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www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, November l. 2008

·· ·~-

ALONG THE RIVER
Fading fast
Fall foliage passing peak,
IIIII Ten

Penn State
Michigan St.

Ohio state

Minnesota

Nortnwestem

Illinois

Iowa

Purdue
Indiana
' MIChigan
WisconSin

5
4
3
3
3
2
1
1
1
1

1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
4
5

w

8
7

2

7

2

7

2

5
5
3
2

4
4
6
6
7

4

5

3

noon

Illinois at Western Mk:hlg;ln, noon
Michig;ln at Minnesota, noon
Purdue at Michigan State, noon
Wisconsin at lnciana, noon
Penn State at Iowa, 3:30p.m.

Ill(; fl N S 11\1 S
RUSHING OFFENSE ·
Penn State ...................... 226.3
Wisconsin ...................... 200.3
Iowa .......... .................... 189.6
.Indiana ....-...................... 180.6
Illinois ............................ 175.8
PASSING OFFENSE
Illinois ............................272.3
.Purdue .......................... 242.4
Penn State ...................... 233.4
Minnesota
.............. ........ 240.3
•
-Michig;ln State ................ 212. 7
•
TOTAL OFFENSE .
Penn State ...................... 459.8
Illinois ..... :...................... 448.1
lhdiana .......................... 390.0
Wisconsin ...................... 385.4
Jowa .............................. 379.1
•
TOTAL DEFENSE
Penn State ...................... 265.9
Ohio State .. .................... 267.1
Iowa ..............................301.6
Wiscons1n ........ .... ..........324. 7
Northwestern ........... ....... 337.4
Bl(; II N lii\Lll HS
. RUSHING YARDS
Javon Ringer, Mich. State .. 1427
Shonn Greene, Iowa .......... 1257
Evan Royster, Penn State ..._: 970
.f&lt;IJI)' Sheets, Purdue ..... .... 924
·Tyrell Sutton, Northwestern 776
PASSING YAROS
:Ju1ce Williams, Illinois ........ 2441
. -Adam Weber, Minnesilta .... 2151
:Brian Hoyer, 'Mich. State .... 1875
.Curtis Painter, Purdue ........1762
:c.J. Bacher, Northwestern ..1700
RECEIVING YAROS
.Eric Decker, Minnesota ........895
'Arrelious Benn, Illinois ..........836
Greg Orton, Purdue ........... ... 610
'Desmond Tardy, Purdue ...... 594
Mark Oell, Mich. State ........ 568

OSU LEADERS
PASSING YARDS
Terrelle ~ .......................879
RUSHING YARDS
:Chris Wells .. ...................... ...674
RECEMNG YARDS
Brian Robiskie ..................... 298
TOUCHDOWNS
Brian Robiskie ... ...................... 5
Terrelle Plyor............................ 5
TACKLES
James Laurina~is ................... 90
SACKS

Gibson ... ... .............. .4
TACKLES FOR LOSSES
Thaddeus Gibson .................... 6
INTERCEPIIONS
· Malcolm Jenkins ......................3
· Kurt Coieman ................... :...... 3
Thadde~s

2008 OSU SCHEDULE
'

Au!', 30 ·

.Sept 6
Sept 13
Sept 20
·Sept. 27
Oct 4
Oct.ll
. Oct. 18
Oct. 25

-.e

No\/. 15
·Nov. 22

Young;town State W, UO
Ohio
W, 26-14
usc
~ 35-3
Troy
.
W, 28-10
Minnesota
W, 34-21
Wisconsin
. W, 20-17
Purdue
w, 16-3
· MSU
W, 45-7
Penn State
~ 13·6
@ Northweslem Noon
@ Illinois
Michigan

Cl

l

0
2

Sl\1\ll!lli\V'S (;1\MI.S
~su at~.

Texas hills marry cowboy
boots and haute cuisine, 01

Ovet:al

W L
5 0
9

Sehool

LIVING

Noon
TilA

·Content oom~led by Jim Naveau ar&lt;l
~ by Ross Bistoff • The Uma News
Copyli~t 10 2008 The LJma News. Repro.duc1ion of all or any I)O!tOO of th~ matenal
IS prohibited 1&gt;1\hoi.Jt "'llress consent

An inside look at

• The Uma News photos

..

week's game

QBs upgrade w~uld strengthen Big Ten
It's no great revelation to
football fans in Big Ten terriJim
tory that the league doesn't get
Naveau
a lot of respect around the
country.
The Uma News
After Ohio State's back-tojnaveau@limanews.com
hack losses in BCS title games
419-993' 2087
the last two years, some national observers don't feel the to retire this reputation.. for
. Big Ten deserves much re- being a paper tiger of a conferspect.
Losing 41-14 and 38-24 to
Southeastern Conference
teams ranked lower than you
will do that.
So, what's the answer the
Big Teri needs to come up with

ence?
There are a lot of possible answers. But here's one: Recruit
some better quarterbacks.
If there is one player who can
change a game by himself, it is
a quarterback. It .takes ,only

Hometown News for
Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
.
.
'

one good one on your roster to · 20 seasons?
ment that part of the blame for
turn around a football pro- . 'rhere have' been seven SEC thisfallsonNFLpei'60nneldegrwn.
quarterbacks picked in the first partments, who don't always
Unfortunately, if you use the round since 1995. There have get it right on draft day.
NFL draft as a measuring been two quarterbacks from There was that little matter
stick, it hasn't been a real good Southern California draftOO in of Tom Brady lasting until the
decade - or more - for Big the first round since the last sixth round on draft day in
Ten quarterbacks.
time a Big Ten QB went that 2000. And a year after that,
Thelru!tBigTenquarterback early.
.
Drew Brees wasn't drafted
selected in the first round of There have been two Tulane until the second round.
the NFL draft was Penn quarterbacks, two Marshall Of the current crop of Big
State's Kerry Collins in 1995. quarterbacks and two Univer- Ten quarterbacks, Ohio State's
How can a conference that sity of California qUarterbacks Terrelle Pryor, Ilinois' Juice
aspires to be among the na- chosenintheflfStroundsince Williams and Minnesota's
tion's elite produce one NFL Collins went to the Carolina Adam Weber stand out as guys
first-round quarterback in 14 Panthers in 1995.
who could get a first-round
seasonsandjusttwointhelast You could make the argu- . look.

SATURDAY'S OPPONENT: NORTHWESTERN (7-2, 3M2)

Alook at someofthe key matchups in the
game between No. 12 Ohio State (7·2, 41 Big Ten) and Northwestern (7-2, 3-2 Big
Ten) on Saturday in Evanston, Ill.:

TDs), Rasheed Ward (35 catches, 329 put consistent pressure on opposing quaryards, 2 TDs) and Eric Peterman (33 terbacks. Gibson leadsOSU ~four sacks.
catches, 386 yards, 3 TDs) g)ve Northwest- Advantage: Northern a solid tr&lt;Jupofreceivers. The lossofSut- westem
Quarterbacks
ton (30 receptions, 2 TDs) will also be no- Unebackers
ticed in the passing g;lme.
:Terrelle Pryor threw for more yards (226) OSU sophomore Dane Sanzenbacher had
Northwestern lost its
than iri' any other game he played this sea- the best game of his career (6 catches, 82 best linebacker, Malcolm
son when Ohio State lost 13-6 to Penn yards, including a 53-yard catch) against Arrngton, to a knee inJury in
State, but that was overshadowed by his two Penn State and Brian Robiskie was consis- awin over' Purdue on Oct. 18.
fourth-Quarter turnovers. This will be the first . tent (4 catches, 56 yards). Robiskie's 30 Sophomore Nate Williams has retime 1n his college career he has had to catches are tied for sixth in the Big Ten, but placed him. Prince Kwateng (68
bounce backfrom significant adversity. The no other OSU player has caught more than tackles, 1.5 sacks) .and Quentin
good news might be that oppos1ng quarter- :~,8 . Ne~er team has consistentlY produced Davie (44 tackles, 3.5·sacks) are
backs have completed 61 percent of their big plays on offense. Each has had only the other starters.
passes against Northwestern's defense and four offensive plays of 45 yards or longer.
James Laurinaitis (90 tackles),
tile Wildcats rank ninth in the Big Ten 1n pass Ad\&gt;antage: Even
Marcus Freeman (56 tad&lt;les) anc
defense.
Off
Ross Homan (52 tackles) lead
Northwestern's C.J . Bacher suffered a
enslve .line
·· Ohio State. Freeman played
hamstring injury two weeks ago against In- . Ohio State's offensive line once ag;lin ~a sprained ankle against
diana and missed last week's g;lme. Coach came up small in a big g;lme in the Penn Michigan State and Penn
Pet Fitzgerald says if Bacher is close to State loss. In its last four g;lmes ag;linst Top State anclohopes naving last
healthy he will start against OSU. Backup Ten teams, OSU has averaged 107 yards a week off will help heal the inMike i&lt;all&lt;a rushed for 217 yards on 27 t:ar- g;lme rushing and has allowed 16 quarter- jury. ·
ries, a Big Ten quarterbacks rushing record, back sacks.
Advantaee: Ohio State
and passed fol143 in a 24-17 win over Min- Northwestern's offensive line is one of the Defensive backs
nesota last Saturday. Bacher has thrown for youngest in the B1g Ten with three redshirt Ohio State has forced 21
1, 700 yards, with 10 touchdowns and 11 freshman starters and, among the frve
interceptons.
starters, a total of two career starts before turnovers, including 12 interAdvantage: Even
this year. Only offensive tackle Oesmond ceptions. Northwestern has
• back
Taylor had started a game before this sea- come up w~ 18 turnovers,
Ru nn~ng
s
son. Guard, Joel Belding, with 22 career eight of them interceptions.
Northwestern's leading rusher Tyrell Sut- starts, has been releg;lted to the second Malcolm Jenkins and Kurt
ton (776 yards) waslostforthe season dur- team. Ohio State's starters came into this Coleman lead the Buckeyes with .
ing the Indiana g;lme when he suffered a season with 70 combined starts.
three interceptions each. Brad
wrist injul)' that required surge!)'. The injury Northwestern has allowed only 10 sacks. Phillips, Jordan Mabin and Brencost the Akron natr.-e a chance at his third Ohio State, ~ 22, is lied ~ Indiana for dan Smith each have two tor
1,000-yard season 1n four years ~ the last in the Big Ten in that category.
Northwestern. Sm~·s 48-yard
Wildcats. His replacement, Omar Conteh, . . Advantage: Even
interceploo return in the final
has 235 yards rushing for the year but Defeasive lile
minute gave the Wildcats the
g;lined only 12 yards on 12 carries against
winning touchdown against
Minnesota.
After being a target of critK;ism most of \he Minnesota last Saturday.
Ohio State's rushing game is coming oft season, OSU's line has performed sOlidly in Advantage: Ohio State
a season-low 61 yards ag;linst Penn State. ~last three games. End Thaddeus Gibson Special teams
.
Chris Wells' 55 yards in that g;lme was h1s has emerged as the standout of the ~oup Northwestern kickef Amado Viltarlowestoutputin a full gamesincetheopener and tackle Cameron Heyward has seemed
,
of the 2007 season. Opposing defenses to become more productive in recentg;lmes. real is 16 of20 on field gJaisy,jth a
have loaded up ag;linst the run and the NorthwestemrankssecondintheBigTen long of 46 yards. Punter Stefan
Buckeyes' running backs have scored only in sacks~ 26, while Ohio State is one spot Oemos is averag)ng 40-4 yards a
five touchdowns in nine games after getting from the bottom of the conference with 15. kick. For Ohio State, Aaron f'ettre')l (5
22 TDs last season.
End Corey Wootton (6.5 sacks, 12 tack- ct5onfieldgJals) hasfPllenmoreatAdvantage: Ohio State
les for losses) leads the Wildcats. Enc Vince tempts than Ryan Preto!ius (13 of 17)
Browne (4 sacks) was lost tor the season reoantly, but coach Jim Tressel S&lt;¥1
Rec:ehers
st'll the No. 1 """'-.
when he suffered a knee injul)' on a kickoff "-'""us
r•e"-''
MA"CO.
Ross lane (38 catches, 397 yards, 0 last week. Tackle John Gill (4 sacks) also has Advantage: Ohio State

.•
NAME: Dave Foley

HOMETOWN: Cincinn;lti
'
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1965-68
CAREER HIGHUGHTS: Three-year
starter at offensiJe tackle. All-American
1n 1968 on Ohio State's national
championship team. A~demic AllAmerican who WBduated with a bachelor's degree in industrial engineering.
AFTER OHIO STATE: First-round draft choice of
the New York Jets in 1969. Played for the Jets
1969-71 and for the Buffalo Bills from 1972-7(.
Owner of Foley Benefits Group, an insurance and
retirement investment firm, in Springfield .

.

l;lv BRIAN J.

POMEROY - Meigs
County
Commissioners
expect to spend nearly
$30,000 renovating lhe
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services building
in order to accomodate the
county's new 911 emergency operation, but nolhing can be done until an

.. ,·.· t

Ohio StBte'i ·~ Gant
(left) ancUiay Sn)all eel~-

BY DIANE PonoRFF
OPOIIOflf-'FOMYDAH.~EGISTER.COM

SOUTHSIDE, W.Va. Two men are in good condition following a three-vehicle accident on ·U.S. 35
Thursday.
Around 4 p.m., Trooper
A.D. Wootton and Cpl. C.K.
Zerkle, along with members
of the Point Pleasant
Volunteer Fire Depanment
and
Mason
td

accident ncar Cornstalk
Road, nearly 10 miles south
of Point Pleasant.
· According to the West
Virginia State Police, Earl
Kiser of Hurricane had been
driving his Toyota pickup
truck north on U.S. 35 when
he crossed the center line
and struck a tractor-trailer
driven by Raben Parrish of
Petersburg, Va., who was
driving SOlllh.
The impact caused such
severe damage .to the steer-,
ing mechanism on the trac'
tor-trailer that Parrish could
not maintain control of the
truck, which crossed into
the northbound .lane and

OBnuARIES
Page AS _
• Mary Chancey
.• Debra Ann Wi(IIZ
• Charles M. Briggs
' D. Pear1 Remy

INsmt:
• Behavior reflects poorly
on company.
SeePageA3
• Firefighters look to
Wayne National Forest
fire. See Page A6

Pluso -

Say what?

- Ohio Stare safery Kun Coleman

"Seinfeld" star spoke at
Northwestern's June,
2007 !'J'adualon?

" North2: Which
western coach has
the most career
wins over OSU?

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

3: Which tonner OSU assistant
coach did Maurice Clarett get into

a heated af0jrnent y,jth during the
2002 OSU-Northwestem game?
. , _ 1. Julia Louis-preyfus; 2. 1Jii:k Hanley, whose tea~ beat the Sue~
four Urnes from 1927-31; 3. Tim Spencer

days until kickoff

INDEX
4 SECI10N8 ~ Z4 PAGE!l

Pill
1eem111r

~~IIC.12t-

'~

Around Town
A3
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds · DSection
insert
Comics
Editorials
A4
C6
Movies
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
A6
Weather
.,) aool Oloio Volley PUIIUohiD&amp; 01-

.llt"

agreement
with
the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission is executed.
Commissioners
have
received .a pledge of
$100,000 in ARC grant
funds for equipment and
renovation work . on the
EMS building. The system
must be operating by Jan. I.
The computer equipment
cannot be installed until the
renovations are completed,

and the renovations cannot
be completed until the ARC
provides a grant agreement
to the county, which ,will be
followed by a check.
That
agreement,
Commissioner Jim Sheets
said, is expected next week.
. It could be executed as early
as Monday. Commissioners
recessed their weekly meeting Thursday until 10 a.m .
Monday, hoping they can

•

.

eJtecute the agreement
allowing the ARC to
process a check .
Once that check is
received, • commissioners
can proceed with a loan
from Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., and begin the
work
needed .
Commissioners
have'
secured a loan for $236,000
for the construction and the
purchase and installation of

the necessary dispatching·
equipment
from
Emergitech .
Commissioners
have
receivecf an estimate of
$23 ,700 from 1.-lomecreek
Enterprises for structural
modifications and renovation work at the EMS building, and ; bid for $5.000
from Maxey Electric for the

Please see ARC. Al

'

. Rio Grande resident Etta
Altizer gives an old incandescent light bulb to Sandy
Davis, lead member services for Buckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative Inc., in
exchange lor two packs of
compact fluorescent (CFL)
energy efficient light bulbs
as part of the company's
"The Sw~ch is On" campaign. Consumer Service
Manager Russ
at

. '
etatlves thrc1ugl1oul
state of Ohio in an effort to
reduce energy use. So far,
BREC has distributed
about 14,000 CFL energy
efficient light bulbs, and will ..
continue to give two packs
(six bulbs) to each BREC
household (6mit one
exchange per account) that
brings in an incandescent
bulb until supplies are
depleted.
Joy Kocmoudlphoto

Accident; Al

issuing the final action, there- wastewater lreatment/disposfore, Ohio EPA recommends al system pennit-to-install
that anyone wishing to file an available, once it has been
COLUMBUS
On appeal contact ERAC at 614- submitted.
Friday,
the
Ohio 466-8950 for more informaCurrent AMP-Ohio perEnvironmental Protection tion.
mits being processed are the
Agency issued a final waste- . According to the Ohio Ohio EPA's 401 water qua\ity
water discharge, or National EPA, the wastewater dis-. certification and the U.S.
Pollutant
Discharge charge pennit limits dis- Army Corps of Engineers
Elimination System, permit charges of pollutants into the · 404 pennit. The landfill draft
for American Municipal Ohio River and its tributaries. permit is currently under
Power-Ohio's proposed coal- · The • permit also includes review by the Ohiq EPA and
fired power plant in Letart requirements fcl the cooling the t~smissjon li_ne applicaFalls.
'
· water intake structure. Ohio tion IS under n:vrew by the
A public hearing on the . EPA says: "The discharges Ohio Power Siting Board.
NPDES draft pennit and may n:sult in a change from
AMP-Ohio's air permit-tolandfill draft pennit were current water quality condi- install is current1y being
held in August at Southern tions, but they cannqt cause appi;aled and is set for a bearElemental)' to allow the pub- violations of water quality ing in the summet or 2009 .
lic a chance to ~omment on standards that protect hwnan Earlier this year the OPSB
both permits. Ohio EPA health and the env110nment. approved AMP-Ohio~s ceranswers any comments or The Agency's n:yiew of the tificate of environmental
questions about the NPDES discharge permit application compatibility and public need
permit brought Up at the hear- ensures that discharges from application pennitting the
mg in a formal n:pon which the project will comply with physical construction or the
c.an
be
found
at:
Ohio's water quality stan- plant to begin.
~ttp://www.epa.state.oh.~slpi
AMP-Ohio
recently
c/citiz:entampnpdespermn .pd · dards, other applicable dis- announced
participating
c~e standards and federal
f
.
communities
in
the
American
Kent Carson, communica- requirements for cooling Municipal Power Generat_ing
tions director for AMP-Ohio water intake structures."
The Ohio . EPA added Station Letart Falls proJCCI
said, "We're obviously
approved
giving
copies
of the waste~ater dis- have
pleased that the final penmt
Limited-Notice-To-Proceed
was issued. It's another one charge pennit, pendmg sohd to the Engineer-Procun:of the critical · path pennits waste pennit-to-install appli- Construct (EPC) contractor.
and therefore a significant cation and other techmcal Notice was provided followstep forward."
· support info~ation a~e ing a full participants meeting
Issuance of the pennit can available for rev1ew at Oluo held in Columbus. The EPC
be
appealed
to
the EPA's Southeast Dislrict
Environmental
Review Office. 2195 Front St ., contractor is basically one
Appeals
Commission Logan, by fii'St calling (740) company that designs and
(ERAC). Many appeals must 385-850 I. Ohio EPA also builds the plant as well as
equipment.
be flied withm 30 days of intends to make AMP-Ohio's secures
'
;

J

-

Switching·things up

nets Ohio permit

Buckeye Brain Busters
1: Which fanner .

'

.

Accident
•
•
VIctnns
in good
condition

WEATIIER

"I think'we're a better team than
.last year but couldn't get the wins
When we needed them."

REED

BREEOOMYD~LYSENTINEL.COM

i

I
. S

Where are they now?

Due to a breakdown of a
key p~ece of the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co.'s production
equipment affecting 'color
processil)g • . the Sunday
Times-Sentinel has been
printed in black and white.
OVP newspapers will
return to color when the
equipment is repaired.

• Hornets sting Hannan
on Senior Night.
SeePageBl

alii ate. .

s 1.50 • Vol. 42 . I\o. 42

ARC·agreement still delays 911 work

To o.ur readers:

SPORTS ..

'

Ptnnt·r·u\ • :\ Iitldl"porl • l ~alhpoh~ • i\'o\ l'lltlu.'l ' t) . --'OOH

( &gt;hi o Y.tlh:\ Puhli ... lling ( ·u .

•

,I

Holiday flower show set for
Nov.22-23
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICHOMVOAILVSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - "A Caroling We Will Go" is th~ the~e
of the annual Meigs County Garden Club Assoc1at1on s
Holiday Flower Show to be staged Nov. 22-23 al Carleton
School in Syracuse.
The flower show, an annual kickoff to the holiday season,
is open for viewing by the public on both days at no cost.
The hours are 1 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, and noon to 4 p.m ..
on Sunday. There are also two artistic arrangement classes
in which anyone can exhibit whether or not .they belong .to
a garden club.
Each class in the show will carry out the holiday theme
with the name of a Christmas carol. The show will fealure
in addition to the two invitational class, seven classes in the
anistic design division for exhibit by garden club members
only and two classes for junior exhibitors .
. .. .
The classes in which only members of the partKipatmg
. ..
.
·garden dubs can exhibit are as follows:
"Silent Night" to include the Holy Fam1ly; The F1rst
Noel,'.' a fanta;y ·flow design; "Away in the Manager,"
exhibit including wood ; "Jingle Bells," a vtbrat1le ; "We
Three Kings," Decorated Packages w1th each one con taming planting material in the wrappmg or decoration, w1th ~
division for a gift for a ch1ld and one for a g1ft for an adult,
"It Came Upon a Midnight Clear.'' : a~ illuminary and "0
Little town of Bethlehem," a synerg1st1c destgn. .
The invitational classes open to anyone are "0 Come All
Ye Faithful," a creative design; and " Deck the Halls," a
door or wall decoration in three categones. evergreen,
cones and/or pods, and herbal/dried. The artistic arrange_
ments must be the work of the exhibitor.
. The classes for junior exhibitors are "H_ark the Her~ld
Angels Sing ," a design includmg an angel f1~urme ; and 0
Christmas Tree," an arrangement mcludmg evcrgr~en
materials . There will also be an educational sectton wh1ch
will feature exhi!&gt;its by Master Gardeners. called "Joy to the
World ."
The horticulture division includes classes for evergreens,

. Pluse SM Hollct.y, A2

,,

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•

l
f
l

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•

PagcA2

REGIONAL

6unba~ lime~ -ienttntl

Sunday, November 9,

PagcA:.J

2008

Sunday, Novembet: 9,

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Behavior reflects poorly on company
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

•

Vicki

Persons anniversary

Kevin Kelly/photo

· GALJ.IPOLIS - The Rev. Robert ·and Bronis (Young)
Persons ofTexas Road, Galli}Xlli£, celebrated their 54th wed- ·
ding anniversary on Oct. 25,2008 at a gathering of family and
friends at the home .of BJ and Scan Eichinger.
Hosting the celebration, which f•·atured a vow renewal ceremony officiated by the Rev. Gene Spillman, were Angela
Wcc!&lt;s and BJ Eichinger.
·
'Children of the couple, both retired, are Margaret (Rick)
Geiger, BJ (Scolt) Eichinger, Janel (Mike) Zweifel, Chris
(Mike) Martin, ~arb (Jim) Harris, and Donna Hawley. They
also have seven grandchildren, and four great-grandchildren.

Golden Corral · Restaurant, 307 Upper River Road,
Gallipolis, will again host a dinner in apprecialio~ of those
who have served or are serving in the military. On Monday,
Nov. 17 from 5 to 9 p.m., former and active service people
can eat tor free at the restaurant. Seen under the restaurant's sign announcing the dipner are, from lefl, Gallia
County Veterans ,Service Commission members Dave
McCoy and Dick Moore, local Golden . Corral General
Manager Joann Harrison, Velerans Service Officer and
Disabled American Veterans Chapter Commander Keith
Jeffers and DAV member Frank Hamilton.

~nd

Nelson Mo,rrison

Morrison anniversary
MIDDLEPORT - Vicki and Nelson Monis011 celebrated
their 2Sth wedding anniversary at.their home in Middlc}Xll1 on
Oct. 29, 2008:
.
They were married on Oet. 29, 1983 at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church, with the Rev. Clyde Henderson officiating.
Mr. and Mrs. Morrison have three children, Brad (Mary)
Monison of Bidwell, and Danny and Misty at home.
Mrs. Morrison is the daughter of Nora Nitz and the late Coy
Nitz. Her husliand is the son of Mac Morrison .and Eugene
Morrison .

Money found in Ohio house's ·walls .no treasure ·

Local Briefs

foreclosed .on one of her Because I hey were not able
properties.
·1o sit down and divide it in a
As for the 21 de"endants ralional way I hey both lost."
CLEVELAND - In the of Patrick Dunne - a
Kills would later call his
end, a contrdctor who found wealthy businessman who. discovery "the ultimate con$182,000 in Depression-era stashed money that was tractor fantasy."
·currency hidden in bathroom minted in a time of bank colHe was tearing out the
walls got just a few thousand lapses and joblessness, only. baihroom walls of an 83dollars and, he feels, some to have it divvied up decades year-old home near Lake
·Vindication.
,
. later ih a similar economic Erie on a spring day in 2006
The discoYery amounted climate - they'll each get a when he discovered two
·
green metal lockboxes sus-.
lo lillie more than grief for . fraction of the find.
"I called it the greed case," pended by a wire below the
Bob Kills.• who couldn't
allorney
Gid medicine chest. Inside were
agree on how to split the said
· money with homeowner Marcinkevicius, who repre- white envelopes with the
senls-the Dunne estate.
return 'address for "P. Dunne
Amanda Reece.
"If these two individuals News Agency."
It didn't help Reece's
"I ripped the corner off of
financial situation either. She had sat down and resolved
their
disputes
and
divided
one,"
Kills said during a
testified in a deposition that
she was considering bank- the money, the heirs would de}Xlsition in a lawsuit filed
ruptcy and a bank recently have had no knowledge of it. . by Dunne's estate. "I saw a·
BY JOE MILICIA

Financial
•
semmar

Free harvest
dinner slated

GALLIPOLIS - Edwrd
Jones financial advisor Isaac
Mills will host an ''Outlook
and Op}Xlrtunities" invesl·ment. strategies seminar on
Thursday, Nov. 13 from 2 to
5 p.m. at the Edward Jones
office in Gallipolis, 990A
Second Ave.
Some of the topics to be
covered in the seminar
include:
• The . ·current economic
outlook.
• The impact political and
social events may have on
!he financial markets.
• The importance Qf mainlll.ini~l\· .a lgnl\·l.,;rm .i{lvelk
ment 'strale~y:
. · ·
The .seminar is free, but
seating is limited. To
reserve a seal, contact Mills
at (740) 441-9441.

WILKESVILLE "
Wilkesville United Methodist
Church will have a free harvest dinner on Saturday, Nov.
15 from 4to 6 p.m. ·

Bazaar .Planned
'

JACKSON -TheCLA 9th
Annual Christmas Bazaar
will be held Saturday, Nov.
22, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. in
the CLA I Gym ; 1595
Chillicothe Pike, Jackson.
There will be holiday decorations and gifts for sale.
Visitors will be able to
watch the OSU/Michigan
~eon site,
Se· Heiti
from 10 to II a.m. Food
will be available.
•
For more il~(ormatim1,
call (740) 286-5690.

ASS""IATEO PRESS WRITER

50 and got" lillie diz~y.",
He called Rcece,'wlio haU '
hired him for a remodeling '
project, at work. She got
there,within 45 minutes.
They counted the cash,
piled it on the dining room
table and posed for photographs. Both grinned like
louery jackpot .winners holding an oversized.creek.
But how to share? She
offered I 0 percent.. He wanted 40 percent. From there
things went sour.
A· monlh afler The Plain
Dqaler reported on the case
in December 2007, Dunne's
estate sued, claiming the .
rights lo the muncy.

For the Record
Sheriff's Office

wlir

ARC from PageAl
necessary
electrical
upgrades.
· The renovation work is
not expected to take long to
complete. It involves work
on the roof, as well as some
reconfiguration work to
convert the EMS building's
training center into the 911
dispatch area. No deterini·
nation has ·been made 10
date, , but the county's .911
commiuee has sought . a
legal opinion. as to whether

Dear Annie: I work for a
wonderful company as an
"administrative
assistant
cxtraordinairc." I love what I
do and do it well, and I adore
the owners.
A major headache for me is
"Maxine," the woman who
covers for me whe.n I'm away
from my desk, running
errands, on vacation, etc.
When I return to my desk ,
clients and employees from
my office and O)lr other
offices ofleil comment that
Maxine comes acroS&gt; as
uncaring, unhelpful, rude and
just plmn miserable. It's true.
Even when she hands me a
file or a me~sage, she just
says, "Here," holds it out for
me to take and then leaves . A
lot of times when I've needed
to forward calls to her, she's
on her cell phone talking to
fricnds.and just ignores me .
She never offers to hel p
answer the phone when I'm
busyc
.
Management and the own·
crs qf the c'ompany arc aware
or her .shol1comings but say
ba•·king me up is not
· Maxine's main job and, therefore , not a critical issue . My
company plans to hire a reccplionisl in the future, but at this
time, it's just not }Xlssiblc.
Annie, I · find it hard to
believe that Maxine is
unaware that she lacks people
skills. She is an organized,
· . presentable wol)lan . I wamto
bring up the · issue with her,
but she makes me so uneasy
that I don't know how to do il.
Can you help'? - Terribly
FrustratL-d
Dear Frustrated: Maxine

EMS staff can be used 10 ·
dispatch 911 calls, as well.
County commissioners
considered locating the 911
center-atthe sheriff's department, but it was determined
that the roie of dispatchers
there as jailers would not
allow them to answer 911
calls. Renovation costs ruled
out the use of a section of
the old Veteran~ Memorial
Hospital building as a 911
center.

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O'BLENESS

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••

HEALTH SYSTEM

Certified &amp;
Experienced

...

ure to control.

...

'

Public meetings

meetings today and Fridays.

GALLIPOtiS - Paul J.
Plymale, 68, Gallipolis, was
cited for failing to yield at a
stop sign following a lwovehicle
accident
lhal
occurred
Thursday
at
approximately 6:55 p.ri1. in
Clay Township.
According to troopers,
Plymale was westbound in
· his 1995 Lincoln Towncar on
Shoestring Ridge.Road at the
intersection of Orchard Hill
Road when he failed to 'y.icld
to a stop sign and struck a
2002 Pontiac Sunfirc being
driven by knnifer R.
Cheney, 20, Galli}Xllis, as she
began to tum onto Orchard
Hill from Shoestring Ridge.
No injuries were reported
and both vehicles sustained
non-functional damages.

10 meet at 5 p.m. at Library.
Wednesday, No,·. 12
POMEROY
The
Middleon Literary Club:
will meet at 2 p.m. &lt;tl the
Pomeroy Library . Jeanne·
Bowen will rev iew Wild
N1gh1s : S10rics &lt;tbout lhc
Last
D&lt;tn
of
Poe.
Dickinstin .' Twain , lome,:

Meigs Senior Center.

POMEROY - Special
mec1iug of the Big Bend
Farm Antiques Club. 7:30
p.m. Mulberry Community
Center.
·
CHAUNCEY -'-- Area 14
Youth 'Council, regular
meeling . 9 a.m., Alhens
CDJFS office .
POMEROY - 'Meigs
County Genealogy Society.
regular mecling, 5 p.m.,
Meigs County Museum.
Thesday, Nov. II
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Community Cenler Board
of Directors to meet, 7 p.m.
Nov. II at the community
center.
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club to
mce1 a1 6:30 p.m. at •the
Syracuse
Community
Center. Janet Bolin 10 pre Monday, Nov. 10
sent program on arlistic
POMEROY - Panners arrangements for the hoi iin Care, interactive program .day flower show.
for those with memory loss .
POMEROY Meigs
9 a.m . - I p.m ., regular County Genealogy Society

Tuesday, Nov. l1
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees. 6:30
p.m. home of Manning
Roush.
POMEROY - Bedford
Township Trustees regular
meeting, 7 p.m., town hall .
Wednesday, Nov. 12
MARIETTA - District 18
Executive Commillee, 10
a.m., Holiday Inn , to select
projects for Round 23 funding under Ohio Public Works
Commission Stale Capital
Improvement Program/Local
Transportation Improvement
Program .

and Hcmingv~" ~Y by Joy(l,.'

Carol Oate&gt;. Marlene Kuhn
will be hostess.
Thursday, Nov. 13
CHESTER
Shade
River Lodge 452. at lhe
hall. Officers 10 be eleeled ..
time
to . pay
dues.
Refreshments .

Birthdays

Clubs and
organizations

Saturday, Nov. 15
LONG BOTTOM
Ernest Griffin will ce lebrate
his 91 st birthday on Nov.
15 . Cards may be sent· to
him at 36606 Post Office
Road. Lung Bottom . Ohto
. 45743 .

Gallia County calendar.
High School, .9:30 a.m. For Church, 1100 Fou11h Ave., 2
information, contact . the . p.m., for election of officers.
school at367-7377.
Dues of $4 per member fur
'--. GALLIPOLIS - Parade 2009 may be paid .
and ceremony in honor of
Thesday, Nov. 11
GALLIPOLIS
The Veterans Day begins w ilh the
Galli}Xllis Christian Women's parade at 10:30 a.m. and lhe
Connection will meet, noon. ceremony at II in front of the
GALLIPOLIS - Homer
at Dave's American Grill, 323 Doughboy
Monument. and Mary Bays will celenmtc
Upper River Road behind the Parade forms at Second their 42nd wedding annivcr-.
Super 8 Mole I. Pleas~ call Avenue and Spruce Street at sary on Nov. 12. Cards can be
Linda at446-4319 or Judy at 10 a.m. For information, con· sent to them at 1608 Gniham
245-5181 to make reserva: tact tlje Veterans Service School Road, Gallipolis.
lions. Special fealurc will be Office at 446-2005. ·
Ohio 45631-8002.
·the Annual Missions Auction.
Monday, Nov. 17 ·
E-mail commnnity calmPlease remember !(} bring
GALLIPOLIS - Knights dar items to kkeUy@mydaiyour items for this project; of Columbus will meet at lytribnne.com.
Fax.
books can be sold too . Kathy 6:30 p.m . at the Holiday lnn. annou11cements to 446Kenimer will be the speaker. All members are urged to 3008. Mail items to 825
Bring a friend and join us for allend.
Third Ave., Gatlipnlis, Oilio
fun and fellowship .
Thesday, Nov. 1!1
45631 . Announume11ts may
GALLIPOLIS
GALLIPOLIS - PERl also be dropped off at the
Riverside Study Club will will meet at the First Baptist Tribune o/fic~.
meet at noon at the Holida~
Inn,

Community•
events

Card shower

•

GUNSROM'
Racine Gun Club
Ever:v•
2nd &amp; 4th
Sunday • lpm

• f'JI:II 1411 TtcMICU S~pport
• lr•tlitt'C ~IMoll!r"'l · Wp yt....- ~~ ~st!
• 10

.ma• ao::n~ v.'llll ¥1~1 :!

• 0.-10111 ~""-Pay · , __M~a!Mf A nJQm'

Open To
The Public

Cf!?~~{&amp;.i~!D
Sign Up OniiMI www.loe.INtc.eom

City Police

(12 gauge· .680 chok~)
Rehitble Internet Accen Su'IU 19'14

...

Accident from Page At

mor~

easily treated than those

that have spread. No matter the

According to the slate.
}Xllice, Mason County 911
received several telephone
calls Thursday afternoon
aboul a Toyota truck crossing the center line on the
roadway. Before officers
could gel to the truck , the
crash occurred.
Both lanes of U.S. 35
were closed for about five
hours, which caused traffic
to. be re-routed to W.Va. 6f.
The accident remains
under investigation by
Wootton
with
Zer.kle
assisting.

Shakir Sarwar, MD

stage of cancer development, we

rtemrw,:tagi st!Oncoiogl~ t

can provide a cancer care team

dt&gt;dicated to help you face and
fight cancer. Our profc$sional
team 1i1embcrs are licensed ~nd

. certified, and most importantly,
experienced.'

JOE

.Clubs will begin at I' p.m.
on Saturday and ribbon s
will be awarded in several
places in each class.
·
Special awards 10 be
presented incl.ude besi of
show. reserve best of show
and creativity in the adull
division. and best of show
tn artislic and horti culture
sweepstakes in the junior
divis1on . The flower show
commi ll~e is composed of
members of the Wildwood .
Garden Club , the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners. the
Shade Valley Council of
Floral Arts, lhc Chesler
Garden Club, and lh e
Winding Trail 'Garden
Club .

'

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_-,

,._,

.

BROWNING

~.

FACING CANCER • .

GALLIA COUNTY

~1 : 13 ;11 ilil

CANCER.
Medical Oncology • Radiatiol') Oncology.
Surgery • Diagnostic Imaging •
Pathology •laboratory • Support

w.o.uld ~ t;o, e.,x:tend tlianJu.,
(;o, tJio..ro raiUJr ftelped liJiiJi, mycamp~. and far y.oUr uo.U&gt;.cf amfuk.m;e, m mRr a&amp; (iallW.r
C~Um~yr'w '~EW Sfierijf elect.
'1 LcJJlefQ.#7JUU'd fll, .wr&amp;intF all
of Galliar Caunw ooer tJle,
n.e.a:t 4 yearn/
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cmu,u·t:
f1artrn;m .

1-'or itu•rr ill}fm•N1:i(•n
Hti.!Jd

174IIJ '192· /~IJ"r
R'-I~MY:~ [JHj,~

·oo-..tX}J HC ·7201. nt. 7425

fmmL
l•n•mp(ffriQ.!t.lll t1r il!llm;wsf.!! rif).!'dtl
On lht " (/t, ,fO liJ "1'\l'lf'. rio.edu Jlllmimwl\

RIO GRANDE MEIGS CENTER

. ..

Holiday from Page At
narrow leaf and broadlcaf.
berried branches, polled
cacti or succulent, houseplants, both blooming and
foliate. Junior classes are
evergreen. · dried roadside
material , and P?llcd plant s.
The rules spec1fy that plants
must be owned and grown
by the exhibitor for at least
three months prior to the
~how. No oil or }Xllish is
permined on the foliage .
Entries in all classes must
be in place by noon on
Saturday, Nov. 22 and may
not be rcmo.vcd before 4
p.m. on Nov. 2.l Judging of
'he exhibits by an accrcdil·
1:d judge of the Ohio
'Associalion of Garden

'

vehicle suslaincd disabling
damages.

