<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3416" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/3416?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-01T20:01:01+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13327">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/07c19220cecf0d537f0f83dbdd35adb6.pdf</src>
      <authentication>05fdea7b801fd4e187166f4c4af27a14</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12267">
                  <text>ALONG 1"HE RivER

LIVING

Travel Guide: Michigan
ArtPrize gears up for b~g crowds, Cl

Right at Home:
Cottage style's cozy charms, D 1

Hontetown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
-

Sund.-ty, September 12,2010

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

OBITUARIES

9/11· NEVEl{.

FOJ~GET

Page AS
• Delta M. Ph11lips
• Linda D. Burnett
• Glennard F. DaVIs
• Charlene Batey
• Delbert D. Sm1th

$1.50 • Vol. 44, No. 37

·

EPA deems
Middleport
daycare safe
Asbestos removed
from Tiny Tech Daycare
BY BRIAN
BRE

FRIDAYNITE
SCOREBOARD
Gallia Academy 41
Wellston 21
Meigs 41
River Valley 0
Southern 16
Belpre 0
Amber G enwaterlphoto

Untvers1ty of R1o Grande and R1o Grande Commumty Co ege students and facu'ty
g athered at the base of the bell tower on A1o s ca us on Fnday morn ng to honor
those who died rn the Sept 11 2001 t rror st n
he prog am nc uded
n by t
e Cho ale and fl.
tol ng of the bel s at the be I tower a
Chapla n John Jackson as the event speak The IT'
A10 communrty tiref g
ers campus pol ce R1o V1llage Po ce EMS and stude
eterans were also honored After the memor al ceremony students from Judrth Thompsons classes read
the names of the v1ct1ms an annual and somber event on Rio s campus

Trimble 54
South Gallia 22

Bossard Library
trustees to meet
GALLIPOI JS - The
Bossard
Memorial
Boord
of
I ibrctry
Trustees v. ill meet at 5
pm. on Tuesdn;t. Sept. 14
m the library.

OOMPD
soccer clinic
GALLIPOliS - The
Mcinty re Park
Dlf;tnct will be spo nsoring a co.tches ond pla)ers
cltmc from 10-1 I
on Saturday, Sept.

0.0

WEATHER

4 SH.•IIONS - 24 I'AGI'S

und Town

A3

ebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
SpOitS
201oOh \nil

B Section
!'ubi luagCo

!

.IIIli!I!IJIJII;!I! I!IHIII.

MJDDLEPORT - ·1 he Ohio Environmental
Protectton Agenc) ha deemed n Middleport child
care center again safe tor occupancy.
In Jul). the EPA had deemed New Freedom
Mint tries and tt'i Tiny Tech Daycare unsafe
becau e of a bestos in the buildmg. after a building
mspector di CO\ ered the un afe conditions during a
rouune m pechon
The.OhtO EPA, m a letter dated Sept. 3. states the
EPA has ooncJuded that Tiny Tech had adequately
completed corrective actions os outlined in July.
and deemed it afe to olloW&lt; people in the area.
At the ume of the 1111tial advisof). the EPA said
eY. Freedom Ministnes and Tiny Tech Daycare
\tolated the law !:&gt;y faihng to conduct an asbestos
survey prior to renovation work at its South Third
Avenue church. It alc;o set a seven-day deadline for
a safety mspection, cleanmg the air ducts and proper d1spo ol of asbestos and other materials.
Ma)or Michael Gerlach srud the county health
department al o participated in the initial inspeclOn and the EPA was alerted after the village
pect r conducted an mspectton of the building
or reconnect1on of wnter ervice, an inspection
reqUired by vtllage code
Fnable a be tos wa dt turb db' removal of the
cethng.. • ccordmg to the EPA m pector. The comphance plan me uded an m pection for asbestos
hazard. abatemert and dt po al of fnable asbestos,
deanmg the bUJidmo f; atr m pectton. and air samplin •.

