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                  <text>ALONG THE RivER

LMNG

Gourd art
A fun hobby, Cl

Right at Home
Typography hits the right key, o 1

..

unba!' ICime~ -i&gt;emttnel
I

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Vnllcy Publishing Co.

OBITUARIES
Page AS

• Penny Causby
• Harold W. Cook
• Mary E. Dennison
• Don E. Johnson
• Edwin F. Jones
• James A. RHe
• William E. Riffle, .Jr.
• Curtis W. Shiltz
• Posey L. Stevenson

.RIDAYNITE
SCOREBOARD
Page 81

Eastern 41
Belpre 0
Gallia Academy 41
Logan

Sunday, October 3, 2010

$1.50 • Vol. 44, No. 4 0

Grube found guilty
Gallia County mother
convicted of aggravated
murder in death of infant
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MOTNEWS@MYOAILY! RIBUNE COM

GALLIPOLIS - After a three-day jury
trial, a Gallia County woman was convicted
of aggra,ated murder and child endangerment in the Gallia County Court of
Common Pleas on Friday.
Kansas 0, Grube, 25. Gallipolis, was
mdicted on one count of aggravated murder.
one count of murder and one count of child
endangennent after she allegedly caused the
death of her infant son earlier this year. 1\voand-a-half month old Jaxson Grube was
found unresponsive by first responders who

arrived on scene at
The jury began deliberations around noon
approximately 11 p.m. on on Fnday. After approximately five hours of
Feb. 12. 20 I0, at the deliberations, the jury returned with its ver~
Grube residence on Ohio diet. Since Gmbe was found guilty on count
218 near Gallipolis.
one of the' indictment, aggravated murder,
Initially. the Grube count two of the indictment was no longer
infant was thought to have applicable. The aggravated circumstance
suffered from Sudden was added to the indictment since the victim
Infant Death Syndrome in this case was under the age of 13.
(SIDS) due to the lack of Aggravated murder is a special category
_.....___ _ _._J any
outward physical
Grube
abnormalities present on felony. while endangering children is a second degree felony.
the child. SIDS is the sudDuring closing arguments on Friday.
den expiration of an infant for which there is
Asststant
Gallia County Prosecutor Eric
no explainable cause of death.
Mulford
and
defense attorney Richard
However. after an autops) was performed.
Hedges
!&gt;ynthesized
their cases and disa standard procedure in the death of an
cussed the presented evidence with the jury.
infant, h\O skull fractures \\ere found on the
. Mulford began by discussing the language
child's head. one being on the left side
of the three-count indictment and later proabove the ear and one on the back of the
skull.
Please see Grube, Al

1?

Industrial plastics
·firm opens in
Tuppers Plains

Chili F

South Gallia 22
Fed. Hocking 12
Wahama 49
Southern 0
Point Pleasant 13
Wayne 8

REM RAM expects to employ 15
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED MYOA VSEWIN COM

and 56
ver Valley 14

Fayetteville Peny 46
Hannan 6

Election letter
deadline
Sunday, Oct. 17 is
the final &lt;Jay that letters to the editor will
be printed regarding
the Tuesday. Nov. 2
general electiOn.
Please
remember
that letters should be
limited to 300 words.
All letters must be
signed b) the author
and include a valid
eturn address and
llid telephone numer.

WMTHER

Andrew Carter/photos

If the proof's in the pot, so to speak, then Team Redneck enjoyed a good day at
French City Chill Fest on Saturday. Matt Johnson shows off an empty chili pot, a
sure sign that folks enjoyed his cooking. Debbie and Mike Thompson (inset)
enjoyed theu trme at Chih Fest, tasting samples from each cook who entered the
competition. Final results of the judging were not available before press time.
High: 59
Low: 39

Pleasant Valley Hospital names new CEO

INDEX

STAFF REPORT

Around Town
cbrations

A3
C4

D2-4
Comics

ns

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

2010 Oluo Valle\

Tl.J'PPERS PLAINS -The industrial concern now
occupying the 32.000 square-foot building at the East
Meigs Industrial Park has local ties
Me1gs County Economic De' elopment Director
Pel'I) Varnadoe aid the lea e agreement with REMRAM Recovery. LLC, is the first part of a long-term
strateg) for developing the mdustrial area.
The Meigs County Con,tmunit) Improvement
Corporation announced Friday It had recently leased
the Thppers Plains indu~tnal bmlding to a light manufacturing company with local ownership ties. REMRA.\1 Recovery. LLC. has entered into a lease/purchast- agreement for the building owned by the CIC at
the East Meigs Industrial Park.
"Th1s new tenant i&lt;&gt; in keeping with the long-range
economic development plans for the industrial park
and REM RAM. along "ith We-Can Fabricators,
already 'up and running' at the park, now gives us two
light manufacturing businesse::. located there.'' said
CIC President Paul Reed.
Local businessman Ray Maxson is president of
REMRAM, and all of the company's owners are
Meigs Count) people. he said.
·
The company began production in September.
.
..Without the support of local go' ernment and the
economic development team, \\C would not have
located this busine in Meigs County during such
uncertain economic times." Max on said.
REMRAM Reco\ el) i de cribed as a light indu~
tnal manufactunng compan) focused on the plastics
industf). Jts primary business will'be in after-market
industrial plastic rcco' Cf) and extm ion for commercial plastic applications and proce::.ses.
REMRAr-.1 currently employs six people at the site and
hopes to expand to fifteen employees by the end of the
year once all operation are up and nmning. Maxson said.
1111~ building REMRAM occupies wa~ constructed
as a speculative building ti\e )Cars ago. Last week.
i\1eJgs County Commissioners took the first step neces·
~af) to allo" the CIC to seek state funding for con.
struction of a second spec building on the East Meigs
jndustrial site.
Varnadoe aid Thursd.1) the loan appro' al for that $l.z
million con tmction project is expected by ) ear's end.

l'ubh hmg (.;()

lllllljI!IllJill!I!I!I!Ill IIII

POINT P~EASANT, W.Va.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
recently named Hugh H. Collin:.
as the new Chief Executive
Officer of the not-for-profit
healthcarc facihty. Collins' new
role will be effective Monday.
Oct. 4, 20 I0.
"Many qualified candidates
were considered but Hugh stood
out as the best fit for Pleasant
Valley llospital," commented
Michael Lieving, Chairman of
the PVH Board of Trustees. "As
members of the Board. we vol
unteer our time to ensure that

Pleasant
V a l I e y
Hospital continues its tradition of providing excelknt care to
our t·ommunity.
Hugh
brings a great
L -_
_..._....__. deal of experiColllns
ence
and
knowledge about the healthcnre
industry to the organization."
Collins is a nathc of
Kmgsport, lenn., and currently
resides in Wilson, N.C. In 1983.
he recei\cd a Bachelor of

Science degree from East
Tennessee State Unl\ ersit)
(Johnson City. Tenn.) and a
:..tasters
of
Business
Administration degree from
Widener Unhersity (Chester,
Pa.) Ill 1986.
Collins
completed
nn
Administrative Residenc) with
a communit) hospital managed
b) Hospital Corporation of
America and an Administrnll' e
Fellowship \Vlth The Grnduate
Hospital in Philadelphia. Pa.
This dedicated professional hu
nearl) 30 ) ears of leadership
experience in health cnre. sen

ing as a Chief Executive Officer.
Chief Hnancial Ofticer and an
Exccuth e Vice-President for
Operations
"ithin
se\ eral
henlthcarc S) stems. This experience includes small community
ho pitals. rural healthcare systt'ms, large tertiary teaching
medil'ul centers and physician
practice management companies.
•
Additionally. Collins has also
O\\ ned and operated a healthcarc
consulting and hospital manage~
ment sen ices compan~ \\here
he has been successful m finanCJOII) turnmg around hospitals.

Please see PVH, Al

�Sunday, October 3,

l,ome•·oy • Middle p or-t • Gallipolis

2010

ABLE class ·ow available

at Rio GrandE~~ Meigs Center

~unbnp

m-1 test -~ent m d • Page A2

Ribbon-~

1

utting
set for new ~a~lia
County ,VA cl1n1c

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
EW C ARTER

HOEFliCH M'fOAJLVSENTINEL COM

'fDAILYTR BUN~C()M

POMEROY
An
Adult Basic and Literacy
Education {ABLE) cla&lt;;s
is no\\ heing offered. in
the
Rio
Grnnde
Community
College
Meigs Center building at
Rock Springs.
Carol Brewer, ABLE
coordinator lor the
Athens-Me1¥s
Educational
Sen 1ce
Center, announced that
the cia s m the Rio
Grande building started
this fall. Classes at that
site are being held from 4
to 7 p.m. on Tue days
and Thursday . The
teachers are Charla Oden
and Je :.ica Pennington.
Students can enroll at
any time because they
~tart where they are educationally and then proceed at their pace through
a program of inc.li\ idualized ·instruction. To
enroll at the new Rio
Grande site or the
Middleport or Tuppers
Plain ABLE sites. or to
get more information
about the program. call
992-5808.
Both Bre" er and
Luanne Rase Bo\\ man

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Jessica Pennington
Meigs Center.

Charla Oden teach the ABLE class at the Rio Grande

vice president for
cial and admini
affairs ot the Unive
ot Rio Grande, feel
attending ABLE I.J&lt;l:):t.-~
in a college setting
I
be advantageous to students "'ho might ''ant to
pursue ~econdary education after they recerve

their GEDs.
..This should make the
tran ition easier." commented Bowman \\ ho
said the college welcome the opportunity to
work in cooperation with
ABLE.
Bowman said they had
the space for the cln s

and value the opportunity for a partnership.
Brewer added that having the students in a
location where they can
relate to other students
they know makes it comfortable and conducive
to continuing their education.

GALLIPOLIS -A ri bon-cutting ceremony to eel-·
ebrate the opemng of e new VA Gallipolis Clinic
has heen scheduled f&lt;u I hursday, Oct. 7. 'I he event
will begin at 2 p.m. at e clinic, which is located at
323A Upper River oad, adjacent to Dave's
American Grill and be nd the Super 8 Motel.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wi on, D-St. ClairsvHle, will be
the keynote speaker ~ the ceremony. Tours of the
facility and refreshmen will oe made available folloY. ing the ceremony.
The location of the c1 ic was announced in June of
this year in a joint stat ent released by Wilson and
Edward H. Seiler. d1 ~ctor of the Huntmgton VA
Medical Center. The H •ntington VAMC is providing
two physicians ' three nurses and two clerical support
staff members for the Gtallipolis clinic.
Local officials expre ed their appreciation that the
clinic was located in G Ilia County.
"The Gallia County mmission is verx grateful to
Congressman Wilson o his work on this, ' said Gallia
County Comission Vic President Justin Fallon. "On
behalf of the people of aHia County we're pleased to
have this here. We loo forward to serving our veterans a little closer to ho e."
Jim Cozza, president &gt;f the Gallipolis City Board of
Commissioners and a eteran of the U.S. Air Force,
said the establishment of a clinic locally has been
long overdue.
"Veterans in Gallia unty have waited a long tim~
for this clinic and we e glad that the VA made th:W
decision to locate it in he City of Gallipolis," Cozza
said. "We hope that it •ill be used to the fullest and ..
remain here for a long eriod of time."
The VA Gallipolis Cl Lnic. a 2.100-square foot structure, currently opera es from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. on
Tuesday and Thursda each. week. The telephone
number is (740} 446-3)34.

Burglary suspect jailed after traffic stop 'Nigh
S TAFF R EPORT

PORTER - Deputies with the
Gallia County Sheriff's office
apprehended a burglary suspect on
Thursday after a traf11c stop
l)rler S. Blanton. 23. Morgan
Township, was arrested after
deputies pulled o-.er h1 veh1clc on
Ohio 160 north of Porter Blanton
\\a dnvmg Y.tthout a \ahd opera
tor's licen e. He wa bemg held at
the Gallin County Jail.

Upon co
in\ entory, a
reportedly st
area home, "
dri\ er's seat
Blanton w
from the Ga
Common Pic
charge m the
Depulles
"'Jth
the
Pro ecutor's
thts case an
motion to be

ucting a 'chicle of the prev1ous bond based upon
57 Ruger revolver. the new charges. These charges
len trom a Bidwell include receiving stolen property
s located under the and driving without a valid operaf Blanton's vehicle.
tor's license.
out on bond issued
According to investigators with
in County Court of the henf1's office. Blanton is a
s for a pnor burglary "per;on of interest" in four recent
1ty of Gallipoli .
B1d\'.ell are burglarie
'e been consultm
Anyone \\ 1th mfonnat1
Galh
Count)
1 ur ed
ffice m relation to the e bur
ha\ e asked for a Galh Count henff 0 ...
led for the withdraw line at (740 446-6555.

are on
Main 'coming
to Ma n County
- The "Nightmare on Main
that will be going around
is a Halloween themed disWest Virginia and
about
and state canl
up by some people in th
ley Patriots Tea Party grou
the Mason County Taxed
up. The display features a
an Obamacare area, a Cap
area a Death of Liberties
area.
Enough Already group is
on Tue.day. Oct. 5 at the
nity Center.
also be in Mason. W.Va.,
.......~···· Oct. 7 at the Charlotte

G ube
from PageA1
vided an O\ en 1e"' of w1tne s te timon).
Mulford indicated that the three
expert witnesses, Y.ho gave te umon) during the trial. indicated
that the two fractures were not
accidental and were caused by an
unusual amount of force.
"An extreme. significant amount
of force was exerted against this
infant's head. not once, but twice."
Mulford said. ''1nis wa no accident. If it were an accident, there
would be one impact, not two."
Mulford also discus~ed the several different ..theones'' offered b)
the defen e in-thi case. including
sympathy for the defendant.
"The state is not "'ithout sympathy for this family. or e\en for the
defendant, for what happened in
this case," Mulford said. "But in
the here and now we deal \\ ith the
facts and we deal with the con equences of Februal) 12. 2010"
The \ 1deotaped interview of
Grube with Det. Chad Wallace of
the Gallia County SherifT' Ofhce
on Feb. 13. 20 I0. "'a al o outlined during the state· closmg
arguments.
''The defendant's pnrtml c.:nnfession to Del. Wnllace, 111 whkh she
minimizes the event of that day, is
very telling," Mulford stated. "It's
very telling because of not only
what she said in the video, but it's
very telling because of its extreme
inconsistency with what she told
you on the witne s ~tand.
''The state ubmits to you. to
paraphrase Mrs. Grube. she dec1d-

ed to tell thi JUry whate\ er she
thmks you n d to hear so she can
go home:·
In his
losing arguments,
defense attor: ey Richard Hedges
told the jury hat th1s case is every
mother's wo t nightmare.
"1b be fal ly accused of intentionally caus ng the death of your
infant son 1 probably the mo t
horrendous hmg that a person
could experi 1ce." Hedges said. "I
don't have a l) idea \\hat it would
be like to be ccused of takin&amp; the
life of a chil like that, especutlly
\\hen you ar • innocent. And that's
omething t at I am going to ask
that you remC!mber; number one. a
person is presumed innocent. and
m this case, she actually i . And
the facts of 'th1s case do con ider
that and do neflect that."
Hed~es later discus ed the
"quest10n" a! to the time of death
and pointed to the fact that the
expert '' itne ses presented by the
prosecution ould not conclu 1vel)
tell the jury O\\ long the interval
was bet\\ e
when the inJuries
occurred an when death occurred.
Ibis i:. a sig iticant point, acc:ord
ing to Hed s. bec&lt;wse ~latthew
Grube, who as allegedly abusi'e
to his \\ ife, Kansas Gruhe, may
hU\C had t e "opportunit) •· to
injure the
ild on the night in
&lt;JUestion.
"The op
umty for someone to
be alone wi h the child was \cry
strong." He ges said.
Hedges also exten~nely discussed the te timony that was pre9

ented that md1cated that the
defendant was an excellent mother
and caregh er.
"lax on was a well-nourished.
normally developed baby,'' Hedges
said and told the jury that the
defendant's husbnnd even admitted that she was an excellent mother. "ller job, for all practical purposes, was to raise the ldds. Matt.
in his own testimon). said that she
was a good mom."
Hedges later referred to the
interrogation ession that occurred
bet\\ een the defendant and Det.
Wallace, the night after the incident. m which the defendant uggested several scenario by \\ihich
the baby ma) have been injured
and al o made a "partial confesion."
"When ) ou ha' e a power broker,
such as a detective. who is skilled
nnd who has done innumerable
in ten 1e'' s, '' ho is taught and
trained to illicit infonnation. they
have tricks of the trade. Their job
1S to get informauon. to ~olicit
information and pull it out of the
person." II edge~ said. "There were
leading questions where, basically,
the detl'C.:tive is putting words in
Kansas' mouth. He':. telling her
what he wants her to say."
In clo:-.ing. Hedges pointed to the
fact pre ented in the cao;e. "The
evidence shows issues but it doe"
not show that Kansas abused her
children," Hedges said.
A entencing date in this case
has not been scheduled.

is free, open to the public and
affiliation. For information.
1aria at (304) 675-3984 or e-

GALLIPOLIS- G
's residents Jim and Chris
Cozza are ho ting a
Thur_day and Friday,
Oct. 7-8 to benefit '"""'""'''" e tabli.,hed Spay Neuter
Assistance Program
held from 9 a.m.-4 p.m ..
The e\ ent \\ill
Thursdn) and Frida),
7-8 at 1031 Second Ave.a
Gallipohs.
W
SNAP is a
ization established by the
as.,istance to low-income
Cozzas to nr"'"'"''"
residents Gallia
to get their cats and dogs
spayed or neutered.
from SNAP will also be
used to spay and ne
free-roaming and feral cats to
l1clp with the ""'''....,~''"· ""'''"'" problem that exists
throughout the c
Donation~.

sources of SNA 's '"'"'" '"'"·
t corporation with the
SNAP is a
at Revenue Service. Plans
state of Ohio und the
m tax exempt and charitable
are under '' ay to
organization status.

Going on

now

Page AI
improving patlent, physician and
employee satisfaction survey
scores and guiding hospitals
through successful re-accreditation
by the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of IJospitnls.
In his new role with" rhe Family
of Protessionals," Collins will
work closely With t"e Board ol
Trustees and focus upon building a
strong Jeade1ship team; developmg
effective workin¥ relation.,hips
with key constituent groups;
improving &lt;JtWlity of care and customer service: improving patient.
physician and employee satislac-

tion; nnprc ving the hospital's
11nancial p ormance and work
ing to u ate the long-te1 111
Strategic Pl. .
Collins, nd his wife, Janet
Smith Colli s, have l\vo children,
Price Collin , a son who is a junwr
at the Uni ersity ot fc..mncssee
(Knoxville,
l'enn.)
studying
nnd
Nuclear
Engineering.
Katherine &gt;Wns. a daughte1 who
1s a fre hm 1 at the University of
North Carol nn (Chapel Hill. N.C.)
enrolled in eneral studies.
Collins a ld his "'ife are both
active in cornmumty voluntceri m.

..

Be ha over 12 years of experience
as an adult volunteer Boy Scout
Leader and six ) ears as nn Elder in
the Pres b) terlan Church. USA.
Janet has nlway~ ~en ed as a voluntecJ and member nf the Ladies
Auxiliary in the hospitals ''here
her hu~hand has worked. Also, she
ha volunteered with Meals-onWheels, Salvation Army. local
schools und sen ed as a Deacon in
the P1esbyterian Church. USA.
The couple will res1de in ~1ason
County.

thiU

Oct. 31st!
FURiVITURE
GALLERIES
:Pe. •

Gallipolis, OH

•w w.topefurlliture.com

�-----·--------------~-------

i&gt;unba~ ~imes -ienttnel

PageA3

·

Sunday, October 3, 2010
•
•

Meigs County calendar ..

GALLIPOLIS FFA

..

Public meetings

Monday, Oct. 4
LETART FALLS - Letart Township Trustees, regular meeting. 5 p.m , office building.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees, 7 p.m.,
Syracuse Village Hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 6
POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Health, regular meeting, 5 p.m., Meigs County Health
Department.
Monday, Oct. 13
POMEROY - Bedford Township Trustees regular'
meeting 7 p.m. at the. town hall.
WELLSTON - · The GJMV Solid Waste
Management District Board of Directors, 2:00 p.m. at
the district office, 1056 S. New Hampshire Avenue,
Wellston.

Clubs and organizations
Monday, Oct. 4
POMEROY - Meigs County Cancer Initiative, regular meeting, noon, conference room, Meigs County
Health Department.
Tuesday, Oct. 5
MIDDLEPORT - Regular stated meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, 7:30 p.m.
Refreshments at 6:30. Bring item for food pantry.
Wednesday, Oct. 6
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club willmeet in the Pomeroy branch of the Meigs County
Library at 2 p.m.

Church events
Submitted photo

Members of the Gallipolis FFA Chapter recently attended the Farm Science Review in london, Ohio. While
there, they had a chance to see all the new science and technology used in agriculture today. Members were
able to walk through the 40 acres of land and view all the educational booths and exhibits as well as tour the
Gwmn Conservation area. Students also had a chance to see farmers demonstrating what the new technology could do in the fields. Those attending the review were Halee Myers. Kayla Harrison. Kari Crance, Mandy
Foster, Megan Cremeans, Tiffany Lewis, Lindsay Brown, Eric Gardner, Tyler Davis and Brooke Plantz.

Gallia County calendar

Sunday, Oct. 3
ROCK SPRINGS - Hemlock Grove Christian
Church. homecoming, 9:30a.m. worship service, Skip
Domigan, Joseph McCall, 12:30 p.m. potluck, 2 p.m.
afternoon worship with speaker Mike Hazelton and' music.
REEDSVILLE - Homecoming services will be.
observed at the South Bethel Community Church w1th
1
an all-day service. Sunpay School will be held at 9'
a.m. A communion service will be held at 10:15 a.m.
and dinner will be served at noon. An afternoon hymn
sing will begin at 1:30 p.m. Linda Damewood is pastor of the church.
SYRACUSE - Sixth Annual Biker Sunday,
Syracuse Nazarene Church, 9:30 a.m. registration, ,
10:30 a.m. service, music by Heart and Soles, guest'
speaker Pastor Bob Thomas, hot lunch served after ,
the service.
POMEROY - The annual Life Chain, 2-3 p.m.,
meet m parking lot by the Grace Episcopal Church,
fe Chain IS part of Respect Life Month and is span-,·
sored by the Meigs County Right to Life.

Polcyn. RSVP: Nancy,
Saturday, Oct. 9
sent to her at 1200 S.
Tuesday, Oct. 5
367-7443, or Linda, 446VINTON
Hog
roast,
Courtenay
Parkway,
No.
GALLIPOLIS- Holzer
Clime and Holzer Medical 401, Merritt Island, FL gospel sing, noon. Vinton 4319.
Full Gospel Church. All
Cent
Retirees lun- 32952
singers and public welRevivals
cheo
noon Courtside
V1rgmia
Kathleen come Info: 446-4023
Bar and Gr,ll
"Katie" Montgomery w,n
Friday, Oct 8
GALLIPOLIS
Oct 3-6, Church of
celebrate her 85th birthGALLIPOLIS - Gallia
AddiSOn Freewill BaptiSt Chnst, 14840 Oh 554,
day on Oct. 11 . Cards
SOil
and
Water
may be sent to her at Church Sunday school B1dwell. Speaker B•ll
servation
District Holzer
Senior Care picmc, 4 p.m , Raccoon Mead. Sunday, 11 a.m.
rd meeting, 1 :30 Center, 380 Colonial Creek County Park, Wild
and 6 p.m.; Monday., C.\-i. Mckenzie Ag Drive,
111 B, Turkey Shelter.
Room
y.Jednesday, 6:30 p.m
nter, 111 Jackson Bidwell, OH 45614.
Sunday, Oct 10
Pike
Suite
1569,
- ADDISON - Sunday
Oct. 3-6, First BaptiSt
Gallipolis.
school, 10 a.m.: evemng
Church Events
Church, 1100 Fourth
Tuesday, Oct. 12
servrce, 6 p.m., Addison
Ave., Gallipolis. Speaker:
BIDWELL - Let's Do
Sunday, Oct. 3
Freewill Baptist Church.
Lunch, 5:30-7:30 p.m.,
ADDISON - Sunday Rev. Rick Barcus preach- Dr. Paul Dixon. Time:
Middle school, 10 a.m., evening ing.
Sunday, 10 a.m. and 6
River Valley
School. Healthy eating service, 6 p.m., Addision
p.m.
MondayWednesday, Oct. 13
and weight loss seminar Freewill Baptist Church.
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
Info:
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
offered free to residents
Rev. Bob Thompson Area
Ministerial 446-0324.
of the Gallia County
Association
meeting,
Local School District. preaching.
Oct. 7-9, Revive €amp
JACKSON
Rev.
St.
Peter's
noon,
RSVP by oct 8. Info:
Meeting,
Enterprise
Episcopal
Church,
541
Joshue
Barrios
from
Conme Bradbury, 245Baptist
Youth
Camp,
11
Second
Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Guatemala
speaking,
Gallia • 446-2342
0593 or by e-mail at
a.m
,
End
Time
Harvest
Info:
Rev.
Leslie
1560
Nibert
Road,
Meigs
• 992-2156
90 cbradbury@seovec.o
Church, 1215 Dixon Run Flemming, 446-2483 or Gallipolis. Time: 7 p.m.
rg.
m
a
i
I Speakers: Oct. 7, Mike
Road, off Ohio 327 exit of e
Thursday, Oct. 14
U.S.
35,
Jackson.
Special
leslieflemming
@columBlanton; Oct. 8, George
PORTER
Springfield Twp. Trustees singing. Prayer for the bus.rr.com.
Holley; Oct. 9, Calvin Ray
Wednesday, Oct. 13
2011 budget heanng, 7 afflicted. Dinner after serEvans. Special music:
ADDISON - Prayer Evidence,
p.m., Springfield Twp. vice. Info: (740) 645Wade
meeting, 7 p.m., Addison Spencer, The Rowlands.
F1re Department, Porter.
3052.
RODNEY - Gallia Co.
GALLIPOLIS - Life Freewill Baptist Church. Info: Greg Lyon, (614)
Retired Teachers lun- Chain Sunday, 2:30-3:30 Rev. Matt Smith preach873-4865.
eon, noon, Rodney p.m., Ohio River Plaza, Ing.
1ted Methodist Church . Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
Thursday, Oct. 14
peaker: Melvin Biars
Pet
ADDISON - Ladies
GALLIPOLIS Need Mammogram?
RSVP : Karen Cornell, blessing ceremony, 1 Aid meeting. 7 p.m.,
Female and under 65 years of age?
256-6846.
St.
Peter's Addison Freewill Baptist
p.m.,
MERCERVILLE
Episcopal Church, 541 Church.
Underinsured or Uninsured?
Let's Do Lunch, 5:30- Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Saturday, Oct. 16
Resident of Gal/ia, Jackson or Vinton County?
7:30 p m., Hannan Trace Info: 446-2483.
GALLIPOLIS
Elementary
School.
GALLIPOLIS - The Gospel Music Southern
Healthy
eating
and
church of Christ in Style, 7 p.m., Ariel
weight loss seminar
Gallipolis meets at 234 Theatre. Special singing
offered free to residents
by Victory River Quartet,
of the Gallia County Chapel Drive. Sunday
Sincere,
Rick Towe,
meeting
times
are:
9:30
Local School District.
and Host
James
Rainy
a.m.,
Bible
class;
10:30
RSVP by oct. 8. Info:
Group.
No
admission
fee.
a.m.,
worship
;
5
p.m.,
Connie Bradbury, 245You must make an appointment for this special offer and meet
A
love
offering
will
be
evening
assembly.
The
0593 or by e-mail at
the criteria mentioned above. Space is limited, call today!
accepted.
90 _cbradbury@ seovec. o church meets at 7 p.m
Sunday, Oct. 17
Wednesday for Bible
rg.
ADDISON - Sunday
study.
Web
site:
Monday, Oct. 18
GALLIPOLIS - Galha www. ch ape lh i llch ur- school, 10 a.m.: evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Co. Twp. Association chofchnst.org.
Free mammograms are
meetmg, 7 p.m., Gallia
GALLIPOLIS - The Freewill Baptist Church.
provfded by
Rick
Barcus
Holzer Center for Cancer Qrre
Co. Senior Resource Gallipolis
church of Pastor
l nd Holzer Olnlc
Center, 1167 Ohio 160, Christ meets at 214 preaching.
through
fUnds receNed by the
WILKESVILLE
Gallipolis.
Upper
River
Road.
Susan G. JComen Founf:Mtlon.
Homecoming,
9
a.m.,
Friday, Nov. 12
Sunday services include
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia 10 a.m. Bible study, with Wilkesville
Methodist
and
Water classes for all ages, and Church. Sunday school.
rvation
District 11 a.m. worshi~. Bible 10 a.m. Dinner. 12:30
ard meeting, 1 :30 study is also held at 7 p.m. Afternoon service,
p.m. , C.H. Mckenzie Ag p.m. Wednesday. Web 1:30 p.m.
~ l-l.OLZFR
Center, 111 Jackson site: www.gallipolischurTuesday, Oct. 19
C A N CE R C A R E
Pike,
Suite
1569, chofchrist.net.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis.
Christian
Women's .
Wednesday, Oct. 6
Connection,
noon,
ADDISON - Prayer
Birthdays
A health fair wiN be held during this time with ft8e Sct88111ngs, helllth
308
Courtside
Grill,
meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
/nfotmBtiOn, stmss relief, and f'ftfrettl1ments available. Bring a friend
Ave..
Gallipolis.
Second
Evelyn Roush will cele- Freewil Baptist Church.
Speaker:
Dianna
and
Celebrate Women/
Rev.
Mark
Dunlap
brate her 95th birthday
Sutherland.
Music:
Karen
on Oct. 6. Cards may be preaching.

l

Keeping Gallia &amp;
Meigs counties
informed

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a

FREE

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Saturday, October 16
Holzer Center for Cancer Care

740.448.5474 or 1.800.821.388

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\ritnes -i&gt;tnttnel

Sunday, October 3,

2010

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825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

niESE ~ AU. OF TilE

Sammy M. Lopez

MIDDlE aASS WE

Publisher

Diane Hill

Andrew Carter

(01Jib ~Nl&gt; LEFT

Controller

Managing Editor

INniE~.

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Co~t)!ress slra~l make 110 lttw respectifiJ! att
establts~utleut o.f rel({!ion, or prohibitin.~ the free

e:-.·emse thereof; or tlbridgin)! the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or tire right of the pe~ple
peacet~bly to assemble, t~nd to petition tlze
Gol'enunent for a redress of.f!riet&gt;auces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OPINION

Rejl~ctions

Seeking answers
Dear Editor:
.., I lo:st my husban~, Larry Hudson_, on Dec. 26,
..009,_ and I have tned for the last mne months to
get hts bronze plaque for hi:s grave. Yes, he is a
veteran and he deserves better.
r ha\ e talked to t\\ 0 different people at the
Veterans Administration Office in Pomeroy. but
have had no luck. The funeral Jircctor has sent the
government the papers three times. rt seems
everybody else gets their plaque in six weeks. but
not LruTy. Why'? He .served hrs country and he
deserves to be treated and respected with pride
Linda Hudson

Last week.

Republicans

·

releas~d a "Pledge to America.:'