Meigs County calendar

·- J-IARRISQNYILI,J!, .,- Ap . "!31DWELL ,..., .Am&lt;\ril!lil\
accident between two vehi- · l-egion Post 161 , along with
cles at the intersection of area veterans, arc invited ·to
Ohio 143 and Mudfork Road aucnd Veterans Day services
at River Valley Midl,lle
was re}Xlrted Friday evening. School,
10
a.m.
A
Emergency personnel from Thanksgiving luncheon will
the Rutland and Scipio be served after the assembly. .
•••
Township fire departments Veterans and their families
BIDWELL - On Nov. 2,
were called to the scene with are welcome to stay for
a chainsaw and a water pump
one injury re}Xlrted.
lunch. For infom1ation, call
were stolen from the properNo further information the school at446-8399.
ty of Abic Troyer, 27,. and a
VINTON - ·American
was available. The patrol is
chainsaw and a generator'
Legion
Post 161, along with
handling the re}Xlrt.
were stolen frmil the nearby
area
veterans,
arc invite-d to
.
property of his brother, Joe,
. Veterans Day services at
25; both are of Bidwell.
Vinton Elementary School at
1:30 p.m.
·
CHESHIRE - Veterans
GALLIPOLIS - A twocar accident on Upper River Day assembly at River Valley
GALLIPOLIS - Tc11ilyn
Road on Thursday sen! a
Lewis, 53, Henderson,
Gallipolis woman to Holzer
Vf.Va., was transported by
Medical Center with injuries.
Gallia County EMS lo 1he
RobinS . Haviland, ·52, 53
Pleasant Valley Hospital ER
Vine St., was tranS}Xlrted by
in Poml Pleasant , ·W.Va.,
RIO GRANDE - Letha the Gallia County EMS from
with inca~acilating injuries D. Young, 74. Rto Grande·, · the scene of the 4:17 p.m.
following a two-vehicle acci- was transported by Gallia
dent that occurred around County EMS the 1-tolzcr accident, Gallipolis City
Medical Center. ER with Police re}Xlrted. .
noon on Thursday.
Officers said Haviland was
According to troopers , incapacitating injurie s fol Lewis was driving her 2005 lowing a one-vehicle acci- northbound but had stopped
that
occurred for traffic. Haviland told offiFord Freestyle northbound dent.
on Ohio 7 ncar mile post 26 Wednesday around 12:25 cers that she had just moved
her car forward when a
when she failed lo maintain p.m.
According
1o
troopers
,
an 'assured clear distance
northbound car driven by
ahead and her vehicle rear- Young was driving her 1998 Sarah· K. Waugh, 19, 295
ended a 2003 Chevy Mercury Sable westbound on Kings .Cemetery Road,
C/K 1500, also northbound Pleasant. Valley Road, about Crown City, was unable to
on Ohio 7 and driven by a half mile west of Ohio 325, slow in time and struck the
Herman A. Ellioll, 66, Point when the vehicle went off the rear of Haviland's car.
Pleasanl , W.Va., who was right side of the roadway,
Severe damage was listed
striking. a ditch. utility pol~ .
slopped at a red light.
to
Waugh 's car while
· Ellioll was reportedly nol and small tree before coming
injured in the accident. 10 re.sl in a yartl with func- Haviland's car funct·ional
d~mage. Waugh was cited
· though his .vchicle sustained tiolml damages.
for speeding. ·
Young
w~ts
cited
with
failfunctional dainages . Lewis'
GALLIPOLIS - On Oct.
30. ·a mig wclder,band saw,
lloor jack, two ll.rills, 22 caliber rill~. shotgun, and 600
pounds of copper ground
wire were stolen from
Dennis Kirby of Galli}Xllis.

Highway Patrol'

Locally advanced cancers are

struck anolher tractor-lrailer
driven by Eric Howell of
Ohio .
Kiser and Howell had to
be extracted from thetr
vehicles by firefighters
using the "jaws of life ...
Kiser was taken to a
local trauma center by helicopter, while Howell was
Jaken 10 a local hospital by
ambulance, where. he was
treated
and
released.
Parrish · was not injured in
Jhe crash and declined
being lransported to !he
hospital.

is being insolent because .she ang"' that her hilsband 1old a
r"sents covering 1i)r you and 'niece who also has a drinking
behaves accordingly. Her per· problem . Believe me, everyformance docs not reflect on one in the family has known
you. It rcnccts poorly on the about the wife's drinking'for
company . However, your some time . Neighbors . and
supervi sors have made it clear friends know, store clerks: the
that they value Maxine and school principal very likely
have no intention of doing know,. Her children arc dealanything about . her rudeness ing the best they can with an
- and she knows it. Tolerate alcoholic mother who is emoas much as you can, and if tionally absent much of the
anyone complains about her. time. I am fairly sure they do
tell them they should take it not have friends over.
up with management. .
I feel compassion for her
Dear Annie: I' am a 12- husband, who is · probably
year-old girl in ·a weird . overwhdmed much of the
predicament There's a 13- lime . His enabling behavior
ycar·old boy, "Alex," who allows his wife 10 live in selfli ves up the street. He has a deceplion, a key ing1'edi~111 of
huge crush on me. He tells addiction. There is help. AIkids around the neighborhood Anon is a welcoming source
that he wants 10 make out · of healing, em}Xlwerrnent and
with me und man)' me. and hope for family members liv- ·
he says he has 'cxual urges ing with an alcoholic. I know. l
around me .
their entire family whole·
Alex claims he just wants to wish
ness
and happiness.
be friends, bUI all the things
Vermont
he says behind my back
Dear Vermont: Many
frighten me.·l would like to let
readers
said "Upset Wife" is
him down gently, but I really
fooling
herself if she t~inks
don:! want to be his friend.
What 'hould I do'' - ·scan'&lt;! she· is hiding her drinking.
Anyone who wishes to conof Him
Dear Scared: We think tact AI-Anon (al-anon.alaAlex is like a lot of 13-ycar- leen .org) can do so by calling
old boys who say things they 1-888-4AL-ANON ( 1-800.
bclkvc will impress their 425-2666).
Annie's
Mailbox
is
written
friends because they don't
have (he maturity to handle by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy
their emotions well. First. talk Sugar, longtime editors of
to your parents about what the Ann Landers colamn.
Alex has been saying. They Please e-mtlil your questions
anniesmailbox@comneed to know. Then, when to
they arc nearby, tell Alex cast.net, or write to: Annie's
politely that you find his Mailbox, P.O. Box 118190,
. remarks offensive. and frighl- Chicago; 1L 606Jl. To find
ening and you cannot be out more about Annie's
friends with him unless he Mailbox, and read features
by other Creators Syndicate
becomes more respectful.
Dear Annie: "Upset Wife" writers and cartoonists, visit
thinks no one knows about the Creators Syndicate Web
her drinking, and she was page at www.creators.com.

2008

•

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Spring Semester 2009

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Sunday, November 9, 2oo8

OPINION

PageA4._
Sunday, November 9 2008 '

825 Third Avenue • Gelllpolla1 ?'lo

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008
www.mydally1tlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

Publisher
Diane Hill

Kevin Kelly

Controller

Managing Editor

Leiters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All leiters are subjectto'editing and must
be signed and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned lt11er&gt; will be published. Le11ers should be iii
gooti taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

TODAY -IN HISTORY

Cokie
and
Steven
Roberts

Obatna's task is to prove
him wrong.
During his ·first Jear in
office, Obama coul face a
budget deficit approaching
a trillion . dollars. That
means he has to choose
spending targets carefully
and avoid lhe "redistributionist-in-chief' label John
McCain tried to pin on him.
One ·good example of a
wise investment: expanding health insurance for
chtldren. President Bush
vetoed attempts to raise the
current progratn from $5
billion to $12 billion, but
every dollar spent vaccinating a child or detecting a
chronic condition pays for
itself many times over
when kids stay out of emergency rooms and parents
stay m the wor~force .
Promoting green technology, through generous
research credits , would
also be taxpayer money
well spent. Writing in
Newsweek, New York
Mayor .Michael Bloomberg
put it this way: "America
can either. be the pioneers
of green energy or the purchasers. If we are ·the pioneers, we'll create thousands of good ·paying jobs.
If we are lhe purchasers,
we will continue transfer-

ring billions of our wealth
overseas - and high-tech
jobs that go with them."
Not all investments cost
· money. A part,icularly stOpid government policy fimlls to 65,000 a year the
number of H• l B visas ·
issued to well-educated
immigrants who want to
contribute their energy and
entrepreneurial spirit to
this country. Obama should
move quickly to raise that
ceiling. As Microsoft
founder Bill Gates told
Congress, the "s m&lt;~rte st
people want. to come here, •
and lhat's a huge advantage
to us, and .. . we're llirning
them away:"
In aiming at the national
interest , Obama will be
confronted by resurgent
Democratic power blocs,
bursling wtth pent-up
demands after eight .years
out of power. Front and
center will be organized
labor, eagerly promoling a
measure that would make it
easier lo organize workplaces and extract contracts
from employers.
Yes, real wages have
slumped in recent years,
but. picking this fig~l ri~ht .
away could be a btg mtstake, Obatna's version of
Bill Clinton's decision to
. recognize gays in the military - a distracting battle
that gels his adminislration
off to a highly partisan and
poisonous start.
More importanl is what
Obama does on trade:
Unions keep pushing
Obama to renegotiale
extslmg trade pacts and
oppose new ones, when ; in

fact, exp11nded trade is
absolutely essential for
future economic growth.
McCain estimated that 1in-5
American
jc;!bS
.depends on trade and ' '
Richard Haass, president of · .
the Council on Forei$n " .
m.
Relations,
wrote
News wee~ that a new glob- ·
a! trade pact would spur
growth by I percent annually and provide "lhe best
noninflationary, anti-recession tool for the American
and global economies."
Not all inlerest groups ,
are outsiders. Farm state
lawmakers from both par- .
ties will continue to pres- ·
sure Congress for outra- · ·
geous agricultural subsi- '
dies. And many legislators·,
with a few notable excep- · '
lions, will greedily pursue .
the practice of "earmarks,"
which direct federal funds : ··
to their districts regardless
of any real benefit.
But money is not the
only issue. Obatna ,has to
bring a new mindset to the
job. He has to mean what
·he said on election night,"
that he wants to "heal the '"
divides that have held back ''
our progress." Fof years .
now, the first question any-· ·
one asked in Washington. ,
has been: Does it helJ.l my .,
party? The new prestdent ,;
has to ask a new question: ~
Does it help my country?
(Cokie Roberts' latest"·
book is "Ladies of Liberty: .·
The Women Who Shaped .
Our Nation" (William ;;
Morrow, 2008). Steve and
Cokie Roberts can be . ~
reached
at ',
stevecokie@gmail.com.) ·

Today is Sunday, Nov. 9, the 314th day of 2008. There
are 52 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Nov. 9, 1938, Nazis looted and blll11ed synagogues as
well as Jewish-owned stores and houses in Germany and
Austria in what becatne known as "Kristallnacht." It's estimated that more than 90 Jews. were killed in the pogrom.
On this date:
In 1872, lire destroyed nearly 800 buildings in Boston.
In 1918 , it was announced that Germany's Kaiser
Wilhelm II would abdicate . He then fled to the.,
Netherlands.
. In 1935, United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis
and other labor leaders formed the Commillee for Industrial
Organization (later Congress of Industrial Organizations).
In 1953, author-poet Dylan Thomas died in New York at
age 39.
·
In 1963, twin dis.asters struck Japan as some 450 miners
were killed in a coal-dust explosion, and about 160 people
died in a train crash,
In 1965, the great Northeast blackout occurred as a series
of power failures lasting up to 13 112 hours left 30 million
people in seven states and part of Canada without electrictty. .
.
.
In 1967, a Saturn V rocket carrying an unmanned Awllo
spacecraft blasted off from Cape Kennedy, Fla., on a.suc~
cessful' test flight.
In 1976, the U.N . General Assembly .approved resolu.'
tions condemning apartheid in South Africa, including one
characterizing the white-ruled' government as "illegiti..
...
mate.n
In 1988, former Attorney General John N. Mitchell, a
"
'
major figure in the Watergate scandal, died in Washington
"
at age 75.
.
.
In I 989, communist East Germany threw open its bor"
ders, allowing citizens to travel freely to the West; joyous
Germans danced atop the Berlin Wall. ·
.
Fi. . ,..)'UR- .uo; \~~~ P,t'im~ . Mi~~ter Juni!Jhiro .
Kolzurttrs rofingbtbc'wori a:·majorlty' fu'tl!e'tollntty'f ~lit- • ••
lia!l'tentary e~ections. Three-time Top Fuel chatnpion
Shtrley Muldowney, 63, ended her 30-year racing career
with a loss in the second round of the Auto Club NHRA
Finals at Pomona Raceway in California. Comic actor Art
Carney died in Chester, Conn., at age 85.
One year ago: President Gen. Pervez Mushatraf of
Pakistan placed opposition leader Benazir Bhutto under
••
house arrest for a day, and rounded up thousands of her
'
supporters to block a mass rally against his emergency rule.
Chadian authorities released three Spanish flight crew ·
members and a Belgian pilot detained in an alleged kidnapping plot of African children by a French charity. .
· Today's Birthdays: Baseball executive Whitey Herzog is
77. Former Sen. Bob Graham, D-Fla., is .72. Singer Mary
''
Travers is 72. Actor Charlie Robinson ("Night Court") is
63. Movie director Bille August is 60. Actor Robert David
- - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -"
Hall ("CSI") is_60. Actor Lou Ferri$no is 56. Gospel singer
Donnie McClurkin is 49. Rock mustcian Dee Plakas (1!.7) is
48. Rapper Pepa (Salt-N-Pepa) is 39. Rapper Scarface
(G~to BoysJ is 39. Blues si~ger Susan Tedeschi is 38. Actor
Enc Dane ts 36. Smger Ntclc Lachey (98 Degrees) is 35.
•
The 2008 political season
deep and abiding love for run for re-election on the
R~yt~m-and-blue~ sin.~er .Sisqo (D~ Hill) is 30. Actress
is now officially over. It
justice and the rule of law. basis of success? Can they
N1kk1 Blonsky (F1lm: Hatrspray") ts 20'.
will
be
analyzed
for
years
They must work with the get along w.ith the
Thought for Today: "All life is an experiment ." - Oliver
to come on its meaning in
minority party to ensure Republicans -o a party
Wendell Holmes Jr., U.S. Supreme Court justice (18411935).
. .
American
history.
quick action on some leg- now trying to rebrand
President-elect
Barack
ishitive items that are criti- itself?
.
Donna
Obama will become our
cal to the success of the
Voters can expect a round :
Brazile
nation's first biracial presinew adminislralion.
of bloodletting on Capitol
LETTERS TO THE
dent of African descent.
One thing is for sure: The Hill and elsewhere. The
EDITOR
This is a moment of jubilavoters will be watching Grand Old Party is now
tion and high expectations.
with an eye toward 2010. void of its center. They are
Letters to the editor are welcome . They should be
Obatna's
success
will
hinge
Pakistan and elsewhere They understand how to bleeding constituencies,
less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to editing ,
on his ability to bring about around
the
globe. fire politicians who gel e.g. Hispanics, young peomust be signed, and include address and telephone
a new tone in American lmwrtant trade deals are engrossed with themselves ple and moderates. The
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
politics, starting with still under negotiations.
and not with the people Republicans face the
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not perputting the very best people
We're in a deep mess. . who actually pay their .prospects of further marsonalities. Letters of thanks to org~izations'and indim· government jobs, not
Obatna must have a per- salaries. As a former con- ginalization if they · are
just political cronies and sonnet process in place gres&amp;ional staffer, I instinc- · unwilling to help Obarna '
viduals will not be accepted for publication.
all-star fundraisers.
right away and policy lively knew my place. I· (assuming he offers ·his .
·Starting now, there are resources to hit the ground worked for the American hand) . They have a huge · ·
fewer than 70 days left running soon after unpack- · people, and my phone was rebuilding process ahead of ·· ,
until Jan. 20, when , ing his bags and sitting in · listed to take thetr calls and them, and it starts by work·President George W. Bush the Oval office. There's no to do their work. ·
Reader Services
ing with the new adminis- '
departs
the
White
House
.
time to measure the drapes
With all the new energy tration.
Comction Polley
Third Avenue, Gallipollo, OH
and welcomes the Obatnas. or carpet.
left from the election, the
This · is an exciting ·
OUr moln - · in al stories Is 1o be 45631 . Periodical poataga paid
Barack Obama will then
In this time-{;ritical envi- Democrats must rally the moment to be alive. Yes,
· I .)OIJ know d on """' In a at Gallipolis.
lk:ly, pielee cal one of 01.1' newwoc:MN. Member: Tho Associated ·Pron,
journey from the White · ronment, there will be an , American .people and con- we are at a crilical juncture
tho West Virginia
Pross
House to the U.S. Capitol incentive for Obama to vert them mto foot soldiers in our history, but we are- .
Qw IDIIo QIIDbn; lfli
Associalion, and the Ohio
to take the oath of office as make crisp and quick deci- for policy changes needed Americans. We know how
Newspaper Association.
t:r!Mnt • Gampoli$, OH
the
nation's 44th president. sions. He can, and should to move the country in a to ·roll up our sleeves and
(740) 446-2342
~:.~::•::''
t
h~·~~~:~:·
o~f;
The
nation and world will employ the symbolism of new direction. This is what get to work . Regardless of
Sentinel.• Pomeroy, OH
Tribune,
625
Third
Avenue,
witness a remarkable tran- actt~n ·as a signal to . the R~m3;ld ~eagan did after who you voted for or if you
(740) 992-2t 55
Gallipolis , OH 45631.
sition, and then .it's time to pubhc that we are ending wm\lmg .m 1980 -. coa- were one of those millions
•ttt*' • Pt. Pleasant, WV
get to work. Immediately.
(304) 175-1333
the Bush era and getting lescmg ht.s electoral vtctory · of eligible citizens who
SubiiCrlptlon A.._
&lt;
The
speed
of
this
transithe country moving again. into a governing coalition said rio to polilics, we mustBy clfrler or motclr route
Pur wtbthol Ill:
tion matters because the The good news is that that helped bring about poi- all agree· on this point: It's .
One niOflth . . .........110.27
t:riMIIt • Gallipolis,' OH
One,.... ...... ... ...'123.24
time for action is going to Obama has many support- icy changes he enacted in time we come together as a':·
Sundey .... . ... .... .. ..'1.50
~.com
be front-loaded. Obama's ers on Capitol Hill. And his first two years in office. nation . We need to comC:
Sentinel• Pomeroy, OH
Senior C111zen Campaigning is easy. But together to rebuild our;
plate is so .full he might they must help him with
One month ...... . ... .'1.0.27
www.mydllllyllllllntl.com
this
transition
.
governmg
can be difficult, country and make it com..;
want
to
consider
taking
a
One , _ ...... ..... .'1 03.10
Jletjlltt • Pt. Pleasant, WV
The
Democrats
are
now
and
Democrats
are about to petitive again . We need tO:
brief
vacation
J~ooner
rather
&amp;bociiMo -*1- il www.~lter.com
better
positioned
to
enact
find
out
just
how
tou~h it is come together around
than later. He might also
- ..... Gelpnl!tllltt-· No
IIA&gt;oa'*''~'~' 11-.i pomillld ;,,...
want to adopt that puppy policies that will help the to maintain the confidence common purpose, commoJC
Owta4 rldrn• n :
now
and get him trained middle class and working of the American people. values and help those whq:
t:rih.t • Gallipolis, OH
because there might not be families with a new stimu- They must get things done will lead us to a bettei::;
lbll Subscription
-•IIIJdliiJirtbunt.com
:
·•
lilolcll County
much time once he sits Ius plan that also helps and bring an end to the era future.
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH
1s
w-.
.............
'32.26
states
facing
huge
budget
of
partisan
gridlock
and
(Donna
Brazile
is
a
polit·":.
down
at
his
new
desk.
-tmydellyllllltnel.com
26 Weeks . . .......... ·:'84.20
ical commentator on CNN,:
The economy is spiral- shortfalls. With this new political paralysis.'
•fllliltr • Pt. Plaasant, WV
52 Weeks .. , ........ .'127.1t
The next election is not ABC alld NPR; contribut-j
-•t111Jdlllyllllllter.com
ing. with no signs of-rever- majority, Democrats must
not
become
too
complalikely
to have the same ing· columnist to Roll Call,'"
sal.
The
nation
is
at
war
on
OUialcll County
(USPS 438-840)
or
·overreach.
They
winds
at the Democrats' the newspaper of Capitol
cent,
13 Weeks .............'53.55
two fronts : Iraq and
Ohio V1lley Publlahlng Co. 26 Wuko ............ '107.10
Afghanistan .
Tensions must govern with humility. backs . Can they keep the Hill; and former campaign
Publlehod
· every Sunday, 825
. ..........
...._ 52 Wuko ..... .· . .. ... '2t4.2t
_.
remain high with Russia, They must govern with a• seals lhey won? Can they ~rza11ager for AI G(}re .)

..

No time to· even measure·the Oval Office drapes ·-

&amp;unba!' 'artmes -~enttnel

--- -·-·

Obituaries

a:

Bv JESSE WASHINGTON
AP NATIQNAL WRITER

Mary Chancey, 66. of Pomeroy, passed away Friday,
Nov. 7. 2008, at her residence ' ·
She was born May 30, 1942 . in Mason , W.Va ., daughter
of the late Gerald and Marie Amberger.
She ~as employed ·as a secretary to the Meigs County
Commtsstoners , Metg s Inve stment Corporation and
Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser Insurance Agency. She
attended the Mmersvtlle Untted Metho~ist Church .
She •s survived · by. her husband, Charles Chancey of
Pomeroy; her sons, Rtck (Karah) Chancey of Middleport
and Mike (Christine Miceli) Chancey of P~meroy ; broJher:
Paul (Dorothy) Amberger o~ Syracuse; uncle, Nathan
(Carolyn) Roush of Syracuse; granddaughter, Mindy
Chancey of Mtddle~on; step-granddaughters , Lexi and
Skyla Coleman of Mtddlewn: special friend and careta~­
cr. Kelly Tobm of Pomeroy; and stepsi sters, Reva (Larry)
Bunce of ~mersville , and Donna Thomas of Pomeroy.
In addttmn to her parent s, she was preceded in death by
her stepfather, Don Rca of Mmersvtlle .
,
Scrvices ,will be II a.m. Monday, Nov. 10, 2008, at the
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, .with
.. Pastor Bob Robinson officiating. Burial will follow at
Beech Grove Cemetery. Visiting .hours will be on Sunday,
Nov. 9. 2008, from 6to 9 p.m. at the funeral home .
In lieu of flowers, the family rcquestnhai a memorial
contnbutmn be made to the Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation, P.O. Box 173 , Pomeroy, Ohio 45'769.
A regislry• is available on-line at · www.andcrsonmcdimicl.cbm.

Debra
Ann Wintz
..
Debra Ann Wintz, 53, of
Spencer, W.Va ., passed
away I;riday, Nov. 7, 2008 ,
at her residence with her
family at.I!Cr side.
·
She was a department manager for WaHvlart jn Spencer
and alleilded, the Spencer
First Baptist Church. In addition, she .had attended the
Morgan Center Christian ·
Holiness Church near Vinton.
Debra was born Sept. 7,
i955, in Columbus, daughlcr of Lenora Burnett of
Patriot. and the late Walker
Rawlins.
Debra Ann Wintz
In addition to her plir~nts,
Lenora and Harvey Burnell,
.
.
she is survived by her hu~band, Robert "Bob" Wintz, and
six . children, Dee Dee (Barry Miller) Dobbins of
Chillicolhe, David (Elizabeth) Dobbins of Gallipolis,
Drema (Chad) Gobel of Philadelphia, Pa., Nicholas (Amy)
Wintz of Rolla, Mo., Jeremy Wmtz ~f Quantico, Va., and
David (Michelle) Foster of Raleigh, N":C.; grandchildren,
Wil'liam, Brendop, Halona, Michael, Caillin, 'Megan and
Makalee; and six brothers and one sister, Charlie
(Charlotte) Rawlins of Biqwell, Gary (Evelyn) Rawlins of
Ashville, Steve (Robin) Rawlins of Gallipolis. Jimmy
(Cherie) Burnett of Sunbury, Timmy (Jackie) Burnett of
Oak Hill, liarvey (Courtney) 'Burnell of Mechanicsburg,
and Lori B11rnett of Palriot.
.
··
'
Services will be noon on Tuesday, .Nov. ' II, 200a. in the ·
Morgan Center. Christian Holiness Church near Vinton,
with Pastor Teddy Russell officiating. Burial will follow in
the Morgan Cenler Cemetery. . Friends may call at the
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home in Vinton on Monday, Nov.
10, 2008, from 6 lo 8 p . ~.

Deaths

____ ______

Ail ·

WASHINGTON
Shortly after leavi ng the
voting booth , 70-year-old
commun ity activist Donald
In this Nov. 41ile photo,
E. Robinson had a thought:
Donald E. Robinson, 70,
"Why do I have to be listed
laughs alter voling in the
as African-American? Why
presidenlial election in
can' t I just be AmericanT' '
.. Washinglon.
· The answer used to be
AP photo
simple: because a raceobsessed society made the
decision for him. But after
Barack Obama's mindbending presidenti al victory, there are rumblin gs of
change in the nalure of
black idenlity and the path
L. Dougllls Wilder, the upon us."
base of aggre ss ive and
to economic equ ality for first black person to be
Certainly raci sm did not vocal advocacy groups to
black Americans.
'elected
governor
of disappear after Obama 's he'Ip pu sh his agend a
Before Tuesday, black ·Virginia, shares Robin son 's · white votes ·-we(e counted. through Congress. "You
identity and community sense of American identity. No one is claiming tha.t can march again st things.
were . largely rooted in · the "But I can tell you, when black culture and pride and and you can march in supshared experience of .the . you say that, people 'take community are no longer port of things," he said . ''If
struggle - real or per- umbrage," Wtlder ·said . valuable . Many · also dis- · you ·re an executive trying
ceived - against a hostile "They belie.ve that you are miss the idea of a "post- tu get .·thin gs done. you
white majprity. Even as late dissing · them, putting racial" America as long as need vi sible and vocal supas Election · Day, many blacks down . I don't have blacks and other minorities port."
blacks still harbored · deep to· tell you what ·t am, you are still disproportionately
Clyburn suggested that
doubts . about' -whether can look at me and see that afnicted by di sparities in civil rights groups should
whites· ~ould vote for I'm opt white. So what dif· . income, education, health, adopt new tactics of working
Obama.
ference does it make?"
incarceration and sin gle closely with the legislative
Obama's overwhelming
It took Obama's election, parenthood.
branch , because Obama and
triumph cast America in a. however, to make that idea· B'ul white groups . ,that the, new Congress will be
different light. There was real.
'
once fa&lt;ed discrimination, more receptive to their agenno sign of the "Br&lt;~dley
"It's 'imrt)ediately trans- such · as Ihe Italians , Jews da: "We don't need to be on
Effect,"· when whites mis- :, formative," Wilder Said. "It and Irish, have moved from the street s raising hell."
.lead pollsters 'about lheir immediately changes .the the margins to ihe main"We ' ve always used a
intent to vote for black can: level of discussion . This slream . America debated variety of tactics." said the
didates . · : · . · Natitlllwide , thing is bi.gger than we whether John F. Kennedy lkv . ·Jesse
Jackson.
Obama collected 44 ' per- thought it was. It's too big could become the first . "Leg islation, litigation,
ce.nt of the white vote , lo get our arms around, and · Catholic president ; now sometimes demonstration ,
more 'than John 'KerfY, AI it grows exponentially each that's a historical footnote . and the vote. And someGore or even Bill Clinton, passing day. It seis us on a
So the prospect of a black limes the con sumer dollar."
exit polls show. .· .
brand-new course."
population that is more of
When Jack son was
In Ohio, domain of the
Yet the past is a heavy "America'' than "black breaking barriers in his
fabled working-class white burden to shed . U.S. Rep. America" has profound . presidential runs of 1984
swing voter, where journal- James Clyburn of South implications - especially and '88, it was the zenith of
ists unearthed multitudes of Carol ina, a former civil for the civil rights estab- Reagan's "morning m
racist quotes during the ri~hts activist who was lishment that continues to AnJerica ." Jackson's tactics
campaign, 46 percent of jatled during the protest baltic for blacks . who were employed agai.nst a
white · voters
backed marches of the 1960s, said remain at the bottom. conservative establishment
Obama's bid to become.the · that Obama's election does Marc Moria!, president of that used racially divi sive
first black president, more : move America toward a the National·.Urban League, tssucs such as welfare and
than the three previous "more perfect union ." But acknowledges
that cnme to grcal advantage.
Democratic candidates. · wl)en it comes to self-defi- Obama 's election does · Now there's a new prcsi Obama did not define · nition, he believes. the cur- change the nature of his dent, a new day, and new
himself as a black candi- rent ·State of that union job, "but not in the way tdeas butlt upon the old. ·
dat.e. · So · Robinson now leaves him no choice.
people might think ."
"M y grandmother told
feels free to define himself · "We don•t come into this
The Urban League spent me when I was 5, 'Boy, if
as something more .than a world defining ourselves," the lasl eight years trying to they ask you what you arc ,
black community activist. ., Clyburn said. "I was born hold the Bush aoministra- JUst tell them that you're an
"We've · taken that next into a world that had lion accounlable on. civil American," said Benjamin
s!ep . . Jt:s moving !oward defined limits for me . I had rights .. Now Moria! is hop- Jealous, the 35-year-old
what we call , universal to sit on the back of the ing . to coopera1e with the r,restdent . of the NAACP.
brotherhood and sister· bus I · cnul"n '• atten" ·~ . oove•IJ~Pnl · and. apply hi$ _,Til~ rc &gt;\tl:;_ ts.l!la) our. herhood," Robii'IS(}fi 'saia after\ nearby··~cfi'ri61'.~ M:;'''w'ite orgoffiit~fion's"ex-pertise fii !l~gc, our cultbre. mtr famvoting for Obama in his had to walk 2 1/2 miles to issues like poverty, educa- tltes, our commumty have
northwest . Washington, school, walk past the white lion and job training . been extremely tmportant
D.C., neighborhood. "We school to ge,t to the sc.hool which will help rebuild the to us . It's always been ·our
shouldn't be spl.it and have for blacks. She dtdn't entire American economy. nghl, and m many ways
all these divisions . That's define that role for herself.
Moria!
noted
that what we fought for, to be
why I· say il's a bright day." Tha}· role was imposed Pre&amp;ident Reagan had .a' seen simply as Americans."

charles M. irlgp

Ariz. boy, 8, accused of killing 2, including dad
'

.BY FEUClA FONSECA

.evaluation of the boy.
Charles M. Briggs,.73. died Thursday, Nov. 6, 200'8, at
ASSOCIATEO PR~.S.S WRITER
.
Mefnick said police had
his residence.
.
. ·
.
.
:
..
.
responded . . to calls of
He is survived by broth~rs, James (Sue) Briggs,' Paul
ST. JOH.NS, Ariz. 7 domesltc vtolence at the
Briggs and Dayton (Marion) Briggs,
,
Po!tce .m thts small. ~astern Romero: home m the past,
Graveside service and interm~nt is I p.m. Monday at A,rtz~na. communtt~ .are but poltce were searchmg
Mound Hill 'Cemetery, Gallipolis.
. :
lookmg mto the fosstbthly . records Saturday to deter-.
Arrangements are by the Evans Funeral Home 4171 E. !h~t an 81ear-ol boy who mme when those calls were
· . A •c0 1 b
·
~
• . · ts charge .wuh ktlhng hts placed.
.
Ltvmgston
ve.,
urn us.
father 'and another man with
Mehiick said' Jl(llice arc
a rifle had been abused. the pushing to have the boy
police chief said Saturday.
tried as an adull, but he
Pea~
The boy, who faces two acknowledged it's unlikely
D. Pearl Remy, 74, Gallipolis, died 'Saturday, Nov. 8, counts of premeditated mur- . a judge would gran( that
der, did not act on the spur mo'tion.
2008, at Holzer Medical Center.
'
"This is a severe double
Arrangeinents will be announced by the McCoy-Moore of the moment, Police Chief
Roy
Melnick
said.
homicide,
premeditated,
. l'unctal Home Wetherholt ·Chapel, Gallipolis.
· "I'm not accusing any- and that's the right lhing to
··
1
·
. body of anyrh,ing at this . do," he said. "We're going
point," he 'said Saturday. to use every a~enue of the
0
·
·
. . "But we're cerlainly going law that's a.vailable to us ,
to look at· the abuse part of but we're also looking althe
1·0
• this. He's 8 years old. He human side."
Bv JEANNINE AVERSA
a 2.9 percenl rate pf decline just doesn 't decide one day Melnick said officers
AP ECONOMICS WRITER
in August and marked the that he's going t6 shoot his arrived at Roiner&lt;i 's home
father and shopt his father·s within minutes of the shootbiggest incn;ase since July.
friehd " for no reason. ing Wednesday in St. Johns.
WASHINGTON - The ' Economists expected con- Something led up to this."
which has a population of
Federal Reserve says con- . sitmef'S . trimmed their borOn Friday, a judge deter- about . 4,000 and is 16'8
sumcrs boosled their borrow- rowing at a 0.5 percent pace mined there · was probable miles northeast of Phoenix .
ing in ,September, defying in September.
cause to show that the boy They found o11e victim just
·expectations for a cutback.
The Fed's measure of cori- fatally shot · · his father, outside ·the front door and
The Federal Reserve's
does not Vincent Romero, 29, and the other dead in an upstairs
report, released Friday. says sumer borrowing
·
Timothy Romans, 39, of San room .
Roman s had been renting
consumer credit increased at include any debt secured by Carlo~. with a .22-caliber
a 3.2 percent annual pace in ·real eslate, such as inortgage rifle. Under Arizona law, a room at the Romero
September:That was up from or home equity loans.
charges can be filed against house, prosecutors said .
anyone 8 ora older.
The judge , of.
Both
men were employees
• - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • ordered
psychological
a construction
company

D.

Reniy

working at a Sail River
Projecl power plant near St.
Johns.
The boy werit to a neighbor 's house and said he
"believed that his father was
dead," said Apache County
attorney Brad Carlyon.
Melnick said police
obtained a confession but
the boy 's. defense attorney,
Benjamin Brewer, said
police overreached in questioning the boy without representation from a p;lrent or
attorney and did not advise
him of his rights.

C nsumers Unexpe.Ctedly
' her.·
borrowed mor-e Septem

PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
Sunday

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S11bscribe today • 992-2155 of 446-2342

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. 6:00pm

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NO IIUNTING IS ALLOWED ON SQUTHERN OHIO
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"They became very
accusjng early on in the
interview," Btewer said.
"Two officers with guns at
!heir side, it's very scary for
anybody, for sure an 8-ycarold kid."
Pro secutors arcn 't sure
where the case is headed,
Carlyon said.
"There's a ton of factors
to be considered and
weighed. including . the
juv,enile 's age," he said .
"The counter balance
against that, the acts that he
apparently committed."

....

When the rfiiL .. Irfll\ .
occasion calls '&amp;l.UilN?))UJJtm

Proceed s to Be11ejit
;

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&amp;uuba!' ili:imrli -l'brutinrl • Page As

Obama victory opens door to ne.w black identity

Mary Chancey

Reviving the national interest ·
Now Barack Obatna has
to figure out how to govern
a country that is facing two
draining wars 'abroad, a
dismal fiscal picture at
home and countless unmet
needs, from uninsured children and · unemployed
workers tO" demanding
retirees and deteriorating
infrastructure.
Two ideas should guide
the j&gt;resident~lect's deci- •
sion-making: investments
and interest groups. He has
to embrace the first and
reject the second. He has to ·
spend Jimiled resources in
careful ways that save
money down the line and.
create jobs and wealth. And
be has to stand up to the
special pleaders who pressure the govemme111 to
serve !heir own narrow .
constituencies.
In short, he has to revive
a concept that sounds corny
but is actually critical: the
national interest. President
Bush ran as a "uniter not a
divider" but did not govern
that way. Obama has to
make good on his promise
to end the destructive partisanship -- practiced by
Democrats as · well as
Republicans - that dominates the capital today. .
Despite the Democrats'
impressive victory, only 22
percent of the voters called
themselves liberals (34 '
percent identified .as conservatives and 44 ·IJ!!rcent
as moderates). Arizona .
Republican Jeff Flake predicted . in the Washington
Post that, "As surely as the
sun rises iti · the east tlie
Democrats will overre~h ."

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

667-3330. (740) 591-0646

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iunbap tltime~ -itntinel

PageA6
Sunday, November 9,

200~

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Adoptable dogs

GAHS lands 8 on AJI.SEOAL, Page 82

James leads Cavs by Pacers, Page 85

•

•FRIDA'Y. NOV T
WV Scores
.

Poin1 Pleasant 17. Chapmal"lllilla 1
Bufti)O 38, Waharna 19
Hundred 30, Haman 12
Winlletd 28, Helbert HoOY&amp;r 6
Wayn11 49, t.ogan 14

Ohio Playolls
New LeJ~ing1on 38, l10nton 6
Louisvtlle 7, Logan 0
._.annibal Riv&amp;r 4S, Trimble 15

SATlJRlJA'Y. NOV. 8 ,
Ohjo ScoMa
Chillicothe vs. Logan Elm, late

Uberty Union vs. Whtellfsburg, late
Bistq» ReadY Ys. Ports. West, late
Eastmoot" Academy vs. Sheridan, late

•

10

STAFF REPORT

NELSONVILLE
Wayne National Forest firefighters were hoping for
containment Friday after. noon of · an
80-acre
Diamond Hollow wildfire
that ·was reported on
Wednesday afternoon on
the I ron ton Ranger District
in Jackson County.
The fire, located about 20
miles west of Jackson, is in
a remote area of the Wayne
National Forest and was not
threatening any homes as of
Friday, according to Gary
C. Chancey, a staff officer.
He reported that wildland
rtte ., invcaliJaton

ape.n\

OhJ:.;:h,.,.~ ·.~ .~&lt;t~~ . . .*+~.~Wii:.""tn

CLEVELAND (AP) she decides to run for
President-elect
Barack chief justice in two years.
Obama may have 'won
O'Connor a former
Ohi? . on . the way to the county pr~secutor and
~h1te House but he was- lieutenant governor, is
n t . the IOJ? vote-getter m also many Republicans'
Oh1o elect10n day.
.
choice to run for attorney
· 1
·
That honor goes to Oh1o
Supreme· Court' · Justice genera·
.
.
Former
Republican
Maureen O'Connor. who
drew 2.8 million votes in attorney .general and state
her successful re-election auditor J1m Petro has also
bid .
expressed interest in runThat's the most number ning for chief justice.
of votes a state supreme
Current chief justice
court justice has received . Thomas Moyer must step
O'Connor says it's a down because of age
good position to be in if restrictions ,

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·Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 30.87
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 37.60
Aahtend Inc. (NYSE) - 20.41
·Big Loll (NYSE) - 17.95
Bob Evono (NASDAQ) - t 9.89
BorgWemor (NYSE)- 20.79
Cenlury Aluminum (NASDAQ) 13.51
Chemplon (NASDAQ) - 3
Chermlng Shops (NASDAQ) 1.30
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 39.48
Colllno (NYSE) - 35,09
DuPont (NYSE) - 30.46
US' Bank (NYSE)- 27.21
Gonnell (NYSE) - 10.53
0.-11 E..ctric (NYSE) - 18.88
Heri.,.·DB¥idlon (NYSE)- 21.31
JP Morgen (NYSE) - 37.75
Kroger (NYSE) - 27.52
Limited Brond1 (NYSE) - 10.31
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 53.72

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Ohio Volley Bone Corp. (NAS.
DAQ)- 19.50
BBT (NYSE) - 31.99
Poopleo (NASDAQ) - 18.29
Pep1ico (NYSE) - 55.36
Premier (NASDAQ) - 8.75
Rockwell (NYSE) - 25.50
Rocky Boola (NASDAQ) - 3.18
Royol Dutch Shell - 53.92
Seora Holding (NASDAQ)
52.113
Wei-Mort (NYSE) - 54.39
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 3.99
W01B1nco (NYSE) - 25.24
Worthington (NYSE)- 11 .45
Dolly otocll reports ere the 4 p.m.
ET cloelng quotes of Iran iac·
Ilona lor NO¥, 7, 2008, pr011ided
by Edwenl Jonu financial advl·
oars luoc Mills In Gallipolis 11
(740) U1 ·9441 end Leoley
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(304) 874-0174. Mtmbei SIP C.

opener

MASON, W.Va . - Corey
Good ran for 185 yards and
scored four touchdown s as
visiting Buffalo denied the
Wahama White Falcons ils
chance at a third consecutive
playoff berth after the Rison
scored 20 unanswered
"points in the s~cond half to
def~al the Bend Area gridders by a 38-19 margin on
senior night at the WHS
campus.
Good scored a pair of
touchdowns' in each half as
Wahama dropped its fourth
straight decision after the
Mason County tea1it opened
·
. Bryan Walte"'Pholo. the 2008 football card with
Wahama running back Micaiah Branch, right, tries to get outside of a Buffalo defender dur- ·six consecutive victories.
in~ the first quarter of Friday night's regular season finale at Bachtel Stadium in Mason.
.The White Falcon s con -

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RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande
Red Storm women's basketball team wanted to get off
to a good start with three of
their first four games
against teams that are
ranked or received votes in
the NAtA Division II Top
25 rating.
.
Game one was a solid outing with the RedStorm making a loud first statement
collecting an 81-72 yictory
over NAtA D II No. 17
Dacmen, on Friday night at
the Newt Oliver Arena. ·
Rio Grande ( 1-0) seized .
control of the game early,
jumping oul to a 19-9 lead
with II :44 remaining in the
first half.
·
The RedStorm steadily ,
built the lead to 23-9 and
.\ll.tjw~t~Jy.. ..JO.~ 15. ~ itl\.5:23
lo. play after a pair of free
throws from sophomore for·
ward Leah Kendra. Kendro
. led a balanced RedStorm
attack with 16 points. Rio
held a 38-27 lead at halftime.
Daemen (I-I) made a run
corning out of the locker
room, go.ing on a9-1 run to
cut the deficit to three at 3936. with 17:36 on the clock.
Minutes later Dacmen tied
. the score at42-42 on a three
·by .Sarah Soroka at . the
15:32 mark. The score was
al$o tied at44-44 and 46"46.
Rio then gained control of
the game and held on for the
win, primarily by making
free throws down the
.stretch.
After Kendra's 16, sophomore Candace Black had a
breakout · game · with 15'
points off the bench. Senior
po~t player Erin Kumc
uddcd 13 poinls and led the
way on the glass with eight
rebounds. Sophomore
guard Bre Davis tossed in
12. points, including going
4-for-4 at the free throw line
in the waning moments .
Davis and fellow sophomore guard Alix Pulley
each dished out five assists.
Sophomore guard · ~cnna
Smith did most of her damugc curly, scoring 10 points.
ull in the first half.
Daemen 's
Sarah
Bogardus single-hundcdly
kept her team in the game
with a monster effort of 35
points and six rebounds.
No other player for the
Wildcats scored in double
figures. Mary Kate Wilson
pulled down, a game-hi~h •
10 rebounds and Hale1gh
VanFleet dished out five
assists. Rio defense forced
Dacmcn into 24 turnovers,
while Rio had only 16 miscues for the game.
1
"I thought we came out
with a lot of focus and
defensively we had to be
pretty solid," said Rio
Grande 'head coach David
Snmlley. "This team is one

'

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STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@ MVOAlLYSENTlNEL .COM

.

