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                  <text>ALONG THE RIVER

LIVL ~ G·

The war at home:
Huntington eyewitness
recalls Kent State tragedy, Cl

House of the Week: ·
Home features lavish
living room, D1

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tme -

un

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HometoWn Ne*s for Gailia &amp; Meigs co~ties
Ohiu \ · ant·~ l'uhlishinJ.: Cu.

SPORTS
• Even without a hit,
Eastern beats Fairfield.
See Page 81

l'nmt•t·n~ • l\liddlt•l""1 ~ ( ;allillolis • 1\la~ 22, 2oo:;

S 1.50 • \'ol. :J9 . ;\;n . 1X

.

Officials expect MeigS will be plant site
.

BY

BRIAN J. REED

BREED@MYDA!LYSENTINEL.COM

.
POMEROY - Officia.ls
with American E,lectric
Power's West Virginia-based
Appalachian Power expect
AEP to anno.unce plans 10
construct a $1 billion power
plant in Meigs CountY. by
June I, and expect a site next
· to the Mountaineer Plant in
New Haven, W.Va., to be the
site of a second IGCC plant.
AEP has · announced plans

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to have I,200 megawatt s .of . power plant in Ohio.
throu gh
the
regulatory
electricity generation online
AEP has already identified process of the PUCO. and the
from the clean-coal IGCC a I ,200-acre si te in Lebanon next thing to haj!!pen will be.
_technology by 2010,eitherby · Township as it s first choice h ear in g~ to lake placi· in
constructing
one
600- for· such a faci lity._but 'doe s August.
megawatt plant or two .
not expect to make a tina!
A site next to Mountaineer··
If AEP chooses to build two announcement on the plant's Power Plant 'in Mason County.
such plants. it may do so on location until after the Public has also been identified ·as a
one site or two separate ones. Utilities Commission of Ohio potential site, as has another
In an interview in Friday's approves a cost recovery plan · in Kentucky.. AEP President
edition of the Charleston for the proposed plant. .
·Kev in Walker said
in
(W.Va.) Gazette, Appalachian
Jeff Rennie, AEP corporate February that Ohio was AEP\
Power ·co. Vice President communications cons.ultant. lirst choice for such a plant.
.Mark Dempsey said AEP will said Friday afternoon that . Meanwhile. GE Energy
· build its first coal gasification . "everything
is ·m.ovmg and Bechtel Power . Corp.

IAN McNEMAR

IMCNEMAR@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Janet Faye Dennison
• Clotilda M. Hood
• Lillian L. Pettit
• Viola 'Dixie' Platter
• Arlis B. Thornton
• Winifred 'Win' Valiance

Page 32 •

HEALTH CARE

2005

INSIDE

Friday, May 20,,2005

~ Fisher tribute highlights

· Southern awards
assembly. See Page A2
. • Meeting date changed.
See PageA2
• Office closed.
. See Page A2
• Service times.
See PageA2
• Eastern seniors claim
over $650k in
scholarships.
See PageA3
• Gallia Briefs.
SeePage AS

.·

RIO GRANDE - Proud
parents and relatives crowded
the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Ce.nter for
Gallia
Academy
High
·School's graduation cere'
monies for the Class of 2005.
GAHS graduated
152
seniors at its !94th graduation ceremony.
Gallipolis City School
Superintendent Jack Payton
welcomed the crowd, both as
an·administrator and a parent.
"It' s emotional," he said of
his youngest son, Jeff, being
part of this year's class .
GAHS Principal Bruce
Wilson added that the class of
2005 was the only class he
could honeslly say' brought him
the most pleasure to work with.
·Representatives from the
lop I 0 percent of the class anq
the lop students in academics
were :An.nie Cornett, Leila
Hojal, Kelsey Huffman and
Alyssa Young. The four girls
have held a grade point average of 4.0 throughout their
entire high school career. . ·
"While it is imponam and
necessary IO thank teachers,
parents and friends _that have
helped us to reach this point,

•

Ii's Time You'Got A Good Night's Sleep

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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL is proud to announce the opening of its Sleep DisorderS Center.
The Sleep Disorders Cente'r-can effectively treat disorders like apartner's snoring, gasping for air or kicking in the
middle of the night. Maybe you're having difficulty falling asleep or are excessively fatigued during the daytime.
'

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· The Center can help. you get back to your normal cycle. Now accepting appointments with a physician referral.
/
,

Please see Plant. A6

BY TIM

MALONEY

materials has sharply increased
since that estimate, so the cost
likely will be higher, he said.
The project is funded with
80 percent federal and 20 percent state money, Barnes said.
The current Cora Mill
Bridge was constructed in the
1930s. It replaced a covered
bridge th~t was built in the
1800s, but later burned.
Some controversy surrounded replacing the current
bridge because ofa desire to
preserve the scenic beauty of
the area by constructing a
new covered bridge.
The engineer's office con'
sidered that option, but they
quickly realized" that it was
· unfeasible for a couple of
reasons , Bames said·.
"That would have cost an
extra half-million dollars and
would have 16 be paid for
locally,'' he said. "We just
don ',t have the money to do
that: That would be four years
of bridge .funding for us.''
Another problem with building a covered bridge involves
the flood plain, Barnes sail!.

· ' NEW HAVEN, W.Va.- A
warrant for the arrest of Boris
Bannai, owner of the Global'
Industrial Products plant in
New Haven, has ·been issued
by Judge David W. Nibert in
Mason County Circuit Court.
Bannai , who last week shut
down the plant and laid off
more than I 00 employees
after
their ' paychecks
bounced, has left the country
and retumed to Israel . .
The warrant for his arrest is
the result of a ci vii case filed
against him in Mason County
·by his own brother and cousin.
Jacob Binson, Bannai's
cousin. is the lead plaintiff in
the case, and alleges thai he and
the other plaintiffs are owed
more than $3 million. Point
Pleasant attorneys R. Michael
Shaw and Craig Tatterson are ·
represent\ng Binson and ltzhak
Bannai, Boris Bannai's brother.
:'Bin son is worried about
his investment, but his goal in
this suit is to keep the plant
running and make it successful," Shaw said.
In tiling a motion to have
Bannai arrested, Shaw said that
he "has removed and/or is
about 10 remove p.rpperty out of
the stale of West Vtrginia with
intent to defraud the creditors.';
Court documents showed that
Bannai ha' removed . approximately $1 million in materials
from the New Haven plant, and
1noved it to Jackson County. A
shipment of ore from Africa
necessary to operate the plant
had been received in a port itt
Baltimore. ne.ver delivered an&lt;!
sold to another company.
·.·
Bannai had been enjoined
by the court on March 2S
from disposing of any assets.
In stating his conclusions of
law,. Nibert said thai the facts
~et out by the plaintiffs indiO ·
cared that Bannai was indeed
in contempt of the court order,
He ordered the Milson County
Sheriff's Department to arrest
Bannai· and place him in the
Western Regional Jail.
On the day Nibert issued
the warrant, however, Bannai
already may have been on his
way out of the country. ·
In an interview on May 11,
Bannai, who was still at the
New Haven plant at the time,
blamed the layoffs on trans. portation problems. He .said

Please see Bridge, A6

Please see Warrant. A5

lan McNemar/photo

Kyle Curry gives a "thumbs-up" to fellow classmates after receiving his diploma Friday al the
GAHS graduation cere!'11ony at University of Rio Grande's Lyne Center.
something very" important
tends to be left out," Cornell
said. ''Often we fail to give ourselves the credit we deserve for
overcoming obstacles we .have
faced these past few years.
While the support of . those
around us helped us in our jour-

ney. ultimately, it is our persevenmce that ha~ brought use
here today. We should be proud
of who we have become and
what we ·have accomplished
during the last fo~r years."
. Hojat touched on certain
triumphs and misfort·unes

•

BY PAUL DARST
, NEWS@MYDA ILYTRIBUNE.COM

.CORA - After years · of
planning, waiting and controversy, preliminary plans for
replacing the deteriorating
Cora Mill Bridge are nearly
complete.
Highway officials are busy
wrapping up work on securing the rights of way for the
new bridge, and should. be
completed
soon, said Craig
Detalto on Page A6
Barnes, · assistant Gallia
County engineer.
Although demolition of the
INDEX
old bridge, and construction
of the new one are still months
4 SECI'IONS- 24 PAGES
away, the highway depart. Around Town
A3 ment is glad the process IS
nearly complete, Barnes said.
Celebrations
C4 · "We've posted (the bridge)
D Section now three times," he . said.
Classifieds .
"It's restricted ·ro passenger
insert traffic on! y and is down to
Comics
Editorials
A4 only 5 mph,
going lo try to keep
Obituaries
As it'"We're
opened to passenger traffic
A2 as long as possible, but we've
Region
Sports
B Section ·gone as far with .it as we can
go," Barnes added. "If it
Weather.
A6 deteriorates any further, we 'II
have to close it"
© aoos Ohio .Volley Publlobing Co.

have sig ned an ag reement
with AEP to estimate the cost
of construCtion of the plant
and equipment needed for it
and to build the plant if AEP
approves that estimate.
County
Commissione~
Mick. Davenpori said earlier
this wee k he anticipated a
final decision from the
PUCO on .the cost recovery
plan on Aug. 8. Until then,
commis sioners are asking

TMALONEY@MYDAILYREG!STER.COM

throughout the year such as
the football team's win over
Jackson, but no playoff birth,
the tennis team's undefeated
season; student spirit, student
disagreements · and
the

Please see GAH 5, AS

New Cora Mill bridge planning winds down
WEATHER

.

Owner of New·
Haven plant
leaves U.S.;
warrant issued.

GAHS GRADUATES 152
-BY

.

.

Cora Mill Bridge

The bridge crosses Raccoon stale highway officials will
Creek just east of Com in spend the summer working
Perry Township. It is adjacent · with a consulting firm on the
10 the historic Cora Mill, built technical aspects of the bid
in 1845. Average daily traffic . advertisement, Barnes said.
on the bridge is about 230
The bridge is scheduled to
vehicles per day, Barnes said . . be advertised in December,
Restricting the bridge to pas- Barnes said. Work on the
senger vehicles only and bridge can begin any time
reducing the speed limit has after that
helped reduce the impact load
Construction of the bridge
on !lte bric!g!;, whkh should · was estimated a few years ago
help it last longer.
to be about $1.2 · million,
Once work on the rights of Barnes said. However, prices
way is completed, local and on steel, concrete and other

/

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AMERICA• .FAMILY

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INSURANCE

•

Wood Agency, Inc.
1581 St Rt 160
G.allipolis, OH 45631
(740) 446-0214
gwool @amfam.com
Mon. • Fri. 9:00 am • 5:00

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
304-675-2551 '
' .

.6.:-ner•can Fam•~ MutuallnstJrance Cornpanv and 11s

Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 186-4J85
jwood@amfam.com
Mon. - Fri. 9:00 am - 5:00

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Subsrdiaries
,
Amencan Standard Insurance COmpany of Wisconsin
Home Office · Mad;son. W/53783
American Family Insurance. Company
Amencan Standard Insurance Company of Ohio
Home Office • Columbus, OH 43240

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PageA2

REGIONAL

6unb4~ Qrimes -f)entinel

Sunday, May

•

22, 2005.

RUTLAND . - Regular
board meeting for Leading
Creek Conservancy District
has been changed 1.0 5 p.m.
on May 26.
·

Public meetings

on Springfield Road, Bidwell,
will be include IO a.m. Sun(lay
school and 7 p.m. worship
service on Sundays, and Bible
study, 7 p.m. Wednesday. ·
·- Matthew Thomas
Simmons

.Office closed

Salutatorian .
Christ Acaden1v

POMEROY
Meigs
County . Health Department
will be closed on May 30.
Memorial Day.
·

BIDWELL - Services at
the Springfield Baptist Church ·

.

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J.

CHRIST ACADEMY
OPEN ENROLLMENT
· 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
Thesday, May 31, 200S . ,

When your chlldren graduate from high
school, do you want them to be well
educarect, Orrlst honoring graduates?
Prepare your children. for the future by

Brooke Kiser. Larry R. Shamblin, Harold Roush-Bill
Those receiving Kibble
sending them to
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Morrison Female Athlete of McKelvey FFA Scholarship, Scholarships for $1,200 per
the Year: Derek Teaford, $150 each.
·year for two years were:
RACINE - The recent Larry R. Morriso n. Male
Nikki Riffle, Bryan Smith,
Angela Hayman, Erin
Southern
High
School Athlete of the Year: Kurt FFA . Alumni
and
Ag Holman, Brooke Kiser, Kyle
A Christian School Alternative
Awards Assembly included Wood, Chris Tucker, Quiz Association
Scholarship, Mees, Jacob Nease, Brittany
Blending tarditional and modern methods of education,
of Bowl ; Tyler Roberts.
$150 each.
the
announcement
Philson, Nikki Riffle, Tyler
providing excellence in Christian education 1976.
$128,125 in scholarship
Those receiving National
Ashton . Brown , Holzer Roberts, Bryan Smith, Ryan
money to seniors; 12 students 'Honor Society key.s were:
Clinic Science Award. $300.
Smith, Derek Teaford.
K4-12 (K4 has limited enrollment available)
who ~ecei ved National. Honor
Ashton Brown , Heather . Ashton
Brown, · Craig
Those receiving Cutler .
.College Prep and General Studies, lndividuafized 'lnstruction,
Society keys and a tribute to . Duffy, Brooke Kiser, Jon Randolph , · Brooke Kiser,
Scholarship,
$1,800
per
year
Educational Field Trips, Varied Music Program, Extracurricular
Southern · High School's · McDaniel ,
Kyle
Mees , Sara
Cammarata,
Ohio
Principal Gordon Fisher, who . Jordan Neigler, Brittany Academic
Scholarship, for four years were:
·
Activities, Non -Doctrinal, Nondiscrimanatory.
Sus an Brauer, Ashton
is retiring .after 35 years in Philson, Craig Randolph , $2,200 per year forfour years
Brown, Sara Cammarata,
education.
Tyler Roberts, Bryan Smith, 'for each student.
Cottrill, Jessica · Admits studen\s of any race,
Convenienr Location
Fisher's tribute was given Chris·Tucker, Nicki Tucker. · Brittany Philson , Hocking Rachel
Gloyd,
-Ashlee
Hill,
Dustin
·
color, creed, national
44 Cape Lane (Route 62 North)
Those receiving Awards of College
Princi pal's
. by teachers Ann Ohlinger and
Keyes,
James
McDaniels,
or
ethnic
origin.
Carla Schuler.
Merit were:
Scholarship, $100 per qu O'fter
. Point Pleasant. Wcsi Virginia
.. .
Jon
McDaniels, Jordan
Ashton Brown, Jordan for three quarters. ·
"We'll never forget and
we'll always love you," Neiger, Sara Cammarata,
Ashley Roush, George M . Neigler, Ashley Roush,
For information call 304-675-1559
· Schuler s~id to Fisher, .who Ashley Roach~ Nicki Tucker, Sayre Memorial Scholarship, Deidra Strong, Nicki Tucker.
was surpnsed by the tribute Honors Diploma; Ashton $400.
and . by · the firSt Gordon Brown, Sara Cammarata,
Brittany Philson, Southern
Fisher Acade'!lic Excellence Mirinda Davis, Jonas Hart, National Honor Society
Award presented to student Brooke .
Kiser,
Jon Scholarship, $250:
Joanne Pickens in the amount McDaniel, Jordan Neigler, · Jordan Neigler, American
· of $250.
Joanne
Pickens, ·Craig Red Cross Scholarship, $500.
·"I appreciated it," Fisher Randolph, Ashley Roush,
Joanne Pickens, Southern
School
Teachers
said a~?ut the unexpected Bryan Smith, Ryan Smith, High
tnbute. I was touched by the Matt Thaxton, Chris Tucker, Scholarship, $250.
students with the cake they Nicki Tucker.
Ashton Brown, · Maude .
brought
me
yesterdar
Honorarians were Sara Sellards Scholarship, $475.
Southern is home to me. This Cammarata Heather Duffy, . Ashton
Brown, Ohio
is more than a job._"
Holly Duffy. Ashley Roush, University
Valedictorian
Semor
English
and Nicki Tucker.
Scholarship, $1000 per year
'.
Salutatorian is Jordan · for four years.
·
Integrated Math teacher
Sc_ott Wolfe was also sur- Neigler.
Jordan Neigler, University
pnsed when he was recogValedictorian 1s Ashton of Rio Grande, . Ohio First
Scholarship, $26,000.
nized with ' the Wal-Mart Brown.
•· .
Award for Teaching. The
Racine Area · Community
Ashton Brown,. American
Scholarship Electric Power Scholarship,
award donates $1:000 to · Organization
Wolfe to use for his class- Award winners were:
$6,000.
room as well as a $50 gift
Ashton
Brown
Sara
Nicki . Tucker,
Ohio
card for supplies. .
Cammarata, Jessie~ Gloyd University License Plate
"I had ~o Idea," Wolfe said Ashley Hill. Brooke Kiser: Scholarship, $500.
a!'&lt;&gt;ut bemg nommat~d , and Kyle Mees, Jordan Neigler,
Ashton
Brown ~
Ohio
picked for the award. Its an Brittany
f&gt;hilson , Tyler University
Gateway
honor."
Roberts Ryan Smith Nicki Scholarship, $750.
. Students who were recog- Tucker.' (Each stude~t will
Ashton
Brown,
Ohio
n.zed for awards at the cere- . receive $500 with money Association o( County Office
mony were:
raised from RACO's yard · Empl&lt;!!yees, $500.
John
Bentz,
Kristina sales.)
Those receiving Kibble
Williams,
OU . Alumni
Bryan Smith, Nikki Tucker, . Scholarships, $2,400 per year
Outstanding Juniors; Bryan Derek Teaford, Edison Brace for four years were:
Susan Brauer, Ashton
Smith, DKALB; Jake Nease Memorial Scholarship. $500
Jroduction,
Derek each.
Brown, Sara Cammarata,
for
Teafor for natural resources,
Tyler Roberts, RACO Jim Rachel
Cottrill,
Jessica
•
John Bentz for AG business, Adams
Memorial Gloyd, Ashlee Hill, Dustin
Agriculture Education: Nikki Scholarship, $500.
Keyes, James McDaniel, Jon
· Riffle,
Tra vis
Adams
Rachel Cottrill, Otis Knopp McDaniel, Jordan Neigler,
Roush,
Deidra
Achievement Award; ' Holly Memorial Scholarship, $500. Ashley
Duffy, Social Studies; Bryan
Derek Teaford, Frank Strong, N,icki Tucker.
Smith, OU History Award,
Brandi Vance, Sarah Pickens,
Natalie Slider, top studel)t
Nicole Holman, Work Study;
2005 4
Parade
.
'
.
Frank Shamblin. Industrial
Arts; Billie . Jo Rizer, Emily .
July 2, 2005 6:00 p.m.
Pickens, Home Economics; 1
Theme: "American Freedom"
Ashton Brown for biological,
ENTRY DEADLINE: June 10, 2005
Jordan Neigler for physical
science , Science Award;
Group Name&gt;:·..-------~-------''---­
Ashton Brown, Nicki Tucker,
Contact Person: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Mathematics;
·Sara
Cammarata for reading.
Address: - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - -t
Holly Duffy for n:search.
Ashton Brown for writing.
Phone 11 _ _ _ _ _ Email Address: - - - - - - - English;
Nicki Tucker,
Number of Units (~ehicles, tractors, horses, floats, etc.) ----.,Foreign Language; Susan
Number of Individuals in ·ea.ch unit: - - - - - - - - · Brauer,
Jessica
Gloyd,
Natalie Slider, Willie Morris,
Unit type: walkin~ I car I 11.;.,1 I tractor I trailer I semi I etc.- ~
.Kyle Mees, Vocal Music and ,
Band; Nicki Tucker, Chris
Will you have
Yes or No (please circle)
'
Tucker, Citizenship; Jordan
Special Instructions (if applicable):
Neigler, Activities; Chris
Tucker, Joanne Pickens,
Drama; Billie Jo Rizer,
Technology Helper; Ashton
Brown. WSAZ Best of the .
Return completed forms to the
.._;,.
Class; Ryan Smith, Perfect
"Real Training for Real Life"
Chamber Offic~ at 16 State Street
.'. '-{__(
Attendance;
Chris
Tucker.
Jordan
!" mail to: P.O. Box 465
Neigler, . OHSAA ' Scholar
Gallipolis, OH 45631
.For more information contact
,
Attn: Lorie Neal
Athletes; Joanne Pickens,
Derek Teaford. OHSAA
Adult Center at 740-245-5334
or fax to 740-446-7031 by JUNE 10, 2005.
Archie
Griffin
NO entries will be taken after this ate!.!·
Sportsmanship
Award :
_:
~

CHRIST ACADEMY

Award Winning ·

Buckeye Hills
Career Center
Adult Center

·Now Enrolling for Fall Classes 2005

*Basic Peace Officer
*Building/Property Maintenance
*Industrial Maintenance
* Medical Office
* Pharmacy Technician
* Phlebotomy
* Practical Nursing
* Surgical Technologist
*Welding·

.

Specials For

22-

mu~ic?

IJ

---~-LL-in-fu-rm-at-io_n_m_u_st~~-co_m_p-le-t-e.---------------1

....

........

•

Buckeye ~ills
Career ·center

•

•

..

•

lllldiiCIII
11111 Clllll
,CIIII.. YIIr
IIIII
:446-4367

Academic Scholarship; Casey.
Smith,
Carrie
Wiggins .
Monday, May 23
Memorial SoftbalLScholarship;
POMEROY - The OhSarah
Barringer,
Came • Kan Coin Club will meet at ll
Wiggins Smile Scholarship.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library
Morgan Weber and Ken , instead of the usual date
Amsbary were awarded the which falls on Memorial Day.
Ivan B. Walker Award from There will be a class on gradthe Eastern Ath.letic Boosters. ing from 5:15 to 6:45p.m.
Sara Barringer, Sara Pore
Tuesday, May 24
and Chelsea Young were recRACINE The May
ognized as office aides.
meeting of the ~acine Area
Valedictorians recognized Community
Organization
were· Chelsea Young, Kri sta will be held at 6:30 p.m. at
White, Jaime Reel, Morgan the Racine First Bapti st
Weber, Jennifer Hayman, Church. All RACQ, Edison
Cody Dill, and Derek Baum. Brace Memorial and Jim
Casey Smith was recognized Adams Memorial sc holarship
as
salutatorian.
Darren
recipi,klts will be honored at
Scarbrough, Chris Carroll the dmner.
and Bryan Minear were recThursday, May 26
ogniz.ed as honorarians.
Athletic Director Pam
Douthitt presented Howard
Caldwell with the Ohio High
School Athletic Association
.Award for his support of
Eastern athletics.

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20()5

POMEROY - Alipha Iota
will hal'e i" 6:30p.m .
end-of-year potluck picnic a1
the home of Joan Corder.
Monday, May 30
RACH\E - Raci ne Po,t
602. American Legion wil hold
Memonal Day services ·at I0
a.m. The Southern High
School band will play and Rep.
Jimmy Stewart wi ll , _peak.
Ma~ters

Church events
Wednesdav, Mav 25
POMEROY .__ A community prayer meet ing will be
held at 7 p.m. on May 25 at the
Enterprise Unild Methodi't
Churcli ~ Enterprise Road.
Special music will be presented by '"Freed By Christ."" .a
gospel quanet.

Other .events
Monday, May 23
CHESTER - The TB staff
will be at the Chester Fire
Department from 4:30 to o
p.m. Monday to do skin testing.
Tuesday, May 24
POMEROY -Chi ldhood
immunization clinic. 9 - 11 , 13. Meigs County Health
Depariment.
Bring shot
records. medical :. Ci.lrds if
applicable.
$5 donation
accepted but ·not required.

SPRING VALUV CINEMA7

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Financial Aide is availaqle to students who qualify

Jo\OMI!AY.

Clubs and
organizations

'

Chester Alumni Association in the district kindergarten .
Sc.holarshiP· Barnett th e
Chelsea · Young, Morgan
• - ,I
Kautz Sc~o lars hip . Hayman Weber, Ken Amsbary, Andy
TUPPERS PLAINS .the .
Maude
Sellers Francis. Sara Pore, Cassie
Eastern High School seniors Scholarship. and· Dill ' th e Nutter, Ch.ris ' Myers and
were
presented
with Ohio Board of Regents Ohio Krista
White
received
$656,600 in scholarships for Academic Scholarship
Student Council awards.
the fall - many of them fullHonors diplomas will be
Darren Scarbrough, Chris
ride awards - at the school's awarded Sunday 10 Jennifer Carroll. Chelsea Young, Krista
annual se nior awards assem- Hayman , Morgan We ber, White, Casey Smith. Brittany
bly on Friday morning. ·
Derek Baum. Chelsea Young, Barnett , Derek Baum, Abbie
Guidance Counselor Sheryl Cody Dill, Krista _White ; Chevalier. Cody Dill, Adam
Rou sh announced the follow" Casey Smith, Bryan Minear, Di.Ilard, Carrie Elberfeld,
ing sc holarship s: Jennifer Darren · Scarbrough , Sara Jelinifer Hayman. Ross Holter,
Hayman. The Ohio · State · Pore , 'Adam Dillard, Andy Andy Francis, Sara Pore,
University, OSU · Prestige Francis, and Brittany Barnett. Jaime· Reel, Morgan Weber,
Scholarship for full tuition , Hayman, Weber, Baum , Dill, Jessica Kehl, Bryan Minern:
White,
Smith, and Jennifer Armes were honLand Grant Opportunities Reel.
Scholarship, Rutland Alumni . Scarbrough, and Dillard ored as Natiomil Honor
Association
Scholarship; recei ve d the Ohio Board of Society members.
Morgan Weber, OSU, OSU Education Award of Merit.
Jemiifer Hayman received
Prestige Scholarship for full
Andy Francis, Darren the· Don Jackson Memorial
tuition,
University Scarbrough, Bryan Minear. Volleyball Scholarship and
Scholarship. "Franklin B . . Jaime Reel, Cody Dill, Jennifer Annes the Don
Walter Award. District .13 Chelsea Young, Derek 8aum, Jackson Memorial. Softball
·. Assoc iation ; Morgan Weber and Jen nifer Scl]olarship . . Hayman was
Coaches '
Chelsea Young , University of Hayman were recognized as inv&lt;ii'ded the U.S. Marine Corps
Rio Grande, Ohio First recipients of the Pres ident's Scholastic Excellence Award.
Scholarship for full tuition ; Educational Award.
·Casey Smith and Darren
The following · academic Scarbrough received the Anny
Derek Baum, OSU , OSU
Morrill
Excellence awards
were .presented: Reserve National Scholarship.
Scholarship for full tuition, French, Jennifer Hayman,
Senior Athlete Awards
Walter H.· Kidd Engineering Sara Pore, Chelsea Young and were prese nted to Ed Beatty,
Scholarship, Ohio State Jaime Reel ; advanced mathe- Derek Baum, Du ~ tin Riggs,
University Scholar Award; matics, Christopher Carroll; Jennifer
Hayman , Ross
Jaime Reel, OSU, Trustees calculus, Darren Scarbrough; Holter, Chris Myers, Adam
University physics, Jaime Reel ; anatomy, Dillard, Bryan Minear, Tyler
Scholarship,
Scholars Award, Walter H. Jennifer Hayman and Krista Winebrenner, Chelsea Young,
Kidd Engineering Award.
White; industrial technolo- Chris Carroll, Phil Pierce,
Cody Dill, Ohio Northern gy/drafting, Adam Dillard; Cody Dill, Sara Barringer,
University, Ohio Board of economics, Krista White; Jennifer Armes, Darren
Regents Scholarship, Robert world history, Casey Smith; Scarbrough, Ryan Smith,
C. Byrd Scholarship, Ohio · English, Morgan · Weber and Brent Hensley, Casey Smith,
Northern Trustee
Merit Jaime ·Reel ; government, Robert Cross, Krista Whlie,
Scholarship of the College of Cody Dill and Brittany Morgan Weber~ Cas·.·1ndra
Pharmacy, Ohio · Choice Barnett; psycholo~y. Carrie Nutter, and Ken Amsbary.
Krista
White, Elberfeld; art, M1ke Kirby
Gran!;
Other senior athlete awa,rds
l!niversity of Rio Gra,nde; and Bryan Minear.
were. presented as follows:
Krista White, University of
Bryan Minear and Autumn Morgan Weber and Cody Dill,
Rio Gqnde, Ohio . First Reed were recognized as Ohio Hifh School Basketball
Scholarship for full tuition; siate-level Ohio Youth Art Coaches
Award;
Bryan
Casey Smith, Shawnee State Exhibition
participants. Minear, U.S. Marine Corps
University;
Freshman Drama awards were present- Athletic
Award; Jennifer
Christopher ed to Cassie Nutter and Sara Hayman and Cody Dill, Ohio
Scholarship;
Carroll, University of Rio Pore, oustanding actresses, High
School
Ahletic
Grande, Atwood Scholarship Andy Francis and Bryan AssoCiation Scholar/Athlete
for full tuition; Bryan Minear, outstanding actors, Award; Chelsea Young and
Minear, University of Rio and Steven Sheppard, direc- Chris Carroll, Archie Griffm
Grande, Atwood Scholarship tor's award.
·sportsman · Award; Krista
Sarah Yost received the White, OHSAA Courageous
for full tuition.
Brittany Barnett, University JOGS Award, and was han- Student Award; Jaime Reel.·
of Rio Grande, Trustee, Jones ored for 500 hours of service Carrie Wiggins Memorial
and Jenkins Scholarships;
Sara Pore, University of Rio
Grande, Atwood Scholarship
for full tuition; Andrew ·
Francis, Ohio · University,
Ohio . University Gateway
Scholarship; Abbie C~evalier,
Ohio University, Ohio Valley
Bank Scholarship, Meigs
Cooperative
·
· Parish
Scholarship; Carrie Elberfeld,
May
May
University of Rio Grande;
Ross Holter, . University of
Sunday-Chicken &amp; Noodles
Thursday-B BQ Ribs
Findley, Dean's Scholarship;
. Monday-Pork Tenderloin .
Friday-Enchi Iadas
Cassandra
·
Nutter,
Thesday-Spagheui
Salurduy-Chef"s Salad
·
State
Washington
Wednesday-Soup Beans
Community College, STRS
&amp; Cornbread
full
tuition
scholru:ship;
St. Rt. 7 • Chester, OH
Andrea Grueser, Hocking
740-985-3726
College, Ernest Ward Vf'W
Schplarship.
Chevalier was awarded the
REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

Entry.

.

Bv BRIAN

Subscril?e today .• 992-:? 155

of July

Monday, May 23
POMEROY Veterans
Service Commission. 9 a.m ..
117 Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Library Board will
meel at 3 p.m. at the Pon1eroy
Library.
•
SALEM CENTER
Salem Township Trustees·
monthly meeting. 6 p.m. a!
Salem Fi'rehouse on Ohio 124.
Tuesday, May 24
POMEROY
The
Morgan "s Raid 2006 organizational meeting will be ·held
at 10 a.m. at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce .
RSVP by calling 992-2239.

Eastern.seniors claim over $650K in scholarships

Proud to be apart of your life.

Fisher tribute highlights Southern awards assembly .

Brtan J. "~" '"'""'"

.,

These seniors received scholarships and academic awards at Eastern High School o.n Friday: front, from left, Sara Pore, Jaime
Reel, -Adam Dillard, Derek Baum , Jen Hayman , Chelsea young, Cassie Nutter; second .row, Jennifer Armes, Andy Francis, Krista
Wh1te. Jessica Kehl, Bryan Mi near. Morgan Weber, Casey Smith, Carrie Elberfeld and Brittany Barnett; back, Cody Dill, Robert
Cross, Darren Scarbrough,. Ross
·
. Holter and Ch~is · Carroll.

Service times

•
Beth Sorgenl/p/loto
Seniors from Southern High School were awarded a total of. $128,125 in scholarship money attheir recent awards assembly.
Those receiving scholarship awards were: front row, from left. Rachel Cottrill, Jessica Gloyd, Ashlee Hill, Sara Cammarata,
Ashton Brown , Jordan Neigler, Ashley Roush, Nikki Riffle ; second row, Brittany Philson, Angela Hayman, Su$an Brauer, Nicki
Tucker, Joanne Pickens, Brooke Kiser, Deidra Strong; third row, Bryan Smith, Ryan Smith, Kyle Mees, Frank Shamblin, Derek
Teaford. Dustin Keyes. Tyler Roberts: fo urth row, Jacob Nease. Craig Randolph . .

. Sunday, May 22,

Meigs County calendar

.Meigs Briefs
Meeting date
changed

PageA3

AROUND TOWN

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j

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-OPINION

6ttnbap 'intts -ientinel

'

..

PageA4
sunday,May22,2o~
.,

Blood in the water
'

•

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing

Co.

Jim Freeland
Publisher

Diane Hill

Ke'(in Kelly .

Controller

Managing Editor

Letters lo 1/w ediJm;rzre wdr ome. Th er should be less than
300' ~~~O rds. A/1 ./euers are subjtYf ro ;diring am/ mus1 b~ ·
signed anti include wldress mul telephon e nwnber. No
unsigw•rllelll'rs . \Viii be fmblislwd. Lelfers should be in good

raste, mldressing i.~·.mes, ·not persmwfities.

GUEST

VIEW

VVhere ,does the money go?
BY BRYNA l. BUTLER

The 2005 Gallia County Relay, for Life is scheduled for
June 3 and 4 in the Gallipoli s City Park. The Relay is a fund"
raising event that benefits the American Cancer Society. As
finance co-chair. I've been asked countless times, "Where
does the money go, does it stay la,caP"
Monies raised at Relay go to the American Cancer Society
for research. education, advocm;y and services. More funds
. raised in Galli a County. means more funds that come back to
Gallia County to educat~ our .:aregivers and ~omfort our surVIvors.
.
Don't believe me'? Think about it. Concerned residents of
Gallia County started the Relay in our communi~y in .1998.
They wanted to do something ... anything to help. Since the
creation of' the Gallia County Relay, the American Cancer
Society has started increasing its support in Gallia County. We
now have a Man to Man support group for men diagnosed
with cancer, an improved Look Good, Feel Beqer program
that encourages those that are weakened during treatment, an
outstanding Cancer Resource Center that was established and
has grown by leaps and bounds, and a trained, knowledgeable
Patient Navigator who guides cancer victims through the
treatment and support processes.
The American Cancer Society even helped our ow.n Miss
Gallia County, Alicia Halley, attend college through a scholarship provided for cancer survivors. This list could go on and
on, but the fact remains. we didn't have any of this before
Relay.
To date, 23 teams. c~nsi sti'ng of at least I 0 members each,
have committed to participating in the 2005 Gallia County
Relay for Life. Seven &lt;oorporate sponsors have stepped forward. These individuals .are dedicated to raising funds and
awareness, to tight cancer, a disease that has taken so many
lives in this area.
"Where does the money goT It goes to Joan Schmidt at the
Cancer Resource Center so that she can have that leukemia
brochure on hand when a·distraught mother comes 'in. It goes
to Kim Painter so that as our Patient Navigator, she can help
elderly Mr. Doe find transportation to his next treatment. It
goes to that researcher working· hard in her laboratory dayafter-day trying_ to find a cure. It goes to help the diagnosed,
the 'survivors. the caregivers, the family. the researchers, the
support groups, and anyone else.who has been touched by the
deadly disease.
It buys HOPE.
With continued monetary support from programs like
Relay, the American Ca~1cer Society aims to prevent almost
five million cancer deaths and avoid six million new cancer
diagnoses by the year 2015.
The Gallia County Relay for Life committee urges you to '
get involved. Stop by the Gallipolis City Park on. the evening
of June '3, overnight, or in the mor.ning of June 4, and support
the teams that are raising funds for your community.
To find out more about Relay, call Bonnie McFarland,
chairperson, at (740) 446-5679.
·
.
· (Bryna L Butler is finance co-chair for Gallia County
Relay for Life.)
.
.
·

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters are subject&lt;to
editing' and must be signed and ,include address ·
and telephone number. No unsigned letters will
be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

~unhap

\!rime!) -~entinel

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, Correction Polley
Our matn concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know ot an error in a
story. please cali one of our newsrooms.

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..

The Newsweek and Dan
Rather situations are so similar it's eerie. Both got
, snookered because they
bought scenarios that, if true,
\vould have made President
Bush look bad. Both ran
with ·said scenarios. Both
crashed and burned.
Whenever you want anything in this world too
much, it is unlikely to happen. Desperately desiring a
person, a job or a ll'festyle
just about ensures disaster.
All of us must pursue our
. goals with our eyes wide
open or else we will hit the
rocks.
What is it about President
Bush that causes such anger
in the press that they are salivating for a story that ·will
hurt him? Wait, I can answer
that question. It.'s the same
emotion that drove rightwingers crazy whenever
they saw President Clinton
acting as Commander-inChief: partisans just don't
believe these guys deserve
the title.

•

I

basher in town. That publi- That has go! to stop.
cation is far less ideological Newsweek's anonymous
than most of the leftwing source burned it, and what
newspapers. It also does the magazine should do is
excellent reporting on a reg' put that person's picture oi:J.
ular basis. But its Achilles next week's cover. That
Bill
heel is the politically cor- would stop these cowardly
O'.Reilly
reel germ that infects most weasels from spreading
New York · City-based false stories. ·
media. Newsweek has a ten,
But Newsweek will not do
dency to be very PC, and that, and now must rebui\d,
The left-wing print press displays far more secular its reputation. That's · not ·
has
rallied
around tend~ncies than traditional going to be easy, as Dan
Newsweek, blaming the ones: It is Newsweek's pre- Rather is finding out~
whole debacle on the Bush rogati ve to do that, but it is Americans are jittery these:
administration for its sys- also risky these days. Most days in the face of killer ter,
tematic "~buse" of prisoners Americans believe the press rorists, and we are in no
in Iraq ·and Guantanamo is unfair and unfit, and if mood for bogus news reports
Bay. If the abuse. had not you m~ke a mistake ·that is that inflame our enemies.
happened, the papers wailed, perceived to be anti- The left-wing media ignores
then Newsweek wouldn't be Ameri.can, ,you will . pay a that fact at its peril.
As with Dan Rather, l QQ
in this fix. From the Los big price.
Ever
since
Woodward
·
not.
believe Newsweek. knew
Angeles Times to the
Minneapolis Tribune to the and Bernstein used an what it put out there was:
BaltiulOre · Sun to the anonymous ·source (the so false. It was duped. But that
Oregonian in Portland, the caller' "Deep Throat") to .· happened because the magaeditorials were almost exact- bring" down the Nixon zine was comfortable with a
·
the sensational item that would.
ly the same. Talk about administration,
American . press .. has · been make the Bush administra-.
group-think!
To be fair, Newsweek · comfortab le hiding behind tion look bad. As the old
Magazine is not even close phantom leakers who often adage says: Be careful what
to being the biggest Bush- hurt people for revenge. you wish for:

'.

