belt and
recorder later in the day. The patient is allowed
clear liquids after two hours; f'lod and medication
are permitted four hours after ·ingestion of the
capsule . After detachment , the reco rder is
attached to a computer work station, . and the
recordin gs are down loaded, processed , a:nd
reviewed by the gastroenterologist. The capsule
is eventually passed in a subseq uent bowel movement l;&gt;ut the patient is. frequently unaware of it.
Possible compl ications exist with any procedure
and VCE is no exception. The major iss ue is capsule retention as a result of failure to pass through .
a narrowed. strictured bowel. The capsule' itself

Gastroenterologists may
see as many as ·8- 10
patients a month who
might require VCE. The
ofVCE into
introduction
'
the Athen s, Gallipolis, ·
and Jack son area · will
now elim'inate the need
to send patients needing
the test to uni versity
referral centers iri distant
cities.
'

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Kathryn Mora
Cha~ene

INSIDE
• Families of ferry
passengers lash out at .
.·Egyptian government over
response to tragedy.
See Page A2
· ·
• Lawmaker says he
was wrong about
increase in donation limit.
See Page A3
• Reporting Iran to the
Security Council,
significant step or
diplomatic distraction?
See Page AS
• Specter says Gonzales'
rationale for spy program
'strained and unrealistic.'
See Page AS
• Other states given more
time to implement
curriculum changes.
See PageA6

WEATHER

Details on Page A&amp;

INDEX
2 S..:cnnNs ...,_ 12

PAGES

A3

Calendars
Classifieds .
Comics

'.

·B3-4
Bs

Dear Abby

A3

Editorials

A4

Obituaries

As

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

MEIGS STIJDENTS EXCEL IN
SCIENCE PROJECfS
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Kimi
Swisher and Catie Wolfe , ·
both freshmen at Meig s
High School, captured the
"best of show" award in the
sc hool' s annual science ·fair.
Their
.e ntry • in the
earth/space sciences category
won out over projects .sub. mitted by the more than one
hundred students taking part
in the fair.
.
' First. sec.ond and. third
place winners in the various ·
are:as of competition will
now advunce to the regional
contest to be held at Ohio
University on March 4.
Winners in the respecti ve
categories of competiti on
were · as follows :
Behavioral sc ience: Bryan
DeLong, first; Jamie· Bailey.
second. and · ·A my Barr.
Leslie. Preece. Angela Stuart
and Caitlin Leslie. third .
Botany : Crockell Crow.
first. ·
·
Chemi stry: April Oiler,
firsl; Molly Smith and Casey
Smith, second , and Chad
Bonnett. third .
'
. Earth/space sciences: Kimi Kimi Swisher and Catie Wolfe proudly display the ribbons they
Swisher and Carie · Wolfe. were awarded after having been selected for the "best of
show" award for their earth/ space exhibit 111 the Meigs High
first: Erin Perkins. second.
·
Engineering:
Andrew School science fair.
0 ' Bryant, tirst.
Envi ronmental
scie nce· . Judging the emn es which School: Man 1\'kCaulia. ·per- .
Cheh;ea Sm&lt;1ll wood , first : iVere on display tn the cafe - fonnimce and inJu ,trial tcchAshley Life , second.
· teria ' for an eve ning ope·n nicicm at Ga,·in P l1w~r Plant.
Medicine and. · Health : house for. parents and teach Jndi c Rnu,h . ,·hcmistn
Amber · Hockman. first: ers
were
Dr.
Janies t~acher :11 Wahama High
Morgan Letlles, second: Eric With erell:
MaryLou Scho&lt;&gt;l: Jason Ki i1~. physical
Toler. , Cura Lawless and Moegling. librarian : . Jenny tllerapi,t: Denise Arnold .
Mei )! '
Middle
Josie VanMeter. third.
Ridenoiur. education coordi- tca,·hc·r.
Mi crobiology :
Caylce nator, Mei gs Soil and Water schl1nl: Jnhn Bent ky. retired
Reeves, Lindsey Mye rs. first. Cnnservation District: Ke1·in \l'ICilL.' e tCad1ec M~lis . . a
Physics: Amai1da Gilkey. Shepp;~rd. MHS teachn: Hll lmaJl. substitute teach er
fi"I. Lian Hollman . second. Jad f'lemmin~. chc mi ,try "i1h &lt;kgrce 111 hiology:
Znology:
Stephanie teacher at Belpre High Danie lk Dugan. science
Donaldson, first.
School; Vi.Lki Hill. scienre teache r.
~k i" '
Middle
Kathy Hudson. ninth grade teacher at Southern Middle School: cmd Rick Cooksey.
science teacher. was coordi- Sehoul: Ginger Wilh . bi olo- 'cien ce · tc al'11er. Southern
nator for the fair.
gy teacher ·at Eastern. High Middle Scholll.
•