•

Lorry Crumlpholo

Members of the Point Pleasant varsity football team celebrate their victory over Chapmanville on Friday night at Sanders
Stadium in Point Pleasant. The 17-7 win allowed the Big Blacks to capture the 2008 Cardinal Conference title outright,
Point's first league cl\ampionship since t 985.
·

Point fends off Chapmanville, wins Cardinal title
.

Bv

RICK SIMPKINS

SPORTS CORRESPONDI;NT .

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - The Point Pleasant
Big Bla~ks added another
chapter to their story-book
season last night when they
defeated the fourth ran ked
Chap,manvill~ Tigers 17-7 in
front of a large and wet
senior night crowd. '
the win gave the locals a
Cardinal Conference championship - their first outright !cage title since 1985
- and possibly a home field
game in next weeks' opening ·round of the Wesi
Virginia state playoffs.
Point needed some help in

.

accomplishing the lattt:r, as a this game with a highly
few higher teams needed to ranked defense - giving up
lose Friday to put the Big · only 10 points per outing Blacks in the top eight and but it was the Red and Black
the coveted .first round home defenders who stood tall arid
game.
proud on the slick Sanders
Regardless, the Cardinal Memorial Field turf.
Conference championship
Point's defense limited the
now belongs to Point vau.nted . Chapmanville runPleasant and that is quite a ning attack to a mere 88
feat in itself. This confer- yards on the ground and just
cnce championship is the 149 total yards. A more
first football title for the amazing fact is that . the
locals since the 1985 season Tigers picked up 67 of those
when they topped the old yards o.n their only scQring
Pioneer
Athletic drive of the evening - leavConference. You have to go ing just 82 yards for the
back even further for the last other three quarters.
On the other hand, the
home playoff game - that
carne in the 1979 season.
locals enjoyed a productive
· Chapmanville carne in'to evening· on the offensive

GALLIPOLiS - Ohio .
Valley Publishing is pleased
to announce t·he nddilion of
Cruig
M c Cormick to the
sports
departments of
the Point
Plcasunt
Register,
Gallipolis
D a i I y
• 'Mctornltck' T r i ·b ·.u 'n e
and
The
Daily Sentinel.
McCormick is a 1993
graduate of Ceredo-Kenova
Jiigh School and is current ly
attending
Marshall
University for a degree in
journalism . While at CKHS,
McCormick also participated in football, baseball, basketball and track at ihe varsity level.
McCormick is also familiar with the local area , havin~'
attended ·Wa..;, hinnt·
b
b on
Elementary and Gallia
Aca~emy Middle School as
a youth before moving
away from Gallipolis . He
was
also
born
111 .
Huntington, W.Va.
''I'm excited about the
opportunity to work in this
area . .I grew up here. so I 'm
really looking forward to

side of the football, even
though they managed just 17
points. The Big Blacks
ama5sed some ns yards on
the ground and added another 36 through ihe air for a
total of 271 yards .
"We stopped ourselves
more than they stopped us,"
said a happy PPHS head
coach Dave Darst after the
game. "I really didn 't warit
to score a lot of points returning to my ~:nots: ·
because I didn't want :uiy- McCormick commcnlcd .
McCormick joins Bryan
one to leave early' - · I wantWalters
and Larry Crum as
ed to keep them in the
bleachers until 'the end of the a full -time employee wilh
game," · said Darst with a the sports dcpurtment al
will
he
smile -and a wink. The sec- OVP. This
McCormick's firsl time in '
Please see Point. Bl
journalism .

.

Hornets sting Hannan on Senior Night
Bv CRAIG McCORMICK

two fumbles and missed two 9:10 remaining in the first
point conversions, while half.
.
also racking up 235 rushing
A failed attempt at the two
ASHTON, WNa. ,..,. It yards in the 30-12 victory.
point converston .would
was a sioppy senior night
Hannan (1-8) countered leave Hannan still trailing 8Friday as Hannan's football with a surprisingly effective 6 at halftime .
team hosted Hundred in the passing ~arne considering
The third quarter waul~
final game of the regular the conditions, as Jacob open with each team unable
season for both teams .
Taylor had t38 ya~ds pass- to produce even a single first
The rain JXJUred down as ing on the night.
down on their first drive,.
two very· sim1lar teams b~tThe Wildcats were able to Hundred wouldtft falter
tied for the chance to end the convert 17 first downs to with their second possesseason on a winning note only 16 for the Hqmets, but sion. however. as they
and it was Hundred who were u·nable stop the Hornet chewed up six minutes with
managed to go out on top, defense when they needed to a 72 yard" drive, 14 play
scoring 16 poiots in the most.
drive. ·
fourth qu~rter to run awar to
Hundred used a balanced
Chuc~y Cunningham fin ·
a 30-'12 victory Friday mght attack , clock management . ishcd off the drive with a
in Ashton .
and some st'oppy field con- fiw yar~ touchdown run
Usually Hannan .comes ditions to their advantage in wilh :! : 15 remaining in the
into the game with a dec1· the victory.
· third 4uartcr.
sive disadvantage due to its
The visiting Hornets got
The· momentum shifted
lack of size and depth. but , on the scoreboard first when early in the fourth 4uartcr
this game would feature two Logan McD1ff1t hauled m a when the Wildcats returned
teams very familiar with 27-yard pass from Dalton a kickoff 67 yards to the five
being the underdog.
Kuhn less thti!) four mmutcs yard Iinc .
"It's hard to put 18 guys into the game .
With R: I R left in the game
on the field and they have to
The Wildcats opened the Taylor to" cd hi' only touchknow evj:ry position on both second quarter gomg 89 down pa" of the. evening ,
sides of the ball," said HHS yards in seven plays and fm- findinl! Patrick flora in ·a
head coach Keith Taylor.
ished thr drive culminating two v ~rd pitch and cat.:h to
Hundred (2 ,8) took full w1th a one yard touchdown
Please see Hannan, 83 . ·
advantage of the Wildcats run by Ait.dy Sowards with
SI'ORTSOMVDAILVSENTINEL.COM

Hi ad.

•

eluded its 2008 season with
a 6-4 mark and will remain
home for the posHcitSOil for
only the seco11d t·irne si11cc
the turn of the century while .
Buffalo closed out the year
wilh a 5-5 mark .
Buffalo c1pitaliLc'd 011
four Wahama tttmove r' lo
overcome a 19-18 11itlftimc
deficit wilh GonJ and ,bruising fullback Cody Cr.. ig
leading a Jo111inating Bispn
ground attack. Crai~ ran for
115 yards on . 20 ,;,Tics as
Buffalo riddled ihc White
Falcon defen se for ~72
yards on the ground . Good
scored on run s of 2, 70, 17
and 53 yards wilh Schuyler
Frazier scooping up a
Wahama fumble and return-

Bv MARK WiLLIAMS

much of Thursday looking
for a cause to the fire which
still remains under investigation.
An Incident Command
Post was set up Friday in
Jackson at the Ohio State
·University extension office
located off Ohio 93.
Firefighters are expected to
be on the fire all weekend or
until there is no longer a
threat. Firefighters from
Pennsylvania, Illinois and
Indiana have been ordered to
assist in mop up operations.
The U.S. Forest Service
manages
the
Wayne
National Forest's almost
241 ,000 acres, covering 12
counties in southeastern

Thcsday night .. .Rain like- •
ly. Lows in the lower 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Wednesday ... Cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
rain . Highs in the upper 50s .
Wednesday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of rain. Lows in the
mid 40s. ·
Thursday...Cioudy with a
40 percent cham;e of showers . Highs in the lower 60s.
Thursday night and
Friday.. ;Mostly cloudy. A
40 percent chance of showers. Lows in the mid 40s .
Highs around 60.

seas~n

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

SPECIAL TO·THE TIMES.SENTINEL

Ohio
supreme
. .
court JUStice top vote-getter

Sunday ...Cloudy with a
20 percent chance of showers. Highs in the upper 40s .
Southwest winds 5 to 10
mph .
.
Sunday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
30s . Southwest winds
around 5 mph.
Monday ... Mostly sunny.
Highs around 50.
Monday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
30s.
Veterans · Day ... Mostly
cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of rain . Highs in the
lower 50s.

Buffalo stampedes
pa~t · White Falcons

PREP FOOTBALL ' .

RedStorm women
make statement

'Firefighters.look to contain
Wayne National Forest fire

Sunday, November 9, 2008

OVP SCOJtE80AlU&gt;

Submllted Photo

Pictured above is a border collie mix female, estimated to
be about one year old, that was found on Stauffer Road in
Rio Grande. She is one out of a number of dogs waiting to
be reclaimed or adopted at the Gallia County Animal
Shelter.

NEWS OMYOA!LYSENTINEL

Bl

tEimes -i&gt;entintl

Friday night scoreboard, Page tw

Veterans Commission as a
member of the Funeral
Detail Honor Guard. He has
also been extended an. addi;
tiona! · honor as he was
inducted into the Military
Order of the Cootie i!t 2004·
05.
..
As a resident of the village
of Rio Grande, Weatherholt
is also active on campus and
in the community. Many Rio
Grande students see him
nearly every day, as
Weatherholt is one of the
many senior citizens who
eat their lunches in the
Davis University Center
cafeteria.
Arter the ceremony is
over. Weatherholt will have
his· picture taken ~ith all of
the military personnel, both
retired and active, who are
present at the ceremony.
F11r more il({urmation,
m// Mars/rail Kimmel at
(800) 282-720/ .
1

The s~aker for the afternoon will be Jim Cozza. a
retired officer from the U.S.
Air Force and the president
of the Gallipolis City
Commission .
Kelsey
Huffman, a Rio Grande student, will also perform
"Taps" during the ccremoity.
Also during the ceremony.
Weatherholt will receive a
special recognition from the
Ohio
House
of
Representatives.
Weatherholt entered 'the
U.S. Army in basic training
at Fmt Knox in 1962. He
. was then assigned to Fort
Jackson. S.C .. and later
spent time serving in France
during his military career.
He is a member of the
Vetcran·s of Foreign Wars.
American Legion and char-·
ter member of the Vietnam
Veterans. For the last eight
years, he has also been serving in the Gallia County

~unba~

SGHS rail sports banquet, Page 83

Campus schedulesVeterans Day.service
RIO
GRANDE
ognitcd .
.
The ceremony will begin
. University
of
Rio
Gtande/Rio
Grande with a performance of preCommunity College will lude musir from the Rio
present a special honor to Grande Symphonic Band.
one lo~:al veteran and recog- The Honor Guard will then·
nize several other ~eterans post the colors for the cereand individuals still actiVe in mony. and the Honor Guard
the · military during a · for this ceremony will be
Veterans' Day servke on made up of Rio ·Grande stu·
· dents who are veterans or
Monday.
The ceremony is actually are still involved with the
being held the day before military.
the Veterans' Day holiday in
The Grande Chorale vocal'
order to give more people music group will then perthe opportunity t,o attend the form for the audience.
serv1ce . .
Chaplain Scott Baker of
The event will begin at the New Life Lutheran
I: 15 p.m. in the . Davis Church in Gallipolis will
University Center cafeteria serve as the master of cereon the Rio Grande campus.
monies for the day, and
Phillip Weatherholt, who Chaplain Pat King from the
lives in the village of Rio Oak Hill United Methodist
Grande, will receive the spe- Church will give the opencial honor during the after- . ing remarks and lead a
noon, but numerous other prayer for the troops . Robert
individuals affiliated with Haner. will then introduce
the military will also be rec- the branches of the military.

Inside

+

Larry Crumlpholo

Hannan's Joe Kelly (1 t ) takes a handoff during the fi rst half
of Friday night's gridiron con1es1 against Hundred in Ashton.

�·-- -·- ,__

'
Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page 82 • sunb.w l!:imes -&amp;rnlinrl

Sunday, November 9. ;wo8

GAHS lands eight on AII-SEOAL squads

Sunday, November 9.

2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

STAFF REPORT

Wahama

SPORTSOMYOAILVTRIBUNE COM

: GALLIPOLIS - Gullia
landed ci~hl fall ath·
letc' on the L008 All·
Southc&lt;tstem Ohio Athletic
League "JUa\ls lor the varsity
'll&lt;llh of football. volleyball,
~Y" 1\tlt:~cr, girl_s \OC'ccr and
!!n·h tenm~ .
~ The Blue Devils' gridiron
&gt;quad had live first-lime ~clcc­
.liom . Seniors J .lm Kyger unlf
Be;ou Wh:dcy. ;dong with
junior htrl'll Gruwly. were
named 111"\lteam.
. SL·nior Quinton Nibett &lt;&gt;lllf
i•mim N;ote AIJiS\lll were hnn·
·~lltJblc mc1Jiioi1 .. ell.'( lion~.
· Tlw Blue Angcf,· volleyball
team nened two AII-SEOAL
. .,. . Jcctiou~ in ~cnit&gt;r' Alexis
Gl.·i!.!CI' ami Kaci Shoemaker.
· while the Blue Dcvib · &gt;o&lt;:cer
t~.:~un lwd nne . . ~lccti~Hl in
.iunim Z.:ke Maher.
GAHS docs not patticipale
· It '"" the third time in her was the first lime for both
~:arccr that Gci!.!cr 'wa:-. 11;ul1cd Shoc1nakcr and Maher to be as a tc~u_11 in either girls soccer
All-SEOAL it I 1olleyh&lt;dl. H twmcd AII-SEOAL.
or girls tennis.

from Page Bl

A.:ad~!llY

2008

Anthony Scott·· , Zanesville

FIRST TEAM

Curt Smtih. Chtlhcothe
Rcn Smtih, Chtllicothe

Enc Voung, ChilliCOthe
Jare-d Gravely, Gallipolis
. John Kyger. Gal!tpolts
Beau Whaley, Gallipolis
Chance Freeman· , Ironton
M1ke Lamb, lronlon
Lukas Moms, Ironton
Tony Murphy, Ironton
Cody Hulf. Jackson
Ryan Hughes. Jackson
Zach Adams. Logan
PatriCk Angle, logan
Cary Maclaughlin, Logan
Mason Mays, Logan
Clay Morgan, Logan

Jon Nef1. Logan
Zane EschbatJgh . Manetta
Sean Munf1eld, Marietta
Ryan Oflenberger, Marietta
Cody Weslbrook'. Manetta
Perry Whee-ler, Mariena
Aaron Montgomery, Ports.
Jon Pnor, Portsmouth
Ben Johnson. Warren
Jacob Lemon, Warren .
Kyle Prllt, Warren
Kaleb Wolle, warren
J T. Bunting, Zanesville
Gary Ransom. Zane.s'-lile

2008

Wes Tandy, Zanesvtlle

OG

6·1
174
6·2
181
6·1
272
191
6·3
5 ·1 0 172
6·3
225
6· 1
240
6-1
165
5· 11 180
6·3 . 205
150
6·2
5·11 270

RB

5-10

180,

6·2
6·3
6·1

280
205
195
200
175
180
225
195
170
205
160
185
205
283

OB
FB·Ol
WR
RB
FB

OG
. SE
RB

TE
WR

T

LB
QB
OG
WA

5·10
5·1,

WA
WR

5-10
6·3
6·1
6·0

OG

5-11

RB
TE

Iii

WI

til

flu
PK

OB
AB
LB

6·3
5-11
5·10
T
6·7
OG
6·0
OT
5·11
LB
5·11
LB
6·0
WR·C 5-5
AB·LB 5·11

Shay Netter. Chtlhcolhe

12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
11

12
11
12
1~

12
12
11
12
11
12
12
12
12
11

240
183
197
145
182

South Division Player of the Vur (MVP):
Caleb Knlgnts, Chlnlcothe

Coech of the Ye1r:
Dale Amyx.

Marlatta
Warren

' ..-f"'!!CS18S fWO·ffml

f.1

· "-fndlcate.s r~a1
$CI&gt;...,iCkiiFI. Huff. Hug/Ills.

12
10

~~«'"~~,~~ .1- ~ ~

GtRLS
.
Player ·

VBrtessa Mon1gomery
Carohne Holdren·
·
To.-rl Skowronek
BriftartY Steirlbrook..
Candace Chapman·
Chnssy Downey
Meredith Rtdge•·
Collllen Bachmann•
Katie Hoffman
Erin Ludwin"

loader,

Zanesv1lle

·

SOUTH PIYfSfON
SchOol
Chilllcoltle
Chilltcothe

Grade

Ch~hcolhe .

12

Gallipolis

12
12 .
11
1t

Gallipolis •
Jac. .... on
.Jackson

Jac;:kson

Player

12
12
12

Meegan Grosm

Kattlyn Sonar
Erin Casey
Sarah lathrop
Sarah Ekst

t&lt;yttonn Adams

' - denotes repeal member ol AH-SEOAL team
''-denotes lwo-llme repeal member ol AII-SEOAL team
Ron Ktdder was North OtviStan Coach vi the Vear in 2007
while coachtng al Warren
Hannah Day was also Soulh OtVISIOn Plaver of the Year in

Jackson
Jackson

Logan
Logan

Logan

School
Marietta

Grade

Marietta "
Marlelta

1o

10
12
11

Marietta
Wanen

12
11
1o

Warren
Warren

Carson Tucker
Jon;lan A.shby

Zanesv,ue

10

M~kenzie Riley

lanesville

1-1
12

Jeff PriCe was also East Division qoach of the Y&amp;ar in 2007

Sc hool
Chilllcotne
Chtlhcothe
Chtllicoltle
Ch1lhcothe

Grade
11

Galllpohs
JacKson

Greg leach

Jackson
Jackson

11
12
12

GIRLS TENNIS

10
11

NOBIH PIYIS!ON

11

Lagan

12
11
12

Logan
Logan

12

JacKson

Player
Callie Zersler
Halen HaW-Cisler
Ntcole Schwartz

Scl1ool
Ma11ena
Ma1lella
Marietta
Martella
Warren
Warren
Warren

Grade
12
11
1t
11
12

Warren

.12

Hank Ring·

Zanesville

Tommy Ring

Zan&amp;S~~Uie

12
12

'·

11
10

·

10
11
11
12

Bryan Watlerslpholo

Point Pleasant's Allan Wasonga (1) runs past the Chapmanville defense during the sec·
ond half of Friday night's Cardinal Conference football contest at Sanders Stadium in
Point Pleasant. W.Va.

•t

POlD

the final score .
minutes to rcf..!ain the lcmf
The gan]e started oul' - a lead which was in peril
quite well for the locals, th.: rc~l of the ni~hl, but one
frorit Page Bl
who. look the opening kick· they would not' relinquish .
off and marched throygh the Wasonga scored the touch·
Chapmanville defense like down on a seven yard r11n
ond year head coach was
·
·
Grant through Richino)ld and Weaver added the extra
referring' to the five fumbles
·
his team had.jn the game _ The drive started at the .Big point to give the Big Blacks
two of wh.ich were recov- Blacks ')S yard line aqd the a t0-7 lead .
locals moved the ball all the
Wusonga led all rushers in
. cred by Cbapmanville,
way. to the tiger one where the game with 20] yards 011
Point had the ball : in they faced a third and goal. 31 carries, while David
· Chapmanv'ille lerrilory Or) )3ut, ·the first of'lhose five Wiley topped the Tigers
every posses~ion of the first fumbles snuffed . out the with 70 yards on eight car·
half and stW ' managed just drivennd the Blacks had In nes.
tjhre~ P~,i~ts -;: cwourtesy.o f a . scllle for Weaver's third
Defensively, the locals
~stm .vp1c
eaver 2 1• field goal of the season,
had those interceptions by
yard , Field goal on toe · It stayed that way ihrough Williams and Wasonga,
game s ftrst. dnve. The B1g · r~e rest of the half. bul ihat but thct·e were many more
Blucks scored a touch,down '· is not io say · ther~ was no , players who had great perm each of the final t~o interesting · football 'being f n r m a n ~ c s . K c n n y
quarters~ but fumbled twtce played'. The Tigers usl!d Longwell had 14 tackles,
· on the T1ger end of the f1eld about four minutes on their Derek Pinson had 12 tackand neetlcd breaks to stop a opening drive and had the les , Nathan Roberts had
·couple of Chat&gt;manvtlle ball at the 50 yard line when nine, and Derek Mitchell
scormg npportumltes. !he JaWaan Williams steppe(! in and Clay Krebs both had
~rst break c.ame on a Ttger front of a Chapmanv11le aer· · eight stops.
f~eld goal ·•llempl 111 the ialto put 'u hall to the drive.
··we had a great. week of
fmlll qu~rter,.
. ·
.
Point had two more posses- practice:· said Darst.
. The
Clwpmanvtlle sions in the half, but both "These guys worked hard
offense took the ball to !he stalled in Tiger territory. - and ' our co:~chcs c.11ne up
B1g Black 10 yard lme Chapmanville ~ad only with a grc;tl scheme . It
,where the drtvc. stalled.. three possessions in the half could have gone either
The Held goal uml was on and did not threaten after w:~y, but the one thing
the fteld , but the snap sat led that initiiil drive .
these guys have is somch1gh ove_r everyone s hea~
But, once the second hulf thing you c:~n't coach.
and ·u1dn I stop rollmg unlll started, it did not take long They just won't gel down.
11 was on the Chapmanvtlle for the Tig.:rs to get b~ck in When something happens
40 yard Ime . Pom1 then the game. Their initial pos- thai could have a negative
fumbled the ball buck to the session of the second half cffe~:l ~ we pick ourselves
Tigers on their third play of produced the only points of up and do sqmcthing p,n sithe ensuing series. . ·
the night for the vtsitors as . tive . I'm very proud of
' On the subsequent drive, ' lhey needed just a minute these guys;· added Darst.
the Tigers moved the ball · and twenty seconds and just
A total of 17 senior foot. inside I he Point 15 .yard three plays to take the lead ball t}laycrs ~Yerc honored
line , but Allen Wasonga in the game. Dylan Wiley in &lt;:eremonies before the
intc'rcepted a Todd Terry . ran for three yards on first game. This nwy be their
pass a( the Big Blacks' one down and then caught a 19- final game at Sanders
yard line to squelch that yard paSS' from quarterback Memorial Stadium, but
drive . The Big Blacks then Todd Terry to put the b.all at there will be at least one
picked up a couple of first the Point 46 yard line. On more game for these
downs and used up about the ~ext , play, David Wiley deserving young men.
half of the games' final . rive . raced down 'the rig(lt side- .Those seniors arc B.J .
minutes before punting the lin~ for the long touchdoWn Lloyd. 'Phill.ip Allen,
ball I?ack to Chapmanville. to give his team their only · J.ustin Weaver, Dorek
Mitchell, Jared Searls,
Cody Greathouse's punt lead of the ni~ht.
was.downed at the Tiger 16
Point didn 1 answer on Caleb Wa.s onga, Tyl&lt;!r
yard 'line and four incom- theirncxtpo~scssion,butn,n Grant , Dennis Rodgers.
pletc passes Iuter, Point took their sc1=ond opportunity of Jeremy
Hunt,
Matt
over rigllt ,lhcrc.
the second halt, the locals Thompson, Daniel Selllcs, ·
Wasonga ran four times, took advantage of a short James Garrell, Chase
the last qne a,sev,en yard Chapmat.w illc
punt. Daugh~rty ;
Kenny
touchdown jaunt In ·add Starting ~llhc Tiger 46 yard Longwell., Chase Liptrap ,
king lo the cake, 'Weaver line , it .tool( the ·Big Blacks Cody Durst and, Jared
added the extra point l\l set five plays and jusl'ovcr two Bartee .

SOUtH PIYIS!ON
Player
Georgta BennQ!t"

Mta lansford"
E.m11y Le:mbert
Megan Zupi
Kara Sm1th'

SchOOl

Grade

Chillteolhe
Chillicothe

10
12
12

Ctlillteolhe
Chillicothe

11

Chtllk::od'le
10
Portsmouth
9
CarOitne Kohury
Kalyn Purdy.
Portsmouth
1()
Ashle1gh lmk'
Portsmouth
1t
Player ollhl? Year tMVP): Kara Smith. Chillrcothe
Coach of the Year : Janet Otsbennen. Chtlhcotl:'e .

12 ·

Coach or ttle Year: Todd Morris, Mariena

logan
Marietta
Mprietta

Coach olthr! Year: Mike MYler. MaUena

12

Player of the Ytar (MVP); Kyle Gray, Marlena

Grade

Marie-ria
Lyndsay Muii4Jn•
Mar~lta
Angie Schmitt'
Marlet!a
Player of the Year (MVP): AngMt SchmiH, Manetta

lO

EAST PIYISION

School

C&amp;ssle Dye"

Ethan Whalen
Logrm
tt
Player of the Year (MVP). Ethan Tawney. Jackson
Co-coaches ol the Year · MtehA.el McCorkle. GhriiiCothe; Ian
Rtddlebarge r, Logan

Shay Amold
Boyd Blown

12 ·
12 ·
12
12
12
12

Jackson

..-dlnotn two-time repeat member ot AII·SEOAL team

Player
Drew Bas1l ' "
Paul Homtng
Tyler Semanctk
To(ly Skowronek"
Zeke Maher
Ethan Tawney

Cod)' W1k:&lt;»t.

11
10

"-denotes repea.l member ol AII-SEOAllesm

SOCCER

WEST PIYISION

l&lt;eilh Schwendeman
ChriS Slollar
Zach Hill'
Malt Gtbl

12

Sadkt McFarland
Zanesvlne
Playet" ol the Year (MVP): Maegan Grosel, Marlena
Coach o11ht Year: Jeff PriCe, Manetla

2007

Player
Kyle Gray'

Grade

EAST O!Y!SION

Coach nllhe Year· Bret Wrtghtsel, Chtlltcoll1e

L.J. Funk'

School
Chillicothe
Chtllicolhe
Chillicotlie
Chilltcothe

12
Player ollhe Year (MVP): Meredilh Rtdge, Jackson .
Coach o1 the Year: Pam Allen. Ch~licoltle ·

12
11

Emtly Hopk:ns
Portsmouth
Cinnamon Fletcher
Ironton
Playe1 or the Yaar (MVP) Hannan Day·, Chilhcot!le

Greg Oe1nert
Cody Rader
Mw:haet Meadows
Derek Montgomery

SOCCER

11 6ifU' 1

12
12
10
12

Kat1e lmnez
lanesville
Player ol1he Year (MVP): Kayla Sowers, Logan
Co-coaches ol !he Year Ron Ktdder,,.Marletta; Sue

Bovs

(NoN-FOOTBALL) .

two--lime repeal member ol AII·SEOAL team
McOOfkle arnf Rktctlebarger alSo shared Wesl 01visfon
Coach of 1M Year honors In 2007

Grade
12
12

Warren
ZaneS\Iille

Player
Hannah Day··
Hale.,- Ptltenger
Meghan Marlin
Kact Shoemaker
Alexts G!:'tger..
Kelsey Mattln
Morgan Mullins
Shanssa Cooper·•

Logan

·-denotes repeal member of AII-SEOAL team

•oT-- ;. ·All S.ummers

11

11

·~-deMleS

SchoOl
L()gan
Logan

Hannah McMJCI'lael
Brenna Goethel
Mtehele Tw1ggs

11
12
11
12
11
12
12
12
12
12
10 .
12
11
11
12
12

Plilrick Angle. Logan .

NORTH PIYISfON

Enn Delong

STAFF REPORT

• LB
OL-OL
RB

Norttl Divitlon PlayN of the v..r (MVP):

VOLLEYBALL

Kayla Sowers

South Gallia honors 2008 fall athletes

212
12
165 . 12

6·2
229
Danny Russel!, Chillicothe
6·0
243
Nate AlliSon, GaiNpohs
S·Hl 175
·, oe
Qwntin· Niberl, Galltpolis
165
6·0
6.(} . 260
Sam Crambhl, Ironton
T
QB
Jon Schwe1ckart, Ironton
6·0
195
QB
Josh Brown. Jackson
5· 11 175
Lukas Lindamood. Jackson
SE
6·3
170
Jaushua Huntsberger. logan WR
5 -10 140
5-11
Seth Sigler. logan
NG
170
Conner H~ss. Marrena
FB
245
6·3
Jare,d Ross, Maneua
LB
5· 10 165
Jason James. Portsmouth
180
DE
6·0
loodan Malone. Portsmouth OB
5·7
145
150
Andrew Coffman. Warren
AB · DB 5·9
Andrew Dunfee, Warren
A B-OB 5·9
162
Cole Hudson, Zanesville
OB·LB 6·3
205
KBieb Mohler, Zanesvill&amp;
OL·DL 6-2
217

'11

204

FB·Dl 5-7
FB·NG 6·0

HONORABLE MENTION

11
12
12
12
12

ALL·SEOAL TEAMS

Player

2008 South Gallia Fall Scholar Athletes

ALL-SEOAL FooTBALL TEAMs

flam.~
Drew Bastl, Chtlllcothe
Caleb Kmghts', Cl"ulltcothe .

eunb.w l!:imr5-srnhnrl • Page 83:

"-&lt;!&amp;notes repeal member of AII -SEOAlteam
Thts IS DISbenneU's thrrd-straight selection as SotJth Division
Coach ol the Year.
.
ThiS IS Miller's seconc!-stra!ghl selection as Nor"lh Division
Coach olthe Year
•

·I

..

OVBLINE

come out hot , you ' re gomg

Rio
from Page Bl
of the premier tcants in the
country.
·
" I thought our kids re&lt;tlly
did a nice job," he aJifed.
"We came out a lillie hot
offensively and when you

6-of· 7 from the f'icld and
to go through a little cold ~he boarded. she went to
period, they came out cold the glass," he said . Black
and then kind of picked it pulled
down
four
up a little bit: il was a great rebounds on the night.
Rio Grande will' face
game and our balat\t:c Wi.IS
'unbelievable ...
.
West Viruin1a Tct:h next
Black's production w:ts a Friday nigh!. November
14 in the first. round of the
career-high effort.
"Candace Black. she Bcvo
Franci'
played 17 minutes and Tournament. Tip-off will
ended up with 15 points , be at 6 p.m .

•

OHIO

VALLEY

telephone banking ·

wnc

honored

next.

tts awards.

Antber Clark and Andrea
Thomas both won first -year
award\. Second-year awards
went to Kirstie Bertram,
Kayla Nance ;md Jasmine
Waugh . Brillany Chapman
also rc.:cived a third -year
award and Katie Fellurc was
the lnnc four-year recipient.
Varsity football was the
last team hothlred on the
cventng. Junior varsity
~~w~m..IS
went to Brctl
Armenta. Zack Beaver,
William Bowm:111, Chris
Foocc. Colton Hensley,
Jaylan Nolan, Andy Welch,
Levi Ellis. Aaron Gwinn,
Corv Hanner. Brandon
Hari·ison. John Johnsol1,
Nick Lyon, Dalton Matney.
Danny
Matney.
A .J .
McDamels, Michael Parcell.
Austin Phillips ;uid Jcrrod
Poiter.
·
First-year . twards Wl'lll to
John Baker, Greg Burgess ,
Jeff Clylmrn. Austin Combs,
Jeff Combs. Bryce Clary
ami D:ilc . Duke. Jacob
Dolson was the lone second·
year dWard -w inncr.
Ctleb McCianall&lt;lll and
B.J . Stanley were both given
fnur-yc;u av.:~u·ds ;md were
also
presented
special

Scholar-athletes for the
first nine weeks were hon·
ored by class. The freshmen
were
Brett
Armenta,
Courtney
Blackbun1,
Chandra Canaday, Amber
Clark, Austin
Combs,
Tiffany
Delaney, Ton
Duncan, Levi Ellis, Corey
Haner, Christina Howell ,
Dalton Matney. Shelby
Merry, Jaylan Nolan, Austin
Phillips and Andrew Welch.
The sophomore scholars
were Tayler Duncan, Dale
Duke. Colton Hensley. Nick
Lyon. Michael ParceiT,
Andrea Thomas, Kyla
Wocmer and Hailce Swain.
The junior scholars were
Jackie Burns, Brittany
.Chapman, Jeff Clyburn,
Jacob Dntsoti, Chris Fonce,
A.J. McDaniel. Rachel
Stanley and Jasmine Waugh.
Senior scholars were
N atasha Adkins, Kirstie
Bertram. Katie Fcllurc ,
Aaron
Gwinn,
Katie
Lawrence.
Caleb
McCianah&lt;m, Rachel Merry,
Amber Miller, Ashley
Miller , Kayla Nance , B.J.
Stanley, Christina Tirpak
and Jacoh Watson.

connectt!J w.ilh C-r.a's for

1

the conversion attempt to
give Buffalo an 18· 7 lead
with 7:13 lefl in the half.
WHS rallied for two
scores 111 the final I :40 of

utcs to play.

· •

Good capped off the
evenings scoring with a 5:l
yard run to remove any
thoughts of a WHS comeback with 3:54 remaining

to give Buffalo the convinc·
ing 3~·19 gridiron win.
Wahama finished the
night with 219 yardsoftolal
offense with 142 yards .on
the ground and another 77
through the airways. Zcillc
.notched 68 yards in 12 car· .
ries while .Branch added 64
yards in nine tries. Zuspan :
connected on I0 of 25 passes for 77 yards and nne
touchdown Wilh ·'lWo of his
tosses being intercepted .
The 77 yards moved the
junior quarterback into sec- :
ond place· for pa"ing yards :
in a season iu Wahama with :
1303 . Underwood caught :
four passes for 40 yards to
give the senior wide-out 94
receptions for 1286 yards
and ,18 touchdowns during
his career at the Bend Area
school. Colin Pierce .tlso.
had four catches for 20·
·
yards in the contest.
Seven Wahama scn1ors
conclttded their high school
football careers following .
the disappointing setback
with Kyle Zerkle. Garrell .
. Underwood, Rodney Bragg.:
Jacob

Roach ,

frt.Jm l,age 81
cui tlw kad to 12-12. but
that i' all till' closc·r the
Wildcats would gel.
The Haltlt:lll dc·i'c11se con·
tinucd the rally with a fum - ,
lik rt·cowry just thrCL' plays
later. hut till' c·xcitc•melll
was short lil'cd as Hundred
fCilii'IK'd tht: f•l\'01" by l"t.:'I.."O\'l'l'ill~ a Wtldcal fumble .
Tl1.: ~llnlll'IS i'i11islwd th.:·

Strength and stability...

Peace of mind...

s..:nrin!.! \\'hen Kuhn founJ

Lngati McDillll for thetr
~l'..:nnd tnu . . ' hdowu l'OIIIll'~o:·­
lilm l)f.lhl' 111!!111 at .+ : ~2 in
the' fourth ciU&lt;~IL'L
"'It \\&lt;IS IOU !.!.b hcl' illlsl'
thc•,c• guys pl&lt;t);c'd hard tit.:
wholl' ~o.Hllt...' :· sai d l'Oach
Tayl&lt;lL •.. It JUS! kinda got
away from us itt the ... ~..·..:nttd
half."
S~o·ni,,rs ·playittg. in Lhl'ir
.

.

Larry Crum/photo

Hannan quarterback Jacob Taylor gets by a Hundred
defender during the first quarter of a high school football
game Friday in Ashton .
·
final !.!,;unc for l-lannaa w~rc Jared Taylor.
"My sc;niors give everyPatri ck
Flor&lt;t.
Andy
tit
i ng tltey have ... coach
Soward.&lt;.
Joe
Kelly.
Claytou
Guc.
N:tthan Taylor added . " I am prm1&lt;.f
Duncau . Willie Christy &lt;llld of every one of them ."

The right choice...

.·

hs ycoo 10knew •lial some P11ng&gt; Pe. ~r •.Jwgc
. b:ip€cia!~1 wh.;n 11COIMS 10 yOUIIi"a'lGt~'

secur I) At ""';pies 3an,. w~··;: ::r0,:d lj tJe I\'
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to t:lk :1 rBsoonsitle apr,roarl'i ~c til.:: l1nan·: i

The right bank...

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to the Re$cue,

has r~ "'-} 31nrd vr.r-~ "-~·1 11 !i1ese t; nc~rt.11-' ?J:1
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Don't put you ami Y&lt;lur family·

healta em COvelfP.

Peoples
Bank· F5iC

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Otpnei!IJ lKld«~mts
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SeiH~Ia)'el/SmiM lltsi!!e:»es

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Trey·

Anderson, Colby Davis and
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Wahimw High School.

Hannan

at Ft$11 by trytngto pt by wtth&lt;lllt

Local OVB Line numbers will be disconnected on or after November 18, 2008.