0

semors and guest'&gt; at a special fare of
$4. The four others will have the Ruble
leavmg from the levy at 5 p.m., at 6:30
POMEROY - 'Rtverfest with it's p.m .. 8 p.m. and at 9:30 p.m.
Hve cruise wtll also be held on
call to "Rally by the River" where
stentwheelers dock. entertainers per Saturda) beginmng at 2 p.m. and confonn, contests are held and everything cluding \\ ith the fun fireworks cruise
from a chih cookoffto a duck derby are from 8 to 10 p.m. on Saturda) night.
Tickets for all cmises can be purchased
featured, \\til get under wa) Thursday
1 he Ruble Sternwheeler \\til be at the Rl\ erfest tent on the parking lot.
A u ual there y. ill be plenty of
returmng to Pomeroy for excursion up
crafter
nnd food \endors on the parkand doY. n the Oh10 River with the first
mg
lot
to keep fe th al-goers happ)
being on Wednesda) ponsored b) the
\\
htle
they
walt from one e' ent to the
Athens Shrine Club. and the econd on
next. The food 'endors '"ill be open to
Thur\day sponsored by the Lndte of ene from 10 a.m.-10 p.m. on both
the Meigs County Republican Party. Fnda) and Saturday.
Both wtll be 7-9 p.m cruises and .trc
fhe fnday night kickoff for Rh erfest
open to the publtc.
wtll be at 6 p.m. with an opening cereOn Frida) there y. ill be fi, e cruises.
Please see Riverfest- A2
the first from 1-2 p.m e peciall) for
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
140E LCH MYOALYSENTlNELCOM

BY AMBER GILLENWATER
I! ~ WS MVOHYTRIBU:-JE COM

INDEX

J. REED

MYOALYSENT.NE COM

Gallia County
Sternwheel Riverfest opens Thursday JFS undertakes
new project

Bossard Library history lesson
offered at chamber gathering
High: 78
Low: 54

w

GALLIPOLIS - Bossard Memonal
Library Dtrector Deborah Saunders
recently pre ented a histor) of the
library ao; well as a dtscussion of ser
vice . funding and hbrary go,emment
during the September Gallia Count)
Chamber of Commerce· First Fnday
e\ent.
The chamber of commerce ponsors
l•1rst l•riday as a serie of infonnatl\ e
presentations from different commumty agenc1es and organizationf;. TI1e
hour-long sess10ns begin at 8 a.m., •enemily on the first Frida) of evety
month, at the Ohio Valley Bank Annex
building on J"hird Ave. in Gallipolis.
Dlll ing her prcsentution on Sept. 3.
Saunders begun with a brief lustory of
the library.
Accordmg to Saunders. the hbrary
that would Inter be knm\ n as Bos ard
Memorial Library. opened its doors clS
the Gnllipohs Public l ibrary in 1898 on
the econd floor of the Lupton Blllldtng
111 the ~00 block of Second Ave m
Galhpohs.

I

Tlus rualllibrnr) was made possible
due to tundrat mg efforts b) the
Thursda) Club. n Indies literary club.
whtch rm ed money through the publicotion of a \\Omen's ediuon of the
Gallipolis .Journal on. Muy l. 1895.
l·ight hundred dollars m proceed from
the ale of tlus publication, as "ell a
100 from the auctioning of a handpainted tofteta copy of the woman'
cdltton of the Journal, were donated to
the hbrary fund.
Jn 1903 04, the library reorganized
and applied for nn Andrew Cameg1e
gront which nllO\\ed the libra.ry ~o
move to n more permanent locatton !n
the Carnegie Building on State Street m
Gnllipohs.
Jn the 1940s, there wn~ n need for
expnns10n ond step were taken for the
Galltpohs Public l ibrary to become the
Gallw County Di"tnct Library. At this
tune. the bookmobile !.ervices began
cllld the collection expanded.
In the 1960s. the communit) began to
focus upon findmg a ne'" library buildmg ond 111 1978. a bequeo;t from the
Please see Bossard, A2