THEY SHOULD
HAVE NEVER
LIED ABOUT
THINGS

22, 2005

~unbav 'Q:rmrs -~rnttnrl •.Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

.Obituaries

GAHS

Scholarship, $225
Jeffrey Payton: M&amp;G Curnutte. Kyle Michael Curry,
· Anne Cornett: University of Polymer Scholarship. SJ,.()(X). Moriah . Whitney Dame h.
Indiana Faculty Scholarship, Var.,ity G Scholarship. .
Nicholas A. Dayton, Brandey
from Page A1
$24,000 .. University of Indiana
- Jill Ratlan: Ohio Valley Michelle Denni stnn. JessKa
Credit Hours Scholarship. Tech Prep S.:holarship for one Lynn Dillon. Peggy Sue Dillon.
senior's loss in the seniorifac- $26.841.
Foodland year- at the University of Rio Eric w. Dinge". Brian Dav1d
Arlis B. Thornton. 83, of
ulty basketball game.
Scholarship . .$1 ,000 Rotary Grande, $3.000.
Donnally, Sarah Ann Dut y.
Vinton (Meigs County).
" l only allude to these Scholarship, $1.000. Varsuy G
- Lexxi Rees: Ohio State JesseR. Eads, Sarah Elizabeth
passed away in 0' Bie'ness
instances as a means to some- Scholarship, $225.
University Scholarship. $6.192 Ebert. Jeffrey s. Efaw.
Memorial Hospit ;li at Athens
how show you what you what I
- Kyle Curry: Gallia Coumv a year for four years. Hubert Michelle Denise Elliott, Ryan
on Thursday, May 19. 2005.
can see from here," she said. "I District Counselor Soho)arship, Harder Memorial Scholarship. E. Elliott. Daniel 1. Ellison,
· He was a World War ll vetwish I could describe to you full tuition to the University of $400 increasing each year for Christopher A. Evans. Tmvis L.
how amazing it is to look into Rio Gmndc, $30.000.
four years . Varsity G
s
eran of the U.S. Army Air
th
f'
t'
·1
·
-Moriah
Daniels·
.
U11ivers
'tv
Schoi,·lfShl.p,
$&lt;_
0.
.
Fellure.
Michael
ean
1
Corps and MP Divisions. and a
e eyes 0 so many ami mr
f c· .
.
·
,
·'
.Ferguson . Megan Anne Fisher,
faces at once; so many who o
111cmnat1 Cincinnatus
- Luke Rice: Holz.er Science
retired self-employed cement
Wl..ll 11ever get the recognl.ti.Oil Century Scholarsh1'p
ti'oisher and contractor.
.
. . , $3 ...coo .· . Award , $300. women of the· Margaret .Mary Fisk. Crystal
F
they. deserve with a few steps
, Brandey Denniston: Ohio Moose Lodge Scholarship, · M. Fletcher, Rachael A. ar1ey,
'· Arlis was born Nov. 21,
across a. stage and a colored Elks Association .'Scholarship, $50.
.
Carly Beth France, Scott Alan
1921, in Liberty, W.Va .. son of
spot
in
the
yearbook."
$1
,000.
Morning
Stru·
Chapter
.
.
_
Jobeth
Rothgeb:·
Varsltv
G
Fultz. Jeremiah Seth Garey,
the late Luther Thornton and
Young first delined success #444 Order ol the Eastern Star Scholarship, $225.
Sanmel Anthony Giles;
J
Fleetie Jefferies Thornton. . .
through
the
words
of
Ralph
Scholarship,
$300.
.
Tiffany
Saunders:
Ohio
Jackie
Alan
Glassburnr.,
· He was precc~~d in death by' his first wife, ' Rosa Beatrice
Waldo
Emerson
following
with
.
Travis
Fellure:
University
Elks
.
Association
Scholarship,
Michael
R.
Goelling,
~oe
. Thornton. In add1t1on, he was precede.d in death by a great-grJnddaughter; a stepson, L.C. Smith Jr.; and tlu:\!e brothers and a sister. some heart-felt words of her of Rio Grande Music $1,000. Varsity G Scholarship. Campbell Haggerty, Rachel
.
Scholarship, $800 a year for $225.
Leanne Hale. Ory D. Harrison,
·He married Lillian Daugherty. on 'MKy 14, 1968, at Black·. own .
'Tonig,ht
we're
here
to
cele'
four
years.
·
Tommy
Saunders:
Ohio
Amanda Hendricks, Benita A.
Betsy, W.Va .. and she s'urvives.
·
·
- Michelle Elliott: Eastern Wesleyan University Legacy Henson. Christopher Aaron
He is also survived by a son and daughter, Ronnie (Betty) brate our success as the Gallia
Thornton, ot R1pley, W.Va .. and Elizabeth Ann (Gregory) Academy Class of 2.005," she Mi.chigan University Eagle Scholarship, $10,000 a year for • Henson. Christopher A. Hill,
four years . Ohio Wesleyan Dakota S. Hill , Derek L.
La~h,ey ol Vmton; a stepson, Sigle Edward (Sandy) Chafin of said. "Graduation is a lot more Scholarship. $5.00.
than
a
ceremony.
It
is
the
end
·
Megan
Fisher:
American
University Activity Award, Hogan. Leila Susan Hojat,
Lockbourne; three. gra ndchildren, Christopher Thornton.
Rachel John son a~d Hayley Gabrielle Lathey; two stepgrand- result of 13 years· of work, Cancer Society Scholarship, $1,000 a year for four years. Desirae Elizabeth Holcomb,
·
Lynn-Angell ' Queen 4-H Kyle L. Hudson, Kelsey Ann
chtldren: Mwhelle S.rn1th and Bridget Spencer; and four great-· friendships and ih;; little $1,000. .
moments
that
still
make
you
·
Maggie
!'isk:
Ithaca
Scholru·ship, $500. Varsity G Huffman. Brittany Juanita
grandch1 ldren and srx stcp-great-grand\:hildren. ·
.
Hun, Kari Beth James, Robert
· He is also survived by two brothers and four sisters, smile. If 1 could give some College Scholarship, $5,000 a Scholarship, $225.
·
· Steven Schneider: Gallfa William Jenkins ll. Tiffany
~ockford Thornton of Fraziers Bottom, W.Va., Luther advice to you, it would be to go year for four years.
' Derek Hogan: Alexander Academy Alumni Scholarship. Michelle Johnson, Ashley
Thornton Jr. of Clendenin, W.Va., Doris Cochran of Liberty. out and make more of the little
Nicole Jones, James E. Jones,
W.Va., Ruby Adkins of Winfield, W.Va:, Magaline Casto of memories that make you smile Graham Bell Scholarship, $1,000.
Eleanor, W.V~., and Betty Smalley of Liberty, W.Va.
.
whenever you think of them." $6,000 a year for four years.
· Zach Shawver: Wiseman- Kristin Renee Kelley. Edward
Serv1ces will be 2 p.m. Sunday, May 22, 2005, in the
Students in the top ' 10 per· . Leila Hojat: . John Carroll Roach
Family
4-H Lee Kirby. Krystal Maria
·McCoy-Moore Funeral Home at Vinton, with the Rev. Elmer cent of the graduating class UmvefSlty Amencan Values Scholarship, $500. Varsity G . Kiskis, Timothy D. Klaiber,
were:
Scholarship and President's ' ·Scholarship, $225.
Adam M. Koch. Joseph David
Geiser officiating and the Rev. Marvin Sallee. soloist.
Burial will follow in the Vinton Memorial Park, with rriiliKimberly Beaver, Brittany Honor Award, $!:!,000 a year
·Stacy Snyder: University of Kormanik , Whitney Michelle
' tary graveside rites conducted by Vinton American Legion Bennett, Kyle Burnett, Anne for four .years. Ohio Student Rio . Grande
Trustees' Larkins. Joshua L. Lawhon,
Post No. 161 .. Visitation was held in the funeral home from 3 Cornell, Kyle Curry, Margaret Choice · Grant S.cholarship, S~holarship, $750 a year for Craig Ryan Layne, Amanda B.
to 6 p.m. Saturday, May 21, 2005 .
Fisk, -Leila Hojat, Kelsey $900.
the first two years and $!,500 a Lewis, Tabitha Lucas, Katlin .
Huffman, Whitney Larkins·,
Kelsey
Huffman: year for the last two years.
'tY o t' ·R·10 Gran de · , Nathan Walker: (!iateway .BrOoke Maher, Brandi Marie
·
Katlin
Maher,
Heather U· mvers1
Oh'
'
1 h'1P· Scholarship, $350. Ohio Mannon ,
Katie
Marie
10 s Flrst schoars
North, up, Lu.ther Rice, Steve
Schneider, Nathan Walker and $30,000. Rotary Scholarship. University
Valedictorian Mathews, Chris McCarty,
Viola "Dixie" Platter of Harper, W.Va., a former resident of Alyssa Young.
$1,000. Ohio Valley Bank 4-H Award, $1,000 a year for four Donna Leigh Ann McCarty,
Kyger, passed away Tuesday, May 17,2005, at the Heartland
Emily Carol McComas,
Students receiving senior Scholarship, $500 a year for years.
s
k
Nursing Home in Beckley W.Va. , after a long illness.
keys with the emphasis on four years. University of Rio
. Geremy Wallen: Reynold's .. Dam antha ML. CMrdcCoJrmihc ,
· She was born Sept 13, 1917, to the late Rev. Emory and character, leadership and over- Grande Music Scholarship, Incorporated
Scholarship,
e1mer A. c u y, os ua
Laura Lawson Evans.
all ability in a particular area $1,600 a year for four years. $500.
·
N. McGuire, Jeremy B. Meek,
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by a son, . were:
Katherine Williams .Gallia · • Jessica Woodward: Ohio Jan1es Merry, Me&amp;an Elizabeth
Carl H. Platter Jr.,' in October 2004.
. Scienc;e: Luther Rice.
County Retired Teachers Valley Bank Scholarship. Mills, James Paul Nickels, ·
She is' surv'ived by her husband of 67 years, Carl "Buck"
·
K
athemattcs: y1e Burnett Association Scholarship, $300. $1,100. Jay Hall Scholarsh1'p· Alexandra Morrison. Mark
Platter Sr.; two daughters, Jean Arin (Ronnie) Lemon of -and- M
Leila Hojat.
Varsity G Scholarship, $225.
for . a full tuition at the Allen Nolan, Jason Edward
Gallipolis, and Mary Lee (Lloyd) Smith of Pataskala; a son,
h
L.e'l
H
·
Kari
James:
Full
Athletic
University, of Rio Grande. North, Heather JoRae Lynn
.
· Eng IIS : . I a OJ3!.
.
S h I h·
Jack (Donna) Pla\ler of Harper, W.Va.; ~ daughter-in-law,Xay
. Social Studies: Annie
c oars 1p to, Marshall $30,000.
Northup. Jason Michael
~latter of Mtddleport and Ormond Beach, Fla.; eight grand, ·Cornett.
University. $72',000. River
- Alyssa Young: Xavier Northup, . Ashley
Anne
children, Dean (Bec.ky) Adkins of Clarksville, Tenn., Allan
. Music: Leila Hojat
Bend 4-H Scholarship, $500.
University
· Trustees Pasquale. Allen· Ray Patrick.
Eugene Adkins of Oak Hill, W.Va., Jimmy Adkiris of
. Athletics: Tommy Saunders
- Ashley Jones: Varsity G Scholarship. $ 11,000 a year for Heath B. Patrick, Jesse B.
· Columbus, Jay (Rose) Adkins of Northup, Ohio, Carla Platter and Lindsay Caldwell.
Scholarship, $225.
four years. Ohio Board of Patrick, Jessica R. Patterson,
of Spartanburg, S.C., Silas Platter of Harper, Leeann (Mike)
GAHS graduates receiving
-Whitney Larkins: Marshall Regents,$2,205 a year for four Jeffrey Wade Payton. Aaron
Sammons of South Shore, Ky., and Lindsay Lemon of scholarships are:
University A. Michael Perry ye&lt;lfs.
Maude
Sellards William Qualls. lillian Hope
Gallipolis; and five great-grandchildren, Emily ancl Ethan
. . Bradie Angell: Tobacco , Scholarship, $750. Foodland Scholarship, $475.
Raffan, Alexxandra Jo Rees:
Adkins, Brittany Adkins, Raigan and Carson Sammons: .
·
Scholarship,
$1,000.
Varsity
G
Scholars:::r·
s
moneys
·t·or
all
Luth
' er Alp ha R1ce
· Jr..Felicia
Association, $1,500a
Burial took place at Orgas, W.Va., with the Rev. Howard Growers'
year for four years.
Scholarship, $225.
students to $590, 366. ·
Michelle Robinson, Jeremy A.
Gwinn oftlciatmg.
·
•
· - Katlin Maher: Ohio State
This years' graduating class R b"
J B h R h b
· • Kimberly Beaver: Ohio University Monill Excellence is:
o mson, o et
ot ge ,
State Buckeye Community S h01 hi ~ ·
·
Tiffany
Marie
Sanders ,
Scholarship. $600 .a year for · c ars P o.r a full in-state
Jennifer Carol Angel, Bradie Thomas Eric Saunders, Steven
tuition,
$6,651
a
year
for
four
Rose
Angell, Richard Barnes,
four: years. Gallia County
••
V:
·
G S h 1 h'
.
years. ars1ty
c oars 1p, Tyler D.. Barry
. , Kimberly Eli Schneider. Zachary . Willis
": Clotilda M. Hood . .91, of Hemet, Calif., died Sunday, May Agnculture
4-H Sc!mlarship, $225.
.
Dawn Beaver, Nathan Beaver. Shawver, · Brit!ney Nicole
I, 2005, at her residence.
$500 a year for four .years.
K
·
M
h
Gall'
• aue
at ews: ' · ta Drew Martin Beman, Brittany Sheets, Kaleb Kent Sias. Brian
'She was born in Arcadia, Wis., and lived in Hemet for 19 Morning Star Chapter #444 Academy
Alumni Scholarship, Ann Bennett, Dustin H. Biars, Scott Sibley, Jessica Lynn
years. She was employed by Bank of America. ·
Order of the Eastern Star. $1,000. River Recreation Michael William Blank, Slayton, Stacy Dawn Snyder.,
Clotilda is survived by her husband of 39 years, Franklin Scholarship, $300.
Queen Scholarship, $750. Kenneth R.. Blazer Jr., Brandon Shane. Sommer,
Hood, a native of Meigs County; four daughters, Sara Leslie
•
Brittany
Bennett:
Ohio
Gallia
Student Cassandra K. Bonecutter; Karlayne Quinn St. Onge,
of Menife, Calif., Ruthie Lorge of Yorba Linda, Calif., Judy State !Jniversity Scholarship, Co.uncil Academy
Scholarship, . $500. Felicia Borden, Jeffrey R. Dustin L. Stover. Sarah Lynae
Gain of Oak Creek; Ariz., and Romelle Jelinowicz of Seal $6,627 a ~ear for four years,
Varsity G Scholarship, $225.
Bose, ,Amber Nicole Bostic, Stanley, Derrick C. Theiss,
Beach, Calif.; a son, Jule Wisenbeck of Rim Rock. Ariz.; a sis-Kyle urnett: West Vlr~inia
_Jason North: West V~rginia Adrina Nicole Boykin. Sarah Anthony Michael Thompson.
ter, Jean Phillips of Wisconsin; a brother, Thomas Slaby of Universit~ Blue and old Universit~ Blue . and Gold Ann Brown, Kyle David Chad Thompson, James
Maryland; and 15 grandchildren; 25 great-grandchildren and Scholarship, $3,000 a year for Scholarship, $2,000 a year for Burnett, . Lindsay Michelle William Charles Tillman, Luke .
one great-great-grandchild. ·
Varsity G four years.
Caldwell, Anne Marie Carter, G. Vollborn, Lindsey N.
Services were held at the Miller-Jones Hemet Chapel on four years.
Scholarship,
$225.
·
Heather
Northu~:
Ke~ Renee Carter, Mark 1. Waddell, Nathan Allen Walker,
May 9, 2005, and interment was in Riverside National
· Anne Carter: Marshall umvers1
·
'ty o f R'10 Gran e· Ch m, Kelley 1. Champlin, Geremy Ed ward Wallen,
Cemetery. The Rev. Johnny Carlson officiated.
,
University A. Michael Perry Atwood Award of Excellence, Andrea Caro~n Chapman, Jonathan Whiteman, Nicole R.
Arrangements were handled by Miller Jones Mortuary of Scholarship,
$500
$30•000·
·
Nata I'1e Jean ·
James· Tyler Iagg. Nathan Wh'mmgton,
Hemet, Calif.
.
· Nathan Clagg: Varsity G
Ray Clagg II, Matthew David Williams,
Matthl.!w
T.
Clarke, Senica Jill Conkle, Wiseman, James Wolfe, Jessica
Jessica Nicole Cook, Anne M. Woodward, Jewel L. Wray.
Marie Comeit, Courtney Lynn Arthur W. Writesel, Alys., a
'
.
Lillian L. Pettit, 89, of Gallipolis, passed away on Saturday,
Cremeans, Donald Andrew Lian Young, Rose Ann Zarley.
May 21, 2005. at her residence.
·
.
, She was born Sept. 21, 1915, in Lesage, W.Ya,, to the late
Auto- Owners In surance
,,
Loren and Mahala Beaver Hagley,
·
. Lillian was a member of Elizabeth Chapel Church and
J~net Faye· Dennison, 5·3, Proctorville, died Thursday, .May
Lilt Home Car Business
retired in 1974 from the Chrysler Corp. in Detroit, Mich.
1.9, 2005. at St. Mary's Medical Center. Huntington, W.Va.
7u '11- .AJ~e. ~ "'
.. Lillian was preceded in death by her parents, Loren and
She is survived by her husband, Allen Dennison.
June 3nl
Mahala Hagley; her husband, Patrick Pettit, in 1973; a daug~­
Services will be 2 p:!ll. Sunday in the Hall Funeral Home,
INSURANCE
PLUS
ShowdiiMf!
tpr, Joyce Spurlock; three b(others, George Hagley; Verhn . Proctorville, with the Rev. Charles Turley and the Rev.
7:15
Hagley and Haslf;ell Carson; and a sister, Sylvia Hagley.
Gordon Simpson officiating . Burial will be in Miller
AGENCIES, INC.
..., .... ,...,_of~PC~•;;~
: She is survived by two sons, Richard Spurlock of Glenwood, M~morial Gardens. Friends. may call at the funeral home on
W.Va., and Gary Tabor of Gallipolis; a daughter, Wanda (Alvin Sunday, one hour prior to services.
· 114 Court Pomeroy
--1!1-1:10
,_.,_.
_ _ _ SlS&lt;•I
Eugene) Blake of Gallipolis; and 10 grandchildren, 14 ~atgrandchildren, and four great-great-granddaughters.
·
-niiWn
, He is also survived by a brother, Donald (Shirley) Hagley of
lluntington, W.Va.; and two sisters, Edith Jobe and Alma
· Winifred "Win" Vallance, 80, Inverness, Fla., formerly of t
Spurlock, both of Proctorville. ·•
· Services will be ll a.m. Tuesday, May 24, 2005, at the Gallipolis, died Saturday, May 21 , 2005, at the Hospice Care
'
Willis Funeral Home, with the Rev. Alfred Holley officiating. Unit of Citrus Memorial Hospital, Inverness.
She
is
survived
by
h~r
husband
of
60
years,
Sanford
"Cliff'
Burial will follow in the Oak Lawn Memorial Park in
HuntingtQn, w_va. Friends may call on Monday, . May 23, Vallance.
Arrangements ·are by the Charles E. Davis Funeral Home
2005, from 6 to 8 p.m. at the funeral home.
·
with
Crematory. Inverness.
'
, Please visit www.willisfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
I)Pndolences.

Artis B. lbomton

Viola .'DiXie' Platter

'

•

INWLVIN(;

· Sunday, May

'

WAR. ~i1-t'fr"
"''
_;

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aotilda M. Hqoci

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Lemon Harangue
TODAY'S CONSUMER
5.7 liters of a manufacturer- actually saw the cari Really, ,
TOPIC IS: How to Buy a
approved wine . . .
All you saw in tlie magaCar.
Of course, the most impor- zine ads was ocean waves,
The First Rule of Cartant consideration in buying leading you to wonder: Is
Buying is one that I learned
a new car 1s the rebate. Th1s this a submersible car? Or
long ago from my - father,
is one area of automotive was there some kind of acciDav"
namely: Never buy &lt;)llY car ·
technology where America "dent during the photo ses'
Barry
that my father would buy.
still reigns supreme. A lot of sion? ("Dammit, Bruce, l.
He had an unerring instinct
Japanese cars don't even TOLD you the !ide waS'
for picking out absurd cars,
have · rebates, whereas some coming in!") But no. the
cars that were clearly
American car dealerships Infiniti, ads were done that·
intended as
industrial
You ·don't see many have become so sophisticat- way on purpose. They wantpranks, cars built by work, Minxes around any more, ed that they no longer even · ed you to spend $40,000
ers who had to be blindfold- ·probably because the factory . sell cars. You just go in there this car, plus whatever if
ed to prevent · them from was bombed by the and sign legal papers for a costs to get the barnacles off
laughing so hard at the prod- Consumer Product Safety · couple of hours and get your it, but they refused to show iL
uct that they accidentally Commission. You also don't rebate and your zero-percent to you. Why? Because tht!
shot rivets into each other.
see
many
Nash financing with no payments Infiniti is actually: The
For example, my father Metropolitans, another car due until next Halloween, Hillman Minx.
was one of the very few my father . bought. , The and you drive bome in your
No, just kidding agai'l.
Americans who bought the Metropolitan was designed same old car. Ask your auto- The truth is that the lnfiniti
Hillman Minx, a wart, by professional ·cartoonists motive sales professional for ads are pan of an exciting
shaped British car with the to look like the main charac- details, He's clinging to your new
trend
called
same rakish, sporty appeal ter in a children's book with leg right now.
"Afivertising Whose Sore
as a municipal · parking a name like Buster the Car
NO! JUST KIDDING! Purpose Is To Irritate You.:~
garage but not as much pick- Otles to Town. It was so The last time I jokingly sug- The ultimate example of this
up. Our Minx also had a small tha.t it was routinely gested that there was any- is the magazine ads for
Surprise Option Feature ~!olen by squirrels. · · ·
thing even slijlhtly unpleas- Del) aka vodka, where 'I
ant
about buymg a car, sev- haughlily beautiful :woman·
whereby the steering mechaIt was not the ideal car for
nism would disconnect itself dating. because there was eral million automotive sales is staring at you as though
at random moments, so room for only one person, so professionals wrote me let- you're the world's largest
you'd suddenly discover that the other one had to sprint ters threatening to take all ball of underarm hair, and
you could spin the wheel all along the side of the high- their advertising out of the she's saying, "When I said
the 'way around in a playful way, trying to make Cl!S!!al newspaper a.qd jam it up·my vodka, I meant Qenak:a."
circle without having any conversation and Sometimes nasal passages. So let me What a fun gal! I bet she's a
effect whatsoever on the · dropping from exhaustion. state in all sincerity that as big hit at paities. ("Pssst!
front wheels. Ha ha!
Being a gentleman, I always • far as I am concerned these Come into the kitchen!
You can imagine how · I made sure my dates carried people are gods, and car- We' re all gonna spit in the
felt, as an insecure [()-year- flares so I could go back and buying is the most legal fun Denaka woman's drink!")
old with skin capable of locate them at night.
that a person can have while
My ·point is that tliere 's
going from AU Clear Status
more to buying a car thati'
Today's cars are much s.lill wearing underwear.
to Fully Mature Zit in sec, more sophisticated, by
But it can .also be confus- jusl kicking the tires.. You
onds. arriving at the big which I mean "expensive." ing. There are so many · have to really know wha:i
high school pep rally dance, This is because modem cars brands of cars today, with you're doing, which is why,'
where all the cool guys had employ all kinds of techno- new ones constantly being all kidding aside, I recomtheir Thunderbirds and their logJcally advanced concepts introduced, not only · from mend that you carefully anaGTOs with their . giant such as meaSuring the domestic manufacturers but lyze your automoli ve needs,
engines and 23 carburetors, engine in "liters." Let's say· also from fdreign countries . study the m~et thoroughly,
and there I was, at the wheel you buy a car with· a "5.7 such ~ Mars. I refer here to and then purchase t~ car
of: The Hillman Minx. A car liter engine": This means the "lnfiniti," a car that was that you truly feel,
all
so technologically back, that when it breaks, you introduced by a bizarre objectivity, has the most
ward that the radio was still should not ask your mechan- advertising campaign in expensive advertisement in
receiVIng
Winston ic how much it's going to which
· perhaps you this newspaper. Don· t thank
cost until you've consumed noticed this - .you never me: I'm just keeping my job.
ChuFchi II speeches.

on

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' - . .. .

-

'

.

'

.

Ullian L

.Deaths

.Janet Faye ·'!ennison

""'

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

992-6677 .

Winifa eel 'Win' Valla nee

aff~ r~~e

•,

Warrant

Fun&amp;MHm

Charleston, have filed a counter

motion that the company 1101 be

placed Wider any rereivership.
Currently, the conn has
from.Page,A1 .
ordered the company placed .
the employe-es would be in a limited receivership,
rehired as soon as the pr6b- under which its books are to
be audited.
lems were solved.
This latest qlisode in the
"I. see a long-term future
troubled
history of the New
here for everybody who.
Haven plant, which has under'.
wants
to work ," he saJ'd. "As
·
gone
nwnerous shutdowns and
soon as we reorganize and
a name change s1nce Bannai
readjust, we'll be back on~"
bought
it for $2 million in
·The warrant for his arrest
200
I,
leaves
in doubt the future
was issued the next day.
of
more
than
I 00 members of
·Bannai's brWJer and coUsin
also have tiled a IIkllion with the Local 5171 of the United
cOurt to have Giotlal Industrial Steelworkers of America •
Pinducts placed under penna- . Local President Paul
.lent rereivership, under which Walker had said after the layan ~irlT!l operawr would offs that employees were very
lie appointed to supervise opera- upset and that ~1 don't
approve of wbat be (Bannai)
tiOns al the plant
.
Bannai's attorneys, Mark: is doing, and no one else
~ and Gary Collias of approves ofwbat he's doiqg."

..

~. ·~~~MU .
•Sbt'U···~

•

Ptu1J, Bib Ganus &amp;

W,tstultction ill tlu artt1!

runp&gt;ing'

c
. .

At Jordon's Campground

&amp;dloolu - Plllfy Slqlp/in • ,Vortltits

(t.m IIDM-Moip Coulil)')

Party -N- stuff

$10.00/ Per Person
Info Call: 669 4400, 66~-5831 or 992-6288
"EFeryone Welcome (Can &amp; Bikes)"

111 Eat Mllit St.

740-992-lZOO

3

•

·.

!•

�·'

•

Gallia Briefs

Bridge

New postmaster
-for a·day

from Page A1

GA LLIPOLIS - Will iam
S Med ley will take over
ope ratio n of the G&lt;dli po lis
Post 1 Office. 440 SeLx&gt;nd
Ave.. as " Postma,ter for a
Day" on Tuesday. M:ty 24.
Medley; a substitute tead1er.
will oversee letter &lt;.:&lt;uTiers as
they prepare to make thei r
rounds. serve customers in the
lobby and otherwise spend the
day in the busy shoes of
Postmas ter Rick Butcher.
"Medl ey will make an
exce llent Postm ~cr fi&gt;r ~
Day." Bu tc her said. " He wil
do a great job in providing
excellent service to his cus-.
ta mers, and I'm sure hi s
employees will enjoy working for him for the day."
Medley was chosen for thi s ,
honor due to hi s background

PageA6

OHIO

iPunba~ Mtmes -~entind

in pub lic rc latim" anJ the
vnlun tr-er \\ nrk hc ha"' perfo rmed for the cummu1 1it\.
Al though there wil l he a

· Plant
from Page A1
that ,·it i/e ns seiHJ kttcrs L&gt;f
su pport , for the . plant to
PUCO. the Oh1o Ptm er
S itin~ Board. which appnn·e,
the loc ation of new · power
plants.
and · the Ohio
Con.suntc r's Counsel', J:mi nc
L. Midg in -Ost rander.
The OCC has voiced oppo-·
. sition to portin ns of the cost
recovery plan AE P has proposed.
Daven port
and
Commi ss ioner Jim Sheet o
allcnded the · first publ ic
meeting o n AEP's co.&lt;! recov-

change at the top. Medley
prom ises thai some th ings
wo n' t change: "A stamp wi ll
still L'O'i 37 cents."

Sunday, May

22, 2005

will be detoured aro und the
bridge. he said. Alth ough
hi ghway offici als will not
ha ve an estimated time frame .
for completio n of the project
until the contract is awarded,
Barnes said a bridge the size
of thi s one could take about
18 months to complete.
The bridge is 222 feet long
and about 25 fee t from the
creek bed. Barnes said .
And the engineer's offi ce
has been preparing for
detourin g trafti c for, month s
now; Barn e~ said. That is why . .
other roads in the area. such
as Mud Creek Road, haile
rece ived upgrades recently.

co nsider. it would have created more probl ems than it
would solve. Barnes said.
"We woul d have to build a
new part of the road. build a
new bridge. and then we
would stil: have the old
bridge to deal with." he said.
"'If the (old bridge) detehorated fu rther. we would have
to close it. and put up deadend signs on part of (Cora
Mill ) road. That wo uld mean
pan of the road wa'uldn ' t b e
· eligible to be a county road
any more. It would have to be
a township road."
When the project begins.
traffi c on Cora Mill Road

Congtatulation~
WP. atP. p~oud of you
LovB you

'ftj h&lt;:n ~:ou buy yo~r hfe in:&gt;tmln,.e fro m us thro ugh
~Auto~Owrl~rs

A uto-Owners agent, we tal&lt; c great
in.tere~t

m

Yl1ll •

as well as ynur

home a nd car. Stop in our agency
, and ask us abouc it n.xlay!
.A--~... ~
L.Jiu

~-~on,.

Car Butlr-9!1$

~flo~&amp;,., '.ibA.•

'

I nsurance

Remember:

+ ..
•

.J 17 2nd A1 ·t&gt;. Gallipufi .s, Ohio

446- t 76 t

Agencies Inc.

Kyle c·asey

Love, Dad and .Mo1nl

'

Toumarftent BaH'ball
Wahama vs. Duval (at Huntington
H.S,). 6:30p.m.
·

1Ueaday'a games
Tournament Baeebell
Ftllnt Pleasant at Roane County, 7 p.m.

1 1:.30 a.m.

,.

AEP'- 35.55

Akzo-40.80
Ashland Inc. - 66.66
ATAT-18.97

BU -1.2.84
Bob Evans- 22.53

BorCWamer _: 52.35
Champion - 3.86
Charming Shops - 8.89
City Holding - 33.50
Col-48.44
·DG-22.01
DuPont- 48.97

Federal Mogul- .47
-.

USB·- 29.75 .
Gai•Mitt - 74.97
General Electric: - 37
GKNLY -4.60
Halley DavlcMon .. 50

JPM-36.06
Kroger -

17.10

•

Some
things just

Go Fast Or Be Last/

ought to

Friday, June S
Track ond Field
State Meet (at Jesse OWens Sladium,
Columbus), 9:30 a.m
·

Sports BrfEfs

.GAHS soccer
to hold parent- ·
player·meeting

w.-20.89
NSC-32.05
Oak HRI Financial OVB- 27.05

match.

ROCKSPRINGS- Tryouts
for this' year's American
Legion Post 128 baseball team
will be held 5-7 p.m. Tuesday,
May 24 through Thursday,
May 26 at the Meigs High
School baseball field.
·

Contact Information
Fax- 1·740-446-3008

Plemler - 10.60
Rocbell - 51.09
Rocky Boots - 28.77
RD Shell - 58.30
SBC-23.63
Wal Mart:.- 47.18

W•ICI)'e - 44.10
Worthlucton - 16.43
Daly etoek r8ports are the
4 p.m. clollng quotes of the
prewloB day'l transac:tlonl,
provided .., Smith Partners
at .Advest Inc. of Gallipolis. ·

mydai lytribune . co~

Soorts Staff

Bi'ld Shonnon, Sporto Editor

.And It's All For You!

(140) 446-2342, ext. 33 .

b&amp;herman@mydaitytribune.com ·

Farmers Bank's
Annual Customer
Appreciation Day!

8t')'lln WaHen, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext ~3
bwallers O mydailytribune.com ·

;

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(30.() 675-1333 . ext. 19
Ierum 0 myda:Jiyregisler.com

Friday, May'27th
l l :00 am- 2:00 pm

meet.

Eastern track
sending 16
to regionals
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTER S@MYCiAILYTRIB UNE.CQM

.

Even without a hit, Eastern beats Fairfield
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMAN@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Eastern 1, Fairfield 0

LUCASVILLE Eastern
didn't have a hit Friday, but
thanks to pitcher Ryan Smith
and opportunistic base running
- it didn ' t even need one.
The Eagles scored an unearned
run in the first inning, then the
senior ace was nearly unhittable
during a 1-0 baseball victory over
the
Leesburg
Fairfield in
Southeast District Division IV title
game at rainy Valley High School.
Smith gave up just one hit, a
K.J. Fife single in the seventh
inning, and struck out eight in the
complete game shutout. He has
gone the distance in all three tournament wins in leading his club to
its second district crown in four
years..
.
, .•
Eastern (20-5) heads back to the
regional tournament, where it will

~YOW.

FB Farmers
Bank
&amp;Sav1ngs Company
• Po,.,..roy • Milson • Gallipolis • Tuppers Plains

'

·

Fairtiold

ooo ooo o

-

012

Eastern

100 000 X -

102

J.R. BaY and Joe Cloud. Ryan Smith and Terry
Durst WP - Ryan SmiUt. LP -J.R. Ball.

face Lancaster Fisher Catholic ,
which unseated three-time defending state champion Newark
Catholic 13-2, also on Friday.
· Smith's counterpart. J,R. Ball,
was the hard-luck loser for
Fairfield (19-6) after a no-hit. 11strikeout masterpiece .
· Ball issued three walks. and the
first of those led to his undoing.
Eastern le.ad-off man Chris Myers
drew a base-on-balls 10 start the
home half of the first frame. then
worked his way around the bases
to score the game's only run.
Myers began his trek around the
base paths by swiping second
ba;e, but during the steal attempt.
catcher Joe Cloud's throw was

short an(i bounced into center field
- allowing the speedy senior to
reach third. ·
One batter later, Ken. Amsbary
hit . into a fielder 's choice that
allowed his teammate to score .
The ball was hit to shortstop Larry
Scruggs, who threw home. but it
was too late to get Myers.
· "Chris got a good read on the
ball and knew all the way he was
going on a ground ball," explained
Eastern coach Brian Bowen. " He
got a good jump on it and he's got
good speed - he hustled in there
with a nice hard slide home and
executed it well."
·
Amsbary made it around to third
himself, but was left there. as ·
Eastern . stranded four base runners. Fairfield left two potential
runs on base - but additionally ·
had two more .erased in successful

Pluse see TrKk. B:Z

Please see Champ$. B:Z

• Saturday, June 11,2005 (Sign-1,1p deadline is May 27, 2005)

.:,g.~J
'

and pioneer

-

Ba~quet/ Auction

~

$150 entry fee per team (Maximum roster: 8 men &amp; 8 }vomen)

takes place fri.day, June 10, 2005 at Riverside Golf Course•

• Rain or shine- Double Elimination
• Must be 18 or older to play- Limited nwnber ofteams
•
_. Point Pleasant High School k Mason County Career Center fields .
. • Individual trophiestotop.sixfinisbing'tearns
.'

the optimal

QUANTUM GAS GRILL- one to be
given away at each of our offices!

Division IV dlalrlct championship

PIODRO - Sixteen members of the
Eastern track team advanced to the regional meet following Friday 's Division III district final at Rock Hill High School:. . ;
The Eagles fmtshed
..--..,.,.,.,....,...:,·
fourth in both ihe boys and
girls team competitions;'
with Ross Holter . serving
as the lone district champi•
on for the Green and
. White.
:·
Holter's 'throw of 14~
feet-4 inches in the .discus
event made the senior the
top qualifier in the south1-..::::.-"----l east district. Holter also
, Hayman
qualified for regionals in
the shot put with a heave of
47-8.5, ~ood enough for
third posttion.
EHS had a trio of runnerup finishes on the girls
.srde. as both Jen Hayman
and Beth Hrsell advanced
individual dtstance events.
Hayman posted a time of
2:39.5 in the 800-meter
run, while Hysell produced
a 14 :04.4 effort in the
Hysell
3200m run.
·
Hayman. Erin Weber.
Katie Hayman and lillian Brannon also fin~
ished second with a time of 4:38.8 in the
4x400m relay.
A pair of relay teams also placed third
Friday, as both 4x800m teams secured
places in .the regionaL
Josiah Martindale. Chris Davis, Josh
Collins and Michael Owen posted a time of
9:04.2 on the boys· side, while Hysell, Jen

All proceeds go to the Pleasant Valley HospitalFoundation and the Bartrum &amp; Brown Football Camp

• Mouth-watering food served up by the.staff!·
• A bounce hoose for kid funl '
• Free goodies just for Stopping by!
• Windshield washes!

.And register to win a super

Brad Sherrl)an/pholo

Eastern's Chris Myers slides under the tag of Fairfield catcher Joe Cloud to score the only run of Friday' s
Division IV S,outheast Distrjct title game. Myers drew a walk; stole second and .went to third on an error to
move into scoring position.

TEAMS BEING AUUEPTED FOR THE ANNUAL PVH COED FLlG FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT

Food! ,..·:t' Prim!·61~1

25.93

. BBT-40.52
Pe.lplea
28.34
Pepelco- 57.12

·Brad Sherman/OVP File
Eastern ·s Ross Holter won the discus and
placed th ird in the shot put during the
Southeast District Division Ill track and field.

Seventh grade ·.
parent-coach
meeting today

Post 128 baseball
·tryouts scheduled

.

• Live remotes from your fave radio stations,
WVYK'and WBYGI

~

Beavers Stadium), 2 p.m:

E-INIII- sports 0

. ACI-46.98

.'•

•.

Toumament 'Baseball
Eastern vs. Fisher Catholic (Lancaster

GALLIPOLIS - A parentcoach meeting for Gallia
Academy High School seventh grade basketball .'Will be
held at 4 p.m. Sunday in the
Gallipolis
Developmental
Center gymnasium to discuss
this summer's basketball
camps and open gym.
There will be no open gym
on Sunday.
.
For more infommtion, contact · Tom Hopkins at 4468755. or 446-1642, ext. 349.

Monday, \\1ay 23
Morning (7 a.m.-'Noon )
It should be a cloudy morning. Patches of drizzle and fog
are likely. The rainfall should
a. m.
begin around
II

Local Stocks

i

O~ision Ill Regional (at Pickerington),
11 :30 a.m.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallia Academy soccer pro~rarn will hold a parent/player
mformational meeting on
Tuesday at the high school
auditonum.
·
This meeting is mandatory
for all returning soccer players ·
for the 2005 fall season and
will begin at 6: 30 p.m.

We'll save you money. A s an i.ll deperidei1t

Temperatures will ri se from
61 earl y thi s afternoon to 68
by 3 p.m. then drop down to
62 late afternoon . Wind s will
be 5 to 15 MPH from the
west turning from the northwest as the afternoon progresses.

eighteen years and
good luck in the

P_rEp Track and FiEld

Monday's games

lnsur.m ce , y'ou'll rcceivt' Spt!cial

~..liscl1tmts on your hom~ cmd car instmmce.

weat her

Congratulations,
Derek, on your first

•

EastErn I ~ . LEEsburg . FairfiEld 0

.

Buy life inswance and save
on your home and car. . .·

River Valley
High School Graduate

to all 2005 Graduates!

Prep Schedule .