--

2008 SGHS Special Awards

the half when William
Zuspan completed a 51·
yard, nine play drive with a
touchdown pass lo Garrell
Under~:Vood. The point after
pass ullempl was unsuccessful to make it an 18--13
contest. Less than a ~ninute ·
remaining in the. opc1ling later Mall Dangerfield
Gln(O.
picked off a' Good pass to
Wahama marched down give Wahuma the bull at the
the field on what appeared Bison 48. Kyle Zerkle then
to be a Inrig scoring drive of broke into the open and out·
11s own following tnc two raced the Buffalo secondary
quick Bison scores but the for a 48-yard TD scamper to
Bend Area team fumbled give the White Falcons a
the bull away at the one to 19-18 edge . Once again the
eliminate the locals scoring PAT pass failed but things
opportunity. WHS would were looking up for a big
force a punt and on its sec· second half for the locals .
· ond play Micaiah Branch
The anticipated big finish
burst through the middle on never really materialized for ·
a ] ]-yard smring jaunt. the White Falcons as
Kyle Zerkle booted the Bu(falo dominated the final
point after to pull the · two quarters both offensiveFalcons to within three . at ly and defensively. Good
1(). 7 with 9:55 to play in the
put the Bison in front to stay
first half.
with a 17-yard run on the
Buffalo answered the final play of the third quar·
hosts score when Good gal- ter with Frazier raci'ng 17
loped around the far side· yards with a muffed kickoff
line and tight roped his way return to extend the visitors
. into the end wne. Good lead to 32-19 with 12 min·

.Heal~h

1-8°8 8-FONE-OVB
. ·-

MERCERVILLE
South Gallia Hi~h SL'hnol
honored ·&lt;~II nt' its 200~ fall
·&lt;tthktcs Moml&lt;ty ~11 the
&lt;lltnu&lt;tl 200X Fall Sports
Athlcti&lt;: U&lt;tlll!Uct in the high
'chnnl gymtMsium.
, SGHS )1011orcd varsity
athll'les from cross nnmtry,
volleyball. thccrleadillg &lt;tnd
ft )olh.tll - as well "' prc~cnlin!.!. awards to scholarathletes lor the first 11i11c
week' and special aw&lt;trds in
ea.:h spnn :
Se11ior J&lt;tc:ob Watso11
rc~cived ·u. third-year award
. fnr CC and also received a
spclial a~tlnl for sclting the
school record with a time of
17 :J8 . Wa1"111 was the lone
CC compclitnr this scaso11.
, II was a plllgr.tm-bcst }'l'ar
for the· volleyball pi·ogram ,
which was IHlnnrcd ll~xt.
Junior varsity awards went·
to Crystal Adkms. Courtney
Bl&lt;tckhurn. Jackie Burns.
Tillany
Delancy, Tori
DunL'&lt;tn. Christina Howell.
Cnr.y
Mannon, Shelby
Merry a11d Kyla Wcorner.
' First·y~ar awanls went to
Blackburn, Cryst&lt;tl Adkins.
Ch;mdra Canaday. Rachel
St:mlcy. Haike Swain and
Christi11a Tirp&lt;tk. Second·
yc~1r nwunJ, wcnl 10 ·Tayler
Dun.:an. Alisa Johnson.
Katie Lawrence and Rachel
Merry.
l"ounh-year awards went
111 N&lt;il &lt;tslw Adkins. as well
as ltulllagl·rs Ashley and
A111bn Milkr.
Special aw;ords i11 volleyb;ill went. lo Alisa Johnson
( Bri"k
House
Aw&lt;trd).
Nalasha Adki11s (Bc,t All·
Arnund), Tayler Duncan
(Piaymakcr). Hailee Swain
(1-.,am Spirit) and Cha11dra
Canaday (I'll&lt;' A,ce).
. The varsity cheerleaders

Bryan Walters/photo

Wahama wideout Garrett Underwood (21) leaps for a pass in
the endzone over two Buffalo defenders during the first half
of Friday night's football game at Bachtel Stadium in Mason.

~~

is switching its local numbers for a new, clearer toll free number

- - - - - - ; -' . . : _ _ - - - - ; - - - -- - ·-·-· -

SPORTSitliMYOAILYTRlBUNE COM

ing the F.dcon miscue 17
yards fnr another Bison sec·
ond half score.
Wahama rallied from an
early 10-0 deficit by s.:oring
19 se.:ond &lt;jllartcr points to
lake a 19-18 halftime edge
as MiCai&lt;~h Bram:h n111 ~J
yartb for a .s~:ore, William
Zuspan tossed an ·It-yard
touchdown pass to GaiTetl
Underwood for &gt;ix points
and Kyle Zerkle ruL'cd 48
yards for another White
l'akon touchdown. but that
would be all the offense the
BcnJ Area team would ~en·
crate us Buffalo limited. the
Falcons to juSt 20 yards nf
total offense over the final
24 minutes.
The Bison jumped out to
10-0 first period lead after
Jimmy Grimm recovered a
Buffalo fumble at the one
yard line but (m the Bend
Area teams first offensive
play Kyle Zerkle was tack·
led in the end zone for a
two-point safety. Following
the ensuing kick Buffalo
drove 44 yards in seven
plays · with Good going in
from two yards out. Good
also ran the tv.o point conversion ·to give the vis11ors a
10-0 advantage with 4:26

�Surulay, November C), 2oo8
Page B4 • leunb.w trnnr!i -lernhnrl

Pomeroy • Middlepo"t • Gallipolis

Friday Night Scoreboard

BEREA lAP) - In !he
.illclnhllh of Coll.tp'c P.111
Kuhn (Chns McDoflll run) 4 5~
Fnday s Boxscores
II rtllllllng b.u.;k J~nn.tl
Hu
Ho
Le" '' slood .11 h1' locker 111
Point Pleasant 17,
F1rst Downs
16
17
Chapmanville 7
1he
Cle1 cl.md B1o" "'
yards
42 235 35 98
Chapmanvol\e 0 0 7 0 - 7 Rushes
shellsh&lt;Kked
locke1 100111
Pass•ng yards
66
138
PI Pleasan1 3 0 7 7 - 17 Total
.md
vemed
yards
301
236
Camp-an tnt
5 10 1 11 23
For !he semnd I nne 111 l11c
Scoring summary
0
d.tys , lhc B10~ns h.lll Ill
First Quarter
Fumbles lost
11
22
PP-Justtn Weaver 21 f1eld goal
dollbk-tlictl lead al home
Pena lt es yards
6 55
5 40
6 25
dos,&lt;ppc.ll -.md thssnilc 1111ll
Thtrd Ouarler
lndtvlduo\
Slotlsllcs
,1\lOihel
St'oiSO!I-dcl \Ill n g
C-Dav•d W1ley 46 run (Todd Terry
Rushing Hu-Zach Watson 17
kock) 10 30
loss
103 Zach Phollops 11 54 Chucky
PP -AIIan Wasonga 9 run {Wea~er
On Sunday. lh&lt;: B.tl\lmolc
Cunmngham 2 42 Dahan Kuhn 9
kock\517
R.twns
l.tlhed lao .1 ~7-27
23 Chns McOtffll 3 13
Fourth Quarter
Ha-Robert
Worth
14
40
Andy
~111 o1e1 Clcvel.md
On
PP- Wasonga 7 run (Weaver kd)
Sowards 8 34 Jacob T"ylor 8 12
03
1hur,d.•y
mght,
1he
Dcme1
Patnck Flora 5 12
Passing Hu-Dalton Kuhn 5 9 0 B1oncos scored 21 pn1111s tn
pp
c
!he foullh qu.ulet .111d bca1
66 Chros McDoffol 0 1 1 0
F rst Downs
10
16
HaJacob
T
aylor
11
21
0
138
!he Btowns ~4- 10
Ru shes yards
29 88 45 235
Patnck Flora o 1 0 0 Robert Worth
Pass1ng yards
61
36
lnctelhbk . bul 1101 exac1ly
0 100
Total yards
149
271
unbche
v.1blc for,, scemmgly
Receiving Hu- Logan McD1ff1t 3
Comp a11 1nt
6 17 2
180
sn.1kc
btlten
1!.111l h!Se
61 Zach Phol\ops 2 5
Fumbles lost
0
2
He-Pa
trick
Flora
6
108
Joe
Kelly
Penalt es yards
Lcwos couldn 1 f.tlhom
6 38
3 15
1 38 Robert Worth 1 10
wh.ll h.1d h.•ppcncd how II
Individual Stah:.tlcs
h.1ppencd 01 why tl h.ipWeal Ylrglnle Scorn
Rushtng C-Oav1d W1tey 8 70
Bridgeport 41 North Mar~on 0
pcncd
Joey Stevens 12 49 Dylan W1ley 1
Buffalo 38 Wahama 19
3 Todd Terry 8 134}
Bul. II h.1ppened
Cra1g Cou11ty Va 66 Montcalm \4
PP-AIIan Wasonga 31 203 Derek East Fa1rmonl 30 Fa~rmont Senror 7
Thos " as flllslraled '"
Elkms 34 Buckhannon Upshur 32
M1tchetl 2 17 Nalhan Robert s 7 17
I
ve
been 111 as many yea1 s
Frank.lort
34
Hampshire
0
8 J Lloyd 5 1 2)
Galax Va J4 B1g Creek 28
'" I vc been playmg. Ihe
Passmg C-Todd Terry 6 17 2 6 1
Greenbrier West 26 Pen dleton County
PP- BJ Lloyd 1 8 0 36
nmc yc.u ve lcr.tn SdJL.! I've
20 20T
Recetvtng C-Chr s Oav1s 1 24
Hedgesv111e 10 Berkeley S pr~ngs 7
llC\Cl
seen .mylhmg lokc 11111
Dy1.1n W1ley 1 19 Zachary Belcher Hundred 30 Hannan 12
my
life
I 111 JU'I nolculltom
1 14 0&lt;1 v1d Wiley 1 6 Joey James Monroe 34 Summers Co 6
Jefferson 42 Wash1ngton 7
!hiS kmd of clolh I pl.ty
Slovens 2 12)
Madonna 4 t Cameron 6
PP-AIIan Wasonga 1 36
physlc.&amp;l footb.tll I come oul
Magnolia 29 Gral1on 24
Man 28 Iaeger 0
here
and gtve 11 my .ill - all
Mar lmsburg 56 Eastern V1ew Va 14
Buffalo 38, Wahama 19
Wl'Ck ThiS " lhe NFL You
Matewan 60 Burch 0
Buffalo
10 8 6 14 - 38 Mtdland
,Tra11 41 PtkeV•ew 28
c.m 1 c.tll 11 qtnls llllltl !he
Wahama
0 19 0 0 - 19 Moorelu!:ld 47 T,-garts Valley 6
g.une 1s ove1 Bul 11 looks lo
Mount Hope SO Sherman 27
N1tro 35 Pm1eeton 17
Scoring summary
me hkc some people c.11l tl
Oak Glen 43 Tols1a 26
First Quarter
Oak Hill 46 Moun! V1ew 12
quoh before that Denvet
B-Salcty 7 53
Paden C1t~ 20 Btshop Donahue 6
w.ts down bu1 lhcy dtdn 1
8-C orcy Good 2 run (Good run)
Parkersburg So 34 John Marshall 14
4 26
Pet ersburg 30 East Hardy 29
&lt;all 11 qu11s They kcpllhctr
Second Quarter
Ph1l1p Barbour 36 Tucker County 35
he.1ds up .md lhcy ftmshed
P1ke Co Cen1ral42 Tug Valley 26
W-M1c a1ah Branch 33 run (Kyle
Po1nt Ple•sant 17, C:hapman\lllle 7
'We d1dn 1 do lhal lwo
Zorl&lt;ie kock) 9 55
Pr eston 28 NtchrJias County 14
B-Good 70 run (Cody Cratg pass
weeks
111 ,1 row ~ at home '
RIChwood 21 G1lmer County t 2
from Good) 7 13
R1pley
10
Ravenswood
6
Then
Wtlho111 nam111g
1
W-Garretl Underwood 11 pass
Roane County 55 Rttch1e County 26
tlolmes , Lewts called 0111
Scoll 25 Lincoln County 19
from W11l1am Zuspan (pass fa1led)
South Charleston 29 Bluefield 21
some tcammales
1 40
Sprmg Valley 27 WoOdrow Wilson 14
W -Zerkle 48 run (pass fatted) 52
'Some people need lo
S! Marys 41 Calhoun County 13
Third Quarter
Valley Fayette 37 W1ll1amson 0
check their egos al Ihe door
B-Good 17 run (pass laoled) 00
Wayne 49 logan 14
.md
fmd some he.ul to come
Werr
4
t
Tyler
Consolidated
21
Fourth Quarter
Wheeltng Park 49 Robert C B~rd 21
oul hc1e and play hard ,· he
8-Schuyler Fraz1er 17 fumble
W1t11amstown 28 Parkerstx"g Cath 7
return (Cra1g run) 11 48
SctJU "'ThiS IS a 111.\11 s game
W1nl1eld 28 Herbert Hoover 6
B-Good 53 tun (run laoled) 3 54
Wyom1ng East 34 liberty Rale1gh 6
The way we wcnl 0111 lherc
1
and played lwo weeks 111 a
B
W
Oblg prayoUa
1
Ftr st Downs
t4
13
Friday's Sc:ores
10w, futtshmg lhc same kmd
Rushes yards
52 372 24 142 I
Division 2 Region 5
of
way. 11\ JUSt nol lhcrc I
Semllinal
Pass1ng yards
22
77
Akr Hoban Hi Mayf1eld 13 OT
1h111k
1he1c s some men nghl
Tott~l yards
394
2 19
Tallmadge 27 Madison 7
here
who need lo check
1
Camp att nt
35 1
10 2 5 l
Division 2 Region 6
2
Semifinal
lhemselves"
Fumbles lost
1 1
2 2
1 Medma H1ghland 35 Powell Olentangy
The Btowns (~-6) a1e ,,
libet!y 0
Ponalttes yards

5 46

0 0

Sylv anta Southview 38 Le11angton 24

1

'

\

Individual Statistics
Rushing B-Corey Good 18 185
Cody Cra•g 20 t t 5 Thomas Davis
8 49 Cameron Jones 3 21 Joseph

......... ~ ... _ 1

I

I

s.mmnel
Cols DeSales !3 1 Cots Marlon-Franktn'l23
Loutsvllle ? Logan o
Dl\lls::.,~~'lon 8

I C1n Anders on 31
New Car11sle
W- Kyle Zerkle 12 6B M1ca1ah 1 Tecumseh 13
Branch 9 64 Jacob Roach 2 16 f C1n W1n1on Woods 44 K1ngs M1lls 9
William zuspan 1 1 6)
Dlvlslon 4 Region 13
Semllmal
1
Passing B-Corey Good 3 5 1 22
Perry 47 Massillon Tuslaw o
W- W!IItam Zuspar: 10 25 2 77
) Steubenvtll£&gt; 28 Youngs Mooney 16
Rece1veng B-Schuyler Fraz1er 2 1
Division 4 Region 14
11 Cameron Jones 1 11
I
Semifinal
W- Garret1 Underwood 4 40 Colin Genoa Area 28 Fostona 14
Ottawa Glandorf 28 Manon Pteasanl
P 1crce 4 20 Jacob Roac h 1 19 I 21
OT
Moore 3 2

I

M1c"'1a h Branch 1 ( 2)

Hundred 30, Hannan 12
Hundred
Hannan

8
0

0
6

6 16 0 6 -

30
12

Scoring summary
First Quarter
Hu-Logan McDiffll27 pa ss from
Dallon Kuhn (Chrts McOt"1t run)
8 15
Second Quarter
Ha-Andy Sowards 1 run {run
laded) 9 10
Third Quarter

OIV11ion 4 Regton 15
Semifinal
Mart1ns Ferry 49 Belmont Un100 Local 14
New Lextngton 38 tronlon 6
01\IIIIOn 4 Region 16
Semifinal
Coldwater 35 Day Oakwood 7
Kel1e11ng Aller 42 Ham11!on Badm 7

Division 8 Region 21
Semifinal

Bascom
Hopewell Loudon
Mogadore 0
Norwalk St Paul 34 McDonald 0

30

Division 6 Regton 22
Semifinal

Ada 42 Pandora-Gilboa 14
Delphos 51 Johns 21 Carey 14
DiviSIOn 6

Hu-Chucky Cunntngham 5 run

Region 23

Semifinal

(run lao led) 2 15

Hann~al RIVef 45 Glouster Trimble 1S
Mr~lvern

Fourth Quarter

53 Shadyside 24

Division 8 Rtoglon 24

Hu-Kuhn 10 run (Cunnrngham

Semifinal
MechAniCsburg 40 Cov1ngton 14
Stdney Lehman 42 Spung Cath Cent 6

run) 10 05

Ha-Patnck Flora 2 pass from

Logan'

Chilocot11e '
Ironton •

lanesville
MtmeHa
Gallla Academy
Jackson

Warren

Porlsmoutll

Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
SEOAL
W-L PF PA
W-L
6-0
213 58
11 1
6 1 227 BO
B3
42
183 76
11-4
4 2 149 63
55
33
141 150
46
24
55 137
55
25
109 255
55
15 46 162
46
06
61 153
19
• denotes playort 1eam

Coal Grove
Soutll Pomt
Fa~rland

Chesapeake
RIVet" Valley

Rock Htll

Oh1o Valley Conference
OVC
W-L PF PA
4 I 158 94
4 1 207 92
41
246 124
2 3 111 172
14
106 213
05
95 228
Tn-Valley Conference

W-L
64
64
45
46
37
0-10

Ohta Division

Nelsonv1Me York

Meogs

Wetfs\on
Alhens

Belpre

Alexander
V1nton County

WL
60
51
42
33
24
15
06

TVC

PF
217
226
182
140
105
125
79

PA
112
106
133
113
187
207
214

WL
83
83
46
46
37
46
19

denotes playoff team
Hocking Division

Tttmbte
federal Hock1ng

Watetford

EaSiern
Soolhefn
M~ler

WL
50
41
32
13
13
OS

TVC

PF
229
166
84
81
76
81

PA
48'
68
88
156
156
201

• denotes ptayort team

Point Pleasant
Waynf

Chopmanvollo
Stuorwtlle

Pox: a

Herbert Hoover

Wahama
South Galha
Hannan

Cardtnal Conference
CARD
W-L PF PA
50
163 65
4 1 210 93
32
113 73
23
115 176
14 102 199
OS
73 170
Independents
AL~
W·L PF PA
64
337 227
2 8 84 320
17 155 293

W-L
9-3
73
55
36
36
19

NEW YORK (AP) - The
NFL ftned f1ve players
~mlay f01 on-focld acliolts
dunng I.ISI weekend's
games,
mcludmg
Mmncsol.t's J.1red Alle11
$'i0 000 f01 1wo below-theknee htls on Houston quarlelb.tck M.&amp;ll Schuub
Allen .1lso was hsled ,1,
doubiful on Ihe tnJUt y
1epor1 lor the upcommg
g.une agamsl Grel' n Bay
J.!Lksonvtllc defcns1vc
t.~eklc John Hende1 son and
Ctncii11MII gu.lHI Andrcv..
Whnwo11h were f1ned
$10,000 e.1ch for f1ghtmg
Henderson .md Whttwollh
exchanged punches afler

ALL
PF
238
311
311
230
173
146
ALL
PF

PA
160
209
224
304
348
431

250
195
155
250
133

PA
225
229
272
187
255
254
334

ALL
PF
377
250
, 163
196
167
135

207
155
202
284
276
368

;134

359

ALL
W·L PF
7 3 336
9 I 389
11-2 240
55 246
.28 226
26
173

PA

PA

165
163
109
300
367
294

1

tlH!hl

( .n.tlt~.:t~

Ctnel.md s ddensc lll.IY
11l'Cd ol eumpklc lll.lkcnvcl
I he B1o~ns d1tln 1 p1ess1uc
Culler, lheu l.tcklmg w.ts ,
oiWilll oll1ll lhele seemed In
he

~.:onfus1on

on

~.;o\ct.tgcs.

I do

pl.oys

Sl\e end Ju slm luck ~."
fmcd $7 .son 101 lm htt on
Dall.ts qu.l!lclb.~ek B111oks
Bollm~eo
tn the foutlh
quar1c1~ 1.1s1 Sund.1y
Allen declmcd commenl
on ll1e fmc due In h" dcs1rc
In .1ppc.1i the (lll11!shment
I cx.ms (().tL h G.11 y Kub1.1k
c.illcd Allen s hoi ,, che.1p
shol eaillct 111 lh~ v.cek
L.1s1 monlh A lien w,IS
docked li 'i ,non by 1he
lc.1gue lo1 " l.tle 1111 ag.nnsl
Clllt.Jgo
Allen W.IS ol 11m lied poll ltci)J.\111 Ill p!.llllL~ . bt!l IllS
'Jlr.1111ed ltghl s(lOllfdei '1111
h.ts plenly ol he . d\11~ In do
V1kmg~
t.:(Mr.:h
B1t1d
•

Chtlthcss '""' he wouldn ' l
&lt;icctdc
whethct
Allen
would pl.1y Sunt1.1y tmltl
shonly bclme kllknll
C111c mn.111's Whllworlh
s.ud Hcmlct son went lor hts
eyes 111 lhe11 conilont.tii0\1
I JUs! pushed hun jMst
lhe qu.l!tctb.ick, .111tl he fell
to lhe gllmnd,' Whllwotlh
s,11d "Hut he held mHo my
t.~ecm."k .md npped my
hclmcl olf I 1111 nell lo go
b.1ck lo the pl.1y, .md lhc
ncxllhmg I knew , lleh hun ,
go.tbbong .11 my eyeb.tlls I
oc.1lly dtdu 1 know wh.11 10
do when so meone\ IIIH!t.:lli
.Ill: 11y1ng to thg min . . .my •
eyes ·

Se11es w.1s JUSt won m ll\e
g.tmt•s
Not every c.;h.un·
p1onsh1p 1s gtHng to be a
f1vc pmnl sW 1ng 01 a flvcpoonl tfoffc1ence , 11 S JUS(
1101

The poslsc.&amp;S&lt;lll fm m.11
\\,ts tnlloduccd 111 2004
.Iller M.111 Kcn selh 1111 ned
lhc 2001 season 11110 ol hohum .1ff.ur wtth .1 champ•unsh!p won by lcss -lh.m scmloll.lllllg eOnSI SILilcy 2 'i top-Ills Ill 1h \.lC CS
Kenscth l1.1d JUSt one Wlll
liMt yc.u Hut ht.: w,t"i su !~1 1
.lhc.td by !he cnu of 1hc se.tson lh.ol he "on !he I!lie by
'lO po1111s OICI Jo hnson
despite lon"h111 g (,, , 1 111 !he
st.:.t\Oil ln1.dc
.It
llomc sle.td
B11.on
h.mce
"ho
bCL.lll1C ch.ll!ll1111ollld CEO
o l N'\SCAR 111 Sep1emhe1
200~

dee~dcd so melhtn~

needed lo be done In com':
pclc w11h the NI-L co lkge
lonlball .tnd lhe b.1scb.ill
pl.t)OIIs .d the entl nl the
Cup ..;c.t.,.on
'I he Ch."e - d1v1dtn g
t~.:gul.tl
'.,C~l\011 .lllll U pn•d'-!C~l'-~011 ~

the sd1cd ul c 1ntn a
\\ ,1-., hi-..

.t il\\\

Will

ol

· I lhmk lh.u ove1 lhe Iaslo
f11c 01 stx years, lhe 4X has ,
been Ihe be st tc.vn .•ond I ,
ihmk- no 111.111er whal sys-"
lc m you 1h10w ·•1 !hem latef). 1hcy' 1e go1ng lo ftgure •
l'll l \\l nll{:l " Ill fi\ C Vl'd l ~ ou1 how In wm 11 ,' he satd •
.md 11 s lull Ins 11 th e- bcsl I lhmk everybody woshes
!l:,/111 h.t ... \\011 ~.:,1\,: h ){:,11
tl1eoe could be .1 lhrec-w llle
I he ( h 1\c flllh llHHe l11mh .dmmt ,, 11e lor lhc
~.:mph .t \1' nn \\ mn111g .tnd '"" cH'lY week Btu 11 \
!ll't !'11.:111~ ultl\1\h.:ll l h nn jll\1 nnt ti.:,III"IIC.:
U lllm,llcl \ illc Ch.&amp;&gt;e
lm !he Sp o1111 Cup h.1s he en
sucLL'"' ul
NA SCAR
'-~PO~l''-~111 m R~tm-.cv Po..,lon
s.11&lt;l We h.1d lhoce &lt;ltll e1

'

up on

J.uncs s.o1d

I

:E~onomy m(lkes free agent signings
,
' even more risky
'A I Ht1111&lt;'11 musll!e_ l1ope\
fc'\,Jy undap.11d bec.llose he
dltfn I lfnnk 1\VIce ,llJOlll
1cllm~ llle lmoni!J Blue J.tys
1h 111 ' ills CUllen! C:O\IIf,IC!
cu.u,mll.·cmg hun Sl:! nuiTI~Jil ,1 yc,n rust w~tsn l gomg.
In cui ot .mymnrc
'H.IHI Ill bl.unc h11n .
1-..:~.lll~e fellow pllchet GC
S.IQ,IIh!·' ' ~tgur~s 10 make
tloubll' rh.tt by the Inn.~ he abou~ thm JObs .md lh~1r
u.\pmts lo spttng 11~unmp ,a houses ~ and no one can tell
i&lt;'W • n,lotllh~, I rom now. o you ho)'ol thmg's "{Ill be even
BeSides. the1e's .1lw.1ys lhe SIX mnnlhs f10111 ~pw.
"•'l!!!'lllg wuu y 1h~11 a new • Yel
1hc
Mtlwaukee
.llhnnnslt.lliOII l.1k111g olltcc Brewers r~porlcdly ofrcred
'!\on fll'l nughl be commg $I PO nulhon ovc1 five yc.trs
.tflet some nl hos I&lt;H!UII&lt;'
10 S.lb.tthl.l,md 11.111 only was
Snmc lc.un pe1 h.1ps even the sllcl)ce tlc;rfcl\111~ f10111
lhC' Blue J •• y, 11 til P••Y Ihe 1 1\ihcr end. tlut • son1e
llplllcll wh.ll he w.uus They. b.ls~b.tll scr1bcs we•g!J&lt;:J m
11 rll hec.ltl'!-' IIHS "b.tscb.IH to say n wa~n't \:ven alegn.md ' ·" super .1gen1 Scoll tm.ttc offer
Bu1.1s pl)ml • nul. the ecuBurnell, S.tb.uhl.l .md
mlnnc tulc;s 1h.11 gow1 n no•_- even M.utny R.umrcz ha~e
ni.tl "' 1hzcd 'oc!et.y don 1 1~e 11ght 10 c.•rn as muc:h
ofipll'
money ,IS lhcy e.tnmlhc lei. Iii otu Ill) opll lllllld .' altvcly shorl Inne rh.tl 'nlhllnt.ls s.nd. 'I!K'tc's ,, lol of lclcs h.IYe to llldke their lm ;
towel ~lcmcniS lh.n l!.mkly· ltmcs Alld 1t's ccll.nnly liue
11e \Ill( ,IS .1pphe.1hic Ill ihc (~,11 [Mscb,lll OWneiS make
nt~lsod,· """''enough wnh rhc maJor
11 "·" mc1c COlneid&lt;'ncc lc.•guc" bnngillg 111 S6 5 btlih.ol B,i,,l, n1.1dc Ius llllll - lmn 111 tevcnuc lasl y_car
till' tllhcl d.1y .11 lhe .1ione
,,nne sc.tSillc ~c:sntl \lh~1e
Bulllhnnalcly 11's the funs
\IG c:xcc:u11H'' p.ul!C&lt;I allet \\ho hue 1he pockets of the
1.1k111g btl lion' 111 .1 gmclll- o~ ncrs ant! the pi'Uyc" And
mcnl h.ulout Bl\1 a lor of llhile 1hc cn1c ol rhose fans
flC•&gt;pk 111 h.!Seh.ill sec·ms to has proven 1cmaikably loy.•l
(1,1\e lhe s,une chsclllllteel dl'SpilC annu,ll IIICJC,ISC' 111
11 Hh rc:.1ftl) ,,, 1he people Iicker and eonecss1on pnccs,
11lll1 luok b1g f·llllblcs .mll a deep .md pnm.tctcd ccolnsl ft\1 dnc 1~f lh~ b1gges1 \10\IIIC ICCCSSIO\l 1111gh1 C&lt;IUSC
,omJl.lnll's in the \\odd .
lhem to rc-c,aluulc how
Thh nl.l\ ltslcn .mil nod ollen lhe) 111.1ke rhc pilgnm·•PilFoi mgl) 11 hc•n Bud Sc•ltg .tgc 10 lh~ b.11lp.u k
s:ll s lmws .Ul'll&gt;u~h .md 1h.11
Selig seems 10 umlerstand
,,•:uus sl1t1uld ".uch "h.11 1h.u. e1cn 1f most olpers 111
the\ th&gt; 11i1h rhen mmwy. us baseball don ' l He sa~ thai
ht ;ltd 111 ,1 , lcku c:.lll to gcn- b.tscb.lll allenuan~·e dcclm~d
,.,,,, lll.lll.ll.!er' mceltng 1h" l.tsl )e.u for lhc hr~t 1nnc 111
II:Cck Ill Dun.l l'mnt c.• hl lOIII yc.ll s ·" fans slayed
Bul ll"' ,, lop ,1.u11ng p1tc:h- home bec.lUse ol h1gh gaso:
,., 111 111&gt;111 11l1h~m .md Cll'n ltnc .m~ l~c:kel p11cc' Hl'
1h,• mlll-m.uket 1e.uns s1.u1 •uuldn'l h.ne helped j:nn
,,,(1\,11111~ .md bcggmg !hen nnl~ee 1h.11 the Wm \d Sencs
b.ltlk\.1~ fot .1 !..Mil
\Lts th.: lO\\I!St 1~\l~d C\Cftlll
[ h~ I..'I..Uill'llll~ IS t.mklllg_ tc\C\ 1SI()tl
\mCIILoll" ,.,,. 11!1\lll'd
Th,• f.lcl rhat Scltg 1~11 II

Tim

t

'

wtnrllng tv.n st1 ~ught rm.:cs

C1

g l\e

'

lnngc1 .1 wmn•ng lounul~l
II Junmoc Johnson docs wm
,\ lh11d LOnSl'UIIIVe ch,llllfl!·
onship, !hen he should be
celcbr.llcd lo1 m.1kmg hiS1m y ,IJul bc.umg lhl' be' I
slnck c.1r di!Vets 111 lhc
WOiflf
Cu11c111 llllllll'l-llfl C.ul
Edwdltis lhts nhldc th1ngs .1
Ionic mote mtercstmg by
In cui Johnson·, lc.td In llll'l
flO !IllS
hc,ltf mg
11110
Sund.ty s l.lle .11 Phoemx
He docsu'r sec a need lo1
d1an gc, crthc1
I've seen Supet Bowls
1h.1t wet e blowouls by 40
ppmls .md I've seen Super
Bowls hkc 1."1 ye.u rh.u
wclll down 11~h1 In lh c end
ot!H.I \.\,IS ~t rc.1i close t!•llllC.
Edw,uds ,,ud 'I h.1i s Jllsl
p.u( ol )JIO(C SSIOII.lf Sfl!ll!S
Somctmu.:s there ,uc gn111g
Ill be lc.IIIIS (}1 u guy rh.ll
gds nn .1 roll .md rs gomg
In (lUll away h gels 1h.11
w.1y 111 anythrng •
Edw.1nls sutd whalcver
!he f&lt;irmal he wanls 10 sec
!he bcSI dnvct and lcam •

.t

'""l!

Consensus: No changes needed to Chase format .
whal lo ch.111ge .md how lo
make 11 belleo 1f we c.111 ·1
w.llch II .11\d look .11 11 for
Junnue Johnson's run seven ye.1rs 01 e1glll ye.Irs
tow.trd ,111 almost cert.un and sec how ,,-..~ wmk1ng
lhtrd consceultve NASCAR ,11\d te.tlly gel .1 good look
Spnnl Cup 11tle has prom pl- at how It 1s w01kmg and not
ed 111.111) llic.IS on how lo working' Ea11thanl1 s,1id
ch.mgc lhe Ch.ISc lot lhe How c.m we 1e.1Hy kn ow
ch.nup10nslnp lo m.1kc 11 wh~tt to (,;h,mgc .uul m.tke
mote compc1111ve
tile tlgllllh.mgc 1
Some would Joke lo sec
" We
shouiJh'l keep
1he 12 di!VCl' mlhe 10 1ace c,:hang1ng ~md t,.:h.tngmg
Ch.1se h.1vc ,, complclcly un1d we siUmble on the
s~p.u.llc pomts stiuclmc 11 gh1 spol and !he 11g)11
lh.H ~ ould keep one 01 lwo op11ons .1nd lhc 11 g h1 v.,tys
b.td ilmshcs ftom knocktng lo h.11e Ihon gs·
them OUI of lll)e LOIIICIIIIOil
E.11nh.11d1 s.ud lhc ct111enl
O!hc1s ms1s1 1h.11 e.~eh ol econmH1c meltdown 1s
!he cftg1bfc drtVets be 1_!1\ell ,molhrl n:.tson to t.1kc .1
.t
mlllllg.m,·
.l!lowm g " .111-and-sec' ·'f&gt;P' "·" h
lhem In 1h11m nul 1her1
'We \C !.!01 In 111.1k~ ~tt1C
~ ors1 Ch.ose lnush
we rc do11lg .til the tight
S11ll olhe!S believe \IIlli lhmgs lu keep the spoil
one lhe
wtld
ca1d hc.illh y .md gc llh\011gh !he
r.J1 .1dec.• race oul of lhe lnugl1 tun e' th.1t ,..,c 1c
CIMsc "-ould mdkc 11 lllOil: gmng tn h,t\ t; 111 lhc ne xt
lt!lr - .111d possibly tllOIC )e.u · he s.ud I thmk ~e
tnmpeltii\C
lc.tlc 1he 1i1111 gs '" they
But 'hould !he domm .•- M C
11on nf John son ,11\d hts No
Jeff Bunon, tounh m 1hc
-+R Hcnd11ck Molotspolls Cha'e and vn1Uallv oul o t
le.un be· ,1 c.t1.1lys1 fo1 conlcnlton , nolcd 'th.ll u 's
,h,mgc 111 !he 'i-~e.tr-old stmply human n.11lllc lm
pf.I}OII 101111.11'
people 10 w.1111 Ill 111.1h
D.1k E.unh.udl J1 h,IS changes when the cu o1cn1
been 111 lhe Ch,!Sc three rul es don 1 ~otk 1m !hem
' I JUS! lhmk \\e h.IIC IO
1111H.' \ IIIH.f h ~ts )Ct lo IC'Ilhllll
be c.trdul ·he ,,mt bell
111 c onlcn11on In Ihe emf
WJ1h h\O rm.:cs rcnMIIlJilg lime we haH: .1 pmnt lh.t mhe " lll'll oul of lhc 111le p!onsh!p th.11 s nul ·" cnm)llLillle Ill ))lh
pclllng ,,..; one pf th e g lc .tlben "' E.unh.u dl ,,ud est I lh111~ 1\C h.11 c In c.l)tlmn
.tg.lln'-.1
1111k1n !!
11 'JUst lou ... oon to umtcm
pl.tll' th.mgt•s
dhmgc..,
Ho\' do \\ t• under \t,m d
1 hi' (\l'.O I s) \\oild

IHll

•

F
'

Dahlberg

Ill•'"''

Sports Briefs

AEP-Gavin Recreation Area map
and permits available

AP photo
II !hey lndmna Pacers forward Danny Granger, nghl, puts pressure on Cleveland Cavaliers' Wally
111.1~~.:: 11 11'-.; .t twn-pomt Szczerb1ak 1n the second quarter 1n an NBA basketball game on Fnday 111 Cleveland
!.!rtti1C I was .1blc to t.,; h.tsc 11
dllWtl ,l\ld g'el II befDoe I( 1escrve foo ward scmed 91, but Wtlh.uns htl a 3- 11npressed James
seven slr.ughl )JOI!lis curly pom1er wtlh 4 48 lefl
" He 's become a go-lo
~Il l on lhe b.1Lkbo.11d
Clevel.md buill u 104-95 guy," Jame s satd "He's
ll1c l.!lt J.unes w.Is ,1bl~ 111 the lmurh qu .lrlc r
'When
!he
b.tll
com~s
to
lead, but lndtana cui tl to slmted to grow and play !he
lo du'c down l'onl one ol
h11n
he
's
1C.1dy
foo
11,'
108-104 Wtlh lwo mmules game w11h more confl11\l quu;kest pl.•ycts 111 lhc
·dence He's a very good
lc •• gue, n&amp;.ltlc lhc pl.1y even Jamcs sa1d "He made some to play
g1e.tt
pi.'Y'·
got
some
Junks
James,
who
was
commg
player He's become one of
"I'" e phenpmen.ll
.md
some
l.1yups"
off
a
scason-h1gh
41
pmms
!he
besl small lo1 wanls 111
· I don Ieven know ~ he1 e
ThF P.&amp;ccrs led 79-72 agamsl
Chicago
on our league·
he ,l,u!ed IHJm," Clcvcl.md
e.nly
tn
!he
fourlh
,
but
Wednesday,
had
a
rocky
Pacers rook1e cenler Roy
w.och Mtkc HHJW!l s.11d
sc01cd
seven ' f1rs1 h'al f, sconng seven H1bberl h td II pomls and
I h.&amp;l ,s wh.ll we c.tll ,, Wlll- V.ncJ•IO
sttatghl
po1nts
Wally pomls on 1-of-9 shommg nme rebounds 111 19 mmpl.ly lndo.ofl,l
co.1ch
Jnn Szczetbi.1k hll a .:1-pomler He also missed three of hls ' ule~. but fouled oul w!lh
9 08 10 play. Marquts
O'Hncn w," disple.&amp;scd .111d J.1mes hil a JUmp shol tour foul shols
10
11c
the
g.unc
.n
84
Wtth
lnd1ana
made
SIX
of
1ts
OamcJs added 17
\lllh !he d"fl·liiiY .11 lhe
fusl seven shots and led 29The Cavahers have won
loce lhtow lme
fhc H 59 lefl
F01d
made
1wo
free
20
.1fler
one
quarter
ll
of lhe last 12 aga1nst
C',tv.illcts wenl lo !he fmc
lhrows,
but
VateJUO
scored
Granger
scored
16
p01ms
,
'
lndtana
, tndudmg e1ght
2X limes, m.1kmg 24, while
on a layup off James ' asstst, shootmg 7-of-1 0 , mcludmg stra•ghL The Pacers ' las I
!he f',llets ~ell' fl-of-ff
"I JUst sh.1kc my hc.1d , · was fouled and made the rwo ~-pomlers The Pacers wm came on Nov 24, 2006
O;'Btoen s:ud "Incredible, f1ee lhrew, g1vmg rhc made I' of 24 shols m lhe lnd1ana hasn't won m
Cleveland smce 2004
.1bsolu1ely Incredible I Caval1ers an 87-86 lead penod
Granger made 13 of 21
Notes: The Pacers were
c,m'l believe lh.ll fo 1.1kc II wnh 8.271cll
Ford's
JU!llp
shot
8
secshots
from
the
ftcld,
mdudcommg
off a 113-101 loss
1o 1i1c tlasket ·" h.n d .IS weontJ, l.ller gave 1he Pacers mg 5-of-10 on 3-pomlers
10 Phoemx on Wednesday
"" .md cui '" h.u d '" we do
"Each leam made runs 111 wh1ch Suns forward
.md In gel only II loul 1hc1r lasl lead W1lltams h11
ltee
lhrows
With
8
10
and
lhc game wenl back Amare Sloudenure scored
lwo
shn(s I m JU't complclcly
tcma111111g,
g1vmg
and
fonh,"
he sa1d 'They 49 pomts
Bolh teams
du1 n bl m1n lied
Salurday
ntght
V.uq.1o g.tVl' Clcvcl.lnd Clcvel.md an 89-88 lead pulled 11 out lo n111e and we play
Oclql]IC
Wcsl'
~
3-pomlt;r
"01
11
b.tek
close,
bu1
JI
.
Cieveland
ha•
n
•renmtch'
Ihe, bllosl tL 11ceiol.:d lot lls
tlu!ll s11a1gh1 Will Kuown .md J.1mes' layup pushed tt1rned ou1 to be 1oo much ag.unsl lhe :S•!lls 111
lo overcome"
Ch1cago while lndmna
lllDIC lm bts tt•houndmg 1he le.1d to 94-R8
The
P.ICcts
cui
11
to
95Grange•
's
pet
formance
hosts New Jersey
.llld dl'fcnSIVe Ubtflty, !he

p.u ttcul.uly 011 Cu1ic1 s 91AP photo Y·" d fD fl·"' lo ~tmkte
Eddie Roy.d lh.ol cui
Cleveland Browns quarlerback Brady QUinn (tO) passes as
Clncl.md' k.1d lo 21-20
light end Kellen Winslow watches dunng lootball practice
c',lfiy 111 lh~ loullh qu.ulcl
Tuesday 111 Berea
Culleo colllilllt.llly pocked
on
LOIIlCib,H.:k
Bl,tndon
mess - ,,g~un
llud of lhc AfC pl.l}oll
Mc
Don.dd
,
wll&lt;l
w,IS
bc.tlcn
The1r defense gave up 447 tacc. lhe Bw~ns could be
yards passmg lo J.1y Cutler, hc.1dcd low,ud theu l11lh lm 1wo 1 Ds .md lhopped
lwo posSible lltlctceplinns
who 1h1ew three I D passes losmg "'e,Lson m s1x yeats
Me Don,dd .1polngozed In
111 the fourlh qu.111cr Jesp11e
And, lhey could be hc.•dnor havmil any of hiS nm- mg for ,1nothc1 L:o.u.:l11ng Clcvd.md s l.uts .md hts
ntng b.1 c ~s on lhe f1eld change 1f lhmgs don I IC,IIllni.IICS
'I ld mysell do~n I lei
because of tnJuncs H1s 1o1al 1111p10Vl' qutckfy
was !he second mosl 111
Cletmcl undc!Siands hts my lc.uu down .md I lei my
Browns
h1s1ory
.md predtcamenl
t.unil) down , he s,\ld I
Cleveland's defense was
"ISh
I could b11ng 11 h.tck.
I !old you m 2005 when I
shredded f01 564 )atds, the go1 hc1e lh1' 1s .1 hoi sc.&amp;l, bul lc.m t ·
lhud -htghesl lolal on 77' Crennel satd 'II you wm 11 s
fhc Btowns, now 1-4 .11
regul,u -sc .tson g.m1~:s stncc not ,Ls hoi. tf you lnsc 11 gc h home. h.&amp;;c 10 d.1ys lo gel
1950
w,um'
1C.1dy lm ,, Mond.1y mghl
The two-game \olaf ol 991
It's hc.llmg up hv !he !.!.llllC .11 Bull,tlo
(the R.1vens had 429 on mmu1e
' Ctcnncl g.tve hts pl.1yets
Sunday) y.1rds ts .1 club
There wusjJlenty ol.blame lhc d.ty off on Fl!d.•y. soml'
1ecortJ
lo go ,1Joun for lhe l.llesl needed down 11me .ollll .1
The loss casl a pall over calamoty, whllh ovct$had- lovc-d.ty g11nd !hey '·' hke In
Cleveland s subut b.m hcad- owetl qumte1 b.ILk Bi.tdy fmnc(
"' been ,, heck nl ,1
qu.uleiS .md co.1ch Romeo Qumn s llnptesSivc debu1 .1s
'll's
Crenncl· apptoproalely wore .m NFL sl.ulct He complel- week," Cienncl s.ud ")
a black shtrt lo hiS ucws con- ed 21 of 1'i for 219 y.uds llnnk we c.lll s.ty we're
ference on Fnd.ty
.md lhtcw lwo lusl-h.llf TD gmng lo go b,u.:k to the
lnslcdd of bemg 111 lhe passes to Kellen Wmslow, ch.twmg bo.ud'

Hendctson knnc ked oft
Whltwmth's helmcl lhcn
appcated lo tty lo gol!gc hiS
eyes Bolh playc~&gt; we1c
.md qccled
penalized
Sund.1y
Hendel son also got .m
add\110\t,ll $'i,OOO fmc lot
tllcg.il h.uuJs 10 the l.llc
~hen he slrl!d Wh11wo1lh
Ptllsbtugh S!cclciS lmcb.ICkcl L1M.u1 Woodley
~as
lined $10,000 lor
slammtng
W,Jshmglon
qu.ute1b.1ck
J.ISon
C.ut1pbell lo !he gtou11d 111
Monddy nt ght s game
C.ompbell b.mgcd hos hc.ul
on Ihe 11111 ~hen hll
New Ymk Gt.l!lls dde n·

umllllitletl

.