•

Hoeftlch/ pholo ..

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a sponsor for the annual Gold
''Mngs ~rw ·1'1ibs Festival to ta ke place , June 2 at&lt;Q. ~.; ori the
P'on1ef5~ parking lot. Here Amy Leach , on behalf drtfii3)iost~i­
tal, presents a $750 check to Pau l Darnell , festival chairman .
Charlene Hoeftlch(pholos This ·is the hosital 's .second. year to help sponsor the festival
Jack Flemming, chemistry teacher at Belpre High School, talks to Katie Thomas, left, and which attracts tourists from several states.
Alexa Venoy about their science project called "Grease Busters."

·•

'

..'

-'

Beth· Se~ent(pholo

Workers from the Meigs County Health Department joined the
rest of the country in recently obserxing Go Red for Women
which raises awareness about heart disease, the number one
killer of women in the United States ·Pictured in red are (sitting, from left) Sandy Cunnmgham , ·Barbara Vujaklija. Brenda
Curfman .. Becki Ball: standing (from left)· Larry . Marshall.
Sherry Hayman. Cou rtney Sim, Edwina Be ll. Beth Cremeans.
Ke'ith Litt le. Andy Brumfield, Frank Gorscak. Connie Little.

Go Red for Women raises
heart disease awareness
BY BETH SER~ENT

di&gt;comfl111 .

ti~htne!.&gt;

or full -

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

ne~s . inJige:-.lipn that · isn't

POMEROY - Dtd vou
'notice a lot of people dreised
in rea last Friday'' If you did.
good' If yo u did11 ·t. vou
missed the local ob,en ance of
the
American
Heart
Association's Go Red for
Women meant to rais~ aware ne ss of the number one kille r
·nf women in America · heart
disease.
In fact nl(lre women die of
. heart disease than men .
"This event \ purpose is ·Ill
.en-:ourage women &lt;to take ron trol of their own . health ."
Meigs Coun11 Cardim ascular
Health Cotirdinator Andv
Brumfield \aid. "Women f,ir
·too lo ng have been concerned
with the hcallh of the famil1
and ha1 e neglected the ir ow i1
health...
S! mplmm of he art di,ea,e
in women ·arc "''mew hat d1fferent than for . mt' n. These
· 1uu¢
• chest
•symptoms c"an me

alleviated b' antacicls. breathb1ness. r(Jtigue. jaw pain. ·
ann pain. chest pain felt during
exercise that Jisappf:ars afterwarcl .
R1'k facto" for heart dis- .
ease in women are smoking.
post-menopavsal status. ele, ated cho lesterol. high hlood
pre"ure. diabetes . famil~ his!Of\. being m·erwe ig ht , slres.s.
little or no exercise.
1.t is sugge~ted thai if a
women falls into anv of these
· ri'k categoric\. she should talk
to her doctor about a heari disease prevention strategy. and
ask a,bout getting a ,creening
te st to ,ee tfshe\ in immediate
·danger.
"Women have just as much
risk developing heart disease
as nwn ... B,rumfield said about
the" arnin~1 and ri'sb of hcan
disca'c ·0Bcing physically
acti1·e and eat in~ a healthy diet
Plene see Red, AS

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