Sunday, May 22, 2005

Saturday. June 4
Track and Field
State Meet (at Jasse Owens Stadium,
Columbus), 9 a.m

Dad, Mom &amp;CatiB

The Sundav Iimes-Sentinel
Subscribe iC!day • 446-2342

Congratulations

Wdfe becomes a Falcoo, Page,B3

· Local Sports RoUndup, Page Jl4.5
Outdoors, B6

Division It Regional (at&lt; Meadowbrook),

your local

Temperatures will hove r' at
60. WiJids will be 5 to 10
MPH from the wes t.
Aftemoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
It will ' re main cloud y.
Light rain is forecasted. The
rain should reach 0.1 7 inches
by
thi s
afternoon .

l'lumrnor'sRio can.wends, Page B2

Friday'• games
Traek ond Field

OF YOUR LIFE.

Sunday, May 22
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
Temperatures will rise to 73
with today 's low of 54 occurring around 6 a.m . Skies will
.be sunny to mostly cloudy with
5 MPH winds from the northwest turning from the west as
the morning progresses.
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
It 's going to be a cloudy
afternoon. Temperatures will
hold steady around 73 wit)l
today's high of 75 occurring
around l p.m. Winds will be
10 MPH from the west.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It should continue · to be
cloudy. It will be dry, except
for a sprinkle or two.
Temperatures will .linger at
64. Winds will be 5 MPH
from the west turning from
the southwest as the evening
'
progresses.
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
There is a slight chance we
could see some
rain .
Temperatures will drop from
64 early overnight to 57.
Skies will range from clear to
cloudy with 5 to I 0 MPH
winds from the southwest
turning from the west as the
overnight progresses.

.u,o:

Wedneeday'a gamea
Traek ond Field
0.11 Regional (a t Meadowbrook), 4 p.m.
D-Ill Regional (at Pickerington), 4 p.m:

PROUD TO BE APART'

Keep a
check on

&amp;unba~ ~ime• -~enttnel

Inside:
D-Ill Track.Results, 83
C&lt;Jinpleto list al placen

Because of the aduitional
water runoff that would be
caused by such a bridge. it
could not be located in the 50cry plan earl ie r tlii s week.
year flood plai n. which where
Dempsey noted that AEP is the curre nt one is located.
fu rt her alo ng in .the process
Courity highway ofticials
governm ent ex amined severa l othe r
of se~ kin g
approVal for the plant in Ohi o options with regards to the
than fN one in West Virginia. bridge as well , Barnes said.
Appa i;K hian Power has liled One alternati ve was replac ing
a prcli ruinary document with onl y the deck. which is badl y
the West Virg inia Public deterioruted.
"We think the structure is
· Se r y i ~e Co mm ission. but has
not ve t submitted a Ctlst sound," he said. "But (replacing
rec01;ery plan fo r a Wes t only the deck) would,be throwVirgi nia plant.
ing good money afier bad."
The cost recovery plan
They also looked at reroutAE P filed with the Ohio ing part of Cora Mill Road
PUCO asks that the utility be and building a bridge that
permitted to begin collecting wo uld cross Racc(!on Creek
costs of constructin g the ne w in a di fferent location. which
plant as. early as . next' ye ar would allow the. old one to
illid continue to .do so for · remain standing ifnd .the sur'
ye;u·s after: the plant begins · rounding area to .be undisopenning - around 2010.
turbed. Aside from th at alternative being too expensive to

NewsChannel

....

instruments coinrral.tii:
degree of ease. sin:!Piii
volume or listening llftior.llll
Ea!!f to wear, falw1l•lilll

• Pick-up entry packet at the Pleasant Valley Wellness Center

Gallipolis
(!40) 446-5f35
• gO' lit
: Iring in thiS coupon to receive;

. . . . . . lhel'

FREE'
u.....:
I

.,.,..,ng

·--

.

I

.......

OemotiSbation Test

I lll_,.b!IWS/31105

• Make all checks payable to "~ f.IIUIIISPifAL
• F~r more information please call, (304) 675-4340, Ext 1326

I

'

'

,

Any ex pen""' relau.d to injuries
are the sole responsibilil)' of the player.
Pleasant Valley Hospilal,
Inc.. and
~
-;.
.
. its subsidiaries "ill no1 be held responsible for an~ injuries that may lie iacmlldwltilt participating in !he' 1GUrllamerll
.

I

·.

�)

.

Sunday,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

'

'
May 22, 2005

'•

Bv

MARK WtWAI'IIS

(Editor's note: Th_e }vi/ow-

ing is rhe }ina/ installment in a
series feat/Iring Rio Grande
senior mens· basketball plarers.)
·

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
· men's basketball program
was hoping five years ago
when they brought a lean . athletic Jamaican by the name of
Sean Plummer to campus,
that he would be an equivalent to a former Jamaican.
Desroy Grant, who· preceded
Plummer to Rio Grande.
Although he did not quite
reach the numbers that Grant
posted, Plummer carved out a
pretty good niche fo r himself
during his playing career.
Plummer, along with fellow
senior Cain Vandall, was the
last of old guard that ·played
for the Rio Grande Final Four
squad of 2000-01. After two
seasons, Plummer sustain.ed
an injury in the off-season
that forced him to red-shirt in
the ~002-03.
Plummer was a very athletic player who posted consistent numbers for the Redmen
during his career. He eclipsed
the coveted I ,000-career

Track
from Page Bl
Hayman, Sarah Martindale
and Ryan ·Davi s · qualified
· with a split of II :38.8 for. the
Lady Eagles.
Martindale also qualified in
the 1600m race with a time of
6:29.4. good enough for third
position.
Weber placed third in the

lOOm hurdles. Hayman posted a split of 18.6 seconds.
Two girls .relay teams
rounded out the regional
berths with fourth place
efforts, as the 4x I OOm and
4x200m advanced:
·The quartet of Morgan
Werry. Darcy . Winebrenner,
Jillian Brannon and Katie
Hayman q1,1alified with a 57.4
effort in the 4x lOOm event,
while
Werry.
Weber,
Winebrenner
and
Jen
Hayman posted a time of

2005

STAFF REPORT

1:58.6 in the 4x200m race.
Wheelersburg ( 164) edged
Southern
Ohio
out
Conference-foe
South
Webster ( 141 ) for the boys
crown. Chesapeake was third
with ·a 'team . score of 128
points.
Wheelersburg
(145 .5')
fended off Belpre ( 108) for
the top spot in the girls meet,
with Lucasville Valley placing just ahead of EHS with a
score of 86.
Eastern finished with 59

points in the boys competition, while the girls ended the
day with 75 potnts. ·
South Gallia finished las t
in the 10-team fleld with five
points. None of the Rebels
qualified for regionals, but
Steven Call was the lone
individual to. score a point for
the Red and Gold.
Call finished eighth in the
1600m run with a time of
5:30.2. The Rebels also
scored a point with a split of
50.6 in the 4x I OOm relay

race, as Paul Combs, Brian
Lew is. Paul Barker and
Adam Shriver combined for
eighth.
The most success SGHS
enjoyed ' was in the 4x400m
relay, as Lewis, Call, Barker
and Shriver collectively
placed six th with . 4:03.5
effort.
The Division III regional
meet will take place on
Wednesday and Friday at
Pickerington North High
School.

a

SOUTH EUCLID
Current senior and former
Meigs basketball standout
Carl Wolfe, Jr. has signed ·a
letter of intent Thursday to
continue hi s playing career
with ·NAJA Notre _Dame
College ·in northwest'ern
Ohio.
Wolfe, a three-year varsity
shooting guard, averaged 15
points. eight rebounds and
four assists per game for the
Marauders (10-12) during
this past season.
He was a first. terun All
Tri- Valley Conference and
District
13
C&lt;;&gt;aches
Association selection during
his senior year, and was also
named to the . Associated
. Press second team all-district. Wolfe was also a second team Ohio Valley
Publishing Super-10 honoree in 2005.
Wolfe is a member of the
National Honor Society and ·
plans to major in both business and sports marketing,
In a state ment. re leased by
Notre Dame College, Wolfe
'spoke of hi s decision to sign .
with the . American Mideast
Co llege North Di.vision'

'01 Hoi.da Odyssey Loaded, 48,000 miles.......... $16,700
Ford Windstar LX, Rear air, CD/tape................$6,200
llodJ:e Crond C.Orovan Sport, rear air.............. $5,995
Ford Windsta1 LX Loaded _up............................$13,500
Chevy C.Orga Van 1/1 Ton Auto, Air, Factory
WOJ•ranty .. - ............................-.... -................................... .$17,500
Chevy Ventuer C.Orgo Van 55,000 Miles.......... $5,900

Brad Shermanljlhoto

Th'e Southeast District Division IV champion Eastern Eagles pose for a photo with their newly·
won trophy following Friday's 1·0 victory over Fairfieid. It was the Eagles' second Southeast
District title in four years.

from PageBl

AI

e....,;.. Flold, ~/
Frldoy'o -

Eastem (20-5) vs. Lancast~ Fl$het'

Catholic (23-7). 2 p.m.
pick-off attempts. ,
GreentCrooksville winner vs. Tororrto
The
Eastern defense (18-10), 5 p.nl.
behind Smith committed two
sotutitoy'owinner
· errors. but other than those.
Eastem/FC
vs.
was rock solid in its support ; Green'Croob/Tornonto winner, 5 p.m.
advar.:es to state tournament
a 6-4-3 double play quelled (&gt;Mnner
a1 Cooper S1adium, ColunOis)
all Fairfield hopes of a good
start in the first-inning.
NOTE: Green/CrOOksvilte game was
One of the miscues pos1j&gt;Oned Friday and played tale (5
occurred in the second p.m:) Saturday at the University of
inning, as a dropped ball in Rio Grande. ' ·
the outfield allowed burley
allowed
another
.Lions first ,baseman Rory error
· Cougill to reach second with . Fairfield l.elld-off man to
ilo outs. He did no damage. reach scoring position. 'A
though, as Smith picked 'him walk to the next batter put
two men on with nobody out.
·
off.
But Smith tossed over to
Smith sat down the next 11
batters that followed until the first · baseman Joel Lynch to
sixth frame, when the other pick off one. struck out the

wins, widens lead·in
Riverside Senior Men's League
.2005 Senior Standings - Week 1
Rlvet'I!M Golf Course

Buick LeS.bre 19,000 miles........................... $17,600
C.Oddy Seville STS .........~ ....................................... $ 15,900
Dodt• PT Ctuiser .... ,.................. :......................... s11,700
Buiclt LeS.bre Loaded .........- ............................ $14,300
Buick Century ...................................................:..... $6,500
Dodp Strllus 4 Doai, 9,000 mites .................$ 12,900 "

AWD Facto'Y
4X4,Sport,

Dodp lillrepid Low-miles ................................... $8,795
Dodp Intrepid LOlli miles ................................$9,700
lmpaiD 23,000 miles.............................................$12,300
Ford ContoUr.....-.....:..............................................S2,595
Pontiac GrandAm Fldory Wananty, V6.. -.. $14,900

s~ h ool.

"The basketball program
is on the rise. it's a great
·academic school," he commented. ''I like it's location
and s·ize."
Wolfe is the so n Bf Carl
and
Della
Wolfe
of
Pomeroy.

Bryan Watters/OVP File

Meigs guard Carl Wolfe , Jf. (14) goes· up for a layup against
Alexander last January. Wolfe recently signed to play at
American Mideast Conference school Notre Dame.

PrEp . Track and FiEld

Division Ill Results.

Soulheast District Division 111 Meet
5·1 715·20 Rock Hill High School

6·05; 2. Fenton (SW) 5-10: 3 ., Adkins (V).
10Q-m8.t er hurdles ...:... 1. Tiiyloir Carr
5-10; 4. O'Brien (C) 5-08; 5. Jones (V) 5· (B) 15 30:2. Bussa (W) 16.00: 3. Bauer
·
Boys
06: 6 Hail (CG) 5·06: 7. Harr (SW) 5·06;
(SW) 17.50; 4. K.Hayman lEI 18.60: 5.
Team Standings - 1. Whee lersburg 8. Thomas (W) 5·0 4.'
Cheek (W) 19.40: 6. Clagg (W) 19.40: 7.
164 . 2 . South Webster 141. 3.
Long jump - 1. Brian Stephenson Miller (BE) 20.30: 8. Elliott (M) 21 .30.
Chesapeake 128. 4. Eastern 59, 5. Coal {W) 20-0 1.25; 2. Simmons (C) 19-08.25:
300 - 1 Tayloir Carr (B) 46.70; 2.
Grove 56. 6 . Valley 49, 7 . Notre Dame 3. Thornburg (C) 19-04.50: 4. Hickerson Bussa (W) 50 .10; 3. Elliott (M) 51 .60; 4.
19. 8. Green 12, 9. Manchester 9, 10. (V) 19 -02: 5. Honaker (E) 18-09 ; 6·. Rowe Warner (W) 53 30; 5. K.Hayman (E)
. South Gallia 5. 11 . SciOtoYille 2.
( SW) 18-06; 7. Butler (G) 18-01; 8. Harr 54.90: 6. Stacey (SW) 54.90: 7 . Hat1ield
1 DO· meter
dash
1 . Brian ( SW) 17·08.75
(V) 58.00: B. Miller !BE) 59,60.
Stephenson (W) 11.30; 2. [irowr. {W)
Pole Vault 1 Trent Blankenship
4X100-metar relay · 1. Valley
11 .30; 3. Simmons (C) 11 .50; 4. Honaker (CG) 10·06: 2. Ross (C) 10·06. 3
( Vanessa Smith , Kr isten 'Blackburn,
(E) -1 1. 70; 5_Williams (V) 1 1.80; 6. Roush Christian (CG) 10-00; 4. Browning (C) 9- . Wh1tney Bell, Courtnis Merritt) 53.·10, 2 .
(CG) 11 .90; 7 . Williams (V) 12.00; 8.
Beaver Eastern 56. 40, 3. Chesapeake
Howard (SW) 12.40.
57.20_.. ~ - Eas,ern. 57.40, 5. Green 59.00,
· Grna·
200 :_ 1. Brian StepMnson (W) 22~ 70; .
6. WheelersbUrg 1:05.40.
. 2. Br9wn (W) 23.30; 3. Williams {V)
Team Standings - 1. Wheelersburg
4X2DD - 1 .' \/alley (Whitney Belt,
24.00; 4. Harness (NO) 24.40; 5 . Castle 145.5, 2. Belpre
3. Valley 86, 4. · Vanessa Smith , Brittany Hoover, Kristen
(NO) 24.40: 6. Warner (C) 24.70: 7.
Eastern '75, 5. Be'aver Eastern 43.5, 6. Blackburn ) 1:55.00, 2. Wheet·e rsburg
Stapleton (C) 24. 70; 8.Howard (SW) Notre Dame 43, 7. (tie) South Webste r 1:55.20, 3. Chesap~ake 1:57.90, 4.
25.90.
-1
•
'
and Chesapeake 32, 9 . Green 23. 10. Eastern 1:58.60; 5. Beaver Eastern
400 - 1. Brian Stephenson (W) 52.00; Maochester 19, 11 . Oak Hill 10, 12. 2:02.40, 6. Green 2:07.40, 7. Oak Hill
2. Patterson (SW) 53.00; 3. Kennedy Sciotoville
2:1750.
(SW) '53.50; 4. Slone '(C) 53.60; 5. Willard
100-meter dath 1. Desiree lson
4X400 1. Wheelersburg (Amy
(G) 55.20; 6 . Hickerson (V) 55.80; 7.
(BE) 13.40: 2. Smith (VI 13.50: 3. Roark Monta110n·, Briltany Warner, Julie Br andt,
Morgan (C) 56.10; 8. Crabl ree {V) 57.90. (SW) 13.70; 4. Bell (V) 13.70; 5. Morgan Taylor Ross) 4 :35 .40, 2. Eastern '4:38.80,
BOO~ meter run Nick Bowman (W) 13.80; 6 . Conley (W) 14.00:7. Werry 3. Valley 4:45 .20. 4. South Webster
(SW) 2 0470 ; 2. McComas (C) 2 00.20;
IE) 14.20: 8. Cline (B) 14.20.
4:47.60 .. 5. Belpre 5;13.50.
200 - i. Holly Emnett (NO) 27.20: 2.
3. Miller (Wi 2:08.30; 4. Gaynor (C)
4lll800 1. Wheelersburg (Amy ·
2:10.60: 5. Hadsell (W) 2:13.30: 6. Rhea Davis IOH) 27.70: 3. Morgan (W) 28.50; Mental/On, Tori Williams . Brittan)' Warner.
(G) 2. 17 30: 7, Collins (E) 2:20.00: 8. 4. Fields (Ci 28.70: 5. Conley (W) 28.80: Taylor Ross) 11-:14.30, 2. Va ll ey
Faulkn er (SW) 2:20.80.
6 . Werry (E) 30.20; 1. Gruesser ·(E)
11 ' 17.60. 3. Easrern 11 :3B .80, 4. South
1600 - 1. Josh LinkoUs (SW) 4:35.50:
30.60: 8. Bennett (C) 30.70.
Webster 12:39.00.
400 - ·1 Desiree Ison (BE) 1:03.00: 2.
2. Ruggles (W) 4:44.50: 3 . Bell JW)
Shot pul - 1 Tabitha VanDyk.~:! (8) 344:47 . 10: 4. Canee (SW) 4:50.80; 5. Emnett (NO) 1- :03 .70: 3. Weber (E) 00.5 ; 2. Boll (W ) 31-10_7 5; 3 . Colvin.(B)
1:04.60; 4. Hoover (V) 1:04 .90; 5. 30- 10.50; 4 . Rader (C) 30-06.75; 5.
Cravens (C) 5:16.?0: 6 . . !;k&gt;ldman (M)
5:23.70; 7 . Linsberg (M) 5:25.00: 8. Call Breth3uef (8) 1:05.90: 6. Cline (B) Tellier (G) 29- 10; 6 . Evans (G) 27-8.75: 7.
1 :09,60: 7. Brannon (E) 1:10 00 ; 8 . Se)(ton (W) 27-8.25; 8. Hagen {SW} 27(SG) 5:3020
01 .25 .
'
.
3200 1. Josh L1nkous (SW) Morgan (W) 1:10.80.
10:09.60 ; 2 . Owen (E) 10:37 . 10; 3
800--meter run - 1: Taylor Ross (W)
DIScus - 1. Tabitha VanDyke (B) 11006: 2 . Evans (G) 103·02 ; 3 . Cheek (W)
Rug!:;Jies (W) 1.0:44 .30 ; 4. Cartee 1SW) 2:36.60; 2. J Kayman (E) 2:39.50; 3
10:50 .90; 5. Bell (W) 10:57.30; 6 . Davis Stewart (V) 2 ·42 80 ; 4. Keaton (V) 101-06; 4. Boll (W) lOD-06: 5. linker
(E) 11 :09.10; 7 . Dtr1ing (CG} 11 :47.50; 8. 2:49.00: 5. Montavon · (W) 2:52c10; 6. (SW) 98·05;. 6 . Colvin (B) 92-07; 7
Boldman' ( M) 11:49.70
Brethauer (8) 2:53.60 :. 7. Austa (NO) Graham (C) 92·05; 8. Weber (E) 90-05.
Hlgh jump - 1. Ashlee Reynolds (B)
110-meter h!Jrdle1- 1. Andy Fenton 2:56. 10: Howell (BE} 2:59 .50
1600 1 Sarah Appleton (NO) 5·04, 2. Merritt {V) 5·04 : 3. Williams (W)
(SW ) 15.20, 2. Tho rnburg (C) 15.70; 3.
Thomas I WJ 16 90: 4. Bea11y (E) 17.40: 6 :07 .00: 2. Montavon jW) 6:15.80; 3. 4-10 4. Howard (BE) 4-,0; 5, Cheek
5. Flindeos (SW) 18.20. 6. Pyles (W) Martindale (E) 6:29 .40; 4. Apel (W) (W)4·08: 6 ..EIIioH (MI 4'04.
19. 10; 7. Hall (CG) 19.40.
.
6 :30 .70; 5. Perko (C) 6 :33.30: 6.· H1mes
Long jump - 1. Courtnie Merritt (V) ·
300 - 1. Andy Fenton (SW) 40.60: 2. (M) 6.36.20 ; 7. Hildebrand IB) 6.42.60; 8. 17-02. 2. Carr (B ) 16-02.50: 3. Reynolds
(B) 15·03: 4. Bussa (W) 14·11.75: 5.
Thornburg (C) 41 .40: 3. Browning (C) Rooney (Sc1) 6 :54 .70.
3200 - 1. Sarah App leton (NO) Brandl (W) 14·08.75: 6. Emne11 (ND) 13·
44.40; 4. Beatty (E) 45.10: 5. Flinders
(SWJ 46.60; 6. Thomas (W) 46 60: 7. 13:12.70: 2. Hysell lEI 14 0440 ; 3. 08.75: 7. Howard (QEJ '13·08: 8. Kelly (G)
13&lt;04.75.
Craft (W) 48.10; 8. Blankenship (CG) Himes (M ) 14:47.00:. 4. Apel (WJ
Pole Vault - 1. Ashtee Reynolds (B)
15:05.60; 5. Davis ~E) 15.27.10: 6. Ray
49 _40.
9·00: 2. Taylor Carr (B) 9·00.
4X100.meter rel·a~- 1 Whe.eJE!rsburg (V) 1539.61l: 7. Houston (SW) 16:3110
(Kai lyb Burgess, Caleb Brown . Brvan
Crall,
Matt
Jenkms)
45 .60 , 2_
Chesapeake 45.80. 3. Valley 46 .50, 4.
South Webster 47.60, 5 . Coal Gro11e
47.90. 6. Green 48.10, 7. Eastern 49.10 ,
8. South Galli8 50.60.
4X200 1. Wheelersbutg (Caleb
Brown. Kailyb Burgess. Matt Jenkins,
Bryan Craft) 1: 36~80. 2. Chesapt~ake
1:37.80. 3 . Notre Dame 1:39.80. 4. Coal
Grove 1 :42 .30, 5. South Webster

.

·

a.

McGrath Truck &amp; TrJctor Repair
("'FAAIVITAAC )

1 : 4~ . 20.

4X400 · - 1 South Webster (Derek
PatterSon. Nick Bowman . Michael
Kennedy. Andy Fenton) 3:37.00, 2.
Chesapeake 3 :40.80, 3. Vall&amp;) 3 :45.60.
4. WheelersDurg '3:46.90. 5. Notre Dania
3:52 .20 , 6. South Oallia 4:03.50. 7.
SCiOtoville 4 :05.80.
4X800 1 . South WebSter (Derek
Patterson , Nitk Bowr'flan . Michael
Kennedy, Joth Linkous) 8 :41 .30, 2.
WhHiertburg 8 : 5-' . 40~ 3 . Eastern
i :0-4.20. 4 . Chllapeake 9 :24 .80 . 5.
VaJley. 9:45.1D, 6. Manchestet9:.,9.90, 7.

-FARMTRAC
FINANCING
. '
.

.

~\,J.o.·--

Located on Stale •••• 1/4 IDle s-ua of Ollila hmeroy, Dido
'AlligatOr jack's has over 38,000 square feet of Indoor space, that Is heated and alr--conclltloned to
accomcxlate year-round comfort for veridors and aJStomers aHke. .
- This Is a~ f.
-Outdoor spaces are located surr.c~~ the lar~
area with ten spaces_located In

•

.

RESULTS
/

$285

$296
$289

$268
$307
$263

91 JEEP CHEROKEE SPORT (12602 4 DR 4K4AT AC SPAT WHLS...-:--·---·--··-----·-·----·-----..- $9.900
98 CHEV BLAZER 4X4 f12806AT AC TIL.T CASE PW Pl. SPRTWHLS. -----·---..- -..-·-------------- $7.800

$157

98 FORO EXPEDITION 4X4112532V8 )(LT 4X4AT AC TLTCRSE PWPLPWRSEAT3AOSEATSPRTWHLS--.. $12.995

$271

$1
$

$249
$213
$289

$275
$267
$239

$310
$219

$189
$99

$139

lliii Jiilh-M frii• .It•f'Jm*•- tat Jre=i• • I

04 CHEV K-15004X4t121515 1&amp;.rll0 ...S BOFWSI...VERADOREG CABCOSPRTWHLS AC FLARESKJE VIL ..... - ... $19.995

'"114 FORD F150 SUPER CREW 4X4_112530 II,IIOOIILS~ XLT AT AC1LT ~ Pw PL SPliT WMLS va .....
'"114 FORD f1504X4 SI,JPEA CAB 012419,.,...; III!SIIOfW AT AC 1LTCRSE PWPLSPRTWHLS , ..;_____,,_
FORD F150 SUPER DUTY 4X4 t126M SC AT ACTa.T CASE PW PLDUAl.VV10 SPRTWHL.S.-----~--·--·
02 FORD F250 SUPER CAB 4X4i125110V8AT AC 11LTCRSE,.., PL CllALLOY-.s TOW Pl&lt;G ..- ...............
02 CHEV 810 CREW CAB LS4X4112540_v6AT ACTILT~ PWPL CD SPAT WHLS BEDUNffi_________.._____..
01 DODGE RAM QUAD CAB 4X411""" 411,000 MLSAUC 1X.T CASE PW Pl VB....., WHLS--·-·---------01 FORD F150 SUPER CAB 4X4112Sil OUADCABAT N;TLTCRSe )(L.T.PWPLP'«fl SEATS SPRTW'tLS.----·------~1 FORD RANGER 4X4 FLARE SIDE 4 DR 112587 SUPER CAB 4 DR XLT PW Pl. CO SPAT WHLS AT AC ·--01 GMC SONOMA SUPER CAB_I12581 ZR2 '"' 3ADAT AC 1LT C11S1i PW LSPRT WHLS Cll------·-------01 FORD F150 4X4 SC 112463...-·-------·-·-----.. ·--······-.... ·-----------..·--·-·"

$25, 395

$23.495
522,995,

523.910
'$12.995

II 8,995
Sll,900

S16.'300

51 1.000

$1!.995
00 FORD RANGER SC 4X4 1121558 AT .AC TLTCRSE PW Pl.' DR XLT vtl SPRT wti...S......., _________·-·-------.... Sl 3.100

00 GM(:: SIERRA X-CAB 4X4 11~AT ACTLTCASE PW PLPWR L.TliFI '~TS SPRT WHLS
OODOOGE RAM QUADCAB4X4112650AT ACTII.TCASEPW PI.SPRTWHlS

CD-----·--M-·

$13.995

•.•• SIU95

00 FORD F150 4X4 RED 112578 AT AC SPAT WHLS--·-----..·------------_..:·-..----~- ....- 112.995
OOTOYOTATUNilfiASR5112410X~4X4V8ATAC1LTCRSEPWPlSI'IITWHLSC1l--...:,-,_·--· $19.995
99 FORD F250: 4X4 EX:T CAB 11:.-.JB~CABr.o WL.NUT IJ M. TLT CRSE PW PL ~ Ln.t SUTS SPAT WHLS'---·- S 17.995

05 CHEV MT CARLO f13141t.OOOIII!LS BOFWAT N; n.r CASE PW PL CA88 SPAT WHLS PWR surs.
51?.495
06 POH11AC II()NEVI.L£1121133 1&amp;,11101&amp;..5 BOFW &amp;T &amp;Cta.TCRSE PW PLPWR SEATSSPRT wHL$CtJ
Sll.fOO
05 PONT1AC GRANO P11X GT 112151 :!24,000 M..S 90FW AT AC Tl..T CRSE PW PL. PWR siAT CD SPAT WHI..s....... S 11.395
05 BUICK CENT\JAY t125702t.IXIOILS 80FW AT ACTLTCRSE PWPLPWRSEATS CD

$15.995

'"*OS BUICK CENTURY 112505 1I,GEIIIAS80FW AT &amp;C lLT CRSE PW Pl. PWR SEAT SPAT wtLS- - - 04 PONT1AC GRAND AM SE 11211153 rTIXIO fiLS BOfW AT AJ;lk.T CASE PW PlPWR SEATS CD VI SPRTWHL.s._
04H'I\JNDAIELAHTRAGSI12131ATACTLTCASEPWPI.tt.OOOMlSBOFW- - 04 CHR'ISl£A PT CAIJ1SER 112111M B0FW AT AC 11..T CASE PW Pl. CD

115.995
514.4-30
512.995

114.300
114.155
04 FORD TAURUS SES 01-)IOAT AJ:'II.T""'""" PL co_.- WHLS22,1100 MLS
116.995
'"04·TOYOTA CNiRY L£ 11- Z3.L1110 ILIIDfW AT AI: 1LT eM PW Pl. PM1 SlAT
KEVUSS EHTRY .....
ID CHEV - . A l S """'AT A!J TLT CASE PW Pl. PWR SEAtS SI'RT WHlS CD- - - - - - 112.350
03 DODGE NEON SXT 11-A'i ACft.T
fW Pl . . . WHLS
110.150

80FW- - - - -

CO

eRa.

IU~5

....:._____

SIJ.995

U.995

01 PON'11AC QRAirl) pfp ...... ., .IC li..JCMENI'l .W, IMOLJ1'--- - - - - - ' - - - - 51.995
01HOICIACMCLJI4Dflrt-JifAC'II.TC0. ... ...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ $11 .995
011UCKCENIURYf1--IUIIfN:1LTa. PWPL- - - - - - - - - -- - IUOO
1» OR\'SI.£A ... t ' l - l . f ArC 1U' C.:.. PW 11\. , _ L1N1 iUrs PW 11.1111 ..X.IJI!Rf wtU CO- - 112.H5

• PONTIAC GIWIDNA CIT IUII72011-1Cf N:VIft.TCO.PW ,.,_, MUCO•- - - - - suso
• TDI'OTACOIIDU.A L£t1_, li.r AClLT.,_,_,.__ _ _ _ __;_;_ _ _ __
5!.195

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----&gt;-.:

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.. '

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'

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01 OC::XX.: QRAM) CMN/M EX ,_.,. . . ~IR'OWaioCU.tO--• c-rvc...,.,-.
112..410
01 QIWILER TOWN I. COIJIYiiW VAN
~'IU-Nfii.MM.trecZ..-~Wa. . . . . tc.... SZi .200
03 FORD WIID8T.\R VAN-irr ..,,_,_"' ,.,_
111.195
tltl DOOQE CNUNAN _ _ _

,..1U_,..,,_

McGrath Truck &amp; Tractor Repair

$329

02 SATURN VUE AWD V6 11252928.000 MLs BOFW AT AC 11L.T CASE PW PL. SPRTWHL.SCDAWD V6 ............... - ....... · 516.995
....02 MERC MOUNTAINEER 4X4 1"12490 lr'8AT ACllL.TCRSE PW PLCD PWR L.THR SEATs 3RD SPRT WHLS........ 517.850
"""02 Ct1EV TRACKER LT 4X4 112411 GREYL.TliRICYL. AT AC11L.TCRSE PW P1. cd~SPRTWHL.S............................. Sl1 ,595
"02 MERCURY MOuNTAtNEER AWDtltDI I;llDOIUIIOI'WATM:fli.TCIIIfNI'I.PWII IIIJITS ~--...JII:l!JUT""MJ.c
$18,850
...02 BUICK RENEZVOUS CXL·.umAT AC n..rCRSE-PL ,-wAlTMR avoTS ~ rr.oooML.S SPJn """'-'-~ !IUN ~ •:u $15.995
02 fPAO ESCAPE. 4X4 f1)404AT AC 'nLT CRSE fY'N Pl. SPAT WHL.$ AMf'FWCO~,-·~·-•~w•wM&lt;M"'M'"-"'""'''"M"'"--'""""'" 513,995
HQ2 DODGE DURANGO SLT 4X4 f1M43VIAT AI:. Tk..T PW Pl. AEAR o\C PWI'IL~si..TScmE co SPAT WHt..S TOW PKQ
$1Z.960
01 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4 11.0 AT .cri..TCRSt: PW Pl ~ SUN ROOf" SPRT WHl.S ~--·-·---------·--·--..;_-..,__ - $16.995
01 DODGE DURANGO XLT PLUSnz111U4A!TAC nLT&lt;:mllPWPL PWR LnflSETS SPRTWHL&amp;._____.. _______..., ••. , 516.495
01 s'UBARU F()fi:ESTER L 112814 AWD PW PLSPRT WHLS ROOf RACk AT AC............ ----·-·-..-~.......................... ,. Sl 4, 995
01 NISSAN PATHANDER lE 012582 BOFW AT AC nLT CASE PW PL BOSE ln'EAEEO C1l SPRT WMLS 4X4...._....... Jll. 995
'"01 FORD ESCAPE X~T 0122211 AT AC Tli.T CASE PW PL SPliT WltLS ................ - ............... ~............................ S13,995
00 JEEP CHEROKEE 4X4 112586 AT AC TI..T CRSE PW PL SPAT WHLS ..................................................-............... S11 ,850
SUBARU IMPREZZAAWD '"'"" 5 SPOAC PW,, ___________ ,,_,__ ,_,._,,._,__ ,,,,,,,,_,______ ,,, $1,995

-Q2 OtRW'IlEA 30CII t13M4tCY\.Itrltt.TLTc:.-N Ill. CO,... L..IAfHIR IIAJIAU.OV Wl-tU 'TMrCTDI COfrrmtCil.

Upgrr1de 't ou r Fo rd Tra 1hH ~\'1th ~
Nt-" [ml\\lon·Complldnt Fdrmtr-t( ln);;!ln•

'

518.995
516.995

02 .f0R0 ~OITION XLT 4X4 112553 VSAT ACTLTCRSEPW PLCDSPRTWUJADSEAT REARAC ... _.:,_................. 519,995

01 FORD FOCUS ZX3.,_,. ... _;;,,..,.,1U._....ar_..___________

SENfiNEL FOR D-ll

•

521.965
$19,995 ·
519.300

'

145-llll: 3. Pemberton (CG)
144-QS, 4 . Branch (CG) Branch .1 &gt;40-2; 5.
DeCamp (SW) 137·10: 8. Heory (SW)
134·09; 7. Crob1roo (VI 132-o2: 8.
Scarbrough (E) 128-0.
. .
High Jump- 1: Brant Renolloi1Dm (CJ

•

518.495

031&lt;188AN 8ENT!IA GXE . . . . ...,. "'AC1LT PW Pl. CO--·--·----------~
112JOO
03SATURNL.20011,.,.,,..-ILIIIfAC'II.TC0.""1'L-- - - - - - - - · - - - - 112.995
GaiUCKMAKAVIt.LTRA .... --...-~,..IMI...,.a.w:ru_,..""o..-.CD..,•
S22.HS

war- (W)

CHECK MONDAY'S
TRIBUNE AND

04 SUB,1!.RU IMPREn:A OUTBACK SW 112Wt,OOOMLSBOFW AT ACTllT CME PW PLA.WD COSPfrrWHlS 5 SPO
CHEV TRAI. BlAZER 4X4 111256529,000 MLS BOFW AT AC TLT CRSE.PW PL CDIALLOY WHLS TO PKG..........
04 FORI;) EXPLORER XLT 11~1 WAT ~c TI..TCRSf PW F'I..,X4 REAR'Ac JRDSEATCD :JO.OOOMLSSPRTWH BOFW ...
03 SUBARU LEGACY AWD OUTBACKt1267'0BOFWAT ACTl..TCRSE PWPLPWR EATS SPAT WHLS ..........................
00 JEEP UBERTY UMITEO 4X4 t12E623 V6AT AC TlL.T CASE PW P CD PWA SEATS SPATWHL.S.............................
....03 FORD ESCAPE XLT 4X4 t1M73 AT Ac TLTCMEF'W ~P\msu.TSPRT IM-II.BCOBTAD~W seArs ONE owNER:w.Mo MLS

03DOOGENEDNI1-ATAC--

Coal Grow 9:58.50.
Shot put - 1. NiCk Warner (W) 5003.25: 2. Clffli)Ooll (W) 50-2: 3. HoHer
(E) 47~ . 50: 4. Henry (SWJ 48-05.50: 5.
lomoo (CG) 48-04; 6. Pemberton tCG)
48-01 .50: 7. Scart&gt;roug/l (EJ 45-00; 8.
Summa (SW) 42-03.25.
DIKua- 1. Aou Holtor (E) 149-00:2:

FrldayslO:OOaJn;S:OOpm
Slltlardays 9:00am-5:00pm
Sundays 9:00am-5:00pm

news to:

E-mail

1:

Ch~ps

K~rb

Riverside Senior. Men's LEaguE.

Mason, W.va.
MASON . W.Va. Willis Korb. of
Guysville, has widened hi s lead in the 2005
t . Wltlis K01b l\6 . 2 MICkey W1no brenner 75 3 Gary Minton
73.5. 4 :Tom Fisher 72 .5 . 5 Hasket Jones 70, 6 Cra1g Barnes
Riv~ rside Senior Men 's Golf League .
69, 7 . Cet1l Minton 67 5, ll,. Dave Jacob'y 66 5, 9 Earl Johnson
Korb's ·team took 'top · hono;s Tuesday to 66, 10. Jack MAIOr'!@Y 1:3'. 11 Mac McCarly 63 .5 , 12. Russ
give him 16 points for the day. and a total of 86 Holland .63, 13._.Don F1elds 62 :5 . 114 Lew Gilland 61.'5, 114 .
Blain 6 1.5. 16. Jim .Cunn ingham 61 ·, 17. P~ul
points for the year to lead second place Harvey
Somerville 60.5. 18 Tom Nunnery 60, 19. Don W1lson 59 , 20 .
Mickey Winebrenner of Racine, who has 75 . Ralph Sayre 58.5 .. 21 . Russ Wood 58, 22. Ron Ptialin 55 5,
points for the season. Point Pleasant\ Gary t23. Claude Proffitt 55,'t23 . Gi:me Gray 55, t25 . Chuck Stanley,
53 .5', 125. Ronda\ Browning 53 5, !27. Harley Rice 52.5, 127 .
Mintbn, is in third with 73.5 points .
Don Kay 52.5. 29. Ph i! Burton 51 .5, 30. Ken Whited 51 , 31 .
A total of 61 players were on hand for Kenny Greene 50.
·
Tuesday's festivitie s. Thirteen teams of four
players, and three teams of three. made 16 the pin honors on· the day. Winebrenner
points availatile on the day.' The low score of ' accomplished his feat on the hole No.7 , with
56 (-14 under-par) was shot by the team of Dugan matching that on hole No . 14.
·
Korb, Chet Thomas. Gene Gray and Clarke
Four new playe rs were on hand for
Gre~ne.
Tuesday's round, making a total of 9 1 golfers
Craig Barnes. Clyde Jarvis. Paul Lanham · for the year. They ·are Richard Holland, J(lhn
and Donnie Fields- finished runner-up with a Bumgarner, Bruce Jenks and Jerry Arnold.
There. is sti)l plenty of time av:iilable to get
score of 59 (- II ). and Cecil tvlinton. Dick
Dugan. Charl~y .Yeager and Paul Somervi lle out and join the league and res.umes play each
Tuesday, until September. when t~ ey will have
placed thtrd wnh a 10-under score of 60.
Winebrenner and Dugan claimed closest to their awards dinner .and party day.

1:

next batter, then induced 9
fly ball that right fie lder
Myers corralled to extinguish Fairfield's biggest
threat.
"That was a tough inning,
and Fairfield' s opportunity to
win the game right there we . felt a lot better after we
were able _to work out pf that
inning." recalled Bowen.
Fairfield came through
with its first hit in the seventh inning· when Fife lifted
a soft fly into shallow center
with one away. but .Smith
ended the game in style with
back-to-back strikeouts .
Eastern's regional semifinal game against Fisher
Catholic is 2 p.m. Friday at
'Beavers Field in Lancaster.
The winner plays again on
Satutday for a state tournament berth.

'Local Golf

STAFF REPORT

ioa.

Region 15 Pairings .

..

.,

SPOATS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

·oo.

.

$unb.w t!:111t!'S -~rntmrl • Page 8;3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis .

SPO~TS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.CdM

point ( 1.019) and shot better had been plagued by injuries.
than 60 percent from the tield
Rio went 85-48 during the
(386-for-627) .
four .years that Plummer
The . past t'wo seaso.ns. played. The Redmen went 22Plummer' was selected 21id 14 du~ing his red-shirt season
Team All-American Mideast and
won · .the
AMC
Conference South' Division. Tournamenr advancing to ·a
NAJA
D-ll
Plummer was tied with fe llow second
senior Dawayne Mcintosh for Tournament in three years. ·
the team scoring lead at ·10.8
"Sean was a kid. in some
p'Oints per game . .He was the ways. · that unfortunately
team's
second
leading never reached his potential
reboundcr in 2004-05. pulling · because of a rash of injuries,"
down 5. 7 boards per contest. said Rio Grande head c.oach
He was the leader in field goal Earl Thomas: "He had two or
percentage. shoot ing a blister- three surgerie s while he· was
ing 63 .5 percent ( 115 -for- here that really affected him.
181) from the field. Rio went
''He was a guy that came in
19-12 thi s past season.
'il from a little 'different culture,
As a junior Plummer aver- a little different background
aged 10.8 points and pulled and really became acclimated
.down 5.7 boards for a team t~ the system,'' Tho'm.&lt;\S
that fi ni shed 20-11 and aiJded. "He' worked very hard
advanced to the semilinals'of and has improved both acade· the AMC Tournament.
mically and athletically.
As a freshman, the Redmen · "He was somebody that
had one of the best single sea- represented this program very
sons in school history, making well ."
a magical run to the NAIA
Plummer also dabbled in
Division II Final Four. track and fie ld during his
Plummer. came off the bench sophomore season (200 1-02)
that season· and contributed competing in the long jump
4.7 points and 3.5 bo;rrds per and triple j ump .
game while shooting 63.7
Th~ 6-fm, t 6 Hl' iV.'! of
percent (58-of-91) trom the Portn''''·'·: .lan.~ ka teceived
field .
his uf!gree· in Information
Brad Sherman/photo
In addi tion· to eclipfi ng Technology/Computer Aided
1,000 career p_oints he pulled Drafting and Des1gn.
Rio Grande's Sean Plummer muscles his way around a post defender during his senior season.
down 629 rebounds. Not bad . He is the son of Granville . The Jamaica product was bothered with injuries throughout his career. but was one of the
numbers for a young man that ·and Jacqueline Johnson.
team 's most productive _players while in the line-up
400m dash with a 1:04.6.
Ed Beatty qualified in two
events . wit h fourth place
efforts, as his 17.4 in the
110m hurdles and his 45 .1 in
the 300m hurdles earned him
a spot in Pickednjlton later
this week.
,
Bryce Honaker's · fourth
place finish in the lOOm dash
( 11 .7) rounds out the Eastern
boys headed to regional.
Katie Hayman also earned
a spot at Pickerington with a
fou rth place fi msh in the

.

Meigs' Wolfe signs with
AMC's Notre Dame·College

·Plummer finishes· ·Rio
Grande hoops career
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES-SENTINE.l

Sunday, May 22,

III.150

ClllawtiUR 'I'OWN It cx:JU!!1liY VM D STK . . . . . KlUC::..:NkNIIIUJ'tJI&amp;MIC ..........
IIIZKIA~VANf1M7DI.W. _ _ ............ _.AC'II.TCO.N ...

• FOfiJ...

61AR VMra~~~llil M:1VCMI ,.,._,_.,.

CO

' 16.100
1 13.HS

St.IOG

�PageB4

LoCAL
·SPORTS
.

&amp;unba~ otimes ~ientitttl

.

'

"

Sunday, May 22,

'

2005

j

GALLIPOliS- t!oya and gino who will
. be In gred11 1"" next y.. r can atttn&lt;f the
annual Baby Blue Bukotball Cemp at the

btMball ..mp
- The Gallipolis Youltl Neurone Churdl .on July B-7.
will be halO 9 a.m. until 1 ' The camp wiU be hold from 1 p.m. until
at Mf41Tl0Jial Field.
2:15 p.IT\. eaoh dav. ·'
17 wut tS'e used as a rna~·
E111ch participant wPI receive basketball
I case of rain-out.
lnsti'uctlon and will participate In fun
camp Is lor boys and girls entering games, and wltl get a camp basketball,
grades 3-8.
refreshments and aHhlrt.
CoS1 is~ per cslnper or $40 for two or
The cost Is ;$30 or $40 after June 21.
more from the same family. Each will
Co.ntact Jim Osborne 446~9284 tor rnors
a carrip T-shirt and dally award~ Information.

Bv ERtc L. WHm .

SPECIAL TO THE TIM ES SEJ\ TiNEl

,.

$60 Adulls' ( 18 years and over)

Family Passes
Hoyrs of Ooeratlon
12.00 p·.m. Until 6:00 p.m. ·Monday
through saturday
'
1:00 p.m. until6:00 p.m. Sunday

$100 Family of four, plua $10 for each

additional person
Day Care Season Pass
$250

SerylcesJFns
Adult Swim
7:30 . a.m. until 9:00 a.m. Monday
through FriQay ·

$3 Daily
$25 SeasOn

•

Dally AdmiSsion·
$1 Preschool (4 years and under)
$2 Students (5 to 18 years)
$3 Adults (18 years and oVer)

Ohio u. lootbtll compo ochodulod
ATHENS -The Ohio Unii'Orolty football
coaohlng ataff, haodod by Fronk Sellch,
will host two campa this summer. The
Senior Prospect Camp wiU' be held 10
a.m., June 5 whHe the overnight individual
Position Camp will run from June 26·28.
The Senior Prospect Camp Is OJ)e!n to all
athletes who will be ~enlors, In the fall of
2005, Cost of th&amp; camp is S25 for those
who' Pr~registlf' and $40 on the day th8

I
I
.I
I

Barlrum and Brown Camp:

ABOVE: Many Meigs High
School studer~ts recently
attended the annual Bartrum
and Brown Football Camp in
H.unt'ington, W.Va .

I

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1

I.

.

Cliffside

.,•

Cliffside Ladies host opening scramble!.
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

District, held In conjunction with Bossard
Memorial Library and Gallipolis Junior
Women's Club
·
FAEE ·to public

GALLIPOLIS - The Cliffside Ladies
Golf Association held its annual opening
day scramble on Mother's Day Sunday.
.
Results from the day were extra special for
the trio of Nancy Tawney, Mary Ann Bickar
and Joyce Russ, which finished first in the
team event.
·
Avalee Swisher. Robin · Hudson and
Wanda Box~orfer teamed up to finish second ahead of the squad consisting of ·
Jackie Knight, Kitty Griffith and Diane
Lewis.
Tawney and Cit1dy Harris finished closest

Swim Lealona (45 mlnule aelllon•)
$30 per person per ·sessi,on
Mornings: 10-10:45 a.m. Levels 3 and 4.
Morn i ngs ~ 11·11 :45·a.m. Levels 1 and 2

Evenings: 6-6:~·5 p..m. Levels 1 and 2
Evenings: 6:45-7:30 p.m. LEWels 3 end 4

Private Pool Parties .(2 hours)
$250

Session 1- June 13-23 Monrtay through
Thursday (Friday make-up). Morning only
· Family Night
lessons
Fridays ·frorr 7:00p.m. until 9:00p. m.
. Session 2-' July 11·22 Monday through
· $1 Per pe rs~n
Thursday (Friday make-up) . Mornings
·.and Evening lesspns
Family Literacy Night
S9ssion 3· August 1-12 Monday through
Thursdays from 6:30p.m. until 8:30p.m. Thursday (Friday make·up). Morning only
Sponsored by Gallipolis City School 1 lessons, parent-tot lessons.

.

t

, I

1 Non-negotiable-1 Voucher per customer per purchase. No Cash value- Offer Ends 513 t 10~ I

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D
.
ay

·s

Submitted photo

to the pin, while Garren Snyder ~ade the'
longest putt. ·
.
.
The league has 18-hole golf on•
Wednesdays at 9 a.m. and nine hole groups
on Thursday at 5:30 p.m. at Cliffside Go[~
Club. Any woman golfer is invited to co111~ .
and join the group.
.
.
.. :
Pre .vious results incl!!de Avalee Swisher
(low gross), Wanda Boxdorfer (low n~t) and·
Joan ~olden (low putts) on Wednesda~.:
May ll; Cindy Staley (low gross),. Garren;
Snyder (low net) and Jean Hankins (lo')':
putts) on Thursday; May 12; and Jacki.e:
Knight (low gross), Joyce Russ (low net):
and Jean Hankins (low putts) on·
Wednesday, May 18.
.

1.
I

SSOO

·I
I
Must be signed by purchasing customer I

Track/Run·m'no

RIGHT: NFL stars and
Marshall . alumni Troy Brown,
Chad Pennington and Mike
Bartrum were instructors at
the Bartrum and Brown
Camp.

Local Golf -

I

I

Present this voucher for additional discount on the · I
purchase of any GM Certified Used Vehicle.
I

I

or

II be glwn out
•.
c~.! ndlvid\Jal Position Camp Is open to
r;;.;(:Om1pers &amp;ho'utd bring a glove, bat and .
· ,·...Eagle haktltball Camp
all students who will be going into grades
ha\16 them.
I TUPPERS PLAINS - Eastern High 7·12 this f8.11. The cost will be $250 for
Rich Corvin at 441-0543 Of' 645- .i School will be holding Its 71h annual Eagle overnight campers and 5175 lor commore lnforrmition or to register ·
BaskelbaH Camp May 31 thf'04gh June 3. muters.
·
The cam·p is open to boys and girls who
A brochure ywllt be made available
~:.:~~~~:College cemp ol Champa will be entering Into grades 4. 5 or 6. The ohiobobcats.q·om when it ls~oo,;;pl!ited.
- .The M(lrletta College ' cost Is $30 for pre~registratlon and $40 on For more information on
Camp of Champs will be held the first de~ of camp.
. please - contact
Gdowski
over the course of the summer at Pioneer 1 Included m the camp .cost wlll be lunda· gdawskl @ohla.edu or 740-593- 1t87.
,.uk.
.
·.
mental basketball Instruction, a camp t·
·
·
. .
~...The
Camps. tor' grades 2-8 will be I shirt and basketball &amp;:nd IndiVIdual awa·rds ..
PQrtsmouth 7-on-7 Pasaing Camp
held
5-7 12; 14 and 19•21 wl1ile the are possible.
,
I
PORTSMOUTH ---. The 13th ann~al
I qtiSid•;nc&lt;IIC&lt;,&gt;mnlu·ter Ca
'11 b h
For more intormatlon. contact Howle I Portsmo.uth High, School 7-on·7
1
1
' ''
d
I!JP w
e eld 1 Caldwell 40878 Dirt Seven Road camp Will be Friday, June 29 at
·
·
• Stadium.
gra es 6-12 on
24-28.
·1 R
'
,
0
a camp brochure, call the baseball
eedsvllle, H, 257.72:
Cost t~r the tamp is $75. Only 16 teams
(740)376-4517 or {740)376·4673
wl!l compete. Teams are taken an a firsti .oiche•Ckthe web at www.marlette.edu.
Big Red Beskllball Campa
come•.first-serve basls.
·
To enter; contact Curt Clifford at 740·
scheduled al Rto Granc:te
hold 3·day clinic
RIO GRANDE -The Unlwrslty af Rkl 355-4416 or Ted Newsome at 740..8'21·
Cincinm•li Reds Grande's men's basketball team will hold 2422.
~';!=~~~will be holding a ·3-d8y youth its annuai .B_
Ig Red BUketbatl Camps in ·
•
11
!t
I clinic lor kids agee s, 19 on June Juno at the lyne Center.
at VFW Baseball Field In Marietta
· The achodule for the camps, wHh fees
.
..
·
· ' 1
. are as follows: ·
;
1
MountJin High Running Camp
• Vars!ty and JV Shootout, June 9, $130.
3-&lt;18:y event will focus on the funda:
tobthlldlnBrlllot
! mentttls of pHchlng, hitting and fielding . ·Varsity Shoo1oul, June 10, $130.'
BRISTOL, Va. - Tho Mountain . High
and wtll Include Instruction from former
~ JV Shoo tout, June 11, $130.
Red&amp; greats such 86 Ken Gr"'-· Sr. · ·Junior High Team Camp, JI.Jne 12·14, Running Camp wJII be held July 1~·16 and
....,. . • $190
.
.
18-23 In the mountains of southwestern
·5 VIrginia.
·Dave Parker, Lee Moy. Jaek Billingham I
v.'
.,,.
--•
JV •--t t J
1
othera
·
•. ~ rs., ~""
'IUU ou ,
une , For more l nform~tlon , call Scott
·
oost ~f the clinic: Is $100 If reglstra- · $130.
•
·
Simmons at 1-800-451-IVIC or go to
completed by June 15 and th&amp; ,' -Varsity and JV Team.Camp, June 16· www.mountalnhlghrunnlng.com .
ror ·reglaterlng Is June 17. For ,. 18,$190.
Information. pleaae call 740&lt;37-3lndlvkfual.Camp, June 26·30, $250.
~
__
1 Th,e Individual CBI11P Includes "The
'
· Triple•, the nation's :only·triple elimination
toUrnament
Marietta College to hold aummer
For more Information, call245--7294, 1·
. ·
volloyblll camp
800·262-7201 (ext. 7294), or e·mall Rio
MARIETIA - Tho Marlena College vol·
· Grande assistant ooach Ken French at · leyball pi'Qgram ~IU hold a summer camp
kfrenchOrlo.edu. .
lof ·glrls grades 7·12.
URG Wo. .n·~ lllsko- Ctimp
The camp ...,til run from 8:4~ a.m. to 4
RIO GRANDe - The University of Rio ,p.m., June 13-16 with a reglstr811on fee of
Grande will ttok;t Its women's .basi&lt;Btball $.100, which lnctudes tunch.
camp~ beginning In June at the Lyne
For [110re lnfofmatlon-. call head · coach
Center.
.
Tom Symons at (740)376-4410 or e-mail
The schedule for, the can1ps, with tees him a.t symonst@martena.edu.
will recleve baaketllall are eafollowe:
to participate In fun
- Individual and V11n11ty Team Camp,
_!I_
a camp t~shlrt, plong wtth June19-22, $225. ·
- Varsity and Jv Shootout, June 25,
and refreshments.
•
i $451f pra·roglste...o and $55 $215.
·Varsity and JV Sllootout. July 9. $215.
' ('~f1tr ~~~~~. 1. Contact Duane Eatep at 304- Junior High lndllildual Camp, Ju!y--17M
• --~, ..-, . Chris EUcessor at 441·9638,
.. . '
~t 245·~677 0&lt; Judi at 446· 20,$226. .
• varsity and JVTeam camp, .July 21·23.
so""'"morelnformation.': .I
. t' p.m.
mom·
$225.
·'i
·
'
"
··For more Information , contact David In
~~ grQup instruction if sat from May 21
Smelley al 245-7491 or s-mall him at
througn June 11 . The second group
domelleyOno.edu.
instruction Is June 18 through July HI;
there will.~ no lessons July 2 for the July
· vea I Can' cemp It
4hollday.
..
·
Holdolbtrg ColfeQo
The Instructor will be Tom Hopkins and
TIFFIN -The 215th annua1•ves ·1 Can" class size . is limited to 20 persons ,p&amp;r
basketball camp, featuring author and .hour Ieason. Children ages six and abOve
CQ&amp;ch Stan Kellner, Will be h&amp;Jd June 26· are Wf!lcome. Cost Is $10 per person.
For more Information, contact Mark
~0 a,t Heidelberg College.
The camp If tor boye and girls In grades Danner at 74tl-446-4612 ext. 255.
6·12.
· For mOf'e Information, call Blll .lmmler at
1.
(440)233-7551 or vl&amp;lt their web alto at
www.ye_slcansports~ oom :
·

~

Locals '

2005 SEason Info

SSO Children (under 18 years)

,.,.

ssoo:

:·SSQQ·'CUSTOMER DISCOUNT VOUCHER!
I·
~~
1I
sum of Five Hundred .Dollars &amp; 00/100

'Football
-----·

.,..N,,•..;

.

Yearly Individual Paaaes

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

•otw at.....laH&gt;ou c.mp

· 1

In action at 0.0. Mcintyre all Vinton ( 1- 1) scoring over
P;trk. Living Water took on 30 runs of offense . Good
Middleport. In the women's News wome'n• fall to 0-2 .. ln . .
.
c
Ch
h
game,
Middle port ( 1- 1) th e men's game, Goo. d News
Th e G a II ta ounty · urc
f
k'
. d tt. s rebounded rum last wee s (2-0) r.e mat'ne&lt;.l un· beaten
S o ftba II Leag ue contmue
2005 season with week two loss to Church of God with a with the win, in one of the
on Monday night. Several l i-S win over Living Water better men 's match-ups of
.
.
.
( 1-1 ). Middleport was led by
teams, mcludmg Good News Sara Ward who had two the' night. . Vinton 's men fall
11
men, Church of God's men
Chlpe l' .hom'ers and Leslie Ward who to - .
·
Fello\VS IliP
' and
' · s had a p·air of triples. In the
Rod ney Method tst
' had· the
·
women,
looked to rematn
unbeaten on,. the young ~ea- men's game, Living Water · league 's week two bye.
so n. Also, First Baptist. the . ( I- I) was victoriou s with the Rodney return s to action
. defending men and women's 12-6 win qver Middleport (0- next week against Church of
tournament champi ons, got 2).
God. Rodney's men have "
their season underway after
At Ch urch of God's field, won 12 regular season games
d .
b k
th
havin g the ope ning we ek Churc h of God took on .
Fellowship Chapel. . In the m a row . atmg . ac to . e
byA.'fter liaving. that wee. k ~ne women's game, Fellowship 2003 season, ·3and wMill lodok .
2-0). remained unbeaten for number .! on
on .ay
bye, First · Baptist men and . 1
· h · M
h'l
· h
..
eanw I ~.
t e
women
were ready to get the wt'th· the win, while Church. mg t.
·2005 season underway. First of God's women fell to 1-1. . Rodney WOfllen, have won
took on Faith Baptist. who . In the men's game, . Church seven regular season games
was coming off of a disap- of God (2-0) came away with in a row dating back to last
pointing opening week at the 21-5 win. Fellowship (0- season, and will look for
Rodney Methodist. . In the 2) n~ade a game of it early. on . number eight Monday.
women 's game, First ( 1-0) sconng four runs Ill th~ fmt
The rest of the league
started off the season where mmng ~nd. one more m the action for week three has
they left off last with an 11 -0 second mmng,. before. COG First Baptist vs. Living
victory over Faith (Oc2). In look over sconng the fmal 17
· ·.
·
the men's game, First (1-0) . run s of the game.
Water, Good News v_s.
completed the sweep of Faith
The last game of the Mtddleport, and. Fellowship
(0-2) with the victory in evening was Vinton Baptist Chapel · vs. Fatth Baptist.
which they held Faith to one visiting Good News Baptist. Vinton Baptist has the We,ek
run.
In the w.o men 's game, it was three bye.

~tntlm!' ~ittmi·-~l'ntin£1 • Pa~e 85

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

and Qinics

Good News and Church of
God's men remain unbeaten

Gallipolis Municipal Pool FHa
For 2005 season
(May 28-September 5)

2005

''

Local Softball - .Gallia Church LEaguE

Gallipolis Municipal Pool -

.,

Sunday, May 22,

'U'O}le):ball

T.enms' .

'05 Pontiac G6 GT
Blue, On Star, XM radio,
leather, less than 3,000 miles

'05 Buick LaCrosse Sedan
Silver, leather, On Star, XM
· Radio, Less than 10,000 miles ·

$24 900*

$221900

I

.

Silver, sunroof, cruise, keyless entry,
less than 4000 miles

'04 Impala
Red, cruise, keyless (!ntry

$19,900

$151900

'95 Malibu ·.

'04Aveo

$21900

$111900

Beige,·remote shirt, rear DVD, . Silver, Air, CD, Keyless Entry, Auto
. Great gas mileage!
()n Star, XM radio,
less than 3000 miles
. I

2005JEEP UBERTY SPORT

2005 OODGE RAM 1500 SLT

Quad Cab, 4x4, 5.7 hemi, tow package, anti
spin diff, loaded!!!
STKit2500740

4X4, wind. locks, tilt. cruise, tinted windows

MSRP

MSRP

Dealer Discount
Manuf Rebate
Rebate when
financed through Chrysler - 51.000

2005 DODGE NEON SXT
6 disk cd, cruise, pwr windows, locks, spoiler

.
1
· ...

~·~; \".·.·.,, ·.,

~·~:·

21Jij JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LAREDO
·

· ·

· ·r &lt;r:o lli:Mnl
'

·

group and more!!!

MSRP
$33,305
Dealer Dlacount
· • $2,400.
Manut Rebate
- $2,500
When flna~ through Chrysler .51,000

$27,135

2m5CHRVSI.ER PT CRUISER GT CONVERI1BLE .

Inferno Red/ Heated front seats; chrome
wheels, 6 disk changer. loadedl/1
.

MSRP

STKt25004.0(J

$211,1170
~ $1,500
Manu! Rebate
-..$2,500
Whan !Ina~ through Chryeler -11 .QQQ
.
.
$24,1170
MSRP
D11i11r Discount

· Dealer Discount .
Manuf Rebate

.

with DVD, V6, quad sitting, pwr side door, pwr
·windows, locks, tilt, cruise. CD ond morel

- . __..,.,... ..
. .

~

-

• -

ZECHRVSLERTOVVNAti&gt;COUNTRY · .
· 'r engine, siDw and f!!J, pwr .slidirrg door, pwr ·
1Dirh, quod seating. loaded with equipment/

STKt2504350 ·

Manu! RebaUI

· ·

. · STKil2501400

5Tii:t25004.9 0

Dealer Dlacount

4X4, 'pwr windows, los;ks, tilt cruise, trailer tow

'

and great miles per gallon//!

MSRP

$23,675
-$1,000
• $3,000
$211,675

Dealer [)Iacount
Manu! Rebate

$27,770
With Cummins Diesel, St package, H.O. Cwnm•ins
diesel, anti spin diff, tow package &amp; more!
MSRP
$36,415 ro"'!!!!!•
· ~aterDiscount
. - $3,000
Manuf Rebate
· • $2,000
Rebate when
financed through Chrysler- S1 .000
$30,415

$24,5115
• $1,10()
• $2,500

Rebate·when.
financed through Chrysler -$1.000
$19,965

.

Red; auto, cruise, keyless entry

STKt2502050

$34,770
-$3,000
-$3,500

2005 OODGE RAM 2SOO

'04 GrandAm .

and morel!/

.

.

STKt250l280

MIAP

.. $28,250

Dealer Dlacount

- $1 ,800
- $2,500
When flnenceclthrcugh Chrysler -11 .000 .

Menut Rebate

.

$22,1150

Meigs Baseball - 2005 TVC Champions

a

$13,900

'05 Uplander Van
Sandstone, DVD player On Star
·Power Doors, less ihim $8,000 miles

$241900

"'

l\feigs High School holds
iumual
spring·sports banquet
..
..

-.
,.

STAFF. RE~RT

SPORTS@MYOAILYTR~SUNE.COM

'03 Silverado 4x4 Ext.

:." ROCKSPRINGS ·- Meigs
, lligh school held its annual
;&gt;ring sports banquet last
. ~esday. Below is a list of
bJ&gt;norees . .

...

DK Grey, Z71, towing, Bedliner,
Less tlran 16000miles

Red, 4 Door, Cruise, Keyless Entry

$181500

$251500

•

• ·

BasebaU

.

Special award winners ~. Fife (2nd team all TVC);
~bel Wi~al. (2nd team all
. tvC); Mtke Davis ( I st team ·
AU TVC); Jeremy Blackston
Cl st team all TVC, l st team all
fstrict, MVP TVC Ohio
!ivision}.
• Team members -. David
~sci, Greg · Musser, Aaron
Story, Eric . Wood, · Cody
Davtdson, Cory Dill, Daylon
ns, David Poole, Weston Barr, Talisha Beha, April
Tyson George, Matt Butcher, Emil~ Davis, Kelsey
baden, Eric VanMeter, Josh Fife, Molly Smith, Hannah
Aniber Burton,
1y, Ty Wayland, Jeremy Williams,
&amp;ackston, Eric Cullums, Cecilia Core, Nicole Ginther,
IIIJiguel Diaz, Edward Fife, Chl!-'sie Manley, . Jennife~
cton Grover, . Ross ~ell, Srmth, Whitney Srmth, Casst
-, nme ~. Chet. W1g~. Whari, Samantha Cole, Joey
ota South, MiJre DaviS, . Hapmg; Melia Whan, Renee
Chuck Davis.
Bailey,
Ashley
Baylor,
:
Jennifer Cade, Megan Games,
:
Softball
Samantha fierce, Jenna Wilt. ·
':Special award winne!l llelia Whlln (All TVC. all disBoys Tradt;
t); Meg. an Garnes (All
Team members - Michael
C. all district); Joey Haning Champeon, Branden Fisher;
TVC); Samantha Pierce . Robert Foreman, Chris Goode,
·•
'fVC); Renee Bailey (All Corey Wilson, · · Michael
C. TVC MVP, l.st team all Blaettnar, Maik Cozart, Dustin
~trict, all Ohio softball team) Knapp,
Andy MeAngus,
· ,Team members
Amy Casey, Richardson,
Brad
Q

Meigs

- 2005 TVC Champions

E

· Soulsby, Josh Taylor. Chris
Atkinson,
Ja1me . 'Ellis,
Brandon Kimes, Josh Kimes,
Kylen King , Andy Kinnan,
Grant Arnold, Gerald Mintz. .

E

Girls 1)'8ck
Team members - Melissa
Grue5er, Tiffany Mytko,
Cassandra Patterson, Lesley .
· Preece, Casey Smith, Patti
Vining, Meghan Clelland,
Sarah Engle, . &lt;:;ayla Lee,
Qlelsea Fahey, Ashley Samar,
Ashley Savage.
·
Academic All TVC - Ed
Fife, David Poole, Jeremy
Blackston, Eric Cullums,
Samantha Pierce, Renee
Bailey, Samantha Cole · ·

'04 Express Pa~s Van

Silverado Ext· 4x4

· Pewter, i71, Bedliner, Towing

White, 15 pass, cruise, rear air
keyless entry

$25,500

$231900

a • • a a • • • • •

-.

•

a •

a •

•

•

(740) 286-2171
'
1-800-700-5150
c::';l;:l M MIMWf,.

700 East Main Street

' IE\U.lllm
---

�.,

,

,·

Sunday, M;ay 22,

.

....

t.

PageB6

OUTDOORS

6unbap ~ime~ -ientinel

..

\

__ /

-

f

·cl

~unbap tltimts -i&gt;entinel

2005

..

Memorial Day weekend marks
traditional start of boating season

·Weekly Ohio fishing report
COLUMBUS (AP)- The weekly fishing report provid&amp;l by the Divisiorl ot Wiktlrfe of
the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
SOUTHWEST OHIO

Grand Lake Sl. Marya (Auglaize and Mercer countres). - Cattrsh cue berng caught
by anglers using night crawlers, cut bait (shad) . or shrimp as bait. Fish the bart along
th B bottom, near the shorehne. Use a No. 2 bartholdrng hook. largemouth bass are
being ~ught by anglers using jigs, crank barts. or rubber worms Frsh the hard flat bot·
toms located along the brush and rocky areas. Choose bii.Je and black colors tor artifidal lures. A few large crappie are being taken using a small jrg tipped wrth a ti'.'e minnow. ChOOSe a variety of different colors lor the jigs and use a variety ot hook sizes.
Fishillg is good m the channels areas where there is brush and woody debns. Keep
the bait deeper than 12 feet deep.
~•eaar Creek Lake (Clinton, Greene, and Warren count res) - 8lueg111 and sunfrsh
are being caught .by anglers using curly tails, jigs with plaslic bodies. live mlnriows,
earthworms, or wax worms as bait. When using ·an artili&lt;;: r~;~ l lure , good cd lor choices
· are white or chartreuse. Fish !rom the shoreline and keep the bait between 2 and 10
under a bobber. Cast into areas with wood debris and submerged tree$ or
1 ~et de~p
f':'rush.
Also look tor good fisl:lmg o~rtunitres in areas with rocky bo"oms. Use a No.
2 tine-wire hook tor live baits. Anglers are catchlpg crappre by I.JSing jigs with plastic
bodies, curly tails. small tube jigs, or live minnows as bait. Cast from a boat or shoreline and fish near submerged trees and brush . Choose white red. blue. or chartre use
colON! tor artificial baits. Two-color artificial lure comblllatrons are WO!kmg the best.
Keep the bait about2-to 10-feet deep and under a slip bobber. A No.2 or 3 tine-wire
hook is a good choice. Fish slowly along deep cover and structure. Tt)ere is a nineinch size limit. There is also a Kids Fishing Pond just north of the beach tt)at was just
stocked on May 7.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYTRI BUNE. COM

'

SOUTHEAST OHIO
Piedmont lake (Belmont County)- Water clarity is a l_ittle murky, but waler level is
nOrmal. Saugeye 15 to 20 inches in length can be caught on crank-baits arid jigs tipped
wilh minnows while still fishing. Troll with crank baits when fishing from a boat. The
best saugeye fishing areas are in the shallow co\les and around sandy points in ·four
to five fee1 of water. Large'mouth bass 10 to 11 inches will· hit w!&gt;ite and light green
spinner baits and buzz baits fished around trees and rocky·poinls. Yellow perch 6 to
1-1 inches r;nay be caught in the shallow coves on jigs tipped wrth minnows fished over
brushy areas. Smallmauth bass up to 1 ~ inches prefer red and green spinher baits·.
U&amp;e a stow cast and retrieve in five feet of water. Crappies 6 to 9 Inches will hit minnows with a bobber in six feet of water around downed trees in the coves out of the

wind.

5eneet lake (Guernsey and Noble counties)- White bass 6 to 15 rnches ca·n be
caught on yellow and red jig heads and small sprnner barts. Crapp•e 6 to 12 inches will
M jig heads tipped with minnows over a bobber in 6 to 8 feet of water around !allen
trees. Saugeye 11 to 20 inches prefer crank baits, jigs tipped with minnows or night
crawlers. or jig heads with yellow or red heads. The best area for saugeye is near the
swimming beach. Catfish 12 to 18 inches will hit night crawlers fished on the bottbm
In the muddy water areas where the small streams dump into the lake.
Lake Rupert (Vinton County) - Boat anglers cari catch smallmouth bass in the 10to 16-inch range on buzz baits, ~nners, and purple worms around weed beds near
shore and around downed trees. Shore anglers will find their best fishing around weed
beds and beaVer dams tor white crappie up to seven inches in size.
OHIO RIVER
Scloto Ccunty - Both the 011io River and SCioto Rrver 1n. this area are in good .
shape wlttl water temperature averaging _63 degrees. AI Greenup Dam. anglers are
catching hybrid st~iped bass with river shiners. Use a heavy lead sinker to weight the
sl"l 'nem on. the bottom near the wall and then pun up about 6 Inches to catch 2-to 14·,
pound fish. 'The jlwr shiners can be caught In .cast nets up againSt -the wall. Stripers
ere being caught on 11\.9 eight-inch shad thrown out toward the dam. Anglers can catch
the bait shad below the access area. Skipjactt herring are being caught mostly for bai t
and can be caught on 112·ounce jig heads with 'light twi5ter tarts, two on a line about
one foot apart. Crappie 10 to 14 inches are being caught on cane poles with minnows
around brush plies in the Holiday Point Marina area.
Tip of the Week
Along riwrs and creeks fish the deep pools on sunny clear 'days or fish rn the mornIng or early eiiBning hours. On days that are overcast or cloudy, fish anywhere along
the banks of the stream.
·

On tho Net:
www.ohiodnr.com
wWw.ohlodnr.com/WildtueJFishingfrecip&amp;s!fr&amp;eipe.htm
http:llwww.dnr.state.oh.uslwildlifelfishingtfreporttwalleyerunreport .htm
http://WWw.dnr.state.oh.us/WIIdlifeiFishlnglfalrporllsteelhead.htm
http://seaboard.ndbc.no ali .gov/data/Forecasts/FZUS61.KCLE. him I

Send us your outdoor news
If you are holding a fi shing or archery tournament. or any event related to outdoo rs send us the information so we can help get the word out. E-maillo sports@mydailytribune.com. phone us at {740) 446-2342 eKt. 33 or drop it oft at our Gallipolis or
Pomeroy office.

..
C()LUMBUS ~
· . . ~emonal !Jay weekend •. Ma) 27-30:
mark~ the trad ntonai start ot
Ohto s summer hoattng seas(Jn and the Oh ro Department
ot
Na tmal
o Re source~
(O DNR) encourabes boaters
to keep salety ()n the water as
th~ u· htgh_est pnonty.
.
W~ w.tnt people to enJOY
Ohto s waters and . we also
want them to come hom~
&gt;afely at the end of the day, .
satd Ken A)ve~ .. c~tel of !he
ODNR _ " Dtvt ston . of
Watercratt . When the proper
measures are taken•. boattng
acc tdents can be a~otded and
ltves can be saved.
The ODNR Divi sion of
Watercraft repon s that while
boating has grow n more popular over the last 25 years,
fatal ities have declined during
. that period. The majority of
fata li ties that do occur involve
males age 18 to 50.
Speed is rarely a factor in
boating-related fatalities , say
watercraft official s. Falling
overboard and drowning
because of the failure to wear
'a life jacket (or wear it properly) is the single biggest culprit in boatin g fatalities. In
2003. Ohio recorded 19 boating-related fatalities, followed
by a re~:ord low seven fatalities in 2004.
Three people have died this
year in boating- related .fataliti es. in Mercer and Fairfield
·counties. None (,\{ the three
were wearing . life jackets'
when their boats capsized or
were swamped in rough
water.
'' In each of these cases,
the re . were lifejacket s on
board , but the victims were
not wearing them at the time
the boat capsized." Alvey

said.
He em phas ized that loday's
life jac.ket ~ &lt;~re designed to be
lightweight and comfonable .
not lik e the bulky; orange
ves ts .of . the past, which still
serve as effective fl otatio n
devices. "Today\ styl.es are
more appealing tu !hose who
shou ld be weming them."
Alvev said.
Ohio law requires any person riding a jet ski or being
towed behind a boat to wear a
life jacket. . In addition. any
child under age 10 who is riding on a boat less than 18 feet
long, must wear a life jackets
when on the water.
Boaters .are. 'also reminded
that, as with driving .a motor
vehicle, drinking alCohol
·
---

while operatin g a boat is a
co mbina tion.
lethal
Wate rcraft officers will issue
citations to boaters who are
driving a boa1 while under the
intluen'' e of drugs or alcohol.
A person with a blood alcohol
-conlent of .08 or more is call"
&gt;idered legally intoxicated in
Ohio.
,
Additional factors to take
into consideration when boating are the location of other
watercraft, water levels, currents or drift , wind and waves.
A weather radio and a cellular
phone are "must haves" when
boating on Lake Erie or . in
rural and unpol?ula(ed areas.
. "One way to make ·sure a
day on the water is· fun and
safe is by completing a boater

~ duca tion course," Alvey
said. "The classes are offered
statewide and li sting s are
available ·
onli ne
at
ohiodnr.com and through ·
. home study."
Lake Erie water levels are
expected to be at or slightly ··
above normal throughout the
summer. However. boaters
still need to watch for sandbars and .banks, which are
generally marked . Obstacles
in Lake Erie can change from
year to year, so bo~ters should
not rely on outdated Charts.
For rulditi01wl · ill/ormation
about boater edu cation •
courses a11d other . boating
pt'ogram&gt; and apportuniiies,.
visit the ODNR web site at
ohiodnuom.

' BY BETH SERGENT

Ohio National Guardsmen on KSU 's campus were armed wi th· Ml
combat soldiers were carrying in Vietnam at the time.

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that tim e. he was sta nding
·uuNTINGTON. their lives."
W.Va . ~ "Orice it
Smith remembered the near a metal statue on the
·
escalated and start- faces of the guardsmen.
com mon s known as the
ed, nobody was
"They had just worked a Pagoda, witnessing the comgoing to back out of it."
· trucker 's strike in Cleve(arid. motion as it escalated.
That's how J. Preston They were kids too."
The Pagoda would later be
Smith of Huntington rememSmith recalled the day of hit with bullets.
bers the moments that led up the shootings as being so hot
''There was ·so much noi se
1312 Eastern Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio ·
to the shootings at Kent State that one of the guardsmen that no one could hear anyUniversity in Kent on May 4, who was wearing a ·gas mask thing," he added about the
Call -U6-.l7-'4
1970, that resulted :in the fainted . Thi s notched up the point where the guard turned
deaths of students Allison ·tension and created a rumor from the ,fence and faced the
·Krause, William Schroeder, that a sniper was Ofi one of students once again . " I canJeffrey Miller and Sandra the nearby roofs · ·where not explain the pandemonium
Scheuer,
crowds were gathering. at that precise moment in
At the time of the shoot- appearing to outnumber the time."
ings, Smith was 28 years old students on the · university 's
That "precise moment . in
and director of radio and TV commons below.
time" lasted for 13 seconds of
information at KSU.
Smith was himself on the M I gunfire. Once the shots
"Any reporters from televi- commons when the guards- erupted f,om members of the
sion or radio stations had to men began adv ancing on the guard, Smith said, he knew
go through me to get onto students, some of whom were ileath would be a result as he
campus with a press pass," s taging a protest. The guards- ran for cover into the KSU
Smith said. "1 must' ve given men moved in a "v:· fmma- .A&lt;:!Jninistration building. H~
out 200 press passes the days tion to disperse the crowd. did not witness any of the
leading up to the shootings to Tear gas was also used to dis- . injured students fall in those
electronic media from CBS perse the students, who were initial moments of pandemoto the BBC to National unwillingly being pu shed nium and was high on shQCk
Public Radio."
upwards onto B Ianket Hill and adrenaline when he
His job also entailed where the soldiers eventually arrived back at his office in
expanding the radio nelwork · ran out of room and into a the administration building . .
for the university's football fence, in essence boxing
"When I got back to my
and basketball teams, being themselves in with students office, I thought, 'whaf am l
the ~olor announcer for the now behind them.
going to do?"' Smith said, ·
baseball team . and sending
"There is no question that remembering that he felt so
the music department's the studen.ts were· throwing overwhelmed at that point
recordings to local radio sta- rocks at the guardsman,"
Smith said , explaining that at
tions.
-Please see Kent. cs
His job changed dramati9\,\ t-4P:\t
cally when campus u.nrest
erupted into violence that
May afternoon .
Now for an appointment
Smith experienced firsthand the disorderly events
that preceded the shootings,
including
vandalism in
• Peoplo seem to mumble mom lroquontty
• Your lamrly complains that you play t11e TV
downtown Kent by protesterS
• You hear. but have trouble understanding
loc loudly
.
and the burning of Kent's
all the words in a conversat,on.
• You l1av•J bccri told that you speak too loudly.
ROTC ·building on campus
• You olten ask people 10 repeat themselves
• 't"::,,r noere1ce nng1ng ;n yovr er1rs
following President Richard
If 'ftHI trperltrtrt any of '""' •rmptom• yoir n•efl ci FREE ,.,,., ,.,,~
Nixon's announcement that
· he· d sent troops into ·
HEARING LOSS OR JUST EARWAX?
NERVE DEAFNESS CAN BE HEtPED!
Cambodia.
·
"I stood beside the building .
as it burned and I watched the
vandaL~ throw · the firemen
Do You Wear
Hearing Aids... ·
.down, chop up the tire hoses
ArM Still .....
and throw fire bombs, but I .
HMriag PrtW.Mt?
did not recognize a .single
• Oofl~ ycur ~lei wtriSIIt?
• ~ -.,our·t&lt;lr'i letl
face from campu s," Smith
phJQ3fl:i-\IP?
recalled. '.'Those people got
• Dot~ yolJr 1'011:8 ICIUnd
loU&lt;!,
out of town before the
• Oo ·;ou
trO\Ib(f
!leillillg 1tlt i)hOI!t~
National Guard came onto
• Art' \1\e toundl MMt
campus, in my opinion."
CI"IOIJgn tot twa 10
_
y
_
_
.
,
_
IIIHIIll51&amp;!\d1
HEMING TEST
• Smith feels the presence of Professor Glenn Frank appeals to angry students to disperse
• '· ·-=-·
COUPOIIIIZ5· VAtU!
the Ohio National Guard only following the shootings at KSU . Frank's appeals are credited
exacerbated the campus with saving the lives of students and sparing more bloodshed . ·
protests concerning the esca'.
lation of the Vietnam
ConfliCt into Cambodia.
"It was a conflict at that
point. not a war with a' winning exit strateg y," Smith
Occupational Therapy
said. "Those kids felt like the
campus was their home .and
S~rvices
they were being taken over."
are available at the following
On the surface. Smith's
views may sound ·liberal and
locations:·
slanted towards th.e students,
but he claims he is a conservHolzer Clinic Sycamore ·
ative
Republican
who
•'
pr~sently supports President
740'-446-5447
Bush's war on terror and war
. in Iraq. A veteran _of the
Contact your doctor for a referral to our rehab
Holzer Clinic
United States Army, serving
staff or for more information. please ca)l one of
Jackson
from l 963 to l 966, he said he ·
74&lt;),.395-886,8
was also sympathetic to the
our locations
National Guardsmen sent to
KSU by then-Gov. James A.
'Holzer Clinic Meigs
Rhodes, whom Smith blames
740-992-0060
for the bulk of the tragedy.
· "Those young men were
in a terrible situation. They
mus!'ve been . scared for
•

Hearing Aid Center

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. Photos courtesy of the J. Preston Smith collection given to him by KSU journalIsm students, and the Kent State Libraries Department of Special Collections .