POMEROY - T"o lice htllllet eduL.illon cl.t"cs lit II he
hdd 111 Metg&gt; Cou111y 'tailing 1\ltmd.t) ciCI!ong. one .11
Easletn H1gh School nc.1r Tuppc" Pl.uns .md ihc o1hc1 ,11
lhe Pomeroy Gun Club
An Oh1o HUiller Etluca11on Cotusc "'"be held staolmg
Monday. 6-9 p m .11 Eas1ern H1gh School Cl.1ss ,e,soon'
Will be heiJ Mond~•y. Tuesday .md 1 hill sd.i) o-9 p ll1 .ll)d
Sa1urd.1y, 9 ,, m. 10 noon Studenls muq .l!lcnd .111 ,e,S\ons
,\lld d.ISS SIZC ")muled IO 60 SIUdellh To ICCISICI c,llf lhe
lllSI!liLIOI .11 740-984-"\914
,
Adlh1lon.•lly, .m Oh1n Hu111e1 Ed uc.lloon Co uos&lt;' 1\l ll be
held S!.utmg Monday. 6-9 pm .u 1hc Pome1oy Gun Club
on Pome1oy P1kc Rtl.ld SesSions 1\111 be held Mond.•y
Tuesd.Iy, Wednc,Uay .md F11day 6-&lt;J p m S!udem' mu'1
.mend .111 sess)o ns, and ci,ISs '"e 1' lomoled 10 .JO sludelll'
ro rcg"rer call1hc msliuclot .11 740 9-llJ-2719

turno\l:l but J~uncs c.:.1mc
11om behmd In lllock T J
I""' s hod lot ,, l.1yup on .1
1,1\l bil'olk Wilh 40 sccoo\ds
(II fll•i)

•

AP AUTO RACING WRITER

ALL
PF PA
377 103
302 155
367 208
202 166
244
304
163 240
204 289
108 271
107 .271

shnll ,J ml to tht'
mtddle ,) 1 ih~ locltl At' complel~d Jll&gt;l one P·'" In \1 1dll
occcl\CI Bt.1ylon Edw.~rd~
lm l'i y.1rds.
I lhmk l1c \1111 usc more
ol 1hc l1eld .md 11101~ ol 1hc
we.&amp;(J011S lholl ,1ft' ,11,11fabk IO
hun C•cn11cl s,ml · He- IS
I muu to 11 l'1 bcth.:'l ,md he IS
go mg to ~npuH c II we L',lll
gcllhl' dekn'c IDtmprow. I
lfllllk Wl' Lolli bt' \lllliC UllllpcitiiVC lh,lfl IW WCIC (,J,I

Denderson, Whit~orth, Woodley, Tuck all fine.d)·:

Bv MIKE HARRIS

PREI' FOOTBALL STANDINGS

llll"ldkc' ~md w~ls dlclii\C
thlll\\ ltl i!

eunb.lV lrtmrs i!&gt;rntmrl • Page B5

Hunter education classes

CLEVELAND (API Lc·Bwn J.tmc' g01 plemy of
hclpnn offense lhcn se.ilcd
!he lJCiory ~ 1th .1 spccl.tc u1.\1 play on dcfcn'e
J.l!(jCs scored 27 pom1s,
AndutMm ValCJ••o added 10
' of ht &gt; c.tri':~i-ht!!h 18 111 lhe
lomlh qu.met~ and !he
Clcvel,md Cav.tllcrs rallied
1!1 bc.11 lh~ lnd!.m.&amp; P.1ce!'
Ill " I07 on rnd.oy 111ghl.
Mo WJiftams, a key oil" ,lS&lt;lol acltuistlton from
~1dv.,llfkec, llmshed Wtlh
21 pol!lls lt'H Clcvcl.md
IIIIIch l•.ul cd lhrou~hnul
11ll1SIIlf !he h!SI iluee'pcl!"d' !hen SCO!ed 4() fl0111ls
111 lhc loUith qu.ulcr
' D.IIlll} Gi.lll[!ct 11eJ h"
'~-tsn n ho gh Wilh H ponlls
lo&gt;i Jn,h.um He stored 21 111
!(~,. fllslli.oll
Wllh Cli:vcl.lnd ltangtng
on Ill ,, 111-HP l~ li li , lhe

11!10 l111oshcd 1\llh 10 c.tlch&lt;'' lm Ill y.ud' bul lei .1
lomlh do" n
P·"s
shp
lhwugh hos h.1nds 1n !he
lon.tl nttnulc
\1 ho ll'pi.~eed
Quum
Det ck
Ande!Son
.is
Clc1cl .md s
,l.nl~t
on '
Moud.l) thdn I n1.1kc ·Ill)

Hu-Logan McD H1t .38 pass from

.

James, Varejao lead Cleveland past Pacers

Browns hurting after second loss in 5 days

Jacob'Taylor (pass laoled) 8 18

PRF.I' FOOTBALL

'

Sunday, November C), 2008

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

necessary 10 wa1 n general
managers .tboul lhe frag1le
s1a1c of Ihe economy JUS! as
rhey slatl dr.1wmg up 1h~1r
frce -agenl · wtsh Its Is was
mote !han JUst stgmf~C.ml,
espc•tully smce any .tttempl
lo reduce spendmg could be
v1ewed as collus10h by lhe
players' umon
Se llg wornc' , bu1 Ihe
umon doesh '1 h.1ve to There
Will be offers aplenty forl~c
lop Iter of free agenls,
eneugh fnr Bumell to get a
n1ce 1atse our ol h1s currenl
deal anJ 11101 e Ihan enough
for Sabalhtu to gel an even
btgger d~alrhan lhe.~ lx-ye.•r.
$137 mllhon pac1 signed last
ye¥1" by Johan Santana. •
Boras dtdh '•t seem tpo
wor.ncd, c1thcr, talRm~
Wednesday aboul how base'
ball revenues haw doubled
111 1he last ,seven ye01rs and
1ha1 1he fr.mchtses 1ha1 have
mcrcased mosl-m value &lt;.ltd
so bec.IUse lhey were wmncrs He re!ICI ated hts behef
1h.11 bascb.1ll ts 1110slly msu),llcd f10m the tmanc•al en'"' .md lhal lhe lop le.uns
know wh.u 1he1r revenues
w1ll be 111 1he neat ' flume
bccal!se ol long-lcrm TV
eontrac Is and mat kclmg
deals
11 s llue 1ha1 baseball has a
financwl securuy blankel of
sorts, a1 least 111 rhe ncar
f111ure, for Inc 11ehes1 rc.1ms
But 1s rhul enough lo JUsUfy
bcmg reckless by offermg
rhe bij1gcsl gumantced con11.\els 111 Amc1tcan sports ala
rune when the econom~c:
furme" so unccrtam'
Ullllualcly. !hat's u call
only 1camlm ncrs c11n mu~c
So 1.1r most of them have
gollcn c1cn 11chcr th.mlhc)
"c1c befote ~etlm~ mlo lhe
baseb.ill bu,ine"' so !hey
c11hc1 kno" \\h,ll lhcy're
domg .01 S!lllply bough! .11
lh~ 11Uhlllllle
Suil 1hcre s llllk doubl ·
1h.11 !he nsk\ busmcss nl
s1gnmg tn.:c .igcnt\ h.h nO\\
\ll)ltCil
C\l'JII 11\0IC rl!rr.k\
~

POMEROY - Ro.1d maps .md pc11111ssoon sl 1ps lm Ihe
AEP-G.•vtn Recrealton Are.t are .&amp;v.HI.tblc f1e c of ch.trge .rt
Ihe Me1gs Sot I .md Wa1e1 Conseo v.t tonn Dlslllcl ~ ~ 10 I
Hiland Road, Pomeroy , and c.111 be pi&lt;ked up \\Cekd.I)S
between 7 am .md 4 JO p m
The AEP-Ga1 111 Wildltfe A1c.1 conS\ sis ol 6 XS'i ·'"'''
loca1ed 111 Sal~m ami Rull.md 1ownsh1ps 111 Me1gs Counly
and Chesh11e Township 111 Gallo.• Counly 1 he p1opc11y w.&amp;s
recenlly opened 10 spoilsmen 1111tlet ,, ct 1pc1.11tvc .lglcemcnl belwecn Ameucan Elcc111c Po""' .md 1hc Oh10
Dcp.111mcn1 of Nalur.1l Re sou~e es D1v1soon nl W•ldhtc

Study links lead in blood
to wild game consumption
BISMARCK, N D (A P)
- North Dak01a heallh offiCials me oecommendmg lhal
pregzMnt v.omen am..! young
chtld1en mood ealmg meal
from Wild g.une ktlled wtlh
le.td bullets
The reeommend.ttlon "
baseJ on a sludy rele.IScd
Wednesday lhal exanuned the
lead levels 111 the blood of
more lhan 700 slale restdents
Those who are wtld game
killed Wllh lead bullels
appeared to have htgher feud
levels than !hose who ale h1lle
or no wtld game
The elevaled lead levds
were not constdered dangetous, but Nonh Dakola says
pregnant women and ch1ldrcn
younger than 6 should avmd
ealmg ventson h.1rvested
usmg lead bullets
Those groups .He conSide!cd m ~l .11 11sk,IJQm lead
~msbhing~ Wh1cfi can cause
le.1rnmg p10blems and convulsiOns, and 111 scvctc
cases can lead lo b1 am dam-

age and dc.11h
1 he slmly, comluucd by 1hc
lcdcwl Ccnlci' lm D1Se.1se
Con110l .md P!cvc\1\lon .md
!he s1.11c he.11lh dcp.u1mcnt. 1s
!he firsl to conncclle.&amp;d 1\.&amp;ccs
m game With hrghc1 lc,td levels 111 !he blood of g.unc
c.11Cis, s.ud Dt Stephen
P1Lk.1rd, ,, CDC cpodemtolgiSI
who w01 ks wolh Ihe sl.&amp;lc
hcallh dcp.u1tnenl
A separ.tte srudy by
Mmncso1.1's Dcpanmenl ol
N.lltn.tl Resources p1ev!ously
found 1h.11 h.1gme111s hom
lead bullets sprc.td '" 1.1r '" IR
mches ,,w,•y hom the wound
' Nobody w.1s 111 111mble
from the lc.1d levels,' Ptok.ud
sa1d Howcvc1 , '!he ellecl
w,\s sm~lll butl4uge enough to
be ,1 cone em," he s.ud
Pllk.ud s,ud !he 'ludy
loumj '1\lc mou! rc-.;~nt the
consunoptlon df Wlltl g.nne
h,uvcsled wolh lc.od bullcls
!he h1giler !he level of lc.td 111
lhc blood ·

•

�Sunday, November 9, 2008

~unbap

tlttmes .j,entinel

Cl
Sunday, November 9, 2008

Joy ·l(ocmoud/photoo

1

Fall col9rs are fading fast, .with most areas. around the
r~gion reporting . peak conditions that are disappearing
rapidly. Local residents are encouraged to enjoy the i11tense
array .ol colors before it's too late.

·Fading fast .
Fall foliage passing peak
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
.

'

GALLIPOLIS ---: Fa)l color is fading ac.ross lhe majorily
of the slale wilh some parks 'slill reporling peak color conditions, accor.ping to the Ohio Department' of Natural
Resources (ODNR).
"With the freezes at night and wind over the next week,
the leaves should continue to drop off the trees and finish
lip the fall color season," said Casey Munchel, fall color
specialisl for the ODNR Division of Forestry.
Most leaves are turning brown or falling lo the forest
floor across lhe state. However, late turners such as oaks
and hickories are just beginning to change to yellow and
have good color. Hocking Hills State Park is full of lhese
trees and is' slill reporting near peak tol\Jr cohdilions.
For most areas, fall color has concluded ~nd winter is on
its way.
.
.
' '
'
.
Overall, it was a good fall color season th1s year, but was
slighlly backward from how it shoulc;l have been. Instead of
beginning in the north and working its way down lo conclude in the south, 1t started m the rn1ddle of the state and
wprked its way nor1h and south. Despite this, the colors
were still vibrant and ranged from yellow to qrange to red
to purple .
·
. ·
The season slarted off with vibrant colors showing on the
ash a11d .maples . Jhose ranged in color from bright yellow
to dark red. Some while· ash turned red-purple and sweetgum displayed put;ple as well.
· The weather consisting of the bright sunny days and cool
evenings in September and the first half of October brought
out the vibrant colors. Early turner trees such as green ash
and walnut began dropping their leaves after the hurricane
force winds.
,
The middle of October Was near peak or peak color
· throughout the majority of th ~ state. After the week.of really beauliful color, we experienced hard frosts that depleted
the brighl color in some areas a•..' left spotty colors.
"We concluded fall color season with a lot of fading colors with a few bright spots at the end of the month. Overall,
we had a good fall season, I believe,'' said Munchcl.
Ohio's 74 state parks, 20 state forests and 131 state nature
preserves provide excellent locations to sample the fall
foliage .
To help Ohioans and out-of-state visitors make the most
of this popular outdoor season, weekly .updates are available from the best Fall Color viewing locations across the
slate by calling (800) -BUCKEYE. For more information,
visit the ODNR website at http://www.dnr.sta(e .oh.us/.

- - - - - - - - - -- ----

•

...... ---··--

-

·----------------~----

--

Department of Research at
lwayland@holzercllnlc.&lt;om or call 7.40-441 -3990

•I

�'

'

. ..

.,

..

HoMETOVVN

iunbap Qtime~ -ienttnti

PagcC2
Sunday, November 9, 2008

·'

Dr.· Beebe obtains certification

RN

Riverboat's visit was big event locally
BY JAMEs &amp;Nos

her stalwart son, Capt. Tom up the levee and found cars
Greene. Despite the lateness awaiting their arrival. Each
In the last few months , of the hour and reports of car owner, who turned out
river residents have lined probable delay . on the to give the visitors a ride,
the banks of the 0-h i-o to account of fog, a goodly made out his or her own
wave good-bye to the ven· number assembled to see itinerary. Most of them were
erable old Delta Queen, the boat and welcomed pas- taken to the Our House, to
which has been a fixture in sengers and crew. The the boyhood home and new
· the Midwest since 1948 Maddy~ and the Belchers home of 0.0. Mcintyre,
when she was brought from and perhaps others present- OI-iE, Holzer Hospital . and
California .
ed flowers ,"
Mound Hill Cemetery.
II was on Aug. I . 2007,
The Tnbune went on to
"These boat travelers
thai the Majestic America report that a. number of seemed 10 lie of one accord
Line announced that the well-known nver people · on the point that a steamDelta Queen would cease :-vere '?n the boat that day. boat ride up the Ohio is the
·
,
operations for good at the mcludmg Capt. Jesse . 1
end of the 2008 5\'ason. The Hughes, Capt. Stogie tdea vacal!on tnp. They
temporary exemption from White. Donald Wright. edi- seemed to be tmghng from .
SOLAS needet.l to keep the t.or of' ·the Waterways scaip to sole. And they were
boat operating had been Journal , and Cincinnati dehghted, they declared~ to
thrown out by a Mi.nnesota writer Bentley Steger. It was,. learn what an mterestmg
place
congressman who chaired Steger's writing~ about the and. . .Pl_e~~ant
Ohio
River
that
led
to
many
Galhpohs
ts.
.
.
the commillcc that would
Dunn~ the boat s stay m
oversee such an extended efforts to clean up the thenheavily polluted Ohio Galltpolls, hundreds of
exemption .
local residents were allowed
Lovers of the "lady" have River.
Of
course,
the
Gordon
C
.
to go on the boat for a tour.
staged a noble "Save the
Delta Qu·: cn " campai"n . Greene , named for Capt. lntet'estingly, the Gordon C.
similar to the one that s av~d Gordon C. Greene, the Greene that day had doc.ked
the boat in the 1970s. but so husband of Mary Greene right beside ihe Goldenrod
far those effort s have failed . and founder of the Greene showboat, then in the
When the Delta Queen Line . would make many employ of Major Bowes '
was brought into re gul ar stops at Gull ipol is for the · Amateur Hour radio propassenger service on the . next 1J years. Teenagers gram.
Ohio,
. Mi ss isstppi , alwa ys looked forward to
Superstitious old ·riverCumberland and Tennessee the boat 's coming because men believed that when
rivers in 1948 by Greene it createp ,s uch huge waves the Delta Queen r~pla_ced
Line
Steamers
of that they could surf on fiat- the Gordon· C. Greene, it
Cincinnati , she sent int o board s in the often shallow broke the "old girl's
retirement another greatly water.
heart," for the boat had all
!ovct.l vessel , the Gordon C.
The Gordon C. Greene kinds of · problems after
Greene .
was built rn 192J at 11148. She was retired in
It was an exciting uay on Jcfferson ville , lnd .. and.first 1952
become a rcstauJune 26 , 193) , when known as Cnpe Girardeau rant at10 Portsmouth , when
Gallipolituns flocked to the for
service
on
the kn own as the Sarah Lee.
river landing to get their Mi ss iss ippi. The Greene
first glimpse of the first reg- Line at 4uired the boat in She was then in Kentucky ,
ularly schet.lulcd Greene 1935 from.the Eagle Packet Florida. New Orleans .
line passenger boat between Co . of St . Louis.
Hannibal. Mo .. and then
Cincinnati and Pillsburgh in
In the July 23. 1936 St. Louis .• alway ~ in ven -.
over 15 years.
Gallipoli s Daily Tribune , lure s that were big failThe Gallipolis Dail y we read of one stop made ures. Tlic Gordon · C.
Tribune reported : "Thi s ele - here by the Gordon C: Greene's hcan finally
gave out . and she sank ro
gant steamer, until recently Greene .
a pride of the Mi ssissippi.
" Memorie s of the ' good her death on Dec. 3. 1967 .
made an unscheduled stop old slc amb(lal days' were at St. Loui s.
ul Gallipolis al II :30 las t re frc ~ hcd last evening when
(}ames Sands is a special
night."
the pa latial Gordon Greene. correspondent for the
"'We just had to stop in with 1-!3 passengers aboard. Sunday Times-Sentinel. He
honor
o f our
good· stopped there for an hour. can be contacted by t~·riting
Gallipolis frknds.' qeclared During that period, from 75 to Bpx 92, NtJrt~•ich, Of1io ·
Capt. Mary B. Greene and to 100 passengers walked -11767:)
·

~

.

Submitted photo

On hand lor the reunion of residents of Varney House and Davis Cottage were, first row,
Jeanette McKenzie, Wanda Willis, Kay Mitchell, Reba Kisor, Priscilla Waldron, Mona
Dobbins, Mary Van Meter, Jo Moses and Kathy Shaw; second row, Freda Lowery, Mary
Null, Mildred Harris, Marine lie Jeffers, Evelyn Watts, Emelyn 'Scarberry, Pat Wiseman,
Betty Shear. Mary Ann Turner, Roalie Story, Bonnie Jones, Belly Bloomfield, Joan Corder,
Maxme Oliver, Newt Oliver and Regina Chaney; third row, AI Sc~;~rberry, Jim Magaw,
Bonme Magaw, Randy Miller, Wayne Wiseman, Jim Shaw and Dr. Greg Sojka. Not picturoct
were Jack Fmch and Susan Haft. •
·

·varney House, Davis Cottage
alumni return ·to Rio for reunion

•

Improves cognitive' and improving the health
GALLIA couNTY HEALTH
development.
and nutritional status of
DEPARTMENT
• Increases breastfeeding income eligible women,
WOMEN, INFANTS AND CHILDREN
and immunization rates.
infants and children
WIC,
the . . Special
.
How WIC helps
HOW TO APPLY FO~
· • WIC
core
servtces WIC? - Appliqmts must
Supplemental
Nutrition 1·nclude ·.
.
.
meet mcom~ . elt!}ibility ·
Program · f qr
W
. omen
• N'utrt'tt'\)n and breast· gut·d e1·mes. For examp Ie: a
C),
Infants an d Ch 1.ld ren (WI
·
feeding education and 'sup- ·
·1 ·
f 2
hl
is a · fundamental part of port.
. famt Y stze .o , mont y
•·
income cannot exceed
Ohio s public health system . • Provision of supplemen- · S2,159; family size of 4 is intended to reach tal, h.ighly nutritious foods . S3,269; family size 5 ....;
·and
mcome-e 1·tgt·bl c pregnant,
• Referral to prenatal and
.I b
I' d
1
pos parium anu reus 1ee - pc. diatric health care and $3,924; family size 6 ·mg women. · ·mfan 1s an d other maternal and child $4,379. Please note: A preg&lt;
f
c h 'ld
r ren up to-' years o age
health and human service nant woman counts as more
with a health or nutrition
than one family member.
·k
programs
A person who currently
ns .
Who provides
WIC continues to make
WIC foods
receives
Medicaid,
·
·
th
CareSource,
Unison
or
'st
b
h1 ory y tmprovmg e
The Ohio WIC Program
health of Ohio's families touches many communities Molina health coverage,
and supporting the local throughout Ohio and is in food stamps, or Ohio Wo(ks
economy. ·
partnership with over 1,430 · First (OWF) automatically
Model of
retail . vendors. These ven- meets the income eligibility
.
.
dors, ·including chain super- criteria for WIC.
· prcven I 10n
WIC's history exhibit s markeis, convenience stores
Please call the Gallia
decades of medical research and grocery stores, accept County WIC Office at (740)
that shows promoting WIC co'upons in exchange 441-2977 for further inforhealthy habits early in life is for authori 7_ed foods. The mat ion or to schedule an
a prevailing and cost-effec- Ohio
WIC
Pro~ram appointment.
Evening
live way to reiluce infant processes over 9.8 mtllion appointments are available
mortality, prevent chronic coupohs yearly valued at upon request.
conditions such as diabetes, over $185 million.
Local staff include Joseph
heart disease and obesity,
WIC works
Koskie, RD/LD; Sandra
and to support healthy pregtsince its beginning in Walker, RN/project direc· ·· ... 1914·, tbe ,WICproaram..hll&amp; . \Or;.~Melissil . Justus, cler\&lt;:
nancies. ,,._. , . ,
WIC also:
earned the reputation of Rebecca Terry, DTR; Angie
• Reduces premature being one of the most sue- Swift, DTR: and Ruth
births.
cessful federally-funded Loveday, LPN.
• Prevents low blood iron nutrition programs in the
Resource: ODH Ohio
and lead poisoning.
United States, protecting WIC annual report.

-

RIO GRANDE - Alumni
from the University 'or Rio
Grande gathered on campus
recently for the 2008 Vamcy
House/Davi s
Collage.

SU. NDAY.PUZZLER
92 Wiok8111'0!k material

I Slop
6 Wint city in Italy
10 Seedlike body
15 Used lObe

94 EKpless

95 Martz or f.lo""an

96 Sllcklfl

99 Peslll in lun

100 Hotpr cold beverage

19 M~erious
21 Wind ln&amp;IIUI!Nlnl
22 Colol
23 CIA
24.lnatructs
258yand- .

101 Appealed

103 Moat stoct&lt; lti'Y
105 Ga""ont insen

106 Madame i!ovi!Y

101 Vldlm
· .
108 Mtrdlon!auociatio~
I 10 Tht stCOIId al!WO

26 Wallp~r .
27 Gill lot dod
28 Unmo'llng

.111 Eldltw

29 Coatv.flll 1 mtlll
31 Slntr..,
33Sorl
35 Mt&lt;:adomlzt
. 38 Supponlng II!UCIUrt
37 Cleltly IPJIIIfllll ·
38 liN - Prtllty
40 Fragmlllt
41 Vallty

42 Take place .
&lt;4 Aonlal con~aa
45 Somelhing onlicing
· 47 Kind ol chocollle
51 Suitcase
52 Gradua!&gt;ng group

llalltnna
55 Fish oggs . ·
56 Shade al blue

53

57 Burn

58 llem on a bruncll ..
1111111

60 LMtllot
112 Christen
63 Oec8j1lond propel
65 t.'eons ius!lier
66 Hampton 01

62 Alive and -

.l Socol standing

2 lmm~rants ' island

3 Foreign
4 Dry. sai&lt;l ol wines

98 POOl

16TinPan-

. DOWN

113 Dull surface
114 Lonli bono

115 Kncllen lrnplemont
118 8N housings
119 Ac:ldlc fruit •
120 YtiloW
124 P-. allltrac!lon
12$ Kind al p&lt;!nltr
126 Asia- ·.
127 So-so grade
128 Beel

12V Metal fasteners

131 One altho B vnamins
133 Say•ng

135 l'bde
136 Desire
137111-will
· 138 we~h poet
-Thomas
139 cash drspemer
(ab!lr)
!40- seal
141 Blanchett lhe aelress
. 142 Closes light~

5 Patper
6 Ge1 in
7 Weighing machine
8 K~o appendage
9 Hotel
. 10 Comlort

8&lt;1'StuHy
86 Let it S1and!
87 Sampras of t8flnis
88 Particular

69 Somelhrng la~e
91 FoHow orders
93 Mort than enough
· 94 Room lor priests'

robes
96 ·-Doone·

12 Montier

97 sweet wh~e wine •
99 Sligo sl&lt;irt
102 Wealth ·

!rom.
15 Recoil

105 Computer-tun ·
enthusiast

l7 Commence
19 Atech
20 Very sttong collet

109 Donated

II Talk on and on

13 Ous!Ckllh
i4 r.kethe strength

· 16 Chekhov or Dvotak
22 Bicydo lor rv.o

28 Shopping bnge

30 Shoeslring

,

·

32 Be ~·k~
34 Holy Roman 37 Throw out
39 Church area
· 40 Mother·ol· -

104 Pt~ches
107 ShroV«&lt;

110 likeasa.mmerdfink
112 'Ben -·
113 Fen the absence al
t14Umned
115 Braz~ian d.ilnce ·
116 Fold in a skirt

117 Froghlen

118 Reduoe by 50 perC8111
119Legitimate

36Pr~ice

~

121 Crty in Aonda

122 -

eag~

42 Danger

123 Cfles 1n lamentation

43 FOfmlf students

125 Fibber

44 Andes an1mal

126 Baby talk

45· Hairless

130 Macaw genus

46 Ethet .was one

132 Sus . ab!lr.

1n the past
48 Pless
49 Learmng
50 On an even -

133 Classified ~ems:
134 Hair preparation

51 Weathercock

52 Dessert choiCe

.Barrymore

53 Stupid

67 Sea eagle

54 Predpitallon

68 Notion
59 Sculs

57 Frag18nt wood

h Mlkelmpu&lt;e
73 Movement downward

-

59 UniQil ol lwo
com~nies
B&amp;over~ lond

'

51
63 "-Marner"

75 ..: cruces·
75 son. creamy candy
Attia was one
78 Oulsidt (prefiX)
81 Ctignizant
113 Aanen 10 ltle ground

..

64'Ptural pronoun.

n

· in OiK~ lhyph.)
66 Flaxen Iabrie .
10 cunmg loot
72 ,Oihearing
74 Tempo

MW!lllered

78 Cooked in oil
79 Wrinkle ,
80 More edgy

85 Owolling (abbr.)
87 S'f' olthe Zodiec

90 Speal

I

.

RODNEY
Rodney
Pike Church of God will
host the Break Free
Women's Conference on
Nov. 14 and 15.
This year's theme k
"Choices
· Oetermine
Destiny." In the words of a
famous gospel song, we
hear a famili~r me ssage : " I
went left ·When He told me
to go right."
God allows us to make
choices. Yet. we must deal
with the consequences of our
choices.This year. we arc
making a choice to tum away
from the ungodly and get rid
of the unholy. We further
declare that ... we will serve the
Lord" and seek Him passionately! "And if it seems evil to
· you to serve the LORD,
choose for yourselves this day
whom you will serve ,
whether the gods which your
fathers served that were on
the other side of the Rivcr, or
the gods of the Amorites, in
whose land you dwell. But as
for me and my house, we will
serve the LORD.'' (Joshua
24:15 NKJV)
. The Women's Ministries
of RPCOG have faced ·
several ch itll&lt;-'nges this
year · while planning the

chcon.
ni such as Jim Magaw,
Beverly .Crabtree, vice Freda Ramsey Lowery,
preside111 for institutional Marge
Fa,dely •Evans,
advancement. also presented Janelle Large· McKenzie,
inforinational updates on Mary Wilson Van Meter and
rcumnn.
new building projects on Belly Mae Shear.
The reunion , which is held campus, such as the chapel · Door prizes were also
every I wo years ' at Rio and the alumni center.
·awarded during the event by
Grande. brought numerous
Annellc Ward, director of Joan Montgomery Corder.
alumni back to camp;Js to alumni relations , then dis- One of the winners was
vi sit wiih each other and cussed several upcoming Freda Lowery, who won an
enjoy the day. The event is events on campus. as well as afghan donated by Mary
held especially for graduates alumni activities that , are Van Meter. Evelyn Kiehl
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
from the 1940s, 1950s and being held at Rio Grande Watts was also a winner, and
1960s.
she received an Alumni Clinic
and around the region.
The reunion . is named
Seth Argabright. who Memorial
Bell Tower announced
after the Varney House and allended Rio Grande and Christmas ornament. This that board
Davis Cottage, but it is open today' is the manager for the ornament, The Red &amp; c c.r 1.i f i e d
to all students who were at Colonial Restaurant in White. is the sixth in a series orthopedic
Rio Grande at the time, Jackson, entertained . the of Alumni Memorial Bell surgeon Dr.
B. r u c e
· whether they lived at home crowd as a Frank Sinatra Tower ornaments.
or on campus.
.
impersonator.
Alumni at the event were Haupt has
The Varney House, which
A special display had been also invited to tour campus joined itws '----'-'
was located on Ohio 325. set up in the museum featur- 10 look over the new facili- team
of Dr. Bruce
skilled
proHaupt
served as a ladies' dormitory ing the history of Rio lies and see all of the
fessionals.
from the late 1930s through Grande, and the alumni
Haupt, who. now serves
1952·. The building held were also invited to look improvements that have
as Hol~er Clinic's medical
over the exhibit. Old pi.c- been made in recent years.
around 20 residents.
of orthopedic serdirector
tures,
yearbooks
.
historical
The
committee
members
In 1957, the ladies dormifor
the
event
put
a
great
deal
documents
and
even
the
vices, is accomrlished in
tory · was moved to Davis
Collage, which served as a . bronzed shoes from basket- of work into making sure the all aspects· o general
House/Davis orthopedic surgery. rang.
ladies dormi~ory until the ball star Bevo Frands were Varney
included
in
•
the
exhibit.
Cottage
Reunion
was fun for ing from bone fractures to
early 1970s. · Many · Rio
which
was
titled.
"Rio
everyone
involved
. The total . joint replacements.
Grande stude~ls from the ·
comn\inee members were including the knee, hip
lime period may have ~!so Through the Ages."
•
Following the theme of Hope Keller, who served as and shoulder.
lived 111 other places on camWith more than 20 years
pus such as New Hall, or the exhibit, all of the alumni chair, Mary Van Meter, who
of
surgical experience, he
they may have lived off in attendance were urged to donated the handmade
is
accomplished
in sports
·stand an4 give a "Salute to ' afghan for the door prize,
wmpus or commuted. ·
medicine.
ACL
reconstrucAt the Sept. 13 reunion, Rio" where they shared· a . Marinelle Jeffers, who led
.the alumni were first wel- fond memory or outstanding the welcome commiuee, and tion , c'omputer navigated
comed back to campus with · experience from their time Joim Corder, who served as total joint replacement
surgery and Iimb reconthe door prize coordinator.
a special reception held in as students at Rio Grande.
"We wanted each member
All alumni are always structive surgery, including
the President's Home. Dr.
Greg Sojka, president of the to share what Rio meant to · invited back on campus, and the complex and highly
University . of Rio Grande, them," · explained Hope are welcome to stop in the effective llizarov Bone
arid . his wife Jane Sojka, Keller, oommillee chairper- Alumni Affairs office as Lengthening Technique.
Haupt has a degree in
son.
well.
greeted the guests. .
Several outstanding Rio
For more informmion on aeronautical engineering
A luncheon was held in
the Esther Allen Greer Grande memories were the reunion or on alumni from the United States Air
Museum on campus, and shared during the afternoon. actiVities at Rio Grande, Force Academy . He comPresident Sojka again spoke and special salutes to Rio ·call Armelle W.ml at (800) pleted medical school at
Vanderbilt University, and
with the alumni at the lun- Grande were givenI by alum- 282-7201.
completed his orthopedic
residency
at
the
University of Cincinnati
Medical Center.
He has practiced in
Charleston, W.Va., specializing in computer
assisted joint replacement.
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer employment at Holzer vide."
He is also a team physiHolzer Hospice ser.ves cian for the West Virginia
Medica~..------. Medical Center on the
Center
progressi ve care unit.
pl(tients with life-limiti'ng Power professional basewo uId
In September 2004, illnesses in Athens, Gallia 1
like
to
Buckley transferred to .Jackson. Meigs and surannounce
. ·Holzer Ho , pice as a staff rounding counties.
I h a I
nurse and in 2006 received
FOr more ;,formation
Be c k y
her certi{ication in hospice
Buckley .
and
palliative
care . ab0111 Holzer Hospire.,
.R N .
in call (800) 500.4850 .
Buckley ' resides
CHPN.
Middleport with her hush a' s
band Tyson, and children ,
rc c en tl y Becky Buckley Jake and Ava.
b c c n
As clinical .coordinator,
named ·as clinical coort.li- Buckley states her goal is
nator for Holzer Hospice . "to continue to provide
Buckley received her excellent patient care to ·
associate degree in nurs- the communities we serve.
ing from the Holzer
"I feel blessed to be part
School of Nursing at the • of Holzer Hospice." she
University
of
Rio added. " We are able to
Gmnuc/ Rio
Grande impact ihc lives of both
Community Colle ge in our patients and their fam200 I. She then began her ilies with the care we pro-

Sunday, November 9, 2008

list and conference speaker.
Her powerful delivery of
the scripture will impact
thpsc who hear her minister.
The conference begins on
Frit.lav, Nuv. 14. The doors
open· at 6 p.m. Ladies can
come early and spend time
in the Prave r ·&amp; · Soakin~
Room. The worship rally
will begin at 7 p.m .. with
special singin g. drama prcsenlations. and a message
from Kathy Isaacs.
· Saturday, Nov. 15 will
Kathy Isaacs
start off with a 10 a.m. session with Kathy Isaacs.
conference.
Following the morning ses"We are up to the challenge sion, there \\•ill be .a lunand more· determined than cheon
· ban4t!CI.
ever to see this conference Entctlainmcnl will be prosucceed'" said Leah Bynum , . vided by the "always hilaripastor's wife at RPCOG . The ous" Charlolle
Music.
Women's Ministries have c':harlolle is the state Girls
pulled out all the stops this Club coordinator for southyear to deliver an exceptional em Ohio .. Her sharp wit and
conference.
. cool comedy is a crowd
Due to unexpected cir- pleaser.
cumstances. there has been
Registrati on is S I 0 per
a speaker change. The new person . Call the chur.ch
speaker is Kathy Isaacs of office for more information
Akron . She and ·her hus- at (740) 245 -951·8. You may
band , Bill, serve as the stale also visit the website at·
administrative bishop for w·ww.rodncypikccog .org .
the Church of God in northThe church · ts located on
ern Ohio. Kathy Isaac s is a the corner of stale . routes
much sought-after evange- 588 and 850 in Rodney. •

ball
team
and
the He and his . wife Susan.
University of Charleston.
have two children: Ryan, a
He is a diplomat of the recent graduate of the
American
Board
of University · of Californ·ia
Orthppedic Surgery as Santa Cruz. and Nicole.
well as a member of the studying prosthetics and
American
Medical orthotics at the Universiiy
Association and the West of Texas, Austin .
Virginia · State Medical
For a complete lis/ of
Association. Haupt is now . services or to schedule all
accepting new patients at !lppoilltment with Dr.
the Holzer Clinic Main HaUJJI , call (740) 446 Campus located ill 90 540/ or •·isil Ill&lt;• web sll e
Jackson Pike in Gallipolis. at H'lVH'.Irui~ C'rcfi, ic .f'om.