What ts most surprising to me is
its length. At 21 pages, it was
many times the lenoth of the
GOP"s hugely succe~sful 1994
"Contract with America:· Why
ditch a wrnning formula'?
Furthermore •. our _increasingly
unpopular pres 1dent rs known for
being_ long-~ind.ed, and his progresstve alltes 111 Congress are
infamous for concoctin~o ridiculously long bills. Would1f't a simpie, concise list of objectives
accentuate the contrast between
the two parties?
Instead of sticking to the main
theme of reining in an insanely
expenqve and increasing)) intrusive government, the pledge was
padded with statements designed
to
rally
the
traditionally
Republican pro-life, pro-military,
and small busmess constttuenciec;
Yes, t~ose area:. are important, but
the smgle i::.sue that unite~ the
largest number of Americans
today ts the concern that if we
don "t check runaway government
soon. we never \\ill. The toobroad pledge en.ds up bemg a
hodgepodge of chched sloganeering. It ?ffers ~uperficially bold but
often trust:atmgly vague proposals. occa~10nally dubious math.
and at least one glaring omission.
Here. ar~ some examples of the
pledges faults: .
It expresses an tntent to "make
gove!llm~nt _more transpa~ent ...
careful tn tts ste\vardshtp and
h~mest in its dealings:· But doesn t every party claim this'/ Why
not pledge !O drastically shrink
government mste~d?
It ~Is~. pronuses "a better
~~~1en~~· W~-~ ~ould promise a
\\Orse. ~~~ettca.
It of!ers Ia plan whereby) the
best 1deas_ trump the most
e~Hr;nched mter~sts:" Su~e. 'lnen
\\h) no! put ent~ent.:hed _mterests
on ~~:1ce _b&gt;: forswea~tng e~r1~arks. (Th1s ts the glanng om1sston I _spotted:? . .
.
It auns ~o _elunmate wastetul
an~ duph~atr_v~ programs . .
wh~le ~ttl! t~lfilhng all neces~ary
obh!?t1ons. Every~me promtses
to t~~m wa.ste, but ~t never hap~~ns. ~n~tead. too-btg bureaucraues p10ltferate and expand. More

Pomt•roy

Supporting Portman
Dear Editor:
This letter is being \vritten in support of Rob
Portman tu be the next United States Senator for
the State of Ohio. I am supportmo Rob because he
has a genume interest in the ft1~res ot our chtl
dren and grandchtldren.
~ believe Rob Portman\\ hen he says he wants to
~nng JObs to the unemployed. With O\er 400.000
JOb~ lost under the admmrstration of hrs opponent.
Ohro's Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher. it is obv10us that the
curre!lt administl1!tion had no plan m place to prevent JObs ~rom bemg lost ~nd obviously no plan in
pa~e to ~mng back those JOb::. 01 creatt: ne\\ out:s.
Wtth tillS economy. there is no doubt we could
have expected some JObs to be lost but losing
400,000 jobs in two years means s~mcone was
asleep at the wheel.
1 read recently where Gov. Stockland was bragging about (Ohio) being one of the few states who
had actually created new jobs. 1 don't know about
) ou, but to. me. appointing more political a~soci­
ates to recetve a paycheck from the State of Ohio
c;hould not .count as. new jo~s. nor should temporary JObs hke creatmg a rarl system that run~ a
tram from Cleveland to Cincinnati goinn 37 miles
an hour. which 1~ pait! for by uc;, the tatpayers.
We ~eed real JObs 111 Oh10 Jobs developed by
the pnvate sector, the _b ackbone of this country.
~mployers_ who create JObs and work hard alongstde of thetr employees in order to recetve a paycheck.
1 will be voting for Rob Pottman for L.S. Senate
be.cause he believes in de\ eloping real jobs in the
pnvatc sector that have long-term benefits. not
JObs that arc temporary and paid for by the taxpayers
Judy ./or~es
Gallipoli!i

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
letters to the edrtor should be limited to 300 words All letters
are subject to editrng, must be srgned and include address ffild
telephone number No unsigned leiters wrll be published
letters should be in good taste, addressing rssues, not person·
alrtres "Thank You• letters will not be accepted for publication.

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J3

on the GOP Pledge
•
to include.
cttatton of ~.:on~tttuttonal authortty. Do. Republtcans regard such
autho~· 1 tY. as. the letter of the
C:onsttt~tt_on Itself. or merely judic~al ~pm_ton.~ wntten about the
Constttutton.
.
Overall. the ple_?ge ts not very
bold. The authors numbers sug~~~t very mode~t plans for do~nsrzmg yncle Sam. At one pomt.
they wnte abo~t rolling spending
back 1?. "pre-sttmulus: pre-bailout
le_v~ls. That sounds like at least a
trillion-dollar cut to me. but then
they ~ay th~t _such a step would
sa"e S100 btlhon. Huh?
The pl_edge _has its redeeming ·
features. lnvokmg the Declaration
?f l~1~ependence at the outset is
1~spmng. Some of the facts cited
htt home ~ e.g .. how much higher taxes wtll be ~:xt year for middie class famlltes and sin ole
moms. if the Bush tax cuts expf:.e:
the extstence of2.050 federal programs providing. economic assi~
1
tance to Americans.
At best. though. the '·PJedoe
America" is a mixed bag. CI;arl).
1ts Republk.an authors sought to
chart a m1ddle path between
Democrats and the Tea Party
movement. In that. the) succeeded.
This is probably a sound political strategy for the GOP. With
\Oters. \veal! of heav)-handed.
hatch-tt-behmd-closed-doors-inthe-~li?dle-of-the-night-then­
ram-Jt-tnto-law-before-anvonereads-it Je~islation (not to· mention counterproductive "stimulus··
plans. in-your-face cronyism. and
soaring national debt). 2010 is the
Republicans' election to lose. All
they ha\e to do is nm to the right
of Obat:na and they \\ill make
lar~e gams in Congress.
Would the "Pledge to America''
even if adopted in~its entirety. be
enough to turn us off our current
road to national bankruptcv'! ~o.
But perhaps it will prow be the
first of many steps needed to
restore economically sound go.
emance to our countr '·
~
(Dr. Mark \V. lienct?.ickson is £1/1
adjunct facu/1\' memher. economist. and coiuributing ~cholar
with The Center for \'ision &amp;
Y(1fue.1· at Grm·e Cit\' Colle~e.)

I? r~qUJre e~very _bil!

Mark
Hendrickson

fundamentally.
where
do
Republicans
differ
from
Democrats on the "necessary
obligations·· of government?
. It seeks to ·'require congresswnal approval of an.) new federal ref?ulation that may add to our
deficrt and make it harder to ereate jobs." Why not insert a period
after "regulation·· and leave out
the 4ualifiers that follO\\?
Currently, rule$ proposed by federal b 1 ucra tes take effect
autom
By un e-.c; Congress _
whrch 1 too busy to even read its
own btll&lt;&gt;, much less reams of
bureaucratic
regulations
_
exphcttly reJects. them, and ~ 0
the) are almo t never challenged.
Change it so that- no rule proposed
b) unelected bureaucrats takes
effect unless Congress explicitly
votes to adopt it.
'The pledge suffer~ from occasional ambiguit). It~ proposal to
replace Obamacare ,.,ith reforms
l!ke !!ability reform and pern1ittmg mter-state sales of health
insurance makes sense. But then
the Republicans ~ound JUst like
Democrats when they promise to
'"ensure Ido they mean ·•man~ateT) t~~t those \vith pre-existmg condtttons gain access to the
coverage they need."
. Remember the promise to elimmate ''duplicative" pro~rams?
Then "' hy promise "a net hirino
freeze'' for fed~ral employee~
mstead of reducmg the federal
payroll after Obama·s rapid
expansion of it?
. The pledge calls for "preventmg the expansion of unfunded liabilities." Fine. but simply freezing
the a_mo~nt . of those unpayable
pronmes tsn t enou~h. rf we don't
eliminate many trillions of those
liabilities. our financial doom is
sealed.
Another intriguing proposal is

to

\!rtmes -~enttnel

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Correction Polley
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newsrooms.
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Avenue. Gallrpolis, OH 45631 .

•

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www.mydallyreglster.com

Qyr ~tm(lll addresses are;
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mdtnews@mydallytribune.com
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�Su nday, October :l,

~unbav

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

Obituaries

Deaths

James Albert RHe
James Albert Rife, 78.
Cheshire, Ohio. passed
away on October 2. 20 I0,
at his home. He was hom
on June 12, 1932, in
ville, Ohio. :snn of
late Frank U. Rife and
late Alice Elliot Rife.
Mr. Rife was a member
of the Rutland United
Methodist Church. He
retired trom the Kyger
Creek Plant.
He i:s survived by his
wife of 57 years, Ann
Sears Rife of Cheshire; three ch1ldren, Debby Rife of
Gallipolis, Terry Rife of Cheshire and Penny (John)
Hamson of Cheshire: ~randchlldrcn. Angela ('lim)
Clickenger of Gallipolis, Ronald James White of
Gallipolis, Jim Harrison of Cheshire and Katie
Harrison of Cheshire; great grandchildren Delaney,
Avery and Emerson Clickenger: niece and nephews.
Betsy (Dave) Ball of Gallipolis. Herman (Nyoka)
George of Bidwell. Eddie (Janice) George of Texas
and Dale (Jenny) Little of Pomeroy: sister-in-laws,
Betty Conkle of Middleport and Carrie Neal of
Racme.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death
by several brothers and sisterc;.
Funeral services will be held on Wednesday,
October 6, 2010, at I p.m at Anderson McDaniel
runeral Home in Middleport with Rev. Herman
George and Rev. John Chapman officiating. Burial
\Vill follow at the Gravel Hill Cemetery. Visiting
hour::; will be on 'I\1esday from S-8 p.m. at the funeral
me. A registry is available online at www.andersondaniel.com.
•

life-lon~ friend of 70 years, Gabriel Canellas and
loyal fnend and fishmg buddy, Jim Whisman.
At Posey's request, there wJII be no service or visitation and the bun aI will be c~t the convemence of the
family. The Deal Funeral Home IS serving the family.
Please visit dealfuneral&lt;Wsuddenlinkmail.com to
send condolences to the family.

Mary E. Dennison
Mary b. Dennison, 51,
of Gallipolis, Ohio, died
on Saturday, October 2,
20 I 0, at the Emogene
Dolon Jones Hosp1cc
House in Huntington
W.Va.• after an extended
battle with cancer.
She was born on
September 9, 1959 in
Nampa.
Idaho,
the
daughter of Preston and
Helen Hoalst. She was a
graduate of the North
West
Nazarene
University in Nampa. Idaho and was a homemaker.
Mary is surv1ved by her husband. Michael
Dennison of Gallipohs: her children, Russell
Dennison, Madelynn DenniSon and Christopher
Dennison. all at home: her father. Preston Hoalst of
Nampa, Idaho: brothers and sisters-in-law, Chris
(Linda) Hoalst and Steven (Justine) Hoalst of
Nampa, Idaho.
Memorial service will be on Tuesday, October 5.
2010. at the Willis F'uneral Home. Friends may call at
the funeral home on l'uesday from 6 p.m. until the
tune of the service.
Please visit \loW\\,willisfuneralhome.com to send emaJI condolences.

Posey L Stevenson

Edwin F. Jones

Posey L. Steven on,
77. of Gallipolis Ferry,
W.Va.. passed a" ay.
Wednesda). September
29. 2010. at home after n
two-and-a-half year battle with lung cancer. He
was born January 12.
1933, in Earling. Logan
County, W.Va. to Jo eph
and Edna Stevenson. He
graduated from Logan
High School. Class of
195 I , and was US Navy
Veteran who served Ill
the Korean War and was retired from Ravenswood
Aluminum in 1995 after 36 years of service. He also
\I.Orked for Kerr Gooch at Southern Glass on occasion in Galhpohs. Ohio. He "as a Christian and
attended the Point Plea ant Pre bytenan Church and
enJoyed fi shmg. flen markets and attending the
Dehue, W.Va., reumon every August and spending
with his famil).
e was preceded in death by his father. Joseph N.
in 1936; step father, Wilham E. Grymes in
; mother, Edna Steven on Grymes in 1943:
maternal grandparents, William and Pearl Griffith.
who raised him along wJth h1s siblings after the
death of hi parent . great uncle. Posey Griftith, for
whom he was named and favonte uncle. Ralph
Griffith, all of Logan County, W.Va.
He is survived by his "ife of 52 years, Alice and
daughter , Cheryl Holland of Gallipolis Ferry;
Barbara (Jeff) Patrick of Gallipolis, Ohio: grandchildren, Jamie (Aaron) Stapleton and Ryan Holland.
Henry Patrick: son-in-law, Steve Holland of Leon.
W.Va.: sisters. Mary Snowden. Ruth and Dana Dur~t
both of Point Pleasant: brother, Ernest (LaWanna)
Grymes of J•Jorida; special aunt. Juanita Griffith and
special cousin, Kay Nisbet. both of Logan. W.Va.;

Edwin F. Jones. age 86. of Jackson, passed away
Thursday, Sept. 30. 20 I 0, at Holzer Med1cal Center in
Jackson. He "a born on Dec. 3, 1923. in Columbus,
Ohio. the son of the late Edwin and Stella (Davis)
Jones.
He was preceded in death by his wife. Dorothy
Bowsher Jones, nnd daughter Megan Jones.
Ed graduated from Ohio Uni"ersity in 1948 after
World War II intenupted his studies. He served in the
Army Signal Corps m the CBI Theater.
He wns the fornter owner of the Cambria Packing
Company, member of the Republican National
Committee, Jackson County Republican Party. the
Christ United Methodist Church, the American
Legion, active in the local Welsh society. the Welsh
American Genealogical Society, and the National
Welsh-American l•ound&lt;~tion
Sumvmg are h1s children Sally Jones McNamara
(Col Roger). Jeanne Jones Jmdra (Louis), Ed (Casey)
lone (Sue) all of Jack on. rand htldren Me an
Miller (Enk) Jenny Wolford Sh.me , Enn H ch
(Brett). all ot Jack on and Chri topher Jone of
Columbus; great-grandchildren Tre~ Miller, Cade
Wolford, Lauren Hm ch. Bodhi \\olford and Reid
Mill!!r all of Jackson: s1 ter m-law JoAnn Bo"' her
Kelly of Dayton. and cousm Glenna Francis Mcl':eer
Gib er Warner of Pomero) Many friends, neighbof"i
and ded1cated care-g1\ ers "111 nl o mourn hi passmg
Ed was a ood citizen. and a proud \Vel h Amencan
who
be m1s ed by man)
Calling hours are Sunday. October 3 from 4-8 p.m.
at Etsnaugle-Lew 1 Funeral Home in Jackson. The
funeral is at 1 p.m. on Monday. October 4 at the
Christ United Methodist Church in Jackson. The famil) "ill receive VISitors one hour prior to the ,$ervice
as well.
ln lieu of flowers donations can be made to the
Jackson City Library or the Welsh-American Heritage
Museum in Oak IJill.

Penny Causby
Penny Causby, 4~. Middleport, died Friday, Oct. 1.
2010, at her res1dence. Arrangements will be
announced by Cremeens Funeral Home, Racine.

Harold W. Cook
Harold W. Cook,. 61. Crown City, died Saturday,
Oct. 2. 20 I 0, ut lm home. Arrangements will be
announced by Hall hmeral Home, Proctorville.

'"ill

oh·o space hero John
6!Aienn reminded time flies
S MYTH

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS
John
Glenn may be a :space hero.
but some things can bring a
guy right down to earth .
A letter the 89 - year-old
Glenn
recently
received
from a third grader who was
studying the former astronaut and U.S. senator's legendary life as the first
Amencan to orbit the Earth
and the oldest to fly in space
did just that. Glenn had the
letter with him Friday at a
campaign event for Ohio
Gov. Ted Strickland. a fellow Democrat.
The boy drew Glenn a pic ture of an airplane and asked
a couple questions .
"Then he finishes with
s, which I think is great,"
nn
chuckled
before
onlookers at the Linden Cafe
near downtown Columbus.
'"I'm glad you're still alive
because a lot ol my c la:ssmatcs' biography choices nre
already dead. 1 hope you
write back. ·•·
Glenn said it was the
fastest return letter he4s
written.
Looking c haracteristically

fit, Glenn said he and wife
Annie now consider thc,nselves "senior senior-citizens . " Yet he continues to
add his famous presence to
Ohio campaigns. In addition
to his historic Friendship 7
flight. Glenn represented
Ohio in the U.S. Senate for
25 years until 1999 and
returned to space at ngc 77
as a crew member on a 1998
s huttle flight.
In years past. he's campaigned
mostly
for
Democrats but also supported ballot issues
under
Republican Go'. Bob Taft.
On Friday. he joined
Strickland running mate
Yvette McGee Brown at the
cafe. located in Columbus'
largely
African-American
Linden area, where patrons
sought his autograph or a
picture "ith the legendary
astronaut.
Their bus tour continued to
Zanesville, St. Clairsville
and Steubenville. passing
through
Glenn'
nath c
Guernsey County in eastern
Ohio.
Strickland
faces
Republican John Knsic:h,
who saw New Jersey Gov.
Chris Christie campaign for

Curtis Wesley Shiltz
Curtis Wesley Shilt7., 89, Point Pleasant, W.Va., formerly of Ashton, W.Va., died Friday, Oct. l, 2010. at
St. Mary's Medical Center. The funeral service will be
held at I p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 5, 2010, at Deal Funeral
Home. Burial will be at White Chapel Cemetery
Barboursville. Friends may call from 6-8 p.m:
Monday at the funeral home.

William 'Bill' E. Riffle, Jr.
William ''Bill'' E. Riffle, Jr.• 83. Point Pleasant
W.Va .• died Thursday. Sept. 30, 2010, at Arbors of
Gallipolis. The funeral service will be held at noon,
Monday, Oct. 4, 2010, at Deal Funeal Home. Burial
will be at Forest Hills Cemetery, Flatrock. Friends
may call from 5-8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home.

Don Emerson Johnson
Don Emerson Johnson, 74. West Columbia: W.Va.,
died Thursday, Sept. 30. 2010, at Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The funeral service will be held at 12:30
p.m .. Sunday. Oct. 3. 2010. at Foglesong-Roush
Funeral Home in Mason. Burial will follow at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.

Local Briefs
Rio Village Council to meet
RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande Village Council
and Board of Public Affairs will hold their October
meeting on Oct. 4. The Board of Public Affairs will
meet at 6 p.m. and the Village Council will meet at
6:30 p.m. The public is welcome to attend.

Marra to speak at workshop
BIDWELL - Home and garden expert John Marra
will present a free fall landscape workshop from 6-8
p m. on Monday, Oct. 4 at River Valley High School.
In addition to Marra's fall landscape \\Ork:shop, the
Rt\er Valley FFA will assist "ith a J?erennial plant
exchange for tho e who wi h to participate. This free
cia s IS provided for residents of the Gallia County
Local School District in collaboration with the Gallia
Vinton Educations Service Center. Re!rlster before
Oct. I by contacting Connie Bradbury at (740) 2450593 or by e-mail at 90_cbradbury@seovec.org.

City commission to meet
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis City Commission
will meet at 7 p.m .• Tuesday, Oct. 5 at the Gallipolis
~1unicipal Buddin~, 518 Second Ave. This is the regular monthly meetmg.

Basket games
GALLIPOLIS - The Galha County Democratic
Party will host a basket games fundrniser at 6 p.m..
Tuesda~. Oct. 5 at River \'alley Middle School. The
school1s located on Ohio 160 near Bidwell.

HC, HMC Retirees lunch

ELECTION 2010

Bv JuLIE C ARR

m:unes -~entmrl • Page As

him earl1er this week.

Biden to for
Strickland on
Monday
YOUNGSTOWN (AP) - A
spokeswoman for the governor's re-election campaign says
Vice President Joe Biden is
cheduled to visit Ohio on
Monday to drop by a restaurant
and hold a rally at an aluminum
plant.
•
Spoke "oman Li~ Smith tell-.
The Vindicator newspaper that
Biden will make a stop in
Youngstown at the Golden
Dawn Restaurant and at Astro
Shapes Inc. in neighboring
Struthers.
Smith
says
Gov.
Ted
Strickland will accompany the
vice president.
Both Hjdcn and former
President Bill Clinton have
made multiple campaign stops
across the state. Democrat
Strickland b facing a tight redection bid against Republican
John Kasich. a former congressman.
A
New
Yotk
rimes/CBS New$ poll released
this week shows the race is
about even.

GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Clinic and Holzer
Medical Center Retirees luncheon is scheduled at
noon on 1\Jesday. Oct. 5 at the Courtside Bar and
Grill.

NAACP banquet Oct. 9
IRONTO!'\ - Paul LaRue will be the ke\note
speaker at the 18th annual NAACP Freedom ·fund
Banquet. The banquet will be held at 7 p.m., Saturda~.
Oct. 9 at First Baptist Church. 304 S. 5th Avenue in
Ironton. Thito. event is hosted by the Southeastern
Ohio Branch NAACP, "hich serve.; Gallia. Jackson
and Lawrence countie~. 'l11e public is invited. Tickets
cost $22 each. For inforn1ation. contact Jessie Pa) ne
at 245-5216.

Good Sam's fundraiser
THURMAN - Ohio Good Sam's Chapter 74 and
Gallia Co. 1\Jmbleweeds will host a fundraiser with
bluegrass band Open Rail at 7 p.m. on Saturday, Oct.
9 at Rocky Creek Campground. located on Ebb
Tomblin Road near the junction of U.S. 35 and Twp.
Road 713. Other activittes are planned on Oct. . All
proceed from food ales will be donated to the veterans breakfast program in Jackson.

Preservation Board meeting
GALLI POLIS
The Gallipolis Histone
Preservation Board will hold a '' ork session at 5 p.m..
Tuesday. Oct. 12 in the conference room of the
Gallipolis Municipal Building. 5 1 ' Second Ave.

tMcCoy-'Moore
Punera{ iomes
Ser-"i11g Ottr Commtmities for Over 100 Years

..

�Sunday, Octobei' :J,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbav U::tme~ -~enttnel

High turnout so
far for early voting
in Meigs County
BY BRIAN

J.

• Page A6

Meigs H.S.
Homecoming

R EED

BREED@MVOAILYSENTlNELCOM

Hope Hajivandi, daughter
of Moe and Anit. .
Hajivandi of Pomerowas crowned the 201 0
Meigs
High
School
Homecoming Queen 1n
ceremomes held at
Friday night's football
game on Bob Roberts
Field. She was escorted
by Garrett Riffle, son of
Matt and Knsti Riffle of
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Early voting began last week for
this year's general election, nnd 'Meigs County voters
have made a strong showing at the polls so far.
Monday is the last day to register to vote for the
Nov. 2 election, which include~ Ohio's governor and
other state positions, as well as Congressional and
state representative races. The Board of Elections
office will be open extended hours Monday to acco- •
modate voter registration.
Becky Johilsto.n, deputy director of the Board of
Elections, said the elections board has received near
ly 500 applications for absentee, or early ballots ~ince
the board began accepting them nearly a week ago.
Sept. 2R was opening day for the election, and hallob can be cast up until Nov. I without visiting the
local pollin&amp; location.
Under Oh10 ·s early voting provision, voters can cast
ballots 60 days before the election by requesting ballots by mail or voting at the Board of Elections office.
The board requires identificatiOn for early voting, as
well as voting at the polling locations on election day.
This year's election lllcludes a contested race for
County Commissioner, between the incument
Democrat Mick Davenport and Republican 1im lhle.
County Auditor Mary Byer-Hill is unopposed in her
race for re-election.
The Board of Elections office will be open from 9
a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday to register voters for the ·
November election. Director Rita Smith said there are
approximately 15,000 registered voters on Meigs
County"s polling records.

Charlene Hoefllchlphoto

Rethink Possible"

€i; ~

Outreach Center new hours
GALLIPOLIS - Officials w1th the Outreach Center in
Gallipolis have announced new hours of operation. The
facility will be open from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Monday through
Friday, and from l 0 a.m.-2 p.m. on Saturday. The
Outreach Center is located at 275 State St. in GalliJX)lis.

Retired teachers lunch
ROD:\EY - The Gallia Co. Ret1red Teachers luncheon y, ill be held at noon on Thursday, Oct. 14 at
Rodney Umted Methodist Church. The speaker will
be Meh in Biars. RSVP to Karen Comell at 256-6846.

Women in Appalachia
workshop
PIKETON - The OSU South Centers m Piketon
will host the workshop Women in Appalachia from 10
a.m. 3
p.m..
Thursday.
Oct.
14.
Visit
www.20 I Owomen.eventbrite.com to register.

I

Local Stocks
AEP ("'') SE) - 36.22
Akzo ("-:ASDAQ) -

60.85
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) -

48.99
B1g Lots (NY.SE) 33.44
Bob Evans (i\ASDAQ)
-28.41
BorgWamer (NYSE) 52.18
Century Alum (i\AS DAQ)
13.52
Champ10n (NASDAQ)

- I 15
Cham1ing Shops ~i\AS ·
DAQ)- 3 56
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 30.69
Collins (NYSE) - 58.51
DuPont (r..;YSE) - 44.85
US Bank CNYSE) -

21.71
Gen Electric (NYSE) 16.36
Harley-Davidson
(i\YSE) - 28.57
JP Morgan (NYSE) 38.81
Kroger (NYSE) - 21.72
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
26.82
!':/orfolk So ~i\YSE) 5902

OVBC (NASDAQ) 19,00
BBT (NYSE)- 24.37
Peoples (NASDAQ) 12.08
Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.00
Premier t!'\ASDAQ)
6.26
Rod.\\ ell (.NYSE) 61.87
Rocky Boots &lt;NASDAQ)
- 7.56
Royal Dutch Shell 61.78
Sems Holding (NASDAQ)- 69.72
Wai-Mart (NYSE) 53.36
Wendy\ (N'r'SE)- 4.42
WesBanco (NYSE)
16.92
Worthington (NYSE) 15.11
Datly stock reports are
the 4 p.m ET closing
quotes of transactions for
October I, 20 I0. provided
by Edward Jones linancial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at &lt;740) 4419441 and Lesley Manero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

•
N

Gallia-Meigs Forecast

.@J AT&amp;T Is the official wlrel.ess sponsor of Ohio State Athletics.

Te~;t OSU to 94253101 breaking news. spcdal ol!c~ end~ Buda!ye cootent deiMml to YWI ~phone!

Sunda_y: A chance of showers, mainly after I0 a.m.
Partly sunny. with a high near 59. North wind
between 5 and 7 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30
percent. New rainfall amounts betw·een a tenth and
quarter of an inch possible.
Sunday Night: A chance of showers. Mostly
cloudy. with n low around 39. Chance of precipitation
is 50 percent. New rainfall amounts between a tenth
and 4uarter of an inch possible.
Monday: A chance of showers after 11 a.m. Mostly
cloudy. with a high near 58. Chance of precipitation is
30 percent.
Monday Night: Mostly cloudy. \Vith a low around
40.
Tuesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 62.
Tuesda} Night: Mostly cloudy. with a low around

41.
Wednesda): Pm1ly sunn). with a high near 66.
Wednesday Night: Partly cloudy. with a lmv
around 41.
Thursdav: Mostly sunny. with a high near 69.
Thursday Night: Partly cloudy. with a low around
45.
Frida)': Mostly sunny. with a high near 73.

Middlqlort~E~ IOC.'lridA~
JI{M.Jlll

-4 '!92 28.b

• Open '&gt;urnll\
+I hgh ~X'f'l:llnt•~ &lt;xlld I1m'

•

�-rr- ;· .

l(

Bl

PORTS
locAI.
OAlUPOliS
A ~ of l4lCOfflii10
COIIegO end ~ IChool Vlmlty IPO'I'"O
event5 inYoi'Mg loal'lS from Gallia Mason
ancl MOJQ$ COU'Iliea.

MQrul.u, Dc1ober 4

Volleyball

Meigs bitten late
by Bulldogs, 33-27

sat out with an injul).
But speedy sophomore
Dillon Bo)er stepped in
POMEROY, Ohio
for Meigs and almost led
Dc'lon Sharp scored them to the \\ m.
~~s
37 ) arch out with
from
The
Marauders
Volleyball
3:05 remaining to left the received the opening
Eastern at Waterford, 6 p.m
Southern ot Trimble, 6 p m
Athens Bulldogs ton nail kkkotf and put together
Meigs at Nclsonv le·York 6 p m
biting 33-27 win over an I I play. G2 yard drive
R1ver Valley at South Po1nt 5 30
pm
Meigs in TVC football to take a 7-0 leaJ with
Pont Pleasant 1 Ravenswood 6
nctton r·riday night at 7:0 I remaining in the
pm
Bob Robert Field in fu t period. With Meigs
Hannan at Va ley 6 30 p m
Soccer
Pomeroy. Sharp - a 5- tncmg a fourth and SIX
Academy at Warren. 6 30
Oa
foot 8, 150 pound junior from the Bulldog II yard
PM
Helbert Hoover at Po nt P casanr
rushed 19 times for line, Boyer was flushed
(G) 630pm
238 ) ards and c;cored on out of the pocket and
Pont Pleasant tBl at W amstown
5 p.m
nms of 78, 32 and 37 s~.:ored from II yards out.
- - - yards
to lead tpe Christian Mugrage added
1 Bulldogs over the fired the extra points.
II took the Bulldogs
up Mnraud('rs.
Meigs played without just five plays to drive 57
the services of c;enior co- yard and tie the ball
c.tptnin quarterbacklsafePlease see Meigs. 83
t) Cameron Bolin '"ho

R er Va ley et Oa a Academy 5 30
pm
Me gs et Eastor'l 6 p m
Southern at South Oa ua 6 p m
Buffalo at Wahama 6 p m
Point Pleasant at H nnan 6 30 p.m

Late rally lifts
Rebels past
Fed Hock, 22-12
B Y B RYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS MYOA ~VTR BUNE COM

S11·WART, Ohio- A
pair of -;econd half touchdo'"ns and t\\O critical
two-point con,ersions
allO\\ed 'isiting South
Gallia to rail) back from
an earl) 6-0 deficit to
clmm a 22-12 victor)
over Federal Hocking
dunrJg a Week 6 Tri
\aile)
Conference
D1'1 1 ton
Hock1ng
rnatchup
in
Athen
Count)
The Rebels (3 3. 3 2
T\ C
Hockmg)
fell
belund earl) in the -;ecquarter
before
ing a score mid"'a)
gh the period.
ich Jed to a six-all
conte t at the intenntssJon SGHS carried that
momentum mto the second half. scoring \l.tth
O\er four mmutes left in
the thtrd quarter for n 14
6 edge
The host lancers ( 1-5.
I 3) ret a Iiated "ith a
k1ckoff return for a
touchdown on their ensuing possession. " hich
made it a 14-12 contest
headed into the finale.
The score sta)ed that
\\a) until SGHS added a
TD with less than t\\O
minute left in regulatiOn. making it a one-possession 20-12 contest.
The Rebel&lt;; "ere sue-

Please see Rebels, 83
~stem

•

s Amsbary
advances to D-3
districts in golf
B Y B RYAN W ALTERS

BWALTERS MYOAJ YTR BUN£ COM

Sunda), October 3, 2010

B Y DAVE HARRIS

SPOPTS

ESPONDENT

Members of
the Logan
football team
walk off the
f1eld after losIng their firstever SEOAL
contest at
Logan
Ch1eftatn F1eld
on Fnday n1ght
followtng a 4117 setback to
v1s1ttng Gallia
Academy in a
Week 6 gnd·
1ron matchup
n Logan
OhiO.

Eagles blank
Belpre, 41-0
B Y B RYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSIMYOA LYTR BUNE COM

M1kc Broce

photos/
courtesy of
GAHSsports.com

Blue Devils knock
off Logan, 41-17
Stadium. "Both schools
have \ ery rich tradition
and a lot of pride, but all
LOGAN. Ohio
those games that ,., ere
Around 10 p.m. Friday. pia) ed are histOI)'... and
the I ogan Chieftain histol) is not tradttion.
Stadium scoreboard read
" I hio; (Gallipolb.) team
dicb1 t pia) those teams,"
Gallipolis 41, Logan 17.
Truth be told, howe\ er, he added. "Tonight it was
the 'tsiting Blue Devils about us and (the current
knew the score long Chiefc;) and not about
before that. .. courtes) of ,..1lat s happened the last
both their own head 13 years. And the kids
conch and a former responded to that well.
Chieftain.
Ye". it s Logan - but
"I ike I told the kid:.: .... e re the Blue Devils,
there s " difference and we rc oka)."
bet'" een tradition and
"Oka)" might not be a
histon.'' Gallia Academ\ sufficient "'ord to use for
coach" Mike Eddy said the Blue Devils perforafter his Blue De\ ilc; mance Friday night.
snapped a 6-game lo ing There ha to be a better
streak at the hands of the '' ord than that.
I ed b) 5-foot-9. 160Chiefs and dealt the
Purple &amp; White their pound running hack
fJrst·C\er Southeastern Austin Wibon. the Blue
Ohio Athktic League
Please see Devils, 85
lose; in Logan Chieftain
B Y C RAIG D UNN

SPECIAL TO ..HE TMES.SENTINEL

CH ILLICOTHE, Ohio
- After a brief one-year
hiatus, :\teigs County
will again be represented
at the ·distnct le\ el
in golf after
Eastern s
Christian
Amsbar)
qualified
out
of
W ednesB v G ARY C LARK
d a y
s
SPORTS CORRE'SPONDEN
Amsbary Divis1011 Il l
sectional
MASON, W.Va.
meet at Jaycees Golf
Jrenton Gibbs tossed
Course in Ross Count).
Amsbary
a three- three touchdown passes
) ear starter for the Eagles in leading the fourth
- shot an 85 on the 18· ranked, Wahama White
hole course, "'hich Falcons to a 49-0 home·
lowed the JUnior to earn coming \ ietory over vi&lt;&gt;e tinal spot available iting Southern Fridn)
next week s district evening before a large
compctltton at River tllrnout at the Bend Area
Greens Golf Course in school.
The win wa-; the filth
West Lafayette.
m
era II for Coach Ed
1\rusbar) becomes the
Cromley
s White 1-alcons
first Meigs County district qualifier in D-3 nnd wns the Mason
teams
fi lth
since Bryan Harris of County
straight
league
conquest
Southern accomplished
his fourth appearance m ns Wnhamn continued on
it .JQume) to a first e\ er
2008.
·1\fC Hocking DivisiOn
league title. Sm11hern
Please see Golf, 84

Bryan Walters/photo

Metgs runntng back Jeffrey Roush, left, runs w1th the ball as Athens defender~
Chris Russell (22) and Skylar Schwarze!, right, give chase dunng the first half of
Fnday ntght's TVC Ohio opener at Bob Roberts F1eld m Pomeroy, Ohio.

BELPRE. Oh10- The
Eastern football team
recorded its second
straight shutout and "'on
its thud consecutive
deCISIOn rnda) lltght
with a \:On\ incing 41-0
tnumph over host Belpre
in a \\eek 6 Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Dh 1sion matchup at
Ralph Holder Stadium in
Washington Cou nty.
·1 he 'isiting Eagles (4:.!. 4-1 TVC Hocking)
racked up 286 total yards
of offenc;e en route to
JUmpmg out to a 41-0
ad\ antage through three
quarters of pia). while
the Golden Eagle::. (0-6,
0-4) managed onl) 129
yards of offense in drop·
pmg the program " 17th
strmght decision.
Eastern - ,., hich has
not allowed a ~ingle point
m o'er 10 quarters of
play
recorded its third
&lt;&gt;hutout of the ... eason
,., hile maintaining ole
possession of -;econd
place in the TVC
Hocking standings.
Klint Connerv. Kvle
Cormen
and· Tvler
HendriX' proved to be a
triple threat in the outcome. a the trio of
Engles each .;;cored two
tmtchdo'' ns in the conte t EHS quarterback
Brn)den Pratt also thre\\
Gallia Academy's Brandon Taylor (1 0) scores on a 9· three TD pa:.,es in the
yard touchdown run as teammate Austin Wilson, left, decision.
watches on during Friday night's VICtory over Logan in
an SE9Al matchup in Hockmg County.

Please see Eagles. 83

Wahama rolls past
Tornadoes, 49-0

I

dropped its second con·
sccutive outing to f~11I to
2-4 overall and .2-~ insid('
conference play.
G i b~s connected on a
pair of long range scoring
pas~es of 52 and 37 yard
111 the opening half as
Wahama constructed a
17 0 halftime edge. The
White Falcons then
exploded for 32 second
half. points to turn the
contest into a rout in
ga111ing the onl!·sid('d
Will.

Wahama racked up 577
yards of total offense on
the night with 409 ) ards
ru~hing and another 168
through the air. Anthon)
Grimm led the Falcons

Please see Rolls, 84

Bryan Walters/photo

Southern's Eric Buzzard, nght, 1s tackled beh1nd the line of scrimmage by
Wahama's Matt Stewart as teammate Anthony Gnmm (35) pursues the play
during the f1rst half of Friday mght's TVC Hockmg matchup at Bachtel Stadium
1n Mason, W.Va.

�Pomc•·oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 3, 2010

The Ohio Val lev Publishing Scoreboard- week &amp; Football
PREP FooTBALL
Frrday's Box Soores

Galllo Academy 41, Logan 17
Gall polls
Logan

10 14

7

3

0 17 -

7 0 -

41
17

I (Kitchen k ck) 7 29
Fourth Quarter
W-K ne Roush 34 run (pass larled)
11 49
W-Crandal Neal 31 rul' (klck I od)
518

Scoring summary
First Quarter
GA -'TYler Hannon 21 FG 6 41
L-Dylan Cavrnee 90 krckoff return
(Derek Montgomery krck) 6:27
GA-Auslin Wilson 80 pass from Ethan
MoorQ (Hannon ktck) 5 20
Second Quarter
L-Montgomcl')' 24 FG 8 02
GA-Wilson 1 run (Hannon krck) 4 07
GA-Brandon Taylor 9 run (Hannon
kick) 0 15 B
Third Quarter
L-lsaac Undsey 24 pass from Jordan
Jurgensmler (Montgomery ktck) 9 58
Fourth Quarter
GA-Hannon 30 FG 10 38
GA-Wtlson 10 run (Hannon kick) 5 50
GA-Wtlson 31 run (Hannon kick)
0387

L

GA
16
49·268
128
396
7-14-0
3-0
5-35

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passrng yards
Total yards

Comp-an-inl
Fumbles-losI
Pcnalt•cs yards

9
29-116

63
179
5-11-1
3·1

128
L-Jord:m Jurgensm er 5-1 1-1 63
Receiving: GA- AustiJ'I Wilson 5-109,
Brandon Taylor 2-19
L-lsaac Lrnd ey 4·55 Kelly Long 1-8
;

Eastern 41, Belpre 0
7 21 13 0 0 0 0 0 -

41
0

Scoring summary
First Quarter
E-Khnt Connery 1 1 run (Ty1er Hendnx
kick) 7:25
Second Quarter
E-Hendnx 27 pass from Brayden
Pratt (HendriX kick) 11 13
E-Hendnx 7 pass from Pratt (Hendnx
kiCK) 6 40
E-Kyle Connery 40 fh!SS Pratt
(Hendrix klck) 1 47
Third Quarter
E-1Kyle Connery 85 kicko?l return (kick
I od) 11 45