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Sunday, May 22, 2005

Fishing derby time approaches

PROUD TO BEA
PART OB YOUR LIFE.
)

-The
Times-Sentinel

Submitted plloto

Pittured are ·members of the planning committee of the
upcoming Colorectal Cancer Seminar, clockwise from left,
Sharon Shull, RN;· Holzer Hospice : Karen . Stocker. RD, LD,
Holzer Medical Center Nutrition Services Department: Beth
KroJJse. American Cancer Society: Bonnie McFarland , RN,
BSN , HMC Community Health and Wellness; and Bethany
Purkey, Holzer Home Health Services. The seminar will be held
J~ne 7 at the HMC Education &amp; Conference Center.

Colorectal cancer
seminar set for June 7

GALLIPOLIS - Holzer and volunteer hours that equal
Medical' Center recently to ten years of employment at
observed Volunteer Week and Holzer Medical Center.
honored its volunteers at the
In addition to service
hospital' s 33rd
annual awards , volunteers receiving
Volunteer Awards
and hours bars included: 200
Recognition Program.
hours - Bertie Rou sh; 300
This year's . theme was hours - Brandi (\'layo; 400
"Volunteers Live Well. Love hours - Loui se Nlckels; 600
Mw;h, Volunteer Often." A hours - . George McFarland:
dinner was served to the vol- 1,500 hours
Naomi
·
unteers and g u~ sts that includ- . Gooderham : 2,000 hours ed members of the hospital 's Jeane Fi sher: 2,500 hours administrative staff. ~md staff Mick Gilben; 3,500 hours members who benetit daily . Velma Rue; 4,000 hours from· the dedicated work of Ann Longstaff; 4,500 hours
the hospital's volunteers.
- Viviem1e Trowbridge and
Service award recipients Wanda Waugh: 5,500 hours included:
Diz Richards; and 11,000
100 hours -· Bnindi May hours- Ellabelle McDonald.
and Benie Roush; 500 hours
"Our volunteers are · a11
.- Roxanne Hanington and invaluable·resource who selfGeorge McFarland; 5,000 lessly give their time , talents
hours - Maxine Carmen and and skills to benefit . others
Diz Richards : and 20,000 every day,'', · said Dawn
Hours - Jessie Payne, who Halstead,
director
.of
was given special recogni!ion Volunteer Servi'ces at Holzer
of her man.y years of service Medical Center.

. GALLIPOLIS _ : The Beth Krouse, ACS · Health
American Cancer Society · promotion· coordinator; Joan
(ACS ), .in collaboration with Schmidt;
ACS
Cancer
Hol~er Medical Center, will
Resource Center volunteer
host a Colorectal Cancer coordinator; Kim Painter,
Seminar on Tuesday, June 7, ACS Patient Navigator; Ken
2005. in the Education &amp; Moore, BS, ·RTN, director,
Conference Center at Holzer Holzer Center for Cancer
Medical Center.
Care : Karen Stocker, RD,
Registration will begin at LD, director of Nutrition
8:30 a.m., with the seminar Services at HMC; Deanna
following from 9 a.m. to Tribe, CFCS. OSU Extension
1noon. The goal of the free ·Agent: and Manha Wilson,
seminar is .to educate regis- BA RT(R). (M), (CT). senior
tered nurses and licensed product specialist, ORTHOpractical nurses on cancer BIOTECH.
prevention and wider use of
Members of the planning ·
established screening tests.
committee include Krouse,
Colorectal cancer is cancer Stocker, Bonnie McFarland,
that develops in the colon or RN , BSN, director of the
the rectum . The American HMC Community Health and
Cancer Society estimates that Wellness
Department;
in 2005, approximately Bethany Purkey, Community
145,290 people will be diag- Relations coordinator, Holzer
nosed with colorectal cancer. Home Health Services; and
Cancers of the colon and rec- Sharon Shull. RN, patient
. tum combined are the third care coordinator for Holzer
most common type of cancer Hospice.
in the United States.
For pre-registration and
Keynote speaker for the contact hour information, call
event will be . Dr. James Susan Robens in the HMC ...,
Ungerleider, medical director Education Department at
for the Hol zer Center for (740) 446-5313. Due to limitCancer Care.
.
ed seating, pre-registration is
Other speakers will include required.

FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

In 1758, young George
Washington decided to seek a
seat in the Virginia House ·of
Burgesses. He had been
stymied in an earlier bid, he
believed, by one . crucial
error:· he had not "treated" the
voters properly - which is to
say, he had not provided them
" with sufficient . alcoholic
refreshment.
This time, determined to correct his ways, he purchased
some 144 gallons of wine,
rum, hard cider, punch and
beer for distribution to support. ers. At more than two votes per
gallon, Washington's etlan
proved successful, launching a
rather distinguished career in
American politics.
More than a century and a
half later. after the American
temperance movement had
finally. won its tight to pro"hibit alcohol, a considerable
percentage of the . nation 's
populace remained staunchl y
faithful to the founders· tradi -

tion, using their ingenuity to
acquire any and all available
a'lcohol. And in the early
months of 1921 , a dedicated
· group of brewers, physicians
and imbibers · attempted to
convince the U.S. Congress
that beer was "nothing less
than vi tal medicine.
Whatever craven thirsts
might have inspired· its advoca!e_s, the righl of physicians
to prescribe "medical beer"
was the subjec1 of intense
national debate.
Smithsonian
magazine
found that the arguments had
less to do with the number of
likely prescriptions than with
the long-term' implications of
legalizing the eonsum)ltion of
beer. It was ·what politicians
today call a ·wedge issue:
. unimponant, even ridiculous,
in itself. but with potentially
vast leeal and cultur'll consequences.
Temperance
advocates
denounced the ·'medical
beer" campaign as an attempt
to play fao.t and loose with the
law - an effort. they said.
that could · lead only to

.-

·'chaos" and "Bolshevi'sm."
Prohibition's opponents, by
contrast, urged the measure
as nothing less than a matter
of life and death.
The idea of alcohol as' medicine was not new. As historian W_ J. Rorabaugh wrote,
Americans in the early 18th.
ceptury classified whiskey,
rum and other liquors as
"medications that could cure
colds, fevers, snakebites,
frosted toes, and broken legs.
and as relaxants- that would
relieve depression, reduce tension, and enable hardworking
laborers to enjoy a moment of
happy, . frivolous · camaraderie." But ·if many doctors
&lt;;onceded the efficacy of hard
liquor, the case of .beer was
rather more controversial.
Beer's ' champions Often
pointed to its relaxing qualities. and to its nutritional
value. In a lengthy ode to
British ale, for instance. one
writer sugge sted that beer
was so chock-full of vitamins
that it had saved the "British
race" from extinction during
food-scarce plague years.

.

Submitted photo

From left are Maxine Carme n '(5,000 hours) , Jessie Payne ·
(20,000 hours) and Roxan.ne Hanington (500 hours ). some of
the volun\eeFs who were recently presented with service
.awards. Standing at far right is Dawn Halstead. c!irector of
Volunteer Services at Holzer Med1cal Center. Not p1ctured are
add i tio~al service award recipients. Brandi May, George .
McFarl and, Diz Richards and Bertie Roush.
"AJong witJ:t their Lledication
F(ir more in formation
and cornmim\ent, our volun- ahout th~ volunteer oppor.ttlteers 'brighten lives wiU1 their niti es Holz~r Medi cal Center
gentle touch and kind acts to h:i' to o.ffer. contact Halstead
everyone they help.'' she added. at (740) -1-16-5056

Meet .Fasttnan's Foodlarids
Gradua~g Oass of 2005!
We're real proud of our graduating employees! You've seen them
working ln our· stores when they weren't in the classroom. Now.
· . they'teGRADUATING from High School &amp;..College!

Randy Tlbbet1s

Twin River~
Pt. Pleasant HS.

Senior art show, contest set
RIO GRANDE- The Area
Agency on Agirig District 7
Inc. (AAA7) will host its 23rd
Annual Senior Citizens An ·.
Show and · Essay/Poetry
Cqntest beginning May 23-27
through May 31-June 3, from
10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Anwork, photos and essays
will be on display in the
Greer Museum on the cainpus of the University of Rio .
Grande.

.•

There are presently. 140
paintings on d1splay, 22 photos and 30 essays and poems.
The public is .invited and the
admission is free.
A tea reception will be held
Friday, June 3, from 1 until
2:30 p.lll. for the. participants
and anyone who would )ike
to attend.
For more details,call ·
Sharon Bowman at. (740)'
245-5306.

.Proud to be a'part ~your lifo.

•

.

;,Sunday Tlme~-5entlnel • Sub$Crtbe t~ •
"

james Rldlardm
. Twin Rivers
Pt. Pleasant HS.

,,

~2.342 C!i' ~-2155
'

-

IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF KANA'I't'HACOUNT'I'. WUT VIRGINIA
KENNETH S. REYNOlDS,

A&amp;l COMPANY, GRANITE STATE INSURANCE ·

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1

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2005

.HMC recognizes volunteer staff

BY JAMES SANDS

Discuss finances before wedding .- ·and after

Snnday, May 22,

·&gt;

-

Hue and cry over connc books drew local comment

juvenile crime. One psychia- "Throughout history. the fall
trist, Dr. Fredric Wertham. of every great power On Sept. II , 1954, Vic even wrote a book alleging Persia. Greece. Rome or
Sherow in his Gallia Times that all of the juvenile delin- France - has been preceded
column. "Along The River quents he treated had in com- by a moral collapse from .
It's fishing derby time again
on sale tomorrow. They'll be Bank," told about tl)e cam- mon that they were readers of within. If we are to shield
$35 in addition the usual reg- paign in Gallipolis organized comics, Of course it should ourselves froin the same colfor the Meigs County Fish
·and Game Association mem-· ·
istration fees . $25 of that will , by the Knights of Columbus be said that some 90 percent Iapse, we must make sure the
of all youth ri,n the ~oun try leaders of the future develop
go for' the Cincimwti Reds' to clean up comic books. ,
bers Who are. gearing up for
Sherow said, ·•rt is part of were comic' ·book readers .a high moral integrity."
Community Charity. that' s
another great outing for kids .
"Comics seem to glorify
grow·
ing nation wide trend tren.
a
.
for youth sports program . .
. The derbies has been
Charlene
.
education and a variety of aimed at ·taking off the · Presid.:1\l Eisenhower even in their ability to produce
going on for years. Dave
newsstands the lewd, sexy. appointed a comic book czar. lawless situation s, and to
health and social services.
·Hoeflich
• Doerfer; club president, says
crime
and other magazines Charles
Now if you are interested, .
F.
Murphy. idolize the individual who
plans are moving right along
the
law."
for the June II , . 8 a.m . to
and I'm sme Louise Gilmore whi ch· so many claim are Accardi ng to the czar, there circumvents
· noon event, and the usual 70
of Pomeroy. will be. they can polluting the minds of our were lJ publishers. all in Buckner blamed the probor so youngsters· are expectbe ordered at any deputy reg- youth, and on which many New York City. who !lad a lem on parents who.refuse to
ed to participate.
·
production of " Bye. Bye istrar "s. oftlce , bv mail or au thorities are placing at virtual monopoly on the supervi se their children's
Everything's free , even the Birdie" and have already ·set onl ine at www.oplates,. com
least part of the blame for .comic book industr.y. It was reading but he also stated.
food, and everyone goes dates for auditions. A preIn case you don't know. the ever-increasing spread estimated that comic . book "Freedom of the press has
away with a prize. Just be 15 audition meeting will be held Louise has ·been a Reds fan of juvenile del inque'ncy sales totaled about 72 million always bee1i subject to the
years or younger and you pn at 6:30p.m. June 2 in the old for years and has a v.ast col- marked of late by some . of dollars a month. ·
right of civilized society to
participate. They really like Middleport · Elementary lection ·af souvenirs, .program the most vicious crime s and
More money in 1954 was protect it, elf from condian adult to accompany each School new home of the books; uniforms and other other acts."
spent on comic books that on tions injuring the health .
child, but no one is turned conimu'nity theater group.
stuff which from time to time
Sherow claimed that free- . textbooks for all of the welfare and morals of the
away ifthey dop 't has someThe auditions have been · she has used tn lawn dtsplay dom of the press not only nation's elementary and high people. " (Buckner) .
•
one · to accompany · them . scheduled for 9 to II ·a.m . .an to show her support of the protected free speech, but schools. The amount spent on
In Gallipolis in 1954,
There will be plenty of help I to 3 p.m. on JLuie 2, and team . Everyone who travel s moral values too.
comic books was four times • comic books were mostly
from the members.
2:30 p.m. on June 6. Casting . Umon Avenue know;; where
"When common everyday tnebook budgets of all of the sold through drugstores and
This brings us to funding. roles are for one I0-year old her heart is.
moral
standards are violated, libraries, in the United States at bus stations. According to
While · the Fish and Game boy, . a large number · of
•••
these people. if you wanted to
folks contribute a lot, they sti II teenagers from 13 up, boys · There's no place like home. as they are by .so many pre: combined.
sent-day
magazines,
the
right
sell
magazines you had to
Father
.
Adolph
depend on . some donations and girls. several adult men · Just ask Jim Freeman, who
display
what the . syndicate
free
press
is
to
all
intents
Golubiewski
of
St.
Louis
of
from local businesses and and · women. and chorus for arrived Thursday from Iraq
Catholic
Church
in gave you. The American
organization. Last night, the · everyone over 6.
on a two-week leave. Not and purposes violated:"
News Co. had a · virtual
The
comic
book
industry,
Gallipolis
.
stated,
"a
ny
Eagles had a benetit spaghetti
If you want to know more only is he delighted tb have
time with family and friends , following World War II, had influence that undermi'nes monopoly on the di stribution
dinner to help with derby call Cathy Erwin, 992-6759.
expenses. If you would like to
but the time just to sit back made some dramatic shifts , the moral integrity of our of magazines then. In 1956,
•••
be a part of outing for kids, the
1f you are a big fan. of and enjoy the natural beauty going from war stories and children undermines their the syndicate was broken up
place to send donations is American 's lirst professional and quiet of Appalachia · con\edy to horror and brutal- good character and good by t~~ courts and by that
Meigs County Fish and Game team - · vou know, the Ohio. His tour of duty is now ity. For instance, EC order in their· community, same year television had
Association, P.O Box 128. Cincinnati Reds - you ' will about half over and come late Comics, which at one time and we cannot expect our caused the sale of comics to.
Chester. ·ohio 45720.
soon be able to show your December. he looks · forward printed Bible stories and youth to become good citi- become half of what it had
. comedies, switched to such zens if we allow such litera- been in 1950.
pride with a new specialty to being back home.
•••
(Charlene
Hoejlich
is
genSo you want to be an actor. license plate.
books as "Haunt of Fear," ture to be put before them
The magazine·industry also
The plates from the Ohio eral IJUinager of The Daily ''Vault of Horror " "Tales day after day."
The River City Players are
developed
a code that for.
'
well into planning their fall Bureau of Motor Vehicles go Sentinel in Pomeroy.)
From The Crypt," "Weird
J. Edgar Hoover, FBI direc- bade the use of such words as
and
"Weird tor, stated that the campaign horror, terror, walking dead,
Science"
Fantasie's."
again st comic books was . torture, vampires, ghouls and
In these books. fathers tor- aimed at those that glorify cannibals. Most of the objectured their children, toddlers crime and those that carry tionable magazines. like the
It's June - a popular
both agree on wl]at it's to be plotted their parents' demise, covers. which are designed to various. EC Horror Comics,
used for, and how much you young couples seethed with excite the youthful interest . basically went out of busimonth for weddings. If
you 're planning on getting
will each contribute to it.
homicidal venom and sexy into delv.ing into the maga- ness.
What are your investment women lured blockheaded zine's contents.
married this month, you've
(James Sands is a special
got a lot of things to think
goals? J'alk about those goa!s men to their doom.
One advocate of cracking correspondent for
the
about: Guests, flowers, honfor which you'll want to
down
In
the
early
1950s,
the
U.S
.
on
co-mic
books
was
Sunday
Times-Sentinel.
He
April
eymoon, etc. · However,
invest, such as a house or. a Senate began · to hold hear- · Lamar Buckner, the president can be contacted by writi11g
Rice
there's one factor you won't
specific retirement lifestyle. ings about the connection of the national Jaycees orga- to 1040 Military Road,
want to overlook: How you
If you have children, you between comic books and nization.
He
stated, Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)
may
want
to
save
for
college.
will handle finances as a cou- ·
In any case, once you know
pie? It may not be as much ·
fun to talk about as the food
what you're savlng for, you '11
you will have at your recep- have plenty of time, and be able to establish approprition, but a&amp; your marriage aren't stressed out over wed- ate investment strategies,
possibly with the help of a ·
progresses, it will be far more ding plans or other issues.
And don't keep any financial professional: Keep
. .
'
'
imponant.
..
secrets
Bring
out
all
·
h
24' ................~ •••••'1259
In fact, financial troubles sources of income, all debts, in mind t at you and your
1SX30 Oval ......'1779
Sunday
spouse may have different
are often cited as one of the
leading causes of divorce. all savings and investments tendencies that is. you might
And, as you go throl,lgh life, - everything you both will favor aggressive investments,
•• ··1
yo.u'll find that you can't pre- bring into the marriage. Once while your spouse may be SubiCI'tbe umy· i ~2342
you're married, neither one more conservative. You'll
vent every type of financial of
you should be surprised at
woe, such as a job loss, an what the other owns or owes. need to reach. som~ common
unexpected medical bill, and
After the wed!ling:
ground if you're going to
so on. But there's a lot you
Chart your course _
invest in a way that will satiscan control -· if you work Early in your marriage, you'll fy both of you.
together.
want to malee some long-last&lt;;ommunicati?n is ·key · Before the wedding:
ing financial decisions. Here · Ulu.mately, the b1g~est factor
Open the books -· Before are two to consider: Joint or behtnd your financ1al success
you get married, ·you should , sep·arate checking? Should as a couple isn't how much
already know your fiancee's you maintain a joint checking you make or how cleverly
temperament, likes and dis-. account,
two . separate ~?u manage .Your money -.
likes and favorite activities. · accounts, or a joint account ll s .how well you commum. ~ut do you know how much plus individual accounts?
· cate. I( you're always on the
money he or she , makes?
There 's really no one right same page. your story w1ll
How about debt? How large answer for everyone. You likely have a happy ending.
are his or her debt payments might want to use a joint
(April E. Rice is an investeach month? What amount of checkbook to pay for the mellt representative with
savings will your future mongage. utilities, car pay- Edward Jones Investments,
spouse bring into the · mar· merit and other major ex pens- located at 990A Second Ave.,
riage?
es that you incur together, Gallipolis, phone 44I-9441.
It may feel strange to talk while keeping individual Edward Jones has been
about these issues 'before you · ac~ounts to pay for personal serving individual investors
"tie the knot." But it will be a expenses or purthases. since
1871,
member
· valuable conversation. Try to However, if you · do keep a Securities
Investor
conduct it when you both joint account, you should Protection Corporation.)

PageC3

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..

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.

•

PageC4

CELEBRATIONS

iunba~ ~ime~ -ientinel

•

·•unba~ Ql:ime~ -~entinel

a

'

Page Cs

E NTE TAIN

Sunday, May 22, 2005

JJBC has hit with update of sci
fi
favorite
"Doctor
Who~'
.
~

Bv BETH GARDINER

ASSOCIATED PR ESS WRIT5R

-

, LONDON ~ A time -tra vFiing blast from the past ~
and the luture ~ ha s become
One of the· bi ggest hit ' of
Britain's television present.
; · A BBC update of the hugely
popular science fi'tion series
:·Doctor Who." complete with
~ille r robots from outer space ·
find a rickety wooden polite
~x that zips through the millennia. has introduced a new
~eneration of viewers to a T·v ·

1.;. ........

IHLE- WILL
ENGAGEMENT
Meredith Bane and Edmund Blake

B.ANE-BLAKE
ENGAGEMENT
GALLIPOLIS ~ Mr. and Mrs. Jeffr.ey D. Bane of Stow are
pleased to announce the e"ngagement and upcoming wedding ·
of their daughter. Meredith Dawn. to Edmund Robert Bl~e of
·
Medina.
Meredith is the granddaughter of Mrs. Isabel Lutton of
Point Pleasant. and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bane of Gallipolis.
She is a I998 graduate of Chagrin Falls High School and a
2004 graduate of the College of Education. the University of
·
·
Akron .
Meredith is employed by Shin-Etsu iri Cuyahoga Falls.
Edmund is the son of Michael and Joni Blake of Medina.
Edmund graduated from Medina High School and attended
Miami (of Ohio) University. ·
He is employed by Verizon Wireless.
A July 16. 2005. wedding is planned at the Evangelical
Covenant Church of Hudson. followed by a reception at "'the
. Silver Lake Country Club.

FORTNEREVANICH
ENGAGEMENT
OAK HILL ~ Billie Jean Fortner of Oak Hill and Bret
Andrew Evanich of New Philadelphia are announcing their
engagement and upcoming wedding.
.
The bride-elect is the daughter of Denver Fortner and the
late Rita Jean Fortner of Oak Hill. She is a 200 I graduate of
South Gallia High School and a 2005 graduate of the
University of Rio Grande.
The prospective bridegroom is the son of Robert and
Pamela Evanich of Scottown~ He is .a t 997 graduate of East
Canton High School and a 2003 graduate of Marshall
·.
·
.
University.
.
He is employed by the Ohio Central Railroad.
The wedding will be Saturday, June 4, 2005, at the Silver
,.
Memorial F{eewill Baptist Church .

'

· RUTLAND ~ Tim and Jane Ihte of Rdlland announce t~e'
engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Sara
Elisabeth lhle, to Josh Will, son of Daniel and )ulia Wili of
Pomeroy.
'
,
The bride-elect is the granddaughter of Robert and Rutll
Bobo .of Rutland, and Doris lhle of Racine and the late;
.Edward thle. Her fiance is the grandson of David and Delores
Holter of Pomeroy, and the late William and Juanita Wilt.
lhte graduated from Meigs High School in 2000 and froni
Ohio University cum .laude with a bachelor of arts in psychology in 2004. She is currently attending Ohio University as 11
graduate student pursuing dual masters degrees in school arid
community counseling. She is a member of Chi Sigma lora;
American School Counseling Association, and the Ohid
School Counselor's Association, and is employed by tqc;
Meigs Local School District. ·
,
.
.'
Will graduated from Eastern high School in 2000 and
attended Ohio University, where he gradqated cum I au de witll
a bachelor of science in geography in 2004. He .is currently
~!lending Ohio University pursuing a master of arts in geog. raphy. He is a member of Phi Beta Kappa and the Association
of American Geographers, and is employed by Ohio
University's Geography Depanment.

.. L
-~

.

Kent

IM1lking groups start meeting in Gallipolis

4 milhon women have found

success at Curves. 'You can too.

s

'

216 Upper River Rd.

OHIO VALlEY
CHECK CASHING
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O.llipolis, Ohio
'I• Mile south of
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oot

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Thcpowor to
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Pomeror, Ollio
992.o461

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·OMr.- ....., .. h..,'"..,.~
...... u-"""'-- . .,. ...,...,..,....,.....,._
..., .,. .. · ....._._.·mw.

•

Ohio National Guardsman move in a "V" formation to disperse students along with tear gas on the Kent State University cam-.
pus on May 4, 1970 just prior to .the shootings. Taylor Hall, the journalism building, is pictured in the background as is Blanket
Hill where the guardsman discharged their weapons.
·

AP BUSINESS WRITER

Show yourself off
.this sumnier.

-

• Can

. Bv GARY GENTILE

crave: Young men.
Research
by
Nielsen
Entertainment has found that
· LOS ANGELES ~ As a prime-time television is losing
member of the Elite younger male viewers, while
Operations Division in the Sony Comp)lter Entertainment
video game "True Crime: America notes that several
Streets of LA," the character million people . are glued to
Nitk Kang must find his way their PlayStation 2 consoles
to a truck heist at the flagship playing online ganies during
Puma sponswearstore.
prime-time TV viewing hours.
Lucky
for
him,
he
has
a
The strategy of insin(lating
Su-ed photo
Ayoung member of one of two walking groups recently formed in Motorola handset with built- ads into video · games was ;j. ·
the Gallipolis area is se.e n taking a trip down a walKing trail. The in global positioning system hot topic at this week's E3
video games trade show,
groups were formed to promote health, fitness and camraderie. technology.
In the online game Everquest where Sony. Nintendo and
U, players don't need to leave Microsoft unveiled their nexttheir· fantasy ·world to satisfy generation game consoles. '
GALLIPOLIS
For Everyone is invited to joi\}.
hunger pangs. They can click
"Game · publishers have to
Children in strollers, wag- an icon and have fOod deliv- recognize that there ·are mil'
health. fitness and comraderie
two walking groups have start- ons, and on bicycles have ered frOm the nearest Pi.zz3 Hut lions; if not billions, of dollars
ed meeting. The groups meet participated. Walks begin at ~ within 30 minutes.
in advertising inoney coming
at the old Odd LOts building 4:30 and · 8 p.m. every
The product placement ~ their way in the next few
Monday. Wednesday and benign, interactive and some- years," said Justin Townsend,
parking lot on Pine Street.
Individuals have been walk- Friday. You pick the day and times aggressive ~ belongs to chief executive of IQA Partners
ing part or all of the trait to Bob time you are able to go.
a growing push by advertisers Europe, an agency that places
McConnick Road either as a
Other interest groups tha! to reach big-spending males in-game ads for clients.
·
group or with a partner who has have also started m the !lorn t 8 to 34 who log long
The increased spending is
the same iJace. No one walks Gallipolis area are groups for hol.irS·playing video games.
another sign of the booming
alone and can go whatever dis- hiking •.scrapbooking, quilting,
Analysts say in-game adver- popularity of video games. In
tance they choose that day. This social events, gardening, nurs- tising could generate as much . 2004, $7.3 billion worth of
is a great way to increase self- ing home visiting, book discus- as $1 billion in new revenue for video and PC games were
esteem, get healthier or main- sion, and three ·Bible studies. the fast-growing industry by sold in the United States. By
, Jeffrey Atkinson and Megan Gallion
tain your health is a safe friend- The hiking groups traversed the end of the decade because it comparison, the domestic
Symmes Creek trail on May 7. almost assures advertisers qual- movie industry saw ticket
ly environment. '
Future goals for the groups The social events group is plan- ity time with an audience they sales of $9.4 billion.
also include participating in ning some river boat tours.
charity .walks in the ·commu- Weekly meetings occur for
nity 'o r more ambitious goals. quilting and book discussion
NEW PHILADELPHIA ~ Megan Gallion and Jeffrey The groups' organizer is a groups. 1be other groups meet '
Atkinson have anll\)Unced their July 2. 2005. wedding to be registered nurse · and has on a monthly basis.
held in New .Philadelphia.
For more information, contact
recently completec! a half
Megan is the daughter of Terrence Gallion of Bidwell. and marathon in Cincinnati. Sandy or Barbara at ~55.
Robin Gallion of New Philadelphia. Jeff is the.son of Roben
. Atkinson'of Dover. and the late Linda Atkinson.
This summer. take time for ~
Jeff graduated from Dover High School in t 991 , and is curyourself with 36-minute fitness
rentl y owner and operator of J.R. Atkinson Trucking ,Co. LLC
and sensible weight loss at
Curves. Right now if you join
in Dover. Megan graduated from Gallia· Academy High
Curves you can split the service
School in 2000. and is currently working for J.R. Atkinson
fee with any friend . Over
Trucking Co.

named Ro , e' Tyler.
Ia. And it ' till survi 1·e,_-·
Au, tral!a. \"e11 Lcala11d.
Aii1o n~ Dnctor W.lw ma inStarring a smooth. charming
CanaJa ;tnJ ltal1. but BBC
Christopher Ecdcston in the 'I L.I\' ~ a~e the T;_trJ i~ time Ame r it:a ha' THl Plan' to air it
title rule and fom1er pop singer · maChine. J i~2 ui ~eu a' :t lor the ume bcin!.! .
Fi nn" \ Junre . ,7n anthropotBi llie Piper as his side kick. the clunk v blu e- I950,-s l\'le
pol
ice
call
bo}.
;md
out-ofo~
t 't \\ho ;.,tud iL'' mcJia Jt
Briti sh Broadcastin g Corp.
thi
s-world
1·ifla
in'
the
K""in~
... Lon
Lni\cr\i t\
in
remake stays true to the muchre lentle s ·. ro botic.Daleks.
LnnJun. 'aillthc lk~ i bility of
lol1cd m·iginal while givi ng it a
Writer Ru sse ll T. Dav ies. the prog ra m·, fo rm at. with
conlemporary sheen.
h o cr~ ated the grmm d- the c haracte t\ tn.t v~l in g to a,
.. All th e · ·Docmr Who.· 1~
breakin Q telev-i.., iun dra ma di fkrc nt time and place in
furniture is there... sa id .. Que~ r - as Folk.'' rev ived
nea rl y every epi:-.t.ldt\ . made it
Antony Wainer. spokesman the series . .;;e n fn g as exec u- endkssl1
adaptah k .
fo r the
1.500-me.rnber tive producer and wri tin g
··You ca n ~o am whe re. vou
Doctor Who Appreci atio n
Society. .. That is the formu- many of the epi sodes. He can Uo ·am·thi n!!. ·\uur ceritra l
hopes to bring in 1·iewe" fi~u rc cali he ani·th ine from
who hadn't watched earli er po'h and ,·eivet.claJ to this
seasons of .. Doc tor Wlm."· a chap wi th a &lt;ha1eJ heau and
goa l he:s clear!) ach.ie 1·cd a leatre r jacket. .. the cu rrent
. ~ the show has been. a hit Doctors look. Moore said.
with kids.
Ecc leston. who had film
Davies is taking on a cultur- rules
111 ~
··.EiiLa bet h;..
al icon. In a 2oo0British Film .. Shallo11 Gra 1·e .. and .. Gone
Institute poJI . people in the in Si xty Sec·onds."' play.&lt; the
TV indu stry ranked .. Doctor lead character as a wi secrackWho .. as their third-favorite in g cha rmer \\h ose jokey
British show ever. The origi- uemeanor covers up his sadnal was· widel y ex.ported. win- . ness at bei ng the l;"t survivning fans in the United State,. ing member of his alien
Canada and Australia .. The spec ies. all killed in the in ternew season is being shown in planetary Time War,

now You

Products now placed
liberally in video games

WE CAN HElP YOU BAlANCE YOUR FINANCES. ..
GET

•

classic that originally ran (rom ~ anu the mysterious Doctor
I963 to 1989.
and his young sideki ck hct\ e
The new season . 13 zoomed 5 billion year.s into
epi sodes runnin g through the future .to watch "the Earth
June. is packed with oddball come to a fi ery end .
a! iens and frequent opportuIt \ a welcome retu rn for
. i1 ities for the two heroes to fan s who' d bee n 11· a i t in ~
save humankind.
more than 15 ye ars for the
S9 far, spaceships have · comeback of the Doctor crashed into Big Ben and the an alien .. Time Lord.. who's
River Thames to presage a taken the fonnof nine ui-tl ertakeover of lhe British gov- ent human · ac tors in · th e
ernment - the bad guys course of the ~ho w ~ and
invaded· the bodies of the hi s ·assistant . t~i s time a
prime minister and his aides workin g-cl ass London gi rt

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UPCOMING'
WEDDING

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about Kent State until 30
Nowaday s, Smith is a
years later, when his son gave Nationwide Insurance agent
him a copy or the "We in Huntington and a writer
from Page C1
Interrupt This Broadcast" of suspense novels. two of
book and accompanying com- which have been published.
,pact discs with a recording of including his latest, "Murder
that he cal)ed career mentors Smith's press "beepers."
on the Trap" which contains
from WSAZ Television and a
"I got so overwhelmed I had a hero and villain, both of
journalism · professor from to' walk out · of the room," whom are Vietnam veterans .
alma · mater
Marshall Smith said about hearing his
He said his experience at
University for advice.
voice that day in 1970 describ- . KSU helped him create a
· Eventually Smith did what ing KSU after the shootings.
novel about good versus evil
he was taught to do as a journalist and informational specialist for the U.S. Army and
· began_ sorting rumor from
fact, releasing information to •
a hungry media about the
four students killed and 'the
nine wounded. He recorded
press "beepe·rs" for radio sta-·
li'ons, one of which turned up
i)n a compact · 11isc that
accompanied the book "We
fnterrupt Thi s Broadcast."
Over the following days and
·weeks. Smith met with KSU
President Robert White about
getting faculty in the media to
jl,elp repair the damage. He
jVas also privy to a conference
call with CBS anchorman
· Walter Cronkite concerning An Ohio National Guardsman checks the credentials of an
~e press being allowed into
unidentified man attempting to enter the campus of KSU on
graduation ceremonies, and May 4. 1970.
pttended every day of the
Scranton Commission hearings on the tragedy.
See how easy the Riverdale staff.can
· "My only recurring thought
make home ownership
fo,r you!
on the Scranton hearings was,
'Where was all this concern
for the ~tudents before the
s hootings?"' Smith recalled.
~ ·some of those s-tudents
might have been disorderly
but they were not unlawful . .
The shootings · should have
never happened, not on a col~
. Jege campus."
• Smith also becaJpe disillusioned with the electronic
:IT!edia after the KSU shootJogs due to the behavior of
Some of the journalists.
"If it was a stow news day,
Jeporters would call my office
~d keep coming back to the
~tory of the shootings without
~ver asking how the university
;was getting along in the pre~nt tense.'' he said. "'Then,
~hen I moved back home to
West virgini3 I. i:ould hardly,
••~ land to watch TV news
'Payment figured on lot-ready site land/home mortgage
recause everyone talked about
at 6.5% fixed APR 10% eQuity w/app·roved credit
mose 'radical students."'
~ " The root of all evil was
~ot their protesting. they
were lawfully protesting
political decisions being
tnade . about Cambodia. and
~n my opinion nobody would
listen io them or what they
had to say." ·
·
740-385-4367 "The leader in affordable housing "
·- Smith did not · talk much

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iunba:p.~imes -ienttnel

N THE ·BOOKSHELF

PageC6

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~unba!' Qr:imes -&amp;entinel

INSIDE
Down on the Farm, Page 02
Gardening, Page 06

Sunday, May 22, 2005

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A dream fulfilled: ·A visit to England Will Eisner's 'comic book' debunks
century-old anti-Semitic hoax

: I have drea~ned of visitin~
the L'lothes.
England since my senior ye.rr ,
Harrod's Department Store
in high school when Anne
is owned by Mohammed AI
Bradbury was our English
Fayed , father of Dodi Fayed.
••
teacher. She was stern and a
killed with Princess Di in the
auto accident in Paris. There ·
bit intimidating. but an exce l- ,
Beverly
lent teacher. She' inspired us
is a 'hrine to the couple in
Gettles
with the li terature and British
Harrod's which includes the ·
history, starring such fascinatglass . they drank from that
fatefu l night enclosed in a
ing characters as King Henry
· gl ass . pyram id . and the
VIII. who inspired thi s verse.
"King He11ry the Eighth to six
engagement ring whi ch Dodi .
wives· was wedded. One died. imprisoned here . prior to supposed ly bought for Diana.
one surviyed. two divorced. their beheadings. The Brit.ish Mr. Fayed firmly believes
two beheaded."
see med to · have a penchant 'there was a conspi racy to kill
Miss Bradbury to ld us of for lopping off people's the couple.
We made it to Bucki ngham
the heads and hangings and all
King Charle·s II.
Palace
in time to see the
Restoration King. who had sorts of cruel punishments.
"changing
of the guard" in
numerous mistresses. induct- There we re over 300 offenses
ing the infamous NeH Gwyi1 . for · wh,ich one might . be their spectacular red cosShe also told us of a popular hangeq Sir Walter Raleigh tumes wit h the large, back.
but racy novel written by a had~ a suite of rooms he~re furry hats. Strangely, .the military band was playing
woman who helped her hus- while''imprisoned.
band, who was getting' hi s
Our guide was the "keeper . "finic ulli , Finniculla'' and
Ph.D.. do research for the of the. ra ve ns." There is a tra-: somqthing from Andrew
period. The' novel was ditioll' .that the fortress will Lloyd Webber Expected,.
"Forever
Amber"
by · fall if the ravens .ever leave. something a bit more highKathleen Windsor, about so one wing is clipped on brow, maybe even a Sousa
commoner Amber St. Clare. each bird 'to prevent it from march, but. of course. he was ·.
an American.
who fell in love with one of goi ng ve ry far.
We also saw Kew Gardens.
the ,royals. was one of. . There is a d isplay of armor
C:harles ll 's many mistre sses. for both horses and men. One a 300-acre tract . with many
and survived London's terri- ·impress ive ·suit was for John ki nd s of trees, magnolias,
ble plague of 1665. I read it. of Gaunt. who was seven feet azaleas and fields of lovely
and I will never forget it. tall ! There is enough intrigue bluebelfs. The wildlife• there
Miss Bradbury recommended involved with th is single · was numerous and friendly.
it for the history. It does give complex to keep a dozen and included peacocks and
an a~curate piuure of the aut hors busy. including the beaut iful golden pheasants.
period, but it isn't so much · story of two , young princes j ust walking along the paths
the history I rem~mber. It's a who were taken there to the and'in the fields.·
We saw numerous othe'r
corking good romance, a bit t&lt;Jwer and never seen aiwin.
ahead of its time:
·
We also visi ted Kensington sigh,ts, bui that would make
A couple of weeks ago. I Palace , where Princess Di . another col umn . We spent
finally got to London. It was lived after her divorce from one day in the country. seeing
everything I had expected. Charles. Prin.cess Margaret, tie ids' of bright yellow canota
and more. One of the attrac- sister of Queen Elizabeth II, in bloom. and fi elds of sheep
tions is the Tower of London. also· lived there. It is Queen a nd cattle. We stopped at
a complex of buildings, which Victoria's birthplace. Part of Oxford, at a Cots wold village
includes a moat .(now filled the palace is open to the pub- called Buford, and at
and grassed over), the White lie and features clothing worn Stratford-upon-Avon, where
Tower (built by William the by the . current Queen Shakespeare was bOrn and
Conqueror in about 1100) and Eli zabeth anq 14 )ovely ·lived. I was a bit sad to leave,
the Crown Jewel-s. plus a dresses worn by Diana. They as I shall not pass 'that way
·
scepter and an orb or two were designed especiallr for again.
(which you view from a mov- · her and special occaswns.
By the time we left. I had
ing floor, like those found in like her appearance at the information ove rload , but
airports, lest you dawdle too White House. where " she vowed to find out more about
long gaping at the diamonds danced with John Travolta: It where I had been and what I
and emeralds and rubies)..
·is interesting .that the !lowers had seen. So finally, after half
Anne
Boleyn
and and &gt;lyles of each country a century, I realized the dream
Catherine Howard, two of she visited were incorporated · 1 had in Mi ss Bradbury 's
Henry VIII' s wives, were , into the fabric and design of class, to visit England.