BY AMBER GILLENWATER
L!DTNEWSIMYOA
BUNECOI.I

GALUPOl IS
- The
Gallia
Count)
Commt 10n recel\ed an update from two area
agencie dunng thetr regular meetmg on Thursda).
~GaiJin Count) Job and Family Sen ices Drrector
Dana Gla sburn recommended to the commission.
and the commis ion later appro' ed, that a job kills
traimng upportive en tee project be established.
This proJeCt ''ill be made a\ ailable under the
Pre,ention, Retention and Contingency (PRC) program and \\ill allow eligible families under PRC
wtth a child or chtldren who are n junior or ~enior
m high chool or' ocat10nal school to purchase job
skill training supporttve sen ices that would
enable them to parttcipate in and complete a job
skills training program.
Glassburn olso presented the commission with a
certtficate trom the li S Cen u Bureau thanking
Gallin Count) Department of Job nnd Family
Sen ices for their support of the 20 I 0 Census.
Gallia Count) 911 Director Sherry Daines
reported that her agenc) 1 currently training three
be great
part-time emplo)ee nil of whom
a sets to her orgamzation Gallio Count) 911 currently employs II full-time taff members and l2
part time emplo)CC plus a maintenance staff.
Daine al o reported that a 911 radio tower Y.a
truck by hghtnil g on the e\ening of Aug. 14. Th1s
hghtnmg strike damaged radio eqUipment that ha
ince been repaired and the agenc) b taking .;tep
to further pre\ en• another lightning trike.
The comnusston also npprO\ed a motion that will
allo\\ the county to btll Hannan Trace Elementary
School for se\\er sen tees. The elemental) school
ts currentl) the onl) buildmg connected to the
Mercen 1lle Se\\ i!r and the school hos been connected to the e\\Cr tor n fe\\ months at no charge.
nle school \\til ha\ e to pa) 200 a month. the
equtvalent of lt\e houses. and thi charge is le's
than what the school had been paying in order to
maintain its O\\ n sewer s) stem
County Administrator Karen prague abo presented the August finnncml reports to the commis
sion. Sprague reported that the general fun? has
mcreascd b) 155.787 smcc Jan. 1 and ts up
107.226 from the Jul) teport.
.
.
Sprague nttnbute thi growth to an mcrease m
the amount of s.1 es tax that ha recently been col·
lected Ill the county nnd the recent collection of
real e tate settlement .

''ill

•

�PageA.2

~unba~ (iinte5 -$entinel

Sunday,Septernbert2, 20t o

Power Force
crusade rolls
into Gallia Co.•
B Y A NDREW CARTER
MDTNEWSIMYOA LYTRJBUNE.COM