E-K Connery 48 !'U Hendrix klck)

836

s

w

10
33-54
80

22

134
7-26-1

63
2-10

~409

168
577
5-11 2
21
5-60

Individual Statistics
Rushing: S--Tyler Sartor 8 33 Errc
Buzzard &amp; 17 Dan el Ramthun 18·8
Trenton Deem 1·(-4)
W Anthony Gnmm 12-124 Kan
Roush 4-70 Isaac Lee 5-55, C
da
Neal 2·55 Trenton G bbs 8-40 Ryan
Leo 9 35 Zach Wamsley 4 16
Jorom1ah HoHman 4-14 Josh Haddox
1 3 Cl::~y VanMeter 2-0, Ty1or Roush 1
( 1), Wyatt Zuspan 2-(-2)
Passing: S Damel Ramthun 7·26·1
80
W Trenton Gibbs 5·11·2 168
Receiving: s-Hunto Johnson 4 49
Trenton Doom 2·22, Tyler Barton 1-9
W Ryan Leo 2 61 Tyler K lchcn 2 64
Isaac Lee 1-37

South Gallla 22,
Federal Hocking 12
S Gallra
0 6 8 8
22

6-55

Individual Statistics
Rushing: GA-Austm Wrlson 20-167
Ethan Moore 11-56, Brandon Taylor 1135, Drew Young 4-11, Ben Saunders 22. team 1-(·3)
L-Cory McCarty 13-64, Jordan
Jurgcnsm or 10 35, Dylan Cavmee 516 Isaac Undscy 1-1.
Passing: GA-Ethnn Moore 7-14 0

Eastern
Belpre

Ftrst Downs
Rushes yards
Possrng yards
Total yards
Comp an rnt
Fumbles-lost
Ponaltlos·yards

FedHoc,k

I

0

6

6

0-12

Scoring summary
Second Quarter
FH-Ky1e Jackson 12 pass from Ryan
Rex (pass farled) 11 53
SG-Danny Matney 1 run (run faded)
6 15
Third Quarter
SG-Cory Haner 1 run (Jus11n Northup
run) 4 13
FH-Ryan Rex 80 lod;olf return (pass
Ia ed) 3:56
Fourth Quarter
SG-Dallon Matney 3 run (Josh
Cooper pass from Haner) 1 31

Frrst Downs
Rushes-yards
Pas:: g yards
Total yards
Comp-an nt
Fumbles lost
Pena ues-yards

SG
12
24-247

0
247

FH

7
32 109
37
146
2-4-1

0

,

7-95

3-17

o-3-Q

Jck

E

B

14
31-183

8
38-92

103

37

Comp-att-mt

286
7-1 1-Q

5-!}-1

Fumbles-lost
Panalttos yards

5·50

F rst Downs
Rushes-yards
Passnlg ya ds
Total yards

, 0

129
0-0
4-35

Individual Statistics
Rushing: E -Kirnt Connery 11-121
Zack Scowd n 4·19 Chase Cook 2-30
B-Er k Wad rker 5-27 Tyler Walk ns
15-42 Jake U man 7-16 Wes Hatfte d
3-14 Dako McOanJe 2·9
Passing: E-Brayden Pratt 6-7-o 101
Chase Cook 1-4-Q 2
B-Todd Packard 2-5-1 9 Jake Ulman
3-4-Q 28
Receiving: E-Kyte Connery 1-40,
Tyler Hendrix 3-42, John Tegnolra 2-19
B-Rashawn Miller 2-17, Ethan
Lockhart 1-13, Tylor Watkins 1-11.

Athens 33, Meigs 27
Athens
Mnrgs

7 14
14 7

0 12 0 6 -

33
27

Scoring summary
First Quarter
M-D• on Boyer 11 run (Chr1SI13n
Mugrage kick) 7 01
A -I an Dixon 12 pass from Troy Hams
(Noah Alassaf krck) 5.00
M-Chnrhe Barren 1 run (Mugrage
krck) 0.40
Second Quarter
A- Dovon Sharp 78 run (k1ck farlod)

1050
A-Dixon 59 pass from Hams (Harrrs
run) 7·18
M-Jeffrcy Roush 1 run (Mugrage kick)

234
Fourth Quarter
A-Sharp 32 run (kick blocked) 10 17
M-Barreu 5 run (kick fru ed) 4 17
A-Sh:~rp 32 run (pass 1arled) 3.05

A

Comp-att-tnt

14
27-282
87
464
3-8-Q

Fumbles-lost
Penal! as-yards

3-15

F1rst Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards

o-o

M
22
55-216
186
402
8-11-Q
2-1
5-45

Individual Statistics
Rushing: A-Devon Sharp 19-238,
Chns Russell 3·29. lan D1xon 2·11,
TannerVVeaver1-1
M-Jeflrey Roush 26-152, Charho
Barrett 10-40, Zach Sayre 6-37, Drllon
Boyer 13·(·13)
Passing: A-Troy Hams 3-7-0. 87.
Devon Sharp o-1-0 0
M-D•Iion Boyer 8·11-Q 1 86
Receiving: A-lan D1xon .2-71, Devon
Sharp 1·11
M-Zach Sayre 4-89, Colton Stewart 352, Jeffrey Roush 1·45

Wahama 49, Southern 0
0 0 0 0 0

Southern
VVahamo

7 10 20 12 -

49

Scoring summary
First Quarter
w- Tyler Ktlchen 52 pass from Trenton
Gibbs ('TYler Kitchen ktck) 7:45
Second Quarter
W-tsaac Leo 37 pass from G bbs
(Krtchen kick) 7 34
W-Kitchon 22 FG 3"12
Third Quarter
W- Ryan lee 4 run (Kitchen kick)
10"31
W -I::Mc Leo 22 run (krck failed) 9 46
W- Ryan Leo 65 pass from G•bbs

Fairland 56, River Valley 14

I W-Jake Barr 15-59, Brandon Spurlock

Northmor 0
Delphos Jefferson
39,
Convoy
Crestview 13
Delphos St John's 42 Versarlles 6
W Zachary Cass dy 1-7-Q 8
Dover 56 Uhrichsville Claymont 10
Receiving: PP-chns Blanken t p 3
Dresden Tri.Valloy 44 Philo 9
48 JaWaan Wtl ams 2·13
Dubhn
Collman
28,
Thomas
W Brandon Spurlock 1-8
Worthington 6
Dublrn Scioto 26, Westerville N 14
E Lrverpool 26 Marlins Ferry 17
Eastlake N 52, Chardon 38
Eaton 42, Monroe 7
OHIO
Edgerton 48, Defranco Ayorsvrllo 6
Edon 62, lakeside Danbury 46
Ada 63, Pauldrng 6
Elida 37. Ottawa·Glandorf 7
Akr Buchtol33, Akr. Ellet 14
Elyna 35, Cuyahoga Falls 3
Akr Coventry 40, Norton 6
Elyna Cath 54 Garfreld Hts Trlntty 31
Akr Frrestone 34 Akr East 0
Fairborn 35 Mram•sburg 27
Akr Hoban 45, Bedford Chane! 6
Farrview 34, Oberlin Firelands 13
Akr Manchester 46 Mass on Tu taw Fayettev.Ue-Perry 46, Hannan W Va. 6
20
Ftndlay Lrberty·Benton 35, CaryAkr SVSM 28 Akr Garf old 0
Rawson 14
Albany Alexander 28 McArthur Vrnton Frankfort Adena 31, Bainbridge Patnl
County 20
Valey 7
Alliance 42, Carrolllon 35
Fredencktown 31, Johnstown-Monroe 7
Alliance Marlrngton 38 M•ncrva 21
Fremont Ross 43, Findlay 35
Amhc st Steele 42, Berea 13
Fremont St. Joseph 24, Bascom
Anna 56, New Bremen 20
Hopewell-Loudon 14
Ansonia 54 Un•on Ctty Mrss•ss•nawa Gallrpohs Galha 41, Logan 17
Valley 14
Garrettsvtlle Garf•eld 25, Atwater
Arcadia 27, Van Buren 22
Waterloo 13
Archbold 76, Montpelier 8
Gates Mrlls Hawken 60, Richmond Hts
Ashland 49 Mansfield Sr 20
0
Ashland Crestv ew 56, New London 6
Geneva 49, Ashtabula Edgewood 20
Athens 33 Pomeroy Me gs 27
Genoa Area 32 PeO)beMIIe Eastwood
Aurora 17 Chesterland w Goauga 14 20
Avon 42, Vermrhon 19
Germantown Valley Vrew 24, Bellbrook
Avon Lake 42, Mrdd eburg His M dpark 21
7
Glouster Tnmblo 40 Waterford 6
Ball more Liberty Union 22. Pataskala Green 20, Wadsworth 13
Lick1ng Hts. 15
Groveport-Madrson 35 Newark 12
Batav•a Amelia 38, Batav1a Clermont Ham•lton H. VV Chester lakola W 13
NEO
Hamrlton Ross 59. Oxford Talawanda
'Bellatre 34, Cad•z Harrison Cent 32
13
Bellotontarne 35, Rrversrde Stebbins 7
Hamler Patrrck Henry 15, Delta 0
Boliefontame Ben)amtn Logan 27, Hanoverton Un1ted 42, E. Palestine 12
Urbana 17
Heath 45, Whttehaii-Yeari ng 19
Be V11lo Clear Fork 42 Wooster 7
HJCksvtlle 43, Haviland Wayne Trace 12
Bert n Center Western Reserve 26 H mrd Darby 21, Cols Upper Arlington
Sa: nevt e Southern 10
6
Blu'fton 14 Lafayette AllenE 7
H ard Davrdson 51, Grove City Cenl
Bradford 33, Arcanum 26
Crossng 0
Brookfield 13, Ntles McK nlay 3
Holland Springfield 38, Sylvanra
Brunswrck 23, Macedonra Nordonla 21
Northvrew 35
Bryan 21, Wauseon 7
Howard E. Knox 48, Johnstown
Bucyrus 33, N. Robrnson Col Craw1ord Northridge 10
21
Hubbard 27, G•rard 24
Bucyrus Wynford 44 Ml Blanchard Hudson 19, Stow-Munroe Falls 7
RNerdale 13
Independence 21 Fa rport Harbor
Caldwe 128, Bea svrlie 0
Hardng 0
Camden Preble Shawnee 60 Day lndp s Cathedral lnd 35 C1n Moe ler
Northrrdgo 24
10
Can Cent Cath 43, Hudson WRA 13
Jackson 38 Portsmouth 13
Can McKm ey 8 Can Glenoak 6
Jeromesvr le H dale 41, Sm thvrUe 7
Can Timken 32 ZoaM lo Tuscarawas John Marshall W Va 20 Rayland
vanay 24
Buckeye 13
Cana Fulton Northwest20 Can South Kent Roosevelt 21 Ravenna SE 15
14
Kenton 60, Ltma Bath 0
Canal Winchester 27,
Ketterrng Alter 42 Crn McNicholas 14
Clearcreek 25
Kmgs Mils Krngs 55, Morrow ltltle
Csnfteld 30 Youngs Ea t 0
MamO
Carey 28 Ka sas Lako 0
Klrt d 55 Burton Berkshire 14
C
42 M t n-U
Lancast 44 G
C ty 14
Ce
45 ..,,.,._,,_, G·~·"-··~··
on 37 Boom24

9·54, Clyde Ferrell 11·27, Tyler Adkuts
12
Passing: PP-Enc Roberts 5 11-1 61.

Prep Scores

cr....,,..,,.,,.., 59 s

~

Chagrn F
61 W
I 27
F r nd
16 20 B 12 - 56
Chogno Falls Kon~ on 32 Oran e 21
Rrver Va f1Y
8 0 0 6
14
Chesapeake 28 Ironton Rock H 27
ChI cothe 27 Ma ett
Scoring summary
n9
Ch I cothe Ur o o 34
First Quarter
Ch 1cothe Zane
Ch cothe
F-Jonothon Holbrook 17 pass from
Hun• glonO
Jon Base (Base run) 8 50
Crn Anderson 43 Lov
d 17
RV- Trey Noble 15 run (Jacob Leach
Cm Clark Montesson 35 C n Chn I an
pass from Jacob He'ner) B 16
0
F-Ch d Fi !lc~ 43 run (Fisher ru
C n Co era n 49 L :&gt;erly Twp Lakota E
232
17
Second Quarter
C n Frnneytown 51 Ctn Deer Park 49,
F-TaM r Sowards 1 run (run fa ed
, 1 15
OT
Q Glen Este 27 M llord 6
F-F h • 30 run (run fa led) 2 50
F-Sowards 31 pass from FISher (Evan C n Hrls Cnnst an Academy 41, Ctn
Summ t Country Day 21
Maddox run) 1 50
Ctn lnd an Hrll 7. Ctn Mariemont 0
Third Quarter
Cin La Salle 33, Cuyahoga Fa ., VVatsh
F-Ba e 11 run (Tyree Ceaser run)
Jesutt 13
2"41
Crn Mt Healthy 49, Cln NW 20
Fourth QJarter
C1n N Co!!ege Htll 27 Ctn Country
F-AiecWarner 1 run (ktok blocked)
Day 3
10 13
Cm Pnnceton 22 Fairfield 16
F-Maddox 9 run (run fa led) 4 00
Crn St. Xavter 35. Ctn Elder 10
RV-Patr ck Wil rams 50 run (pass
Crn Turp n 35 W Carro ton 13
fa led)
Crn Wtnton Woods 44, HarriSOn 33
Cin W•throw 48 C1n Woodward 16
F
RV
Crn Wyom ng 34 Crn Maderra 7
19
F1rst Downs
5
Clal'ksv. e Cl nton-MJss e 49 London
49-355 30-129
Rushes-yards
0
104
19
Passing yards
Clayton Northmont 10, Beavercreek 3
Total yards
459
148
Cle Collrnwood 22, Clo John Adams
8-11-Q 2-9-3
Comp-att-tnt
20
Fumbles lost
o-o
3·1
Cle Glenvtlle 51, Cle JFK 12
Penalties-yards 18·150 6-37
Cle Hay 14. Cle. Rhodes 12
Cle John Marshall 26 Cle E Tech 0
IndiVIdual Statistics
Rushing: F-chad Ftsher 12 136 Clyde 33, Castalia Margaretta 12
Evan Maddox 10-74 Tanner Sowards Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant49, S Potnt
9·59 Alec Warner 6-37 Jon Bruse 5- 26
29 Tyree Ceaser 4-15, Josh Ross 1·9 Coldwater 42, Rockford Parkway 0
Collins
Western
Reserve
37
Kyle Sowards 1-(-1) Der ck Wtlts 1-(
Monroevrlle 27
3)
RV-Patrtck Williams 8·1 03, Au~trn Cots Beechcroft 27, Cots Mrlf rn 12
Smith 4-18, Kyle Brown 10.15 Troy Cols Bexlay 42, Hebron Lakewood 21
Noble 2-8, Austrn Davres 1-4, Austrn Cols Boggs 27, Cols Independence B
Cols Brookhaven 44, Cols Linden
Bradley 1-1, Jacob Hefner 4·(-20)
Passing: F-Jon Batse 6·8-0 60, Chad McK111Iey 8
Cols DoSales 20, Cots St. Charles 6
Fisher 2-3-0 44.
RV-Aust1n Whobrey 1-5·2 11 Jacob Cols Easttnoor 82, Cois South 3
Cols Grandview Hts 47, Mrlersport 0
Hefner 1-4-1 8
Receiving: F -.-.&lt;:had Frsher 2·39, Cols Ham1 :on Twp. 30, Ctrdevrlle 27
Jonathon Holbrook 3-33 Tanner Cols Hartley 42 Columbus Grove 35
Manon-Franklrn 46, Cols
Sowards 1-31 Alec Warner 1 5 A ex Cots
Africontnc 0
Guzman 1-(-4)
Cois Northland 27, Cots Centennial 7
RV-Austrn Sm tr
1 11
Aust
Cols Walnut Rrdge 55 Cols West 24
Spurlock 1-B
Cois Watterson 72, Greenvrlle 0
Cols Whetstone 36, Cols East 6
Point Pleasant 13, Wayne 8
Columbta Statton Columbta 29, Lorain
Pornt Pleasant 7 0 0 6 - 13
Ciearvrew 15
Wayne
0 B 0 0 B
Columbianu Crestv1ew 38, Colj,lmbiana
7
Scoring summary
Copley 21 Locli Cloverleaf 0
First Quarter
Coshocton 31, Cambndge 8
PP-Chrrs Blankenshrp 31 pass hom
Covington 40 W Alexandna Twm Valley
Errc Roberts (Jerrod Long krck) 6 28
S 6
Second Quarter
Creston Norwayne 25 Apple Creek
W-Jako Barr 8 run Barr run) 10 00
Waynedale 22
Fourth Quarter
Crown City S Gat a 22. Stewart
PP-JaWaan Williams 10 run (pass
Federal Hockrng 12
faded) 614
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 35, Navarre
Fairless 10
pp
w
Cuyahoga Hts 31, Mrddlefleld Cardinal
First Downs
17
6
10
46-230 36-142
Rushes-yards
Danvrlle 38, Centerburg 21
61
8
Passmg yards
1
Day Carroll28, C•n Purcell Marian 0
150
Total yards
291
Day Chnstran 37, Lrma Perry 14
17-Q
5-11-1
Comp-oIt-tnt
Day Dunbar 19 Lou Malo, Ky 13
4
Fumblos lost
0
Day Oakwood 41, Brookville 20
7-70
Pcnalhes-ynrds 2r20
Day Pon tz Tech 50 Day Bomont 26
Day Thurgood Marshall 62, Day
Individual Statistics
Rushing: PP-chns Blankcnshtp 11 Meadowdale 12
97 J:~Waan Wrlhams 22·93 Eric Dehanco Tinora 56, Antwerp 0
DoGrafl Rtversrde 33, Rtdgeway
Roberts 6·20 Mtchael Musgrave 4·11
Jorrod long 1·8. T~lun Campbell 1-2 1 Rldgcmont12
Delaware Buckoya Valley 30 Galion
Teran Barn•tz1 (-1).

Broadview Hts 14
Ortano 42, Crestline 8
Orrvtlle 38, Millersburg W Holmes 6
Painesvrlle Harvey 24, Conneaut 13
Parnesv; e Riverside 56, Ashtabula
Lakesrde 6
Pendora-Gilboa 42, Dola Hardtn
Northern 0
Parma Normandy 35, Parma Hts. Vallay
Forge 21
Parma Padua 28, Chardon NDCL 7
Pataskala Watkins Memorrai 40, ,
Delaware Hayes 0
Perry 27, Jefferson Ar&lt;!d 0
Pr::kerrngton Cent. 45, Ga and
Lrncoln 2
Prckenngton N. 45, Reynoldsburg 14
Pla1n City Jonathan Alder 38, Ironton

1-4
Ptymouth 39, Ashland Mapleton 14
Poland Sem nary 31, Youngs Chaney o
Portsmouth W 56, Waverly 6
ProctoMIIe Fairland 56 Bidwell Rrver
Va ley 14
Ravenna 22, Mantua Crestwood o
Readrng 27, N. Bend Taylor 13
Reedsvtlle Eastern 41, Belpre 0
Richmond Edtson 31 , Belmont Union
Local 13
Rchwood N. Union 37, Caledonia River
Valley 7
R nman 55, Doylestown Chippewa 27
Rocky Rrver 44, Grafton M1dview 30
Rocky Rrver Lutheran W 23, Brooklyn
13
Rootstown 21, Wrndham 12
Salem 43, Campbell Memorial 21
Sandusky 42, Uma Sr. 21
Sarahsville Shenandoah 30, Lore City
B:.rckeye Trail 6
Shadystde 41, Barnesvrlle 13
Sharon, Pa 27, Warren JFK 21
Shelby 21, Gallon 14, OT
Sherwood Fairview 54, Holgate 15
Sidney Lehman 33, Cols. Ready 14
Sparta H1ghland 14 Cardmgton-Lncoln 3
Sprrng Cath. Cent 21, W. Uberty·

Salem 0
Spnng NE 41 N Lewisburg Tnad 6
Sprrng Shawnee 21, Tipp Crty
Tippecanoe 18
Spnngboro 35, Stdney 14
Spnngfreld 28, Huber HIS. Wayne 21
St. Clarrsvrlle 47, Wrntersvllle Indian
Creek 7
St. Pans Graham 36, Spnng. Greenon

37 Bethel-Tate
14
L
a 40 Seb 9 McKmley 21
Le psrc 50 Art ngton 7
Lew Ce 1 0 ntangy 10, Powell
Olenta
7
Lew! burg
1.1nty N 13, Casstown
M mE 1
LewiStown 1 cf&amp;an Lake 13, Spnng NW

12
Lexmgton 28 Mansn ld Mad son 10
U!Jerty Center 13 Swanton 6
Llcna Cent Cath 58 SpenceM le 6
Lockland 41, Hamrtton New M am 8
Louisvlle 28 Belo t W Branch 0
Lowellvrl e 26, N Jackson JacksonM tton 7
LucasVIlle Va ay 54, McDermott Scioto
NW 7
Magnoha, W Va. 42, Woodsfield
Monroe Cont. 14
Malvern 24, Newcomerstown 13
Maple HIS. 49, Bedford 21
Mana Ste n Manon Local 34 St Henry
12
Manon Elg n 54, Morral Ridgedale 0
Manon Pleasant 65 M' G lead 28
Mason 14 Ctn Oak H Us 13
Mass lon Perry 43 UniOntown Lake 33
Mass. on Wash ngton 56, Brentford
Ontario 7
Maumee 56, Rossford 18
McComb 65, Vanlue 0
McDonald 47, Wellsv•lle 13
Mechanicsburg 21, S Charleston SE
13
Medrna
Buckeye
12,
Shelf•eld
Brookside 7
Med1na Hrghland 24, Rtchfteld Revere
13
Mentor Lake Csth 55 Parma Hts Holy
Name 0
Metamora Evergreen 35, Tol Ottawa
H• s 14
Mtdo etown 38, Ctn Sycamore 12
Mrddletown Fenwrck 55, St Bernard
Roger Bacon 28
Mtddletown Madtson 14 Franklin 3
M1lan Edtson 21, Sandusky Perktns 20
1
M•ilord Center Fairbanks 47, McGuffey
Upper Scroto Valley 21
Mtllbury Lake 28. Elmore Woodmore 14
Mmeral Rtdge 47, Ltsbon Davrd
Anderson 7
Mrnster 35, Ft. Recovery 7
Mogadore 12, Pen nsu a Woodndge 7
Mogadore Fteld 35, Akr Springfield 34
Mt Orob Western Brown 36, Goshen
32
N. Lima S. Range 23, Now Mrddletown
Spnng 17
N Ridgeville 38, Bay V111ngo Bay 13
N Royalton 36, Garfield Hts. 14
Napoleon 29, Marion Harding 13
Nelsonville-York 28, Wellston 21
New Albany 28, Lew•s Center
Olentangy Orange 21
New Csrhslo Tecumseh 28, Spr ng
Kenton Ridge 0
New Concord John Glenn 16,
Crooksvrle 13
New
Lexington
43.
Byesville
Meadowbrook 27
New Matamoras Frontror 28, Beverly Ft.
Frye 14
New Ph•ladelphra 28, Warsaw R1var
View 7
New Rtchmond 51, Blanohester 13
New Washington Buckeye Cent. 41,
Lucas 20
Newark L1ckrng Valley 35. Granville 3
Newton Falls 48 Cortland Lakeview 14
Northwood 43, W Un ty H lllop 13
Norwalk St Paul 49 Greenwich S l
Cent 8
Oak Harbor 10. Port Clinton 7
Oak H/1165, Portsmouth Sciotovrlle 8
Olmsled
Falls
24,
Brecksvtlle-

22
Steubenvrlle 39, Wheehng,Park, W.Va.
0
Strasburg-Frankhn 43, Tuscarawas
Cent.Cath 6
Streetsboro 34 E can 6
Strongsvr e 34, Med na 14
Struthers 16, Leavittsburg LaBrae 0
Sugar Grove Berne Umon 27, Canal
Wrnchester Harvest Prep 7
Sugarcreek Garaway 41, Bowerston
Conotton Valley 0
Sullrvan Black Rrver 7, LaGrange
Keystone 0
Sunbury B g Walnut 26, H1ll1ard Bradley
10
Sycamore Mohawk 21, Attrca Seneca
E 13
Sytvanra Southvrew 21, Perrysburg 7
Tanrnadge 38 Barberton 6
Thompson Ledgemont 17, Orwell
Grand Vat ey 6
.
Thornvr e Shendan 62, McConnelsvrtl
Morgan 7
Trffrn Calvert 45, N Baltrmore 26
Trfftn Columbian 41, Bellevue 16
Tipp City Bethel 39, New Pans NahOnal
Trail 0
Tol Bowsher 14 Tol Warte 6
Tol Cent Cath 28, Oregon Clay 0
Tol. Rogers 62, Tol. Woodward 0
Tol St Johns 31, Tol Start 16
-or. Whitmer 35, Tol. St. FranciS B
-ontogany Otsego 37, Bloomdale
ElmwoOd 20
-renton Edgewood 45, Norwood 6
Trotwood-Madison 25, Prqua 13
Troy 34, Vandalia Butler 7
Troy Chnstian 21, Grove City Chnstran
14
Twinsburg 56, Lakewood 7
Upper Sandusky 35, Fostoria 14
Utrca 49, Loudonvrlie 15
Van Wert 42 Defrance 7
Vienna
Mathews
24,
Andover
Pymatumng Val ey 21
Vincent Warren 14, ParkersbUrg South,
wva 13
W. Jefferson 51, Lancaster Ftsher Cath.
6
W. La!ayette Ridgewood 42, Magnolia
Sandy Valley 13
W Salem NW 24, Dalton 14
Wahama, W.Va 49, Racme Southern 0
Wapakoneta 38, St. Marys Memonal 14
Warren Champron 28, Youngs. Ltberty 0Warren Hard1ng 42, Eudtd 14
Warren Howland 26, Ltsbon Beaver 0
40, Greenfield
Washrngton C.H
McCian 20
Washington C H. Mraml Trace 50,
London MadiSOn Pia ns 21
VVaynesfrcld-Goshen 36, Fostona St.
Wendeln 14
Waynesville 49, New Lebanon Dtxte 14
Wellington 49, Oberlin 7
Westerville Cent. 23, Marysvrlle 20
Westervtlle S. 35, Dublin Jerome 23
We~lake 21, M. Olmsted 7
Wheelersburg 45. M1nford 13
Wheeling
Central,
w Va. 41,
Steubenville Cath. Cent 0
Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 55,
Bowling Green 1 4
Wrilard 33, Norwalk 28
Williamsburg 62, Batavra 28
Williamsport Westfall 35, Southeastem
26
Willoughby S. 36, Madrson 28
Wrilow Wood Symmes Valley 34,
Franklin Furnace Green 7
Wilmington 17, Ctn. Walnut Hills 7
Wooster Trtway 49, Gnadenhutten
lndran Valley 21
Worthington Kilbourne 44, Galloway
Westland 6
Youngs. Ausuntown-Fltch 35, Masstflon
Jackson 7
Youngs. Boardman 24, N Can. Hoover
14
Youngs. Mooney 42. Buffalo, N.Y. 0
Zanesvrl e 64, H•llsboro 16
Zanosvtl e Maysville 35, Zanesvrlle
Musklngum 0
WEST VIRGINIA
Buffalo 26. Valley Wetzel13
Chapmanville 32, James Monroe 17
Fayetteville-Perry Oh b 46, Hannan 6
Poca .e7. Herbert Hoover 24
Point Pleasant 13, Wayne 6
Ravenswood 63. Rrtch o County 7
Scott 28, Summers County 12
Sherman 27, SJSsonvrlle 21
Wahama 49 Racine Southern, Ohio 0
Wtlhamstown 22, St Marys 12

I

)

�- Lady Defenders win streak

Pomeroy • Middlet&gt;ort • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 3, 2010

~unlk1P mimcs-~rntmrl

• Page B3

,

ends at 7 after tri-match losses
e J g h t
points

BY SARAH H AWLEY
SHAW\.El'OMYDA.. YTR

N COM

(

TEAYS
VALl EY.
W.Va.
-The Ohio
Volle) ChristJnn volleyball team dropped both
.Itches dunng a tril h
on I hursday
111g at Teays Valle)
Chnsuun.
1he ]o!\ses \\ere the
first of the season for

aves (7-2).

The Lady Defenders
lost to Parke• sburg
Chri'itian in three set .
Parkersburg Christian
won b) scores ot 21-25,
25-15. and 25-21.
M gg1e Westfall h&lt;1d
13 pomt (three nee.;;) to
Lad)'
lead
the
Defender&lt;;. Beth Martm
had 12 pomts (one .tee).
Samantha
\\estfnll
added II poults (four
Sarah
aces).
Schoono,er had nine
ace),
points
(one
Mad1son Crank had

•

Rebels
from Page Ul

cessful on thetr two-pomt
attempt, puttmg the game
out of re.1ch \Hth a two
I0-pomt
po s~.: sion.
ad,nntage.
.South Galha outgnined
the hosts b) 10 I total
) .mi of offense nnd hnd
a 12 7 ad' antage Ill first
down.;;, The Rebel had
247 ) ards of total offense
- all of which were on
the ground - wh1le the
Lan\,;ers mustered JUSt
146 _y.trds. mcluding IOQ
rushmo yards
Fed Hock struck firo;t
blood at the II :53 mark
of the second quarter
"t&gt; ·n Kyle Jackson
haul d m a 12-yard pa '
from Ryan Rex, gt' 111
the hosts a 6 0 lead
S th G lim, ItO\\ e-ver.
qu1e-kly reo;ponded wJt)l a
''hen
Dann)
plunged in from

t

w

0

aces),
A 1Ii e
Hamilton
had seven
points
(

t

\\

0

aces), and Amy Ours
had one point.
Maggie Westfall had
six ktlls and two blocks.
followed
by
Allie
llamilton with five
ki!Jo;, Crank with four
kills and one block.
Samantha We~tfall with
four kills. and Martin
and Schoono\ er \\ ith
one kills each.
Samantha
Westfall
had nine assists. Mu~gie
Westfall had SIX nsslsts.
and Schoonover had one
assist. Maggie Westfall
and Samantha Westfall
each had four digs.
Crnnk had three digs.
Allie Hamilton and
Schoonover each hnd

two. and Martin had
one.
In thetr second mach,
the L&lt;~dy Defenders fell
to
Teays
Valley
Christian by scores of
11 -25 and 14-25.
Maggie Westf,tll hnd
eight
pomts (three
aces), followed by Allie
Hamilton wtth live
points.
Bryanne
Hamilton with four
point!'&gt; (one ace). Crank.
Schoonove~
and
Samantha Westfall with
two each. and Martin
and Ours with one each.
Schoono\er
and
Magg1e We tfnll ench
had one k1ll. Samantha
Westfall had t\\0 blocks
and Maggie Westfall
had one block.
Samantha
Westfall
had two asststs. Crank
and Samantha Westfall
each had one dig.
OVCS
will
host
Hannan on Thun,da) at
6 p.m.

one-&gt; nrd out with 6: 15 in turnover lhfferential
left Ill the half - tying - was penalized seven
times for l)5 yards, while
thmgs up six.
I'he Rebels took the1r red Hock \\US flagged
f1rst lead of the mght three t1mes for 17 yards.
Jacob White led the
with 4: 13 showing on the
third quarter clock after Rebels with 79 rushing
Cor\ Haner scored on a yards on 17 carries. while
one:yard run, then Justin Austin Phillips added 65
Northup added a two- yard on 13 totes. Dann)
point com ersion run for Matney and Dalton
Mntne) added re pecti\e
n 14-6 edge.
Rex returned the ensu- ru hing totals of 36 and
ing kickoff 80 yards to 32 ) ards. Haner was 0pa) dirt, which allowed for-2 pa ing for zero
FHHS to pull within 14- )ardc;.
Kavon Lacke) paced
12 with 3:56 left in the
period. The hosts came the Fed Hock ru hmg
no closer the rest of the gnme with 41 ynrds on
seven attempt • while
WU).
Dnlton Matney capped Rex added 31 yards on
the clinchmg drive with II carries. Rex was 2-of1:31 remaining in regula- 4 passing for 37 yards.
tion after scoring on a throwing one intercepthree-yard run. then tion in the etback. Chad
Haner found Josh Cooper Hatfield led the rece1vers
on a pass to complete the '' tth 25 yards on one
c;ucce ful wnvero;ton for catch
South G lha return to
a 22 12 ad\ anlage
South Gallia
whtch TVC Hockmg adton on
fmt hed the night w lth- Fnday when It host
out a turnover and plus-2 Belpre at 7:30 p m.

•

Sarah Hawley/photo •

River Valley quarterback Austin Whobrey left, hands the ball off to runmng back
Kyle Brown dunng Friday mght's OVC opener at Raider F1eld in Chesh1re, Ohio. •

Raiders fall to Fairland, 56-14.was J'icked off b) Valley dnve was onl)
Fairlan s Fio;her at the one play with Whobrey
Dragon s 37 ) ard line. bcmg mtercepted for the
CHESHIRE. Ohio Fairland scored on the second time, th1s ttme by
lbe game was tied at resulting drive with a one Natahlllal Brewer
eight just four minutes yard touchdown run by
fairland was drh ing
into the fir t quarter, but 'I anner Sow ardc;. The deep in Raider territory at
Fairland score the next two point attempt was the end of the third quar48 points to hand River stopped short by the ter. The Dragons placed
Valley the los:, in its River Valley defense.
the ball in the hands of
league opener.
After a four nnd out on Alec Wnrner to begin the
1 he Raiders - who the next dnve by the fourth quarter. with_
have not won an ave Raiders. Fairland be~an Warner scored on a one
game since Oct. 24, 2008 on its 0'' n 47 yard hne . yard run at the 10:13
hosted the 1-4 A trio of penalties mark of the fourth quarr:urland Dragons in the brought the ball back to ter. The first kick attempt
Ohio Valley Conference the Fairland 36 yard line. of the night for the
opener on Frida) evening but the Dragons convert- Dra~ons was blocked.
at Raider Field in ed on a third and long.
was
Rtver Valle)
Cheo;hire. Ohio.
mo\ iog into River Valle) unable to convert on
Fnirlnnd began the territor). Fairland had a fourth down. giving_
game at its own 46 ) ard first and goal at the ten. Fairland the ball back
line and took just t\VO but the fourth down pass w1th 6:08 remaining in
pla)S to cross into Raider b) Fisher fell incomplete the game. E' an Maddox
territOI)· Five plays later in the left stde of the end added the final Fairland
Jon Bmse connected with zone.
'iCOre with 4:00 remain
Jonathon Holbrook for a
Rtver Valle)
was ing in the game.
17 yard touchdown forced to punt on its next
The Raiders be!!an
strike. Baise run for the drh e, allowing Fairland their final dri'e of ~the
two point conversion to to begin at the River game near midfield. with
give the Dragons an 8-0 Valley 37. It took three Patrick Williams scoring
lead.
pia) s for the Dragons to on a 50 yard touchdown River Valley began its return to the end zone. run with 1:44 left in the
first possession at its own with Fisher sconng on a game. The two point
30 yard line. advancing 30 yard run
conver;ion failed.
m to Fairland territory on
Fairland won by a final
The Rmders firc;t pia)
a 56 yard run b) Patnck ot the next dnve was score of 56-14.
Wilhnm&lt;i&gt; to the 15 "&lt; ard t mbled and recovered
River Valley was led
hne Tre' N b e
nto
Frurlnnd
Alex on the ground b)
the end ione n
ext
The fi.Jmble Williams "ith eight car
play for the tou hdown Guzman.
recm ery &lt;;et up the ries for I03 ; ard-,
Jacob Hefner connected Drngon s final score of Austin Smith carried the
with Jacob Leach for the
ball four times for 18
two point con' ersion the the half JUSt two pln) s &gt;ards. K)le Bro\\n had
later.
Fisher
connected
ue the game.
10 cames for 15 .., ardc;.
l airland. hindered b) with So" ards for the 31
'oble had two carl-eo; for
&gt;
ard
touchdown
stnke.
Its own penalties. could
e1ght yards before leav- ~
Fairland
led
36-8
at
the
not com crt on an fourth
in~ \\ lth an undisclosed
down attempt on its next half.
inJUr) in the second half,
River
Valle)
recei\ed
possessiOn. givin~ River
Austin Da' ies had one
Vallev the ball at 1ts O\\ n the opening kick of the carry for four yards.
second
half,
but
Guzman
25
line. After an
Auc;tin Bradley had one
errant snap. which cost wac; again able to '" reak caiT) for one ) ard. and
havoc
on
the
Raider
the team 20 yards. River
Jacob Hefner "a&lt;: four
Valley was forced to punt offense, this time inter- for
a negative .20.
the
\u tm
for the first time in the cepting
Whobre) and Hefner
Whobre)
pass
Fairland
game.
The Dmgons took was unable to capitalize each completed one paso;;.
left the game in
advantage of good field on the turnover. punting Hefner
the
first
half and did not
drh
e.
River
to
end
the
position, starting at the
return.
Valley
was
forced
to
punt
River Valle) 43. Chad
Fisher led Fairland
Fisher took the ball 43 on its next po ses ion.
"ith
136 ) nrds on the
Fairland
began
its
next
) nrd for the second
Fairland touchdown and dri .. e nt the Rher Valle} ground. 44 yard~ pa~;sing,
added the extra points on 33 ) ard line. Bnise took and 39 yard!! receiving.
Rher\alle) will be on
a nm. Fairland led 16-8. the ball II &gt;ards for a
Ri\ er Valley looked to touchdo\\ n the extend the road the next l\\ o
score again near the end the lead to 42-8. with the "eeks "ith Ohio Valle)
of the first quarter \\ ith a t\\0 point comers10n run Conference games at
dri\ e starting near mid- b) Tyree Cect er making Chesapeake and Coal •
field. but Jacob Hefner it 44-8. The next Rher Gro,e.
B Y SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWI.EYOMYDA YTR BUNE COM

varo

Bryan Walters/photo

Me1gs quarterback D1llon Boyer (2) scrambles away from Athens defender Josh
e xson, left, dunng a first half run Fnday night at Bob Roberts F1eld tn Pomeroy, Ohio.

•
eigs
M

from I•agc Bl
game at 7-all. 1 rey Harris
hooked up "ith Jan
Dixon from 1 yard out
for the score. Noah
Alassaf added the extra
points to tie the game.
Metgs took a 14 7 lead
at the end ot the period
when C'harl ie Barrett
scored from .t )•lrd out.
cappmg oft an 8 pia) 70
yard drive. I he o;core
was o;et up by n 45 )ard
pao;s from Bo}er to
Jeffrey Roush to the
Bulldog nine.
h took just four plays
for Athens to answer
when Sharp scored on a
run, the extra
nts· was no good but
Bulldogs had pulled
within 14 13 ''ith
temaining.
'I he Maraudc1 s wa'i
driving and tecei\ed a
bad brenk when they
fumbled at the Bulldog
II y~ud line, Chris Norris
reCO\ creel fur Athens.
Four plays later llnrri
hooked up with Dixon.
this time from 59 yards
out for the touchdown.

Harr1s added the extra
points at the 7:18 mark to
ni\ e the 'isitors a ~ 1-14
iead.
But back carne the
Marauders and scored
when Barrett dove in
from a yard out with 2:34
left. ~ lugrage \\as true on
the extra points and the
half ended '"ith the game
tied at 21-all.
After a scoreless third
period, the Bulldogs
\\ ent on top when Sharp
ndded a 32 yard run. the
kick was blocked but
Athens "as on top 27-21
with I0: 17 left.
But back came, the
maroon and gold to tie
the game at 27 with 4: 17
left m the contest when
Barrett scored from five
yard out. That score was
set up '\ith Boyer hooked
up with Zach Say1e for a
37 y~rd gain to the
Bulldog 15 on a tlmd nnd
24.
But Sharp scored the
go ahead touchdown
\\hen he went 37 vards
around right end •\\ ith
3:05 left in the contest.
Mei"s "ns able to
drive t~ their 45 and have
a tirst down, but three
straight sacks of Boyer
and a fourth do" n pass

that fell incomplete
ended the. game.
.
"1be k1ds played the1r
hearts out,'' Meigs coach
Mike Chance) snid after
the contest. "I m very
proud ol they "ny the
kids 1~lllghtl~l\lth and nail
especwll) '' tth our taping quarterback (Bol111)
out. But C\ crybody
teppcd up: Dillon Bo) c1
did an excellent job making pia} s tonight."
Sharp led the Bulldogs
w!th 23~ ) nrds in 19
tnes: Chno; Russell added
29 111 three carries. Harris
wns three ot se\ en m the
air for 82 ) ards; I an
Dixon caught t\\ o for 71
yards.
Jeffre} Rou h once
again paced Meigs with
152 ) ards in 26·. tries.
Barrett Hdde&lt;l 40. 111 1,0.
nnd Stt) re . 37 m st~.
Boyer. wn~ e1ght off II 111
the mr lor I ~6 yards.
Sayre caught tluee lor 89
yards,. Colton Stc\\ nrt
three lor S2 and Housh
one for 45.
Athens IS now 3-3 on
the season, w1th thetr
third win in a row..\1eigs
drops to 2-4. and the)
will travel to B.uchtel to
pia} ~clsml\ llle-'tork
next Fnday.

Eagles
from Page Bl
Klint Connery :.tarted
the ~coring with 7:25
remaining in the opening
canto after plungtng in
from 11 yards out. making it a 7-0 contest.
The score remained
that "ay unul the II: 13
mark of the second, \\hen
Hendrix hauled in a 27) ard pass from Pratt for a
14 0 edge. Hendrix and
Pratt hooked up again at
the 6:40 mark on a 7yard scoring pass, giving
the Eagles a comfortable
::! 1-0 cushion.
Pratt connected with
Kyle Connef)' on a 40yard scoring strike with
I :47 left in the half.
allowing the guests to
take a 2H-O lead into the
intermission.
Kvle Connery wasted
little time in the second
half adding his second
score. taking the openi ng
kickoff back 85 yards to
pa)dirt for a 34-0 lead at
the J I :45 mark of the
third.
Klint Connery added a
48-yard run '' ith 8:36

left m the third penod to
"rap up the final core at
its 41-0 conclusion.
Eastern - which did
not commit a tumo' er 10
the game - finisl'ed the
night plus-1 in turnover
differential and als,&gt; posted a 14-8 edge in first
dmvns. EHS ''as penalized five time •or 50
yards, "hile Belpre was
flagged four times for 35
yards.
The Eagle churned
out 183 ru hi ng ) ards on
3 I carrie and had another 103 yards on 7-of-11
passing. Belpre amas ed
92 ) ard on 38 rushe
and added another 37
yard on 5-of-9 pa sing.
BHS also thrc\\ one
interception in the contest.
Klint Connery led the
guests \\ ith 121 mshmg
'ard on II carries,
~' hilc &lt;-'hase Cook added
JO yards nn l\\0 totes.
Pratt finished the night

6-of-7 pa ~ing for tot
yards. \\ hile Hendrix led
the \\ ideout~ with three
catches for 42 &gt;ards.
T)ler \\atkins led
Belpre with 42 nt!-&gt;hing
)ard~ on 15 carries,
'' hile Erik Waderker
added 27 yards on tive
attempb. Jake Ullman wa 3-of-4 passing for
28 ) ard~ and Todd
Packard \\as 2-of-5 for
nine yards. including the
interception. Rao;;hawn
Miller led the receive!"&gt;·
\\ith 17 yards on l\'fO.
grabs.
En tern - "hich has
had a trio of three-game
"inning streak . . 0' er the·
last two sea~ons go for its first four-game.
"inning "treak since
~004 next Frida) when
the Engles host Trimble
on Home~·oming. The
TVC Hockine show
do" n bt·t" een th se sto
ried rhals \\ill bCgm at
7 30 p.m.

'"ill

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�I
Pomeroy • Middlepcwt • Gallipolis

Big Blacks battle past Wayne, 13-8
BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORFtE SF OND

~T

WAYi'iL. W.Va.
"We. pounded on them
lllld thC) pOUIHkd liS
back. We won this game
because "'e poundt·d on
tht'fll one mo1e time than
they did."
Those were the '"ords
of PPHS llcml C'oach
Da\ c Darst just after hi&lt;;
team handed the Wt~yne
Pioneers a rart• I 3-R
defeat here last ni .. ht
'1'11e wm
. was rare because
o
tlf a couple of thin"s
For one, Wa) ne does1~ t
lose
regular sea'ion
games at home. Period .
Secondly.
thb
was
Homecoming night for
the Pioneers and the\
especial!) don t lose
Homecoming
games.
But. for the second time
in three )Cars, the Point
Pleasant Big Blacks did
ju&lt;;t that
heat the
Pioneers
on
Homecoming
night.
'J1wt puts Big Black men
tor Dar&lt;;L in another rare
class the class that fea
lures coaches \\ ho are 20 again~t Wa) ne at
Wa)ne.
..This \Vas a great ''in
for ou·r program." said
Darst. ..The kids pia) ed
hard and the) pia) ed
we II. In a \\ onl. I om satisfied. We heat a good
football team tonight.
We needed this nne.
This validates our position as one of the top program.; in Class AA !notball in West Virginia.
When peopll' talk about
elite teams. nm\ the) will
have to mclude Point
Pleasant." added Darst.
Who \\ins the game
ball'! When pressed on
this issue. Darst couldn t
come up with just one
name. "Ob' iouc;h Chri-.
Blanken'&gt;hip
deser~es
consideration - he ran
'ery well tonight:· Darst
said. "'Ja\Vaan \\ tlliams
also pla)ed an outstanding football game. Our
entire defeno;i\ e tt•am
played well enough to
win a game ball. Tylun
Campbell made a great
block on Chris long run
Jerrod Long hud a great
night blocking for us. I
d:n t kilO\\. I II just say
this wao;; a great team
win." &lt;;aid Darst.
That defensive unit that
Darst talked about rna)
get thi.;; writer s 'ote.
The\ held the vaunted
Wa)·ne offen!-.ive unit to
just 150 total yards 142 on the !!round and a
paltry X thr(&gt;ugh the air.
l'he Pioneers had just o
first d(1wns on the
evening. Those numbers
are e\en more impressive
when \OU realize that 60
of tho~e ) ards and four of

Rolls
from Page Bl
on the ground with his
second !'&gt;lraight I00 yard
outing with 124 yards in
12 carries Gibbs ~om­
pleted live of II pas-,es
for I68 vards and three
touchdown-; '" ith 'I) ler
Kitchen grabbing a 52
) ard scoring strike. Ryan
Lee a 65 yard bomb and
Isaac Lee a 37 yard 'J D
catch.
The Tornadoc!-. limited
WHS to just 129 yards
on the ground in the first
half but trailed 17-0 after
gh ing up a pair of touchdown passes during the
games first 24 minutes.
Southern managed 134
yards of offense~ with 54
yards rushing nnd another RO passing )ards.
Daniel Ramthun con
neded on seven of' 26
passes
with
J luntcr
John~on his favorite target with four receptions
for ~9 yards. Tyler
Harton paced the Meigs
County team on the
ground with 33 yards in
eight carries.
Wuhanw opened the
scoring with an 86 yard,
five play series on its
first offensive posses
Gibbs
found
sion.
Kitchen on the far sideline and the senior \\ide

Sunday, October :J,

2010

Prep Soccer Roundup

the turnover, a-. the)
marched (JO vnrds on II
pia)~ - capjled by Jake
Bn1T '&gt; X yard touchdown
run. Harr also ran ill the
two point conversion and
the home team led 8 7.
That score help up until
the midway point ol the
fourth quarter. although
both teams had chances
thoo;;e first dtl\\n'i came to take control of the conon one drive in the first test. But, squandered
half - a drive that n"ed opportunities were tlw
prevailing theme of the
~ome four and n half min
utes ol the clock J'hat nipht and it looked like it
means in the other fot1\ 1mght \!nd that way.