Sunday, May 22, 2005

BY MARCUS ELIASON . the Russian Revolution stir-· translated into many ianring, Czar Nicholas II need- · gua ges, has gained new li fe
ASSOC IATED PRESS WRITER
ed a scapegoat on which to on the Intern et, and filters
"The Plot: The Secret blame Ru ssia's trou ble s. So into the Middle East conStory of the Protocols of tile . the Okhrana, his sec ret llict through its popularity
Elders of Zion." By Will poli ce. came up with what in the Muslim world.
Eisner, the creator of .
Eisner. No,rton. /48 Pages. purpo rted to be the , record
$19.95.
of a secret meeting of inter- " Blackhaw k. "
" Sheena,
miti'o nal Jewi sh le aders Queen of the Jungle" and
•••
"The Protoco ls of the plotting to subvert and take ''The Spirit ," died · in ·
Elders of Zion" is 100 years over the world..
January at 87 . not long after
old and still waiting for a
The " Protoco ls" gained a compl eti ng hi s own investistake to be driven through its \Videspread fo ll o.wing ·iu . gat ion into the origin of the
heart. All serious research Russia, but the revolution ''Protoco ls." Now thi s son
has confirmed it is a hoax, happened anyway. and in of Jewis h-American immiyet it continues to feed all .1921 The Times of London gra nts has posthumously
mann~r of anti-Semitic con- published a detailed expo- · left us the story in "The
spiracy theories.
sure of the hoax concoc ted Plot. "
Now comes a debunking by the Okhrana.
Through text and drawfrom a differe nt quarter in
There things mi ght have in,gs, Eisner takes us on a
an unusual format ~ a ended. Yet, within a- · few fascinating journey that
"comic book'' by the master years, the . " Protocols" was ., begins with the origins of
of the genre, Will Eisner, featured. prominently . in · the " Protocols" in a pam- ·
call ed "The Pl ot: The Hitler's anti-Semitic doc- · phlet published in 1864 by
Secret
Story
of
the trines. and even today, it · Maurie !! Joly, a French '
Protocol s of the Elders of ' remains a weapon in the satiri st whose target ~a~
Zion ."
armory of anti -Semites the Emperor Napoleon 11,1 ,
The facts: In 1905, with world ove r. It ha s been Bonaparte 's nephew:

Home features lavish living room
'

House Dillie Week
(AP) - The inviting
living room found at the·
heart of this charming
one-story home, plan M75 by the Homestoi:e
Plans and Publications
Designers'
Network,
features a built-in media
· center, a cozy fireplace
and access to a capti vating rear porch. The floor
plan covers 1,429 square
feet of living space.
, Another favorite family gathering spot is the
dining room, which is ·
embrac.ed by a bright
and cheerful' bay winAP Photo .
dow.
In this photo provided by the Homestore Plans and Publications Designers Network, th'e inviting living room fou nd at the heart
Sunlight also streams of thi? charming one-story home, features a built-in media center, '!l cozy fi replace and access to a c&lt;~ptiv&lt;~ting rear porch.
56'- 0" _ _ _ _;___ _ _ _ _--;
through the adjoining
kitchen, thanks to a
well-placed
window
PORCH
above the sink. The
DINING
tn this photo provided by the
kitchen also offers a
I~""""""'"""'"'1--:;=d.l I t' -4" X 10, -6.
Home·store Plans and
handy pantry and lies
Publication s Designers
Network, a favonte famil y
just steps away from the
gathering
spot is the dining
laund-ry room.
LIVING RM.
·room,
which
is embraced by
t5·-o· x ra·-o·
The
amenity-filled
a bright and cheerful bay
10'·0" clg
.... window. Sunl ight also
master suite boasts a
"',- streams through the adjoin·
bayed sitting area, as
"';
GARAGE
ing ki tc hen, than ks to a wellwell as a corner media
20·-a· x 20'- o·
placed window above the
center and ·a posh prisink. The kitchen also offers
vate bath featuring two
a handy pantry and· lies just
walk-in clo6ets.
steps away from the la undry
. Two spacious bedroom.
rooms and a full hall
AP Photo
bath complete , this
home's quiet sleeping
wing.
t----~---~---

... ..

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{

Norton provided this photo of Will Eisner, author of 'The Plot The Secret Story of the Protocols
of the Elders of Zion.'

M- 75 DETAILS
Bedrooms: 3
Baths: 2
Main noor: I ,429
sq. ft.

Total living area:
I ,429 sq. ft.
Garage and
storage: 484 sq. ft.
Exterior w;ill
framing: 2x4
Foundation options:
Crawlspace, slab

A downloadable
.study plan of this
house, including gen- '
eral information on
building costs and
financing, is available ,
at www.houseofthe- :
week.com. To receive a'
' study plan by mail, ,
send $10 to House of
the Week, P.O. Box
75488, St. Paul, MN
55175-0488, or call
(866) 772-1013. Be ,
sure to reference the
plan number. To view
hundreds of hoine
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ASHlAND, KY

WINFIELD, WV

GALLIPOLIS, DH

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LOCATED ON US 35 AT AT 34

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CUSTOMER MUST PURCHASE A NEW PAEMIUM MODEl JOHN DEERE RIDING lAWN TRACTOR TO BE ~IGIBU FOR THIS OfFER . CUSTo'MER MUST PURCHASE NEW PREMIUM MDOH LAWN TRACTOR TO BE WGI BLE FOR HilS OFfER_CUSTOMER MUST PUfiCHASE NEW PREMIUM MOOELLAWN·TRAC TOR TO IE EUGIBL£
FOR THIS OFFER. TO BEEUGIBL£ FOft THIS OFFER, CUSTOMER MUST PUACH4SE .NEW PftfMIUM ._tO~EllAWN TRACTOR. John Ottfe 's gr"n 1nd 'flikNI cohn ~c heme, 1he leapmy deer symbol. and JOHN DEERE 1r1 tradem •iU ot 0@tra ·&amp; C:omp!nv

llZlCCA6-05221l5-00050!107

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6unba~ limel ~ientinel

Sund~ov. May

PageD2 .

DoWN ON ·THE. FARM

22, 2005

.,,

•

ROBERT

W.

Extension ·Corner

PAWELEK

OSU EXTENSION AGENT
GALLIA COUNTY

With the growing interest
in meat goats in the region,
more people are considering
other types of livestock.
Some may consider exotic
livestock as investments; others, as merely con);'ersation
starters. Still others look at
exotics as bonafide. alternatives for their farm.
For the latter, my advice ·is
that any new enterprise needs
a market before it seis foot
onto the farm. Especially if it
expects to be fed. For both
investors and farmers, introduction of exotic creatures
where they are scarce encour·
ages speculators to bid prices
extremely high . . Oftentimes
however, breeding stock
Big Tree Ranch/photo
becomes the focus ·of attention rather than the basic use Intimidating as they may seem. centuries of breeding 'have
of the ani m·al for meat, wool made the water buffalo a very gentle creature.
or work.
For the moment, the deer, suc h as red Of fallow, to their value. About 18 difbiggest dollar demand is for under the head of "exotic ani- ferent breeds of both types
South American humpless mal." In the past, the program can work iri tropical mud that
camels - llamas, alpacas. · covered only American bi son can bog down a tractor. One
guan'acos and vicunas. Little and cattalo or beefalo. FSIS of these animals can work as
demand is noted for Alaska's officials say fewer than 2,000 many as 20 years.
yaks or musk oxen. Yet, any- "exotics" are slaughtered
Milk from river buffalo
way. African pygmy goats annuall{in thi s country com- goes into mozzarella cheese
however are gaining in popu- pared to more than 32 million in Italy. It has a higherconcattle per year.
·larity.
tent of both butterfat (at about
· In 1987, wi.th almost no . In view of the demand, 5 to 8 percent) and nonfat
advance notice or publicity; a small -scale entrepreneurs s0lids (at 16 percent) than
' company called . "Camel ids find it profitable to market cow's milk. In India, river
lnc.".sold 52 male and femal e federally inspected .meat from buffaloes make up about 35
llamas at an estimated cost of certain exotic animals.
percent of milk an.imals
In the coming weeks, we
more than $1 million, accordthan goats) bul pro·
(other
ing to a slick tabloid publica- will focus on different species duce almost 70 percent of the
of exotic livestock that may
tion called "Llama Life."
One buyer paid $100,000 or may not have a place on milk. In 1995-96, India was
estimated to have about 194
apiece for two studs. Three the Galli a Count y farm .
Today, let's examine a very million cattle and 82 million
other males also brought
$100,000 each at the opening unlikely critter that is coming water buffalo.
China has · the second
rush, which drew nearly I00 onto the scene : Water buffalo.
Unlike llamas. they aren't largest buffalo population,
buyers from all ,aver the
country. ' The 5,000 U.S. ii1 great demand , despite such after India, recording 22 milowners of 12,000 llamas have praise as a . media advisory lion in 1992 with an average
been pricing themselve s out from .the National .Academy growth rate of 1.6 percent.
of the market for quite a while of Sciences saying the water Butfalo are also rai sed to pronow, even though camelid buffalo may be the most mis· duce milk in Italy. · Iraq,
wool is sought by spinners understood and underutilized .Turkey, Egypt, and Eastern
Despite its intimi- Europe.
and weavers and the pack ani- animal.
mals are used in all sorts of . dating appearance and large
In the U.S.; they have been
fund-raising events-shows. size, the water buffalo's gen- in traduced by developers
tleness contrasts sharply with hoping to build a market for
fairs, and 4-H projects.
Owners contend llamas the ferocity of the African the distinctive mozzarella
excel as 300-pound pets. · cape buffalo. The first com- cheese and low cholesterol
Camelids are also used as mercial herd was imported to meaL A market for leather
guard animals for sheep and the United States in February goods and decorative horn
goats. USDA's Forest Service of 1978 . The two majortypes products is also developing.
people traveling into wilder-. of . water buffalo are the
·· In taste preference tests,
ness c6untry often use llamas swamp buffalo, or carabao, water buffalo steaks have·
as , pack animals instead of and the river buffalo. Both are been judged to be leaner and
horses or mules, bqth of used for work and' meat. The just as tender as those of catwhich are ecologically more carabao is rarely used for
intrusive. You can rent a milk, while the river buffalo tle . Water buffalo usually
maintain their appetite in hot
llama for $20 a day; there are is noted for milk.
With either tightly coiled weather, and thus may pe
more than two dozen commercial llama packers 111 or drooping straight horns, more adaptable to it than catbusiness.
. breeds of th) latter are com· tle; but they may need shade
Restaurant demand for manly found in the temperate ·or a pond in summer.
"different" meat has risen to climates of Southern Europe, Sensitive to some cattle disthe extent that in 1998, the Turkey; the Georgian and eases. they are highly resi s- ·
USDA's Food Safety and Azerbaijan areas of the tant tu others.
Chief breeders of water
Inspection Service (FSIS) Soviet Union; and in cold,
expanded its voluntary exotic mountainous
areas
of buffalo in this country are
ammal inspection program. Pakistan. Afghimi stan, and selling unbred young heifers
FSIS added reindeer, elk, Nepal. Latin America coun- at about $3,500 and bulls at
antelope. water buffalo. and tries arc beginning to catch on various lower prices.

BY HAL f{NEEN
OSU EXTENSION .AGENT
MEIGS COUNTY

Do your evergreens, shrubs
and trees have one to two inch
ornament-like 0ags . un ihe
twigs? l3e on the lookout for
hatching bagworm caterpillars eme rging from lastyear 's
bags. Bagworms are insect
caterpillar~ that build spindleshaped silk bags with bits .of
foliate , bar\( and other debris.
Th ey prefer pine, spruce,
cypress, . juniper, willow,
black locus, ·sycamore, apple,
maple, elm, poplar oak an
over 200 other pl ants. Large
infestations may defoliate a
shrub or tree.
Bagworrns have only one
generation of caterpillars a
year. Each bag may contain
300 to 1,000 eggs.~They hatch
in late May or early June . As
the small caterpillars emerge,
they may be q.rried on the
wind on to neighboring plants
on silken strands. They feed
for two months thCii transform themse lves ·after a four
week . dormancy pupa stage
into adult male and female
bagworms. The female is
sedentary. She remains in her
constructed bag while the
male bag wonn flies to her to
mate . The female lays her

LOGAN - As part of the
seventh annual Landowners
Conference, the Rural Action
Forestry Program will open
this year 's event with a field
trip on Friday, June 3 from l
. to 4 p.m. at Bear Run Inn
Bed and Breakfast in Logan.
The · horse-drawn wagon
ride field trip is packed full
of ideas and solutions for
private woodland owners of
any size acreage.
Come and learn how you
can harvest timber while creating new habitat to attract
wildlife and maintain the
aesthetic beauty of your
property at the same time. ·
Dave Swanson and Mike
Reynolds of the Ohio
Division of Wildlife will talk
· about attracting a diverse
range of songbirds, grouse,
turkeys and other wildlife
species to your woods, all
while riding the horse-drawn
wagon through 550 acres of
beautiful woods.
If you are considering a
timber sale, Dave Apsley of
the Ohio State, University
Extensio9 will talk about
how to improve a stand for
harVesting, managing your
crop trees, and how to
arrange a good harvesting
contract.
After the field trip, you can
enjoy various other workshops offered during the seventh annual Landowners
Conference. which will be
•held at Camp Oty &lt;EOkwa in
the beautiful hills of Hocking

County. l4s part of this event, pared with fresh locally proyou c.an leam more about duced food.
good forest management,
Bring a buddy and receive
sustainable agriculture, culti- $10 off your conference regvation of medicinal herbs, istration. Don' t hesitate to
and new strategies and call, since registration is limopportunities for marketing ited for the field trip and preyour value-added products. registration is required. To
This weekend conference is register or for more inform'!complete with on-site lodg- tion, please .call (7 40) 767ing and delicious meals pre- 2090.

LIVESTOCK REPORT

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11 M&lt;Mig about
18 Swilbfi&amp;
21 Scou1dret
22 LMdmalt&lt; In TelUII
23-illand

24 RtcU:e
bY 5o peiC4I1I
25 Mlde a miSlike

26 Hajlpen again
Z1 e-ve
28 E&lt;lbte tUb
29 Olr. lollonl
30Begel
31 Merry
33 Unwantld ICIIIId
35 Approves
36 Poor gradaa
38Newt

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&gt;10
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42
44

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AttarTI!ll
Golf b8l stand
Mulicalllymllal
Axw of clogl

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48 City In OJcWioma
51
54 Metal oontalner
55 Life .,.., for lhCllt
57 .A !lower

61
62
13
tl5
88
87
70

()penile 1011111

Clt!liN
lllarlllt
SoJeom biiiCIIIId
Vlrul

Dedn., bt 'Malt~
Heron
.

73 Amlr'•dli•
74 Mlmooy lllrle
75 They nil!

n

116~

. irrllrlrnln
118 Duo '

118 BedfU gilt
120 Ontaltrl~

Dwwfl
122 FOOd am
123 Till
124 Tallll8dllhldges
125 NOlJriiih
1Z1 Vartety of lelll:t
129 Oow'l Cltel
130Aulo
133 Willian I8COIII
. 136 Food llllr
136-0W..
137 Deli 1111 dM1y
14t Poem
142 Detrge
144 MIN I Willi'

f4S WoefiA CtY
148~

147 PoWorU ' bUD
••,
148 Delli Of Dudlly
151 Illicit linilh
153 - Minllllt .

155 Alb cut
156~

157 &amp;l*noboll
158 Swift
158 Tlilllllllf
1110 ..,_ dcnl
1110 . .
162 Sipoltql.,

come

r.

79-IJrU

·eo Otto••••

15 .. huck
16 Bnike pert

17 Pellr18 Gaorue or T.S.
19 CllfDrtl
2011....
..,
.._ _
..
30 l'enlillvM
32 Get ready to shoot

34 A4lll1 watclles.
. . fOr short
.
37 Seal Itt
39 F-lnacap
43 -Vegas
44 Sal e11aem
45 Erdsh I10IMurk

(alibr.)

46 'the Emerald l!le
47 AllcM
48 Nroy
50 -Qiicole

. 51

OidiOfC811f

52t.lcu*lnddge
53 GoienWIQ body
54 "'rMMI' poet
58 'IWIINd
58-and

1140.

62~

merlt, coding/billing, bookkeeping. Relevant experlenCe required. Please send
resume/quallfica1ians, references, F/T or PIT -prefer3 Kitte~S, 2 Black &amp; ~ Gray enCe, and desired sa lary
Tabby (304)675-5730
range to P.O. Box 275, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.
3 puppies, 2 male, 1 female ,
Domino's now Hiring:
lather AKC Dalmati an. black
Safe Drivers
with white ma r~ings, hoUse~
and Managemen t
broken, (740)992-9B32
All locations.
5 Solid white kittens. Call
Apply in· person
(740)446-0129.
(304)675-5858
(740)446 -4040 •
Firewood Must Halll Away

Call alter 5pm (304)675- Due to recent changes in
5108
.
coverage area, Medi Home
Free Coal. You haul away. Heal th Agency is seeking· a
(740)446-7484 or (740)441 · highly motivated, independent full-time Reg istered
7411
' '
Nu'rse to manage/service
Free Kittens 7wks., wormed clients out of our Gallipolis
1304)882·3324
office. Must be lice nsed in
both Ohio and West Virginia.
losT i\NU
We offer a competitive
FOUND
salary, benefits package an d
401K. E.O.E. Please send
""Lost Dog .. Goes by the resume to 352 Second Ave .,
name Lacy. 5 years ol d, Gallipolis, OH 45631 or call
Golden
Retriever. Very 1-B00-481-6334.
Alln :
friendly, lest seen on Au~rey Farley, AN. .
Graham .
School
Fld.'
Established Heating-Cooling
Ga'l'.pol•·s,' QH. 11 you ha"e
•
any information pleas~ call Company in Gallia County
ASAP
(74 "u 1446 . 861 1·. looking for experienced
1740164 5 ·3733 , (740) 645 • . installe"rs and technicians If

r

w~ maclllne

but not captured.
11-{)5 Magnolia Drive in
Spfing Valley. Call (740)4464488

Edge

Slblng, fOr Sholl
Holler .
Wldnl
.. ICO ilrOIIed
124 EnlmiH .
128 IJ.Ialld
128 ElqilrtllmWl
. 129 Al!crllee .,

Found: Dog - Pitbull , very
friendly, white wlblack spots,
has plain co llar. Call
(740)36.7-7760 or chec~ animal shelter.
Found: Female Rat Terrier,
wear ing red co llar. Reese
Hollow/Jericho Rd. area.
(740)367-0429.

130 ~ praTiso
131 Low
132 Fit for a Icing

.,;:&gt;

Lost 5/14 around GAHS.
Black/white male Boston
Terrier . Family pel. Call
(740)446-757&gt; or (740)709·
6141 .

134Moller- .
t36Ankllpde&gt;ico
136 Baidalda!l1
t39 Aspice
1&gt;10 Pays attenloh ·1o
Contnicla. ~

Lost cat, long haired Female
Tabby. With whilE! paWs. Call
(740)446·0350 .

Prfla1bed amou1l
"Porgy and-"
VIlli region

148Mex.~

150 Scarlet
152 Aeldve
of114 Down
153 Quij - qoo
t54 Bull

EEl'!

r

~==roonr

:&amp;:='
81 Legfaasetllln

92WhNIIwililllli
113 Sttclll&lt; .
96-decdop
8tl FllwrU

GALLIPOiiS - ·United Produrers Inc. market report
from Gallipolis for .salts conducted on Wednesday, May
18.

YARD SALE

·Absolute Top Dollar : U.S.
Silver arid Gold Coins,
Proolseil. Gold Rlogs, U.S.

.

Currency,-M.T.S. Coin Shop,

Feeder Cattle-Steady/Higher

;.

151

G

1 11'1

"I

110

• I\
I ~\

\I

ASSISTANT S/

·

DtETARY:
COOK/AIDE

lrnmOdiN ap.ning
Motor routa ~m~Jiabtl In

1'311

IMIAon-

Gllllpolla Co!Mf College

2842

co!J-.Cullen01

(CorHrs CioM To Home)
Call Todayl 740 446 4367,
1-800-214-0452

I' I "

IJW'WANIID

~1333ut.20 .

-. gal~ •

=:..:..=-'-'---=:-:::·
IAIIJO==...!:..:....::..::---:-:=-

0000 m . 24. EOE

•

Jad&lt;oon Pika, Gollii&gt;OIIt.

..._

•

New 3 BD 2 Bath Home
Only 198/mo. Includes ale,
deliver~ and set up. 740365·99 48
.

New 3 BR 2 Bath Sectional
Home
Only
249/mo.
Includes A/C. de livery &amp;
setup. 740-385-7671

i

A I'\KI " \IJ]\'1~
F(Ut Jb:~;r

1979 Homette 12x50 2
Bruner land
2 Bedroom Mobile Home 2 Bedroom
Apa1tment .
Bedroom/1 Bath . gas . sel(
(740)441-1492
$375/mon. 1 Mob1le Hom e $400 a month no pets. call
cent -ai r cond itioner
Will
Lot
S t 501mon .
Call 740 -992-4 11 9-- a s ~
lor
rent for 5265 00 a month or Meigs Co. Danvi lle. Red Hrtl (3 04 )675-3423
Marge
sell for $3,495 .00 . .740-385- Rd., beautiful 1tracts. 8 acres
$22. 500 or 12 acres 2 be droom mobrl e humt! for
40 19.
34 1·2 Sm1ll1e' s Ave
$29 ,950, co. wa ter 1 B.r 1ar 1 rent Jollnson·s Mob1le .Hor:ne
1982 ClaytOn 14x70, newly Ridge Rd. 5 acres $7. 8501 Park (74"0)446- 1409 o r Upsta1r s. slove' refrjge ra:tor
fur nishe d 2BR. Renter pays
remodeled, excellent condi· Boaters, bet ween Ohio (7 40)4 46-2-003.
u11.1111 es
$280/mo
li on . Fir eplace,· building,
9 0 ~ .2 bedroo m rn obi l ~ home .on $15,0/depOSII.
(740)446 ,
fence, porch &amp; appliances River + Forked Lakes
Inc luded . $8,495 . Neet;ls 10 acr.es $1~, 900, co water. Po le Cat Rd. 5425 mon th. 906 1.
moved .
(740 )256·8816: Tuppers PI&lt;WJS, off Success plus ulrhtles. $42 5 deposit - - - -Ad., 5 acres against state Call (740 )44$.4- t O? .
BEAUTIFUL·
APART·
(740)339- 3709.
'
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
land $16 ,950 , · co. water !
1991 Sunshine 14 x65, 2 Chest'er, Bashan Ad . 17 2 bedrqom, Rio Gr an de. PRICES AT JACKSON
bedroom , 2 bath, central air, acre field $26,950, co. water! $400 month + depo.sit. Water ESTATES, 52 Westwood
covered porch. good condi &amp; trash paid No pe ts Dnve fr om $344 to $442
lio n, Sf 1,000. (740 )379 · Gallla Co. Vinton, Dodrill {740)2 45-567 1,
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
2484 .
Rd. three 5 acre tracts
740-4 46,256 8
Equal
$12 ,900+ up, co . water l 3 bedroom, 2 bath, CIA, w1t h H
O"po 1 1
2000
Fleetwood , 1ront Kyge r, woo ded B acres deck &amp; room addiUon. 455
ou w1g I? · ' rum y.
kitchen model with skirting $13 ,950 !
Rio
Grande , St. Rt. 218 (74~)446-7322
and cen tral ai r. Wil l deliver
Chester, Ohio, 2 bedroom . 1
5
Very d ean. 1-800-837• 3238 ~~~~~:~o~d ·$ ~ ,~~~ · co Beautiful river v1ew m bath. w/d hook-up, .$350 per
Kanauga. Ideal lor t-2 peo · month , {1nclud es w ~te r &amp;
99 Holly Park Glenmoor 3
pte . No pets. pl ease · trash), call 740 -992 -6604 or
BR , 2 bath, vinyl/ shingle. We'll gla d!y fi n a~ce · a.ny " o f Appl ication$ b€! ing tak en (7 40 )992-3332
Rio Grande, already set up our prbperties with . S% Call (740)441-018.1 .
or can be moved. $11 ,900 markup. Callforfree mapsto ------~~ Clean spac1ous D u ple~~: . 3
(304)633~6536. .
exp lore each Joca11 on + Mobile Home 2br, 2ba, all bedrooh1
bonus roo m.
additionai parcels 1
Elec tric,
in • Country
downtown
Gallipolis,
New 14~~:60 , on ly $198.73
(304)8 82-2537"or 593-5433 $61 0/mon th.· no pets. renter
REAL E~Hi\TE '
per mo. Includes complete
pays utihties. · (740 )446Mobile Homes si tes in the
set "up and d91ivery, 740WANTED
996 1.
385·2434
.
Shade area Water. Sewer,
Trash, included . $1 30..00
SAV E·SAVE·SAV E
CONVENIE~TLV LOCAT·
I Buy Homes· local person .pe r month 740"385-40 t9
Sloe~ models at old prices. buys homes. Confidential,
EO &amp;.AFFOrDABtE 1
2005 models arriving Now, Quick cash. Jim. 740 -992 Tdwn house , apartments.
AI'.-\IU~IENT.;
Cote's
Mobile
Homes, 6300 . No calls after 9.
and/or small houses FOR
fUR Rtx o·
15266 U.S. 50 East. Athens.
RENT Call (740)441 - 11 11
IU "\ I \I.'
tor appli cation '&amp; 1ntor mat1on.
1
Ohio45701 , (740)592- 1972,
· and 2 bedroom apart"Where You "Get Your
ments, l urnished and unlur·
Downtown
Lux ury
Money's WoFrfAh'R
' 'IS
r10
secu rity deposit Apartment. Now LeaSingl
,.
FOR
RENT
'
required
.
no
pets.
740-992
..
1
Sin gle Bedroom Avai labl e
FoRSALE
22 18.
(30 4 i6 7 5 · 58~9
3 bedroom , 1 t/2 bath,
Santa's For est . -~ 25,000 locate"d al 1641 lin. Hgts . ."
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
pi Us/minus.
Christmas Pomeroy. Lease &amp; dep. No
Trees 2.7 aces Mature pets . Call (740)667-0762 .
Hardwood . $40,000 (if new)
Attention!
NEEDED IMMEillAT EI.Y
Machinery, Minerals, Rented
TrBiler site. 4-Bedroom, local compan y offeri ng "' NO
mETETIC TECH NIC IAN · llTR
reconstructed Log House. DOWN PAYMENT'" pro·
Three Outbuildings. County gram·s for yo u to buy yo ur
Hu l/'_cr Medil"a l Ce ntcr. Jack son 1"
Water,
Trained
Labor home instead of renting .
•
100%
financing
St.!cking
a pan time Di.:te tic.: Techn ician,
$265,000 (304)675·4138
• less than pertect credit
Registered ( DTRJ. Dut ic!-. o.f thi . ; po,ition
accepted
i nL~ l ude performin g uut"r ition s cree n ~ .
L01s &amp;
Payment could be th e
p atient int ervi ew s. ,educati o n &lt;IIH.I
~--xiAiiiiCREAiiiiliiGiiiEiirror-"· same as rent .
Mortgage
locators.
dqcumenling in the m edical ren1rd .and
2 acres more or less, all ulll- (740)992 ·7.32 1
assistance with other duti c:- as assigned hy

=::::::::::;:::::::____

r

I

:~==~===~

I'

Hou~

I ~ i shed .

L..---=-_.1

.r

ror------..,·I ·

r
L,

New .3 BR Home Only
. 189/mo. InclUdes ale, delivery anti s,et up. 740·385·
ities, paved road, 2 miles For Rent 3b~. 2ba, detached
4367
.
from~ Chester,
$16,000, Garage . $400/rnon th · in
Nice 3 BR, LA. FA, DR , Eat: (304)483-7550
Glenwood . (304)743- 8584
iri -Kitchen,
1-1/2 Bath,

~=~~=====~

I

Momtt: HoMES

Fireplace, Gas Central Heat
&amp; Air. Inter-Com SyStem,

IUR RENT

(304)

BOILER OPERATOR
Holzer Medical Center - Gallipolis
is seeking a Boiler Operator for the
Plant Operations Department.
Individual will operate and maintain
boilers, chillers, fire system and other
utilities.
·
Requirements for position include:
Ohio High Pressure Boiler Operators
license. Experience in operating gasfired boilers is highJy.destrable.
Excellent . salary and benefit
package. If interested please contact:
Human Resources Department
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. DH 45631-1563
Phone: (740) 446-5105
Fax: (740) 446-5106.
EOE/ADA Em lo er ' .
"

Help Wanted

. fielp Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDlATELY
Home tlealth Aide

.oom

Ufeguards tor Middleport ~ t.lernbfi Accrediting
Pool , applY ar pool Sat Council b' hodepaOto!t ColegM
10am-5pm or calf 740-992- and Bc:nool• 12748.

money.

Replacement brood cow sale, 1 p.m. Wedne sday,
'
May 25 .
For more infonnation, call Brad at (740) 584-4821 or
DeWayne at !740) 339-0241. Visit the Web site at
www.uproducers.com •

I

Thla newapaper.wllt not
knowingly acctpt
advartl..man1e for real
estate whlc:h Ia In
violation of the laW. Our
• readers are hereby
Informed that.all
dwelling• advlortlaed"ln
thltt newapaP"r ant
available on an equal
opportunity bues.

__,

~

--··

Upcoming specials:

•NOTICh
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recomme nds tha
ou do business with pea
le you ~now, and NOT t
end money through lh
sll until you have investi
ated the offerln .

1-877~24'7 oxt. 2456

hiring all localions, full or
FREE Home
part·timO, pid&lt; Ul! appifco· OIRECTV
Syatem .
1ioo allocation • brirlg baCk eotertainment
MatBfials provided.
between
I O:OOam ·
&amp; FREE Equipmenl and lnala!'
To $480/wk.
11 :OOam, Monday thru up to bur rooms. t 45 chanFree information 'pkg. 24 hr
nels $29.00 a month. · Ask
S..iurdoy.
801-428-ol549
how 1o gel FREE HBO,
McOOnallll In Alo GrM&lt;M! MAX, and STARS. 1-800An Excelient Wfl/ to ear~ , _ -hiring ail lllilil. PalO
The New Avon .
vacations , paid holidays,
Cali MarHyn 304-882-2645 · startlnO above nii_nlmum
AVONI All Areul To Buy or wage. A!l1JIY~-·
Sol. · Shl....., Spoaro. 304- •·-~ 10 ~·10 -~, ......
• -•
·~
,_,.... - -,. .. OHK CLEANING &amp; PCNI·
87:).1429.
CaJt (740)446-3358.
••u NG ~-·•- ' ~
ERW~I , ·~· ~
Bulldog Wlr.- Au1110rized NEED f.STIIIATEI ON Ut ~'!bull~.
Allttl Agent II hiring retaH AOOftNG 6 MJNTJNQ A, 11 d enti e t/ Bu tl n esa,.
wirelets consultants for lUll DtHG (304)11 ...101 C..,_....-up111 Wt~aW;er h
Galiipoilo. 12 month• NIH
job wo'i) G01-or.OOn•lll
Okpo&lt;IOrlCO p-~· Grea1
Karon or Oaw, (740)Q85-.
Pay, .Great Benefitl, Great Paramedlca
&amp;
EMT'1 3633 or 7~16--1823, dntl·
Company. Cali (7-40)36:&gt;- noed.G . Apply l1 1354 ciNnlngGylhoo.c:om

Cow/Calf Pairs $500-$1,225; Bred Cows $510-$925;
Baby Calves $30-$300,; Goats, $20-$129; Lambs, $130-dn.

0J~~lKI1JNITY

;:a

AsSemble crafts,

Back To The Farm:

BUSINt~

icensed. (This is 8 pub li
ervice announcemen
h Oh
V 1
rom I e
io
al e

FON REI\'1'

a suPerVisi ng Regi stered Diet ilian ( RD' as
needed .
,
Rcquircu Qualifi cations aro: Regi stered

by

th e

C omm is ~it 'Hl

Rcgi , lrat oon

!C DR ).

on

Die tet ic

g r adu a1e

of

acr.:re&lt;.lit..:d DTR program Or 4 year degree
in nutri tion or related fiel&lt;.l. One to three

years or expericm.: c preferred.
I f i nt e rc~led . plca:-.e c u iJ l&lt;tl"l :

HUMAN RESOURCES
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER·
JACKSON

500 Burlington Road
Jackson, OH 45640
,Phone: (740) 395-!!300
. EOEI ADA Employer
H~lp

Wanted

Help Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
Home Health Aide

$100-$850 monli1

I \, I

In thi s nawapaper 11
to the Fed~rar
Fair. Houllng Act of 1968
which makeSit.lllagal to
ac:lvertllje wany
preference, llrriltatlon or
dlacrlmlnatlan baaed an
race, calar, religion, aax
familial atatua ar national
origin, or any Intention to
make eny auch
preference, llmltatlon or
dlac:rlmlnatlon."
eubj~t

II\\ \I I \I

. MONEY
1Ul.oAN

20 !\ I( JUIIJ·. H&lt; 1\ IE"

2

All real eetalfi.-.dvertlelng

_J

ffairs toll free at 1-.SS6
78-0003 to learn if th
ortg age bro ker
o
ender
is . proper!

1110 WORKERS NEEDED

Well Muscled/Aeshed $55-$62 Medi~m!Lean $50-$55;
Thin/Light $10-$40; Bulls $68-$82.
·

L_ _.~;3~04
2::,75~·~00~2~2_

Disabilities.

~----------~6~~~9~~--~~McCiure's Restaurant now

1

Cows-Higher

· ,Brand Now. Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or-Sha mpoo
F
E
rea- stimates
...Clearly Clean'"

by Friday, June 3rd.

Avenue ,

1

Second

..
I

275-415# St. $!20-$172 Hf. $105-$ 158 425-525# St.
$ 110-$ 150 Hf. $100-$130 550-625# St. $ 100-$135 HL
$95-$ 110 650-725# St. $95-$119 Hf. $90-$110; 750-850#
St. $90-$108; H[$80-$ 100. -

OW• 0 8 ure
Carpet-Cleaning

orrow Smart. Contac
he Ohio Division o
inancial
Institution'
ffice of Consume
ffairs BEFORE you reli
ance your home o
btain ~loan. BEWAR
1 requests .lor any larg
dvance payments o
ees or insurance . Cat
he Office of Consume

r

83 Sllrrw1
.
114 Rlilool)l on.....,.
Btl Wllllold .....

l•o

r--r=.,...,r--r==---,

Substitute AN/LPN wanted
for the Meigs County Board
of mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities.
Hours 9:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M
Must have Current RN
License in the state of Ohio.
Prefer E~eperience in Public
Health Nursing and! or work,
nd Ad
ing with Children a
ults
with
Oeveloprl1ental

-..:v::.~-.,~.-._.JI.

8f Picjactfng pert

· lfllnllrlock
100 Comsplle
101 NoletiiMJ!tt
10&gt;1 Doedq
105 PIUIDGJ
10&amp; -A Clwi1et

Gallia County Council on
Aging is see~ing aides to
provide Home Care and
Personal Care to Senior
Citizens oi Gallia County
Benefits Include:
Competitive wage
Mileage reimbursement
Day shift
No nlghVNo ca u
2 Sat. o·r Sun. a month
Vision/Dental plan
Apply Senior Re,sou~ce
Center
11 67 St. At. 160, Gallipolis
Mon-Frl., ·a-4,
(740)446·7000 EOE.