RJO GRANDE- Demonstrations of awesome
power and speed and positive messages of hope
will be presented this week when internationally
known strongman and Christian minister John
Jacobs brings his Next Generation Power Force to
GaiJin County.
Jacobs is the founder of Strength Evangelism,
which first unleashed the Power Team on the world
in the late 1970s. In 2003, Jacobs formed the Next
Generation Power Force, which, like the Power
Team. utilizes feats of strength, speed and
endurance to catch the attention of audiences and
pave the way for presenting the Gospel of Jesus
Christ. anti-drug and anti-alcohol messages in
churches, schools and other public venues.
Over the course of his career, Jacobs has conducted more than 4,000 crusades in 50 countries
and held another 30,000 events in schools. All told,
Jacobs said some 40,000 people have accepted
Jesus Christ as savior at evangelistic events he and
his fellow team members have conducted.
The current Next Generation Power Force rosteA
includes two former NFL players, a world champiW
on strongman and an ex-pro wrestler.
Shawn King played for NFL's Carolina Panthers
for six seasons and spent one year with the
Indianapolis Colts.
Jerome .King. another NFL alumnus, spent three
easons as a member of the Chicago Bears.
Russ Clear &amp;s a s1x-time world bench press champion at 1,000 pounds. He is also a former Hell's
Angels gang member.
George Milam's resume includes being a former
U.S. body building champion and professional
wrestler. He is currently a youth pastor.
The Next Generation Power Force will conduct a
three-night crusade Thursday through Saturday,
Sept. 16-18 at the University of Rio Grande Lyne
Center. The doors open at 6 p.m. and each service
begins at 7 p.m. Admission is a free. A love offermg "ill be taken. Concession stands will also be
available each night.
In addition to the crusade, the Power Force will
be conducting programs at several schools in
Gallia County. Following is the schedule for the
school programs thi week:
Wednesday. Sept. 15
• R1ver \alley Middle School. 8:30-9:30 a.m.
• Rl\er Vnlley High School, 10-l I a.m.
• Vinton Elementary School, 1:30-2:30 p.m.
• Rio Grande Elementary School, 1:15-2:15 p
T hursday, Sept. 16
• South Gallia Middle &amp; High School, 8:30-9:30

Amber Glllcnwetcr/photo
The Ga a Co Comm s on and Ga I po s Cuy Comm ss on ore once aga n n full support of the Annual Emane~pat on Celebration Duong
the county comm1sston m et ng on Thursday C ty Comm1SSlon Pres James A Cozza a we I a th county comm ss on proc!a med Sept
18·19 2010 as Em nc1pat1on Ce brat on Week nd tn the City and the county The c lebrat1on wII commence on Saturday and Sunday
at the Gal a Co Jun or Fa1rground Back row from left County Comm ss1oncr Lo Snyder and County Commission Vice Pres JustJn
Fallon Front row from loft County Comm1ss on Pres Joe Foster EmanOtpat on Comm tteo V1ce Pres Glenn M ller Emanc1pat1on
Comm nee Pres Andy Gilmore and City Gomrrtss on Pres James Cozza

The Gal 10 County Board of
Comm1ss1oners recently procia med Sept 12·18 as
Nat1onal Assisted ltv1ng Week
1n Gal Co and presented a
represental've of Holzer
Ass sted Uvmg as well as
ass sted I vtng res dents wtth
tho proclamation Fam es of
the reSidents are encouraged
to attend the many actiVIties
•p annod n ce ebrot on of the
week ncluding a cookout a
res dent artwork d splay and a
pot-luck luncheon Back row
from left CommiSSIOner lojs
, Snyd r and Comm ss on Pres
Joe Foster Front row from left,
Holzer Assisted LiVIng reSident
Florence Sheets Holzer
Ass sted lMng ActiVIty
Coordinator Kate Stone Holzer
Ass ted llv ng resident Dr W
Luther Tracy and County
ComMISSIOn V1ce Pres JustJn
Fallon
Amber Glllenwater/photo

Riverfest
from Page AI
mon) by Ore\\ Webster Post,
Amenc. n Leg10n, and n fire truck
parade folio\\ ed b) Southern
Accent performm
an the
amphtthe..ter from 7 10 p m
::F n&lt;la) event \\Ill feature
noonume pro rom b) the Met
High School Band and C\ emn
entertamment b) Sttll Standmg,
Simba, and South of the R1ver
Band
Saturdn) IS a big da) With the
hrghl) competitive chih cookoft
getting underway at 8 a.m .. and a
variety of kids activities at I 0 a.m.
At II a.m. there will be the chalk

dra\\ ing contec;t on Mam Street
side\\alks for k1ds under 12
The e\er popular lme thr
conte&lt;;t "Ill be 1n at II a
front of the ta e
• \\ Ilh
\\mner reco mzed t n m rd
ceremony on- Saturda) afternoon.
Then at 3 p.m the cornhole tourna
ment will start. ell 4 p m the
Pomero) Merchants A%octntlon'
annual duck derb) "ill begm. and
at 7 p m. the always-popular men's
sex) leg contest will be held on the
stage. All of the contests carry
either trophies. cash prize&lt;.;, or
both.