On their first offensive
three and a half minute"-;
of action, the Wayne possession of the fourth
offense mustert·d ju~t 90 quarter. the Big Black:;
y,mls rtnd two first drove to the Wayne five
dm' ns. Impressive num- yard line. whcrc the drive
stalled. But, the subseben;.
quent
tield goal attempt
Josh llerefonl led the
red and black defenders was blocked and it was
with 19 tackles. That s feared that the locals had
not a mi ... print - he w:b perhaps \\'astetl their
in\'olved in 19 ladles. final opportunity. Hut,
Trey Lh ingston and the Point defense quickly
Brandon T'oler \vere ~rt&gt;d­ gave the Big Blarks
ited \\ ith I 2 tadlcs. another chance when
while Jason Stouffer had Jason Stouffer recovered
II. Cod) Sto\'cr and a Wavnc fumble at the
La) ne 'I hnmp-.on had 9 Pioneer I 7 'I' ani line. It
tackles each. Stouffer took just three plays for
.
,
Paul Boggs photo/courtesy of Jackson County Times-Journal
and
Musgrave each the locals to find the end Galha Academy s Jonathan Caldwell, left. controls a loose ball in between a pair
incomplete of Jackson defenders during Thursday night's 3-0 SEOAL v1ctory over the Iron men
rt'CO\'ered a Wayne fum- zone. An
pass
on
first
down was at Alumn1 Stadium in Jackson, Ohio.
ble, as did Gabe Starl·her.
followed b) a 7 yard
On the other side ol' the Blankenship run, before
ball. Hlankenship led the Williams hulled is way
Point offenc;e \\ ith 97 into the end :tone. break) ards on II rarries. while lllg tackles all along the
JaWaan Williams added way for the game-winBY BRYAN WALTERS
sion.
and Kyle Scott were sent
93 ) ards on 23 carries. ning score. The try for
BWALTEAS MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM
GAHS, however, broke nut in St) le followin!! a 4Williams did much of hb two was no good,
Jb scoring drought in the 0 triumph over Calvary
damage between ' the though. and the locals led
JACKSOJ'\, Ohio
43rd
minute
when Christian Academv dur~
tackles. Blankenship was by five.
Break Clllt the brooms. Cald\\ ell netted hi~ sec- ing u non-conference
Again.
al!&gt;o the leading receiver.
ond goal of the game on a matchup
in
Gallia
The Pioneers had one
·n,e Gallia Academ) pen.alt) kick - giving County.
catching 3 passes tor 4X final chance, but again it
yards. "'hilc William-, \&gt;vas the defense that soccer team claimed a the guests a 2-0 edge.
The host Defenders (6latched unto a couple of turnt·d them away. forc- sweep of rhal Jackson
Robinson followed in 3-3) had little trouble
aerials for 13 yards. ing the sil&gt;.th Waynt&gt; punt for the second consecu- the 59th minute "ith the with CCA, ouhhooting
Junior quarterback bric of the night. The Big 1 ti\'e season Thur5da) tinal goal of the night. the guest&lt;; by a whopping
Robe11s completed 5 of Bl&lt;il:ks offensive unit night following a con- netting a pass from 25-2 margin. OVCS also
I0 passes for 61 ) ards then held the ball until vincing 3-0 victory in a La\\ renee Wedemeyer had an S-0 advantage in
Ohio for the J-0 cushion.
and a touchdown. and the final horn o;;ounded. Southeastern
corner kick~ and did not
also rushed for 20 yards· giving the locals the Athletic League matchup
Zack Northup made II give up a single shot
in the Apple Cit).
on six carries.
saves in net for the Blue attempt 111 the first half.
upset win. But, even that
'The Blue Devils (5-7- De' ils. while a trio of
Chance Burleson startThb game actually had drive \\a~n t without
the feel of a great hea\ y- drama Facing a third 1, 2-5-0 SEOAL) - who Jackson goalies came up ed the scorin!! in the
\\eight boxing match. It and 12 !rom their O\\n defeated the lronmen b) '' ith II saves. The ninth minute after netting
started c;lo"' 1). \\ ith the 39, the local~ needed one a 5-2 ..:ount at home earli- lronmen fell to 2·~ I an unassisted !!Oal for an
• dd d to oHrall and 0·6- I in earl) 1-0 edge. Richard
teamc; taking a little tame more big play and 1t was er th1s fall
the1r good f rt
SH&gt;AL pia).
Bo'"man netted a pa-,s
feeling each other out A Blankenshap '' ho pro\Jd
\\
ek
b)
p
ka
the
n1e Blue De\ ils ha\e frnm T.G. Miller in the
fev.. jabs. some counter eel it. Blankenship rampunches somewhat dull bled some 38 yards on progrnm &lt;&gt; fourth &lt;&gt;tnught outscored Jackson in the 26th minute for a 2-0
and somewhat fascinat- the pht). reversing field \ actory O\ er J H S and JUst last tour games b) ar II- lead, which ended
ing at the ~amc time. and breaking tackles to the sixth overall in -\ margin. GAHS won ~eing .th? score at t
ll1e Big Blacks drew first nive the Big Black.;; a SEOAL hio;tory. GAJI&lt;) last ) ear s match ups b) llltellTll'iSIOn.
1-.o \\011 the HolLer (
counts of 2-1 and 1-(1.
Alex Hadded ~ave
blood on their second f. rst down at the Wa) ne
GAHS return-; to non- 0\'CS H 3-0 edge 00 an
possession of the game 25. One more running on Tue'ida) alter'' annm
action unaso;;isted goal in the
when
Roberts
hit play netted a couple. and a c;hootout agaam.t Ohm conference
Valley
Chri.;;tian
Saturdnv
"hen
it
travel&lt;;
4 bt mimate~ then In' in
Blankenship in stride on then the locals brought
Gallaa Academ) out- to Poni't Pleasant for a finished off the scoring in
a ~:retty 31 yard scoring out the -xictory fonnation.
1 shot the hosts b) a 14-11 jumor high junior \'arsi- the ()9th minute after netstnke. Jcrrod
Long s Robert&lt;; knelt twice and
margin. with the main t) 'arsit) tn-match at 6 ting a pass from Haddad
PAT made it 7-0 and the that was that.
Jilference
beim! the three p.m.
lor the 4-0 finale.
large
Homecoming
''You win with defense extra shoh that led to the
Sebastian Kinder made
crowd be~ame prett) and that ~ how we did it three extra goals.
DEFENDERS BLANK
one
&lt;;ave for the victoriquiet - at least on one tonight."
explained
Jonathan
Cald\H"II
ous Defenders. "hile
CALVARY, 4-0
side of the field.
Darst. "'ll1is conference !-.tarted the -.coring just
Alex Rhodes had ~even
But. after forcing a ''e play in is tough and eight minutes into regusa\es for Cahan.
GALLIPOLIS.
Ohio
Wa) ne punt, the ~B1g you ha\ e to play good Jation. netting a Cod)
0\ CS returns "to al:tion
Senior night \\as more
Blacks gave the ball ri9ht defense to \\in in this 1 Robinson pass for the
than memorable for the Thur5da\ \\hen it travels
back \\hen Tyler Adk111s l~a~ue Our ~efense kept earl) 1-0 advantage. The Ohio Valle) Christian to Belpre for a non-conmade a nict· interception g1v~1~g nur nftcnse l!ppor I score remained that wa) soccer team Friday night teren~e matrhup at 6
on a Roberts pass intend- tumttcs and we tmally headed into the intemlis- as -;emor-; Daniel lm in p.m.
ed for Tnb\ Martin. It capitalized when we had
didn t take long for the to. I m proud of our Pioneers to capiralize on guys."

Blue Devils 'sweep Jacksone

I

I

I

·

URG volleyball knocks off St. Catharine

out eluded one defender
and cut back to the near
!-.ideline ft)r a 52 'ard
score. Kitchen also a2ded
the point after kick. nne ·
of four on the night, to
put WHS in front by a 70 margin
The hosts added to its
lead mid\\ ay through the
second canto when Gibbs
found lsaa() Lee across
the middle for a 37 vard
touchdown pass. "Lee
went
up over the
Southern defender to
make the scoring grab
and gi"e the Falco~s a
I 4-0 advantage with 7:34
remaining in the half.
Wahama was denkd a
third touchdown in the
half when the 'I ornadoc
defense surtcned.to halt a
Fakon drive at the -,ix
yard line. The White
Falcons would have to
settle for a 22 yard
Kitchen fidd goal for a
17-0 first half lead fm the
Ma~nn County eleven.
'I he White Fal&lt;.:ons
\Vould put the game aWCl)
in the third quarter &lt;Jfter
scming three times inside
a four and a hall' minute
span. Ryan Lee ope1~cd
the second half assault
wnh a four yard run followed by an lsaat• Lee 22
yard scampe1: Ryan Lee
wbuld later add his ~ec­
ond six pointer of the
evening. by hauling in a
65 yard tou~hdown pass
lro111 Clibbs with 7:29 to

play in the third period
freshman Kane Roush
ran 34 ) ards for a fourth
quarter touchdo\\ n while
sophomore Crandal Neal
rambled 3 I yards for
another ~ix points to t'ondude the Falcons scoring acti\ ity on the night.
Roush entered the uame
in the tinal quarter and
picked up 70 yards in
only four carries \\ hile
Nei1l added 55 )ards in
just t\\ o tries on the
evening as Wahama utilized the services of 12
different ball can·iers in
the game.
The \Vhite Falcons
turned the ball over three
times on the evening
with Trenton Deem and
Erk Buzzard each intercepting a Falcon pass in
addition
to
Daniel
Jenkins recovering a
Wahama fumble.
Southern committed
four turnovers with l\latt
Stewart. Tyler Kitchen
and Colton McKinne) all
recO\ ering a 'lornadoe
fumble and lac Warth
picking off a Southt•rn
aerial.
Wnhama will return to
action next week \\hen
the White Fakon!- travd
to Federal Hocking for a
TVC contest against the
Lancers. Southern will
attempt to snap its brief
tWtl game slide when thl'
Tornadoes host kague
foe !\Iiller.

{

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECiAL TO THE TI!ES.SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
The Uniwr!'&gt;it\ of Rio
Grande RedStorn1 volle\ball team lx&gt;ullL'ed back
from a ditl"icult loss to arch
rival Shawnee State on
Tuesda' night with a win
m·er visiting St. Catharine
College in straight sets.
26-24:2.5-16 and~25-J9 at
the Ne'' t Oli,·er Arena on
Friday night.
Rio Grande (79) started
slowly and had troubk
shaking the Patriot!-. in the
first name. With the score
. at
1:&gt;.,_4-2-+, R'ro was able
t1ed
to 'icore the final t\\ o
points to take control of
the match.
The RedStonn pia) ed

l.

chapped in \\ith !o.e,en
each.
Sophomore
libero
Lauren Raines was all
mer the lloor. racking
I 7 digs to lead th
RedStom1 in that categon.
Smith added II digs. ~ •
Senior setter ~Ash lev
Bloom handed out I)
assists to lead the
RedStonn while freshman
Kavla Landakcr dished
out II :md Cait' Willis
distlibuted I0 assists for
the match.
Rio GmnJe will ha\ e a
l}Uick turnaround as it
heatb to n011hern Ohio to
face former American
.\Iideast Conference foe
i\otre Dame College for a
doubleheader. TJ1e first
matd1 begins at I p.m.

Wednesdav marked the Wamer rounded out the
end of the ·!!olf st•ason l~)r team total \\ ith respecthe rest o(the Ea~Je,
tive efforts of 96 and
as well as both~ South I 00. K \ le Young also
from Page 81
Gallia and Southern.
'hot a I i 7 for the nagles.
D:\\ id Michael ~led
Pastern \\as fourth nut
\Vate1ford
tht• 20 I0
of 15 tl'ams "ith a total SGHS "ith a 92. folTVC IItK'king champion
of J 71, "hile Somh lowed b\ Casin Rou
\Hlll the sectional
team title \\ ith a score of Gall ia made its first tour- "ith an . .eH'Il 100 G
3J I, while Belpre earned nanll'nt appeara1Kc ~ince Slone and Seth .Ia
the other team spot as 20()(, b\ firinf.!. a total of tired matching J02s to
runner-up with a J48. ~1.)6 ft;r SC\ ent h place. munJ out tht&gt; t~am score.
Duane
Irvin
of l'he Rehels had ne\ cr \\ hile Col'\ Haner added
Huntington was the O\ er- fini,hed hi!!her than I lth a round ot" 109.
\dam Pape paced the
a II runner-up and first at a seclitHlal meet.
qualifier \\ ith a round of Southern also fini,JH.'d J"ornadllt'S \\ ith a 94, fo)(owed
bv
Brandon
R4. Todd Griffith of 14th\\ ith a tally or -+54.
\lan:inko
;,ith
116 and
Da\
id
Warner
lollmH·d
lklpre was the medalist
Amsbary for Fastern Trenton (\1ok '' ith I I9.
with a 7Q.
\Vhill' t\msb:uy lllH) with a round of90, \\hile Cole Graham romplett•d
he
mm ing
on, Chns Bissell and .1,1) the team tall) '' ith a 125.

Golf

l

with consaderabh more
re,nl ve in the -.ec()tlll et.
grubbing leads of 7-!. 124. 17-9~and 20-10 before
cniising to a 25-16 ad\' an·
ta~:c and taking a !;()111manding 2-0 lt~ad in the
match. ~
Rio auain jumped out to
a siLeahle athanta!!e in the
third game. securi'i1u leads
of 50. 13-5 and 15:?. St.
Catharine (3 23) made a
run to make the score
res[)l:ctable before C\ entualh falling, 25-19.
~ophon1ore middle hit
ter Erin Shennan led the
wm for 1he RedStorm
with 12 kill~. Seni&lt;w outside hitter Rachel Walker
added nine kills \\hik
sophomores
\\'hitne\
Smith and Trcsa S" .mel

I-

I

�. ,.--::-

Sunda), October 3,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Devils

McGehee shit lifts

Brevvers over Reds, ~3

from Page 81
Devtl rolled up 396
yards of total otfen e.
scored 7 of the 10 time
they possessed the ball.
and didn t comnut n sin
gle tumover
n one \\ ny or another.
&gt;n himself account
for 276 of those yards.
rushing tor 167 yards and
3 touchdm' ns and call hing 5 passes for I Ol)
yards and an 80-yard
catch-and-run
touchdown pass from quarterback and fello" semor
Ethan Moore.
\\ ilson an(J Moore
takl t been part of that
history. either· they dido t play agamst the
Chtefs as ophomores or
juniors due to tnJUI).
The Chiefs ( 1-5 O\ er
all. 1-2 SEOAL) saw
enough of them t·nday
night. thank you
"11 s been a short career
here (at GAHS) for me."
said Eddy. in his second
) ear at the helm of the
Blue and Wlute. '"but this
is truly a staple "in for
our program. We re looking tor something to tum
the comer and hang our
ton. and thts was n b1g
n.
•
"This was a huge game
for coach Penrod (GAHS
a sistnnt Alex Penrod is c1
former Chteft.tiO quarterback). and I m o happy
for ham." Edd) ndded.
"He does a great job and he kept u up on the
stats all \\eek: the point
spread the last three
years wa 137-13 and we
were on the negattve end
of that. We had lo t 11
out of the Ia t 13 (to
Logan). We knew all the
numbers commg m.''
Gallipoli (5-1, 2-0)
batt t beaten the Chiefs
since back-to-back wins
in 2002 and 2003, before
that. the Blue Devtl Ia t
tnumph
O\er
the
Chteftam \\a \\ ) ba~k
In 1996
The last ttme a Galht~
~~..,·~-... team defeated
d by at least
\\as a 44-20
sion an Galltpoli
back m 1974 nnd the
loss was Logan s l.trge t
margm of defeat at the
hand
of a Gallt,t
Academ)
team
m
Hocking Count) m~;e
1953 (47-n) on the old
Htlltop.
But in a11 fatrnes~ to
the Purple &amp; White. the
game was closer than the
final score indkates. In
fact, it got too clo e for
comfort for the Blue
Devils when the Ch1efs
cut a 24-10 halftime
deficit to 24-17 \\ ith
9:58 to play 10 the thtrd
quarter.
lhat s when 1 ogan
quarterback
Jordan
Jurgensmier hooked up
\\ith recei\ier Isaac
Lind ey on a pa to the
left ideline and Lind ey
tn awa) from a couple
uld-be tackler for a
-yard catch-and-run
touchdown.
Gallia Academy took a
27-17 lend earl) in the
final period on a 30-yurd
field go.ll by Tyler
Hannon - his econd
field goal or the game before the Chiefs Dylan
Cavinc" brought the
ensuing kickoff back 30
yard to the Logan 45yard line.
Cavinee bud already
retumed a first-half kickoff 90 yards to paydirt
for Logan s first kickoff
retum touchdown since
2004. More on that Inter
Then,
after
Jurgensmier picked up 6
yards on a keeper. he
threw a bomb do" n the
middle to a tret~kmg
Kelly Long. who made
the catch and was tack
led on the GAHS 5-yard
for a huge 44-yard

t

Logan s JUbilation
was short-lived when the
Homel·oming crowd saw
yellow laundr~ on the
field. The Chtels were
called for two penaltico;
an illegal recetver do\\ n
field (\\hich Gallipolis
declined) and often ive
holding (which the
Devils accepted). negating the play.

&amp;unlk1v 'Ctmtnt -&amp;tntmrl • Page Bs

Mike Brace photo/courtesy of GAHSaporta.com

Gallla Academy's Tyler Eastman, nght, nngs the vtctory bell at Memonal Fteld after
returnmg from Friday night's SEOAL v1ctory over Logan.
Logan then fumbled
the ball awa) on the very
next play and the Blue
Devils eventually turned
it into a twisting. spinning. fourth-and- I. I 0yard coring run up the
middle by Wilson \\ ith
5:50 remaining to make
it 34- I 7.
Wilson added a 31yard scoring run in the
final minute to put the
tcmg on a S\\eet victol)
cake for the Blue De' ils.
··we bust that (long
pa:ss) to Kelly ... ,.,e had
them We were back in
it,'' aid Logan coach
Kell) Wolfe, "then it got
taken nwa) from us. It
"ould ha\ e been a 3pomt game.
''You have a (44-yard)
bomb taken away from
you. and then )OU fumble on the next play and
the) go dO\\ nand score,"
he added. "It s hard to
bounce back from that.·•
And. to their credit.
"hen the Blue Devtls
!o.lllelled blood m the
w ter th ) u ed kiUer
m ttnd to put the game
awn)
• \\ e t.tlk to the kids all
the ttme (about) "hen
the
opponent
get
knocked down. )OU can t
let them get back up."'
Eddy smd. "\\e kmd of
tumbled a little bit there
nnd ga\ e them that bit of
breath. but the turnover
\\a5 huoe (for the Blue
De\ tis) to be able to get
the momentum back
"I don t worry a lot
.tbout adversit) because I
know these kids understand it and how to \\ ork
through it... but. man. it s
sweet to not ha\ e to deal
With 1t! he added.
The Ch.iefs went awa)
from their usual spread
offense to start the gnme
and went "ith a 'ariation
of PO'" er sets 10 the first
half The) attempted
only 2 passe · were outgained b) the Blue
De-.ils 258 _89. and converted only 3 first do" ns
Ill the first half.
··our game plan ,.,as to
run power in the first
half," Wolfe satd. ··we
di&lt;ln t think we d be
behind b) tw 0 touchdown~. but we c.tme out
in the second half and
had a completely differenl (spread) offense.
That was the plan. We
were hoping it might be
the other wa) around on
the scoreboard. but we
stuck to the plan.
"It worked."' he added.
"We came out and
changed the pace on that
first drive (of the ~econd
half). came do'' n and
cored in two minutes.
nnd it was a new game."
Eddy .tdmttted he was
somewhat taken aback
b) the Chtefs
game
plan
"It did surprise me a

ltttle bit." he said. "We
had prepared for it
becauSl' we knew it was
something they had done
in the pa~"&gt;t. but to see
them do it in the first half
consistent)\ was a little
surprisi11g "that they didn 1 get out of it. After
the) '' atched the Ironton
game last "cek (a 48-7
Ironton win), I could
understand why they felt
pretty good about lining
up and coming traight at
u .

"But that
a whole
dtfferent "eek, nnd I
thought what our kids
experienced last week
was a· great learning tool
so that we didn t ex perience it ag,tin this week,"
he continued. "By secmg
it two weeks in a row,
they adjusted to the mistakes they made last
week. When (the Chiets)
only had JO points up
there. I thought 'boy.
when are the} going to
start throwmg1 At orne
point the) had to do it.
We knew that econd
half \\.tS gomg to be the
pread."
Gallia Academ) took
the lead on ,, 21-) ard
field goal by Hannon on
the grune s first cries.
but Cnvinee took the
en~umg kickoff on the
far stdeltne. cut up the
mtddle and back do" n
the left sideline almo t
untouched for a 90-yard
touchdown return and a
7 3 J ogan ed e
Howe .. er. when facm
thtrd nd 12 from Lhe
GAHS 20 )ard ltne on
the next ene • Moore
thre\\ on the run deep
dov. n the nght ideltne to
a treaking \\ tl on who
made a leapm c t h nd
went the dt tunce ~ r n
80 )ard conng pi,)
Logan pulled even
"ith 8:02 left m the sec
ond stanza on Derek
Montgomel) 5 24-)ard
field goal. but on the next
series the Blue De\ tis
dro\e 59 yard on 8 plays
to take a 17- 10 lead on a
I-) ard run by Wilson.
Then. after forcmg a
Chteftain punt. the Blue
Devil~ mn •1 ne.1rl) pic
ture-perfcct t\\o-rninute
drill, takmg the b.tll 58
yard on 10 plays nnd
coring wtth 15.8 seconds left in the hall on a
9-) ard touchdown run b)
Brandon Ta) lor a the
re ult of n well-executed
nu dtrecuon m tde hnndof~Vtl on. the son of

CINCINNA11 (AP) The Cmcmnatt Reds will
be packing thetr bags for
thetr first playoff game
in 15 years.
Casey McGehee hit a
grounder that caromed
off second baseman
Brandon Phillips in the
I I th inning, driving in
Corey Hart and sending
the Milwaukee Brewers
to a 4 3 victory Friday
ntght
that
ensured
Cincinnati will begin the
postseason on the road.
With one out and run
ners on the corners,
McGehee hit a bouncer
up the middle off Jordan
Smith that went off
Phillips che t and into
short center field Hart
scampered home to give
Milwaukee a 4-3 lead.
Phillip said he was
screened by second base
umpire Mike DtMuro. It
was ruled an error then
chan~ed to a hit by the
offictal scorer after the
game.
"Once I saw it. it was
almost past me," said
Phillips, the 2008 Gold
Glove winner. "I still
almo t caught it. It s
something that just happened."
Manager Dusty Baker
figured somethmg odd
happened.
"Brandon makes that
play 99 umes out of a
hundred." Baker said.
The NL Central champion Reds needed a win
to maintain nn) hope of
fimshing the regular season \\'ith the second-be t
record
among
the
league s three dtviston
champions.
ow.
Cincinnati will open its
first pla)off senes since
1995 at top-seeded
Phtladelphta or the winner of the West.
Mike McClendon (2-0)
pitched a perfect lOth to
et the wm and John
Axford fim hed for his
24
ave m '17 opportun e Axford truck out
Jo D) Go me wath runners on first and second
to end the game.
Tra-.i Wood pttched 6
I 3 inning to bot ter hi
chance
of
makmg
Cmcinnati s po tseason
rotation. He alia\\ ed
three runs and three htt .
R1ckie Week hit a
one-out dri\e to center in
the
sixth
for
Milwaukee s first hit,
cutting Cincinnati s lead
to 2-1. It wa Weeks
29th homer.
Drew Stubbs tripled
and scored on Philhp
sacnfice fly in the ~ixth.
but the Brewer tied it
with two runs in the seventh.
McGehee
dm1bled
with one out and
Lorenzo Cain followed
"ith a single. moving
McGehee to third and
chasing Wood. Pinchhitter Craig Coun ell
greeted Logan Ondrusek
with a nm-scoring sm~le
and Matt Lucro) addea a
t) ing sacrifice fly
Sam LeCure (2-5)
started the lith for the
Reds and allo" ed both
of his batters to reach. It
was onlv his econd
~~:earance since Sept.

Baker. who satd before
the game he needed to
get some inmngs for
some of hts relievers
before the postseason.
ended up usmg eight of
them.
''They ve been doing a
~reat job;' he satd, pomtang out that Ryan
Bidun s walk agamst
Nick Masset in the
eighth was the first
allowed by the Reds
bullpen m a combined I0
1-3 mnings. "Some of
tho e guys needed some
work, so that part of the
mission was accomplished"
Mark Rogers pitched
five
inmngs
for
Milwaukee. ) telding two
runs and two hits. He
also struck out six and
walked none.
. ''Roge.rs had a J:!rettr,
ampresstve
outtng.
Milwaukee manager Ken
Macha said. ''He only
gave up two htts. He just
needs to pitch. He has
good velocity and hides
the ball very well. He s
confident in his stuff."
Gomes smgled with
one out in the fifth for
Cincmnau s first hit. He
tole econd. moved to
thtrd
on
Ramon
Hernandez s infield hit
and cored on Paul
Janish s sutcide squeeze
to gi .. e the Reds a 2-0
lead.
The Reds grabbed the
lead in the first. manufacturino the fir t run
allowed'by Rogers in six
inning O\ er four appearances since being promoted from Double-A
Huntsville on Sept. 10.
Stubbs drew a leadoff
walk. stole second and
moved to third on
Phillips
~oundout
before Joey \Totto hit a
sltcri fice tl).
Rogers strong outing
"ill send the rookie into
the offseason on a high
note.
"It was great," he said.
''It "as a lot of fun. I felt
more confident thh. time.
1 bad a bener idea of
what to expect. I m
happ) I ga\ e m) team a
chance to win."
'OTES: The Reds
might send some pla~ers
whodon t make the di\iston eries roster to
Arizona to stay sharp in
case the) re needed to
replace injured pia) ers
or for subsequent series.
Baker said before the
game .... Week:-. \\as hit
by a pitch for the 25th
time. tying Fernando
Vina for the single-~ea­
son lranc:hi e record
Vina set the record in
1998 .... Prince Fielders
fourth-inning walk for
Milwaukee was hb lllth
of the season. breaking
the franchi e record he
et in 2009 ... The Reds
are 5.204 fans 'hort of
reaching two million in
paid attendance for the
22nd time in franchi e
hi tOI) and second in the
last three eason . The)
topped t\\O million in
2008 .... Milwaukee LHP
Zach Braddock broke his
left pink) fin~er while
shagging balh 10 the outfield during batting practice.

After having their season-opening
4-game
winmng streak snapped
la~t week at Ironton,
bddy felt his team had
something to prove
Frida) mght.
"We felt we hadn t
pia) ed well the last couple \\eeks and we really
needed to come out and
make a statement," he
said. "Not just because
\\e \\ere playing Logan,
but becau e we hadn t
pla)ed to our ability for a
couple weeks. We really
felt like we needed to
an wer that
"To get the opportunit)
to pia) Logan, you kind
of get a little water in the
mouth. you know?'' he
added "ith a smile. "It s
one of the great rivalries
(in
southern OhiO).
Overall \\C did the things
we felt we needed to do.
The kids executed really
well (and) they played
hard from start to finish.
We h .. e great kid and
re
che . and
'' h
uc e
fr 1
For a e ond- tr ght
\\ eek. there "ere orne
glanng numbers that
,.. ent again t the Chtef
1 e ron JU t 40 often
.. e pia) and had the
ball JU t 17 minutes and
47 econd • Gallipolis.
meam.,htle. ~ 63 plays
and had the ball for
30: 13 The Blue De' ils
396) .trds more than doubled the Chiefs output of
179 total yards.
And the road !!Ct no
easier for the Chie~f,, who
•now face a string of
gnmcs
at
Warren.
Zanesville
and
Portsmouth before finishing the seru.on at home
against Chillicothe.
"It "a a downer
tonight,'' \\olfe said.
"You ha\e to be able to
do fundamental things to
"in game . Our kids
scrapped and pla)ed
hard. but the main thing
GAHS grnduate and for )OU ha'e to do to "in
mer Logan coach Brett ballg.tme ,.,e didn t do
Wit on. was all that he tonight. And Gallia did.'"
was advertt ed to be.
"He is a great runner.
Crar!: Dmm is the
He nms lo'' to the ~port\ editor of the
ground and he s hard to Logan /)ail\ \ew.\ 111
tackle. and we had a lot Logan, Ohio.
of guys in position
tonight who bounced olf
of him." Wolle said. "J lis
center of gravity is about
that high (holding hts
hand around his wm t)
and (It s) like trying to
Starts Friday, Oct. 1 &amp; runs through
wrap your hands around
a barrel when he comes
entire month of October.
through there. He ran
hard and he
a great
ballpla)cr 1-k: s got it all:
speed, good viston. and
te s hard to bnng do,., n."
But as good as Wilson
and others ran the ball.
there wece tunes the
Chiefs just didn t do n
good job of tackling.
"We cnme out in power
and we didn t hlock very
Excludes clearance
well in the first half and
we didn t tncklc \Cr)
well.'' Wolfe said. ''I m
not taking nn)thing a\\H)
from ''hat (Gallipolis)
did - they had a grrat
plan tonight and the) did
well
but looktng at it
from what Logan does.
we didn t tackle very
Rt. 2 Bypass Point Pleasant, WV
good .. and tt s ome
thing we just haven t gotten fixed."

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�Page Ub • $Sunbm' '{I;tm~ -~cntmrl

Pmnca·oy • Middlc J&gt;Ort • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 3,

2010

Back)'a1'd can1ping i11 the good old days Attorney: Wichard to meet
I feel
for kid
'011)

these da) s. I rea II) do. I
thmk the) nn.: nussmg
• out on many of the great
expenence~ that I and
others of Ill) generation
enjoyed and occasJonally
endUled '' hllc we were
grO\\ ing up.
The Atari games were
just stnrt111g out. the same
with '1deo-cassette pinycr-.. and there \\ ercn t
nearly as many television
channels to \\atch. I he
home computer \\as
crude (and tncredJbly
expenc:;ive) .tnd the internet and cell phones
weren t C\en bcglllning
to appear on our limited
horizons. What \\ e did
ha\ e ''as b1cyclcs wh1ch
occnsJOn,lll)
worked. back)ard-. and
plent) of room in the out
ooors to wander and
explore.
Like most ) oung ter;
of m) generation. m)
first ~olo and group outdoor experience&lt;&gt; tended
to bcgm and end in the
great wilderness ol the
buck) ard. and again like
many ) oungsters, m)
tirst 0\ernight outings
weren t entirely suc~ess­
ful. Gencr,dly we would
be chased back inside by
bears. mountain lions.
aliens or ghosts sometime'&gt; around I 0 p.m. or
JUSt in tJme for snacks
and watching tele' 1S1on
before collapsing around
the h\ing room.
1 he secret to the fir;t
successful campout, a
campout ''here )OU uctuall) sleep outside all
night. is to fall asleep
\\lthout reahzing you are
falling a-.leep. At least
that \\as the (,ecret of my
1111.1 success: I accidentally fell a-.leep. I \\Oke
up m the morning ly1ng
on the grnss, CO\ cred
"1th , heet and bhnkmg
111 the e.trl)' morrung
It ht. not cx,tdl) sure
\\1tat t1me 1t '', " I '' ent
ms1de to ec '"h. twa for
dmner. but e\CI') one ''a~
ao;leep ~tom d1dn t e\en
reahze I had been out
side: m her defen~e. this
\\&lt;Nl t neollgcnce on her
part. 1t \\a just that we
had n httle more independence back then.
People tend to thmk
that parents \\ere much
stncter in the pa~t liMn
the) are no\\. ,md tn
some \\ay~ th1s w.ts true
especmll) in matters of
enforcement -but for the
most part \\ e were left
alone while playing out5ide, usuall5 '\ummoncd
back indoors for supper
or when it got dark.
I think it s s.tfc tu say

In the
Open
Jhn Freen1an
we had more freedom. I
d.n t think kids actually
go to friends
houses
under their own power
these da) s: the little darlings are dehvered and
picked up m the modern
day
equivalent
of
annorcd-personnel carri
ers or oversized SUVs.
trnnc;ferred from parents
to caretakers and back
again with absolutely no
time "pent "ithout adult
o;upervision. Ho\\ awful!
It also didn t help matters when I told Ill) mom
I "as going to be at my
friend s house. and he
told his mom the exact
same thing. and the t111th
nctuall) lay some\\ here
in bCI\\een. usuall) in the
woods along a creek
somewhere, occasionall)
'' ith fishing poles or
camping gear. In most
C.t e we wercn t intentionall) being deceitful:
it would just tum out that
\\a).

there were no cell phones
or GPS Ulllts to let our
parents know pn:cisely
where we were, they just
h.td to wait until we came
home sometimes With n
belt in hond. fortunately
our parent didn t feel
they needed to know
where we were ever) single second of the day: if'
kids tried that sort of
thing today they wl)uld
have a search party culled
out for them and it would
be national news. The
parents would be cited
for child endangerment
and
the1r mugshots
shown on television.
ln~tead, we learned
about the \\onders of the
night, about glow 111 the
dark fungus and other
cool things. We experi
enced small ,uumals rn1d
ing our campsites: \\Cre
deafened by the \\hippooru ills thnt apparent I)
surrounded us. We swam
in the creeks. finding the
deepest holes and jumping from the banks m our
clothe.:; and wearing
those clothe.:; unt1l the\
dried t)Ut and sleeping ii1
tl1em.
We were mountmn
men in our mind&lt;;.
Camping almost always
invohed creeks. fire.:; and
knives, the bigger the
better My friends and I
learned hm" to make
fire&lt;;, and do ome primithe cooking, and how to
open can when we renlized nobody had thought
to bring a can opener, nnd
how to run from yellow
jacket ne&lt;;ts.
We sta) ed up all mght
and talked, telling ghost
storiec; and such. c;caring
ourselves hnlf to death
until we finally cmc;hed
out. surrounded by the
sound of the nighttime
woods only to '' ake up to
a ") mphon} of song
birds.
Unlortunatel)' those
da) s only I,\ ted untJI
cars and dm ers he en e
entered the p1cturc. then
thev
were
gone
No\\.tda\ s my idea of
campmg· is staym, m a
cabm. or at the mo t
pnmithe sleeprn 11
store-bou~ht tent on t lp
of a full) mflated rur mat
tre&lt;;s. but it 1 still fun to
recall the tun da) of
back) ard •ond \\ oodlot
camp mg.

We didn t have actual
tents. our campsites were
"forts'' made \\ ith blankets or boxes, if we were
lucky we had a folding
lawn chair or some such
for a bed, otherwise we
were on the ground. A
rope tied bel\\een two
trees (or a clothesline)
\\ ith a blanket hung O\er
it was our shelter. and
someti mec; \\ c '' ould just
Jeep in the open under
the lea'\es and '\tars. covered up to keep the mosqUitoes at bay.
The mo.-.quitoes \\ e
heard buz.ztng around
dKin t trouble us much. II
''as the once; you could
lu~ar buaing toiiO\\ed by
a pause that meant the)
had alit that ''ere the
problem. ~ ventually I
would \\ md up \\rapped
up hke a cocoon \\ ith the
mere!:&gt;t opening for
breathmg, hke some sort
of lungfish sealed against
the harsh em ironment
\\ 1th no exposed :.km left
for
bug
bites.
Jim Freeman 1\ \11/d/ifc
f·urthermore it ''a, not 5peciali~r for tlw Met£:5
uncommon to '"ake up Soil
and
m·aer
\\ ith a dog or two curled (' o/1\erratitln lJi \trier.
up to ) ou or C\ en on top lie ('£1/1 be c·ontacted
of you.
weekday' at 740-992- •
lwcntuall) our trips 4282 or ar jim.frcewent fanher afield. and num0 oluwcdner.net

with NC investigators

RAJ I IGII, N.C. &lt;APJ
NI I agent Gary
Wichnrd wJII talk \\ ith
investigators from the
North Carolma Secretary
uf State s office as they
review whether the state s
c;ports agent laws were
broken.
llis attorney Howard
Silber said Friday that
Wichard is scheduled to
be mterviewed next week.
though he wouldn t specify exactly when.
Elaine Marshall s office
launched its pmbe in July.
shortly after the NCAA
began Ill\ estignting the
football program at North
Carohna. ll1e NCAA
rev1ew initially focused
on agent related benefits.
but expanded to include
po s1ble academic 'iolations invol\ ing a tutor.
Wichard 5
longtime
friendship \\ ith former
Tar Heels a~si&lt;&gt;tant coach
John Blake has been a key
part of the investigations,
rncludmg loans from
Wichard that Blake s
attorneys have described
as one friend helping
nnother during financial

about two hour&lt;; Tue&lt;;day
I nvcstigator-;
have
already interv1ewec Blake
and defen'\ive tackle
Marvin Austin, an NI•L
pro~pcct whose trips to
Cnlifornia nnd Vliami
have also been scrutimzed
in the case. B,tlrncr. n
Wiehard client, reportedly
patd the lodging expenses
for Austm and 1orn1er I ,u
Heels teammate c:,un
lbomns to travel a~.:ross
the country to tram la'&gt;t
year.
George
Jeter,
a
spoke .. rnan tor Marshall.
declined to comment
f·riday mght. citing the
confJdentlcthty of the
investigation
On Thursdn), Blake s
attome)'i confim1ed the1r
chcnt had recei,.ed lorms
for an unspec1fied sum of
moncv until about three
years ·.~go, but smd there
was never an ammgernent
for Blake to &lt;hrect player;
to W1chard once they lett
for the NH The school
learned of the financial
transactions
11rst
reported b) Yahoo! Sportc;
- when Blake met Aug.
difticult1e~.
j I \\ 1th NCAA investigaS1lbcr snid there \\as tors and he resigned about
"no impropriety'' in the a week later.
trnnsact1ons.
Yahoo~ Sports reported
"Mr. Wichard i~ full) that there were at least SIX
cooperating and made \\ire trano;fers from
hunself mailable tor an \\ idmd !., bank to Blake
intemew '' ith both the and a credrt card l%ued 111
NCAA and is scheduled Blake
name t1ed to
to meet '' ith the secretary \\ ichard s agenl:), Pro
Management.
of tnte next '' eek 'olun- Teet
tnrily." Silber said. ··And Blake s attorneys sa1d the
he ha volunteered to pro- account ''as opened to
duce documents to dispel help Blake pa) for
any of these false accusa- expenses for running a
tions about hi relation- football
camp
111
ship with John Blake ..
California years ago when
In nddition. Silber
he \\as bet\\ een coaching
who also represents for- jobs
mer f';orth Carohna pin)·
Silber.
based
m
er and current Seattle California. &lt;;aid the card
Seahawks defensJ\e hne- was opened in 1999 after
m n Kent\\ .m B
B ke '"~ ftred as hend
B m
po
ch at Oklahom I cllld
\: lo ed m 2006

"The financial arrange
ment between Gary
W1ch&lt;trd and Coach Blake
is o;eparate and apart,"
S1lber .:;aid. "It has nothing to do wuh the referra.l
of player&gt;.''
Silbe1 said Wichard wa~
scheduled to talk with the
NCAA lac:;t week, but the
NCAA canceled the inter
VICW. He wouldn t .:;ay if
&lt;mother .inten ie\\ has
been scheduled.
In an e-mmllate Friday.
NCAA
spokeswoman
Stacey Osburn aid the
mten tew was canceled
bccau&lt;;e W1chard wouldn t 1•n a confidentiality
agreement.
...rhe CAA continues
to be int~ted in securinf? an mterv1ew with Mr
Wtchard," Osburn sa1d.
Earlier hiday. the
NCAA denied an appeal
to shorten suspensions for
North Caroltna comerback Kendnc Burney and