Let Me Show You How To ·.
Increase The Size Of' Your
Ret.irement Account IJy I O&lt;k

SPECIAL
PURCHASE
CLOSEOUT PRICES

Holzer Hospice names ·
new clinical coordinator

Arbors at Gallipolis
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
'Providing

'.

Rehabilitation Back To Home!

2nd Annual Turkey Trot
Fun Run/Walk

Hi, I'm Fred Taylor of Wilkesville , Ohio
Following back surgery, l came to Arbors at
Gallipolis for Rehabilitation. I am
so impressed with the efficiency of the staff.
When I first arriveJ at Arbors at Gallipolis
I did not think I would ever walk on my
own again. Now. thanks to the wonderful
therapy and nursing stMf. I have returned home:

. os

1{ea\tb Screenlne
1{ea\tbY food
'f.Sbirts

FROM OUR FAMIIJ' TO YOURS

Arbors at §a{(t_ro[is

'-.

See Sunday Puzzle Answer on 20
~---

·--- -------

-

Saturday, November 15, 2008 11:00 am-3:00pm

Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehabilitation Center

Located .at the Pomeroy Parkinr;Jlot/WalklnQ.Track

170 Pinecrest Drive • Gallipolis, OH 45631

For more information, please rail the Meigs Wei/ness Center a.t (7-10) 992-1161, ext. 233

•

'

Holzer Clinic welcomes
board certified orthopedic surgeon

Submitted photo
WesBanco of Gallipolis recently donated $2,500 in support of the Ariel-Dater
Performing Arts Centre and its current lund-raising drive. WesBanco Manager Deb
Rhodes, lett, presents the check to Ariel EKecUiive Director Joseph Wright.

ACROSS

'

Page C:J

Church hosts annualwomen's conference

WIC~ at a gl~nce
SANDRA WALKER,

~

Supporting rhe Ariel

GALLIPOLIS
Dr.
and two years in a fellowship at the University of
Kathleen S. Beebe has
recently received board
.Medical and Dentistry of
Nev, Jersey. She is curcertification from the
of
American
Board
rently an as sistant profesOrthopaedic Surgeons.
sor of orthopaedic oncol. Beebe is a 1989 graduogy
surgery at the
ate of Gallia Academy
,l UMDNJ .
High School. In 1993, she
Additionally, . she is
graduated from New York
affiliated with the North
City-based Hunter College
Jersey
Orthopedic
with a bachelor of science
In stitute, a professional
degree in physical theraas sociation of 15 surpy. She obtained her licengeon s, which provides
sure as a physical therapist
teaching and ·Surgical serfrom the state of New
vice s to the university.
.York . She was employed
Beebe , her husband and
as a physical therapist by
two children . ages 8 and 4,
Memorial Sloan Keller'ing
reside in West Orange .
Dr. Kathleen S. Beebe
Cancer Center in New
N.J . She is the daughter of
York until 1995 .
1999. Beebe graduated as Mr. and Mrs . Larry Beebe.
After completing four a medical doctor. She con- . formerly of Gallipolis.
years :of mediCal school at tinued her education for now living in Bradenton .
Columbia University in five years .as a resident Fla .

Bv

·· : .. ·~ .ITY
·. · ··. . ·
~ ~-IJil'VIUN
- .

~t
~ fiiU' ·p·~ J···~ .· .·
lf/""1
1.
,.:- ! l•J · v·

iunbap \Elmes -ientinef

•

•

..

740-446-7112

~ww.g..Uipoliukilltrl•ursi•g.com

'

�.

•

' .

'

&amp;unba~

PageC4

otimes ·itntintl

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Two novels for
long, dark evenings

Alexander-Lawrence
engagement
Kuhn anniversary

Ailams-Johnston wedding

GALLIPOLIS - Francis E. and Norma Jean (Holston)
Kuhn will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on
MIDDLEPORT .,.- Jamie Lynn Adams and Scoll Alan Nov. 22, 2008.
John&gt;ton were. united in marriage on friday, Oct. 4, 2008.
They were married by the Rev. Leslie M. Rogers al 'lhe
The ceremony took place ·at Scarlet Oaks Resort m Poe a, Methodist ChUtch in Catlettsburg, Ky., on Nov: 22, 1958 ,
W.Va. , wilh .Minisler Eugene Brooks Jr. rJffJcJalmg._
The bride is the daughter of Robert and Lena WJiham~on · Francis retired from Ravenswood Aluminum and is a
of Vincent, Ohio, and Donna and Danny Fink of retired farmer. Norma is a homemaker.
They are the parenls of two· daughters, Karla Kuhn and
Charleston, W.Va . She is a graduate of Hocking College
Janel
Campbell of Gallipolis. ThH also have four grandand works as a registered nurse at Cabeii-Uuntington
Hospital.
. children, Courtney, Caleb, Colton and Carter Campbell of
.
.
The groom is the son of Timothy Johnston and Shcrne Gallipolis.
ln
honor
of
their
50th
anniversary,
lhe
ch1ldren
are
and Scoll Bryant. all of Winfield, W.Va . He is a graduate of
Winfield High School and works fuii-IJJ11C al the R1!e-AJd requesting a card shower for their parents. Friends may
send their cards lo Francis E. and Norma Kuhn, 6650
Warehouse in Institute , W.Va .
· The bride was given in marriage by her sons, Grant and Duncan Road S.W., Lancaster, Ohio 43130.
Cole Adam s.
.
Matron of honor was Allison Richie, sister of the bride.
Maid of honor was Stacy Williamson, sister of the bride.
B(idcsmaids were Jennifer Chasteen, Carly Marshall, and
Daniclle Caruthers.
WHEELING, W.Va. (AP)
.. In some ways it reinThe flower girl was Emma Sparks and ring bearer was
After a four-year forces my true belief thai
Zeke Richie, nephew of the bride.
·
Sue USA Cycling gravely
Olympic
fight,
Serving as best man was Tony Johnston, brother of the Haywood has a sense of erred · and continued to
groom. Groomsmen were Justin Johnson, Shane. Mains, vindication.
show
absolutely
no
Billy Short, and Jake Richie, brother-in-law of the bride.
UaywoOd, who was li:ft remorse for it," Haywood
Serving as ushers were Dame! T~ornlon, cousm of the off the 2004 U.S. Olympic said Friday 'in a telephone
bride, and Adam Sparks, a friend of the couple.
· mountain biking te.am interview. ..They· never
Music for the ceremony was provided by Patrick Ross of because of a clerical error in said, 'Hey, Sue, we're
Soundsation Enlertainmcnl.
the qualifying series stand- really sorry.' And that
·
The reception followed at Scarlet Oaks Resorl.
ings and has baltled that might have gone a long
. -~ · c!&gt;:l!.P~, ~~,nd~y rppon~d )l!.,!'jge_!l~· fqr~~. Tel'~ T~Y . l!e&amp;iji91l ~it~~;~.• ~a~ ~wa_rded way., So I. feel like I was
1
now rcs1ue m 1vJJ dlcport.
.
,
·
·
nearly $319,000 over .. the the rightful nominee and
neg ligence
of
USA this was really the only
Cycling" from a federal jury recourse that I had."
Haywood went to mediain her home state of West
Virginia on. Thursday.
tion twice in an effort lo
Uer conflict with USA
Cycling, though, isn't over.
The organization, which
declined
10
comment
Friday, is considering an
appeal.
SliH , Haywood .considered the jury's award a sig·
·
nificant victory.

VINTON - Bradley W. and Stephanie Alexander of
Vinton are announcing the engagement 'w1d upcommg
marriage of their daughter, Katharine (Ka11e) V1rgm1a
Alexander, to Lucas (Luke) Lawrence, son of M1chael and
Pearl Lawrence of Patriot.
Katie is the granddaughter of Jim and Janet Alexander. of
Vinton, afld Stephen and .the late V1ck1 Houchms of
Middleport.
. ·
· . ·
· Luke is the grandsop of Tary and Lms Vance of CatJal
Fulton.
A 2005 graduate of River Valley High School; Katie
received her BA in anthropology from Anzona 'Sial&lt;;~
University in 2007 and is currently pursumg an MA Jn&lt;
anthropology at the University of Alberta in Edmonton,
Alberta, Canada.
· Luke is a 2004 graduate of South Gallia H1gh School and
is currently majoring in English at. the Umvcrslly of R1o
Grande/Rio Grande Community College .
A December wedding is planned. The couple will reside
in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
·

Mountain biker bounced from )04 Olympics wins suit
avoid trial.
·
lnlernalional
Cycling·
"I gave . them. plenty of · Union. And -one race from
chances," Haywood said.
2003 was not 'included in
Haywood · and Mary the UCI 's totals because the
McConneloug batlled· for a results were nol submitted
year.for the lone women's by event organizers. Thai
mountain bike spot on the race would have given
2004 U.S. team, and one Haywood 15 points, which .
month he fore the Athens were never included in the
Games
opened ·.uSA UCI rankings .
Cycling said Haywood
McConneloug eventually .
prevailed - by a single was chosen by an arbitrator
as the winner. Haywood
point.
B.ul in USA Cycling's filed suit in October 2005,
own selection criteria, it and the two-day trial finall'y
said the officiill standings looR place in Wheeling,
would be kept by the W.Va., this week.

1-(tlpfml 10. Go(Jd People .
·'II seems· we are all seek·
i~g

answer-s. We have a
deep human need lo feed
our spiritual side. We
hunger fof relationships,
for forgiveness, forJ·u.st.ice.
We have a har ltme
a~cepting · random.
We
need to know lhere is some ·
order in our world, some
g11iding hand at the helm . .
·This book may be very
·cpmforting lo some. I find
i~ more lhan a lillie bi~arre . .
Qui I guess that's r--hy there
·are so many branches on
the Christian tree. We each
find ·the spiritual·. home
which suits o11r owil' needs,
tile place where we go to
bl-ing our thankfulness and
1~ Jay our burdens down. I
l~uly do not know how il_is
possible lo gel through hfe
without a spiritual home.
T)Jal is ·Mack's proble_m.

·'•

Rocksprings

REHABILITATION CENTER

SPRJNGS REHAB 3XIQ ·

Bevo volume
available at
GCGS
GALLIPOLIS -A book
written about Bevo Francis,
His Record Stands, by Dr.
Juanita E. Dailey, is now
available at the Gallia
County
Genealogical
Society, OGS Chapter, 57
Court St.
Hours arc Wednesday
through Friday from 10 a.m.
until 4 p.m. or by appointment. Phone is 446-4242.
Gift certificates are available and the society will
also mail items with the cosl·
of mailing additional.
A documenlary about
Be~o's career is lo air Nov.
10 and 16 on PBS stations.

Mr. and Mrs. Steven McCullough

Hannan-McCullough
wedding
POMEROY - Uolly Lcighann Hannan and Steven
James McCullough were united in marriage on Saturday,
Aug. 16. 2008 at the Saaed Heart Catholic _Church in
Pomeroy. The Rev . Father Walter Hcmz offJctated at the
wedding.
.
·
.
The bride is the daughter of Jack Hannan of Syracuse and
Paula Hart of Azlc, Texas. Ken and Carol McCullough of
Pomeroy arc the groom's parents .
Matron of honor wa, Cara Bullington, and maid of honpr
was Brandy Graham . Bt'idcsmaid was Ashley Hannahs and
the junior bridesmaid was Carolann Stewart, niece of the
groom . Pumpkin and watermelon were the colors earned
out in the wed!ling .
A.J. Vaughan scrwd as best man and the groomsmen
were Chad Hanson. Joe Hill and John Hill. Ringbearer was
Isaiah Bullington and thL' !lower gi rl was Alexis Birthisel,
cousin of the gn5om.
John Anderson, organi,t. and Bernadette Anderson and
the Sacred Hearl Choir provided music for the wedding .
. The wedding guests wer~ welcomed by April Baker,
Amorclte Salser, niece of the groom. and Laura _Stewart,
sister of the groom.
'
A rccL' ptJon followed at the Riverside Golf Club. .
.
Afla a honeymoon m Las Vc·gas. the couple res1dcs 111
Bedford . Ohio .
The brid&lt;' is a 2001 graduate of Mei gs High School and
allends Cuyahoga Community College . McCullough is a
graduate of Meigs High. class of IY9X. and Ohio Umv~rslly
in 200.' . and is employed by Prugrcss Jvc Insurance Co . 111
Cleveland.

••

·Peebles plans
Charity
Days event
GALLIPOLIS - Peebles
Department Store will host
a Charity Days · event on
Sunday and Monday, Nov.
16 and If.
·
event wiH benefit
local non-profit charities
through the sale of Peebles
coupon booklets. Peebles,
working with parlicipaling
charities. will donate a
quantity of coupon booklets
to charily. The chanty Will
then distribute them for a 55
donation for each booklet.
AU donations from this dislri(?ution go to the . chari.t~·Par.t idpaling
chanties
will start offering the coupn
booklets prior to the Chanty
Days event. ·

The

e would like t,o recognize
'

Powell's Foodfair
Life Ambulance
Bob's Market

BY MONICA OROSZ

CHARLESTON OAILV MAIL

~

thing from trying to stay ' know ing what she was
warm in an old farmhouse do ing .
to building a new home and
"I just started sending out
drilling for water lo garden- books - complete manuing to raising goats - the scripts:· she said. " I Jidn"t
blog carries an appeal know any beuer."
beyond one woman 's story. . Her first book was bought
She includes recipes for by a small publishing house
funnel cakes, sh&lt;xrfly pie and that later folded 'and her sec,
cornmeal biscuits. photos of · ond landed al Si)houelle. an
the family pels (a Great imprint of the huge romance
Pyral)ese puppy named Coco, publisher Harlequin . A coua cranky shih-lsu named ple of other. publishers folDookie and an "embarrass- lowed , before McMinn
ing" eight cats) and even tid- returned to Silhouetle,
bits about her own liule real- where she has turned out a.
life romance story.
steady stream or books.
· Yes, romance.
many now sci in We st
On her blog. he is called Virgini a. She has another
"52,". (his age) and he :s a due out this fall.
local guy she bumped mlo
" Romance writers do nol
one day. She has posted bits make a lot t1f money ," .she
and pieces about their bud- said . "It ends up being a litding romance, but to respect tle more !haJJ minimum
his privacy, has promised wage. The perk ' is I gel lo
not to post his pholo or his stay home and do il. I'd
name on Iine.
rather -,vrite books than ·do
The fact thai she's living a what ·1 call having a real
scenaiio that could be taken job ."
right out of one of her own
McMinn is hoping her
books - woman moves to blog will continue to supnew town, meets mysteri- plement her book-writing
ous stranger - isn 'I lost on mcome.
McMinn.
Beyond that, she's deter"It's kind ·of amazing ," mined to make rural life
she said. "And it's been a work for her, too .
very wonderful part of my
''I'm trying to move toward
life here."
more selr-sustainability," she
McMinn · said she also said.
rai &gt;ing chickens
feels blessed to make a liv- for the eggs. I'm gelling goats
ing at writing, something for the milk. I'm growing
she's wanted to do since she more of my food and I
was 12 years old and picked learned how lo can."
up one of her mom 's '
favorite romance novels .
After earning a degree
from Texas Tech - she
majored in English and
minored in history McMinn worked a year for
a newspaper, which she •
credits with teaching her the
discipline of daily deadlines .
,
To break into publishing
~ ;Ut mtlcpcndr:ni :books, McMinn was more Voas~nq•. wt o.il u.1l tit
about persistence than

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Saturoay, November 15,2008

Robert A. Fada, MD, FACS

· Pt't&gt;pl!:!:~;;.. /\.,k u!i 01.buut tlw

1:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m.

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For initial ev~luations or follow-up visits for total
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Next clinic date is Friday, Nov. 21.
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
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Dr. Subhash Kumar Is now accepting padent
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•

For their generous
contributions
to our
.
2008 Annual Community
Halloween Celebration
.

r

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THANK YOU!!!
From the Staff &amp; Residents
of
· Rocksprings
Rehabilitation Center

'

KARR·
740·985·3444
34740 St. At. 7

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Sunday, November 9, 2008

Romance writer returns to her Mountain State roots

On the other hand . the
family has found a great
support system from rela1
On
40
acres
of
land
in
•
tives and rural friends.
:The Shuck has become a
rural
Roane
County
so
McMinn lias le&lt;~med how to
p)lblishing phenomenon .
rural
you
have
to
cross
three
can
apricots and make
J&gt;:rivately prmled, it has
to
get
there
and
so
far
peach
jam. She is raising
creeks
now sold over 2 miHion
out no postal carrier or chickens and just recently
copies .
school bus will go there acquired .three goats with
Originally written for his
.
an
author
and
her
three
chillhe .goal of using ti)eir milk
children, William Paul
Beverly
dren
are
living
an
uncomfor cheese.
Young penned this strange
GeHies
mon life . .
.
Does she have any idea
story and showed it to sevSuzann
McMinn
is
a
bit
how
to do that? Nope . But
eral friends. One- of them
uncommon.
to
locals,
too,
like
everything
else in the
p(inted it, and the rest, as
-known as "that romance latest chapter of her real
they say, is history.
writer," and then, after a life. she'll figure it out.
This novel centers ·on
And write about it.
country
road mishap. , "that
He
has'
lost
faith
in
..
relithe abduction and apparent
romance
writer
who
ran
her
McMinn, who has 26
..
murder of Mack Phillips' . gion."
car
into
the
river."
books
under her bell
Tile G11emsey Literary
lillie daughter, taken while
Nearly three years ago, many with the Harlequ.in
the family .was on a camp- and Pollita Peel Pie
the
44-year-old McMinn romance imprint Si1houeue
was
recommended
-Society
ing trip . Evidence of her
was
at a cr6ssroads. · She - also keeps a daily Web
murder, blood and her little by friends whose judgment
red dress, are discovered in I lrusl. II is a deLIGHTful was divorced and given the log of her adventures in
book which features a first chance in her nomadic rurai living. She calls . il
a deserted shack.
Some three years later, British writer, Miss Juliet · Jife · lo choose where she "Chickens in the Road: L1fe ·
Mack receives a note in his Ashton, wlio receives a fan would live. Figuring lhal.as in Ordinary Splendor," and ·
mailbox from "Papa," · leiter from a ·resident of a writer, she could lake ' her it has become . so popular
requesting him to come to Guernsey, one of 1he laptop computer and work lhallast month il had 18,000
lhe /shack the next week- Channel Islands located anywhere, she turned to her hils from around the world,
end. "Papa" is his wife's between England and · family's 200-year-old roots enough to gamer some
name for God, so he' won- France. This island was in Roane County, loan area advertising interest and pay
her a lillie money.
ders if this message can occupied by the Germans outside Walton.
She'd
visited
her
grandOne reason for the blog's
in World War II . This
possibly be from God.
With fear and trembling, novel , wrillen in the form parents and Dye famiiX rei- success certainly lies in 'the
Mack, wilhoul telling his of letters, begins in 1946, atives lherc · many limes fact that it is well -wrillen.
wife and family where he . when memories of the hor- while growing ~p. a preach- And. though McMinn says
is going, borrows a friend's rible ,comnict .are still very · er's ·daughter )llho moved she's no real pholographer,
·
often . as her father was her pomt-:nd-shoot dJgJial
Jeep and head's for the _ fresh.
1
A
charming
cast
or
rcsicalled to different churches . camera turns out plenty of
shack. Can you imagine his
dents
had
begun
the
"liter.AI one time, the family · malerial to illustrate her
surprise when he a(rives to ·
ary
soc·
i
ety"
.
as
an
excuse
land comprised hundreds of daily pursuits.
meet God, an Africanto
meet
during
the
occupa·
acres.
Today, her cousin
McMinn likes to think it's
American woman, Jesus, a
lion.
Flashbacks
remind
us
iives
on
just
a
small
piece
of
popular
because the blog
Middle Eastern Man, and
of
the
terrors
of
the
conremaining-lfllld .
..
isn 'I just about her.
the Holy Spirit, an Asian
centration
camps,
the
who
had
lived
"Last year I changed the
McMinn,
woman named · Sarayu~
of
the
near-starvation
in
.
Washington,
D.C.
,
design
and dropped all the
Sound preposterous? That
islanders.
The
occupation
California,
the
Carol
mas
.
writer
sluff
and il became a
is only the beginning.
lasted
for
five
Jon~ years. and Texas, longed to feel a country living blog. I found
We are discussing this
One · resident, Elizabeth, sense of place, the feeling people wanted lo hear these
book in our Sunday School fell
in love with a kind she recalled when she spent country living stories .
class. Some folks absoluteGerman soldier and had ·a summers in West Virginia.
"I ·realized that my blog
!Y love it. Others. don't find child. She was later sent Thai has happened,,.
used to be . about me and
II SO , appe~Jmg 1 JUSj a-M!y for sheltering one of
But
getting
there
has
been
serving
myself. People
strange .' As often happens, the slave workers sent to
the
sluff
of
interesting
read·
aren't
going
to come to a
tile. discussions are more the island and has disaping·
in
ils
own,
'as
McMinn
blog
that
serves
you ."
interesting than the text peared .
·
and her children learned
So while McMinn shares
itself.
.
· There is love and friend- how to live in a lown where her daily foibles - everyThe back cover asks , ship and kindness in this
"Where is God in a world story. It is upliftiing and there is n!&gt; Target or
so filled with unspeakable sweet and entertaining. Dominoes pizza ·delivery,
pain?'' It's a universal Thanks, Sandy and Alice, where schools have just a
question we all ask al for recommending this few dozen students in an
ti\nes. I recall another one. It's a best-seller, and it entire grade level, where
everybody · knows your
Sunday School class exam- is easy to see why.
business before you do.
i~ing Rabbi
Kush~er's
book, Wily B.u d Tluhgs

Luke Lawrence and Katie Alexander .

Mr. and Mrs. Scott Johnston

OKS ·ELF

iunbap Ql:f~ttt~ -ientinel

Pag~Cs

U on-Fri 8:0010 5:00 tJnd By Appoinlment
Sal: By nppoinlmtnl
Sun ; By appuinlm~nt

it1depentltnl

�. .......
~

'
•

.

•

PageC6

.iunbap limes -ientinel

........

INSIDE

S~day, November 9, 2oo8:

•

Holiday highlights: Bond, Nixon, 'Madagascar' gang=·
Bv

from a family of vamps trying to do the right thing by
refusing to feed off humans .
Teen girls have been the
core audience for the books .
But director Catherine
Hardwickc figures it's a
story everyone ~an relate to,
even h~r moms 70-someth~~g fnends.
. .
. You can relate to falhng
m love wnh the wrong .person, not your socto-economtc olass, not your gender, not
your race , or the bad boy m
school - someone your
fam.tly and ht~ fa~dy and
soctety doe~n !. thmk _you
should be wnh. Hardwtcke
sat.d . "In 1h.ts case, 11. •s
extreme, because he's not
the same species."
.
"Quantum of Solace"
picks !-IP. where .2006's
"Casino Royale" left off.
with 007 out to avenge the
death of his great love. Bond
bounds around the world,
going rogue as his quest
tosses him up against a
phony environmentalist cornering a South American
water supply and lands him
in the company of a woman
(Olga Kurylenko) with her
own mission of vengeance.
Unlike the always slick
Bond of old, Craig again
presents an operative with
rough edges, who reveals his
emotional scars in the downtime between the action.
"You've got this mix, this
man that works incredibly
intensely for short periods of
time on incredibly terrifying
missions. then has to go back
to normal life, and doesn't
cope with it very well,"
Craig said. "I love that idea
that he's at" his best when
he's in trouble."
Other
upcoming
Hollywood highlights:
HOLIDAY TALES:
"Four Christmases" features Reese Witherspoon and
Vince Vaughn as a couple
suffering through the ultimate holiday horror - four
separate family gatherings
with parents, stepparents,
siblings and other kin. The
cast includes Robert Duvall,
Sissy Spacek, Jon Voight,

very much is about the disin- encounters again years later
tegration of a relationship."
when she is on trial as a Nazi
Clint Eastwood directs and war criminal.
LOS
ANGELES
stars in "Gran Torino," about
ACTION: .
.
Nixon's back. So are Kate
a bigoted Korean War veterJason Statham returns for
and Leo, Nicole and Baz, a
an who develops unexpected "Transporter 3,"· as the ·
herd of stranded zoo animals
rapport with his immigrant world's most-lethal delivery
and a very vengeful . James
neighbors;.
·
m~ finds a little rom.a~ce
Bond.
"Doubt ~e~tures Meryl .whtl~ e.scortmg .a Ukratman
Despite the harsh econoStrcep. . Phthp Seymo~r of!!ctah daughter.
..
my. Holl~wood has been on
Hoffman .md Amy Adams m
Pumsher: War Zone has
a box-o fice roll the last
a mor~l showdown between Ray Stevenson as the new
month, and studios head into
a tradtttonal_nun and a pro- mcarnatton, _of the Marve_l
the year's homestretch with
gress_tve pnest accused of Comtcs vt~tlante, who takes
a solid lineup of returns,
abusmg a student at a. o~ the mmmns of a vengeful
reunions and promising
Cathohc school m 1?64.
cnme boss.
.
newcomers that could
DOGGIE TALES.
Grap~!c · ~~vehst ~~ank
uphold the old saw about
Followm~. m the P!lw Mt_ller.. ( 300 ) dtrects The
movies as a recession-proof
prmts of Beverly Htlls Spmt. the story of a resurbusmess
.
Ch 1"hua hua, , . M'l
. fitg hter (G ab.ne I
.
.
1 ey Cyrus recte d cnme
Lighthearted fare such as
and John Travolta provide Macht) battlipg a villain
"Beverly Hills Chihuahua"
the "lead voices in the animal- (Samuel L. Jackson) with a
and "High School Musical 3:
ed "Bolt," a family flick · destructive scheme to
about a dog that plays a achieve immortality. Scarlett
Senior Year" provided a
brisk p: ~ludc to the holiday
superhero on TV but must Johansson co-stars. ·
season, of which the first big
scrape by on his ordinary
SCI-FI/FANTASY:
offering is · the animated
canine abilities on a crossKeanu
Reeves
and
sequel "Madagascar: Escape
country trek "home.
Jennifer Connelly ' star in
2 Africa."
''Marley &amp; Me" stars ."The Day the Earth Stood
The movie reunites a voice
Jennifer Aniston and Owen Still," an update ofthe 1950s
cast led by Ben Stiller, Chris
Wilson in an adaptation of classic about an alien and his
Rock, Jada Pinkcll Smith
John Grogan's book about a robot partner who come to
and David Schwimmer as
crazy mutt whose mischie- our world with an ultimatum
the foursome of zoo buddies,
vous ways keep him perpet- for humanity.
now stuck on a wildlife preually in the doghouse with
''The Curious Case· of
serve in Africa after their
his exasperated owners.
Benjamin Sulton" features
ra·mshackle plane crashes.
Michelle Williams puts in Brad Pitt and Cate Blanchett
Stiller enjoyed making the
a heart-wn:nching perfor- in an . adaptation of
F.
sequel more, partly because
mance in "Wendy and ·.Scott Fitzgerald story that
he wasn't so lonely in the
Lucy," a dramll about a traces· the stran$e life of a
recording booth doing the
woman who encounters hos- man born ·in hts 80s who
vocals. Actors generally
tility, indifference and the ages backward toward infanwork alone on animated
occasional act of kindness cy.
flicks, but one pivotal scene
after she and her dog
TRAGIC LEADERS:
between Stiller"s Alex the
become stranded on their
Sean Penn stars in the title
lion and Rock's Many the
way to a new life in Alaska. role of "Milk," based on the
zebra was recorded with
ON THE WAR FRONT:
life of gay politic:j) pioneer
both actors in the room.
"Australia" takes Nicole Harvey Milk, who was slain
"I really wanted to have
Kidman, co-star Hugh along with Mayor George
that ·experience to see what
Jackman and director Baz Moscone by a fellow San
came out of it. It was a lot of
.Luhrmann · back to their Francisco politician.
fun improvising back and
homeland as World War II
Steven S&lt;J&lt;!erbergh's twoforth, doing a scene with
breaks out.
part epic "Che".stars Benicia
somebody else like a regular
"It was important to all of Del Toro as revolutionary
movie," Stiller said. "Just
us, 'Baz, Hugh and myself, . Che Guevara as he rises to
getting Chris 'in the room
thai we be able to go back power alongside Fidel
and riffing with it was inspirwhere we started, at a time Castro in Cuba but fails in a
in g."
when we could go anywhere similar guerrilhi campaign in
Among other big films :
in the world, and actually Bolivia.
Daniel Craig returns as Bond
choose to go there and tell
"Frosi/Ni~on" presents the
in "Quantum. of Solace'';
our story;· Kidrnan said.
behind-the-scenes and on"Titanic" stars Kate Winslet
Kidman plays a Brit
· and Leonardo DiCaprio are
searching for her unfaithful
together again in the domeshusband in Australia. where
tic drama "Revolutionary
she hooks up with a rough
'Roac.\'';· Nicole Kidman •. Mary Steenburgen .and . locai..(Jw::kman~ on a .J:attle
reteams with "Moulin Vaughn buddy Jon Favreau. drive acros.s the barren land·
Rouge"
director
Baz
In "Nothing Like the scape, the two ending up at
Luhrrnann for the World War Holidays," a family copes ground zero during a
ll-era epic "Australia"; with upheaval, new addi- Japanese bombing.
Kidrnan's ex, Tom Cruise, tions and old resentments as
Tom Cruise, Kidrnan's ex,
stars in his own World War II siblings head home for and Daniel Craig each head.tale "Valkyrie"; Frank Christmas at "their parents' line thrillers about fighters
Langella reprises his stage place. The cast includes John opposing the Nazis in
role as Richard Nixon in Leguizamo, Debra Messing, . Europe.
Ron
Howard's Freddy Rodriguez, Alfred
Craig stars in "Defiance,"
"Frost/Nixon": "Babel" co- Molina and Elizabeth Pena.
a tale of Jewish brothers who
stars Brad Pitt and Cate
H E A V Y W E I G H T organize a resistance moveBianchett reunite for "The DRAMA:
men! in Eastern Europe,
Curious Case of Benjamin
Kate
Winslet
and . while Cruise plays German
Button"; Keanu Reeves stars Leonardo DiCaprio played Col. Claus von Stauffenberg
in an update of the sci-fi lovers whose romance in "Valkyrie," a thriller about , .
classic "The Day the Earth wound up on the rocks after conspirators who plotted to
Stood Still"; and a best-sell- the ship hit the iceberg in kill Adolf Hitler:.
er comes to the screen with "Titanic."
. With
Viggo Mortensen also puts
"Twilight," · about a teen's "Revolutionary Road," they on a German uniform in
romance with a studly vam- play a couple on another sort "Good," playing an academpire .
of collision course as they ic gradually seduced into
Adapted from the first try to break free of their sti- collaborating with the Nazis
book in Stephenie Meyer's fling suburban lives.
during the Holoeaust.
series, "Twilight" stars
"We knew if we were
"The Reader" features
. ..
Kristen Stewart as the new going to a relationship, a Kate Winslet and Ralph
girl at school who falls for love story again, it would · Fiennes in the story of a
the eternally young blood- have to .be dramatically dif- young man's obsession with
sucker (Robert Pattinson) ferent," DiCaprio said. "This an older woman, whllm he
DAVID GERMAIN

•P MOVIE WRITER

camera drama between
Richard Nixon (Frank
Langella) and British TV
personality David Frost
(Michael Sheen) amid their
historic series of interviews
in 197:7.
With the actors reprising
their roles . from Peter
Morgan's play, the film is
anchored by a brooding.
melancholy performance
from Langella, who captures
the intonation and bearing of
Nixon without relying on
mimicry or imperSonation.
, "He made .it a point 10
steer clear of all of that," said
"F tiN
. · .. d" 1 Ron
ros
H
d txon
"F tree
k or
t"
owar ·
ran · s1ar mg
wtth the play and on throuj;h
th~ m~vte . hts approach 10
Ntxon JUSt ~came mote and
more laserhke and refined .

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FOR LAUGHS:
In "Bedtime Stories,"
Adam Sandler stars as a
hotel handyman who inexplicably finds the outrageous
tales he .spms for hts mece.
and nephew conung true .
Jim Carrey accentuates the
positive in ''Yes M~n ," playing a loser whose ltfe takes a
positive tum after he ado~ts
a self-help program req~nring him 10 say yes to every~
thing.
"Role Models" casts'
Seann William Scolt and
Rudd as immatu~
Pau 1
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grown-ups who wmdup sen '
tenced to commumty servtc~
as youth mentors ..
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~unbap \Elmes -~tntinel

Down on the Farm, Page D2

1

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Travel &amp; Destination.s
Texas hills marry
cowboy boots and
haute cuisine
wineries adds · a kind of
urbane bent to the region's
long popular out~r activifREDERICKSBURG . . ties. including river tubing
Texas - The Texas Hill and· horseback riding,.
Country, where tiny towns
About 50 miles south of
dot a landscape of wild- Fredericksburg. in Bandera.
flowers and cedar trees, i$ dude ranches have been
the kind of place where operating since 1920. The
cowboys ani,( · sommelicrs self-proclaimed "Cowboy
.meet. Sometimes literally. . Capital of the World" is
· Dude ranches anJ country home to seven dude ranches,
dance halls sit alongside where guests can take trail
wineries and haute cuisine. A rides and eat cowboy fare. .
hard morning on horseback
Clay Conoly and his wife
can be followed by an after- run the Di~ie Dude Ranch. a
noon · of wine and cheese. 725-acre spread that started
And tiobody minds a bit. ·
hosting cuyfolk in 1937
Ask Brandon Stowe. The · when Conoly's great-grand24-ycar-old in . cowboy ·father was in ·charge.
boots was swirling and sipG~ests
ranging from
ping samples of wine here urban Texans to intemationrccentl) while in town f9r a al travelers interested in ·
wedding. but he and his experiencing the American
hunting buddies often stop West stay in the duplex cabat a winery to pick up their ins at the ranch all year
favorite vintage at the end a round.
day of hunting in the Hill
Twice-a-day horseback
Country.
.
. rides begin near a century"ll's hard. to imagjne six old graying wood bam guys who have been hunt- "the most pholograph.ed
ing all day going to " win- barn in Texas," Conoly
cry, but we do," he said, . chuckles. ·
glass in. hand in the cenar- . There are hiking trails and
like tasting room of the other outdoor acuvities, and
Torre di Pietra winery.
lots of room for children to
' The Hill Country doesn't roam .
just sit culturally at the
The ranch also has a heatintersection -of cowboy and cd . pool and massage treaturbane; it sits there geo- men! available, for those
graphically,loo. Most -of-the · who find the saddle sorercgmn'~ ,attractions · are ness ofnlnch life a little too
l!'ithin ll~ hour's !I rive cif ·authentic. . .: · ·
Austin, the state's hipster
"We don't get cell service:
capital, and· San Antonio, . That prelly much drives
· home of the Alamo.
people crazy, but after they ·
And in a slate where a get used to it,thcy're sort of
drive between cilies can be ·glad they don't get. cell serderriere-numblngly long, vice," s'aid Conoly, wearing
the .Hill Country provides his usual white cowboy hat
easy stops in a short dis- and boots.
lance.
Like Dixic,lhe other dude
"People arc starling · to ranches around Bandera are
hear about it and starling to relatively small and familyunderstand that they are day run, said Patricia Moore,
trips that you can take," said executive director of the
Debbie Harmsen. lead cdi- Bandera .
. County
tor of new Fodor's guides Convention and Visitors
for Texas and for San Bureau.
Antonio, Austin and the Hill
She · compares the dude
Country. "It '$ an area of the ranch experience to "an
stale that is bvctlookcd, but adult and kids camp at the
it's one.ofits gems."
same time;" and she sriid the
There arc 22 wineries in town draws visitors who
the Hill Country. seven want to try the cowboy liff
around
Fredericksburg they . only know from
alone. with two more slated movies or books.
to open soon. Texas is now
"You can come here and
the nation's fifth largest . have some 'encountcrs that
wihc-produeing"state. .
will leave you like. 'I can't
It's "surprising to a lot of belie.ve I JUSt saw what I
national lilcdiafolks and con' saw,"' Moore said. "I can't
sumcrs as
whole. They tell yo~ "for sure you'll see
don't associate wine with someone riding ~orse into
Texas," said Ernie Locfner, · downtown, bu.t you just ·
di=tor of the Fredericksburg might." .
Convention and Visitors
A11d don't be entirely surBureau. "It's like, 'You have · priscd if that cowboy
wh;it in Texas?!""
decides to wet his whistle
l:he Mediterranean eli- with a glass of chardonnay
mate: is conducive to grow- or sauvignon blanc.
ing
grapes.
allracti·ng
"There's wine enthusiasts
dozens of new vintners in all over," Maxwell said.
lhe last : several decades . ·
Those vintners, with tasting
If You Go ...
moms mnging from basic
TEXAS WINE COUNsetups to villa-like show- · TRY: · http://www.texaspieccs, arc
attracting winctrail.com/
to1irists . and highcr-J:nd . BANDERA TOURISM :
reslaurunts · io a region http://www.banderacowalready pqpular for its cow- boycapital.com/
boy culture and outdoor
TORRE Dl PIETRA
activities .
WINERY:
10915
E.
The wineries clustered Highway
290 ,
together complement each Fredericksburg,
T.exas:
other by sparing visitors http: // www .tcxashillcounlong drives bctwecw stops. trywine .com/ or 830-64~­
said Ken Maxwell,' a former · 2829. Open daily, II a.m.-6
semiconductor executive p.m . Tasting fee, five wines
who started Torre di Pietm for 55.
·
in 200~ .
DIXIE DUDE RANCH :
. Visitors range from new Bandera.
Texas:
wine drinkers to cxpcri- http :// www .dixiedudcrenc:ed connoisseurs , he said . an&gt;h .com/ or 800-375Thcy come from all over 9255. Daily rat e ~ (per perthe world , but Maxwell son} including lodging ,
notes one consistent demo- three meals. swimming. two
graphk: most arc women.
horseback rides daily and
"Seventy ·to 75 percent of other ranch activitie s: S 150
my customers .. are ladies . for singles: 5125 for dou ·
Guys arc -~ little slow. but bles; 5~5 for ages 2-5: Sfi5
sooner or later, they'll fol- for aees 6-12 : S8) for ages
low the ladies," he jokes.
U-16. Discounts for groups
The explosive growth of and weekly stays .
·

A visitor ndes a horse at
the Dixie Dude Ranch
near Bandera, Texas.
Friday, Oct . 24.

BY MICHELLE ROBERTS.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

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�Page 'D2

N

6unbap Otlmes -&amp;entintl

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

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Officials tour local farm
State and local officials
recently toured the. farm of
Joe and Cindy Dailey on
Ohio 850 near Bidwell in an
effort by the Gallia County
Soil and Water
Conservation District to
inform people about the ·
importance of preserving
our natural resources.
Du.ring the tour, experts
spoke about the benefiis of
implementing dilfernt conservation strategies such
as access roads. fencing,
and water removal processes.
Jay Kocmoudlphoto

m:rthune - Sentinel CLASS I F.l ED

Gallia Soil &amp; Jfaters
2008 honorees

Gallia
County
OH

E-niall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
p

1\egister
(304) 675-1333
'

675-5234
~

Offtce ·~~o~~
.