.m.
• Hannan Trace Elementary School. 10-11 a.m.
• South\\e tern Elementary School, 1:15-2:15
p.m.
Friday, Sept. 17
• Addaville Elementary School, I :30 p.m.
• Gallia Academy Middle School, I :30-2:30 p.m.
For infonnation about the Next Generation
Po\\er Force crusade in Gallia County, call (740)
645-6496 or (304) 812-7271.

•ot 11 ent 2
from 2 to 3 p n
(J t Talent for tho e
o\er 18 to be held at 5.45 p.m
Cash pnzes to be U\\ arded m both
conte ts
Entertamment Cross Road
Stntion w11l pia) from 3:30 to 5:30
p.m.; Insured Sound from 8 to 10 .
p.m.. and Paul Doeffinger will
close out the fe tival perfonning
from 10:30 p.m. to midnight

Free disposal day
Sept. 18 at Gallia
County Landfill

Bossard
from Page AI
e tate of Dr. Samuel L. Bo sard. a
Jong-t1me ph) stctan of the
Gallipoh State In tJtute und n
World \\nr I and II 'ieteran. pro\ ided n buildmg at 641 Second
AVe.
In 1991. thi buiidmg. converted
from a warchou e. \\as expanded
and an addition at 7 Spruce Street
was added thanks to a ltbrat]
Services and Con,truction Act
grant.
The library currently prm Ides a
number of services to the community as n c;ourcc of education.
entertainment nnd n place for com
munity events, Saunders '' ent on
to explam dunng the prescntauon.
Not only docs the library provide
research materials through a large
reference collection and on-ltne
databases. but nl o a large genealogy nnd rare book sect1on. penodicals. muc;ic COs. DVD , and both
print and audiO book (at the end
of 2009. the ltbrary held a total of
110.755 Items). 1be bookmobile
also makes monthly stops to the
homebound re Idents of Galha
Co • youth erv11;e provides rending program . school VIsits and
commumty outreach to are.1 children and dozens of commumty
programs arc scheduled each year
111 the hbrnry's lnrge meetmg
rooms.
According to Saunders, the
library also makes good use of
available technology as an average
of 350 individuals per week uc;e
the public Internet stations. which
have recently been replaced thanks
to Bill and Melinda Gates
foundation •rants. "l11cse publtc
access computers pro\ Ide n hi&amp;h
speed Internet connection "luch
hnve mo t recent!) been u&lt;;ed by
indivithwls searchmg for JObs and

•

unemplo) ment ervices
Saunders later d1scus ed m her
pre-.entation the gO\emmg bod)' of
the libraf): the board of tru tees.
The C\ en-member board consists
of a di\erse group of Galha Co.
residents, four of \\htch are
appointed b) the count) comnusstoners and three of \\ h1ch are
appointed b)' the Gallia County
Court of Common Plea JUdge.
The members of the board nrc
appointed to seven )ear terms and
can be appointed perpetually. I he
library board of tmstees meets on
the second Tuesday of every
month at the library.
Saunders also tried to explam the
somewhat complicated subject of
hbrary funding during her Hr t
f·riday pre entation. Accordmg to
s.mnders, the libraf) . mnm fundmg. source rs the Public Ltbmf)
Fund \\ hich account for 77 percent of the library's operotmg bud
get. The approxunately 251 pubhc
library S) tcms m Oh10 receive
2.22 percent of Ohio's total t!ener
al tax revenue. HO\\Cver. m the
2009-2011 tate budget. hbraf)
fundmg was reduced to I 97 per
cent of the Ohio General Re\ enue
and this reduction, in addition to
the current econom). account 1or
•• 26 percent reduction m the
Jibrary s mam tunding source
Oluo's general re' enuc lund,
according to Saunders. is made up
of a variety of taxes includ111g
income, sales and estate taxe and
in thic; economic recessiOn, the
total general revenue fund is much
smaller than" hat1t has been in the
past. l'hus, as libr,uic recctve a
percentage of thts shrinking gener
al revenue fund. less and less fund
tng lm been made awulable tor the
tate public library system