safet) Deunta Williams.
Burney was suc;pended
six games and Williams
four for receiving improper benefit\ connected to
se\eral trip~. including ·•
Cc~lifomm to 'ic;it a fo
mer North Carolina pla)er.
Burney abo had trips to
Atlanta and Las Vegas
hoked to fonner college
pla)er Chris Ha,.,kino;;.
\\hom the NCAA has said
qualifies as an agent.
Hawkins also paid SI.OOO
for the jerse) of Georgia
recen er A.J. Green, a
trnnsact1on that resulted
in Green s four-game suspension.
The
NCAA
also
returned to campus this
\\ eek to participate in the
school-Jed investi!:!ation
into the possible academ
ic '10lations. School
spokesman
Steve
Kirschner s:ud an tmestigator wa on campus
Wedneo;da)' and Thursday.

Haden welcomes trash talk.from Cincinnati
BEREA. Ohio {AP) A trash-talkmg coil\ enlion and a football game
begin at I p.m. Saturday
m Cleveltmd Browne;
Stadium.
The game i:-. bel\\ een
the Bro\\ n~ and Bengnls
The tra-;h talkers are Chad
Ochocinco and Terrell
0\\ens from the Bcng,tls
and rookie Joe Haden
from the home team.
Normal!) Browns rookie safety T..l. Ward might
get in on the gab fc~t. hut
he has other plans.
"I rn going to he silent,"
he said 111 the locker room
Friday. "I lll~:t my pad'\ to
the talking.''
The Bengal
usually
high-octane offense has
produced only three passmg touchdowns and two
rush1ng
touchdowns
through three games.
The) arc 2 1 chiefly
because Mike Nugent is
8-for-8 on field goal tries
and 5-for 5 on PATs.
Ochocinco ~ays he will
can the trash talk until the
Bengal.;; offeme starts
rolling. but Haden isn L
bu) ing it.
"I just like to ball, hon
estl).'' IJaden said. ''If
they\\ &amp;~.nt to talk. then I m
n really good talker. I
respect
thci1
ga111e
because they ve hcen
pln)'ing so long. but 1f
they wmll to talk, we can
talk. When you get on the
tield 11 s just playing football."
Haden play \\hen the
Browne; usc five defensive backs. He II line up
as the left comerb.tck.

In those o;ituations he
expects to be one-one-one
with Ochocinco. \\ho has
20 catches but no touch
downs this season.
0\\en has 14 catches
and no touchdowns this
c;eason. Combined he and
Ochocinco hav-e I, 724
receptions for 25.292
)ards and 206 touchdowns in the :\tf'L.
"Ochocinco realh b a
phenomenal
player.··
defensi' e
coordinator
Roh R\ an said on Friday.
" Ife gets faster and better
each year. And 1:0. is just
a freak. He makes a lot of
plays."
Ryan has to decide how
to attack Bcngals quarterback Carson Palmer.
In the first game
bemeen the Ohio rivals
last year Palmer completed 23 of 44 passes for 230
)'Hrdc; with t\\ o touchdowns and an interception. 'I11e Bengals ''on.
23-20. in overtime.
Jn the econd game the
game plan was to let the
Bengals get their ) ardage
on the ground. but stop
Palmer.
Palmer completed 13 of
24 passes for I00 yards
and a touchdown. The
B~ngals rm.hcd for 2JO
yards and won, 16-7.
The yucstion fncmg
Rvan on Sunda) is dues
he blitz Palmer, or sit
back nnd pia) bend but
d11 t break defense?
Palmer has been starting o;;ince 2004 and is one
of those quarterbacks that
ill\ ne a blitz: he can lind
the 'acated spot in cover-

age and hit the recei,er.
Plus. the blitz ha backfired twice an critical situations. The Bro'' ns u ed
an all-out bhtz in Tampa
and did not get to
Buccaneers quarterback
Josh Freeman. Freeman
thre\\ a 33-yard touchdown pass to Micheal
Spurlock over Haden.
Last week Rn,ens quarterback Joe Flncco &lt;;tood
up to the blit7. and thrc''
the winning touchdo\\ n
pass to .i\nyu:.m Bol~lin.
'' ho beat l.mc Wnght
one-on-one.
Palmer has been sacked
three times this season.
He has completed n
career-IO\\ 56 6 percent of
his passes nnd has liJrO\\ n
three interceptions along
\\ itH three touchdO\\ ns.
R).tll admits blitzing
Palmer could be risky. but
he said dcfen cs don t
usually thro\\ the house at
him. The Brown might
give It a tf).
''I-£ s very streak),''
R)an said. '·If he son top
of his game. he can beat
ju t about fill) thing:
.
"The bottom hne IS
most people don t max
pres ure. Ver) few teams
will send everyhodf. But
som~tlrnl's you lll'Cl to hit
tl~e lp1:111Crback. l wan.t hl
h1t lum. I 111 not perle~ t,
hut I still ''ant to hit the
quarterback."
The Browns ha\e four
sacks Their sack leader,
Marcus Benard (2 5
sacks) will pht) Sunday
after
missing
the
Baltimore game \\ ith an
ankle injuf).

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Sunday, October 3, 2010

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOE'FUCH MYDAILYSE!tToN

COM

O~lEROY fhere's no
end to what one can make
""ith a hard-shelled gourd
anything from long-hnndled dippers like those
found in the pyranud to fancy fruit
;-,\\Is lit for use on a formal dinner
ble.
•
"It's a fun hobby," md Janet Bolin as
he talked about her 20-some years of
O\\ ing and growing gourds in a plot
behind the Bohn home near Rutland.
She ackno\\ ledge that the process of
SO\\ ing, grO\\ mg. haf\ e ting and drying
the gourds is n long one but says it's
\\ell worth the effort for one who has
patience.
Once fully grown and completely
dned. gourds ltrt\ e hard shell that can
be cut, caf\ed, shaped and finished to
create something useful and attractive
for u e indoors or out that Janet claims
"wi II last fore\ cr."
ln the spnng Janet sows gourd seeds
of '&gt;'anous kinds to produce different
sizes and shapes ba cd on what she
plans to do with them. In the fall either
!'&gt;he lea\' ec; them on the vme to dry or
takec; th m off and arrunges them on
pallet for good • 1r Circulation to fimsh
the dry
proce
Once he ourds are all dned out and
the shell are hard. then the) can be
m water Wlth a httle bleach to
mold dned and sanded to
out the cxtenor. and the ere- ·
e proce s can begin Using hand
tool
he cut . shapes and canes
de 1gn , andc; off the rough edges, and
once everythm • mce and smooth Janet Bolin demonstrates techn ques of turning gourds into art.
apphec; the pamt and fim he it off \'lith
a good ealant.
Janet c; lo'&gt;'e of gourd art 1s not a single pa 10n There are thousands of
people workmg With gourds. While
mo t do it for artistic plensure. others
ha\e a business prospective. The populanty of workmg w1th gourds led to the
fonnation of the Oh10 Gourd Society,
Inc. which annually stuge~ an Ohio
Gourd Show at the Darke County
Fairgrounds in Greenville.
The 48th annual show held last week
carried out the theme ''Gourds of
Yesteryear." It not only included 'ast
collections of ornamentals and household accessories but offered workshops
for those ne'' to the hobby.
For the newcomers to gourd nrt Janet
emphasize the importance of planting
the right kind of gourd seeds to the get
the size and hape wanted. There are
bout 20 varieties. So, for example. if
)U ''ant to make a bird house, you can
mly get the nght shape by plantmg bird
-'
house seeds. or if you want the swan
design, then you need to buy what are
called swan seeds.
She recommends going to a reputable
dealer for help in selecting seeds, since
using ones from local growers usually
don't work very well. A dealer will be
able to provide the right seeds for producing nice gourds in the s1ze and
shape needed for bird houses, musical
instruments, g1ft items like baskets,
vases, bowls, and dippers, as well as
seasonal and holiday decoratiOns.
Hi tory tells us that gourds were used
in a utilitarian way by some cultures
thousands of years ago. More recently
we have seen gourds move toward the
decorative arena "Gourds are wonderful to work with,'' comments Janet,
because "once they're dried and
cleaned. they're just hke '' ood, and will
last forever. You can use a hand drill to
make hole rtnd a saw to create cutout
designs in gourd and they don't break
apart."
Once the design is finished. the color
tsing acrylic paint ,goes on and after
1~t the spray craft sealant to give
111e.
Janet and Jo Ann J&lt;etty, who has a
gomd busine~s and is act1ve in the
Gourd Society, displayed numerous finished gourds at the Meigs County Fair
this year.
, Fairgoers were amazed nt the beautiful creation tn varied sizes and shapes
and gathered round to learn the creative
process when Janet offered a workshop.
Some even found that gourd art was
the answer in their quest for a new
hobby.

Charlene Hoefllchlphotos

Gourds
galore
from the
collection
of JoAnn
Fetty.

,.

�Sunday, October 3,

2010

TAYLORSHAWVER
WEDI)ING
Katie Nicole Tnylor und Samuel Kenton Shaw,er
were united in marriage on July 18. 20 I 0, on the
\Vhite sand beach of SJe!-ita Key. Ha. They were joined
by a gathering of 31 fnends and family. The bride was
escorted down the rot;e pet,tl-lined aisle by her father
to the mus1c of Keith Utban's "Onl) You Can Love
Me This Way." played on guttar by Aaron Brown.
friend of the bride and groom
The bride i the d.tughter of Gary and Letsa Taylor
of Gallipolis. She ts the granddaughter of Donald and
Maxine Schilling and Kenneth and Aubrey Taylor of
Gallipolis She 1s the great great granddaughter of
Florence Slindc of Point Pleasant
The bndgroom is the son of Kent and Lou Ann
Sha\\ \er of Gallipolto; He is the grandson of Cleland
and Wanda \\ ilhs and the late Jame and Jean
Sha\\ 'er of Gallipolis
The bride wore nn "OI) I.tee cap-o;lccve go\\ n With
a s\\eetheart neckline and ke)hole b.tcJ... It had a pearl
beaded sash and d1Jpel tram She \\Ore an elbo\\
length beaded h ory 'e1l nnd fe.tther m her hmr. She
carried a bouquet of or,mge ) ell ow and pink gerber
daisi~. c.tlla hhes. orchid&lt;; and 10 e~
The maid of honor \\a Anne Ta) lor, sio,ter-in-la\\
of the bude. The bm.le maid WdS Betsy Sha\\\Cr, sister of the g10om The bndesm:ud-; earned bouquets of
orange erber da1s1e and ro co, The flo\\ er g1rl wa
Zoe Kllboun ou 111 of the oom
The be't n n '' l chat) Sh W\&lt;Cr brother of the
1.1n \\a Em: Tayl &gt;r brother of
groom The ro
the bnde fhc nn bear r \\ .t J. me Gilmore. cou m
of the bnde
A reception \\a" held 111 the banquet room of the
Boatyurd Re t.turant m Stesta Ke) foliO\\ 111~ the ceremony The ~ouple honeymooned on a cru1se to the
Bahamas A rec pllon of fanul) and fnend&lt;; \\ao; held
Iocall) at the l m\eNt) of R10 Grande after the)
returned home
Sam 1 .t 20 I 0 raduate of the L Ill\ er~1ty of R10
Grande \Hth a de ree m po\\er plant mechamcal
mamtenance Kat1e 1 pur umg her degree m radiologic technolo y .tt Mount\\e~t Commumty and
Tcchmcal Colleoe, \\here she will graduate m 2011.
The couple re!&gt;Jdcs m Gulhpoh&lt;&gt;
·

Pomer oy • Middlep ort • Gallipolis

~unbap ~tmes -~entmrl

• Page C2

Charlene Hoeflichlphoto
Kathleen Scott will be 1OS years old Wednesday. Shown with her is her daughter, Mary Jane Wise of Middleport.

Kathleen Scott: Born 1905, going strong, 2010
B Y CHARLENE H OEFLICH
HOEKICH MYDAILYSHlTINEl ::OM

PO~IEROY One of
Meigs County's oldest
rcstdents, Kathleen Scott
of Forest Run, \\ill
obsene her IOSth birthday on Wednesday, Oct. 6.
In celebration of the
occasion. her daughter.
Mary Jane Wi e, assi~ted
by her mother's qllllter
fnends at the rorest Run
United Methodist Church.
hosted a luncheon in her
honor on Thursda). She
\\as
presented gifts

including a bouquet of
rose .... m1d gi\ en a tribute
in \erse by the Rev. Bob
Robinson. pastor.
An active member of
the church since 1910.
Mrs. Scott's sc;hedule
includes spending every
Thursday at the church
quilting with her friends
and e\ei)' Sunday playing the pwno for congregational singing. something she's done since
she was 17 years old.
At the luncheon, Mrs.
Scott. a retired teacher
commented on her own

education which included graduation from
Pomeroy fl igh School
followed by two years at
Ohio Uni\'ersity to get a
teaching certificate.
In 1927 she began
teaching in the t\\o-room
school building at Forest
Run. She was there for
five years before getting
roamed, havmfc! a daughter. and staymg home
until after her hu band
John, died in 1972. She
then returned to the cia sroom. and taught for the
next dozen or so year-; in

the elementary schools at
Salisbury, Harrisonville,
Bradbury. and Rutland.
Mrs. Scott also talked
about her own early education in Pomero}.'
speaking of walking
distance to catch the
streetcar to ride down
town to the school.
She said her education
including memorizing a
poem every month and
then recited for the group
one she remembers from
a McGuffey Reader, 'The
Golden Rod is Yellow."

Church Notebook
French City \VMU meeting

frrst love, Rev. 2:4.
Each person received a gift from Mrs. Brown.
Millie
George then blessed the meal.
GALLIPOLIS
A g.trden party \\a'&gt; the &lt;&gt;cene of
French Cit)' B&lt;~pll t M1&lt;&gt; ionllf) L nion's meeting at
in
the home of S) IVIa Bro\\ n on Saturday, Sept II.
2010 Pre~ulent S\hl. Bro\\ ~ tlled the m e
to
, 1\LLlPOLIS - First Baptist Church in Gallipolis
th pcnm p )
e
order Olhe P1cJ... n
I host Dr Paul Dixon, chancellor of Cedarville
Au •ust mmut " \\ere re.td
Tho e attendmg \\ere Syl\1 BrO\\n Be,erl) Umver&lt;;ity. Oct. 3-6. On Sunday. Oct. 3, Dixon will
Coomb&lt;&gt;. MJll1e George. Olhe Pickens. Irene Le\\I .
peak during the morning and evening sen•ices at)l
Jenetta Bower!&gt;. Dom a\\ II on anti Hazel Persinger A a m. and 6 p.m. and Monday-Wednesday at 7 p.m.
pect.tl pcaker D 1n \\ I
from Pomero) B.ipU
D1xon is a graduate of Tennessee Temple Universit
poke of tn I'&gt; nd u
r hfe. She IS A S
and holds a doctorate in education from the
Teller The Iad1e the
us&lt;,ed a tnp to th
Uni,er ity of Cincinnati. He sened as president of
Port mouth \\all
Cedan ille Unhersity for 25 years and became chanNe\\ bu'&gt;meo;s \\a d1o;cu '&gt;ed A goal \\as et for Ra) cellor in 2003. During hi tenure as pre~ident. enrollRobert State Mis ionary offenng. InformatiOn and ment increased by more than 150 percent, the faculty
oftenng envelope'&gt; are placed m the pe\\s. French Cit) grew threefold. and the Unhersity added more than
Baptist io; the drop off for Operation Christmas Child. $100 million in facilities.
Sam.tntan Pur~e The) dJ'iCUS5ed a \\Omen's retreat
For many years Dixon has been a popular speaker
111 Cheshire on Sept. 25.
for profes~ional ~ports chapel programs, Bible conferOlhc Pickens read"'\\ hen I'm on My Knees" by ences, church en ices and school event...
Anita Donahue. Mrs Brown read "Remember your
For infom1ation, contact First Baptist Church at
(740) 446-0324.

Dixon to speak

Gallipolis

.1, ·

Life Chain set for Oct. 3
GALLIPOLIS - Life Chain Sunday will be
observed on Oct. 3 in Gallia County. The annual prolife event is cheduled from 2:30-3:30 p.m.
Organizers plan to meet at Ohio River Plaza and line
up along Ea!'o.tern A\enue in Gallipoli~.

Church of Christ meetings

Jillian Cockran and Brandon Fitch

COClZl~AN­

FITCH
ENGAGEMENT

GALLIPOLIS The church of Christ in
Gallipolis meet at 234 Chapel Drive. Sunday meeting time are 9:30a.m. for Bible cJa,::.: 10:30 a.m. fo.
worship; 5 p.m. for C\ening ns,embly. Bill Mead" il
be ~peaking Oct. 3 at the morning assembly. The
church "ill be attending the go ..pel meeting at
Bid\\ ell for the e\ening as~embly Oct. 3. The service
begins at 6 p.m. The church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesda) for Bible ~tudy.
In keeping with New Testament teaching and exanlple, the Lord'" Supper is remembered each first day of
the week .md singmg is vocal, \\ ith no instrumental
accompaniment. Free by-mail Bible courses are
offered. and there arc Christians who would be glad to
study the Bible with you personall) in your home.
Just ,end your name and postal address to the address
u......_ _ _ _-:~~-..k-----.--;:~....__ _ _ ___. r abO\e, or call 446-1494 to take ad,antage of either
Mason Christo pher Skidmore
-.en ice, Visit our \Veb -.ite \\" w.chapelhillchurchof&lt;:hrist.org.

SKIDMOI~E
Bll~THDAY

Mason Chn~tophcr Skidmore celebrated hi-. ~bah
birthday\\ ith fnmil) and f1 iends on Sept. IS at SJ...:yline
Jullian N. Cochran and Brandon L. Fitch, together Lanes He enJoyed a superhero binhday Lheme.
Mason IS a kindergarten student at Vmton
with their famihc'i. announce the1r engagement and
Elemental)' School. His classnMtes celebrated with
approaching marnage
The bride-elect i&lt;&gt; a 2003 graduate of Me1gs him during a clc~ss pat I) on Sept. 17.
Mason i the son of Christopher and Amy Skidmore
H1gh School. She 1s the daughter of Kim and
Wesley Cochr,m of Bidwell and Jennifer Clark of .md big brother to s1stcr. Reagan
Guests at ti\C pm1) mcludcd his p.trcnh and si ..ter.
Marietta, and the grandd,wghter of Thelma
Hurtso'ok of Bi-dwell, AIHI and Kr!len Clark oJ Granny Bee ,mel P&lt;~p:l\\ Jay Ricpen11oiT. Papaw Ron and
Rutland. and Phyllis CIMk of Pomeroy. and the MawMaw Vickie l lauldrcn Phalin, Grelll Grandpa Bob
great-granddaughter of i\lahcl ,111d the late Denzel Gwnt, (11 eat Aunt tvh1ppy Penny Ratliff. cousins Kelly
and Oln ia Ratlin, Margi Luyne. Little bric Skidmore.
Geoglcin of Pomeroy
Her fiance is ,1 2003 gradu,tte ot Eastern High Patty Skidmotc. Aunt Kay K Higley. Carol Smith.
School lie IS the son of J.mie ,md Bobby htch of Justm and 1 r.tcy Stump. Carrie Logun and girlfriend
Long Bottom .•111d the g11mdson ol Rudy and the Sydney Blmur. D&lt;~kota Scarberry, Jen!1ife1 Moles and
late lia1 old Brewer ,md Bob and Donna Fitch ot guest Trac) Rile) and Race i\1cLaughlm. Reed Allen.
Sending gifts \\er· Aunt Cissy Riepenhoff and
Long Bottom.
The invitation-only weddltl!;. \\ill be an event of cousms Lauren nnd l luntcr Riepenhoff.
The D.t\ 1d l c.tch fanuly celebrated ~1ason's birthOct. I0 at 2:30 p.m. ctl the Umted Methodbt Church
day earlier 111 the month wjth .tn Italian dinner.
in Long Bottom

Pet blessing
GALLIPOLIS - St. Peter\ Episcopal Church in
Gallipolis will host a pet blessing cere':non) at .1
p.m., Sunda), Oct. 3. The ceremon) ts bemg held m
honor of St. Francis of. A~~·dsi, patron saint of animals. Re'. Lc lie Flemming will otTer the blessing
for the animals. St. Peter·~ Episcopal Church is located at 541 Second AH~. in Gallipolis. For infom1ation.
call 446-2483.

NOW
OPEN SUNDAYS!
Everyone is welcome
*:Featuring NFL Sunday Games!
308 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, OH
740-446-9371

�Suud ay, October 3 ,

2010

ASK J) R.
BlzOTHE lz S

· lfriend too helpful
tr l&gt;r. Bro ther s:
lless my girlf1 iend
t bemg the selfish
'he really goes out
way tn help cvci~­
shc volunteers m
kitchens, sponsms
rican orphan, the
hul bit. The real pwb1

1 16

\\hen she tries to

people who don't
\
et help, like when
s 1 thmks senior citizens
r
help w.tlkmg mer
curb It s very embarra" m ''hen people give
I
Ius "Get away from
ook. Why docs she
.he has to do so
1 Can J get her to
L.W.
r L.W.: The best
lnr )OUr very helpirlfriend to t,tke
t
be to investigate
l&gt;he could be of the
help - I mean
here that would
J!Ct enough help. no
r
1 how hard people
t
and stick to that
1
She needs to
her eftorts on one
that she cnn
c deeply invohcd
cad of trying to be
kind of crazed
ce Nightingale trysave the world. You
lp her in this venim estlgating all
,Junteer and paid
!unities there are in
'" n. Find out what
led by e.tch organiand try to help her
kill et and intertth the place that
hem the most.
r girlfriend has
• rful instmcts for
•enerous and perven philanthropic.
e may have some
hat are drh ing her
extremes. If she
igns of rejecting
for herself, she
' I she doesn't
or ha n't \\Orked
thmgs she has. Or
y be feeling guilty
mtticular pre' iou
e or relationo;hip
lnch she was hurtful
t lughtless. In any
e 1f you can be
tl\e of her generure "hile helping
ck and choo e her
nts of helping a b1t
~;arefully. If he is
I to enJO) any
• t 11\ other than one
selfless, she may
ng a bit too far and
e givin~ in to some
I red thmking. She
1ecd some help to
the balance.

I

• ••
r J&gt;r. Ur othcrs:
n has had his ups
wns, and he seems
lo\\ n or depressed
often. He had a
bad reaction to
llions. and while
&lt;&gt; to ther,tpy regu-

larly, I really think he
needs something to bust
him out of the blues
between appointments.
He's a grown man now.
and cem to be doing
fine \\ ith hi job and his
socwl life, but he isn't
really passionate about
anything I'm aware of.
Do you know of any
simple and natural ways
to cope with depression?
-B.H.
Dea r B.H.: Your son
sounds like he is getting
along pretty well but
needs some way to keep
him on an even keel that
doesn't involve a lot of
heavy medication. The
fact that he is invested
enou~h in his mental and
emotiOnal health to go to
therapy is' encouraging,
and 1 am ure his thempi t will stay on top of his
condition and recommend medication if any
is w.trranted. But you
ha\e a great instinct in
\\antm~ him to have
somethmg in his life that
brings him some joy or
excitement.
Part of feeling occa~iional depre~;sion is that it
tends to flatten things out
and make it harder to
enjoy e\en simple pleasures. But I'd hke to propo e one Jdea that
lll\Ohe" a natural way to
boo t one' spirits. The
1dea revolves around
exercise - and it sounds
a though that's not e\en
on the radar for your son,
yet it hould be. A regular
form of exercise can
release endorphins and
make people feel better
e\ en as they sweat it out
- urely you·,e heard of
the runner's high? Of
course, running isn't for
e\eryone. But a new
focus on exercise as a natural form of antidepressant highlights an easier
sport that can be done
year-round and through·
out life; it's low-impact
and fun- and that would
be swimming. Part of its
appeal is that S\\ imming
laps. at your 0\\ n speed.
can imolve the repetitive
motions and deep breathing that yoga and meditation also prO\ ide.
(c) 2010 b) King
Features Syndicate

Keeping
Meigs &amp;
Galli a
informed
(!gallipoli~

i!lailp

\!Crtbune
Gallia
IVleigs

•

446-2342

•

992-2155

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbll!' 'a:tmcs -ii&gt;entmel • Page Ca

Libraries launch apps to sync with iPod generation
Bv JEANNIE Nuss
ASSOCIATED PRESS

GRANDV I bW
HEIGHTS, Ohio
Libraries are tweeting,
texting and launching
smart-phone apps as they
tr,y to keep up with the
bJblio-techs- n computer-savvy class of rcople
who considet can catalogs as vintage as typewriters. And they seem to
be pulling it off.
Since libraries started
rebnmding themselves for
the iP&lt;Xl genemtion, thousrulds of music geeks ha\e
downloaded free songs
from libr:uy \\ eb itcs. And
with manr more bookWOffilS wruting months to
check out wireless reading
devices, libraries arc shrugging off the notion that the
Internet shelved them
along ide dusty books
''People tend to ha\c this
antiquated 'ersion of
libraries, like there's not
much more in ide than
books and microfiche:' says
Hiller Goodspcc.d. a 22ycar-old graphtc designer in
Orlando. Fla., who use~ the
Or&lt;mge County Library
System's iPhone app to discovet foreign films.
The Jatest national dat:l
from the Institute of
Museum and Library
Sen ices how that library
visits and circulation
climbed nearly 20 percent
from 1999 to 2008.
Since then, experts say,
technoloi?y has continued
to dri\e m-person -. isits,
circulation and usage
"It also brings people
back to the librn.rr that
might ha\e left thmldng
that the hbrary wasn't
relevant for them,'' my
Chris Tonjes. the mformation technology dtrec-

tor at the public library in
Washington, D.C.
Public libmry systems
ha\C provided free Internet
access and lent movies and
music for years. They have
a good track record of
syncing up with past technological advances, from
vinyl to VHS.
"They've always had
competition," says Roger
Levien, a strategy consu ltant in Stamford,
Conn., who also serves
as :111 American Library
Association
fellow.
''Bookstores have existed
in the past. I'm sure they
will find ways to adapt."
Now, the digital sphere
is expanding: 82 percent
of the nation's more than
16,000 public libraries
have Wi-Fi- up from 37
percent four years ago,
according to the American
Library Association.
Since the recession
hit, more pt;,.op1e are
'turning to. li Braries to
sutf the Web and try out
digital ~adgets.
In Pnnceton, NJ., 44
people are waiting to borrow Kindles, a wireless
readin~ device. Roya
Karimtan, 32. flipped
th10ugh the preloaded epages of "Little Women"
after two months on the
waiting list.
"I had already read it,
but I wanted to experience readin~ it on the
Kindle," Kanmian says.
A WO"ing number of
libranes are launching
mobile web ites and smartphone ap_elications, says
Jason Gnffey, author of
"Mobile Technology and
Libraries." No one keeps
tabs of exactly how many,
but a recent iPhone app
search sho\\ ed more than a
do7.cn public libraries.

The Grandview Height'&gt;
Public Lib~dl)' m suburban
Columbus, Ohio, spent
$4,500 - a third of what
the library spent on CD~
-to give patrons access to
songs by artists from
Beyonce to Merle Haggard
using a music-downloading service called l•rcegal.
Online sen ices point
to technology as a
cheaper means to boost
circulation.
The Cuy,1hoga County
Public Library tlcnr
Cleveland laid off 41
employees and cut back
on hours after its budget
shrank by $10 million.
But it still mamtain a
Twitter account and texts
patrons when items are
about to become overdue.
As more libraries log on
to social medta, their lexicon is changmg, replacing
"Shh!" with "LOL" In
Florida, the Orange
County library's Twitter
feed sounds more like a
frat boy than a librarian:
'There's more to OCLS
than just being really, really ridiculously good looking. We created an Appl"
Crops of social networking sites :u·e popping up
specifically for bookworms
- electronic or otherwise
-and library junkies.
Jennifer Reeder. a 35year-old mother of two
in suburban Phoenix,
tracks her reading stats
on
Goodread .com:
12,431 pages so far th1s
year - most of them in
library books.
"When I was grow ing
up. J al\\ays felt like a
1ibrary wa \\here I '' a
supposed to go and like do
homework," Reeder says.
Now. it's where she
checks out audio books
for her kid · iPods and

sates her addiction to
1Tunes wnh free downloads of songs by PinJ
and the cast of ''Glee··
Even the bnck-andmortar buildin~
are
evolving, as hbrarres
cater to a generation with
smart phones stapled to
the1r hands and mus1c
pl ugged into their ears.
Sleek study areas !?1ve
off a coffee-shop v1be,
while si lence seekers are
relegated to nooks. Sellcheckout stations feel
more like supermarkets,
with patrons ringing up
books and DVDs instead
of boxes of cereal.
Libraries are designing
new branches as hybrid
technology centers dedicating more space to
computer labs and meeting rooms.
The Central Library in
Seattle houses some 400
public computers some of them clu'\tered m
rows with cafeteria-chic
chairs. compared with 75
computers in the old
buildinf?. The building
opened m 2004 and looks
more hke Prank Gehry's
Guggenheim Museum in
Bilbao, Spain, than the
imP.osing stone or brick
blll ld in~ that's come to
symbolize a library.
"The traditional function of a lib~.try, of being
a place where people can
come to get information.
to learn. to relax, to kind
of lose themselves in
books, i going to contmue," says Tonjes, of
the D.C. Public Library.
"It's just not going to be
constrained by physical
boundaries."
(011l1ne:

twitrer.com/oclslibran;
www.good reads. com;
http://www.ala.org.)

New to the Castrop Center*University Medical Associates Diabetes and Endocrine Center • Diabetes Education Center
• Athens CGncer Center
(North s1de of the Castrop Center)
Aaron 0. Williams, MD

(740) 566-4600

• Athens Medical Associates** -

• O'Bieness Satellites** -

O'Bieness LGboratory

(740) 566-4520

O'Bieness PGtient RegistrGtion

(740) 566-7317

Acupuncture Gnd OsteopGthic Mt~nlpult~tion
Anna K. Wright, DO
(740) 594-8819

O'Bieness lmt~glng Services**
(740) 566-4540
Bone Density · Mammography · X-ray

Orthopedics ofSoutheGst Ohio
Jason A. Reed, DO
Briana Furman, PA·C·

(740) 566·4640

O'Bieness RehGbllitGtion Center** (740) 592-9326
Physical Therapy

River Rose
Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
Bruce B. Banias, MD
Kathleen M. Bertuna, 00
Jane E. Broecker, MD
MIChael J. Clark, 00
Jody M. Gerome, DO
Jack M. Ramey, 00
Anna K. Wnght, 00

(740) 594-8819

• Athens Surgery Center**

(740) 566-4500

0 '8/eness Sharing Hope Boutique** (740) 592·9270
• Orthopedic Surgery
Stephen J. Voto, MD

{740) 753·7323

• PodiGtry, PodiGtric Surgery
Earl L Driggs, DPM

(740) 592·5799

• Spine PhysiGtry Gnd Pt~in MGnGgement
Yeshwant PReddy, MD
(800) 527·9022

• ARHI Dit~betes EducGtion Center@OU-COM*.
Karen Bailey, f.:1S, RD, LD*
(740) 566-4870
Barbara Nakanishi. RD. LD, CDE*
(740) 566-4870
Carol Merckle, DTR, RN*
(740) 566-4872
• Eye Physicians &amp; Surgeons
ofAthens
Cra1g H. Dodrill, MD
Jeffrey F. McAdoo, MD

(740) 592·4461

• GenerGI Surgery
Neal J. Nesbitt, MD. FACS

(740) 594-6100

• The DrugStore
Ben A. Holter, PharmD

(740) 566-4690

• University Medical Associates (740) 566-4880
Endocrine Gnd 0/Gbetes
Christ iane Benson, CNP•
Randall ColucCI, DO*
Aili Guo, MD*
Cara O'Shaughnessey, 00, D1abetes Fellow*
Frank L. Schwartz, MD*
Jay H. Shubrook, DO*

FGmlly Medicine
Linda B. Tome, DO

(740) 594-.4476

•lnternGI Medicine, Infectious DiseGse
Andrew R. Murry, MD
(740) 687-8805

Otorhlnolt~ryngology (Ear, Nose ant/Throat}
Michael W. Tome, DO, FACOO
(740) 594-4476

• lnternGI Medicine, Nephrology
John P. Maclaurin, DO

(800) 292-0076

PGthology
Scott A. Jenkmson, DO, FCAP

•Neurology
Gary E. Cording ley, MD, PhD, FAAN

(740) 594·8147

• Neurosurgery
Ward P. Buster, DO

(800) 527-9022

• 0Gkvlew DermGtology
Dawn L. Sammons, DO
Nilthan P. Mlsel, PA C

(740) 566·4621

O'BLENESS

{740) 566-4530

~

H EALTH SYSTE M

CASTROP CENTER • O'Bieness Med ical Park • 75 Hospital Dr., Athens, OH

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

.

.

�.........,

Sunda) October 3,

$lunlM1' \!:tmes -~enttnrl • Page C4

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

Are we raising a generation of nincompoops?
BY BETH

J.

lc "rth the mcchamc~ of

HARPAZ

clothe\ hanger."
Many kich ne\er learn
to do ordinary hou~chold
1 sb. They ha\ e no
chotc.-. Tukc-out and
dfl\ c through meals have
tcpl. ccd home cooking.
And busy fmmJiec; \\ho
can aff01d tt often out'iOUrl.:c hou'&gt;c-cleaning
.tnd lawn care.
"It's so all laid out for
them," said ~1uush,1rt,
author of the forthcomin • book "The Winter ot
Out Disconnect," about
hc.·r el fm1s to \\ ean her
fttmtly from its dependence on technology.
"lla\ rn • c;o much comfort and e.1se 1s what has
Jed to thJ'i srtuation- the
Velcro -.neakcrs. the Pullt..,;ps ~cner,llion You can
pee m ) our pants and
\I.e II take care ol it for
)Ou'"
The assue hit home for
me when a 'isiting 12)C.u-old took an ice-cube
tray out of my freezer.
then stared at it helplessly Raised in a world
"here refrigerators ha\ e
pu~;h-button ice-makers,
he'd ne\er had to get
cube-; out of a tray
in
the s,une \\ ay that k1ds
gro\\ mg up wnh pull-tab
can&lt;; don't underst&lt;tnd
c.tn opcn~rs.
But h1s passi\ tl) was
\\hat both.:ted me most.
( omc on. ktd 1 If your life
dependt.:d on it. couldn't

.1

you wre tie that tee cube de\ clop thor..e 'kills until
tray to the ground? It'
they arc older. Sure. harnot that compltcated'
ried p&lt;trents are gmteful
Mark Bauerlein, &lt;~uthor for Velcro when they're
of the best-selhng book tt)'ing to get a k1d dressed
"1 he
Dumbest and out the door. and
Generatron," whtch con- chilchenlemn to tie .;,hoes
tends that cyberculture is eventu.tlly unlesc; they
turning )'(Hill~ people have a real di&lt;oability. But
rnto know-nothmgs, says if they're capable of
"the ttbsence of technolo- learning to tic their c;hoes
gy" contuse., kids faced before they le.trn to read.
with Simple mcch~u11cal ~houldn 't we encourage
tusks.
them?
But 13.1llerlci n says
Some skills, of couro;e,
there\ a second factor: are no longer useful.
"a loss of independence Kids don't need to know
and a los., of initiathe." how to add Roman
He .1ys that gro\\-ing up numerals. \\rite cursive
w1th cell phones and or look thing-; up in a
Googlc means kids don't p.tpet bound thesaurus.
ha\c to figure thmgs out But ac; snail mail already
or .,ohc problems any so
outmoded
that
more. They can look up teen&lt;~gers don't need to
what the) need onhne or know ho\\ to address an
call mom or dad tor step- envelope or put the stamp
by ~-ttep mstrucuons. And 111 the nght spot'l A"&gt;k a
today's helicopter par- 15-ycar old to prepare an
ent" arc m~rc th.m happ,Y c;welope some time; )OU
to obltgc, whtthcr thctr might be shocked at the
kids are 12 or 22.
'
result.
"It's the dependence
Lenore Skena1y. who
factor. the unirn&lt;~ginabili­ writes a popular blog
ty ol life without the new called Free-Range Kid-;,
technology, th&lt;lt is mak- based on her hook by the
ing kids less entreprc- same name, has a differncurhll. lese; initi.ttt\C· ent tnke. Skenaty, whose
01 icnted, less indepenapproach to {&gt;&lt;~renting IS
dent,'' Bauerlein said.
decidedly ana-helicopter,
Teachers in kinder- agrees that we arc partly
garten have ,tl\\ays had to to blame for our chilshow patience with chil- dren's apparent incompedren learnmg to tie shoes tence. starting when they
and zip J.tcketc;, but are infants.
thanks to Velcro do&lt;;ures.
'There is an onslaught
today· kids often don't of tuff being sold to u-;

from the scl:ond they
come out of the \\omb
trying to convmcc us that
they art: mn ompoops.''
'&gt;he .ttd 11t~:) need to
go to Gymhorc 01 they
\\Ill nc\eJ hum and c.l.tp'
I o teach them how to
w.1lk, you'1e &lt;,uppo~cd to
turn ) our chJid 111to a
marionette hy str.1ppmg
this thing on them that
hold~ them up be~o au-.e 11
helps them balance more
naturally than 30,000
years of C\ oluunn '"
Dcsptte
.til
tht'&gt;,
SJ...enMy thmks tod.1y'c;
kids arc "ay smarter than
''e gtve them crcdtt lor
"They kno\\ how to
ch.mge a photo c..tpllon
on ,J dt llal photo and
o;end tt to a tnend 1bey
can add the -.mtlcy face
w1thout the colon and
parentheses 1 They ne\et
took I) pmg but the) c,m
I) pe f.l"&gt;ter than I ~.:an, .•
H&lt;1d I not been there to
help lh.tt 12 yeat old
\\ Jth the Jcc cube tray,
she ,1ddcd, the ktd urel)
would have .." htpped out
his 1Phone and chcked on
his icc cube app to get a
little video animated by a
6-year-old that explt~incd
how vou get ice cube-;
out o( a trdy."
rnends pl&lt;~ymg de\ 11\
ad\ocate say I'm wrong
to indtct a \\hole generation for the dedine of
-.ktll they don't need
After .Ill. \\ e 1'10 lon er

have to gro\\ crops, shoot
deer, pnmc a pump or
milk a cow to make dinner but 1t \\-as ju&lt;.t a couple of generations ago
th&lt;~t you couldn't survive
111 many places without
th,tt knowledge.
Other&lt;. ..ay this is simply the last gasp of tl.
.malog era as we mo
once and for all to th
digital age. In I 0 years.
there Wl~n't be any icc
cube tmy'&gt;. every fridge
\\ill ha\e push button ice.
But Bauerlein, a prolc-.sOJ
at
E-.mory
lm,eNt} \\ ho has studted culture and American
life. defends my right to
r.ul agam&lt;,t the ignorance
of youth
· fhat'~ our JOb as we
get old.' he sa1d. "A
healthy 5-0cicty 1s health}
only 1f 1t has some degree
of tension between older
and younger generations.
Jt's up to u-. old folks to
remmd teenager': 'The
\\ orld didn't begin on
)OUr 13th birthday!' And
11'~ good for kids to
resent th.tt and to argue
back. We want to critiCize and pro\oke them.
It's not healthy for the
older generation to say.
'Kids a~e kids, they A
gtowup.
"They \\On't gro"" up.''
he Jdded, "unless you do
your job by knocking
do\\ n the!I hubris."

Medicine: $93,000 cancer drug: How m~ch ·sa life worth?
BY MARILYNN
MARCHIONE

drugs ha\ e been toppmg
$5.000 a month. Only a
few of these keep cancer
m rem1sc;ion so long that
they arc. 111 effect, cures.
I or most people, the
drug!'i may buy a fC\\
month" or \caro:;. Insurers
usually pay 1f Medicare
p. \ s But o;ome people
hm hletJmc c.1p!) and
more people .tre unm
t d be m e ot JOb la.&gt;1
h re e-.-.wn The
n tt n nt.: h lth ~;are
Ia"' eltmmates these hfetun hm1ts for plans that
\
1
t&lt;.c;ued or rene\\ ed
S pl 23 or later
Cel cne
Corp '!i.
Rc\ hm1d p1l1 tor multiple
my cloma, a I) pe of blood
~a• cer ~.:.In ntn a much
a" I 0.000 .1 month, so