Members of the Gallipolis
FFA Soils team are seen as
they competed on the dis·
tricl and state levels.

HOW

m
W~IfE 6fi &amp;2
SuccesS:
Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response •••

/Jealtlre.Y
• All ads must be prepaid•

• Stllrt 'Your Ads Wtth A Keyword • lndwle Complete
Dncrtptlon • tnctude A Price • Avoid Abbrevlltlont
• Incl• PhDne Numtt.r And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

POUCIES: dhjo Vt&amp;ley Pub4lthlng reMrVellhe right ID edit, 111~, or c.ncetsny ad at .ny t11n11. EITOrS must be rtpOrted on tM ftrtt day Df pubftcatlon and tM
Tl1bUn.-SentlMt-Reglst.r Wilt be ,..ponslbll tor no·mOI't thtn 1t1e cott Of I;M ~ occupied bV the error end only the flrst inMf11Dn. we Shill nDt be Meble fQf
any lOts or IKP'ftM that ,..ult• frOm tht pUb4JcaUon or omtaaion Of an actv.nllemenl. CQrNctiOn will be made In the fir~ evalllblt edition. • BOK number ads
lrt alWays conlklentltl. • CUrrtnt l1dt Cltd epplltl. • All ,.., utatt ld"Hrtilementt art subjtct to the F«&lt;efal Felf Houetng Act of 11)68 . • Thlt newtpa!*
accept. only http wented·adt ~'Meting EOE stand1rd1. We wtn not knoWingly acc.pt anv adv.rtlllng In viOittlon o1 tM llw. Will not be ,.tpontlble for sny
IITOI'IIn an ad liMn o¥'11' the j)honl.
·

Pnolnoi-1 s.,.;...

wanfod ,

·.
Photo courtesY of Justin Fallon

coot~sts.

The Urban Soil teani,
which consisted of Tyler
Davis,
Levi
Pullins,
Andrea
Withee
and
Morgan Daniels , placed
fifth overall at the district

contest.
compete. The Rural Soil individually out of 199
The Rural Soil team, team placed 13th at state. participants.
of · Lawrence
which
consisted
Wedemeyer
Tyler Davis also placed
Lawrence
.Wedemeyer, placed fifth overall indi- 96th overall individually.
Kody Roberts., Kayla vidually out of 194 partici- Morgan Daniels
was
Harrison and Eric Gardner, pants. Eric Gardner also ·unable to make it to complaced fourth overall at the placed . 13th overall indi- pete in Fairfield County.
district contest.
vidually.
so .Brady Brannon filled in
Both soil teams got a
The Urban Soil team for her at the state contest.
chance to go on to the placed 26th at- state. Levi Both teams we're very sucState Soils Contest and Pullins placed 39th overall cessful at_the state level.

Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor
David Carter, left. presented the SWCD's 2008
Distinguished Serviqe Award to Kevin Kelly, managing edi·
tor of the Gallipolis,Oaily Tribune/Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
The presentation was made at the SWCD's 64th annual
meeting and banquet Thursday.

Must

Uiteported an the

FOUND
male gray . kitten at Twin
Rivers
Tower

304·675·2897
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO. rec·
ommends that you do
business with people you
know, and NOT to send
'money through the mail
until you have l(lvestlgating the offering.
Nmice~-wheeler

No
hunting.
riding or trespaS&lt;i·

ing, I'm not wriling 1my ·per·
any
Ord

mits. nOt re~pt,m5. ihl ~ for
nl'cidtm ~. Bl!1Ch Upon

Lane Hendersoo WV.

Get A Jump

-on

EXTENSION ·CORNER

SAVINGS

Eliminate mice right away
BY HAL

KNEEN

POMEROY
~ Where
there is one mouse, look for
another.
.
Cooler temperatures have
started the invasion of fidd
mice into our homes and
garages. Wannth, a dry spot
and plenty of food is a great
combination for attracting
mice . What can you do to
keep them out? Get a hun·
gry cat'
All kidding aside, exclude
them from your home and
garage by checking for
·openings around the house.
. Holes as small as a dime,
can provide an e.ntrance . Fill
openings with foam, .steel
wool , metal sheathing;
cement and wood.
Remember that mice &lt;:an
gnaw through wood if
trapped. Mi&lt;:c can have five
to I0 litters of five or six
young a year if food is
available. Water is not neecssarv for their survival as
they ·obtain water from the
food they cat.
·
Trapping is a method of
control measure . Set two
traps side by side n~ar the

Economy
effecting '
construction
pennits
MASON CITY, Iowa (APl
- Higher fuel and feed
prices. combined with a troubled economy and lessening
demand. means Iowa fanners
are building fewer hog confinements this year.
Farmers also blame ' ri sino
building costs for slowino th~
clip of construction that 7ook
off bet ween 2002 and ,2()1)7.
The Iowa Department of
Natural Resources said construction pem1its for hog confinements are being issued at
about the same rate as last
year. but experts say the cost
of so-called "inputs" is up 27

wall
of
the
room. square feet.
access to irrigation water
Remember to check daily.
The nitrogen and potassi- and has full sun most of the
Set the trap with peanut but- . um assists the grass plant iti . day (minimum of ,10
ter or cheese as they don't developing a better root hours) . Take 10 to 15 represee well but have an excel- system and store more car- sentational samples six to
lent sense of smell. Placing bohydrates in the crown of eight inches deep and place
poi.son out as in anticoa~u ­ · the plant. The increase in in a .bucket. Select out two
lants
like
Warfarm, carbohydrates allows the cups of soil and bring into
Brodifacom, Difethialine, grass plant to green up ear- the Extension office with a
Chlorophacinone
and lier next spring, grow better paymenl of $15, so we can
Pindone are effective in . and out compete spring ·sefid off to a soil lab for a
killing mice .
weed seedlings. Do not soil test.
However, anticoagulants apply weed and feed .or
The soil test will recomlake several feedings before crabgrass preventing weed mend additional liming . ferthey kill the mice . Make killers now. The chemical~ tilizing and organic matter
sure bait stations arc placed do not do an adequate joo
every six feet, left installed in killing weeds now and needs of the soil. We can
for several weeks and suffi- may wash into local discuss the recommendacient quantity to kill off the streams U&gt; affect p-lants · tions and start you on your
way 'o a healthier life style.
population . There. has been down stream.
Winter programs will ~ .
some proof that resistance
·to the anticoagulants exist, ··Are you "!orried about the given at the Extension
if so, plan on · trapping . So economy, food on the table, office: on starling a vegremember lo exclude, bait and a healthier lifestyle? etable garden, a managing a
or trap mice before they Take charge oryour life and qackyard fnlit orchard,
become a hoilsehold' pel.
plan a garden for· 2009. ' improving your existing
Reduce your food bill , place garden and marketing your ·
•••
If you only fertilize your fresher fruits and :vegetables excess to friends , neighbors
lawn once a year, now is the on your table, and learn that and food banks.
(Hai K11ee11 is th e Meigs
.time. Apply a ·combination digging, planting, hoeing,
County
A!lrintll(lfe·: Na111ral
· of water soluble and long picking and toting can be
lasting nitrogen and potaSsi- just as beneficial as a work- Resources und Cummrmitv
De1•e/opmen1
Edun•tur.
um fertilizers, i.e., 20"3-12 out at the gym.
.
Ohio
Swre
Unil·ersirv'
at the rate of one pound
Start with selecting a site
·
ac tual nitrogen per 1,000 . that is well drained, has Extension .)

Nick Mills of the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation District
presents the SWCD's 2008 scholarship. to Samantha Lee
Northup of Gallipolis, currently _studying 'veterinary tech and
animal science at Morehead State (Ky.) University. The
·scholarship was presented at the SWCD's 64th annual
meeting and banquet Thursday.

.

5

:E ~~~~~

eves. aner 6PM.

510P by off~e a1 266 Co·
lon!al Dr.

, Ohio

Rooms available at Darst
Adult Group Home, we
provide
24hr. supervi·
sion, personal care assistants, meals, laundry,
housekeeping &amp; a warm
environment for those
who need a little Of a lot
we
can
help,

(740)992·5023
Haino lll)pranmWaterproofing
.Uncondltlonalli~atime

guarantee. Local references furnished. Estab·
lished ,975. can 24 Hrs.
740-446-Q870, Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

or ,.._=Oih;;;;=;o;;;r;;;S.;;;mcot;;;
"=;;;;;;;•
~

Pet

Cremations.

Call

Happy Ado ...................................,................ 210
Loot &amp; ~ourid ............................................... 215
Memory!rhank You ..................................... 220
Notice a ......................................................... 225-

Boati/Acceooorteo ..................................:.1ots

Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304

Btilldlng Mlletiala ~ ..........,........................... 306
· Buoineoo .......:.............................................. 308
Cllerlng ........................................................ 310
Chtl~tdoriy Care ............................. ,......... 312
Computerl ................................................... 314

Kevtn Kelly/photo

Terri Hamilton Bowie, right, was the 2008 recipient of the
Outstanding Farm Woman Award presented by the Gallia
Soil · and . Water Conservation District . .Gallia SWCD
Supervisor Bob Woodward, left, made the presentatiion at
the organization's 64th ann~,Jal meeting and banquet.
Thursday.
,,•,
'

Recreational Vehlclea ...............: ..... .......... 1000

ATV ............................................................. 1005

Wonted ........................................................ 235
Servlcel ....................................................... 300

ContntC1Dro ..............................:................... 3t8
Domootlci!Janhorlal ...................................318
Electrlcel ....................................................:.32o
Flnanclal................................. ,.....................322
Healtl1 .......................................................... 328
HeaHng &amp; Coallng,...................................... 328

Cow/Calf Pairs , S500-S825 : Bred
Coi.vs, 'S300-S750: Baby Calves. S 17 .50S 180; Goats, S t 5-$95; Lamb ~ . $79-$82:
275 -415 lbs.. Steers, $65-S 112, · Hogs, $52.
· Heifers, · $50-$92.50: 425-525 lb,s .,
Steers. S65-S 108. Heifers. $50-$92: 550625 lbs .. Steers. $65-590, Heifers , S50S80: 650-725 lbs .. Steers , · 565-$85.
Fat cattle sale~ Wednesda y, Nov . 12 ,
Heifers. $50-$75: 750-850 los ., Steers. 9:30a.m.
·
S60-S72, Heifers. S50-S70.
Ohio approv~d feeder sale,
Wednesday, Nov. 19, 10 a.m .
No sale on Nov. 26 (Thanksgiving).
For )!lOre i11(orma1irm. "''" De IVa \'Ire
at
(740)339-0l.J/ or Stacy al 1304) 634 Well-Muscled/Fleshed. S42-S51 .
022.f. Visit tire IITblil&lt;' al "'"'"'.llproducMedium/Lean , SJ5-S42.
1
ers.com.
· Thin/Light . $ 10-$35.

CamperiAVa &amp; Trallprs ........... ~ ................. 1020

Upcoming specials:

Hoy. Feed, Stld, Grain ............................... 7.15
H~ntlngl.).ond ........................................... 720
WOtnt to buy ................................................-.725
MlrchandiM ................................................ 900
AnttquH ....................................................... II05
Appll~~nca ..................................................... 91 o
Auctlono .......................................................B15
Bargain Booement-......................................920
eotteclibtH ..................................................t25
Carnp..,.ro ................................................... 930
Equlpment/Suppi!H.................................... 935

Cows-Steady

Flea Markets ................................................ 940

Fual 011 Cooi/Wooci'Goo ............................. 1145

Furniture ...... ~............................................... 950

percent.

,

Hobby/Hunt 6 Sport ...... :............................. B55
Kid's Cornet........................................ :........ 960
Mt...tlanoouo ........................................ .-.... 965
Want to buy .................................:................ B70
Yard Solo ................................................., .. 175

1 Female 1 Male AKC
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Golden Retr. pick up Nov
~~M~oney~~To=Lon-:::d=. 21 $350. 367.()637

GRAPHICS·DES
' IGNER

Progressive company with a great
work atmosphere is currently accepting resumes for a Graphics Designer to
prepare ads for a newspaper and the
newspaper web sites. The following
skills are highly desirable&lt;.
~ QuarkXPress
• Photoshop
• Multi-Ad Creator
• Adobe Acrobat
• and be familiar wltb Macs.
Should also have _knowledge of fourcolor and spot-color separation. Fulltime position with benefits. Paid vacation, healthcare/dentallvision, paid
holidays, 401k . .

WOtntto buy ......,........................................ 1035

P.O. Box 46'1, Gilllipolis, Ohio 45631
or e-mail
mrodgers@myd~lytrlbune.£om

Help Wanted

OFFICE MANAGER

A~tornotlve ................................................ 2000

Auto Rentol/loen ..................................... 2Ql15
Autoo ......................................................... 20t.O
Claollic/Antlqueo .......;............................... 2015
Commerclalllnduetrtal .............................. 2020

Plrtl l ACCIIIOrioo............................. :...;2025
Sporta Utlltty .............................................. 2030·
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vll11 ............................................................ 2045
Want to buy ...................... ......................... 2050
Real Eotote Seteo ...................................... 3000
Cametery Ploto .......................................... 3005
Commerclal ................................................ 3010

Conatructlon ......~ ....................................... 6012

Drlvaro a Deltvery ..................................... 6014
Educlllon ................................................. 8016
Electrtcel Plumblng........c ....................... :801a
Employment Age~ ...............,............. ,6020
Entertolnment ............................................ 8022
Food Servlceo ............................................8024
Government &amp; Federal Jobo .................... 6026
Help onted- Gonoroi .................................. I028
Law Enlon:ement ...................................... I030
Molntenonce/Domeotlc ............................. 1032
Managem.nt/Supe,loory ........................ 1034
Mechanlca..................................................1031

Medlcal ................................,...................... 6038
Muoicol ....................................................... 6040
Part· nme-Temporarln ............................. 8042

Rettlluranta .............,. ............:............. ,...... 6044
Seloo...........................................................6048
Technical T.-1....................................... 8050
ToditeoiFoctory .........................................8052

!f the mortgage broker or
!ender is property fi.
censed. (This is a public
service
announcement
from til e 'Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)
SQO

td\iCdiiOfl

Peoples Bancorp Inc ., a diversified financial
services holding company, is seeking motivnted
leaders to manage a banking o[fice in
Gallipolis, OH . The position will focus on
bu ilding and expanding our consumer and
conunercial busi ness by cultivating client
reta1ionships in local market ~. Qualified
candidates will need to lead sales and service
processes, develop staff and ensure office ·
profitabili1y. ·be actively involved in 1he
community, and manage daily office activities.
Must have strong leadership skills and be an
energetic. enthusiastic team pl ayer with
excellent . communication , problem solving,
customer service. eros$ selling and lending
skills. Five Or more years of experience in
management of a banking. sales or retail
en~iro nmerit
required . Consumer and
commercial lending experience und Bachelor's
degree in business or a related field preferred .

ui'UI('

FarmEqui~

INTEGRITY;

LOAD
MAX
EQUIP·
MENT
. TRAILERS,.
CARGO EXPRESS · &amp;
HOMESTEADER
·

CARGO/CONCESSION
TAAILEAS.

GOOSENECK FLATBED
Ragis1ered $3999. VIEW OUR EN·

black/tan
·longhair
Dachshund
males,
shots,
~armed $250
each 304·593·3820 ·
·

TIRE TRAILER lNVEN·
TORY AT
'
WWW.CARMICHAEL·
mAILERS.COM
740-446-3825

Mini ·oachshund ~..........~--:--~
$300.
Call Have you priced a John
74()..256"1498
Deere lately? You'll be
~!!!'-..----...,..• surprised! Check out our ·
CKC Maltese pups. Fe- used
inventOry
at
male $550. Mate SSOO www._CAREO .com.
Car·
740-256-1498
michael
Equipment

AKC
pup.·

~~~-ha~~~~ F~o-r-M~ie-G~e-rm_a_n~-~S~he..
p·
Kittens, 2F, 1M Part Bin- herd &amp; Belgiun Malir;ois
pups 304-389-~598.

gle $25 304-675-3102

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

..

, Skilled Nursing &amp; Rehab Center
, ·:, t

'

.

'

A. 'Vrabte HeaiU'ltire Company
,...,;

, ·. , ·Kif lll.ft ;;jJmBit1y fl£'(:f1pll):is applicatioils
,. , . . · at Scenic Hillsfol':
· .,

·. J{N's, · ~s; .STNA's
r·., ,.,
. l·:
, ~...,., ..

· .fA' ll S'L4A..: 'iil/rTI ·:o... 1 nmll , •.
-(rlll · IUJa.a;, lV-':r' flr rfil·j {'

• Corupellllte wages. Grllt patient llune l1llio
• Fulllet.eftb padtage •lncetttite and Bonus padtage
• Paid VICilions •401K
... Miewlllles:.Maltdily-fridaytiam 10a to4p
Apply in person:Scenk Hills, Diana HarleSs, DOH
31111uck Ridge Rold, llldwell, OH 45614
Or fmoii~lthcart.c:om Or Online at:

www.vrablehealthcare.com
fqUJJJ rJppotrrJIIiry Employtr

' Competitive compensation package includes
life , health , pension, 40i(k) and disability. To
apply complete electronic application at Career
Opponunities link on www.pebo.com.
EQUAL OPPORTIJNITY EMPLOYER
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

e

IIUISE PIIAI:TITIOIIER

Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
BCCeplins resumes for a lull-time
Emflgency Department Nurse Prac)itioner
or Physician As$istanl Applicant should
have a minimum of one year experience
in a dinic, urgent are or lamily practice
setting.
Send resumes to:
...

d v..., IIGipltat

c/o"-1-·

2110 ...., llrlft
Polllt "'-~, wv 21150
Or lax: 104-171-1171
M/EOE

.

B+W.

740·446·2412

Send.resumes to:
Matt Rodgers.
Advertising Director at

The Gallipolis Daily Tribune

I(

Toy Poodles for sale KIEFER BUILT,
the~'ll be ready for VALLEY
HORSE!l..IVE-"
~hnslmas can reserve STOCK
TRAILERS,

Affiars 1011 ~•• at
•,. 866 -c'78 -0003 ••0 1e am OCKC

,.

Help Wanted

AI

::

sion of Financial lnstitu·
·lions Office of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you retinance your home or oiJ.
tain a loan. BEWAAE of
requests tor any t~uge
advance payments of

Motorcvc1es ............................................... 1025
Other' .............................................: ............ 1030

Condomlnluma ............................... :.......... 3015
Far Salo by Owner .._..,................................ 3020
Home Improvement• 330
In au ranee ..... ,.......................................... :.... 332 tfousea tor Sale ...................... :.................. 3025
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Lond (Acreaga) .......................................... 3030
MOoiciDoncOillrama .................................... 336 · Lots ............................................................3035
Other Servlceo.............................................338 Wanl to buy ................................................3040
Pl~mblng/Eioctrlcal ..................................... 340
Real Ellato Rental1 ................................... 3500
Prolanlonal Senrlcu ................................. 342 Apilrtmentllrownhouua ......................... 3505
Ropolro ......................................................... 344 C::ammerclol................................................35t 0
Rootlng ......................................................... 346 Condomlnluma ...................................... :...3515
Socurlty ........................................................ 348 HauMIIor Rent ........................................ 3520
r../Accauntlng ........................................... 350 -Land (Acreega) ...................." ....................3525
TravotiEnt-lnment ..................................352 Storage............. :.........................................3535
Flnanclal...................................:................... 400 Want to Flent.............................................. 3540
F.lnanclal Servicea ....................................... 405 Manufacturad Hou ..ng ............................. AOOO
lneuranc::e .................................................... 410 LOta .............................................................4005
Manoy to lend ............................................. 415 Movaro........................................................ 40t o
Educatton..................................................... 500 Rentala .......................,; .............................. 4015
Bual-o a
Schoot...................,....... 505 Seioo ........................................................... 4020
lnoiructlon a Tr.tntng ................................. StO Suppllel ..................................................... 4025
L.aaona ......................1..................... ... ......... 515 Want Ia Buy ............................................... 4030
·Plf8onal ........................................ ;.............. 520 RHOrt Proporty ......................................... sooo
Anlmoio ........................................................ 600 Resort Property lor . .te ............... ;...........5025
Animal Supplleo ...... :................................... 605 Resort Property lor rent ........................... 5050
Horon .......................................................... 610 Emplayment ............................................... 8000
UVHtock ......................................................615 Accountlng/Finonclel ................................ 6002
Peta............................................................... 620 Admlnlstratfv6'Profeaalonal .....................6004
want to buy .................................................. 625 coohlor/Cterk ............................................. eooe
Agriculture ................. :................................. 700 Chll~iderly Cara ..................................... 6008
Form Equipment ....................:..................... 705 Clerlcal ....................................................... 6010
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710

;oo

NOTICE 1he
Borrow
Conlact
Ohio Smart.
Divi· ~_,-----· EBY,

B~cycles ........................, ............................ ~1010

Tr-

Feeder Cattle-Lower

Pots

Now taking bkls tor
painting and · or cleaning Septic pumping $160.
of vacant units. Must 'pro· Ron Evans Jackson, OH.
one now. 367 •0889
Vide ·. proof of Workers 800.'537·9.528
Chmperlsatkm and ·habll'·
fleg.Lab
puppies, tst
ity
insurance. PleaSe
Shots&amp;wormed
call Honey Suckle Hills i;;;;;;He;;;;;lp;;;W;;;an;;;te;;;d;;;;,o;;;;;;H;e;;;tp;;W;a;;n;;tad~~ 1e.es or insurance. Call $200.965-4135
Apts.
7:40-446-3344 or
the Office of Consumer

Announcemente .......................................... 200
Bfrthday/Anniver11ary ............... ,.................. 205

Personala ..................................................... 230

1-888·582·3345

Prof.Nional S.. riclt

740;-446-3745

Legal I"" ....................................................... 1 00

Back To The Far:ffi:

I

740·2~6·6627

740·610-4875

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win!

740·446·1974 304-£75·1957

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Bulls, $40-$69.

.

only.

Wan! to buy a long shaft
out board motor 10 10 35
HP with manual tiller.
Also a wortting · propane
refrigerator.

otthe law.

LivESTOCK REPORT ·
2008.

have been
placed In ads at
the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked will be
discarded.
The Tribune ·
Office has .many
unclaimed
pictures that will
be dlscatded on
December 31, 08.
II you think you
may !lave
forgotten to pick
up a picture you
have placed tn
the paper, please
feel free to come
Into tha office
and' took through
the them.

a.-

...

GALLIPOLIS - United Producers
Inc. market report from Gallipolis for
.sides conducted on Wednesday, Nov. 5,

Lead singer for estab· George's Portable Saw·
lished
southemldassic mill, don't haul your Logs
rock band. Serious lnq. to lhe MHI just call

Wontod

Kevin Kelly/photo

Now you con hove borders and graphics
'-'
added to your classified ads
.S,~
""'
Borders.$3.00/perad
E!
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for Iorge

Dally In ~Calumn: 9:00a.m.
All Dl•play: 12 Noon 2
Monday- Friday for Insertion
Bu•lne. . Day• Prior To
In Next Day•s Paper
Publication
Sunday In;-Column : 9:00a.m • . Sunday Dl•play: 1:00
·.
For Sundays Papar
Thursday for Sundays

Submllted photo

Ohio Volley
Publishing.......,.
the right to sdlt,
rtjtct or cancel 111y
lid at any time.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

Display Ads

WQrd Ads

Monday thru- Friday
fi:OO a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

,.

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis FFA Soils teams
competed in District I 0
Urban · and Rural Soils

Websites:
Www.mydailytribune.com
www.mydailysenlinel.com
www.mycta_ilyregister.com

Kevin Kelly/photo

Soil arid Water Conservation District Supervisor Bob
Woodward, left, presents the 2008 Beginning Farmer
Award to Toni Sue and Clif Ford,. The presentation was
made Thursday at 64th annual Gallia SWCD meeting and
banqu·et. ,
,

Gallipolis FFA competes in Urban/Rural soil judging

Meigs County, OH

Seasonal Delivery Driver Helpers

Opportunities are miiable throughout 1he Gallipolis area. Enjoy great pay
ami work daytime houf&gt; right in your local neighborhood. Candida1es mus1 be ·
18 yem 01 older and be able to li~ up to 70 lbs. No Driving Required . You'll
meet lhe Dli'fer on then rovle, 1ide alorlg and help make package deliveries to
1he doors of our cusiomPrs. Muil be available to work Monday thrOl!gh Fnctay,

based upon your roule Earn S11.88/hour 1
Apply on/me at

www.upsjobs.com
UPS is an equal opportunity employet

StasoMI position~ flot eligible for benefits

..

�•

~;;;;;~;;;;;;=~--~

446·3364

HEAP

,

645-5946 or 441·0941

$re,n2tsoo"

Lctnd (Acnoge)

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
for
Concrete
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steer
Grating tO!' e(ains, Driveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Mon.
. Tue,.
Wed
&amp;
Fri,
Sam-4:30pm.
' Closed
Thurs.
Sat &amp; · Sun.
740-446-7300

$15.500
tor
!!stings
800·620-4946 e~~: FI019
::":~~~~"":"'"":"'~
2·3 bedrooms, 1 bath,
new
roof,
hardwood
floors, · goldfish
pond,
fenced in yard, 1 acre,

Rockspnngs

Rd.,

Pomeroy,

~~~~~-=
Nice Spinet P18no $300

~CI~ay~lo~n~.~3~~br•,~1~99~0·,

304·882·3362

14x70

Oh,l7401992·2355

w/appliances,

~~-~~""'!~~ must

STEEL ARCH

INGS· MUST GO ASAP!
Clearance and cancelled
orders .
20x24, 30x44
Huge discounts can save
you thousands. Call to·
day
tor
savlngsl

move4

3 BR 2 bath att.ached ga·
rage w/1 acre on Morn·
ingstar Road, new fur·
nace
&amp;'
heat
pump

$125,000· 740·949·2009
or 740·367·7731

666-352·0469

HA-PPY ·
50th
BIRTHDAY
SHARON

Zero
turn
mower.
Gravely. , 60 iilc:'l ~k .
27 HP. MCIVil ' ~ . must
sell. 367-7129

WantTo 8~
Absolute Top DoHar - slicoins.
any
ver/gold

10K/14K/18K

be

BUILD· $13,000, (7401992·5924

•

i&amp;W·

gold

polis. 446·2842

Love;
Ryan, Rachel,
Reid, Ji·evor
and Meghan

Campen I RVt &amp;
Troilon
AV

Service

at · Carmi·
1 'ilhecs

740-446·Mletlon

Auction

ABSOL""
Real Eatat. AUCTION
'• /•.

j

ATTENTION Hunte.-.!
ATV'e,..ll lnveeto.-. !I
Bat., Nov.16, 2008 10:00 AM
WHAT AN OPPORTIINITY II
368Aoree
ot'fered In
4Treotl

--

· rldgn
•
· In •the

grtllt
."""""
. . . .plula
poo!IIN
pfl auut TntOt Itt·
It ... Moolly
T~J~Qt

ft-77 Ac. (ApprP . • .......,.,
........ a 19 ·- ) ; T-1 fS-148 oc.
(....,.... 48 tilloblolpootunl a 1041 oc woodo);
TNDI 14-App..,.. 32 ac . W -. ~~'!'";
UU&amp;lGDhd;

-·~·
lA
mila, -tti/M#IW.
tum left on Porter

•••w.Go
Holow Rd; F

........... % - · tho lllnd ltlyo on .,. rlglll.
Open flir ¥1ewlng during doyllght hauro ar for
a
wowtna ooll Dewjd P. """""· l!dc.
(f.ctl) 111·7028. T•mucS.lls ol -..tate A,...
1on 1o till Hlghell B~r; no mini""""' ar
, _ , . .; Ofr.I"MM frwe &amp; clear of IMna or mort..... p!'lor lo ClooOng by 12·15-20011; 0 1 emplor, ...1100 down por troet Of $15,000
IIIU· 4rt t1m1 of .ucUOn In C.lh or c;:heok. No
11Uye&lt; """""'"'"''"' ••Ill. Buyer flutllor
IJ f'llaMI$7150 per~tto Rlctterd Joh....,, llutwyor, to ••atilt aurvey ••·
· 8uyer Broker Porticlpolion Oflwrod.
$ •.Eotete ACPC 12007.£-317

..n-

.... kf,_

CALL FOR DETAILS &amp; BROCHURE
·STANLEY &amp; SON, INC.
..

(740) 775-3330

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

...., . ......,,Ill

CAI , AMI.Ofii'A, CQ~·

-

Renl $600. Call for appfl·
llvlngCgmaM.cbm

Gracious LIYin_g 1 and. 2

Bedroom Apts. at Village
Manor
Apts.

.IITAHUY--.COM

In

and
Rivers.lde
Middleport, from

$327
lo
' $592.
•
740·992·5064.
Equal
Housing Opponunloy.
Nice
Clean
Ground
Floor, 2br, W/0 hookup,
RelerencesJDeposit!No

Pets 304·675:5162
Auction

e

wv. 304-675-5806
•

7~~~~::::::= NANCE

~

740-591-5174
44 1.0110
,..~--""":,_~,..
Tara
Townhouso 2002

i;:J;=;:=;::;=;,;
2 br. mobil&amp;
for

NEW ITEMS SALE
()LDGLORY AUCTION
659 Pearl St. Middleport, OH
Monday, Nov.IOth at 6:00p.m •.
It's that time of year again for our Annual
Sales 10 stan up for ChriS1mas shopping.
Come 0111 and enjoy the fun filled evening.
Good food· Good Fun! We have our regular
consignment atoc1ion every Thursday.
Jim Taylor· Auctioneer #00 14
Licensed &amp; BonJed in favor of State of OH &amp; WV.

Announcemenls day of sale lakes precedence
over all.Jli'in1ed material.
· Auction

10:00 a.m.

CAR&amp;TRUCK
1999 Pontiac Grand Am, 4 door · wiGT 6 cyl, fin baek &amp; 1intcd
windows, 1997 Ford Fl50, car &amp; truck will sell at Noon.
Estate of Ralph "Larry" Durst Case# 2008 1080
By Patricia Durst· Administrator
..
Dan Smith· Auctioneer Ohlo #13449
Cash ·
P081tlve ID
Refreshments
'

panial estate~.

Auction

Early 4 Dr. l'loesl. Feather T1ck Chest, Mah.
I'St:rv.:r, Oak Flatwal\, Vicl. M.1. Table, Arrow
Back Rocker, Glider Rocker, Oak Sleigh
Botlqm Rocker, New Rechners, Wardrobes,
Oak Pedestal , Dough Box , Ethan Allan
B ookcase-console Mirror &amp; Desk. Drexal Side
CheM. W1ck r · Buggie's, Antique Roll T"p

. 78·3 miles north of Glouster, turn on Dock 2
turn right on Dock 2A Road, go .5 mile, turn left
W••m•nAr Road, go to end, auction on lett side, watch for
spinning wheel, old brass
cutter, child's rocking chair,
bottle boxes, old oak desk, old enamel kitchen
.
milk can, older pie safe cabinet, hall tree, treadle
wash stand (rough), old pie safe cupboard (no
2-two man crosscut saws, 10-llcenseplates (1960s/70s), 7·
of slate, 2-wOQd carpentei's tool boxes, small No. 6 wood
old hand garden. plow,

Cambridge~caprice
8,

Gl ass, Pickle Jurs, Heisey

Vehict"" Will De Sold At 12:00. Noon
No Reserves .
1977 Fnrd Thunderbird WI Continental Pack
1979 Ford F 150 Larict Ranger 85.300 Miles
19R5 Cadillac Sevolle 99 ,000 Miles , Garage
Ke~l
· ·
I,995 Lincoln Con1inen1al 87.200 Miles
Ayctiogccrs Nole: A Super Nice C lean
, Auction Everythmg (:.. Read)' For Your House

Or·Shop. Don't Miss This One!!!

Auction Conducted lllr

Rick Pearson Auction Co. #66
304-113·5447 Or 304-773-5785
www.allCtionzip.com for pictures
and additional listing .
Terms; Cash or check with 10. Mus1 have bank
letter of credit unless k:Jiown to AuctiQn Co.

•

Auction

Burr Oak- Dock 2 Road
5770 Jess Wemmer Road, Glouster, OH
Saturday, November 15, 10:00 a.m.

Bookcase, And Much More Not Listed.
Glassware &amp; Misc.· 32 Pes. Fosloria Coronet I
Pattern Elegant Glassware W / willowmere
Etchmg lncJudes -pucher-stemed Tumblerscen ter HanOied Sandwich . !ien1er-car1dl&lt;' I
Holders-8 Luncheon Plates-lg. Bowl &amp; Salt

!!1

Dally Scntlnal, PO Bo•
129·23, Pomeroy, Oh
45169

bed 1

x8°

3 bed 2
1 2002 16
bath, Priced
delivered
blocked, leveled and an·
chored
Day
Ph

&amp;
&amp;

140·388-0000
740·388-8513

740·245·9215
Evenings
&amp;
weekends
Ph.
740·388-9017
&amp;

AVAILABLE. 740·245·9215

&amp;

740·794·0460

Auction

$$250$$
Sign on Bonus
No Credit Card Sales!

I

BQAT: 14ft. aluminum fishing boat wilh Johnson motor and
trailer, 6+ 1\shing rods,
'
TOOLS: Miller Thunder BoH 225V electric welder, Oayton 3000
watt ge.nerator, TroyBilt Hoise Rototlller, Yard Machine 22" push
mower, yard/garden hand tools cement mixer, 6+ pieces
galvanized pipe 10 ft. long, 2-pieces 3ft. section metal bestos pipe,
12ft. long steel channel beam,. several jacks, electric gnnder, wash
tubs, nuts, bolts, nails,
,, tire chains,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Jason
!

organ;·Tappan
EmberModel313
Glo propane
IIBOIIOL, dining tabfe,
bed, child's bike,