3br House, Dining Room,
Kitchen, Hot water heat &amp;
Electric, City-Water &amp; Drilled
Well Brie~ &amp; Viny l E~~:t .
(3041o86· 4858

Attention!
Local compariiy Offering ~No
I will. clean house s or offices. DOWN PAYMENT-' · proReferences available . For grams for ·yoU to tJuy you r
the best in cleanliness call home 1nstead of renting
· ·
Malinda at304-~31 · 1.794 or . · 100% fln anc1ng
740-992,-5805.
• less than pertect credit
accepted
.Jim's Carpentry
Free estimates fully ins. and • Ptiyment could be the
sma ll
landscaping. same as rent .
(740)446-2506 or (740)367- Mo rtgage
Locators.
0437 . We do it alit!
(740)992·732 1

HH~

CAN

Veterinary Ass1stant n~..._
ed. Experience prelerred ,
but will train. PT/FT, some
a,
ru..a:r
weekends
reqUire .
DIETARY AlOE
. d
Minimum
wage .
Send
G Al.J.JPOLIS
If you are interested 1n join· ·
1119 Our team al')d becoming resume to French , Town
Veterinary Clinic.. 360 SR
234 Honeysuckle Dnve. part
ol . lhe
~Holzer
· Addison : Misc. books, cklth- Difference- give Phyllis 160· Gallipolis. Or fax
' {new scrubs size small) Cantrell, DON a call at &lt;740)446-4 101 ·
(740)446-5001 or come SEe
Wanted: Billing person for.
us at
physician office. Part time.
Must have reliabte trans300 Colonial Drive
portation and medical office
Bid,..ll. Ohio 45614
COding and billing · experi9:00, Saturday, May 21 , S1x
ence- oomputer and typing
Famil y , Cheshire Boat
ski lls a roost. Benefits availRamp Shelter House, Rain
. able. 'Sand resurTMil to Cl.A ·
or Shine, 992-9475.
Box 569, C/o . Gallipolis
Tribune.
P:O. 8(),)( 469,
(An ....~_.,GallipOlis, pH &lt;45631 ,. ·

Id

71 lniWclld

89~ -

STNA

. MOHILE JIOMI!li
IURSALE

Double Garage , ln gfo!Jnd River lots for rent. beautiful
· Pool , 2 Lots Total 100x100, beach. convenient location, 14)(70 e)(pando 3 bedroom,
Fenced
in
Backyard . ca ll (740)992-5782
1 1/2 bath $475+ deposit.
PROFISSIONAL
.r.x1800sq. Feet Ranch Style
includes wa1 er. sewer &amp;
SERVI
computer. No experience School Psychologist for the L-----~-~'-•·
ca ll
77 3_594 4
trash pickup - (740 )44 6necessary. Call 1-800-440- Meigs Cou.nty Schools, for
4824 .
7234.
· the 2005-2006 SchOQI Year.
TURNED DOWN ON
No Down Payment is possi14x70, 2 bedroom. all alecGarden ' help
wanted . Applicants niust ~old. a cer· SOCIAL SECURtTY ISSI? ble on this beautiful 3 bed·
'No -Fee Unless We Win!
room, 2 bath home . 2 car
, tric . CA/Heat. Excellent conGeneral garden mainte· tificate or license !hat allows
1-888-582-3345
garage. Deck ove rlooking
dition . No pels . 2 miles from
· nance, weeding, etc. Terms them to serve as a School
PsychOlogist.
Salary·
will
be
beautiful
view,
Five
Points
tow h.
Deposit/Reference
flexible, Call(7401208·7977.
required, 5450/month. Ca ll
based on experienc!E' and -,;;;;.,._ _ _..;.............., area. {740)992·6667
l~~~;~~rLJ
Help wanted· . par~! Adull certification according to ther
1!!16 .·
HOMES
1.
after Spm (740)446-6565
Group Home, (740)992- salary schedule. This posi · FOk SALE
No Down Paymen t Possible,
5023
1900 square ft. house, 3
tion has Board approved
:..:.:.:.:__-'-----::- benelits. Subm it letter of
bedroom, 2 bath. full baseHELP
WANTED : Interest and res ume to John $59,000. New Haven 2,800
men!,· new heat pump, ,sets
Salesperson. An ambitious 0
Costanzo. sq. ft . log cabin as is, w/3-~ on 3 acres SR 7, Eastern
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
person can earn up to. Superintendent,
Athens- acres. Call Mike (513}314- School District. {740)985$500/wk. Call for details Meigs Educational Service 2754
4321
locally at 304-675-5100 or Center, 320 112 East Main
out·ol-town at 1·866·902- Street. Pomeroy, Oh 45769· 3 Bedroom , 2 Bath, 2 Car Owner relocating. 0% down.
5100.
0684. Application Deadline, Garage on spacious lot. MuSt see this Immaculate
ThurSday
May 26 , 2005. The Sunset Lane. off Sandhill Ad. '2000 sq. ft . home with
Holzer Senior Cara Center
AMESC is an equal oppdrtu· Must See Call (304)675- remodeled kitchen/ built-ins.
4352 for appt.
Great neighborhOod, close
-,II you enjoy working In long- · nity EmplnuAr/Provider.
3-Bedroom,
1-Bath
to town. Call (740)446-8325
term health&lt;:are and want to
Tired of your current job?
Remodeled, Full Basement. or visit www.ORVB.com
become part of a caring
LOoking for a pay raise?
App liances
· included, Code 4505. Priced to sell at
team you may be a candiOutbuilding
&amp;
24FT
Pool, $132 ,500.
date for one· of the following
At tnfOCision we pay br
positionS!
~rk Dnve (304 )675· -A-ea
_d_ylo_ m_
ove
--in-.-3-B-~
experience!
Home in country setting only
We will match your current
NURSING:
salary plus 25 cents up to 7 Homes under $14000. 198/mo . with 10"/o down
RN .
Will deliver. 740-385-4367 · 74Q-385-4367
$9.25.
LPN
STNA'S- Evenings and
If yoo are cur.rently working
Night Shift
Help Wanted
Help Wanted
and need a pay raise give
us
a
call
today!
,
RESIDENT SERVICES:

White wlblac~ spots . Rat
Terrier was taken from ·1034
2nd Ave. Gallipolis on
5113/05 across from Gallia
Country Animal Welfare
League. If ·seen , please
return , he IS a CH(LQ'S
Call (740 )44Hl544.
Consider Award .
ACTIV ITY
STNA

• Gungp.

90 Engillh l!le
91 Plaltlc ,_..
92 Wooldwldt

Seeking energetic. bright
collection specialist. Dental
backgroun~... helpful . Fax
res1,1me to (740)446·464"0 .

Capital FuFlding Courthouse
Group now The
hiring
Athens· Meigs
Researchers. Will train to Educational Service Center
work lrom home on your has a position opening as

forthorl
t 15 Un&lt;:loN, I n -

142
143
144
145

RN P~rt Time to supervise
nursing se rvices for indiViLiuats with develOpmental disabilities in Jackson County·
and surrounding areas.
Duties : asSessments, self
medication pr9grams , MAR
s8t "up/monitor\ ng staff/tamily training . Pay based on
experience.
Please call
(3041373 _1011
- - - - -- - - -

Gentles Contruclion- Home
Improvement
30 years
experience. Customer satifaction guareneed . Anyting
with home improvement
Compare our pri Ces. Free
estimate. {740).256 -6878. '

Send resume
•
TO:
3280, (740)645-0130. Call interested send resume to : MCBAOO,
1310 CAR·
568
anytime.
CLA Box
c/o Gallipolis LETON STREET· P.O. BOX
S A CUSE
OH
Tribune, P.O. Box 469 , 3
07 •
GallipoliS, OH 45631.
y A
'
·
45779.
E.cell.nl Income Na11"onal

99 PIA on the payrol
102 In rneclaa103 Uttertd
106 Widing bild
109 Nr!Da
111 OYerUn
112 Peeltrln ....
114 &lt;lome oflcill,

117
119
121
123

Experience and worki"ng
knowledge of behaviora l
principle and techniques
preferred. salary negotiable
based on experience. Reply
to:
Behav ior Support
$pecialist, PAIS, Inc., 229C
South Church Street, Ripley,
WV 25271 {304)373- 101 1
- - - --'--'-.,--Doctorrs
Ofllce ·
Point
Pleasant area, recruitlnn to
•
.fill need fo r office manage-

2 IQng-halr Calico ~lttens .
One rilostly blayk, one most· IY grey. (740)446-7484 or
(740)441-7411

. 67 !:lcJl.9rU Wi!lltY
68 PloUII Of....,_,

83GoJiiiCM
tl5 Almolh
UiidiiiiiW87 Klidofllllil

9G T••IIGI

1 Belief aystem
2 Pcny
3 Sill eye.to-ey.
4 Take b IXUI
5 Slirt .... (lilbr.)
.e Taxonlrn!lor1&amp;
7 VtldH.....
8 Metlrtlll fOr a doly
8 tllo bini
1.0 Pllnlthat~
tyrup
11 Large~
12 Thil peraon
13 Shniddad .
14 l!loclotooad

GIVEAWAY

1 rna Ie,. 1 Iema Ie pup ,
{black), small calico kitten.
good pets lor child ren ~ call
{740)949-2306

5tllltpU80 Kled
62Arinll ........

W•~*""iildof

IN~

98

Now Hiring
E11p. HVAC Installers needed , also ne.ed Installer
Helpers . Apply at Comfort
Air 1160. Jackson Pike.
ing effectiv9 interventions , Gallipolis.
·
lraining staf1 and monitoring
lmpleme nlation of inte·rve n- Point Pteasant Dental Office
1ion 10 the Ripley and Man seeking ,, Exp.Dental
area. Must have BNBS and Hygienist 3-days a-week.
1 year eMp,erience working Send ASsume c/o PO Box
with individuals with devel- 45 Pt. Pleasant, WV 25590
opme nf8!1 ' .
di sab ilities,

My storage unit was broken
into at Gallipolis Storage on
Flamingo "Drive between
April 30 and May ·14. if anyone knows somebody wh'o
has bought ·or sold a 12
single
shotgun,
gauge
motorcycl e ·helmet w/goggles. 1 suitcases ,
log
machine , sword . Please call
me at (740)245-9266· 1eave
message if no answer.

...

DOWN

_ _.I. Lr.m_
....~.~.s.~.~....
.Lr.·a_H_El_.
. _~·.w.ANTEJJ_.:_.I.L1·.80--~-~.N'.r:o.'J)
~
~

, BEHAVIOR
SUPPORT
SPECIALIST: Work w jth
I will not be responsible lor individuals with developany debts other than my mental disabililies assessing
own, Laura Baird 5·20-05 .
behavior problems, develop·

eggs in the bag she occupies
If threshold levels of
and the eggs over~in ter witH- leafhoppers are greater than
in the bag.
·
eigh t ·leafhoppers pier ten
Control measures include sweeps S&lt;imple at ·eight inch
hand pickin g off the bags alfalfa height, c.hemica[ "COObefore the new caterpillars trol is. warranted. Sever'al
hatch. Spray affected trees insecticides are labeled such
and shrubs with a biological as Ambush, Dimethoate,
control substance like bacillus Furadan, lmidan , . Laraban,
thurinensis when the caterpil- · .malathiion . Punce, Sevin arid
Iars are young. A third control warrior. Remember to follow
measure is to apply an early label instructions and to take
application of an insecticide int o acco unt post · harvest. •
spray. Thoroughly cover the · interval.
foliage with an appropriate
The ' seventh
annual
insecticide such as carbaryl
(Seviil)
malathion , landowners •conference '· is
pyrethrum, or rotenone. Read being held June 3-5 at Camp
. label directions for frequency Oty-Okwa in Hocking Hills. ·
of application. For more . This conference-is scheduled to
information please ask for asset landownerj interested in
Extension Publication 2149, learning about income opportunities from· field and forest. •
"Bagworm and Its Control."
Whether you are interested
•••
Alfalfa growers, be on the in mushroom produqion ,
look out for the first sight of forests, agritourism. specialty
potato leafhopper being carried crops, sustain~bl e agriculture
on the wind currents from the there is sure to b a session of
more southern regions of the interest for you. For a full .
United States. Alfalfa is espe- age nda and fee structure call
cially vulnerable after the tirst Rural A~ tion at (740) 767cutting ·or alfalfa. New growth 2090. Brochures may be
is more tender for the leafhop- picked up at the extension
per to pierce with its stylet office.
mouth part. Potato leafhopper
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
injury will stunt and tum leaves County agriculture and
yellow if large numbers are nature resources education,
present. Remember to scout Ohio
State University
our alfalfa fields.
Extension.)

107 l,awyM' org.
1Cl8 Eict8nd.,
110 Sl4JIJial ollid
112 Rllllill1 n1011111:11
113 ·Back (preftx)

I'

-

SUN.DAY PUZZLER
ACROSS

. Lr.ta...HEL
__~·.w·A·NTED-•
ANNOUNCEMENTS

\\\01\1 I \II '\ I \

Be on ·lookout for bagworms

72 Ontlily--tlrnt

Field trip to open landowners conference

03

'

Exotic livestock: Small-scale farm alternative
BY

&amp;unbap lm:lmesl'i&gt;entinel' •

Pt. Pleasant, WV

,t!J;r.tbunt ..

.

Sunday, May 22, 2005

.

•

Holzer Home Care, Jackson Branch is
seeking a part time Home Health Aide.
Duties of.this position include providing
personal ~are to patients 'in their homes.
·Required Qualifications are: Formal
completion . of a Nursing A~siswu
program, preferably through a vocational
institution. lrulividual will need to
successfully complete a home health aide
skills test. Prior experience of one year
working in 'Home Health or wor!Gng with
geriatric patients preferred.
If interested. please c9ntact:
Petty

If interested, please contact:

Paula Eichinger, RN
Pomeroy Branch Manager
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
100 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1561
Phone: (740) 992-1772
Help Wanted

IHEPTIOiiiSI

POSITIONS

AVAILABLE
• FuU ond
Part time

.·=.lhs
•Wilen!
hourlyroles ·
in lieu ol
berEfils
.• Convenient

..m
houJSIJd

l'oini-.

in:
LIW, -ooilolilt
WI;
~. Uit Hocling, Tuppon
l'loi..oni~OH.

CSHEALTH
PROJECT

Snider, RN

Jackson Branch Manager

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
I 00 Jackson Pike ,
Gallipolis, OH 45631-1563

Phone: (740) 288-4287

____________ - - .. ·- -- ·-·

Holzer Home Care, Pomeroy Branch
is seeking a part time Home Health
Aide . . Duties of this position include
providing personal care to patients in
their homes.
Required Qualifica\ions are: Formal
completion of a Nursing Assistant
program, preferably through a
vocational institution. Jndividual will
need to successfully complete a
home health aide sk11ls test. Prior
.experience of one year working in
Home Health o.r working with
geriatric patients preferred.

c.l..,_,

7

IS

5

l

l).4-865-4205
1-800-551·7658

.. -·- ·--"--- - - - + - -- --- "·

SUPPLY/INSTRUMENT TECHNICIAN
Pleasant Valley , H0spilal is curren tl y
accepting rosume5 for a .f ull - l ime
Supply/lnstruinent Technician . Previous
surgica l or cen tral sterile experience
preferred . Knowledge of medical supplies
and Jerminology or lhe demon slroled obilily
'to leorn quickly.
Excell ent salary, holidays, heollh insuran ce
.single/family plan . dental plan. l ife
in surance, vacation, long -)erm disability and
retirement .
Sen&lt;!f reSumes to :
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resources .
2520 Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, 'IN 25550
(304) 675-4340.
www.pvalley.org

M/EOE
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

�·'

•

J
Sunday, May 22, 2005

Furnrshed apt 2nd Ave
Upstar rs, all utlltt1eS pard
One bedroom no pets
Gatlipolr s (740)446-9523

Full srze Serta Elec Bed 3
Prece Mahogany Bedroom
Surte (304)675-4034 or
(3041675-041 B

John Deere 10ft No Ttl Or1il 14 mon th old Black Angus
for
Rent
Ca r,m1chael cross bull out of regrstered
Bull {740)446 -6755
Equipment (740)446-24 12

...... 8uHert1y Kol

(304)773-5338

l arge Water Hyacrnths John Deere Commercia l
$3 50 Butterfly Kot Healthy Works1te Products In Stock''
Lots ot Colors Phone Compact Excavator. 27C,
350 500/Skld Steers 371
(3041675-5043
320
325
328/Tractor
Mtntature Prnchers 1 male Loader BackhOe 11 OTLB
OlackJtan ta•ls docked dew Check out our rental rates
claws removed wormed Grea1 Frnancmg AvarlableEqurpment
Ready to go 5300 each Carm lchael
(740)446 24 12
(740)388 a t 24

GraCIOUS llvmg 1 and a bedJET
room apartments at V1llage
AERATION MOTORS
Manor
and
Rrversrde Repaered New &amp; Aeourlt In
Apartments m Middleport Stock Call Ron Evans 1From $295-$444 Call 740- 800 537 9528
992·5064 Equal Housrng
Opportumlles
Mov rn g sale Story&amp;Ciark
Nrce upstarrs apartment par- upnght prano $50 Broh11l
tially furn1shed no pets one sola/sleepe r queen srze
bedroom su rtabte tor 1-2 $50 both ex-good condrtron
Pr1tbull pupp1es 6wks old
a1r {740)446 0555
people
central
ask for 1st shots and wormed 1
(7401441-0731
Barbara Jean
mate 3 tamale $1oo each
North 3rd Ave Middleport NEW AND USED STEEL (7 401446-Q872
1 br lurn1shed apt no pe ts Steel Beams Prpe Rebar
Purebred Jack Russell pups
prevrous rental refereces &amp; For
Concrete
Angl e 7 wks old first shots
depoSit (740) 992-0 1()5
Cha nnel Flat Bar Steel wormed ta11 s docked $75
Grating
For
Drarns
(7 401992-4131
One Bedroom No Pets
Drrveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
Utr lltles Pard 5400/mo
Scrap Metals Open Monday 570
MUSIC-II.
Depos1t
&amp;
Aelerence
Tu'esday Wednesday &amp;
IN&gt;" IlWM}NI ~
Aeqwed (740)446•3667
Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed
Pleasant Valley Apartment Thursday
Saturday
&amp; Wurlttzer
$300
Pta no
Are now takrng Apphcat1ons Sunday (740 )446- 7300
for 2BA ,. 3BR &amp; 4BA
Pole
Barn
30x50x1 0Ap plications
are taken
$6 795 rnclud es Parnt ed
Mond ay thru Fnday, from
Metal Slider ' Free Oelrvery
900 AM 4 PM Otfrce 1s
$4 595
Loca ted at 115 1 Evergreen 24x 32x 1 0 ·
HOMEGROWN
40x64x12 ·
$13995
Dr111e Pomt Pleasant WV
STRAWBERRIES
(937)599 7740 http //oa!rooPhone No IS (304)675·
wldepolebarns com
5806 EHO
Available at McKean Farms
We sterns Wrll Trade Or on Centenary Road and th e
Pomeroy 2 or 3 br Naylor
Wil lram Ann Motel (740)446
E~~:c hange (304)675 5884
Run wid hook up s/r HUD
9442
leave message (740)992·
Wolff Tanning Beds
I \I&lt;'\ I ""l t•l'l II...,
6886
Huge selectton
.\11\l ... llllh.
Takmg Appltcatrons tor
lmmedrate Delrvery
Tracy A partm~nt s
3317
Frnancrng
10
Franklin
Ave
Srngle
1-800 894 6997
Bed room
Upstarrs ~~~
17_4~
01•4-6--6-579_._ _,
(304)675·2288 Refe rence
BliiUMNG
0% F1xed Rate up to 24
ReQurred
SUPI'IJI:S
months on New John Deere
Tara
TownhOuse
Compact Tractors &amp; 110 TLB
Apartments, Very Spacrous Block brrck sewer p1pes at Carmrchael Equ1pment
2 Bedrooms CIA 1 1/2 Win dows lrntels etc Claude._ (740)446-24 12
Bath Adult Pool &amp; Baby Wrnters Rro Grande OH
Poo.L Pat10 Start $385/Mo Call 740-245·5121
1995 M F 362 tractor, 55
Lea se
Plu s
No Pets
n.H P 8430 ease I H round
rr:Srs
oa t1 er 55 N H rake 479
Secunty DepoSit ReqUi red
(740)446-34 81
lt'OR ALE
N H haybme hay tedder

r

0'

1
10

(740)446-2412

Pequea N646 Hay Wagon 8
Round Bales hke new kept
1nsrde
$1 500
Frr m

(3041675'-2902
Round hay ba ter

1800
(6x51
(7401379-2366

r

-

M&amp;W
$4 200

\I\'

)(1:(1(1

~s.

211u;;

,..Antiques or Collectors Items ..

P1e safe. high back bed, dresser, night stands,
oak marble in lay dressers, stool, art deco

Appliance

lamps, quilting rrames, stands, chairs, wood

cabinet w/5 drawers. kitchen base cabinet,
Warehouse

kitchen table wlleaves, bench, small table, ox
yoke, lots of stone jars SOIIH! w/writ-ing, tin

cans &amp; misc .. SO's chrome di!l'\elle set. table &amp;
4 chairs, iron kettle, copper t~h boilers, corn

rn Henderson , WV
Preowned applrcanes startrng at
$75 a. up al l und~ r warranty
we do se rvrce work on all
Make and Models (304)6757999

cutter, nM:ker. iron beds, h1gh buy,wall)ut

blanket chest. oak chest, jug Kauffman
Lattaman Co. Columbus, OH, blue jars,
McCoy planters, bro" n crocks, ne" zinc lids
&amp; rubbers, Iris sugar bowl, tea pot~. crystle,

Furnrture &amp; Apptr8nces lor
Ltst &amp; Prrce s (304)675 5652

crackle glass. green depression. feed sacks.
I KilO's history book &amp; lots lots more.

Furnrture Sale Mollohan s
Sofa and charr startrng at

" Household''

Sene) gas refngerator, Frigidaire gas dryer,
Westinghouse &amp; Kenmore washers,
Westinghouse &amp; Maytag dryers, corner booth
&amp; seats. chest or drawers, dressers, beds,
couches, Jpc. bedroom suite, portable T.V.,
"ood chopping block table, lamps, coffee

$399 Call (7401446-7444
Mollohan Carpe t 202 Clark
Chapel Road, Porter Ohro

(7401446-7444 1-877-8309162 Free Estrmates Easy
f1na ncmg, 90 days same as
cash Vrsal Master Ca rd
Drive a- lrnle save alot

ta hle, recliners, ktlchen butcher block table &amp;
4 chairs. dishes. lots &amp; lots of linens, S.S.
cook'"are, complete set Guardian ware, lots
or electrical appliances and lots more.
''Misc."
Rinse tubs. bug wacker, misc. toots, pressure
canner, books. tool ,boxes. folding chairs, ..
scanner. excavator HD 700 pedal toy. misc.

or

Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Reparr 675-7388 For sale
re-condit ioned automatrc
washers &amp; dryers, relrrge ra
tors
gas and electriC
ra~ges arr cond1t10ners and
wrmge r washers Writ do
repa1rs on ma,er brands rn
shOp or at your home

childrens toys. fruit jars, christmas
decorations &amp; lots more.

Owners-Roger &amp; Rosemary Keller and
Jeanette &amp; Don Williams.
Dan Smith-Auctioneer Ohio#1344 WVIISIS
Ca.'h Positive 1.0. Refreshments

Two matchrng mauve mce
upholstered Cha1 rs $135
11 09 Sunset Dr Phone

Auction

Auction

Used Furnrture Store 130
Bulavrlle Prlo.e Applrances
mattresses
dressers,
couches, dinettes, reclrners,
bunkbeds
grave monuments
much
more
(740)446 -478 2 Gallipolis
OH Hrs t 1·3 (M·S) We buy
used furn lrre

Auct1on

PUBLIC

Auction

AUCTION
••
••
••
••
••
•
•••
••
•

Buy or sell
R1verrne
Antiques 1124 East Marn
on SR 124 E Pomeroy 74Q992 2526
Russ Moore

••
•

!
22 Oak factory padded
Churcl"r Pews 11 rt long.
Q00&lt;1 condrtiOn , $125 each
40 new Hymnal Church
books
S360 (7401388
8965
24 n swrmm1ng pool, 4 rt
deep must take down
(740)388-9873

saoo

35• M1tsubish1 TV 1n Oak
cab1net
$275
32~
Panason iC TV w/stand $425
Good condrtiOn (740)4461802

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Approx. 2.17 Ac. {Htgh Vlalblllly)
Near Rt 35/Rl 50 Split
1999 HarleY. Davidson Sportater
Cub Cailet Tractor· Toots

1111Q1
~m~~~-----

For saia Electnc hosp1tal
bed
Good
condir.on
(7.0}446-0974

!
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THURS,_,JUNE 9th

•

endless/
3 Bedroom 2 Bath Home w/eat-1n kitchen , ltvlnQ rm
Wfbnck hearth wood bumrng fireplace large foyer
half wfstorage under staircase, extres rr•dude partral
basement fuel 011 fumac:e w!huge underground fuel
: arl storage tank central AC dnlled 'Nell plus co
• water tap '' rnstaileel
,

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CALLFOR8ROCHU8EW

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PM :

: Real Estate TERMS. Setla to Highest Bidder above
• $75,000, orreretl free &amp; clur pnor to cloting on/
before 7/9/2.Q0_5, SS,OOO,.dc.,.., at t1me of aale, ~arlee at closrng no contingencies
PERSOftAL PROPERTY t999 Hartey Oavldson
: 883 Spoortster rnoton:yde Cub C8det Model 2188,
• Murray 14 5 HP ndlng mower; Murray 11 HP riding
: mower wal~ behind 3 ~ HP trimmer IT'IOW8l': 5 HP
• rototrlter la...m &amp; garden tOOt , HouMhotd, Fuml·
: ture &amp; Appll•ncn + too much to mtntl..,.,l
; TE""S ON PERSONAL PROPERTY. Cash or
• Check all sales final, everythtng sold As-Is. Jesa~e
Pntcnen, Owner Jeanette Mendenhall Atty In F.ct

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4 : ~PM
•
Real Estate
!
at6:00PM
:
Comfflflf'CI•I
*'
poalbllltiM .seem !

: OPEN HOUSES 512312005 &amp; 5.'31/2005 H
Delta '1" 9encl'l top band
saw, almost new Craftsman
corri:llnatlon 8" disc and 4"
~ aancltr sllgntfy used
S55, Craftsman 7 1 /4~ orcular saw $25 Skll 7 114" err·
cutar saw. comr.'lererat duty
S30 Wood , cente( mount
drawer slider , metal center
.mouM slider wrm brACkets
and rollers, appro• 80 sets
8aJt of Senco na11er 2 1 2
n&amp;Jtl (740}441 -9359 leave

*

'~~:~
House~d

, STAHLEY &amp; SON, INC. (740) 775-3330
WWW STANLEYANOSON.COM

School) recruits and

2003
Toyota
Spyder
Convertrble Excellent condr- any race, color or eth·
Iron, 7 000 mrles 6-spaed nic origin to all Its
Sequential Sh rft tf! storage rights, privileges, profrom Oc tober to Apnl grams and acllvltles.
(3041675-4318 m (3041208- In addition, the school
will not discriminate
4128

Oldsmobrle
Srerra
94
loaded, good hres, body
excellent must see $2995
080, 740-416··044 1
98 Camara V6, Magna- flow
exhaust, 1B nms cd player

automatiC

78,000 mrles

$7500 Call (7 401441 -0450
98 Dodge Neon 90 000
miles cold Slf, tilt runs
good, great gas mrleage

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:

•
.......-y'-1 s~ 111 c-.1 MRE ~·~•~E a-.
•
: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......................:

LICII:ell

at tile 11uc111n Center 111 Rl i2 n. If

•--.IIIII. Uera lltlc:llaMI has been tanlltlell
11 a lll'1ltlg hlme iltlll we will llMint Iter
jltl Silllill ~ frlm

~

on the basis of race,
color or ethnic origin

NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLl·
CY AS TO STUDENTS
OF CHRIST ACADEMY, LTD.
Christ
Academy
School admits stu-,
dents of any race,
color, national and

ethmc origin to all the
rights, privileges, programs and activities
generally accorded or

TRUCKS

dents at the school. II
does not discriminate

I"OR SA1 F.

extracurricular activi-

on the basis of race,

ties. Furthermore, tho

color, national and

school is not intended
to be an alternative to

court or, admlnlstra·

ethnic

origin

In

or public school dis·
!riel Initialed dos"egra-

and

other

school

administered
programs. Dated thts
19th day ol May 2005.
Cynthia T. Langona
Administrator

Christ Academy, ltd.
A
West VJrglnla
Corporation

'

May 22, 2S, 2005

(7401645·6734

Real Estate

saucers-cruet-goblets &amp; tal l glasses. Havtland
creamer &amp; sugar, Homer Laughh n 8 place

settongs of china M•lls pattern, Fenton, old
1950's lamps. matched pau. Blue saun lamps
w/marble base &amp; more !
HOUSEHOLD MISC.
KJtchenware, old books, blankets, do1hes,
Btssel sweeper, luggage, rod &amp; reels, good
old carpenter box wlkey, fishmg tackle box...
cute nun. wheelbarrow. salesman sampler,
several hand toots, saws. cirCular saws. etc
Y:ird rools &amp; more '! 1

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY
RJCK PEARSON AUCTION CO. IHi6
P 0 A Sandy Iannarelh
304 773 S447 or 304 713 5785
www.aucuonzlp.com

Ttrms: CISb or theck wilD

(740)245-Q372

a;:;::

r

1 :00 - 2:30 pm
795 Jackson Pike

•

Galllipollis tum 3rd

Call for additional information!
Hope to see you there!

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
510 Second Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45631
446·7101

$182 •57 Per
Mo

ts.ooo '

Mun fn 9 00-7 00

Sm 9 00-6 00
Closed Su nday

1-800-837-3238
Halp Wanted

Help Wanted
&lt;

Ohio Valley
~·
Home Health, Inc5fj ~
&amp; PT PbSI*Ions available.

'

Competitive Wages with
benefits. including health
Insurance.

•

f'O BoATS &amp; MOIURS
· mRSAIE

r

ExCAVAllNG

16 ft Eager Beaver trailer
dove tarl, needs flo or $800

Apply at:

Iilii lllll\1\1, 1\1 1 1111\1'1 II I Ill \I
&lt;

Home Health Aide/
Homemaker Training
Program
•

7111 Aru Jt&amp;?* •..,,. a ....,
•eftt £ttdla..' .....

The AAA 1s currently accepting
applications for their Home Health
Aide/Homemaker Training Program.
The program is of no cast to 'the
participlWlts. Upon graduating,
participant will be assisted with
job placement.
For more information contact
the Area Agency on Aging at
740-374-9436 or 1-800-331·2644.

Hof.*'"H ,'tf•tiiJ
WaJiun ton

HelpW•nted

Mtmn~tt

Nub/"

Pnf)

Year 2000 Pontoon Baal 24

r

M~wr:~

r

--

rnrles, loaded, leather cowl Anniversary Edition e~~:cei fnductron hood
custom
OBO lent con di110n, 16' bo~e, AC
. ami
$tt 300
and heat, stove ICebox,

~401245-0395

dinette $2 000 (7401949·

Jeep
Liberty ~709)
Lo aded 4x4,
1992- 29' Airstream Excalla
080
Call Very
good condrt1o n, twtn

S14 500
/7401256-1618 o• (7401256· beds Ph (7401645-4454
1200

• Ford F150 4x4
84

automat - 1998 30' frfth wheal travel
trader t:louble slide excel1: newly reburlt 302 engrne lent
condr tron , $13 900
Alummum rntake , Edel
phone
(7401698 9319
fjrock carburetor, new t•res

1480 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
OH or Phone Toll Free
1·866-441-1393

,., ,400 (7401379-2826

24FT

Dodge W1nnebago

96 Jeep Cherokee Spmt Motor Home (304)593-0898
4x4 auto, 81r, whrle looks 85 Wrnnebago Ch1ertarn
and runs good , $2 800 many updates &amp; extras
- 40c.:;;,)7..4,;;;2·,;;;2,;;;66~2~--_, 6t&lt;W Generator Ready to

Help Wanted

"
VANS
.,.__.iFiiOiilliiSiiiAJiiiE
ii._

Owner Operators

_.l
ir.l
)982 Ford Conversron Van
4 Capt arn's Charrs AfT, A/C
~M/FM Cassette 302 VB
Eng , E\leryth1ng Works
t,.ooks Good, Runs Good,

No NYC or Canada

$1,500 Sign On Bonus
Home Every Weekend
*86CPM UE
*Paid Base Plates &amp; Permits
*Paid Liability Insurance
*Paid Fuel Taxea
*Paid Fuel Surcharges
· *Medical &amp; Olsablllty Benefits
Available thru True Choice

Go (304)675-3035
Coleman Camprng Tra 1ler
12FT, 2 Krng Beds $5 500
call for Details (304)6751731

In Memory

S1200 (7401256-1961

•

i 997

Ford Convers1on Van
f 4,000 m•les, exce llent con dillon, new trres , $9 800,

(740)992-2945

'

( 'ompa11y I &gt;riJ·cr \

:.; Announcements

Solo up to 40¢/mile

********************"*'
Team up to 46¢/mile

TD

Construction
"AU Your Home
lmprovemem Neeth"
• S1dmg • w,ndoY. s

1 year OTR experience

end Good MVR required

• • Decks • Pon; hes
• Carpor:ts • Garages
• Room Add

An Equal Oppottunlly Employer.

~rl' I11 11'AIIr"ns

2000 8aylrner 21 fl cuddy w/
trarler, many extras, very
clean 304 -675·5563

In Lovilrg

ji;;;'o(t£
Johnson
'Day s of
sad"1u H _(n((
co me over us

Tears ana

~I{ent oft ell

j(ow 1or

me mory li"Y'
lfOl4
• liS

ofren ,u ar

1"'(,,,

V011

• M1mbarns

(ejr u s ;IX

• K1tche ns • Baths

"No Job To Smafl'

years aBo

Racane, OH

We love and miss

740-247-2t62
or 740-416-3508
14 yJ'S eAp

you so much •

Mom, Dad &amp; Fanilly

..===:::::==:::!.!::===::=::::!

!lnd

( Offflflf'J

- Announcements·

Announcements

The famoly of
Be verly Chapman
would hke lo thank
lhe Commumty and
church family for
the outpounng of
support love and
prayers for us
dunng lhe illness
and loss of o ur .
w1fe, molher,
grandmoiher, grea1
grandmother, sister
and aunt
We are so blessed
to live m a
comrnumly that
cares and supports
our famtly dunng
our loss Our lives
have been made
ncher by your
show of care and
love
We wish to give
spec1al recogmhon
to the ne&gt;ghbors of
Bob and Bev,
Pas tor Bob '
Robinson, The
Syracuse Method1SI
Church. Tina Story
(home health
nurse), Ftsher
Funeral Home.
Holzer Canoer Care
Center, Hospice
and the slUff of
holzer Medical
Center. God has
blessed the
Chapman fam1ly
wnh some very
special friends;
Joyce Sisson and
lamily. Barry
McCoy and family.
8111and Nan Dav1 s,
Dorothy Sayre and
Jean S1ou1. We
w1sh we could
ment10n each
pe"on thallouched
our farmly dunng
ourloss. Thank you
seems too small a
gesture for your
care, s uppon and
love.
Thank You,
The famtly of ,
Bever I y Chapman

~allipolis

UnitManapr

UnitMan.pr

Obstebics
40/wk Full time Exempt

Pedimics
40/wk Full time Exempt

,

+

oversees

'

The Gallia County Department of Job And Family
Services (GCDJFS) is releasing a Request for Proposal
(REP) to solicit proposals from organizations
interested in developing and operating innovative
youth programs under the provisions of the Workforce
Investment Act (WIA). The design of innovative youth
programs shall provide comprehensive education and
employment preparation services through a skills
based design to eligible low-incoroe in school and out
of school youth age fourteen -(1 4) through twt~nty·one

(21).
The program shall operate from July 1, 2005 lo June
30, 2006. Interested parties may pick up an RFP
packet at the Gallia CDJFS Work Opportunity Center
located . at 848 Third Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Proposals must be submitted by 4:30 p.m. on June 1 ,
2005 to be eligible for consideration. Please contact
Fred Childers at 74Q-446-3222 with any questions.
The GCDJFS reserves the right to .reject any and all
proposals.

u \\ \\ ,u l s n~ sc houls ,t·um

Reward offered for

03-II-II\97T

I

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

Auct1on

.

IKHUI Kher Road. A.t hrns
~ I DIO RIAL

10:110 a.m.

HAPPY

In Memory

A.t hen" tu rn on R rH~r

BIRTHDAY

TRUCK:

BETH
ELLEN!

Auction

DIRECTIONS: Rt .'50-west ol Athens turn
watch tor signs,

l 979 Ford F250

w/460 motor

P1ck up 50 000 mtl es tn good condllton. lull
s.tze truck can le r acks lull s 1L e "0ap box

ared C.
Leach

d er by

car

..

Fo\RM EQUIPM E;NT: Ma &lt;&gt;&lt;) Ferg uson
165 d1esel Trac1or 11900 hrs ). MaS&gt;ey
Ferguson 50 Tra&lt;.:tor w/end loade1. Land Pnde
rototlller. Oltv cr 3-bouom plows, dt sk.,
Hesston 5()(X) bale mow er. Ma ssey Ferguson 9
'Baler, Ford 501 7 It ~tck l e b.1r mower 32 It

March 7, 1979 •
May 21,2004

hay elevator. , pt whcd rake, 2-wh ee l utrltty
wagon 250 gall on fuel tank, push plow. hurse
d rawn mow board plow. 2-rolls new woven
w1re. 2-parttal rolls barb w1rc.

We th ought of you with love today,
bur rhat:1nnthing new.
We th ought of you yesterday and
the day before that, too.
We think of you in sder1ce and
often speak your name.
Your memory is our keepsake with
which we'll never part
God has you 111 His keep1ng;
we have you in our hearr.1.
Greatly missed by your family

TOOLS: John Deere GT275 Lawn Tractor

D1 nner Bell w/good brac ket. ox yoke, cream
cans, lard pre-;,., corn JObber, II boxes of
assoned
glassware
m~: ludm g
-;ome
depressiOn. pre ~sed g lass &amp; u m: k s,
HOUSE HOLD
FURNISHINGS
&amp;

MISCELLANEOUS: Maple ch&gt; na hu1ch.
m aple d mrn g tahl e w/4-cxtra leaves and 8
c hairs, so fa. lovcseat, 2-recl mcrs, m.1ple

With nook, pantry, d isposal, m tcrowave , great
room wtth stone/gas trreplace , formal dtnmg
room With bay w1ndow, study/offtce wtlh walk-

FUR-.ISHINGS
'~ tt \hl't

&amp;
rel1H!t'rt!tnr-.

wmUow .tr r u md ri HUJI!I hl'droom ... urle huhk
beds h\111 h~JJ dnuhiL· hcd ,,uut \ dt l'""'-'t
C00 SOJe "tl'rCU dt:d !IC Otl..! ,tn 5111 1.!1.?1 ~C\\IIH!
ma&lt;.: hmc m ~.;,tblnct (.l t:" ~k '-~llll l;lllll &lt;.h:-.,k,__.
dresser. en d &amp; &lt;.:ollec t.ihJc..,, fi.Ulh:d pr dul ..,.,,
kmd kn ,K k'- .mll d.:~.:or.1to r 1h:m\ dl ,hn
pots, pa ns, hook" g,ls- ~nil., gd~ l ncpL!t:l'
logs t.:crhng 1;3 11 lot" o l t.:.mm ng: J-11~ [l,!o.;h

TERMS: Cash 01 check wlpo&lt;111 vc I D No

3 bedrooms, all electnc. 2 1/2 baths k1tchen

(Ron)!.' T'\P \ 2lJ).

GMC I T Du mp ln1ck.