l:an Genentech"s A\aStm
tor certam cancers. No\\
Dendreon
Corp.'s
Provenge rockets price
mto a ne\\ orb1t.
Vnhke drugs that people can try for a month or
I\\ o and keep u"ing only
if they keep responding.
Pro\ cnge is an all-ornothmg $93.000 gamble.
It's a one-time treatment
to tram the immune system to fight prostate
tumors. the firc;t so-called
"cancet \ accinc.'' Part of
"hy it co ts so much is
th,u u· not .t pill cranked
out m a lab, but a treatment th&lt;~t 1s mdl\ idually
prepared. using each
patient's cells and n protem found on most
p10st.1lt.: cancer cells. It is
expcnsi\ e .md time-consuming to make.
It·., .tlso in short sup·
ply, forcing the first
mtwning of a cancer drug
since T&lt;txol and Taxoterc
were app1 oveJ 15 year..,
.tgu. At the Uni,·ersity of
Tex.ts M.D. Andason
Cancer Center, doctors

plan a modified lottery to
decide wh1ch of ats 150
or so eligtble patients
"'ill be among the t\\ o a
month it can treat with
PrO\ enge. An insur.111cr
pre-check is p&lt;~rt of the
process to ensure they
financially qualif) lor
treatment
''I'm fearful th.tt thts
\\til become a dnt for
\\ 1th
m r
people
re"ource" and less a\a I
ablt.: or pe pte with e
rc-.ources. sa1d M D
Ander on's prostate can
ccr research ch1ef. Dr
Chmtopher l ogoth t1c;
For other p 11 nt
other drug . mon
nlre.Id) IS aftectmg care
• Job losses h,l\ c led
ome people to stop taking Glce\ec, a $4.500-a·
month drug by Novartis
AG that keeps certain
leukemias and stomach
cancers in remission.
Three such cases were
recent!) de!&gt;cribcd in tf1e
t'\C\\ England J(~urnal ot
Medicine. and nil those
patients ulfered relap ... ~s.
• Kctirements are being
delayed to preo:;en c insurance CO\eragc of cancer
drugs. Holly Keid, 58. an
account.tnt in No\ato,
Calif., hoped to retire
early until she tried cutung back on Glee' ec and
her cancer recurred. "I'm
convinced nO\\ 1 ha'e to
take this drug fo1 the re"t
of my hfe" and
ha\e
to work until eli~1ble for
Medicare. o:;he o:;md.
• Lifetime c.tps on
insurance benefits arc hitting many p.tticnt:... .mel
lm' s nrc bemg pushed in
dotcns of st.ttcs to get
""ider CO\ era~c of L'ann:r
drugs. Jn QUIIK'). Ma .... ,
30-ycar-old g1~1d student
Thea Sh(1\\ stack tc&lt;;tilicd
for nne such lei\\ after

''ill

pharmacists said her fiN
cancer
prescriptiOn
exceeded her o:;tudent
insurance limit. "The)
said 'OK, that will be
~I. 900,"' she said. ''I ~\a'&gt;
absolutely panicked." 'fhe.
tedcr,tl health care Ia\\
torbtds such caps on
pl.ms Issued or rene\\ ed
Sept 23 or later
• fen of thousands ot
pic
ep
mdru
~h

d

I

med n
copayo:; or lo\\
attento; Genent c
patients has n
ch f the lac;t t
ar and the corn
ty nearly 85 percent t
Amencans earn les~ Lhan
$100.000. makmg them
potentmlly elig1ble for
help if no other programs
like Medicaid will pa)
• Doctors and in&lt;,urers
incre,lo:;ingly are doing
the cruel math that mam
cancer patients want to
a\ oid, and questioning
hem
much
\mall
imprmemcnts in sun hal
arc worth. A recent editorial in a medical journal
asked \\ hether the extra
II
"eeks
that
Genentech 's Herceptin
bu) s for stomach cancer
patient
justified the
S21 .500 cost
Doctors also ha\e
que"&gt;tioned the \alue of
Genentech ·s Tarce\ a for
pancreattc cancer. The
$4,000-a-month
drug
\\On npprO\al b) boosting median sunhal h) a
mere 12 days. Here·.,
ho\\ to think about thi'\'
cost: People \\ ho added
T.lrl'C\ el
to "tandard
clwmotheJapy lived n~dr­
ly 6 1/2 months. \CP.. u-. 6
months for thos~ on
chcmo almw. So the
!arc~' a folks spent more

Church Notebook
Revive Can1p
l\1eeting

J
i
I
cbaptists.org.
Online .11 \\\\\\.ebap1i &lt;,ls.Or!!.

CJAII IJ&gt;Ol IS GAl
liPOL IS
I he Rc\1\e
( unp Me m ""Ill be
h ld Oct
9 .11 the
f nt rpn
B.tptrst Youth
( mp.
I 'i60
Nihctt

Miitisterial
Association
1neeting

Ro.1d
~en

C~.tllq&gt;Oh'&gt;

JCes he Ill ,It 7 p.m
,u;h s The folio\\ ing
&lt;: v.m~' I. ,f \\111 he spc.tk
rnr Oct 7. Mtkc
Bltnton, Oct H. Gem •c
Holley· Ckt 9, ( .1lvlll
R.ty
l v.ms
Spcct,ll
IIHNC \\Ill be prO\ tded
by I \ rd~ nee. W.1dc
lipcn rr
.md
fhc
R ,,., l.md' I or mfo1 m.t
II ( ,,
I ( II
6S

m

clerk~

GALLI POLIS GALl lPOLIS The Gallia
Arc,l
Ministerial
A-;(jociatiun will meet at
noon on Wcdncsda), Oct.
J 3 at hr:.t Presby ten an
C'hun.:h in Gallipolis. All
G.tlli.t County pa.,tors are
inv1tecl to the meeting
Bnng ,1 brown bag lunch
and JOIIl other pastor for
pt l) r fellowship and
dr U\'ilOil ol nc\\ mtn

...

i try op~ortunities. For
informatton, call Re\
I.e lie Flemming at St.
Peter's Epi'&gt;COJ&gt;&lt;tl Church
.tt 446-2483 or e-mail
lesheflemming @columbuc;.rr.com.

Hon1econ1ing at
\Vilkesvillc
1\Jlethodist
WILKESVILLE
\V I L K I ~ S V I L L 1:.

Wilkesville 1\.kthodist
Church "ill ho t horne·
coming servkcs h~~in­
ning ett 9 a.m .. Sunday,
Oct. 17. Sunday school
bcgi n&lt;; .11 I0 :.1 m. A c,tiT)in dmner "ill be '&gt;Cncd
.11 12 30 p m The .tltcl

noon sen ice v. ill begm at
1:30pm.

Guatemala
pastor to speak
J \CKSON J \CKSON
Re\. Jo\huc Barrios from
Guatemala \\j!) be the
guest spe.1ker on Sunda).
Oct. 3 nt End Time
llancst Church The scr' icc \\ill begin at II a.m.
The dnm·h Is located at
1215 Dixon Run Road
off the Ohlll 327 exit of
LJ.S. 35. J'hc1e \\ill be
special singing and
pmycr lor the afflicted.
Dinne1 will be sened folIO\\ ing. the set\ ice J·or
mform.llion. call (740)
645 305.2

than $24.000 to get those
extra 12 days.
\\ hen IS a drug O)ISid
erect cost-effedl\ e?
The most v. idcly quot
ed figure t&lt;, $50,000 for a
ye,lf of hfe. "thou •h it
has been thett for decades
never really .tdjustcd
and not written m
tone." sa1d Dr Harlan
Knlmholl,
a
Y&lt;~le
l 1\ er it
expert on
lth car co t
\1 m n r dnt ·~ are
y ()\ er th.ll m.1rk:
ttmatc'&gt; of the cost f a
f

h~

.l

~

lung c.mcer patient on
E:rbttux ran e from
300,000 to as much a&lt;&gt;
$800.000. Jtd J&gt; . Len
L1chtenfeld.
the
Arnencan
Cancer
Society's deput) chtef
medical ofhcer
H1gher cosh '&gt;cem tn be
more accepted for cancer
treatment th.m for other
illnesses, but there s no
rule on ho\\ much ts too
much. he said.
Insurers usually me the
.ones to decide. and the)
t) picall) pa) 11 Mcdic.trt.:
pay . Med1care u.,uall)
pa)" 1f the fedcr.tl Food
and Drug Adnum~tJation
has apprO\cd the u&lt;,e
"In urance o;ort of tso·
ldtes you from the ~oost of
health care." ,md tf people Jose CO\ erage. the)
often dtsCO\er the) c.m t
afford the1r medtcmes.
sa1d Dr Al,m \enook . .1
cancer speciah'&gt;t at the
Unl\er.,Jt\ of C.1hfo1m.t,
San l·rancts o He "rotc
m the N C\\ E:.n ~ J.md
Journdl Jn Ali!;USt cthout
three of h1s pattcnb "'ho
stopped tak1ng 01 &lt;.ut

back on Glee\ ec &amp;cause
of economtc hard hip.
1 wo of the three no"'
are getting the drug from
11 maker NO\ artis AG,
"htch like fuo&lt;;t pharmaceutical ~;ompanies has a
program for low-income
p.tticnts. About ·s.ooo
p.1t1ents got help for
Glee\ ec last ) car. o.;aid
Novartis
spokesman
Geoffrey Cook.
Sho\\ stack,
leukemia \\as ma.gnt~sea'
!.1st vear, gets
from ·~O\ rtis. The
she ., on OO\\ "auld
50.000 a ) ear.
"I m not actua11) ure
that I knov. any one "'ho
could afford it.'' she said.
Glee\-ec's co&lt;,t is ea ier
to JUo:;tify, man) ay,
be au e 1t keep people
.1h\ e mdefinitel) - a \ Jrtual cure. About 2.300
Amen cans d1cd each) ear
of ShO\\ stack's form of
leukemia before Glee\ ec
came on the market: only
470 did last year
"I don't think we quibble
"ith a drug that bu) s people magical quality of life
tor )Cars," \enook smd.
lt'" unclear \\ hether
PrO\ en roe v. ill e\ er do
that
rt needs to be testeJ m men with earlier
&lt;;tage of prostate c~ncer.
doctors -.a) So far. tt ha
onl) been tried and
appro,ed for men \\Jth
mcurelble dJ&lt;;ease \\ ho
h,l\ e ~topped re pondil.
to honnone thernp). G
ci\Cr.tge. It ga\C them
four
month~
more.
though for some it
extended sun h a! hy n
year or more

COIN SHOW
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 2010
9:00a.m. - 3:00p.m.
Featurrng

MTS COINS

Over 15 Dealers
Holiday Inn
SR7N • Gallipolis, 0

�&lt;

Sunday, Octob er 3, 2010

w

~,.

Po m e r oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbn!'

"&lt;ltune

~~enttnel

• Page Cs

Dorie Greenspan : French food, flaming kitchens

selling "Baking with Julia,'' a
comp&lt;mion to the public televi:,ion series. which put Greenspan
on the culinary map.
"1 ne\ er could have expected I
would have this life," Greenspan
says. ·•nut I also feel like 1alwn)
say ')es.'.Saying '&gt;es' has really
been part of my being able to
ha\e this arna1Jngl) luck.')' life."
But it hasn't been all luck.
Greenspan is known for the precision and eminent readability of
her recipe . She often gesticulates
abm e her ke) board to figure out
how best to dco;cribe a kneading
or mixing technique, and tests
each fC(..ipe multiple times before
turning it O\er to professional .
"She's very, \Cry concerned
about details," says Herme.
France's most famous pasty chef,
whom Greenspan calb her
"friend &lt;md mentor in all things
sweet.'' When she writes a
tpe she bake jt once. twice,
tun
st to make sure the
"111 be able to do
th reclpe

Like cookmg, Paris was lo'e at
s1ght After a bti;f, budgetconscious trip as a newlywed
Greensp&lt;m devoted her life to
going back as often as possible
Like cooking, Pari was love at
first stght. After a brief, budgetconsctous tnp as a newlywed
Greenspan de\oted her life to
going back as often as possible
and to one day having a home
there. " I had ideas about Paris, I'd
seen movies," she says. "But I
could not have predicted that I
would have reacted thJs way.
Nothing had e"cr hit me like that,
and nothing has hit me like that
since."
A little more than a decide ago,
Greenspan and her husb&lt;md,
M1chael, finally found a flat in the
Left Bank. "Tius \\a a charming
apartment right across from the
Church of St.-Gennain-Deo;-Pres,
the heart of the most romantic,
the most written-about part of
Paris," she says "It \\as an amazmg place to be.'' With one tiny
dmwback.
"It didn't ha\e an oven," she
says.
A baker with no oven? "I
couldn't bake," she says. "But
what you can do on two burners
with a Dutch men is amazin!!."
Apparently you can do creamy
mu hroom soup with white wine
and cht\es; ch1cken tagine sweet-.
ened wJth saffron &lt;md prunes:
and a springtime \eal stew laced
with arugula and pinach. And
you can el'\e them on your
French table, ~ hich, if you're
Greenspan. i always groarung
\\ ith food and people.
"Doric will te11 you \\hen she
inVJtc ) ou that eight people are
coming. and then she end up
inviting 14,'' Fairchild a)S.
"Somehow. magically 14 people
appear. But there's always
enough food.''
Greenspan 1s blunt that her
new rcc1pes are not cla,sica11y
French, that they are her specific
take on Paris. a thoroughly modern mterpretation of what real
Parisians arc really cooking
today. Which make-. her a bit like
Child, who trdllslated the ways of
French cooking for an earlier
generation of Americans. Of
course, Greenspan is wary of
putting herself in such grand
compatl).
"1lu i my ' iey, ," Greenspan

gre&lt;it pru.tf) chef:' Henne c1dds.
"But y, hen &gt;ou tell thi to her, she
say::;
no. no, I'm nothing.'
When I make orne compliment.
she hate that •·

anybody would 10\e, that Julia
would love. She lo'ed knowing
\\hat' ne\\. But it's definitely
French Toda) 's French.''

B Y MICHELE K AVAL

fi~t

FOR THE ASSOCIA 0 PR SS

A fe" pecans. A prinkl" of
Annagnac. Wh) not? Done
Green pan thought
A bottom-nmg bake1 in n chichi New York kitchen. Green pan
bored making the same cake
after day, nnd decided sub~tipecans &lt;md Armagnacl for
almond-; and whiskey in the
rc~taumnt's signature confection
would shake things up. It \~as
such a success she w:ts calledjnto
the boss' office at the end of the
day.
And fired
"She fired me for 'ere ti.. e
insubordination,"' Green pan
sa) s. "No''· as a gTO\\ n-u . I
thmk that' a g~ thing to be.
creati,ely insubordinate. At the
time it made me m1 mble:·
The best- elling cook lOk
author made her
e by wn ing
about the recipes f mao;t like
Julia Child, Daniel Boulud and
French pastry ch~f P1~n:c. Hem1e
with near-papal mfalhb1hty But
today Greenspan . has put her
voice 111e best· elbng cook X&gt;k
author made her name by w~ting
about the recipes of masters like
Julia Child, Daniel Boulud and
rrench pastl) chel Pierre Henne
with ncar-papal infallibilit). But
today Greenspan ha put her
. e a "ry, anecdotal style that
won her legions of fan a
•
wry. anecdotal style that has \on
her legions of fans and her &gt;Wn
creaU\e viston ftrst.
"Around My French Tubl her
I Oth and late t
kbook 1 ullfrontal Green pan, a com
to her 2007 Jrune Beard a ard
\\inner. "Baking from My H me
to Yours." The new book
a
shift in her identity from b r to
all-around cook. and capture the
glan1our of her ltfe ru n part t me
Parisian.
"It's the essence of Done r.;rsonality and of C\erythin she
lo\es," says Bon ppcllt ciduorin-chlef Barbara Fairchtl . a
friend for nearly t\\ o de
"Her writing has nlwuy&lt;&gt;
very, \el)' good But 0\
years n' become more
me
Her pc.rsonaltt)
no\\ more than ever"
And there's more of th
come For her n t book
to come. For her next
k
released m 20 13 t be
m 20 13 Green p.m will
" ith mao;ter che~ and
use what he learns to ~-reat yet
more of her own ipe&lt;;
Greeno;pan leads the ki

Alan Ricllardson/AP photo

Dorle Greenspan, the bes1-selllng
cookbook author, made her name by
wr!Ung about the recipes of masters
like Julia Child, Daniel Boulud and
French pastry chef Pierre Henne with
near-papal JnfallibiDty.

chrumed existence you only get
by ha\ ing saved a boatload of
l&gt;rphans in a previous life. From
her home base in Manhattan, she
spends a few months a year m
Paris, and now and then visits her
house in Connecticut. She has
worked elbow-to-elbow with
Jean-Georges Vongcricheten,
Alain Ducasse and, of course.
Child. She has cooked for
Jacques Pepin, &lt;md had Henne
O\er for Thank&lt;;giving. She
counts illustriou'i food writers
like Patricia Wello;, Alex,mder
Lobrano and Da' id LeboVItz c~s
fnend . And though she's
unknown to Food Network
JUnkie and celebnty chef
groupte , Greenspan i one of the
best-recogni;,.ed names in the
cookbook "orld with a Jo,., -kc)
but loyal fan base that has devoted enure blogs to cooking from
her books.
Plu , she's really. really nice
''She is a very thoughtful person." ays Laune Woodward, a
33-year-old Sta)·at-home mother
of three \\ho created 'Tuesday-;
With Dorie," a blog de\ oted to
making the more than 230 recipes
in "Baking From My Home to
Yours.'' "She really apprecmtes
that evenone cook from her
books. and he' been 'Cf) supporuve of the group. If) ou e-mail
her he e-mruls you back v.1thm
I 0 nunutes."
"Tuesdays with Dorie" has
about 200 member~. some of
whom v.11l \\att more than a ~ear
for thelf turn to bake. But
Woodward'
next
proJect,
"French Fndays with Done,·

alre.tdy has signed up nearly 700
people to cook from the new
book. Why such de\otion?
''llcr books become like a
fnend m the kitchen," Woodward
say~. "Her style is so familiar. It's
like ~our gmndma in the kitchen
with you telling you \\hat to do."
Not bad for a woman whose
cookmg career could have ended
m 7th gmde, when he burned
do\\n her mother's ne\\ly renovnted kitchen. She didn't touch a
sto\e agrun until o;he had to. as a
)Oung bndc. In a kitchen no bigger than a closet. Greenspan
learned to cook from books And
dJscovercd that she lo\ed it.
'') was a pa sion.tte. crazy,
obsessed home cook and baker,"
she says.
A brief turn m restaurant
kitchens ( md the infamous
pecans and Anna
mc1dent)
com U}\:Cd Green patl th t she
\\ n't m de [I re ta
t life
and o;hc turned
S
l.mded her fi :t
ne ece
the l 980s by o;endm Food d
\\ me editors 1 ba..,ket of deh.:ctable truffle ..t d lath More
psece follov.ed
d then books.
A book
akes A book
about ~,.,ee
mall books.
and then th
ckpot the be :t-

'She 1s a \ery great cook and insists. ''11us is my little pe~onal
\\Orld. I thmk this 1~ food that

Meli sa Clark: Recipes are only 90 percent of it
B Y MICHELE KAVAL
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The pork rihs amved m
the CSA box. A quick dig
through the fridge turned
up a \\ ithering green
tomato. An orange and
the usual garlic and herb.:;
sat a bit further back.
"The \\ ay dishes come
together in my head, they
come together 90 per
cent," say Meli a Clark,
whose new book ''In the
Kitchen with a Good
petite"
(H) perion
10) encourage pia) ing
h your food unttl 11
tes good to you. "You
ay 'This is what I have in
the fridge, this is \\ h, t
I'm hungry for, this is
what 1 bought "'
A dash of this, a
squeeze of that, a ~prinkle
and a grind later. and
Clark had a delcctahle
pork dinner (you can find
the recipe on her hlog,
melissaclark.net).

t

This i~ called improvisation. and it scare~ a lot
of people. But Clark
swears anyone can do it.
"You have to take that last
10 percent and make it
your own," she says.
Here's how:
Focus on balance
Complexit)
comes
fro m balancing sweet,
salt, ac1d and pungent.
S\\ eet can be ~ugar,
honey, hoisin. Salt can be
capers.
pickles,
anchovies. Acid equals
'megar or citrus. Pungent
is ) our garlic and onions.
Some ingredients do double duty, like Clark's
orange. \vhich provided
both sweet and acid.
Make sure each b represented m your dish and
it's hard to screw up.

Or turkey Try lamb in
place of hecf.
Grind, squeeze. dash
Cooking integrates flavors, but it also softens
them. So be sure to reeason when the dish
come off the heat. That
could mean a grind of
salt; a squeeze of citrus or
a midge of ze t: o da h of
hot auce. vinegar, \ermouth: or another fla\or
you like to help brighten
the dish.

Start slm\
Can you crumble an
egg? So '\Cramble one
Can you scramble an egg?
So scramble one and add
a little cheese. Or tarLarry Crowe/AP photo
ragon.
Or
chorizo.
"Whate\Cf you're confi- This Sept. 21 , 2010 photo shows figgy, piggy drumsticks and thighs from "In the Kitchen with a
dent making, make it and Good Appetite" by Melissa Clark.
take it to the next IC\ el,"
Clark says. Ju~t don't (,thout 2 I /2 pound-.. total) other side. ,thout 3 min- en, about 3 minutes.
Play with proteins
Recipe calls for chicken experiment 30 minute~
Pour the pan sauce over
utes.
I teaspoon kosher salt
but you've eaten it all before a dinner party.
the
chicken. then garnish
Scatter
the
figs
and
Ground black pepper
week'? Use pork in~tead.
11 or 12 fresh figs, thyme 0\Cr the chicken \\ ith'the bacon and garlic.
Trust \'Ourself
Nutrition infonnation
hah cd or quartered if and trnn-..fer the skillet to
Your palate is as good large
the O\ en. Roast until the per sen ing (values are
a anyone else's. Hone t.
chicken
is
cooked rounded to the nearest
12 sprigs fresh thyme
If you like a fla\or. usc it.
2 table poons 'ennouth through. about 20 min- "'hole number): 557 calories; 296 calorie... from fat
1 tablespoon lemon ute.s.
Al\\ays ha\C p Plan B· juice
Tran fer the chicken to (53 percent of total caloIt's true. )OU might
Heat the O\ en to 500 F. a erving platter. Stir the nes); 33 g fat (10 g atuscre'' up. But wh.1t' so
In a large O\enproof \ennouth and lemon juice rated: 0 g tran fat-.): 126
bad about breakfast cereal skillet O\er medium heat, into the skillet, scrapmg mg cholesterol; 36 g carfor dinner no\\ and then? cook the bacon until up an) bro" n bit on the bob) drate: 29 g protein; 5
"My emergency food is cri'P· Transfer the bacon bottom (be careful \\hen g fiber: 1,045 mg ...odium.
tomato on toast." Clark to a paper tO\\el-lined touching the skillet han(Rec1pe from Meli-..sa
says. "~ly husband has plate to drain. Don't drain dle: it "HI be hot). Place Clark's "In the Kitchen
peanut butter."
the skillet mer medium \\ ith a Good Appetite,"
the fnt from the sk.illct.
Add the garlic to the heat until the juice::. thick- H) perion, 2010)
skillet and saute for 1
minute or so, or until the
slice... are pale golden.
Drumsticks
Tran-;fer the garlic to the
and Thighs
plate along \\ ith the
hac on.
APPLIANCES • ELECTRONICS
Start to li111~h: 40 minSeason the chicken \\ ith
utes
the "all and pepper.
3 17 Stnte Rt. 7. Gallipolis, Oh 45631
Scrvin~s: 4
Increase the heat under
7 40-446-805 1 • l -H00-377-2532
8 stnps bacon (8 the skillet to mediumounces), hahed
high unulthe fat begms to
10% off All appliances with this ad!
4 cloves gnrlic, thinly smoke. Add the chicken
sliced
and cook unul bro\\ncd, 5
3 each of chicken legs. to 6 minutes. Flip the
drumsticks and thighs chicken and brown the

Figgy, Piggy

ELLIOTT'S

~

$25 off all HD'I""V"s

�Sunday, October :J,

~unbat' \l:unc.S' -~rntmcl • Page C6

Pomeroy • Middleport • GaJiipolis

2010

Out to scare you: Haunted attrac ions, the e parks
BY BETH

J.

HARPAZ

ASSOC ''ltD PRESS

Nl=.WYORK (AP)
If
)ou're too old lor trkkor-treatmg but still 10\ c
spooked
on
getting
Hallo\\ecn. it's time to
trade in the superhero
coo:;tume f01 ,1 ticket to .t
huunted house or thc111e
park
But allr&lt;~ctions like
Uun•c:1 s,tl's llallowccn
Nighl'i
,md
Horror
Atlanta's Nether\\ orld
Haunted House arc not
for the faint of heart.
You'll be ltappcd in
creepy mazes. disoriented
by strobe light., .md fog,
and confronted by crazed
monsters
Expenences
like these are not recommended for kids under
13. but e\en 'iOme grownups rna) not be able to
handle them. If watching
a Stephen King mo\ ie
keeps ) ou up ,111 mght. or
)Ou're prone to panic
attacks 111 snMII spaces.
better stick to npple-pickmg or the child-friendly
".\'lickcy's Not So Scary
Hulloween Party" at Wah
Disney World.
On the other hand. if
you 10\ e the lingle of terror that comes "ith a
really creepy horror
mOVIe, this is )OUr kind
of fun.
Da\ id !\1,mdt, &lt;:&gt;pokesman for the International
Assoctation of Amusement
Parks
and
AttractiOns. noted that a
number of parks ha\e
added ne'' elements to
the1r HaiiO\\ ecn event&lt;;
thi., ) ear: "ll1ey're figurmg out new ".1y~ to scare
the daylightc; out of you.''
Mandt &lt;;aid this year'c;
Hallo\\een
offenngo:;
include a number of
behind-the-scenes tours,
including, at
Busch
Gardens Williamsburg in
Virgima.
"All-Acce"'i
Insider;· "l~ene Jn..,tder"
and "Monster Stomp
Re,ampcd ln&lt;;lder" tour.:;
for the p.trk' Ho\\ 1-0
Scream.
\\" ".hO\\ Joscream.com. The tours
include cast mtroduction'&gt;. front-of-the-line
access to a haunted house
and a chance to ha\ e ) our
makeup done ltke one of
the perf\lnner.,
Ea tern State Pemtentiary m Ph1ladelph1a.
\\ h1ch \1\ as ,1 real pnson
until 1971 ,md today j, a
~ational H1storic Landmark. ho!&gt;tS an annual
Hallo\1\ een e-. cnt called
Terror Behind the Walls.
The attraction aho offer-;;
an after-dark VIP tour,
where you get an hourlong flashlight-Puided
tour of cellblock s, mclud·
ing AI Caponc'5 cell, isolation cells, and Death
Ro", www.terrorbehmd
thewaUs.com.
Knott's Berry Farm. a
theme park 111 Buena
Park, Cahf.• boao:;ts one of
the oldest Hallo\\ een
theme park e\ents in the
country. datmg to 1973
"hen "it wns a fe\\ decorations and fc" emplo)
ees putting on some
masks,'' said spokeo;\1\0man Jennifer Blaze).
The event, now called
Knott's Berry !·arm
Haunt, has gro\\ n drnmattcally. This yrm· it features 13 mules (including
"Terror of London" With
foggy "trect&lt;; and Jack the
R1pper). three · care
zones." 1.000 mon ter·•ctors, and seven lh c
shows r.mging frQm
improv comedy to a h) p
notist While Knott\ do~s
not relea5e attendance
figure-;. Blazcy &lt;:;aid the
month that the Haunt runs
makes more money for
the company than any

other tune of) car.
And "hilc Knott'!'. doc~
hmc a \\Cekend daytime
e\ cnt for ages 3 to II.
with a co... tume party and
tt ick-or-trcating.
the
aftcr-7 p.m Haunt io:; for
t~gco;
13
and
up;
http://haunt.knotts.com/
fut date&lt;; and tickets.
Uni\crsal Orlando in
!•lorida
began
ih
IJ,11loween nttraction as "a
tiny little experimental
event with one haunted
house over one weekend"
in 1991, according to Jim
Timon, senior 'ice prest·
dent ot entertainment.
Thio:; ye.tr, hundreds of
thouo:;ands of VISitor&lt;, from
around the countf) are
expected for the park·.,
20th annual Ballo\\ een
Horror !\lights, \\ 1th eight
haunted houses, stx scare
1ones and 1.000 ··scareactors" m the park. The con·
tent is newly created c.1ch
year for the Horror
Nights. "tth ongmal story
lines and characters. This
year's character'&gt; include
an evil master named Fear
\\ ho dnxt.:s ctll the other
monsters'
diabolical
deeds. Details about the
hack stories m the park
uttrctctions can be found
on Universal's \\Cbsite;
fan&lt;; can then see them
come to life in the park.
Timon said the costumes. stories and sets are
so nch. realistiC and
detailed that they are
"f1lm-quality We could
litcrall) make our O\\n
ne\\ mo\1 ie~ from the.,e
characters. 1be hghting.
the l&gt;pecml effects. the
'isuah film-quality We
could literally make our
own ne" movies from
these characters. The
lighting, the spec.al
eflccts. the" isuals we do
C\erything \\C can to suspend your disbelief and
take a\\ a) your illus10n of
control"

In the picture above, pro·
vlded by Universal
Orlando, visitors are
chased by a character
with a chalnsaw prop at
Halloween Horror Nights
XX: Twenty Years of Fear
which opened to guests
at Universal Orlando
· Resort In Orlando, Fla.
This undated photo, at
right, released by Knott's
Berry Fann shows their
Halloween event uKnott's
Annual Halloween Haunt"
In Buena Park, Calif.
Knott's Berry Farm had
one of the frrst major
Halloween events back In
the 1970s, but the con·
cept has since grown Into
an Industry, wHh amuse·
ment parks, farms and
even historic sites offer·
lng weeks of Halloween·
themed entertainment
leading up to the holiday.

HOl.JZEH
CLINIC
You Need to Know This Flu Season
The flu season is~

It generally lqins iD the Can, can last untfl spring and
typicaily peaks in Jamwy or Felmary. Flu season last year was unique 'bccaulc a acw
slrllin of flu called HlNl ("swine flu") c::iraJlated causing mare ii1ncss than in past yean.
'Ibis )'all. it amtinues to be one of the main s:tra1ns of flu that is clrculatiDg iD the world.
Because of chat. it bas become a part of the :seuona1 flu vaa:ine this year.
The Ccmcrs far Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) rcoommcnds a three-step approa.ch
to protect you and your family against the flu.
1. Get the flu va.ocine.
2. 'nlke evcryday steps to prevent or stop the spread of I!)CI'm.S.
3. 'nlke anti-vital medications when your doctorprcscribcs them.

Flu Vtu:eiM
r.l1le easiest and most important step to pron:ct yOllt'lclflllld family against the flu is to get vaccfnatcd.
It is now rcoommcndcd Cor cw:ryone 6 mcntbs old and older, but especially Cor those who are hi&amp;h rlsk
for complications from the flu (have a chronic medk:Bl o:mditfan such as asthma, diabetes, or heart
disease: pn:gnant women: and young children). The VBOclne :b avai1ah1e at an Hol.zcr Oinic locations.
The vacdnc is made up of tbnx: main mains of flu including HI N 1 The VBCdne comes in two prcpatations
- a "mat" or a nasal spray.
The "shot'' is rerommcndod far people 6 months and older includmg people who
are halthy and those with c:hronlc medical cxmditions .lt Is inl.cdvated (made with a killed virus) and is given
as an hQa:tion in the ann. This year, far those aged 6S and older, there Is a '"high-dose• flu vaccine wtrich bas
the same campODCDU as the quiar flu vaa:iDc; but In bf8her doses to give that population of people bc:ttcr immwnty.
The nasal spmy is nxommendcd for healthy pcop1c 2-49 years old. .lt is made of weak, 1m: virus and Is given as a spray
in the nmc. Most ptop1e do not c:xpcrience any side clfocts from the au vaocine.. Howaoer, if tbe)• do occur, they are
genan1ly mild and include rcdnas or sarenc:ss at the fnjcctian lite (with the r.hot) and sore throat or runny nose
(with the nanl spmy). Mast ofb:n the dele dreds last far a short time and are mild in comparison to having the flu.
Th find out which vacdnc is most appropriate for you and your ftmily, please call your family doctor.

Fhl Prnmtltm tmtl T~lllmDII
•Wash your hands with soap and warm watc", espcx:ially &amp;fu:r you oough or mceze. Alcahct.:bascd band sanit:ir.c:rs arc
also cffi:c:tjyc,
•AYOfd touching your eyes, nose and mouth. Genru spread this way.
•Bat a balAnced diet and DUililtain an eu:rdse program to la:ep your body as healthy as pcm'bk.
e·rry to avoid clox contact with sick people.
elf you are sicl: with a flu.like iiJn.css, stay home for at least 24 hours after your fever Is gone.
• .KJ:low that treatment is availl.ble for th~e who are scrlotiSly ilL It is ~ that moct people will
recover from the flu without nccdillg medical care. However, If you hJn.oe a scw:re iilnca or at high risk
fbt flu complications contact your doctor or seek mrdiad care.
• Your doctor will dctcrminc what testing and/or tmttment is needed.
elf your doctorpn:saibcs mcdic:arion, it is important to take aD the modicadoo as d.ircctec!.

Holzer Clinic will be having a Flu Shot Clinic
Octo~ 4th-8th- &amp;un-Spm
October 9th- 9am-Spm
OctobeT 11th-15th- &amp;zm-5pm
at the Main fadllty on
90 Jackson Pike in Gallipolis
for any adult (over 18yrs old) Holzer Clinic patient.

AP photo

Ascene from the Eastern State
Penitentiary event "Terror
Behind the Walls," at the
former prison In Philadelphia.

..

Please bring your insurance card with you.
No appointments are necessary.
Signs will be posted inside the Clinic building
directing you to area
where the flu shots will be given.
If you have any questions, feel free to contact
Holzer Clinic at 740-446-5411.

Holzer Clinic Urgent Care

Open 7 Da a Week
365 D_!!s a Year
_ _____.
Athens • Gallipolis • Jackson • Pomeroy

�'Dl

~unba!' ~imes -~enttnel

OME

..

I

ography hits the
t key in home decor

This product image
released by Graham and
Brown shows Basso &amp; •
Brooke's Alphabet wall
covering. Numbers and
letters are hot off the
press this season in decorative items, dishware
and soft furnishings.
Typographic decor spans
a variety of styles, from
vintage, in the form of
letterpress or old correspondence imagery, to
clean-lined modern
graphics, often using
bold text or individual
symbols.
Graham and Brown/AP photo

I
Palette lnduatrlea/AP photo

Chrtstopher J~~gmln/AP photo

This product Image released by Palette Industries shows their laser-cut chair which features a seat formed by
the words Stand, Forget, Breathe, Acknowledge and Observe.

This product image released by Christopher Jagmin
shows their odd and even numbered porcelain plate sets.

Bv KIM

COOK

FOR Tl£ ASSOCIATI'D PRESS

Numbers and letter are hot off the
press this season in decorative items,
dishware and soft funushings.
Typographic decor pans a variety of
styles. from vintage - in the fonn of
letterpress or old correspondence
- to clean lined modern
cs, often tising bold text or indisymbols.
eforc
designing
dinnerware,
Christopher .Jagm1n was a graphic
designer. "I love and appreciate the art
of typography," ht' says. "We're nil surrounded by it every da). We type on
computers. we' re aware of it on advertising, billboards, magazines and on
television."
His numbered plates are creating a lot
of bua - there's something really
artsy about these o;ymbols on a crisP.
white ceramic plate. Jagmin agrees: ' I
think that breaking down words to the

simplicity of a letter or a number, we
see the true beauty and art of a font, and
its basic elements.''
San Francisco designer Rae Dunn
stamps clay cups and plaques with the
sparest of phrases; the result is both
channin~ and evocative. "Tres Bien"
and ''Om," say sweet little cups. "C'est
Ia vie," shrugs a plate. And the homespun phrase "Home Sweet Home"
becomes something special when
pressed into creamy clay and embellished with a little bee.
Textual decor can add a touch of
drama. John Derian was given an envelope of correspondence between two
fonner lovers: throughout the letters,
written in 1919, a young lady is trying
to recover some personal items. She
becomes more impatient with each missive: "Sorry to appear insistent. But I
must have my trinkets back."
Derian has decoupaged several of the
letters onto beautiful glass trays for a
collection he calls "Relationships.''

Samuel Ho, Nathan Tremblay and lari
Campana comprise the· Calgary,
Alberta, design firm Palette Industries.
Their limited edition Dhanna lounge
chair has a seat fonned of the laser-cut
words "Stand. Forget, Breathe,
Acknowledge and Observe," atop sleek
chrome legs. Their Camus floor lamp
has a veneer shade laser-cut with Albert
Camus' quote, "You cannot create
experience, you must undergo it.''
Walls can support a variety of strong
graphics, and are a perfect place to play
with numbers and letters. Cafe Press
has the simple yet striking Helvetica
wall clock. lkea's Olunda Typeface
wall art depicts the alphabet in bold
black, white and red.
Flamboyant, innovative fashion
designers Chris Brooke and Bruno
Basso have ventured successfully into
wall coverings with "Alphabet." a lacy,
intricate pattern of Greek letters in a
palette of sophisticated tone-on-tone
and softly contrasting hues.

Inspired by layers of advertising on
New York City billboards. Megan
Meagher created collages of fonts on
two canvases; find them at Crate 8i

Barrel.
The retailer also has a kicky collection of cocktail-oriented serveware
with chatty, multi-font words fanning
drink pitcher and martini glass shapes
on slivers of "'hite pon:t:lain.
For the floor, consider Peacock Par)(
Design's wildly popular Tattoo mat, an
antiquarian-style set of inky fonts print-.
ed or1 bamboo. CB2's Club Red rug is a
plush and punchy rendition of a:
London club poster.
·
lkea's Vitamincr Siffra duvet set is a:
peppy pop of colors and numbers.
And tinnily, Donna Wilson plays with:
the whole concept by scripting "Bla}(
Blah" across a ·oft. cozy blanket. Welt
said, Ms. Wilson.

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

Page 02 • &amp;unba!' ~tmt~ -6rntintl

~ribune

Sunday, October 3, 2010

..

- Sentinel - l\egister

J'll
•

•

i.

~

. 1 '
I
II

CLASSIFIED

nkitclassifk'de~~~~~!nytnbwJe.com

I

I

'

Meigs County, OH

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

Websltes:
www.mydailytribune.com
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To Place
~rihune
Sentinel
l\egister
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today... or Fax To (740) 44G-3oos
or Fax ro (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

JUST SAY

CJ:IARGE IT!

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G£J YOUR CLASSIFJED LINE AD HOIICED
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Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
,.._ '1"1
'

HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

•POLICIES*

200 Announcements
lost &amp; Found
Vorl&lt;
Lost
Blond
shtre, F, No ta1l,
about 1Olbs. Sophte,
small reward 740794-0321
$100 REWARD for a
Black •
&amp;Wiltte
Maltepoo PLop, Lost
I om Green Vr. 'eY
Dr Btdwell 140) 441·
1440
FOUND-New Haven
area sma' black dog
Wlre-hr. ed w/ camo
collar 304-882-3570
LOST
Shepard/Husky MJX
Black w/ Gray &amp;
White, Last sween
near ETS sand &amp;
grave! In Gallipolis
Fe•r on 9/6/10 (labor
Day) Please call 304812·5227

Dally ln·Cotumn&amp; 9:00a.m.
Monday-friday for Ins;ertlon
In Next Day's Pape!r
Sunday In·Column: 9:00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

lndude Complete
Ouulption • Include A Prkc • Avoid Abbre~atlons

• Include Phone Num!M:r And Address Whm Needed

• Acb Sholdcl Run 7 Days

Services

600

Animals

Child I Elderly Care Five- 6 &amp; 8 week old
Rooms avatlable for K1ttens Lite1 Tratned
cl1ents needing 24 hr. 446-8567
care at Darst Adult
Group Home. 740- 2 Jack Russ~ll pups.
5 mon, all shots. 446 "
992-5023
4706
Other Services
Mtnlature
CKC
L1ne
Danctng Ptnscher
Pups,
Lessons at Merry's Shots wormed Tall
Fam1ly Wrnery Eve!)' Dock POP $250 00
Thursday 7-9 740- ea 740 388-8788
388-0578
Reg sterad
Yorktes ChaMp on
Blood Ltne, Lowest
500
Education
Price Ever 740-4419510
Business &amp; Trade
School

Boxers
AKC
fawn.b acklwhtte
ones 8wks old 304_
a s_2_-2
_7_6_o_ _ _.....,