~

~~~~~;::~~~~wrought
Iron patio
table &amp; )lors, andsnow
skllother
toilet, boxes
of canning
lots of
items.
•
Cash or check w/posltive I.D. No CredH Cards.
$1000 must h~ve bank authorization ol funds

=;;;--..

A.

sales are linal. Food will be available .
Not responsible lor loss or accldeots.
·
· OWNER; Fritz Hohman
SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEERS: Joj'tn Patrick "Pat" Sheridan,
Kerry Sheridan-Boyd, Mike Boyd &amp; Brent King
Licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio - Memberol Ohio &amp; National
Auctioneer's Association
Email: SharnrockAuction@ aol.com
WEB: www.shamrock-auctlons.corn
PH: 740-592·4310 or
9-9122

•

No experience requi red!

No Collections!

Gowmooont &amp; Fedoral

Posltiolls

$17 89·$2821/HA.,

., Ptofpuicml Work
En~ronm&amp;ntl

now,

1·913-599-8226,

40IK!

$57Kiyr,

or

Fed.B&amp;n,

~not

adSource,

Bohus Incentives!

"' $2 50 Sign On Bonus! ·

Coli TODAYI
Interview

Coli TODAYI

lntOrvfew
TOIAORROWII

TOMORROWII
Wotf&lt; NEXT WEEKIII

Work NEXT WEEKIII

1..a88-IMC.PAVU

1-888-IMC·PAYU

incll.des
by
aff1 tiated

Plac•

With USPS who llir&amp;S.
1-866-403·2582

~:~!~~~~1 ,

_,.Weekly Pay and

emp. serv.

or

Medical, Dental, 401 K!

.

· "' On·sltt Doc!or

24nlrs.

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr

&lt;; On·sHe Doctor

"' f.Mdical, Denlal•.EAP,

hiring.
For
application
and tree go11emment job
1nfo, caN American Assoc. ·
ol
labor

Eld. ~911

Ell: 2321

Apply Online: ·
htt9:lt1ob•Jntocl~com

Check us out al
http:tl]obt.lnfocillon.~

Cert~ied
tant full

Nursing Asslstime and temporary ~90-day.) wonc in 114
bed long tenn care State
facility.
Full-time em-

R-

Tra1ner Positions
Now Hiring Experienced.
Are you interestect in a waitstaff, cooks, dish·
rewarding positiOn? PAfS washers &amp; deli~~ery drill·
currently
seeking
time staff for
Point Pleasant·, WV pro·
tJidh'lg
resldentlalloommunity skiM training with
individualS with MAIOD.
High school diploma or
G~D required. No expeis

fuU/part

Mainf.nanc. /

and

honest.

Call P1icatillils may be picked

339·1210

at

up

Lakin

Hospital ,

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Sat..iiiiiiii~~
;alesperson
Experience if1
materials

Please

apply

Wanted:
building
preferred.

within

store. Thomas Do It Can·
transportation and ter, 176 McCormick Ad.,
auto
insurance.
Paid tra1nmg. Hourly rate ~G~al~l!&gt;of~IS~,~O~H·~~~~
starting at $7·$8.00/hour.
Serv ,_e 8u5
9000
··Please
call
J 1ec ory
304-:373-1 01 1 or toll free ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
able
valid

quired). Must ba depelod· hlgh school diploma. Ap· at1·877·373·1011.

able

ers apply in person
Harry'&amp;
Famous
Hot
Oog,s New Haven

Cona.tw

~""'":R:"-""'"'ura""'ntt""'""'"' ·~=-';;i;;.;==

Monday ~~:;::~~~~~ All types Masonry, Drlck,
Mec:hanica .
thro,ugh Frk:iay, 8:00 a.m. GOOOTIMES
BAA
IS block, stone, conc rete,
4:00
Lakin Hospl· NEE"ING
ENERGETIC, ·Free
Estimate,
1al IS an EEOIAA em- PAOFESSIONAL,BAA·
~30!;4;;,·5;93,;·6;:,;42¥1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Appa1ilchian llre Prod· player.
Lak1n Hospital TENDER 'S
WAITRE· .....

Lakin

iiiiiiiiiiii=:..iiii;;;;;iiii• -

WV.

P.m.·

ucls, .Inc.· ·is currently conducts

pre-employ· SES,

BIKI~I

'BAA.

Health Caro

DANCERS AND A SE· ~~~-=~;;;;=~
CURITY/DOOA
MAN, Home Health Care af,j es
MUST
HAVE
GREAT needed
immediately
PERSONALITY,
AND must be cert1fied or have
ber~efits · InCluding . 401K,
DR
. I year expenence bo·
Health
Insurance,
and Middleton
Estates . &amp;
IVE
TO
MAKE nuses available cor1tact
Paid Vacation are also ResCare Home Care 1s G~EAT
MQNEY.ARPLY KaY
or
Shelley

seeking tlretolt
servloe
tech lor our Polnt Pleasant, V'N "location. "'Y.ages
based on experience and

mE!nt dru!)'alcohol test·
ing. Employes may be
exposed to streamline or
secondhand S!ll9k~.

~~. ""---1
Mason. County
Homeless
:=~=-~~~~:'":
'I bf
accapting
appt~atlons AT
B HUNTINGTON
Holp WD,m.u
"""-"' Shelter
2
PosltiQns WV 80 Hr. Apprentice avm a e.
Please apply
AD 122
(RT2)
E
TO 1·688'388·1100.
foJ
Direct
Care
Staff.
In·
J
•
N
XT
Non-profit seekinn Prr Miner Class MSHA • 24 In person. For any more
THE LOCKS D
19 people n&amp;eded to lose
•
1
terested persons may
Housin""reatment ' Co- Hr. Ctass WV Mine. For· In ormation
contact
IN GALLIPOLAN
S EDAM
A.
SHOPTHE .
up to.;JO lbS on 30 ,days
'!:1 '
T........
t
contact Rhonda Harrison ,
I F A Y
of
Mason man Class Safety Con· ·· to;o.~~.~Y
Lambert
0
wv
304 576 2220 ASK
30 day money back ordinator
., Mo
at 7.40·44-14
Whit· 304·675-3930.
d th h axt.
F id26 FOR· JOHN · G; (lOOP ClASSIFIEDS
guarantee .
Cell
Lisa COunty ,Shalter Simms sula1ing Service
1'8rmanent
Housing:
Co
Tral'ling Company
n
ey
roug
r ay PAY, AND FUN WORK..
(\00-442-8101
Min. HS diploma or GED {304)-372·8346
9a·!Jp or e-mail a. resume

~~;:rTE;::N:;n~o::":N:::""'---

with 5 years reiatecl
Local company with full perience

, time ancl· part time potions in
customer
service departr:nent. No
ekperlence required p.er·
manent position - com·
pany . training provided
must be a High Sctlool

our

~raduata. Fu~'

e:~~·

in ~~..,...~-~~-

housing/homeless
seiV· Youth
Ca~e Manager
ices. · Valid drive(s li· needed tor workforce decense, drug screen and· velopmenl ,program in
criminal
backgroune{ West .V !~Inla. Duttes Incheck requi"red. ·• Also -~
group presenta·
seeking temporary
full ' tlons,
developing
retime · Team Memtiei tot soutces, · ~ ., · facltltating

m1ir~ . 11S dl-

lime po- .Sh&amp;lter:

' per • week, pl~a or GED preferred.
positions
require
bSneflts: For an ' interview excellent cornmuf!lcation
caii74D-446·7798.
and some bask: coplputer skins. Send cover
.
Ohio ' valley
Home letter, resume and ihree
Health, Inc. hiring Home tatterS
of
reference:

·$58()

r~id advancemeim. and Both

AUCTION

Motllcol

Salary ,
commensurate
. with eltperi$0CE!.
Must
No Collectlon11 ·
IOIMitic
have a . WV CNA cert1f1·
catlon to work in West
"Full and Patt·tlme
Part-time
Housekeeper Virg1n1a, and must pos· Positions!
. , :Oeeded {references re· ' .sess either a GED or

.,. Day and EYM~ng Shiftl

POSTAL JOBS

Modlcal

ployment o"ers an ex·
tens1ve benefit package,
wmonterossoOrossprov.
InclUding
State
Civi
com Equal Opportunity Servtce Retirement, eam
E[nployer!Program
up to 15 days vacation
Au~~:niary Aids and Sery· per year, 18 days sick
ices are av-ailable upon leave and 12 plus paid r1tnee necessary. Crimi·
request
holidays; health/life in- nal background check re·
!""'""'~""'""'""'!!!!!! ' surance is avaiiBble. quired. Must have reli·

No Salesl

.,. Full and Palt-tlipt

Job.

LLCOCAREO.COM
fax to 740·446·9104

tifying, developing and
secunng resources fQr
diverse popu!atlon.
Ex·
oellenl full·tlme opportu·
re- nity
wtth
benefits.
to Please ·Forward Cover
or Letter and Resume to

Ten positions filled by nolll wookl

No experience requi!'edf

Haalth

Aides

Medical

"'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii==•
-

MA needed full lime,
days with hoi1days and
vacation pay. Needs to
kOOw Medical , Manager

~arrison@rescare.com

Auction

IGetAJUimiDl
on
SAVINGS
.
.

a~ . rated

by

'

abil~.

· Wo/]1 long term and sta·
ble
304·412·2005

appfy al '1480 Jackson
Pike, GalllpoiJS, Ohio or

workers.

25701 . years e~~:perlence In iden-

VN

EOE

· Real Estate

OPEN HOUSE WEEKEND
Sunday, November 16th

1:00- 2:00pm ,

Auction

ANTIQUES&amp;
AUCTION FRIDAY, NOV.14, 6:00
·PM AMVETS BLDG. (KANAUGAJ
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

meeNngs arid worksh&lt;tps and bfcl&lt;. No smvking
~ssessme~. data entrv. or ,9ubstance use. Sal·
file
mana99ment and
progressive case . m~age~ent. . Must enjoy
worktng With the youth
popufatlonl · Travel re·
quired . Position requires

Real Estate

-------- ·-------

STNA, SCAC, HAD, 540 FM!h a BNBS and at least 1

CNA, CHHA, PCA may Ave., Htgn.

. 11956 SR 7 S
(DiteeliOD§: SR 7 S. tum righl just aflcr old
Clay Elementary)
. OWNERS WANT SOLD NOW!
Roomy:3 bedroom, 2 baths, livong room ,
family i'opm, dining rOom, kitthen,laundry.
Large s1orage ~uilding, covertd front porch,
. I acre and 'plenty more to see 1
Reduced,Prlce $79,900
• '
#2578

, 3:00 ·4:00pm

pltone 740-441·1393 fo r
Former Muson Municipul Building Property
Fronting on Route :13, Mason, WV
50' x 80' +1,-, located in middle
~1::;6~1, WV (Tax Map 2, Pel. 77), being the

I

same

real

estate conveyed

by

more Info. Competitive
wages,
mtlea~
reimbursement and bOneflts

Including he&amp;llh :lnsur•
.enc:e &amp; much more. .

Rhinehold

Schwarz and Nellie Schwarz, his wife, 10 the
· of Mason, by deed daled July 7. 1938,
of record in the OfTice or the Clerk of the .
I County Commission of Muson Co., WY at
No. .114. page 455. Frontage on
Route 33 - main street through Mason , WV,
BL!lG 1: 4,180 sq. h. +1-; i-story; Ground floor ·
(1.815 sq. fl. +I·) fOJrmerly housed Mayor's
Office, Water Works, and Police Sta1ion ·for
Town of M a.~on . WV large office spaces,
reception area, more than adequate stor.tge
area; Upstairs '(1.815 sq. h. +/-) previously
used as apartment with 2 nice-sized bedroom~;,
I full bath, . kitchen . dining mllm, spacious
liv mg . room und royer, separate outside '
entrance, fire escape: Addition on ground
(550 sq. ft. +I·) office space &amp; reception area.
SITE IMPROvEMENTS; Off-Sireel pa.·kin,g.
Great opponunily tor ptime commercial
with earning potential, on 1he ·main drag
Mason, WV. Ideal for storefront, relail
location. professional building, etc. with
residential ren1al possibilities on 1he second
floor. DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE TO
PURCHASE A GREAT COMr.IIER.CIIll
PROPERTY 'IN A GROWING AREA
MASON COUNT\', WEST VIRGINIA!
PROPERTY OPEN FOR PUBLIC
VIEWING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 9,
2:00.4:00

In

order

to

register

19' Chris Lane

(Directions: SR 588 from Gallipolis then first
road 10 the left pasl Bob McConnick Road)
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
Bi·level home with 3 bedrooms, 1.5
living room, dining room, kitchen, an:Jehedl
garage. All just a short dist~nce to town
new city schools!
$124,900
#2598

{Directinnr SR 160 N of Ho lzer tum right

SR 554 then

AUCTIONEER: LESLIE A LEMLEY
740-388-8115 OR 140-441 -7766
CASH/CHECK APPROVED
BY AUCTIONEER ONLY!!!!
PLEASE CHECK OUT PICS ON auclionzip.com
ALSO MORE ITEMS LISTED THERE.
THIS IS AN0THER GOOD SALE, TIME TO
THINKING OF CHRISTMAS GIFfS.
FOR THOSE COLLECTORS IN Yc;JUR LIFE\

as a "".'""'·I

i · buyers must produce · a bank

leiter of credit stating. "As a customer of
financial institulion. said financial iqstitution
will guarantee payment of a check drawn on
the account of ·
not to exceed the total
amount of $
lor the purchase of
former Mason Municipal Building propeny al
the auction conducted by Rick ·Pearson Auction
, in Mason, WV, on No\•ember 13. 2008 at
I:00 p.m." Jerms o[Sale: A1en perceht (10%)
down paymenl will be due from lhe winning
bidder immediately after being declared the
Said down payment shall be in the form·
cashier's check, personal or company
1c~tee~ with bank letter of credit. ·Buyer shan

""''·""" price shaH be due within 1hiny
of approval of the sale by Town
, 10% paid down on dare of sale shall be
forfeited unless buhmce timely paid to Town
Mason. 1ime being of 1he e~&lt;ence. Sale subjecl
to approval by Town of Mason, ~~~~~~~
accepts all liability and risk of loss H
Sale of lhe propeny is "AS IS", wilh no
warranties, and subject 10 all liability for
hazards, including environmental hazard.~.
associah:ll with the premises being assumed by
1he purchaser. The only known or suspected
hazards are the possible presence of asbeS1os,
lead-based paint, possible pa st presence of an
underground storage tomk, and/or the general
condi1ions of lhe struclure(s)
locaJed upon the premises. Sold subject to all
prior encumbrances, zoning restrictions, etc.
Buyer's·Premiuln: A five percent (5%) Buyer"s
Premium Will bC added to the winning bid
price to arrive at the total contract price paid by
the buyer. Agency Disclnsure: Any and all
representatives of Rick Pearson Auction Co.
are acting solely as agents of the Seller, and
~
Buyer's agents. Disclaimer: ALL
INFORMATION
SUPPLIED
TO
PERSPECTIVE PURCHASERS IS FROM
SOURCES DEEMED RELIABLE, BUT
NOT
GUARANTEED.
ALL
ANNOUN CEMENTS MADE ON DATE OF
SALE TAKE PRECEDENCE OVER
PklOR
ORAL
OR
WRmEN
REPRESENTATIONS.
NOT
RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS OR
LOSS OF PROPERTY.
Auction conducted b11:

Rick Pearson Auction Co.
Drop Tine Properties, LLC
Rick Pearson, WV Lie. No. 66
Mason, WV
R. F. Stein, WV ~ic. No.lSlO
Gallipolis Ferry, wv
304-773-5447 or 304-!93-5118
304-675-6376 or 304·593·!280

on Bulaville hou se on left
Pmspect Rd))
floor pl an ranch w i th anached garage and
sotorage offt:~red in detac·hed guraage. 3
Bedroon_1s . livtng room open to kitc.hen with
formal dining. Over 12.8 Heres included.
Reduced Price $149,900
#2581
$124,900
#2598
right

pa~l

NEXT AUCTION FRl . NOV. 21ST

~

s&lt;d es contmct und the balance of the

Desk. Berkley &amp; Gay B .R. Furniture~ Oak
Boy W/ Mirror, Vu.:t. Secretary, 3 Stack Globe

absolute

Auction

2

an

Sweeper, tread mill, ex bike , stepper, jewely &amp; 'jewelry box , gun
cabinet. potty putter, misc . baskets, lot s or hats &amp; purses . microwave ,
cookbooks , W elby dock, bookcase, card table, lots of tapes &amp; stereo

Located at the Auction Cen1er on Rt. 62 N. of
M.!Son W.V. Mr. &amp; Mrs. Sliles have been
l.cr&gt;llc.ctino g antiques for ov~r 40 years and will
be !telling their ~o llecti on along ·with orher

16x70

bath, 1 1999 16x80 2
bad 2 bath gas, 1 1997
14Jt70 2 bed 2 bath gas,

REAL ESTATE

home In Pt Pleasant

Auction

w/CDlJHazmat
tlons for full time employ·
ment C propane busl·
ness, sand resumes to:

lions

Rontala

304·674·6219

Reduced 2 2006

Auction

""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~
or ~

$425/sec.

2000

(N.O) 446•3570

sewage. No peta

Saturday, November 15, 2008

I

Glass,
· Fos10ria. Cookie .Jar. Carnival
Glass. 4 Pc. Mixing Bowl Set, Sel Of
Dishes , Peach Opalscent Carnival , Hummel
figurines, Lemonudc Pitcher, Hull c~~~~·~D;:
Yase, Hull Jaranaire &amp; Pedestal,
Silhouette, Folk Art Picture, Colonial Prinl, 3
Buggy Whee ls.baskets And More
These vehicles are out of the estate of David
Gainer from Pt. Pleasant W.V. and will be

de·

16~~:81;&gt; 2 bed 2 b,ath, 1

03 MansiOn 70 11 26 Dou·
blewide.
Ma,ter
3br,
Bedroom w/ Full B§th,
Full bath off fam1ly room
w/ fireplace, Den, Spamodeled.
New appll· clous kit w/ large DR
Must
move
1 bath S40,000.
2 Bd
ancss,
.,
'
C.A1r &amp; Heat.
Large yourself.l740-645·5286
deck on back
Call
~
d
M
Brand new 3bed 2bath
9 2 5094 '"-~r etas on
740· 9.
+ ·half acre In Pt
4BR house in Gallipolis Pleasant. OWNER Fl·

Auction will be he14 at the Racine American Legion Building in
Racine , Ohio on St Rl . 124. Watch for auction signs.
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR'S ITEMS
Table, chairs, round stand, rocker, radio , tiny tear doll, doll's high
chair, Longaberger Basket s, Boyd &amp; Russ bears , carosel horse , foot
stool , telephone stand &amp; lots more . Misc. plates, Humffiell.
'
HOUSEHOLD
Two 3 pc . bedroom suits, Koehler dresser &amp; chest , of drawers,
Broyhill Hutch, table &amp; 6 chairs. slider rocker, coffee &amp; end tables,
Sanyo TV, VCR. TV stands, lamps, dishes. pots &amp; · pans, lots of
Tupperware ,linens, some Pamper Chef items, stands &amp; etc .
MISC.
Apple computer HP Pavillion MD703 , printer &amp; monitor, rax
machine,Jots of l,)isney pictures &amp; mise items, shadoW box, ·Tri-Star

Auction

For

for

W1de.
CondtCa 11

driver .ln~pe::':".rso.On'-:-...,~"':"~
qualiflca·
Hiring lmmadl•tely

Seol&lt;lng

tails, must be moved

Sale&gt;

Apartments
Applk:atlons 1 mile from city. No Pets
are
takan
1'.1onday $475 ' +
'dep:.s1t.
through
Friday, . from 446·3292 ·
9am· 4pm. OffiCe I$ lo- ~ve·ry~n~k~&amp;-h:"'o~m~e"":'fo•r•re~nt
cated at 1151 Evergretn In
Middleport,
good
Drive. Point Pleasanl, nelghbortlood Newly re-

ESTATE SALE

AUCTION

~~~'.'~::~~~:;·~~

~

plicalions for 2BR, 3BR ;,

GalliHighway . 35

cat1on to 740-236·~872
or e-mail tO southohlo-

LARGE

Serv ice

$6800,

tlon, .

-30~4~-9~34":·:::74::6•2-:-.:::""~~ ~~4;;:·5,7..6·;;,294,.2;,.!!!!!!!!!!!!! . Prices

J~n and

polis · on

Franciscan-descrJ Rose, Blue Willow Set
Dishes England. Homer Laughlin Vii"ginoia I

-Oo.prar rty wl ·

tween

J~t!?JlJM!!R

Pc.pper Shukers,

Homes
SlnQie
14~~:70, Average

2005
14x70
Mobile Government funds avail·
2 brln country out back Home, 2Bedro0m. 2bath, able for home bu'-'ers
·
•
ylnyl siding, shir;tgle rOof,
'
in New Haven WV Hud thennapayne
window, wCha~l own ~~~- $0 ~~
accepted 304-682-3177.
20ft. porch 740-664-4356 ·
877·310·2577 for pre-ap2br on the RJVer in Ma·
or 740-797-4356 lo·
son. . HUD
approved. • cated
at
Darwin. proval. I
$ 600
mooth .:$2~6~,000
~"!"'~~~~ ~""":~~~~~~
~.~. •
':"
New 3 Bedroom homes
.;JU"t
or 3BR for rent In .Gallipolis from $214.36 per mon....
~•
.. .,

garden, fully OQulfll)ed d&amp;p. Call740·367·0647
application
kitchen, wheelehalr ac· - - - - - - - - ~=======
· ce88fb~. Midway be·
Auction
Auction

Matchmg Pair Of Cherry O tmer Cupboard~. 4
Stuck Oak. Bookca.~e W /secretary, Secretary
Bookcase Jasper Cabinet ,Co .. Jamestown
Cherry BntTct , l'l.R. Suite , Prim. Meal Bin,

!-~~,••• ~,~·-&lt;

1987 Aem1ng

For sale

drivers at an 19Cations, able. Please send
must be 18yrs. old. At&gt;P~Y sume

Wayne ..,,__,_,__.,_~ -~~~~~:-"':~

CaH

.&amp; -4BR HUD Subsidlz&amp;d aean 38R, LA, kitchen,

Land lor your flowers I $425/rent,

hrnilure· Lg. Cherry Chest , Oak Ice Bux ,

I

740-423·9728
·---~=-~~

or· (7401992·6049

740-645-3413

·patio,
2BA, pool,
1.5 $400 .00 p1month w~h
BR, 1.5 baths, attached playground, (trash, sew· a $400.00 dep Incl.
gar. Iront I back porches. age,
water
pd.) water · &amp; sewer calt

·.. *

Fj

1st time
home buyers who own
land or have land or
ha~e family land. Zero
Down Eaay Financ1ng.
CaM to be Pre..Qualif1ed.

,...7946
74o-367·7762 _ _ _
~~~~"!"'~~~ ;;;;;,;;;:,;..;.;.;;;...

vader and Employer.
~~~~~-~~~~ ~nments
Brand new duPJex With 2 bath, back

234 West 13th St.... t, Wellslon, Ohio

6:00 pm Sharp Rain or Shine
Hoose's will be open lit 5:00pm
Conducted for ohe Estate of Leslie Rowland
. Executor Mark Dilloh
Com pl ete terms or sale and picturc:s coming
soon to: www.wisemanrealestate,com
2 houses for the price or I resdng on Ut6
· acres of land!!
'Located In Wellston, Ohio-less than 2 miles
from the Genre&amp;i MUis Plant Excellent
lnvestmcn1 property. Minimum starting bid
of$35.000!! 3% Buyer's premium. Call J08h
Bodlmer Auctioneer/Realtor for more details
or questions. Watch newspaper and website
for open house date.
Call Josh Bodimer at Wiseman Real E.•tate
David Wiseman· Broker
For more info 740-446-SOLD

for

882 3512

Apts. ments is riow taking ap-

Bd. Apt. hos W/0, No 5560. · 740.446-2568.
pets,dep.Aef.,992·0165
Equal Housing Opportu·
·nlty. Tills lnslltullon is an
Auction
Equal' Opportunity Pro-

Auction

··~h1cl=s

,

1 wood Dr., from $365 ro trash,

ReaJ EState AUCtlOfi
·•

Recre1' 1o ,.-JI

1000

View

November 13th, 2008

Available

~~
Rent
Spectal!ll
includes many upgrades,
2&amp;3BR and up, Central
2br. house
garage, full For Rent
'delivery
&amp; · set.·up.
Air, WID hookup, tenant ~-~-:o:~--:-"':" Dasement, nver frootage Mobile homes &amp; lots
74D-385·2434
pays electnc. EHO Elm Pleasant
Valley Apart· Jn
New
Haven
wv (no pels) in AShton wv

i=::::==:::::=:..:====~==:;

·

~~

br.

•

elr)', dental gold. pre
1935
· US
currency,
dla ·
proot/mtnt . sets.
' monds, MTS Coin 'Shop
151 2nd Avenue, Galli-

-TDOf 419-526-o466
"Thts tnstitution IS an ·
Equal Oppot1uniry
Provider and Employer"

AVONt All Areas! To Buy Service Manager &amp; ServSell Shirley Spears 1".6 Tectlnletan posjtions
304-675·1429
available. Health , ~ &amp;
Domino's now htling safe Retirement plans avail·

"AA" Government funds

404·456-3802

$400. a mo., 1 br. 2 BR apt 740.288·5789 ~~~~~-~':"'
$295 a mo., plus utilities ~o;,r7-40-~44~1"i·3;,;7;;02;,.,_~ $pacious · 3BR apt. lo&amp;
deposit, 3rd St., IINulflul Apta. ot Jilek· catad on Gallipolis. ,$650
Redoe /74Q 1W ·1282
1011 ,Eitetft, 52 West· month Includes water,

3

Federal Funds JUSt re2 bay serviCe statiorl
Jackson
Pike.
Lease· leased for land Owners.
required. can 446-3644 No closing cost and
tor more Info.
ZERO DOWN! Will dO
land
improvements.
Houtea for bnt
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
s1991 , J ••• 2 •-·h OK. 2, 3, 4 and 5 bed·
mo.
UI:U ,
rnu • morns
available.
R , (l"
do
ll
Bank epo. ?V wn,
74()..446-33Q4
years, 8% APR) for Jtstings ~~~~~~~~
R00-620-4946 e~ R027
Double Wide for rent
BR,
ba1h, Porter area
2
3
2 BR house in GaJijpDIIS, $600
rtf
deposit.
WfD
COf'ln.
$4151~ Lease re 1+
year.
HUD.

Opportunity

-=Free

-..==;;;;;;;;===- 304)882 3011'

Auction

-

Equal Housing

2BR garage Apartment:
downtown . $425 mtn rent
· +· utlllti~. NO PETS.

4par1n.nh/
Townhou•

New Haven furnished

""'""'""'""'!!!!!!""'!!!!!!~
Houlal for Sale
3 Bed, 2 Balhl Only

catiOil
' &amp; 'onformab·on.

•1 and 2 BR apalrtm ...s .,
,(;;.:;;;;.;
· ~~-~.,.
.
for rent near downtown Spring
Valley
Green
Point Pleasant. All utili· Apartments 1BR for rent
t!es paid.
No
pets. $375
month.
!=~tease
call 740-446·1599
304-360·0163.
Twin Rivers Tower is ac·
...,,_.,...;....,..,.,._..,..._ ceptlng appticatlons for
1BR Apt, WID ,hookups, · waiting list tor HUO sub·
satellite TV inct. wlrent, sldlzed, l -BR apartment
I CaU tor the · elderly/disabled,
close 10 hosp1ta ·
740·339·0362
calle?s-6679
eA
APT
CIA
(1
0)
~~~~~~~~
4
2
.
1 BR Cabin appliance
44t-0194 .
tumlshed utilities pd. also

Want To

NEW AND USED STEEL

P~thnt

=i!!!!ii!!!ii!!!ii!!!ii!!!ii!!!ii!!!i

=

200
acre
:::"~~""":~~"":::= v-e
motor
10 Gat!ia Co
Wurtitzer
Plano
$300 ~140)416·2969
OH
60+
acres
cash only Neea tuning ;,,;,,.,""'""'""'""'"" well-drained
bonomland
5
vou haul. 256·8138
VORl
along Raccoon Creek,
60+ acres pasture, bal':"'~~--:--~~
A Kenmore ·heavy duty 03 Kia Sedona, under ance wooded. Stock wa·
57 •500
upright freezer. in good Warranty
ter pond, 2 springs, well.
2550
304
75
con&lt;11110n for $200, Call
-6 "
Farm has carried 40·45
cows wtcalves. Modem
after 5pm 740-949-3059
Buy
Dfic~ ranch style hOuse
WI
finished
wal~-oU!
Heatwave Wood Bumer Cars, T-rucks, and GMC,
basement. 937-596·6774
with du~ work, $350, Salurn, BuiCk SUV's with
Kenmore washer · 575, warranty. VISit us at (go·
Dryer $50 &amp; upngh1 Ken· cOOQll:motors com)
more Frezzer small $75 Cook Motors 328 Jack304-675·31023
son Pike. 740-446-0103

low Pric&amp;sl

&amp;
AFFORD·
ABLEI Townhouse apart· .
ments,
andlor
small
hOuses for rent Call
740-441-1111 for appli·

~HelpWanlod-Genoral HolpWanted-Geoooral HolpWanted·GIMral
or

titllittes. No section 8 or

assistance,

Novem~ber;;;9;,~20~0~8~~~;;~~· ~-~~· ~Po~me~r~o~y;·~M~id;d;le~p~o;rt~·:G;a;ll~lpo;;lls~,~O~H;·cPt.:P~I;ea~s~a=nt~,~w=v:::=t6~WJ~Up cthnes-6mttlld . Page os

j:o11merdal

$1.SO/dep. You pay all, 740367-tllli14

446 "'15
:::;;;~~--~~-:-=

Exeeptional
$2500, ,cattle farm

Mollohan Carpet Fall
Spocial. 20 oz. Comrner·
clal Carpet $6.95/yard.
Several
Colors.

office.

Possibility of rental

CArED

304-674-6219 to r an
~ap=pl;k;af;IOil;.;:;;;;

;,;~;;!!;!!!!!;!!"""""'""'"'""' 62K m1 los · Clear to.•.. &amp;. 6 SPECTACULAR VIEW
MismlaneoUa
cyl engine.
$7500.00 Se~ous
InQUires onty,
~~iiii=~==• 304-675-315l .
pleaseca11740-992 -3678

740-1W&amp;-7444. Quality at

p/Pt.

for

·
mon. WI a
$7500 dep, includes
water &amp; sewer call

view ol the Ohto River. 2
car detached garage and
Firewood tor sale lor inTrucb
2 out buildings. Would
.formation
can ~~~='i:"~""::'" make a wonderful tamily
or 200 1 Bl1.1e Dodge Da· home or bed &amp; breaklast
740- 379_2891
kola, snap .oo bedcov€r, Private and Picturesque
7." 446_2513

good, &amp;XI cab, ladder
~s. CD player, 350
ra ~

hom&amp; lot

Mobile

740-709-6'339

1-1100·537·9526.

Ohio 45685

740-245 8170
1· 28edroomApartments

~~~~~;;.,."':":~
CoNVENIENTLY
• lO·

Lois

lui~ landsca~ woth in

Jet Aeration Motors re·
paired, new &amp; rebuilt m White 95 GMC S1erre; 4
stock. Call Ron Evans, WO,. high miles, runs

Thunnan,

e

~""'""'""'""'""'""'~

2001Hujndyi Accent 2· ground pool Sit on the
DR, 5 sp, atr, sahtage ll· wrap arqund porch and
tie mest sell, $800 OBO enjoy
the
spectacular

accepted

awkations at:
Valk!Jy View Apartments
800 State Route 32!J

wv

$12,5001
We
ti\ance! o1 adjusted income. Call with awJiBnc8s furnished
Call
740--441·1,.92 for 304·882·3f21,
available. On site laundry facility.
maps or visit WNW.brun· for Sentor and D1sabled Cell tor details or piCk up
ertand.com
people.
aPPlication atrental

·. ~Seii.asono
iiiO;;;;;d"'-;i;;;;~F~Ire"'·

Seasoned Firewood CAA

Now acoepting

Apartment available now
Rlvert&gt;end
Apts
New
Haven
Now accepting
applications
for

HUD·subsldtzed,
one
Bedroom Apts
U1Kities
5 Gallla Co. 8 or 10 acres included. Based on 30%

King
glassware. ~:'!""-~~-:~- home. Circa ~900.
8;Q0...4.00 Mon·Fri, 606 1999
Z28
Camara
Eash Main St., Pomeroy
23.300 m11es. V·8. 6 bedrooms, 2 flraptaces, 2
speed, T .Top. $12,500. tun baths. 2 staircases,
beauttful original wood·
740-256-6989
IW/Oil/~/
wol1!., many piclure wmWood/Goo
2000 Buick Century l S
dows, mostly r~ew w1n·
w"'ood.._ runs excellent good tires dows, large kitchen and
needs body work $500
breakfast room, OOaull·
Hardwood. 446·9204

•••Ill/

T............ ii'"iiii~To:w:o~J:o:•-;.,.....
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;o;;=•

1Wg1 Co. 5 acres on
Umdaker or Cook Ads.
Si9,900. Red Hill Rd. 8
acres. co water $2i ,900.
Reedsville
12
acres
mites. woods on ·three sides $22,500!" Salem CtJ. 18+
(4+)acres, to a h1storlcal acres,
pond
$491900.

Crtsay's Odds &amp; Ends, 02
large seleCtion ot salt &amp; loadad , 92,000
pepper shakers, Fire Call 740·245·5526

' Apoo

Aparlmwola/

Extreordlnary Pl'oc*fy:
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Spectacul11 view of the
Auto.
Ohio River
Pnvate dnve off Lincoln
Honda Accord V6, H11l,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,

-~---~--

I·

Land (Aa.ag.l

Sunday,

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Pomeroy • llllddleport • Gallipolis, OH • Pt. Pleasa~ WV

Page D4 • ......., t:illa 6t1dind

BUL

:.

·O'Dell True Value lumber
Over 37 NEW Interior &amp; Extertor
·ENERGY efficient Lights in Stock
. light up your su~roundings . ·
·
inexpensively!
.. ·
61 Vine St., M·F 7·6, Sat. 8·5, Sun. 10.4

Gallia Cpunty
·Gun Club
Sunday
Noyemper 9, 2008 ,
10:00.am to??
F.ood &amp;Prizes ·

O'Dell True Value Lumber
F=ull Line ol Hunter CeHing Fans iil
.Stock Starting at $89.95.
We stock the Hunter 5 Min •
Assembly Ce~ing Fan ',
61 Vine,St., M·F7·6, Sat8·5, Sun. 10·4

Station~ry &amp; Trap ~~oot;;'

..

.

300 Buckridge' Road •
GalUflolist Ohio 45631

Courts ide .
Bar &amp; Grill
'

"

'

,

'.

"presents"
Krunch
Fri: Nov. 14th
10 pm2, am
,
·'
L

740~441 -01 04

'

•'/ PublicWelcome'
,. (3allia Co. Con~ei-vatlon
Club Meeting
VVednssday, No~ 12
Dinner 6:30

'

Clothing GIVjiiiWay ,
Community Christian Feuowshlp
.
29QTraUs en&lt;tRoad
· Thunnari; (lhlo
Friday, Nilil. 14ih '
·:
10amtll.3pm ;

BIG BEND REALTY, INC.
Ru ssell D. Wood. Broker
510 Second Avenu,, Gallipolis. OH 456.11

(740) 446-7101
HOPE YOU CAN MAKE IT!

BOARD
I. Gary "Pat" Skidmon:~, will ~
not be responsible for any
debls or personal loans ·
incurred by my daughter,
Lori L. Skidmore. ·

BRISTOl- NASCAR
PACKAGE
March 21,

21l09

to March 23, 2009
Includes motorooach
transilortation, tickels to the race,
parking
tWo nights hotel
accommpdations
$469/pernon (double occupancy)
$439/pernon (triple occupancy) , .
$41 9/pernon (quad occupancy)
$599/person (single occupancy)
Staying at the .Hampton Inn in.
Princeton, WV
PERFECT CHRISTMAS GIFTI
·We can provide .a certilicate lor
preserilatiOn durtng holidays
LIMITED ,S~TSI · .
No relu.nds unless trip is cancelled
We accept cash, credif cards,
checks and money orders
To·make a reservation please call
PVH Community Relations,
(304) 675·4340, Ext. 1326

and

THE DQWN UNDER
300 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'l;lar only with Appetizers
Thurs. 4 pm • 11 pm
Fri. '4pm - 11 pm
Sat. '1/2 hour before
Buckeye Games till 11 pm
Sun. 12 noon • ? ·
Fo( Nascat and NFL FOQtball
Corne out and
the
Arne1ican Legion Post 27 in
saluting all rnili)ary Veterans..on
Veterans Day at our annual
Fish Fry Tuesday, Nov. 11th
from 5 to 7 prn

.'

I
PROGRAM AT PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL
Alzheimer's Oiseass
"The Basics of Best Care"
Presented by

Melissa Gandee, LSW
November 11 , 2008
6p.m.
McNeill Conference Room
Open to the public
For more lnfonnatill!l plea!¥! caU
PV!'I Education, '

•
•

�Page D6 • Sunday Times- Sentinel

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

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Nurse in Times

After hours event, As

Square war photo
reunites with Navy, A2

'•

II

~

Printed on 100%
Recycled ~·,.· sprint ~41

Middleport • Pomeroy; Ohio
MONDAY. N0\1~ MBER 10, 2ooH

:; o Cl '\;TS • \'ol. :;H . '\;o. H&lt;&gt;

To our readers:

Veterans· Day observance Tuesday

.Due to -a breakdown of a
key piece of the Ohio Valley
Pubfishing Co.'s production
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
equipment affecting . color
HOEFLICHOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
processing, The Dajly
Sentinel has b\:en printed in
· POMEROY - Veterans
black and white.
OVP newspapers will Day services will be conreturn to color when the ducted at the Meigs.County
Courthouse at II a.m.
e.quipment is repaired.
Tuesday by Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion.
=
Commander
Tom
Anderson, Post 39 officers,
and the honor guard will

========== ·.

SPORTS

MSRP $32,300
SAU PRICE

$24,4.95

'""' ·"'l daill""nt ind , ..,,.,

• Pryor, Wells lead
.Ohio State to 45-10 win.
SeePBge81

participate in the .ceremony
with special music by the
Southern High School Band .
Members of the Legion
post will speak at the observance to which all veterans
and community citizens 'are
encoura~ed to attend. The
. celebratiOn will mark the
90th anniversary of the
. signing of the Armistice that
ended World War I.

During the pro~ram, veler- · Armistice Day for Jl!ov. II,
ans of all wars will be reco~­ 1919 .. The United States
nized. Those who served m · Congress passed a concurthe Gulf War. Afghanistan, rent resolution seven years
and Iraq are given a special later on June 4, 1926
·invitation to be there since requesiing the president
they are considered the vet- issue another proclamation
erans who will carry the lo qbserve Nov. II with
torch on behalf of all veter- appropriate ceremonies.
. ans organizations.
An Act approved on May
U.S. President Woodrow 12, 1938 made the lith of
Wilson first proclaimed November in each year a

Syracuse
to purchase
fire truck

Library
announces
upcolTilng
events
•

· Bv BETH SERGENT

%
MSRP $37,850

BSERGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

SYRACUSE - At its
most recent
meeting,
Syracuse Village Council
gave Syracuse Fire Chief
Bill Roush permission to
order a qew fire truck at the
.best price as long as it mel
his specificatioJts.
Basically, the fire department is looking for a 1,250
GPM pumper truck whiCh
will in part be purchased
with funds from the
Community Development
Block Grant (Dtstress
Grant)
awarded
to
Sy~acuse a few months
ago. Through surveys and
community meetings, tl)e
community' cliose sev'erlir' ·
different
projects
to
receive-the $300,000 grant,
including $85,000 towards
the purchase of a new fire
truck.
Grants
Administrator
Fred Hoffman said funds
from · the Distress Grant .
should become available by
the end · of this ·month.
Jioffman sa.id there has been
no word on the grant the village applied for in terms of
receivmg· new fire equipment and the villag_e did not
receive funding for the latest round of Issue .Two
paving funds.
Council approved applying for a community facilities grant through the Ohio
Department
of
Development's Governor's
Office of Appalachia to help
finance replacement of windows at the Syracuse
Community Center. The
availability of funds may
.mean awards could range
from $15.000 lo $30,000 if
Syracuse is chosen;
Council
transferred
$10,000 from the general to
the police wages fund to
cover police wages for the
remainder of the year and to
maintain police protection.

MSRP $38,250

Sa(ef Price

Sa(ef Price

5 25,99

5 29,999
·' .·. \fl. :·.. .'

.....
' ' &lt;'I.

' ·, ' ,..

· .1

.

) / f

MSRP $25,400

Sa(ef Price

' 5 20,99

OBnuARIFS
Page AS
• Steven Hood, 45

$189

per 110.

$29.·9
_per •••

INSIDE
• Weber presents UMW
program. See Page A3
• Social SecUrity
questions and answers.
SeePageAJ
• W.Va. holiday festival
kicks off. See Page AS

$209

per 110.

BY BETH SERGENT
. BSEAGENTOMYOAILYSENTINEL.coM

Tov
Santa Claus sometim&amp;s
takes modes of travel other
!han a deer-pulled sleigh,
I and Saturday, he led the
pack of motorcycles on its
way on the Annual Toy
Run. The Meigs County
Bikers Associaliop has long
sponsored !his most visible
of char~y bike runs, with
proceeds going toward the
purchase Qfloys lor area
children. Arnold Priddy is
always the first biker in line
as Santa. The run ended at
Sonny Gloeckner's Cafe,
where a dinner ,and auction
raised more money for this
worthy pause. Here, Santa
took a moment lo greet
youngsters along the way.
Submtn..s pllotoe

PIUJe SH Syt•CUH, AS
'

Oltlllt on Page .U

INDEX

'

legal holiday - "a day to be
dedicated to the cause of
world •peace and to be thereafter celebrated and known as
'Armistice Day,' according to
a ·history on the observance.
Then in 1953 a bill was introduced to tum Armistice Day
into All Veterans Day, and on
May 26, 1954, President
Dwight Eisenhower signed it
into law.

EHS National Honor·Society

POMEROY
.The ·
Meigs County District
Public Library recently
announced upcomi.ng, free
events held this month at
the Pomeroy Library.
First up, the MCDPL will
host "Scrapbook Recipe
Albums" at 6 p.m., Nov. 17
'at the Pomeroy Library.
Using scrapbook techniques, participants will be
able' to create a unique
recipe album for themselves
and
their · families.
Registration is. required· by
Nov. 15. Call992-5813.
A Holiday Greeting Card
Workshop will be held at
6:30 p.m., Nov. 19 al the
Pomeroy
,. Library.
Registration is required by
Nov. 17. Call 992-58.13 .
Family Fun Night will be
held at 6 p.m., Nov. 21 at
the Pomeroy Library featuring a screening of the movie
"Wall-E" which is Rated G.
Refreshments will be pro- .
vided.
·
The MCDPL is also continuing its Library Book
Club which is open to the
public and to new members.
The ne~t meeting is at 6:30
p.m., Nov. 24 at the
Pomeroy Library. The club
will be reviewing "The
Hobbit" by JRR Tolkien .
Fall storytime for children
continues until Nov. 20.
Storytimcs are 2 p.m.,
Mondays, Racine Library;
2:30 p.m.. Tuesdays,
Eastern Library; 2 p.m.,
Pomeroy
Wednesdays,
Library; 2 p.m ., Thursdays,
Middleport Library.
During storytime children are treated to a story
as well as a craft project
which follows . This pro~ram is also free. For more
mformation call Emily
Sanders at 992-5813.

Truckload of toys

•

• SI!.CI'lONB - Ia PAGES

Calendars

A3
A3

Classifieds

83-4

Annie's Mailbox

'

Comics

8s

Editorials

A4

Obituaries ·

As

Sports
Weather

Beth Sergenllphoto

8 Secti6n

' As
Submitted photo

4

Nalional Honor Society of Eastern High School inducted two seniors and 11 !uniors last
week. A IWlCheon provided by Giovanni's of Belpre followed the cerembny. Pictured _are
inductees: Front row: Hannah Hysell, Erin Dunn, Whitney Putman, Samantha Cummins,
Breea Buckley, Andrea BLickley, and Amanda Roush. Back row: Matthew Friend, Andrew
Benedum, Kelly Wint;~brenner, Wade Collins. Kyle Sargent and Tresa Swatzel.
•

,

'

,.

..
. I'

Mark Porter GM Supercenler recenlly donated a literal
truckload of toys lo the Meigs County Bikers Association
who will distribute thetn this Christmas lo needy children,
ages birth to 16, who live in Meigs County. Theresa Porter
of Mark Porter GM Supercenler said lhe dealership wanted
to do this ior "the kids" and employee Vincent Felts did lhe
shopping and worked with MCBA President Rudy Stewart
to fill the truck with toys. Pictured (from lelt) Rudy Stewart,
Theresa Porter, MCBA member Ron Holley, Vincent Fehs.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="14468">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="14467">
              <text>November 9, 2008</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
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    <tag tagId="4090">
      <name>amberger</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="477">
      <name>briggs</name>
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    <tag tagId="90">
      <name>burnett</name>
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    <tag tagId="4089">
      <name>chancey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1532">
      <name>remy</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4091">
      <name>wintz</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