Locall). Bos ard Library has expenenced an O\ erall $300.000 reduction m funding from 2006 2010.
The re ult of thi has been a reduction m hbral) staffing. hours and
Cl'\ ICeS.
lbe library also receive a small
lev) \\hich \\as pa sed in J9Q8 and
generates S180.000 and cost the
O\\ ncr of a $100,000 home approxImately $10.50 per year. A small
amount of re' enue is also produced from patron fines and fees,
contribullons and reimbursements
for public use telecommunication
serv1ces.
A ne\\ libmf) levy will be on the
November ballot this year m an
attempt to restore hours. services
and, po stbl). staff positions. that
were cut due to the "hrinking budget this pa t year. fhic; le\ y. if
pas ed, would begin in 2011 and
'"ould cost a homeO\\ ner of a
hou'Se 'alued at 100.000. approximately 2.92 per month.
I hroughout the state, library
levies ha\ e pas ed or "ill top ballots thts November in an nttempt to
restore this critical communit) er' Il:e. At Bossard, over 244.000
Itemf&gt; were borro.,.. ed from the
IIbmry in 2009, for an average of
c1~ht items per Galli a Co. resiJent.
ln her presentation. the library
director ended with a quote from
the former U.S. f·irst Lnd), the late
I ndy B1rd Johnson. "Pt:rhaps no
place in any community &amp;s so totally democratic as the tm\ n libraf)
... I he onl) entrance requirement
IS interest "
The Chamber of Commerce's
next hrst l·nday event \\ill be at 8
a m on Friday, Oct. I at the OVB
Annex.

BIDWELL- The Gallia County Landfill, WM
of .Michigan Ohio and the Gallia County
Commi ioners ha\e scheduled a free disposal day
on Snturda), Sept. 18. Gnllia County residents may
d~ pose of household garbage at no charge from.
7.30 a.m.-noon.
Cu tamers must provide proof of residence.
either in the form of a dri\ er's license or utility bill.
Only re idential trash will be accepted. to commercial or construction debris will be accepted.
The folio" ing items will not be accepted: tires,
car batteries, refrigerators, air conditioners, items
containing freon, liquid, hazardous waste, yard
"aste, burn barrels.
All loads must be covered with a tarp and
secured. Only one load per household will be
accepted. Busines cs and anyone with construction
debns will be charged the regular rate at the gate.
The landfill is located at 497 Brush Hollow
Road, Bidwell.

!

Dining with
Diabetes
Are you a diabetic?
Do you know a diabetic?
Free training &amp; recipe" for diabttic support

Sept. 27th - Oct. 4th &amp; 12th
6-Spm
Courthouse Annex
Pon1eroy, OH
Contact Andrew Brumfield
at 740-992-6626
Meigs County Health Department