~~~==~~ Gallipolis
NOTIC~

OHIO
VALLEY PUBL SHtNG
CO recoiW!e!lds that
, you do bus ness with
people you know and
NOT to send money
th·ough tile '11811 unto
you have Investigating
the oftenng.

Career
College
(Careers 700
Agriculture
Close To Home)
CaliToday! 740-4464367
1·800-214·
Farm Equipment
0452
Accedted
Member STIHL Sales &amp; Servtce
at
Ao9'ed fing Council tor Now Available
tlldependent Co leges and Carm1chae1 Equ1pment
740-446-2412
Sc.'IOols 12748

•I'll•

Wont To Buy

For.,

Wont To Buy

Furniture

Absolute Top dollarstlver/gold coms any
1OK/14Kf18K
gold
1ewerty. dental gold,
US
pre
1935
currency proof/mint
sets, diamonds, MTS
Cotn Shop. 151 2nd
Avenue
Gallipolis.
446·2842

GIVE-AWAYI!! Love
seat 2 chairs, fa1r
condition, call 304675·2620

Oct 4·9, Burnett Rd.
kmck
knacks,
clothes,
ptctures,
nascars. etc

f?'LGoking
A New Home?

TrY the
Classifieds!!

Yard Sale
Perry s Annual Yard
Sale Mu tJ Fam ly-3
rn !es east of Bob
5 p ece bedroom
Evans on old Rt 98
Sl.. te wrthout bed
Oct 1st-10
arge
refrigerator
5pm
marble top tables &amp;
mary other p aces.
also 2 bedroom, 2 123 South Park Dr
bath rnob!e home for Fri &amp; Sat quahty
sale 740 949-3601
clothtng-womens
(14-24)-Boys (10 14
Husky)
des gner
Taylor outsrde wood hand bags, shoes.
ftred
hot
water atr compressor, a1r
fl'lrnace
Taylor conditioner,
home
model 750 large Jntenor, new xbox
enough to heat 2 to 3 360 rock band.cook
houses or bU1Id1ngs, books, &amp; jewelry.
6 yr. old excellent
------cond1t1on,
strll
hooked up can see 2000
Automotive
1n operation, asking
pnce, $2,000. 740742-2720
Want To Buy
Miscellaneous

=-=====;;;;;

~l;;;;;a;;;;nd:::io:(A~c~rea;;;;;;;;i;g;;;;e)~

Gallia
Co
14
acres.Water&amp;Septic
$34,500 or Kyger 16
acres $15.900 Meigs
Co. 8 acres 19,900.
More
@
www.brunerland com
or call 740-441-1492
Want to buy Junk We Finance

Apartmenll/
= =To•wn=h;;;;o;;;;u;;oas;;;;;;;;;;;;
2 BR apt. 6 mi from
Holzer. $400 + dep.
Some utilities pd.
740-645-7630
or
740·988-6130

Apartments/
;;;;;;;;;;;T;;;;o;;;;wn
=h•o•u;;;;se;;;;s;;;;;;;;;;;
Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1.5 BA, back
patio.
pool,
playground No pets.
$450 rent. 740-3670547
Valley
View
Apartments
800
State Route 325
Thurman, OH 45685.
740-245-9170.
1-2
Bedroom apartments
with
appliances
furnished. on site
laundry facility. Call
for details or pick up
application at rental
office. Possibility of
rental
assistance.
Equal
Housing
TO.
Opportunity
419·526-0466 Thi
Institution is an Equal
Opportunity porvider
and Employer

1 BR and bath. first
months
rent
&amp;
FIREWOOD &amp; HAY Cars. call 740-388· 1 1/16 acres Happy deposit. references
Square Bale. Quality
FOR SALE 304-882- 0884
Hollow
Road. required, No Pets
Hay $2.50 Call'740)
2537
Middleport, 740-992- and clean. 740-441·
256-1197
0245
Oiler's Tow1ng. Now 0924
2BR Washer Dryer
Card of Thanks buying junk cars
Card of Thanks
Real Estate
w/motors or w/out. 3500
Hookup 2miles from
Rentals
:c-----~~-_,----.J• 740-388-0011
or
hospttal. Also 1 BR
740-441-7870.
No
cabin. 740-441-3702
111e family of
Sunday call
or 740·286·5789
)ames C. "). C.'' Glassburn
Apartments/
Real Estate
'' ould hke to take tht' opportunit) to
3000
Townhouses
Nice 2BR apt $350
Sales
thank .1!1 of our fanul). fnends,
plus
utilities,
netghbors. co 1\orker-,, &amp; communi!)
Gallipolis 446-8919
for all of ) our love, support, food,
Beautiful
1BR
For Sale By Owner
or 446·2074
donatmn~. c-,ml,, thou~hts, &amp; most of
apartment in the
all the. pra)crs. Our famil) has been 6 apts $137.000
country
freshly
through such a tragedy that h) no rent $2030 mo, 740· painted very clean 2 BR apt. $300 also
mean,, 1\.ts e1er anticipated. You're 446-0390
WID hook up nice 2Br trailer new carpet
$350.
thonghtfulnes~ rs mu•·h apprccmted
country setting only throughout
Must
have
ref!
740J C'. was such a ktnd-heartcd &amp; lo1 ing
10 mins. from town.
indi' idtt.tl wtthin his orne!) 1\a)s' He Home for Sale 74 Must
see
to 446-7602
was lo\ l.'d m\ nl&lt;lll\ &amp; wrll sureh be Midway Dr. Bidwell appreciate.
Water
20%
mrsscd b) all·,, ho c~unc 111 contact 'with $50,000.00
pd. $375/mo 614· 2 Bedroom Apt. Rio
down
on
Land
hrm
595-7773 or 740· Grande $400 Dep.$400mth
740-245We Uri.' so Ol'cpl) :o.:tddened b) hi:; Contract. 740-794· 645·5953
New 2Br,
1.5BA
9060
passmg and the farm will surel) mtss 1013
Townhouse 1 mile
him He so lovl.'d his fanning life and
helpmg those in need So m turn. to
2nd floor 2 BR from Silver Bridge
In Memory
In Memory
$550 mon. 740-645C\ el) one "'ho has helped his famrl)
apartment,
overlooking Gallipolis 5785
dunng this drfflcult time, 1\e just don't
ha1 e all the words to e:-.press our
City
Parf&lt;.
LR.,
sincere appreciation.
kitchen/dining area, 1 • FIND A JOB
Bam)ard Bud.:amos .:t-H Club. River
1/2
BA.
OR ANEW
Valle) Jr. P\!n) l.c·ague (Middleport
washer/dryer. $600.
CAREER
Ball Assoc.). nil Masonrc Brothers Ill
mon + dep. 740·446IN THE
atll.'ndancc. ll'OE Local 1.12 officers
4425 or 740-446&amp; members, Rt\er of Life Church2325
CLASSIFIED$
Addison, OH; Addis011 rWB Church
Howlmg League &amp; l.:~du!s Atde. Vinron
In Memory
ln Memory
Hapllst Church, McCO)·Moore hmeral
Home, Kokosing Workers &lt;a l 'S 35
\Ill'. Phrltp t\mlstrong, Da\rd &amp; Be\
Rrfc. Raccoon I\\ p. Cnmc Watch.
Remembrance of
Carpenters Local o50 &amp; K) ger Creek
Terry Hoffman
Pl&lt;lllt l:mplo) ees. Galhpolis Shrint:
Remembrance
is a golden chain
Cluh, Brd1\ell Commumt) Neighbof$.
Death tries to break, but all in \ain.
l'nde Ralph Hmson. Jack Chambl.'rs.
ro have, to love. and then to part Is
IIMC' Rchah staff, ResCare ol
the greatest sorro\\ of one·, heart.
lluntmgton, WV, Dr. \\agncr &amp;. stall. &amp;
on his 72nd birthday. Oct. 2.
all the I..MS staff &amp; thosl' that
The
)Carma) wipe out man) thmgs
Almost tno years ha,·e passed.
responded th\.' da) of th: accrdcnt.
but some the) "ipc out ne\er Like
since you left us, but JOU are
Man) thnnks to all, ton man) to
memories of those happ) times when
mention, ) ou all h.l\ e &amp;. fore\ l.'r wtll.
newr out of our hearts and mind.
we 1\ ere all together.
ha1 l' 0111 gmtttudl'. I he· out-pouring of
We nilllove )OU fore"\-er.
Janual) 3. 1946 • October 2. 2009
help' &amp; ~upport has bl.'t:fl tremendous
Wife Zenia,
Lovillg Jfemorirs Alwayi
during nur loss. l'kasc coni IIlli\.' to keep

Hay, Feed, Seed,
Grain

With so many
choices, it's easy to
get carried away
with our
Merchandise listings
in the classifieds!

I!

Borders$3.00/perad
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for lai'Qe

POUCtES Ohio \IIIey Pub Shlrg resemslhe rlgltt to edl!, reject. or canceltny ld It ar1y time. Enm mUll lit repolfid on lilt
of ptbfleallcn tnd lht
Trlbii10-Se1t nel-llegtsler will lit rnponalble lOr no moro tnan the CCIII o1 the IIPICe occupied by the errorlnd only the hl.-tlon. We still nolllt bb!t 1ar
any fen or expern10 thDI rwutt1 11om Ihe pW!IeatiOil or omissiOn ot anadYIIIItemllll Correction WIIH lit J1lldt In the lire evahllblt tditlon. • Box numblf teSt
are always can!ldtntlll • Cartnt rllo can! appUes. • All reel Ktate ldvenmnlllla '" IUII)Iet to fit Ftdlfll Fai. ltoualnfl Act 01 tieS • 'lhll r-.peper
~s 0111y IWip Wllnted adl mtellrg EOE standan!A We wtll not tnowlrgly acatplmy eanrtJ"ro In wlollllon o(lllllaw Wll 1101 lit Mlj)OI'IIIfble lor any
«rors In an td taken OVIf the phont

Elderbernes.
sp1ce
bushberries.
Applionce Services
Peb
pawpaws.
black
740·698Joe's TV Repa1r on Half grown Tom cat walnuts,
most
makes
&amp; to gtveaway, b/w, 6060
Models House Calls likes people. 446900
Merchandise
304-675-1724
1542

·= ======

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your claSsified ads
f~

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Start Your Ads Wi\h A Keyword •

300

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Bu51nes:s Days Prior To
Publication •
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thurs;day for Sundays Paper

In loving memory
of
Donald (Perk) Evans

us 111 )OUr pr:t)l.'rs.
Stnl·crcl),
I he Famil) uf .I.C' Glasstnrrn

Dau~hters

Jan &amp; Penny and
families. Son Dou~las

from Terr)' 's family, frimds,
and lOl·ed onrs.

�y, October 3, 2010

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

---------------~~~~~~
Announcements
Apartments/

Announcements

Houaea For Rent

Drivera &amp; Delivery

l'unbap ~tmtl·&amp;ttttintl· Page 03

r----~------~----------------------~-.

Townhouses

--~~=-=-=-- Very n1ce home for Drivers.

&amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
houses 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Middleport. NO Pets,
740·992·2218
~M~id~d':"'le-po-rt-.--s-en-io-r

H~me •flfllfi.Demand Career· No commutng
~ • Earn More Mloey Than In Mosl Office Jobs'

O,ps AT 7Pfll &amp; BRING A F~/'lJ!

llipolis Holiday Inn""
I S17 State loutc 7 N.
1
Gallipolia, OH
I
I
I.,
.

For Dllaill About Thll Seminar V.it Us At
w.'IW.IIhpttmlnars .com

____________ _
7d ~ !M StZf ~Of~ SCboo!Rfll!'l:llliJ•

Dtpt. GLPA1MO

._6

2001--

pWanted

••u:..... co~~

•

,... , -.

Help Wanted

WOtiLD YOU LIKE TO WORK
FROI\1 HOME?
R ruit NRA members and take
donations for conservative
political organizations
' Training
fi ts Package
Schedules~ Full and Part time
ld) Pay and Bonus Incentives!
our team and find out what
-; lnfoCision one of Ohio's bt!st

I l'oday for your appointment!
-8!)8-237-5647 EXT 2371
p Wanted

Help Wanted

GKN SINTIR METALS

Sinter Metals, a wholly owned

mry of GK N pic, JS the world's
" producer of precis1on powder
... omponents and has O\er 7.000
vees in 30 locat1ons on five
nts Our manulactunn
m Gallipolis, Oh10, is 1
1nd reachmg new cu t
eek1ng mOll\ a ted
nance Teclimcmns.

I

facility

creasmg
ers \\e
c;kJJle d

i\lalntenance Technici
llifi (ll/011,4.
&lt;i lied a~ both correctne and
, Dll\ e

mamtenance
orking knowledge of lndustnal
neil\
n cnce with Allen Bradley PLC
JVO S)'SI~OlS
1c Weldin g and sheet metal
1 11tion skills
\h1lity to re ad and U11derstand
1hc -;ystem pnnts.
1oslfwn will r~~uire rhe crmdidate
H a basic tkillr test ',Prtor to

I .mem
offers a comprehensive benefit
•e to its employees. If you are
red, motivated and looking for a
1 .,;rowth opportunity and rewarding
I nges, we encourage you to p1ck
rr application at:
1:.1 County Job &amp; Family Service~
Work Opportunity Center
848 3rd Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Equal Opportumty Emplo~·er

llvtng. 2 br, furnished
apt., dep. &amp; rei , no
pets, utilities paid,
740.992 •0165

rent in Middlepoort,
good neighborhood.
newly
remodeled
New appliances, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath,
large kitchen. sun
room, central air &amp;
heat. N1ce outdoor
spaces. No pets, non
smoking. Call 740·
992·9784 or 740·
992·5094 for more
details.

Nice
Clean,
Efficiency 1BDRM.
Ref., Dep., NO pets
4000
304·675·5162

Manufactured
Housing

Tractor trailer Driver
needed. Must have
~---~~- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Hazmat.
Send
Pleasant
Valley
Rentals
resume to Human
Apartments is now
Resources Po Box
taking
applications 2BR Mobile Home 705 Pomeroy Oh
for 2. 3, &amp; 4 br liUD water, sewer,. trash 45769.
Subsidized
pd.
No pets ~~=~~~~
Apartments.
Johnson's
Mobile
Help Wanted·
Applications
are Home Park
740·
General
taken Monday thru 446·3160
Thrusday
9:00am·
Local Site Manager,
1:OOpm. Office is
General
Cleaners,
located
at
1151 3BR,
2BA. $575 and
Floor
Evergreen
Drive, mo+dep+utl 1722.5 Technicians needed
Point Pleasant, wv. Chatham Ave 740· m Rio Grande Must
(304) 675·5806
645·1646
be dependable and
hard working.
All
~
applicants will need
4 BR. 2 BA Mobile to be able to pass
home.
all
appl. • background/drug
washer dryer $450 screen
To inquire
mo + dep. 740·388 • call 888·806·5720.
8066 or 740·245·
0001
Part-time
1·2 BDRM Apt's 1n ~~~~~~~ Wanted:
Salea
position available to
Pt. Pleasant all
assist
individuals
utilities paid call 304·
14x70 Winsor 79 with developmental
360·0163
model
w/dish disabilities
In
washer washer &amp; Gallipolis. 13hrlwk.
Nice 2 &amp; 3 BR apts. dryer, stove refrig.&amp; Must
have
high
Gallipolis. $600 mo more $3,200. Also school diploma or
includes w/s/g &amp; 12x 6.5 trailer for GED, valid driver's
Washer &amp; Dryer No hauling lawn mowers license, three years
Pets 740·591·5174
$500 Call 740-256· good
driv1ng
1355
experience
and
adequate automobile
Spring Valley Green
Apartments 1 BR at ~~~--~...,
BRAND
NEW insurance. $8.97/hr,
$395+2 BR at $470 foreclosure 3br 2ba after traming. Send
Month. 446·1599.
ready to move into resume to . Buckeye
$3 S,SOO.OO Call 740 _ Community Services,
Houses For Rent
PO
Box
604,
_
446 3093
~.....,......,......,......,......,,.. Jackson,
Ohio
2 br., for rent or sale
45640. Deadline for
in Pomeroy. Full 6000
Employment applicants: 10/4/10.
basement w/garage,
Pre-employment
kitchen appliances,
drug testing. Equal
w/d hookup, rent Child/Elderly Care opportunity
$500/mo
plus
Employer.
utihtles, No pets, ref Do you need a
christ1an
nanny
m
&amp;
dep,
asking
Support
$39,900,
740·992· your home. Reply to Behav1or
PO Box 100 Pt. Specialist To work
5502
Pleasant. WV
with Individuals with
,..-S:::-::E:-:l,..-:-l-:Y~O""'U~R,..., developmental
.-----:=,....----.
disab . ties assess !1Q
FIND
behaVIOr problems
EVERYTHING
develop ng effectiVe
nter\tentlons tra ng
WANT
staff and mon onng
OR NEED
mp1ementat1on
ot
Interventions
IN THE
Pos1ton ts open .n
CLASSIFIEDS
the Rtpley area Must
have BAIBS and 2

"W'

=-=-=-=-=-=--

You

EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED

AD

------- =======
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

~ResCare

,- HorneCare
.........,

--

Ff/PT direct care staff pos1tions
available. No experience required
but must have diplomaJGED and
Valid Drivers License. We have a
variety of positions for the Point
Pleasant and Lesage areas. Walk-in
interviews this Thesday and
Wednesday (October S-6) 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. at our Lesage Campus
(formally Green Acres) on Ohio
River Rd.
For more information 304-5223548.
EOE mlf/v/d

HIO VALLEY BANK
Public Auction
October 9, 201 0
10:00 a.m.
Ohio Valley Bank will offer for sale by public auction the following items:

5
8

Buick Rendezvous ·does not run

#548922

Pontiac Solstice

#114937

2

Ford Explorer 4x4

#A22268

2009
2000

Polaris Ranger 4x4

#653764

Chevrolet Tracker 4x4

#915108

2002
1984

Dodge Neon ·rebuilt salvage
Peterbilt

#649375
#1688KN

Ford F150 XL

#A50704

Fleetwood Graphite Camper
Chrysler 300C

#282272
#371595

994
2006

2006
n

CDL·A
Teams &amp; Singles
Wanted
0/0ps.
Dedicated
Lanes,
$1 000
s1gn
on
Bonus,
Fuel
Discount,
Great
Home Time, Super
Pay Package, Safety
Bonus Program .
Excellent
Fuel
Surchacge, 1 year
Venfiable exp. 800·
599·0087

·items are avalable at t11e Ohk&gt; Valley Bank Annex,~ 43 3rdAvenue, Gallipolis, OH on the
at ard time spec~ied above Sold to the highest bidder 'as·is where-is' without expressed or
ur. 'ed warranty &amp;may be seen by calfing the Collection Department at 1-888441-1038 OVB
, c rvcs the r~ht to accept I reject any and all bids, and witl1draw items from sale prior to sale
Tc ms of sale CASH OR CASHER'S CHECK

years
pro'
onal
experience worktng
With
MR/00
1ndrviduals
Expenence
and
working knowledge
of
behavioral
principles
and
techniques preferred
Salary
negotiable
based
on
expenence. Reply to
BSS·Ripley
4834
MacCorkle
Ave ,
South
Charleston,
wv 25309
HEALTH
ABODE
CARE
SERVICES
INC. Home Makers,
CNA wanted for
Southside
&amp;
Glenwood positions
1·800·327·7262
Direct Care- Fun and
Part time direct care
position
for
WV
Ravenswood,
providing commumty
skills tra1ning with an
individual
with
MR/DD.
Seeking
Monday-Friday:
evening and midnight
sh1fts. Saturday and
Sunday:
day.
evening and midnight
shifts.
For
all
positions
High
school diploma or
GED
required.
Crim1nal background
check. Must have
reliable
transportation
and
valid auto insurance.
Hourly rate starting
at $8.00-$9 so hour
based
on
experience.
Apply
online
at
http:/lwww. paiswv. co
m or call 304·373·
1011

ulletin Board

O'Dell True Value Lumber
St1hl Leaf Blowers
Startmg at $149 99
St•ht Cham Saws
Start1ng at $179 99
St•hl Mechanic on Duty M·F 9·6
61 Vine St. 446-1276

Thank You
To all my customers
for their patience,
understanding and
support. It is greatly
appreciated. I hope
to be relocating
soon
Pat Fuller
Formerly of Style Station

O'Dell True Value Lumber
4" Sewer &amp; Dram Pipe
4 99/10 ft.
Lowest Pnce on Water
Heaters!
61 Vine St Galhpohs
740·446·1276

Thank You

OVB
for buying my
2010 Hog.
Drew VanSickle
Triangle 4-H
Club

RIGHTWAY
CONSTRUCTION
Site Development
Demolition
Ponds

Dump Truck Services
Over 35 years
experience
Fully Insured
We'll do-it right

740-384-6988
Basket Games
Gallia Co. Democrats
River Valley Middle
School
St. At. 160 Bidwell
Tuesday, Oct. 5
Games beg1n 6 pm
For pre-sale or into call
367·7530 or
339·3702
refreshments available

Get your gun permij now!
Call for next conceal and
carry class
740·256-6514
Certrtied Instructor

OPEN HOUSE
Oct. 3, 2010

1 pm- 4 pm
Resumes to
Pastor Mark W111iams,
French Crty Baptist Church

3554 State Rt. 160,
GallipOliS, OH 45631.
304-675·1 043
304·674·5550

New Home 3
bedroom, 2 full
baths,
Info: on pricing call
7 40-446-0118

Christi Johnson
has moved!!
Please visit her at her new
locat1on:

Strawberry Hair
313ThirdAve.
Gallipolis, OH

740-446-2673
(740) 339-2525
www strawberryhalrsalon.com

Real Estate

Real Estate

Real Estate

Real Estate

Exp. Person to assist
w/ milking on modern
dairy farm. housrng &amp;
utilities can be a part
of
package
fax
resume w/ 3 ref. to
304·675·5074
Enjoy caring for the
Elderly? Caregivers
needed Pt. Pleasant,
Leon &amp; Pliny areas
Good pay benefits.
Drivers
Licenses
required.
Flexible
hours.
1·866·766·
9832 or 1·304·766·
983o

L~-------'-~----t:.:._~~=~=~!..J

�Page 04 • &amp;unba~ tn:imen-&amp;entintl
Help Wanted

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

Help Wanted
100

Legals

C ncl of the Village
' Vtnton w111 hold
th r nnual budg
I' anng on Fn Oct
A 2010 () OOPM at
towrt hall
Brenda
Bums Ftscal OH1cer
Oct3, 2010
The Gallla County
Local
Board
of
tduca' on VIII accept
btds
for
rnow•ng
11
ervtce for CY2°
Plear.c
contact

Count~ Jlr.tlth l&gt;~p.u1mcnt
Sand) \\alk('r, RN, \\ J( Hi~ctor
499 .Jackson l'ik(•, Suitl• f)

Gnllin

&lt;:allipoli~.