MISCELLANEOUS:

Credit C.lfds Chccb over $ 1000 mu sl have
bank authon1 a11on ol !umh avarbh lc. Food
Will be avail abl e Notte~pon:-.tblc lor lo"'s or
acctdent s

Bnck Ranch B1dweii/Porter Rt 160, near

1 ~77

HOUSE HOLD

coflec &amp; end t able~, lamp.. hurn cunc lamp
m&lt;Iple console stereo, maple double hed
maple desk &amp; dmu , st.::vcral h umcd flllllts
some h,mdt cap C4UIPIIlCnt. exe rl tsc b1ke.
hutmdrficr, wmdo w .llr conU rttoner. metal
shelvmg, potato crates, 5 doz~n+ canmng J.Us.
and other mJscellaneou' Hem ~

school, grocery store and gas stat ton

Ro.rt.l

sle1gh hells complrte gunll mg wheel on
stand 2-wood \Hllll c.tnls old l,ngc nrn,Jte
bud cage , old Lnu.:oln cr&lt;~nk \\tnll r~.;lmll
player old je ll y cabtnct (no doot"'l old
p;untcd w.trdtobe l)Jd Lhrlcwhc. ol d hull ct ,
old roekm g. c.:halls chert y l.tmp tah h: . l n rnb
wood barr.::l s 11011 buhy hcd d.ty h~..·U I ~+
Long.1bergcr huskt:t 'i '"lliL' old ha..,hh 110
kc t ost:ne l a m p~. '-L.th.'" hutll: l dturn l.tld
pte "-s, clu:11 y pillet tun wo m.tshu uppll tt.
stone. wood dm:ken u.ttc~. lOll \1 11 ld
N.ll!onal pump ""ecpa , m,tl l Ll~t' 11n n
bulla lo st.t1 Ui.' 1(11.., tl l gla' "'' ''r'- ..,~,ct,ll
croc ks &amp; JUgs. AP Do11.1ghlw J.lr I~) ()'.., N.n.,
Machmr st M t~ t l' untlorm-. &amp; O\L'rco,!t R R
la ntern , Carhtde lights. \ lngle/Jlluhlc tiL'l''cwssl:Ut sa\\- 2-old d11 ld s \\ag1ms &amp; ..,~c J~
old Ton k.\ lo) ll tKb. ·dnldte n.., l tK~ mg
hotsl!s. o ld d.tlll p on ..,J\,HL' .md (1lhet tt\.'111~
h CII11..! lound Ill th._, ,IIIIL

and oth er nW'iCell aneous Ite ms

Real Estate

·

ANTIQUES ANI) COLLECTIBL ES: &lt;cl ol

w/baggcr
att ach ment .
Gr.wcly
Super
Com mcrcml wal k beh1na w/mowcr, plow &amp;
ttl ler La" n Boy law n muwcr. JD sellpropell ed mower Humcl ue 250 &amp; 410 cham
!'.aws. \\-Ced caters. Cral tsman 5 hp. rototlller,
cle..:: tnc
garden
sprayct.
Crattsl11an
plancr/Jomcr, router &amp; table, Milwaukee dnll ,
bus, load bmders . log &lt;.~am.;; , cham t all p1pc
threader &amp; st.md p1 pe wrenches, socket sets
SeaPs. pump , homemade atr compressOr, tence
stretchers. sca lt oldmg w lu:el l"t;..t!TOW. several
wood ladders. some '1\0od, roll of plasttc p1pe,

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES: Eag le
Real Estate

•

Mode l A I rw.:k. dump het.l \\ /crank hlH ~t
GUN: Rcmm gton 870 Shotgun \\/..,cop!.!
\-JOBILE HOME 1969 Sch ull &lt; I; , 60 1bedroom (as 1..,1
FARM EQUIPMENT: Ca,;; 8R5 Trauor
\\ /2040 h r.,
dtc"d -c:-;:c dlcnt t.:omhtr on
lmernatton al I DlJ DutCI w/HD \\-t m:h lUll "
good-u nd!!rcarnagc toil et~ 1n gond ~..ondllton
(diesel. m .mu.tl blade. 1oll ~.:ugc , cxtr.t parh).
A lit" Chal ma-. G kanc r Comh tne Model F
\\/4-tm\ narnw. cmn/~t,un h~;.td Ame tt c.m 70
bu~ hd £I .till df)C ! \\/\\CI &amp; " !lll;..t gt.: h111 grcllll
lllOISlU! I! Lc"lt:l. 4 7 It 6 ,gr.un .tugcr. 20 It
gram &lt;~ugt:t. M cC utd y 10 It
gram/hay
c!c' .ttor
~00
g&lt;tllon
ltdt.l
s prJ.~ t.:r
lnternatt lHhLI 4xl6 phn'"· 1 pt 4 It dhk
D.uush -1 -tow r ultt \ dtllr 1~ It l1c ld cui II\ .lt llr
2-fO\\ ~ pl cult l\,ttm 12 I t h.ul m\g.ttor l tlhn
Del! rc 12 It ~.. ultmuk hct Nt:\\ l t.lc.1 L Ut
condltr on~o.• r, lntl!nlal torutl 9 It
h.t\ hu1e
ln tcmatl onal 10 ..,ha nk pull t)"pt' ~.;hr . . ~! pkl\1.,
B ermd l l t'l'd gnmkr PTO l lll v.h..:'-1' 2-flat
h~d h.ty '' agon ... St h " hcl'l 1 .rxl.: 27 It tlat
trall t:r '200 g.tllon lu cl t .tn~ \1.' 1 n l lug hunh.
4'' ntt gatton pump \\nf, JOi nt" ol pt fK'" &amp;
n scrs, hearl gat!.!, 'ome t.um g.t tc-., 2 l&lt;t 1gc
barn tans. step ladJt::rs,
TOOLS: S,mborn Pro-Fore..:- 6 5 hp L p11 ght
atr compt cs so t Lmcoln •\rl "dckr r.ut.:.
washer g nnt.l e1 dnll pre .. -. hydt ,JUI Il pJ e,s.,
large lm r w11h l ot~ ol blllt s. l m~ of p1pe
fttltll£"· log cllm ns da mps.•t~ ... unment p t
belts, elc ctn~,; motot. Su nbe.un sheep :-.hc.llct ....
groo nun g -;hom, ..,ho" hoxe..,. 15 g.t llon s good
latex pauu .•md other mt s.~.; c ll aneo u "' rtt:nb

on F1Sher Road iCounl y Rood 17). go I nule.
TRUCK:

OH

go les-; than one nu le, \\,Itch 101 '- tgn ...

Thursday, May 26, 5:00p.m.
· In Memory

Count~·.

IH\ - ~lundm , ~hn 111

DIRECTIONS: Rt ,)0-10 m&gt;b ""'' ,,1

FARM EQUIPMENT EVENING
AUCTION ,'
5295 Fisher Road, Athens, OH

(304) 675-1333

Auction

FARM EQUIPMENT AUCTION

Auction

l}otnt ~lea~ant l\egi~ter

lOillpaltOI. C\l'TU SL' C(jlllplll l' llt ll'lidt p.ll tO
table &amp; 2-~,.: h,ur~ .•mt.l ot h~.;·r nu"''-ellan~o u..,
Items

TERMS: Ca&gt;h 01 check 11 lpo&lt; &gt;111c I D No
Personal

Propert y ol

the la te

Ru ssell &amp; Betty

Credn C ard "' (hct.:k... owt S I000 rmht h.l\ e
bank ,wthot u .ur on ol lund' .tvJiiahlc Fot~d
\\I ll he a\,ulahk Nol l t:\J1tln\th lc I til lm" or
a\.:l:tden ts

Bashore
+
Owners Jun R1 shorc &amp; P.u Uhl

'" closet M aster bedroom and bath w1th 2
walk tn closets, Whtrlpool tub, shower and

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER John Patnck ··p,,t Shendan
L1ce nsed &amp; Bonde-d '" Oh1o &amp; WV -

dual s1nks Enclosed back po rch. 2 car
garage. 20x40 mground pool. oak woodwo11&lt;,
new roof , landscap&gt;ng plus A/C-heat Adjacent

OWNERS R.1lph &amp; N&gt;t.I Rodcha'"
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
o\UCTIONEE R John P.1111ck Pot" Shcndan

Member of Oh1o &amp; Nattonal AuLIJonecr"s

land approx. 4·5 acres avatlable

L1censed &amp; Bonded tn Ohto &amp; WV - Mc mhcr
ol Ohrn &amp; N at um.d r\udtonecr s ' "'-lX: I.tl lllll

Assoctau on

Email Shamrock 1\ucuon@uol rom WEB
www shammck auctton s l o tn

$179,900
Call (740) 446-9312

Em.ul Sh.unr ud.. Aul.tlun{!l1::tOI I.om \I\ EB
W\\'W ShamiO~o;k-,lUC II On ~ ~o;Onl

PH: 740-592·4310 or 800-419-9122

PH:

74t~59+·4310or800-419-9112

•

YBULLETIN BOARD

Aimou~cements

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL

Shift: Monday throush Friday day shift~
Shift: Monday through Friday day shift
carry full time responsibility for the umt
Full time responsibility for the unit (24(7)
(24/7)
Qualificat1ons: Current Ohio RN licensure.
ciualificatoons:
Current Ohio RN licensure.
M1mmum 3 years nursing (obstetrics) BSN
Minimum
3
years
nursing (Peds preferred)
(or health field) or currently enrolled in
and dinical experience. BSN (or heakh;
BSN program to be completed in 4 years.
care) or currently enrolled in BSN program
'
Brief Description: Mana1es departmental
;
to be completed within next 4 years.
operating activities accprdin1 to HMC;'s
BrieU&gt;escriptlon; Manages dep~rtmentaf
palicies, procedures, and accrediting
1
operating
activities according to HMC's
latlort5 (Joint Commission, OOH, CAP).
policies, procedures, and accrediting regui
Promotes continuing education of stall to
latoons. Promotes continUing education ol
provide safe, competent and ~ustomer­
stall to provide safe, competent anc!
lriendly care. Assists and
commucustomer-friendly care. Assists/oversee~
nity education/dasses/health fairs.
community activities.
Experience: Clinical and/or managerial
Ellperience: Clinical and/or managenal
experience in ol&gt;stetncs. Prefened· 3 years
experience in pediatrics preferred- 3 years ·
Contact:
'llanny CouJhenour
Kannr Coutftenour
Contact:
446-5205
446-5205

IDailp W::ribune

(740) 446-2342

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Columbus, OH 43207 ·

MISSING
personalized w1ld
turkey box call
made for Jam es
Earl Kenname r by
J D Harris. Last
seen Tuesday, May
10 1n a leather
holster. Reward of
• $100 for info
leading to recovery
and $500 for the
return. Call Horace
Karr, Jay Reynolds
at Baum Lumber or
call 803-480-1842.

17401446-4987

~rr Sport 5 9L V8 67t&lt; 1984 Skamper pup-up 25th

~enegade

.

Help Wanted

1994 Pontoon boaVtrarter
JD 450E Dozer 6 V:Ja~
40 HP Jol:1nson Motor used
Blade GOOd Undercarriage
very little $5000 00 740 Read~ to work,
Hours
992-3875
unknown $ 18 500 7 40-9924,19
1996 Stratos bass boat 11 5
last stnke 2001 Soli ride
tra1ler custom cover, excel Card of Thanks
lent
condi!Jo n,
$6500

Associated Training Sen ices
2323 Perfnrrnam:e Pk" •

missmg '

(7401388-9673

loot Sweetwater 50 HP
Mercury, Power Trr m, 4
Stroke Engme, B1g Foot
Outdrrve, lounge Seats
Pnvacy
Room
Depth
Frnder, Hour ' Meter, Good
Radio, Has only 50 hours on
Boat. Garage kepi m w1nter
4999 Ford F250 d1esel truck Like New Pard over $18 000
ax4, 314 ton extended cab Will sale for $13 000
ISspeed, stand ard loaded , (304)773-5944
81.000 Very clean Price ~!!::"~~-~~~-,

f21 .§00 (7401388-0356
~ Dodge Durango 4x4,

.800-383-7364
Announcements

WATERPROOF1NG

'&amp;99.9 Bravada, tully loaded
leather, dual-power seats
d:eow t1res, Alloy wheels Blue
Soak pnce S8 750 sacnf1ce
$6,495 (740)645-2729 or
{?40)379-2544 leave mes·
rage, wrll ret urn call

!003

Attention Dnvers
Help Wanted

4 3 V6 5

1-998 Ranger 4~~:4 5 spd 3l
~MIFM cassette, A!C, off
Jl()ad package new parnt
OBO Call after
4: 30pm {7401256-6257

RN'$, STHA, CNA's, CHHA's FT .
Vinyl/stone
i
home.
Equipped kitchen, d1ning room, 3
bedrooms, 2 full baths, family room,
laundry, inground pool, attached garage,
concrete dnve N1cely landscaped lot Stop
m and see the rest 112328

Chevy S-10,

sPeed 4x4 $4,000 OBO
«Jail (304)675-5612

Is H'ring

'

4x4
FOR SAlE

1'991

(across from McCiures Restaurant)
Motivated Sellers!
Immaculate one floor plan ranch home
situated on easy to maintain lot with
fenced -in lawn, oversized 2.5 car garage
with work shop area, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, DR, FR, LR. newer replacement
windows, roof and carpeting. Stop bY, to
see the rest!"il2360

Help Wanted

$7,000 (740)367-

Train in Ohio
Next Class: June 20th
National Certification
Financial AssisLance

Uncondrt1onal lifetrme guarantee Local references furnr shed Established 197 5
Ca ll 24 Hrs (7'40) 4460870 Rogers Ba sement
Waterproof•ng

18ch lift, 35 rnch t1res Reese

~Area Apncy oo Aging

GLASSWARE
Large collecuon of Fostona Chintz pauem
pncher-glasses - 1ce bucket - fruit bowl-pla1es

motor and !lames per1ect shape only
and/or 2 21,000 mrles, many extras
lor parts $9.500 (740)416-2213 or
(7401985-3677
ne\"( rad1a

88 Chevy 4x4 V8 , auto, 6

('"&lt;"-

chesr &amp; others Early l111en press
10 o ld green pamt. Brother sewmg machme,
30'' Kenmore electnc range. Maytag washer
&amp; dryer. lawn furniture &amp; more 1

Harley Dav1dson custom low

78 Chevy truck partrally rrder Black wfchrome, 1rrbal

-

Bulldozers, Hackhocs, Loaders. Dump
Trucks. Graders. Scrapers. Exca• a tors

RedCat/ l 1Dec

A.Utomatrc , 30,000 actual GSF 600S Suzuki Bandrt
mlles
$2 450 {304 ) 576 - 2003 3,000 miles, Custom
2934
Pamt , Custom exhaust ,
2001 Dodge 1500 Sport V8 h.gh)y mod1f1ed strong bike'
g~ad
cab, $16,900 $5000 (7401441 0450

C

~~

ge ntlemen·~

2004

Training For Employment

Ph (3041675 1935

sage

4 _ Truck Camper AC TV
1968 Ford Ranger extended Whee le•
Pa'd
$l 600 Antenna Wiled for Ca ble,
&lt;=;ab, wrll run $400 (304 )458
like new $6 500 (304)675Askmg
S1,100 Helmet 3353
~727
'
rncluded
(304)675 426 2
"I U\ It I ...,
f 991 Ford Explo rer 2WD (3041593-4290 (3041593standard
tran sm1ssron 0840 leave message
motor Wi ll turn over but ~-------­
won't start. $500 {740 )3Btl 94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic 10,000 m11es ~ue
9673
excellent con ditiOn $13,500,
BASEMENT
1996 S·'O Prckup, 4cyl (740)949 -2217

admissions, poltcles,

criminate on tho basis

C9nd $2 500 (304)675

Heavy Equipment
Operator

I

educational policies,
scholarship and loan
programs and athletic

of race, color, or ethnic origin In the hiring
of Its certified or non·
certified personnel."
(5) 8, 15, 22, 29, 2005

1972 Chevy Prckup, 350
Automat iC, LWB
Good

WM~R~am

~52

Real Estate

3:00- 4:30 pm
182 Brentwood Drive

SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION

Plymouth
Voyager 35FT
MCI·SC
former
107,000 miles, runs ~d Greyhound Sus partly-conS800 (7401379-2826
verted
to motor-home
19:11!"'"::-:"----~., Licensed/titles as Meterp41
Home
Manufactured
1 4 ~
October-1979 Det roit 6V·
71-0iesei·Engine Alllson-3speed
Automatrc1998 Buell S3 Thunderbolt
Transmrssion New t rres on
Harley Oavrdson engme
very fast sport b1k:e, great fflar 75% on Front Old con·
versron rs slnpped-out and
shape $5100
{740 )985the unrt IS ready for new
9857
des1gn Have kltchEin-srnk
2000
Harley
Oavrdson bathroom -smk, and torte\
for lnstallatron
Sportster 883 w/ 1200 Ki t ready
8 000 mrles new trres lois Complete set Ot manuals
of chrome excellent condi- and much mt~re Mu st sell or
tion $8 000 (740)949 4019 trade because ot rll ness In
fam1ly W1 ll sell lo 1 $7 000
740-591 -5610
frrm or w111 tra de for a motor
ot
ltke/vatu e
2004 RedCaV11 Occ, 4 - home
Wheeler
Pard
$1 600 Call304-6 75 1981tal1er7PM
Askmg S1 100 (304)675
4262
(3041593-4290 For Sa le or Trade 77 Cru1se
(304)593·0840 leave mes- A1r 30FT asking $6 000

administration of Its

tlve agency ordered,

gatlon."

97

(7401446-6865

.made available to stu-

her ...... Spring
llue. In l'tmerOtJ, OH to the llttclllll Center to

FURNITURE
Beauliful S1gne1 Wdlel cherry DR SU1te,
table. 6 chaors &amp; large 2 pc Hutch , Must
See' Like new 2 pc sofa &amp; loveseal made by
FlexSteel, La·Z-Boy Recliner. Mah tables
5pc maple donette set, good early walnut
chest, 2 pc maple BR Suue. cedarchest.

$5 495

In the administration
of Hs educational programs and athletics/

"The Ohlo Valley
51 .200 080 (7401256 9031 Chrlatlan,
School
or (7401256 1233
(Elementary and High
School) will not dis·

.,., lflat . . . , . . -

(7401446-3257

"The Ohio Valley
Christian
School
(Elementary and High

4x4

Caravan, $2,395 96 Dodge
-4K4 pu S3,900, 98 Wmdstar
van $2 ,695, 01 Suzuki
Metro, $2,695, 97 Chry
Concorde
$2 495
97
Nrssan Alttma $1 995 00
Ford Focus, $3,295 97
Escort s w $1 ,595 97 GMC
$onoma, $2 ,395 98 Grand
AM GT $3 195, 98 Jeep
Cherokee $2 995 96 Ford
Asprre, S1 250
B &amp; 0 Auto Sates
HWY 160

.stored new
More , $2,500
~evy trucks
,500 Lots of

I II

Blanket Chest, Chest Of
Drawers, 40's Over Stuffed Chair, Tole
Painted Potty Chair, Two Oak Library
Tables,
Kitchen
Work
Table
W/porcelain Top, Child's Wicker Chair,
Small Tables And Stands, Misc. Old
Chairs, Very Nice Lowery Organ, Doll
And Baby Carriages, Pr. Of George &amp;
Martha Lamps, Small Primatives And
Countr) Antiques, Old Quilts, Cast
Iron Items, Stone Jars &amp; Crocks,
Anchor Brand Wringer, Old Kentucky
Home Scale, Old Kitchen Items, Misc.
Table Lamps, Old Dolls, Mccoy,
Jars,
Franciscan
Ware,
Cookie
Knowles
China,
Wall
Pockets,
Depression Glass, Carnival Glass,
Pressed And Pattern Glass, Glass
Candy Container, Advertising Tins And
Boxes, Cream Can, Postage Scale, Bob
Sled, Pedal Tractor, Older Bicycle,
Trike Ai\d Wagon, ,Metal Toys, Older
Tonka Toys, Old Disney Toys, Windup
Toy, Uncle Tom's Cabin (t896)
Oak Rolltop Desk.
THIS IS A VERY BRJEF LISTING, WITH
MANY MORE ITEMS" HICH
ARE NOT LISTED.
AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A. LEMLEY
740-388-8115
"NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
OR LOST PROPERTY"
CASH OR CHECK W/PROPER 10
NO SMOKING!!

LOCATED ON ST. RT.7 BETWEEN
CHES'IER,OHIO &amp; POMEROY. WATCH
FOR AUCTIOI'i SIGNS. THIS IS THE
PERSONAL PROPERTY OF MARCIA
KELLER &amp; OTHERS.

HousEHOUJ
Goo!l&gt;

l . \ I \I ' . r1 it I I ' \ I
I\1 Ill ; I II I I\ I I''. I

$9,500, 98 Ford Ranger sup

cab

Real Estate

\ . \1.

3936

'II IU II\ \IllS I

I~ I I) \

PUBLIC
NOTICES

6unbap lltime~ -6tntintl •· Page 05

99 Chev l71 4x4 ex cab 92

admits students of

Real Estate

I\ I I I I '
"l l ' ""-111;1 1
I; II. I 11 '1 &gt;I I&gt;; (&gt;I ll&lt;&gt;

l'l iBLIC .\l CTIO!'.

s \ r.

(7401446-

I

(7401256-1428

1997 Mercury Sable Ru ns &amp;
Cadrllac 1988 Sedan Deville
looks good, garage kept
105,600 miles new brakes,
high miles very dependable,
$1 200 1740)379-2366
Tob.lCco Plants for sa le Ca ll $1,500 (740)441-8947

\YIHJl I'S 1\. I"OI.IITIIBU.S
\I 1" 110\

Auct1on

Atrf()S

HAv&amp;
GRAIN

696-0358

Auction

2002 Cadltlac Devrlle while
diamond , tully equrpped
factory warranty 22 900
mrtes ltke new $24 995

3yr-otd Palomrno Pamt
.__..,;}"()oiiiiRoiSiiiAiiiLiit:-_.1
Mare can be Regrstered
Sunny Dee Bar
Green
broke $6001080 !304)593- 1977 MGB Convert rble tor
restoratron With ' another
1392 (304)576-2201
complete MGB for parts
$1 000 (740)441 0542 or
New 5003 5005 &amp; 5020 Ask about our AQHA
7603
(740)441
Senes Joh!l Deere Utrlr ty Member Drscounts on new
0
.:John
Deere
Equrpment
Tractors @ Q ,o frxed/ 36
Equrpment 1992 Ford Crown V1ctor1a
months Used Utrhty Tractors Carmichael
PW/Pl auto, $2 500 OBO
(740)446-2
41
2
@
4 9% Varrabte/ 60
(740)256-9181
or
Call
months
Carmichael
(304
1638-6990
For
Sale
Unbroken
Equipment (740)446-24 12
19/mon th old Red While
1993 Toyota Paseo runs
New John Deere 5025 Parnt Colt To Good Home
good automatrc sunrool ,
on
ly
(304)5
76-2806
make
Ser1es Ut1lrty Tractors @
$1 500 (740)388-9673
2 99% F1xeril 36 months O tter
Equrpment
Carmrchael
Parnt Mare 5 yrs : well broke ,996 Whrte Frrebrrd , auto, V(7401446-2412
$ 1 300 QH yearling stud, 6 good cond , 133 ~000
mrles Askmg S4 000 080
New John Deere Round So,OO (7401256 6824
TTop 740 992-6079
Balers @ 1 9% Frxed Rate
Yearling Angus Bull s Mos tly
Fmancmg lor 48 Months or
Burck
LeSabre
A
I exce llent bloodlmes 1997
New Model 457 Standard
prrced reasonably Slate Run Lrmrted 75 thousand m11es
Round Baler Only S13 250
lnt ,
Loaded
Farm, Jackson (740)266- Leather
cash Makes 4X5 Bale
Garag e Kept
$5 995
5395
Carmrchael
(304)675- 1731
www slaterunfarm com

$50 (740144 1-1218

hatred
Mm1ature
Dachshund Dark red 4 mo
old $400 Phone (7 40)367
0846.

For lease Office or reta11
spaces rn very good condrtron Downtown Gatlrpolis
Approx 1600 sq It each 1
or 2 baths Lease pnce
negotrable ro encou rag e
new
busmess
Call

(7401446-4425

9905

Full blooded Rat Teme r
pups Wormed and shots

Twrn Rivers Tower rs accept- AKC RegiStered male long

rng applicatiOns to r war\lng
hst for Hud-subsrzed 1· br
apartment call 675-6679
EHO

18 yeartrng ewes S t 25 www.carea com
each 740 388 9747 or leave
II~\ \...,I'O IU \ I !II\
a message at 740·669-

John Deere Rrdrng Mowers
starting at $1,399 Frnancmg
Spec1al Purchas e- John avarlable subjec t to John
Deere 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel Deere Credrt appro\lal Your
Rakes/ John Deere D1sk payments could be as low
Mowers Call for prrce as $39 month wrlh $0 down
Equipment
Carmrchael
Equrpment Carmrchael
(7401446-2412
(740)446·2412
----Tandom gooseneck full 8~~: 8 Purcha se a New John
Premium
Lawn
head deck 23+5 treated Deere
fl oor $4 300 good trres Tractor &amp; rece rve $250
(740)446-9317
lowa rd a John Deere
17401985-3843
Implement Acces sory or
You r
used
equipme nt Marntenance Plan Offer
990 Davrd Brown 52 Horse source
Carmichael good May 3 thru June 27 at
S2 500 New Holland 9 Foot Equipment (740)446-24 12 Carmlchael
Equipment
Haybany call for prrce 6
or VISit www careq com
(7401
446-2412
Fool lnternatronal Pull Type
Mower $699
M1ts ubrsh1
Trackhoe MS090 $12 900
Auction
Auction
Good Condtt1on Call 740-

r

2002 Bwck Regal Brown
Metallrc,
9 700
Mrles
Le ather, Uke New $13,500

Middleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasant, WV

DEADLINE 2:00P.M. FRI.
'

The annual Kyger Creek Alumn1
banquet w111 be held on the
28th ol May, 2005 at the old
Kyger Creek H1gh School
(Rtver Valley)
Soc1al hoUr at6 00 pm . meal at
7·00 pm $15 00 per person
Contact Becky Mea1ge at
741).446-3194 for reservations

CHANNEL
MARKER
,·CONDOS
North Myrtle Beach
Sleeps 6, fully furnished,
2 row ocean view.
Openings from May thru Sept
446·2206 Mon thru Fri
' .
or leave message

Rocksprings Longaberger

BASKET BINGO
Middleport American Legion
May 26th 6:00 pm

Serenity House
serves victims of domel!tic
violence call 446-6752 or

Cornerstone Construct1on
Res1denttal &amp; Commerc1al
Roof1ng, Stdmg , Rem odehng,
Decks, Plumb tng
Ed Clonch 367-0544
M1ke Pnce 7 40-367-0536
.

'

o :Dell True Value Lumber
Webe~Gas Gn lls Start1ng al $349 95
e Can spec1al order any
Weber Gnll or part
446-1276
61 V1?8 St.
Open M·F 7-6, Sat B-5; Sun ,10·4

New

Prints by Earl Tope -

Visit
Tope's Furniture Gall enes
151 Second Ave. Galhpohs

1-800-942·9577
•

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.,

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'

•
•

,•

·GARDENING

&amp;unba~ ltm~ ·ientinel

Page·D6.

..

•

Direct
~ml·
is
a
must
for
the
typical
·rose
.

. launch offensive in
Abu Ghraib district, A2

but·not Knock Out

in m,e gar&lt;kning: If rose' ' Shade tolerant roses aren't
thri \'C. thn needed at an altogether new concept,
l ea,(~ix hnur..., or"Uirert 'un- says Gre~ Stack. an ~X tension
.
ome specialty grower' ligh~ per da:. a &lt;tirring oreae ~ducatoc
with the University
in the commercial gar- and a 'lteaJ\ tlo\\ of murieoh.
den industry are uproot- But thl'n ~ilun~ came Knod of Illinoi s at Matteson.
ing all the ntles about where Out and tliing' quickly, "There·, a species of shade ·
tokrant rose that's been
you should plant roses.
changed .
How abou·t roses that
Granted. \OU can 't expect around since God made roses.
bloom from spring to freeze- Knock 6ut 'or any rose l'ar.i- But most t.~n d to be single
up. are disease-resistant and ety .to do well under the heavy bloomers." he sa)•s.
maintenance-free . winttrr- shade of a back·yard m&lt;tple
"They don 't bloom all that
hartl y. drought-tolerant ·and · tree . Not manv !lowering long. maybe one time· in the
flower extravagant ly even ' plant&gt; do. An' acc:eptable
':"hen grown in light shade''
amou nt of li ght for the new spring for a couple of \1-'eel&lt;:s
''This .class or roses liber- hybricb is d~ppled. 'or what and then they're gone.
ales-the' rose · plant from the Hution cal ls "honey locu st They' re basically . a green
formal · rose garden." says shade." Tl{at gives the roses plant. ..
Steve Hutton. president and ut least a fc1v hours of sun
Roses like the Knock Out
CEO o f the Conrad, Pyle Co.. each day. Morning sun i' best. varii'IY are probably favored
·about hi s company's new
·There is no such rhing as, a as much for their ability to
universal plant." Hun on says.
Knock Out line.
"A nice thing abour these "No plaut will Lake dry shade wit hstand marginal condi •
disease-resisrant plants is that or dire.:t sun and perform tions, Sta.ck says. ·
· they mix successfull y with equal ly wel l. You still ha ve to
perennials. which are becom- pick the right plant for rhc
ing so popular. They also lit ri ght pl ate. But if you want to
in well with other kinds of increase the odds of having a
woodsy shrubs. Now yo u can successful plant in a number ·
' say roses fit the entire land- or places. you need one as
scape." ·
robust as you can tlnd. You
Conard- Pyle is a wholesale need a plant wi th good genetoperation based in suburban ics. And this rose fit s the bill:"
Hutton uses grass as a guide
Philadelphia.' About 25 percent of its business is roses when choosi ng plant l o~a­
and it sells to some 3.500 Lions. "If you liave an area
nurseries natiqnw ide under where grass doesn't grow. ·
the Star Roses and Star Plants . you' re cooked. That's a good
labels.
inqication you'd better ,pick
The Knock Out. variety was . another spot bfcause yo u
·developed in the mid-1990s ' won' t be successful. Bmmost
by a semi-professional breed- people don't h.ave that kind of
er from Wisconsin. offered deep shade in their yards." .
Hunon prefers noribundas
for commercial. sale in 2000
and designated · an All- and shrub roses for partial sun
America award winner late r sites because they produce an
that year. It didn't take rosari- abundance of blooms. Figure
ans long to hear about it. The on losing ·abou t 25 percent o f
original brilliant red Knock that color display, however.
Out "Radrazz" and its many- when growing them in areas
colored siblings have become having significant shade for a
. the nation's top sellers among significant part o.J the day.
rose plants. "They' ve gradu"Any flowering plant thai is
ated from the rose category Lo primaril y sun lo ving will
the category of hardy bloom- have diminished !lowering in
ing shrub,'' Hutlon says.
diminished li ght," Hutton
Once upon a.time. there says. "That's j ust the way it
BRAND NEW :ZOOS CHEVY
were three hard and fast rules works."

Eastern Elementary
presents Baum ·
Lumber with plaque
of appreciation, As

v.s.andlraqi~ps

Sunday, May ~2., 2oos

'

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BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES

s

••

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1...

One of the hundreds of vari·
eties of roses on display at
the Portland ·Rose Garden in
Portland. Ore .. is seen on
Monday, August 1.6. 2004.
Some s pecialty growers in
the commercial garden
industry are uprooting all the
rules about where you
·
should plant roses. Many
roses are now disease-resis:
tant and maintenance-fre~t·· ·,
winter-hardy. and drought-tolerant
'

at

Retract your screen
doors for b_etter living .
'both in terms of
appearan~e and imegrity MORRIS CAREY
FOR AP WEEKLY FEATURES
in the last several years, but
no screen door can compete
Planning on adding a new with the beauty and curb
screen door for your home'' appeal that a new entry door
Or replacing an old one? offers a home.
Before you spend anywhere
The retractable screen door
from $75 to possibly hun- offers both fo rm · and fu ncdreds of dollars for a tradi- • tion . Peopl e who are increastional framed and hinged ingly sensiti ve about indoor
"fixed" screen door, you may air quali ty and the appearwant to ·consider the latest ance of their homes now
innovation: retractable door ha ve an alternative in a
screens.
retractable screen door. By
A retractable screen door is the same token, don 't ex pect
essentially a roller shade a screen door ''(swinging or ·
. ttJmed on end. Heavy duty retractable) tn keep out anyvinyl-coated fiberglass mesh thing other than tlying pests.
. wraps around a spring- Neither of these products is a
loaded roller mechani sm. reasonabl e alternative for a
which is neatly concealed in storm door or a bona fide
a slim housing that is mount-· security door (complete with
ed on one side of .the door key lock and deadbolt).
But there are other acl\'a nopening. The ·other components consist of an upper and tages. For one. it 's not in the .
lower track in which the top way when you don ' t need it.
and botlom edges of the Ever trv to hold the scree,n .
SCreen travel and a rigid lead- door Open with your elb&lt;JW
ing edge that pulls the screen while you unl ock the front
taut and seals a~ainst the · door - wi.th your arms full
door jamb. The screen is held of packages o r groce rie s''
in the closed position by two Ever dent or rip the screen in
·or more magnets and catches the process'! You' ll never
placed on the leading edge have to prop it open either, to
and door frame respectively. move bulky items (like fumiFrom the outside, when in ture or appliances) in ur out.
the "ope n'' position, you'll With a retractable screen in
hardly know it's there. The · the "put away" · position.
full door-size screening sim-· bumping (w hic h cou ld resull
· ply· rolls right up i'nto a neat in screen damage) or door
and compact side-mounted "interference" is never a
housing that blends right in problem.
with the existing dootframe.
And while in the "stored"
In recent years, retractable positi on, ihe ·screening is furscreen doors have ,quickly ther protected fr!lm de strucgone from a one-time luxury ti ve ultraviolet ray s and
item to being a serious con-. needless 'year-rdund weat hersideration fot ·any home. It's ing as well. l'lbwever, when ,
due much in part to people you do need fresh air ventil awho li ve in fresh-ai r~starved , tion and a barrier between
homes t1ying pests and your living
energy-efficient ·
where natpral veptilation is area, all you do is pull the
at a premium. Often. opening screening across the door
a few windows here or there opening - for a 'creened
simpl y isn' t enough. And, in doorway with a panoramic.
many homes, the entry door unobstru·cted view.
is frequently the. only source
While the. popularity of
of fre.sh air on a given 'side of retractable door screens cona home. Thus, the only tinues . to grow, so do ihe
means of ac hieving good number of companies otTercross venti lation is to open ing
thi s · technology.
the front door. ·Therein lays Ba&gt;icall y, Fetratlable door
the problem.
screens 'fall into two major
A swinging sc reen door categoric&gt;: dealer-installed
may be just fine on the back produm and "do-it-yourself'
porch, but who wants to con- models.
Cun , ider:Itinn'
ceal a beautiful new entry .include yuali'.) ma·t~riah.
door with a screen door'.' smart engtne.enn.g. compettGranted, swinging screen tt ve pricing. and. if you're a
doors. storm doors and 'ecu- do-it-your,elfer. ease · of
rity doors have come a long installation .
.AND

., .

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Racine receives $1 00,000 for water·well replacement

AP .Pholo

BY BETH

• Division II track and field.
See Page B1

..

SERGENT

in the amount of $100.00 for·a
Rac ine curren tlv bas .threc
. 'water well rep lacement pro- · wel ls from which 'their water
- - - - - - - - ' - - - - - ject.
is derived. Two \Jf the we ll&gt;
RACIN E - This week the
Th is mon,ey is in addition were constructed· in 1951 and
Buckeye .Hill s · -Hocking to . the $300,000 grant the both wil l be req ui red to run
.Valley Re giona l Development . ARC awarded the vi llage ear- simul taneous ly to keep up
District announced
that lier this year for the con stru e- with the rate of usage from
Rac ine wa s selected to tion .of a water treatment the new water treatment plant.
receive
an Ap palachian plant, new tank and addit'innal The thi rd wel l was constructed in 1~~5.
·'
Regional Commi ssiOn grant lines.
BSERGENT@MYDAtLYSENTINEL.COM

'

•

Raci ne Mayor J. Scott Hill .
sa id that the vi llage had
planned to borrow m;mev to
const ru l't a new we ll ·b ut
.became aware of the ARC's
new . Flood · · R'i.covery
Appl ication Grant that was
im plemented
after
the
September 2004 flood .
"We saw the opportunity

Southern High School graduates 54 students
BY

BETH SERGENT

RACINE -· . Proud family
and friends packed the.
Chmles
W.
Hayman
Gymnasium at Soulher'n
High School Sunday night to
recogni ze the gradu ating
Class of 2005.
Class President and 2005
Salutatorian Jordan Cara
· Neigler gave the welcome,
follow ed by Treasurer of the
Student Council Christopher
Sylvester Tucker who delivered th e invocation . The
Pl edge of.AIIegiance was led
by · Class Vice-pre sident
Ashley Marie Roush.
Mu sical
se lection ,
" Forever Young," by Rod
Stewart was performed by
the choir under the direction
of Southern Choir Director
Patrece Beegle which preceded 'the Salutatorian and
Valedictorian addresses.
·
Salutatorian
Neigler,
daughte r of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Neigler, began her
address with a poem that
said every perso n is a
"builder for eternity" and
must "either build a stumbling block, or a stepping·
stone" during their lives.
"Will we build stumbling
blocks or stepping stones'"
Neigler as ked her class'
·mates .
Neigler encouraged classmates to use their talents as
their tools to create those·
stepping 'stones and to accept
challenges into their lives.
"Nothing besides hard
work will bring results."
Neigler said about facing

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• William E. Cadle

INSIDE

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• Iran hard-line body bars
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reformists from running for
. president.
See Page A2
• Civil War soldier's name
missing on monument.
See Page A3
· ·
• States target property
taxes as home prices
zoom.
See Page AS
• Radioactive waste from
Ohio begins its journey to
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See PageA6

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Beth .Sergenl jphoto

Southern High School seniors Bryan Smith, Matt Thaxton and
Jake Nease await the commenceme nt of Southern 's gradua·
tion ceremonies on Sunday night.

Brian J. Reed/ photo

Autumn Reed prepares to receive her diploma at Eastern High
School 's commencement exercises on Sunday afternoon.
BY

BRIAN

J.

REED

BR EED@MYDAILYSENTI NEL. COM

TUPPERS PLAINS Sewn co-valedictorians and
a salutatorian addressed thei r
fe llow graduates at the 48th
annual commencement exercises at Eastern Hi gh School
on Sunday afternoon.
Thi s vear. the school
chan ged rts means of ranking
acco mpli shed
grad uating
seniors. using a cumulative
grade poim average as lhe

method of determ ining the
top students. Co-valedictorians were: Jen nifer Hayman,
daughter of Pat Letso n and
Gre g · Hay man . of Long
Bottom, Morgan Wcbq.
daughter of David and
Debbie Weber of Tupper&gt;
Plains. Derek BaUJn. son of
Tim and Martie Baum of .

Beth Sergentj photo

Mirinda Beth Davis was one of 54 students who received the ir
diplomas from · Southern Local School Board President Ro n
Cammarata.

Volunt~ers beautify Pomeroy

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Editorials

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12 PAGES

Comics

Obituaries

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Brlan J. Reed/ photo ·

Chelsea Young was one of
seve n co-valedictorians to
address her classmates! at
Eastern High School commencement exe rci~es on
Sunday.

'

. Right: Jody Lil ly of Pomeroy

2 SECilONS -

$19,990* $20,7

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Rotary and
Health Department .
.
sponsors free tetanus immunizations
'

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and thou ght ·why shouldn 't
Racine ha ve th at gran t
mot) ey'~ ... Hill ,&gt;aid . "That is
$100.000 we won' t .have to
borrow."
Hill anticipates the bidding
process for constru ction to
begin around the tlrst part of
·
•
Please see Racine, AS

Eastern graduates 56 at
Sunday commencement

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTII\IEL.COM

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BY JAMES

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IV ere. to

Charlene Hoeltlchj pholo

Numerous volunteers pitched in Saturday .to plant flowers. a
downtown beautification program of the Pomeroy Mercha .~ts
Association . Many of the flats of flowe,rs put in the ground
were donated · for the · project by Bpb's Market. Here Ellie
Blaettn&lt;~r and George Wright fill a bed at the stage area on the
upper parking lot.
·

B Section
A6

.

gets a free tetanus shot
from Sherry Weese, R.N. as
Rotarian Harold Newell.
looks on at Saturday morning's immun ization clinic held
at Powell's 'fgodfair: The clin·
ic is the first o! one-a-month
!JUtreach programs jointly
. sponsored by the Meigs
County Health Department
and the Midd leport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club. Both adult and
childhood immun izations are
offered to the
public free .
.
Chatlene Hoeltlch/ pholo

A simple remind~r about insurance discounts.
A Saturday morning ritual kind of reminqer.

• Taos, Tags, Tille Fees ·u h. tlltate induded in sale price of - vlhkle listed where rw'kohle On IJiliWOVtd ,aedit.
. On seladad modlk. Not•4J5PGI1Sible fol; l'fN'aphkai ..CIIS: hicts good May 18th lh1au;. May 22nd.

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