�Page.AJ

iunbap ~imes -$entinel

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Gallia County calendar
Sunday, Sept. 12
GALLIPOLIS - Pete
and Margte Parsons famtly reumon. 10 a m -dark,
Raccoon Creek County
rk, Ruffed Grouse
telter #2
GALLIPOLIS - Harry
and Murlie Drummond
famtly reunion, noon,
First Church of God picnic area.
GALLIPOLIS - Lyla
and Amel Waugh family
reunion, Raccoon Creek
County Park, Cardtnal
Shelter No. 6 Dmner at
noon.
Monday, Sept. 13
CENTENARY
Green Twp Trustees
meetmg, 6 p m , Galha
Academy Htgh School,
room 008D.
Tuesday, Sept. 14
RIO
GRANDE
Galha-Vmton Educattonal
Servtce Center govern·
mg board meetmg. 5
p.m., Wood Hall, room
131, Umverstty of Rto
Grande.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Cttizen Corps
nctl, noon, Courtstde
and Gnll. Lunch at
1:30 am. Info. Cathy
Clark, 446·7943, or •ematl cwclark@sudden·
link. net
GALLIPOLIS - Gall1a
Co Chapter PERl meetmg. 1 30 p.m, Ftrst
Bapttst
Church,
Galhpohs.
Speaker :
Devon Hooper
GALLIPOLIS - Rtver
Ctttes Mtlltary Support
Group, 7 p.m., Gallipolis
VFW Post 4464, upstatrs
room Thtrd Ave. Info.
245·5589 or 441-7454.
Wednesday, Sept. 15
MERCERVILLE
lnvastve
Plant
ldenttftcatton and Control
Workshop,
5 30·7 30
p m . South Gallra Htgh
School 55 Old Hannan
Trace Road Mercerv le
RSVP to Annemar e
Sm th at (740) 589·9914
or
e-matl
Smith@dnr.st
oh.us
Thursday, Sept. 16
VINTON
H u nt1 ngto n ·Morgan
Cnme Watch 6 p m
Vinton Town Ha
Saturday, Sept. 18
GALLIPOLIS - 147th
Emanc patton
Day
Celebration, 10 30 a m •
Gal ta County Fa1rgrounds
EWINGTON
Amencan Legton Post
161 meetmg, 6:30 p.m.,
Ewmgton Academy.
GALLIPOLIS - SrmsWtlhams famtly reumon, 11
a.m. 3 p.m., Raccoon
Creek
County
Park,
Bluebird Shelter No. 4.
Info: Donna Btas, (740)
886-8352.
or
Dana
W1lhams, (740) 867·5950.
GALLIPOLIS - Crown
City mtmng reunion, Ftrst
Church of God shelterhouse. Ohto 141 .
Sunday, Sept. 19
GALLIPOLIS - 147th
anctpatton
Day
"''"'''\r"',IOn, 10 a.m.,
Gallla
County
Fatrgrounds
RIO
GRANDE
Evans-Penn yfare
Supermarkets reunion ,
Bob Evans shelterhouse
#2, Canoe Livery Road.
Covered dish dinner at 1
p.m. Info: 446·4289.
GALLIPOLIS
Montgomery
family
reunion, Raccoon Creek
County Park, Wtld Turkey
Shelter. Covered dish
lunch at 12:30 p.m. Bring
your own dtsh and beverages.
Monday, Sept. 20
RIO
GRANDE
Netghborhood
Watch/Cnme
Watch
annual ptcnic, 6 p m ,
Bob Evans Farm shelterhouse. Info· Johnnie
Russell 367-0323 or Dep.
Jimmte Spears, Galha
Shenff's Office.
GALLIPOLIS - Look
ood.
Feel
Better
Program.
1·3
P'.m .,
Holzer Center for Cancer
Care, 170 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis. Info 446·4728
or 441·3909.
Tuesday, Sept. 28
EWINGTON
American Legion Post
161 meeting , 7:30 p.m.,
Ewmgton Academy.
Thursday, Sept. 30
GALLIPOLIS

French 500 Free Clinic,
1·4 p m., 258 Pmecrest
Dnve, off Jackson Ptke.