01145631

fhc

{,aiJiu
Count)
Dq111rlmcnt i~ an etJual opportunit~
l'lllJIIO\ l'l" .md sen il·e pnn idl·r.

JSHOP CLASSfFIEDSJ
Auction

Sunday, October 31 2010

Auction

Charb Evans for b•d
•:lformahon B ds Will
be accep~ed until
10
1
October 9 20
at
3
4 00 PM Oct
&amp;
10
1
0 20
Sealed proposals w11J
be rece1ved by Me1gs
County
C mmtSSIOners
at
100 East Second
SirNit
Pomeroy
Oh o
45769 by
Wednesday October
20 2010 at 1'00 p m
nd
opened
tmmf!dtat y
th reafter
for
l&lt;~rn
ng
the
matenal
and
perlormtng tM labor
f r the execution &amp;nd
construction
of
ProJect
#100506
Meigs County Job &amp;
Famtly
Servtces·
Extenor Employment
O.vtston Exparston
150
Mtll
Street
Middleport Ohto
In oe;cordance with
Plans
and
the
Speed cattons
prep ed by RVC

l.agals

' 100

Arch1tect Inc 131
West State Str1,1et
At n Oh1o 45701
B d wll b rc ved
for CONTRACT1
Genera
Con tructtonA pre
Will
b d conferenc
be held at 150 M1ll
Street
Middleport,
Ohto
45760 on
Wednesday October
6 20t0 ot 4 00 p m
The tnlormatton for
Btdders, form of
Proposal, Form of
Contract
Pl:m~
Spectficaltons, Form
of Bond and other
Contract Documents
may be examtned at
the
follow1ng
o!ftces RVC
Archtteots
Inc 131
West
State
Str etAthens
Ohio
45701 Me g.. County
Commtsstoners1 00
East Second Street,
Su te 301Pomeroy
Ohto 45769PAPER
DOCUMENTSContra
Cl documents may b&amp;
oblatned by pay ng a
non-refundable lee m
the amount of $25 00
{twenty·flve dollars)
per set pay11ble to
the Metgs County
Commtsstoners All
Btddtng documents
w1i
be forwarded
shtpptng
charges
.collect
Contract
documents may be
obta1ned by Prime
Contractors
from
RVC Architects Inc
131 Athens Ohto

Auction

Public
Auction
Fri., Oct. 8th, 2010
l.ocutcd 111 the \m• ~.&gt;Is llulldlng
I OS I llwrt) i\• e. (;roul,&gt;olis. 011 4"t•.\ I
(I rom l'omcro) 12 ntiS. lo RIH·rfronl
llmulu, I urn right. I&lt; rom l't. l'h•ost~nl.
\\\ Ink&lt;• Gnlllpolls t•xll, turn ll'll JIM
1111, turn ldl. \\utch fur signs.
l'lclnrcs cnn bt• •h=-u.·d ut
"'"'' '"·uuctinnzip.corn
Hrokcn Spnkc Au«.~tinn

Scr,kc.'i
,John\\, 1 ,.,,...... Ohio l

k. No • .20061100 14J

Chc..,hin·. Oh (740) 367-0123

100

l.agals

btd
must
ba
accomp tnJed by n
BID
GUARANTY
mectu1g
the
reqwemcnts
of
Sect1on 153 54 of the
Ohto
Rev1sod
Code Btd shall be
Sflaled
and
addressed to Me1gs
County
Comm
oners, 100
East Second Street
SUite 301 Pomeroy
Ohto
45769 No
Bidder may Withdraw
h
bid W1!h1n stxty
(60) days after the
actual date of tho
opemng thereof Tho
We gs
County
Comm1ss1oner"
reserve the right to
wa1ve
any
lnformahttes or to
reJect any or all btds
{10) 3 10 17 2010
Sealed proposals Will
be received by Meigs
County
CommiSSioners
at
tOO East Second
S•reel
Pomeroy,
Ohio
45769 by
V.edne day October
20 2010 at 1 00 p m
and
opened
lmmedtately
thereafter
for
llxn sh ng
the
matenal
nd
performtng t e labor
for the execution and
constructJon
of
ProJect
#100506
Me gs County Job &amp;
Fam11y
Servtces·
lntcnor Fmp oyment
DIVIsion Expans on
150
Mtl
Street
M ddleport Oh o In
accordnnce w th the
Plans
and
Spe 'tcatlons
prepared by RVC
Architects Inc 131
W t Stat
Street
Ath
Oho 4 701

81

100

Legals

Street
M dd eport
Oh o
45760
n
Wed eSday Octob r
U 2010 a: 3{)0
p M rhe mformaton
for B dders F-orm of
Propo I Form ol
Corttract
Plan •
Spectf1cal1ons Form
of Bond and other
Contract Documents
may be exam1ned at
the follOWing olf1ces
RVC Arch1tects lrtc
131
West
State
Street Athe:-~s Ohto
45701 Mc•g:; County
Commissioners I 00
East Secono Street
Swte 301 Porn&amp; oy
Oh1o
45769
PAPER
DOCUMENTSContra
ct documents may be
obtatned by paytng a
non refundable fee tn
the amount o' S25 00
{twenty·! ve do Iars)
per set payable to
the Metgs County
Comm ss1oners
A
B1dd1ng documents
w I be forwarded
sh1pplng
charges
collect
Contract
documents may be
obtatned by Pnme
Cootracto~s
from
RVC Architects, Inc,
131 Athens. Ohto
45701
Telephone
(740)
592 5615 All
que« ons regardtng
the
plans
and
spectftcattons should
be addressed
to
John
Valentour
Architect or Prrtny
Mul en
AssOCiate Each b d
must
be
accompan ed by a
BID
GUARANTY
meet ng

100

Legall j

.

2010

to

&gt;VI

U:ASE
ESTATE
Bt:LONG
RACINEV
FOR
PURPOSE
OF
PlACEMfNT ~ A
TEL[COMUI\ CATI
ON TOWER
Tht1
V•llage ol Ractn a
Muntelp '
Corporat1on
w1ll
accept propo AI tar
the lease of proporty
owned by the V1llag
ot Racine ne •tVtllages
W • r
Tower local d
Greenwood
Cemetery Ro d
area
approx
100 X 100
proVJd ng
d q
tel
mmun cat o
for the CIUens of
V ge of Ra
l"l GOTIATIOI"l OF
CONTRACT &amp; liME
LI'IIF The Vi ag
Cot. eli r
rv
th
nght to n got1a'
opt on to Je
lor
$500 a )'Car up to 2
(two) y ars and 11
opton 1s ex Cl d a
Lease
Agreem n•
Contract wtth the
highest b1ddc• wtll b
acceptau e by the
Village
Tile lease
ag·eement Will bo lor
a ftve (S) ye tefiT'
and up to four (4)
renewals and there
after a new

ed

f
G
~t

bid coni r
be l'teld

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

ll\11\1EJ&gt;IATE OPE 'I G
CIVIIJ E GJ 'EER
1

Auction

The Cit) of Galhpoh~ 1s seckmg quahftcd apphl:ant for the
pos1t1on of ( 1\ tll:ngmeer
POSI1 ION: Ch il Engineer
The cand1date for thts pos111on perforns profe~~10nal
engmeenng \\ork m the plannmg. rc\aC\\, do..~ gn. c.onstntctton,
operatiOn and maintenance of the C'lt) 's '' .tter nnd '' aste\\ .1ter
~) \tems fhe candtdate wall mterfucc .md o!SSISI the Ctt) 's st.lff
1s "ell as prnate contra• tors and other CJ11zens w 1th reg,mls to
the Cit) 's \\atcr ami ''aste\\utcr S)Sll'llls I he engmecr must
also ensure that des1gn~ meet ~.1f\'t) and en' tronmcnt&lt;tl
rcqu1rements. I he cundulate ''til he rcspons1hlc tor
tmplemenung a GIS program for the C1t) 's \\&lt;tier Md ~c\\er
S) ~tems and nsstst "1th other cngmcenng tasks ns requtred
I has position repons to the Crt) Man.ager
RESI'O~SIUILII'JES:
The re~pons1balttJe Itsted belo1' .are e:~.amples of the 11 ork
I) pacall) performed b) empiO) ces 111 thas clll'is An emplo) ee
m:t) not be as~agned all rcsponsabaht1e5 hstcd .md ma) be

ass1gncd duues "hach arc not hstcd below
Prepare or examme puhhc and pn1 at~ cngmccnng plans.
pccaficauon~ dc~1gns. cost c um.tte\, b1d proposals and leg.tl
de cnpt1ons for uultt) c-onstructiOn rutd m:untenance proJetts
Represent 1he Cll) an meetings "llh contractors,
de' elopers and other agencaes
Insure comphance to I:PA re!julatJons and I.!Utdclmes
Pro11de cngmeenng ser. tees and consultatum to a 'anet)
of f1eld nnd office personnel
•
Prep.tre proJect-rel.ttcd studtc • draft reports,
recommendataons and correspondence for the &lt;'11) Mnn.tger,
C'll) Conumss10ners, other dcpanments m the puhhc
Makes oral pre~ent.ttlons before the C'Jt) C'omnus~10ners.
cumnuttee,, commun1t) group~ ••md hu:uds ol othe1
gO\ c1 nmental ugenctcs.
l'mlll ipalc Ill the sclccuon and monllt&gt;llllg of con,ult.utts
,111d nlllt 11ll'lnrs
Scr\'e ns restdcnl cngmec1 un a 1a11C!) o l'onstruL'tton 01
cnp1tnl amprm emcnt JlfUJCl'ts
Perform contract .1dnums11 at ton act I\ 111cs, 1ppnn e
progress p:t) ments on Cl,ntr:utt ron~trucuon proJ~Ct5, ncgouatc
pnccs and prepare eonttact t•h,mgc order;
Research new mateatals and tecluuques and momtors
current de' elopment~ m Cl\ 11 cngmccnng
Pcrfonn related duues and respons1hahttc as reqUired and
i other dutaes \\ htch rna) be asstgned

RH..)LIRF\1F;\; l'S:
ll\e (5) )Cars of respon\1blc engmeenng e:o.pcnence rcl.:ated to
the destgn and construction of publiC \Inter and \\astC\\ater
. S) stems mcludmg e11&gt;penence \\ 1th pl.tts. c.tsements, faeld
sun C) mg. construuwn management and con,tntt t aon
mspecuon reqUired Abtltl) to use dagll L.mg and dnta
mampulatmn procedure~ for geugraphtt mformat1on S) stems IS
needed. Bachelor's Degree 111 Ca' 1l Engmewng or close!)
related f1eld reqUired Professton.tl l:.a1"gmecr license reqUired
I xpenences \\ ath Water &amp; \\ a.~te\\ ater regui.1Uons ore needed
~ x~.;cllent \\ ntten .md oml commumc.ttJon kdl~ .u-e e~sentml
Prolll:ICile) 111 M1nosoft Olfk~, des1gn .md modcltng :soli\\ are
requared. Candidat&lt;.&gt; rnuq poss&lt;.&gt;~s n \ilhd timer's license

Get A Jump

to

Commu catl n
Vendors
accordance
W1':-t
se~on 721 03 o' the
Oh o ReVIsed Code
sealed b ds w II be
rece ved
by
the
Rac1ne
Vi !age
Council
PO Box
399 Racme, Oh10
45771, until 12 00
NOON on Monday
October 25. 2010
The btds will then be
opened and read
aloud at 610 PM on
Monday, Octob&amp; 25

on
SAVINGS

Shop the
Classifieds!

Need a
Job Done?

Shop

( '0\JJ&gt;ENS,\TH&gt;N:
I hl' htnng sal:u; range lor tim poS~tmn " $50.000 $SS,OOO
per )ear dl'pt•ndmg on qualtlll'alwns I ill' Lit) uho t&gt;lll't"
nllllJll'tlti\ e emplo) cc bend 1ts 1ndmhng Sit'\ II nil' und pa1d
\ .tl'.ltlllll.

The

Appill~ltlons

"'" \\.kauf'mnnrcalt).nnn
.Jason L Miller CAI Auct ioneer
740-541-7475

jason(!! kaufmann•alt).COm

are a1aalahlc .11 the
Offite of the Cit) \l:ma~o:er,
8-JH 'I hird A' cnul\ (~ullipoli s, Oil ~5(•31
A ppltcnuons must be ret el\ cd h) 4 p 111 • O.:tnher Ill. 21110
I 'he CH) ol Galhpohs IS .m l:qu.tl Oppor11mlt) I'JIIfllo)et
Septemher 28. lO 10

Classifieds

There's t
Somethingff.
For
Everyone
In
The...

CLASSIFIEDS!!
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP MAN·
AGEMENT
AND
CIRCULATI N
1. Tltle o(pubhca·
tlon Tho
Sunday Times- Sen·
tmel.
2. Publication No.
526·500.
3 Date of filing:
September 29, 2010.
4. Frequency of
Issue: Weekly.
5 No. Of Issues
published Annually:
52
6 AnmlaJ Subscription
Pnce.
S91 00 Home Dellv·
ered
7 Location of
Known Off ce of
Publication
111
Court St. Pomeroy,
Ohto45769
825 Third Ave. Gal·
hpol s, OH 45631.
8. location of the
H adquarters or
General Business
Off1ces of the Pub·
llshers 625 Third
Ave.
Gallipolis,
Ohio
9.
Publisher:
Sammy Ldi ez, 625
Third Ave. Galllpo·
lis, OH 45 1. Msn·
aging
Editor,
Andrew Carter 825
Third Ave. Gall po·
lis OH 45631.
10 Own
Hc;Jrt·
land Publ cations,
LLC 1 W 91 Man
Street. Cli llon CT
06413
tchael
Bush 183 Orcutt
Drive, Guil rd CT
06437, AlB S ealty
Inc 405 Par venue
NY
New
Yor
10022. An
CapItal
Corporation
GEBusme Fman·
clat Servl
, GE
Cap tal Cor rat on,
2325
Lakeview
Parkway, Su te 700
Alph retia,
GA
3004. Cooperative
Centrale R :lffo1sen·
Boereteentiank 8 A
245 Park Avenue,
Yo ,
NY
New
10167; Goldman·
Sachs &amp;
6011
Connection Drive,
Irving, TX 75039;
SPF COO I. Ltd:
Filed Point I ltd.;
SP Heartland Inc. 2
Greenwich Plaza.
Greenwich,
CT
06830
11. Known Bond·
holders. '
Mongogecs Hotdmg 1%
or more. General
Electric Coplt I Cor·
poration, GE Business
Flnanc1al
Services Inc. and
Antares
Capital
Corporation 2325
Lakevaew Parkway.
Suite
700
AI
pharettn, GA 30004,
AlB Debt Management Limited 405
Pari&lt; Ave. New Vorl&lt;,
NY 10022 Goldman
Sacks
Spcc1al
Heading Hold1ngs,
Inc. 6011 Connec·
tlon Dnvo, Irving TX
75039
Cooperative Central
Raltfcisen-Boeren·
loenbank
~.A.,
Rabobank Neder·
land' NY Branch,
245 Park Ave , Now
York 10167
Average
No.
Copies Ench Issue
During Preceding

b

res

12 Month::·

15. Extt'nt and
nature of
Circulation.
A
Total
No.
Copies
Printed:
8042
B Paid and/or
Requested Clrcula·
t1on·
1. Mall d Out·
side County Paid
Subscriptions State
on PSForm 3541
(Include paid dlstrl·
butlon above noml·
nnl
rate,
advertisers proof
copies, ond ex·
chango copies.) 100
2
Mailed
In·
County paid sub·
scrlptlons states on
PS Form 3541 (In
elude paid dlstrlbu·
tlon above nominal
rate,
advertisers
proof copies ond
1 exchange copels)

28
3. Paid distribution outside the
mails
Including
sales through deal- •
ers and carriers,
street
vendors,
counter sales, and
other paid distrlbuhon
outside
USPS'®- 7141.
4. Paid distribution
by ather classes of
mall through the
USPS (e.g. first .
class mail$) • 0
C. Total Paid Cir·
culatlon: 7,269
D. Free Distrlbu·
ton by Mail.
1 Free Of Nominal Rate Outsidecounty
Copies
Included On PS
form 3541: 1.
2. Free or mini·
mal rate In -county
copies Included on
PS Form 3541: 0.
3. Free of nomi·
nal rate copies
matted at other
classes through the
USPS 1e.g. first
class mall) : o.
4. Free or nomi·
nat rate distribution
outside the mail
(Carrier or Other
Means): 192
E. Total Free or
Nominal Rate Dlstrl·
bution : 193.
F. Total Dlstribu·
Uon: 7,462.
G.

Copies

Not

Distributed: 504.
H. Total: 7,966
I. Percent
97 4
All'erage
Copies of
Issue
Nearest to
Date:
15. Extent and
natur~ of Circula·
t1on
A.
Total
No.
Copies
Printed:
8,057.
B. Pa1d and/or requested
Circula·
tlon:
1. Mailed Out·
Side-County Paid
Subscriptions State
on PSForm 3541
(\nclude paid dlstrl·
bution above noml·
nal
rate,
advertiser's proof
copies, and ex·
change
copies.):
102.
2.
Mailed
InCounty paid sUb·
scnptions states on
PS Form 3541 (In·
elude paid dastnbutlon above nominal
rate,
advertiser's
proof coptes, and
exchange copels):
29.
•
3.Pald drstri
t1on outside t
malls
Including
sales through deaJ:.
t'rs and carriers,
street
vendors,
counter sales, and
other paid distribu·
tlon otuside USPSlY
• 7,298
4. Paid distribution
by other classes of
mail through the
USPS (e g. f1rst •
class maii.ID) • 0
C. Total Paid Dis·
trlbut1on: 7.429.
D. Free Dlstribu·
lion by Mall.
1. Free or nomi·
nal rate outside·
county
copies
Included on PS·
Form 3541: 1.
2. Free or nomi·
nal rate in county
copies Included Oll
PSForm 3541:0.
3. Free or nom!·
nal rate copies
mailed at other
classes through the
USPS (e.g. first·
class mail): 0.
4. Free or noml·
nat rate
outside the
(Carrier or
Moons): 86
E. Total Free or
nominal rate dlstri·
bution: 87.
F. Total Distribu·
tlon: 7,516.
G. Copies Not
Distributed: 591. •
H. Total: 8,107.
1. Percent Paid • 98.8
Sammy Lopez.
Publisher
October 3, 2010

�Sunday, October 3, 2010

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

BLONDIE

6unbap ~tmt' ·6tntintl • Page 05

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD

Tom Batiuk

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Outftts
1 Yak tt up
6 Sh1p
2 Presldenpolcs
t1al
11 Concern·
n1ckname
mg
3 Decay
12 Colleague 4 Stopped
ofSpock
l ~ erlenng
and Sulu
5 Take the
13 Davis o f
wheel
"All About 6 Soft
20 M us1c1an's 34 S Uit
Eve"
sound s
JObs
p 1eces
14 Arrested
7 Cry o f
21 Wrote
35 Doll's cry
15 Bulls or
insight
1n a
36 Iow a c1ty
Bea rs
8 Warbled
hu rry
37 Soft
17 Role for
9 Smglng
24 Tart
m 1neral
George
g roup
25 B lunders 40 M enagB urns
1 0 Beach
26 Un 1t of
ene
18 Stnped
stuff
42 W1nter
fo rce
baby
16 Top card 28 Eden
ailm ent
22 L1ke the
18 Accou nt
tempter
43 Help out
desert
19 Steel
31 Mineo of 44 Secret
23 M ade
Ingredient
m ovies
agent
blank
NE:W cnocswono BOOKI send $4 75 (chccktm o l to
27 Company Tllomas
Jo:;oph Rook 1 PO Bo• 536475 Orlando Fl 3;1853 6475
symbols
29 A ccount
30 Follow s
as a result
32 Rotate
33 Go across
35 Small rug
38 Begged
39 Knock fo r
a loop
41 Couches
45 Honeydew, for
one
46 Dutch
bloom
47 Fancy t1e
48 Examine

Brian and Greg W alker

THELOCKHORNS

William Hoest

'"HE HURT IT ROL..L.ING HIS EVES AT

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

I

Bil Keane

I

h) Dave Gree n

4

l2
t-

_1 8

~-

5
t-

-

-

·- f-1

-- 8

7 4

!7

t-~

2

8

DENNIS THE MENACE

D rfkult) Level

*

~·If
.4

[2, ;J

1

1

3
9 2

" Wh at 's th e leaot breakable r oom
In our houto?"

Hank Ketchum

5 3 I9-

s.

4
2 5 6

•·J:

9 s G
9 s p 8 8 ~
G ~ 1·8 v L 6
G 9- r-L
~ p 6 s ·.! 8 ~ Z ~ - s 6 8
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8 L 9 8 . ~~ v
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R6 8 L

I
P."

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HAPPY BIRTI ll.)AY for Monday,
Oct 4. 2010:
J1us) ar. you \\etgh the tmportan«'
of !;1._'\'l.'rnl cstablishL'CI friendships You
question whether vou want to makL•
an adJUStment or Change. When \\ e
change, often our irnmOOiatc cirdc
d1angcs too. Allo\\ 1n new friends
who fccl more appropnate. f rue
friend-,\\ 11 be open to chaflb&gt;e If you
arc smglc, you fTlC('t pcoplt \\Jth c.1se,
csp.•dally through soda] happenings
.md ) our m.m) lriend:;. &amp;&gt;open to
someone your family tcally like;, e\'Cil
tf vou have mixed feelings If you are
.ttt."lched }OU might find th,lt when the
t\, o of) ou talk. you "ill nonce your
f,'O.lbas n couple Your home might no
longer su1t} ou Cons dcr n:modcbng
or selling. 1f possible. VIRGO make&gt; a
gn.'at healer or doctllr for you.
n~e St;us Shmv the KiJu( of Day You U
li
5-Dynamu:; 4-PtlSltive: 3 Anm~c:
2 .»$0; 1 Dzfjiatlt
ARIFS (M.mh 2.1 Al'riliiJ)

"*"** )our st\•lc ffilght .1dd to

another'~&gt; d

scomfort. You m1ght be
\\ ondcnng about the why .1nd hm, of
a situ ltion. A partner or clOS(' assoa.1te
till'S to stlpl.'l) answers to )OUr qu~
tions. fomght: Oeanng out ('rrand...
md some papcmork.
1AURUS (April ~l\L"ly .lO)
Stav on top of your game.
Und~tandfng will evoh'l-' to a new
level if you allo\\ your unagm.1tion to

* *"*

wander. Your crcatiVJtv emerge:: m a
meeting. nllowing gn-.1ter gJ\'c-and
take. Torught: AdJust your pL1ns
around a rncnd.
GEMI~l (t\ Ia\' 21 June 20)
1-.:ccp commurucation flO\\
1ng. 'I ou nught wonder which IS the
best approaCh. The unc.xp..'Ctcd occurs
"hen taking &lt;1 !'&gt;tmd Be Willing to flm,
and understand. An nssociation could
k.&gt;cl hkca \\CJght. lorught: l l.1ppily
he,1du1&amp; home.
CA."\ CER Qunc 21 Jul\ 22)
.11 \\ ith each inchvtdu.ll
dm.--cth·. Keep talking ,,;th ,,thcrs t!llll
ont~n-onc fc\ cl in order to netnm
pbsh a d~anng A leap to be Iter understandmg am h.tppcn tf another pcr.;on
INs fl'. of a Cl.lll\'lction. lotught S.w
') N
to an tn\'ltatton

*"***

*"*"*"

I EO Quly 23-Aug. 22)

***'*

Your tzustmg natun.· nught
mtcrprct another's motives qu1te d1f
~rcnth· from what 1s n:-.1)h• gomg on.
l..C;J \ c n.,om h., be w rtmg. focus l"lll
data and fact-; m the l.:1te aftcmool\

ME.~

when making a nustake L&lt;; less likch
forught frcat youoof \\ell
VIRGO (Aug. 2h.x&gt;pt.22)
Manage) our m.&gt;t.'&lt;i to root
out a problem on n deep level.
I'hrough obscr,.ing and :"'atdUng \\hat
someone nught put on your plate ) ou
\\ill gam. Midnftcmoon, you dC'Cidc to
be more verbaL Tonight let aeati\'lty

*'*' *"*

flO\\.

UBRA (Sept. 2J..CXt. 22)
Gsc the davli~t hour.; to
tht• max You rmght not be plca"Cd
w1th eve!) thing th..1t comes up
Certain!\: you have the ab1lity to read
others. A m&lt;.'eting could be n.•vcaling
IOrugh!: Go \\ithin .md think through

***"*

ndcci-..1on.

SCORPIO (&lt;At 23-1'\m·. 2.1)
Others often are enVIOUS
of) our n.1tura)-..!atus and St) lc. You

'* **'*'""*

m1ght not be able to handle n per;,on.1l
matter M soon as you ·w&lt;mted tn
Others seem to n.'\.'&lt;i a lot from ·ou
Make tt) our pleasure! Ton1ght:
Sunoundt-od b\' JX-'Ople
SAGilTARIUS (NO\~ 22 lA'C. 21)
l..::t&gt;ep n.•:~chmg out for "'"'
iiiL"'\'eN and different solutions. 'lou

*** *

could find a famil) mcm~r adcL.ng
pl\'S..."tll\' w hm you cannot t'\'Cll diS
russ or think about a pc nal matter.
1hkc the lead tn a k'\ el'\!n!. JOnight

Out late
CAPRICOIL"'i (I.:X•c. 22 Jan.l9)
\\'Ork du\.&gt;ttly w1!h one person at a time Your attention and conC'('m arc nppnxia~d. Be t.:an.•ful dealing
with a moncv-rcla.tt~ matte~ \\'ithout
realizing it. you uld be ''alking into
,, situation that '1Pl"I(';U"S to t-t.~ one \\ ay
but i..., real.h· onothct Tonight: Put on a
goodmO\'Ic.

***"*

AQUARIUS Oan. 20.h~b.1S)

***"*
&lt;)lficrs have «tnmg opmCre.1tiv1 'helps you JUggle differ

IOns.

cnt demand . The uncxp..'Ctcd from
nssoda!t• or dear p..1rtncr could fon.'l'
\ ou to qt tion wh.'lt L" gomg on.
toru~ht lli"icn to another pcl'iOn'
t1plmons:...
PISCES (I cb 19-~1m:ch20)

* *"* Dh c mto what ) ou must do
m on:icr to ijgh~"Tiup the moment and
allow a !itt)(' ml)l\.' fn'\.' tinw later.
&lt;."&gt;theN seck }OU out. or a mcctmg
bcrozru:s n sociall1.&lt;1ppcmng 'lou want
!11 lx· free in (lrdl'r tube splllltM~'US.

Torught: l...istcn to suggestions first.
facqu bn&lt; B1srrr zs vn tlte lntt"T1Jt"t
t llttp l'fi&gt;U a~ut'imclu~rrrcvm

•.mvdailvsentinel.com •.mvdailvtribune.com
I

I

J

�.., f ilE

~unbnp

geD6

m:itnes -ientinel

Sunday, October 3, 2010

EXTENSION CORNER
It's a bird, a plane, oh
no another pesk) flymg
insect that has appeured
to cause us grief'
Calls have hccn ring
•ng into my ollice con
cerning a large (nickel
:.ized) b10wnish insect
tlying around windows
and doon' a) s looking to
get inside homes. I he
bug is five eighths inch
es long and three eighthc;
inches wide with white
and brown bandmg on
its body's edge and
antennae.
Sw ntting
them lea\ e not only a
bro\\ nio;h stam but also a
stinky smell!
The
pest,
Brown
Marmorated Stmk Bug
(Halyomorpha halys), is
11 non-native pest from
China,
Japan,
and
Korean that was discovered
in Allentown,
Pennsylvania in 200 1.
rhc brO\\ n stink bugs
feeds on fruits and '&gt;ced
pods. OSU ExtensiOn
factsheet, f•S 3824.
''Bro\\n
Marmoruted
Stink Bug" on "W\\.ohioline.osu.edu. &lt;;tntes its
favorite plants wclude
such plants as apple,
peach. ·corn. soybean.
green bean s, pepper,
(emprt!
paulo\\ n1.1
tree), redbud. butterfly
bu h. maple. \\eet gum
and many others. It feeds
by suckmg on the plant
JUicec; \\ ith sts beak
(strawhke mouthpa11s).
The 1ife C) cle of the
bug is that they O\erwinter as ndultc; in a protect
ed spot (house. garage)
They emerge Ill the
sprin-g in earl)' Ma)
They feed. m te and Ia) s
eg s on the under 1de of
leaves Each fern le can
Jay up to 400 eggs over
the summer. The ) oung
bug (inc;tarl emerges and
start to feed. It takes
fl\ e stages of grO\\ th
spurts to OCl:llr mer the
next couple months
before the) are full
grO\\ n. They mature JUSt
m time to congregate to
find places to h1de out in
to overwinter..
L1ke the Multicolored
AsllltlC Lady ijeetle, a
\!acuum cleaner with n
oisposab}e bng l'Hn
sweep up these pests
both mside and outside
the home. Dropping
adult bugs in soapy
water effectively kills
the bugs. There are no
registered tnsecticidnl
recommendations yet.
• Curren~ research has not
confirmed any harm to
humans. They arc not
able to bile humans,
spread a dt ease or cause
a health pr blem.
Informal! n J&lt;; being
gathered thr ughout the
country to r istcr the
spread of the bug into
ne\\ areas. C, I eithe•
my office or go directly
to a centralized eb site,
htt ps:/ /njacs. rutge s.cdu/

stmkbug/report.a p.
•••
Are you intereo;ted 111
growmg and using your
own produced biofuel'l
Plan on attendwg an
open houc;c, 'Sunllowers
to Biofucl' scheduled for
I to 4 p.m., Octohet 23
at
the
Alternative
l•ducation
Program's
School ~arm. The school
lnnn 1s located just off
the intersection of t: S
Rt.32 and State Route
143. at 18 State Route

Program (AAEP), start
I here wJII be a demon
ed the Sun! lowers to c;tratwn of the press
Biofuel proJect as an u ed to extract the oil
AAI•P junior semor land fr m the sunflower
plannmg project. I he 5CCd'i and a presentation
two year proJCl:t was on the procec;s of turn
funded with a Sugar iug
the
oil
into
nush J·oundation grant biodie&lt;&gt;el. A discussion
along \\ ith grant p:u tner. on the value and u&lt;;e ot
Ohio GmversJt)' 's Ru s the by product cake as n
C'ollege of I nginecnn~.
IJ-.estock feedstuff will
The p10ject mcluded be mduded
custom fnr nung, grmn
D\Hght M•tchell will
and cake torage, and the also provide an ecode\-elopment of a mo'&gt;Jie nomic analysis of the
bsodicsel
processlll" prOJect, as well as esti
facthty that I"&gt; on ftrrn mates of an on farm
143.
Learn how to tum a I0 read} The goal of the start-up cost The field
acre field of sunflowers proJeCt \\as to den on day is free and open to
mto a btofuel that can be strate on !arm otlc;eed to the publJc. t•or further
used in nny diesel tractor b10diesel proce sm" and mformat1on check out
or truck. After the ,j il is to sho" how the tech the "eb link BioFuel
pressed from the seed. nology \:an be usee. to Field Day Flier.
the spent sunflower prm tde the power on
(Hal Kneen i ~ the
product or seed cake can any Ohio !ann ..
A s:rrc ulture &amp; Narural
be used ns a high value
The field day wsll Rewurces
Educawr,
feed concentrate for begm with a session on Met}.:\
and
Scioto
ruminant live-stock feed. the agronomics of pl•111t Counlles. Buckere Hili~
Dwight
Mitchell, ing. "rowing and har- and 0/uo Valley EERA,
instructor at the Athens vesting suntlowcrs for Ohio State Univenil\
Alternative EducaPion biofucls
product on. E\tl'll\ion.)

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Nature • olCk W mba"

Metgs
counties
informed
~untmP

mtmes~entind
Galha • 446-2342
Me gs • 992 2155

Hlltlor "lu f..mlly"
The Amaztng Race • A K1
Sav• th O,r,·

1 OTV News

The
Cleveland
Simp sons
Shbw
Nature Bl.xk 'VI mba"

,,

275-415# St. $90 ~ 129. Iff. $88-$1 10; 425-525
St. $90 $115. Jlf $88 $105; 550-625# St $90$110, HI. $85 $98; 650 725f/ St $88-$105, Hf.
$85-$94; 750 850# St $85 $95, Hf. $80-$88.

Cows
Well Mu&lt;;cled/J Jeshed $48 $54, MedJUm Lean
$43 )47; flun 1 tght c;, 30 $42: Bulls $52 50-$69

Back To The Farm:
Cm\ Calf Pnu 5900 dn. Bred Cows 250-$775;
Baby Cahes 25 245. Goat $25-$155. Hogs.
$33. Lambs $9"i $11 '5.

Upcoming specials:
Sale, 10 a.m., Oct. 6
Fat C'attle Sale 4 30 a.I]l , Oct. 13
I·or more inlormatJon. d:all DeWayne at (740)
339-0241, Stacy at (304) 634-0224, Luke at (740)
645-3697, Donny C'ratt at (740) 534-2533. Visit
the Web site at www upn ucers com

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