Birthdays
Hattie B. Gothard wtll
celebrate her 93rd birthday on Sept. 12. Cards
may be sent to her at 242
Magnolia
Drive,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Marlene Belville will
celebrate her 84th birthday on Sept. 20. Cards
may be sent to her at 300
Brlarwood Dnve, Apt.
140,
Gallipolis,
OH
45631

Church Events

Meigs County calendar
mclude 10 a m Btble
study, wtth classes for all
ages, and 11 am. wor·
shtp. Btble study ls also
held at 7 p m Wednesday.
Web stte: www.galhpohschurchofchnst net
GALLIPOLIS
Tommy Moseley concert,
10.20 a.m., F1rst Church
of God, Ohio 141 Info:
446-4404
POINT
PLEASANT,
W Va - Tommy Moseley
concert, 6 p.m., Ftrst
Church of God, Point
Pleasant
Wednesday, Sept. 22
ADDISON Prayer
meet•ng
Matt
Smtth
preactung, 7 p m , Add son
Freewill Baptist Church
Saturday, Sept. 25
CHESHIRE
Women's retreat, 8 am,
Cheshire Bapttst Church.
Info· 367-0154 or 992·
7542.
Sunday, Sept. 26
ADDISON - Sunday,
school, 10 a.m., evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor
Rick
Barcus
preachmg Jamre Ramey,
special music.
BIDWELL
Homecommg, 10 a.m ,
Garden of My Heart
Tabernacle, 4950 Ohto
850, Bidwell. Dorsel
Messtck preachmg Perry
Famtly smgmg.
CHESHIRE The
Gracemen In concert,
10.30 a.m , Cheshtre
Bapt~st Church

Center w1ll meet 7 p m. at
the Center.
POMEROY - Metgs
County Tea Party, regular
meeting,
7
pm ,
Mulberry
Community
Center, presentatiOn on
Constitution.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Chamber of
Commerce
businessminded luncheon, noon,
Pomeroy Library, Pamela
Martino of the Amencan
Red Cross speaking,
McDonalds
Pomeroy
catenng, RSVP 9925005
POMEROY - Metgs
County
Genealogtcal
Soctety, 5 p m , at the
Metgs County Museum
Public welcome.
Thursday, Sept. 16
POMEROY
American
Cancer
Soc1ety Meigs County
Advisory
Board/Sur v 1vo rs hlp
Taskforce meeting, noon.
banquet room of Wtld
Horse Cafe.
MIDDLEPORT - Free
community dinner. 4:30·6
p.m., Daye Dtles Park,
pulled pork, hot dogs,
baked beans, desserts,
drinks, sponsored by
Heath Untted Methodtst
Church.
Saturday, Sept. 18
POMEROY
Veterans
Memonal
Hospttal
Employees
annual reumon 1 tro 4
p.m at the Mulberry
Community
Center.
Potluck with beverages
furmshed. Memorabtha to
be on dtsplay

worsh1p, potluck at noon.
CHESTER - Mercy
MISSIOn
Church
of
Chester w111 have a
gospel smg to beneftt the
Fall Harvest Gospel Sing
7 p.m. Singers wt~
mclude Cross Cree~.
Donnlce Boggs, Brian
and Famtly Connections,
Jerry
and
Diana
Fredenck,
Debbte
Falcon, Donna Tackett,
and Randal Johns.
Sunday, Sept. 19
RACINE
Homecommg at Mt-.•
Monah Church of God,
Mtle Htll Road, with
mornmg serv1ce at 9:45
a.m., wtth Herman Stuart
as speaker Dmner at
11·30 a m. Serv1ce at 1
p.m. With special stnging.

Sunday, Sept. 12
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 am., Add son
Freewtll Baptist Church.
Evemng service. 6 p.m.
Pastor
Rtck
Barcus
Birthdays
preachmg.
GALLIPOLIS - Bro.
Freda Smtth wtll celeJ.R. Vance preaching, 6
brate her 86th birthday,
p.m.,
Faith
Valley
Sept. 13. Cards may be
Community
Church,
sent to her at 42919
Bulavtlle Ptke, Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - Eric
School Lot Road, Alban~
Hinson concert, 11 a m.,
OhiO 45710.
Calvary Chnstian Center,
553 Jackson Pike. Love
offering. Bean d1nner
after servtce. Info: (740)
682·9023 or 446·6306.
LECTA
Walnut
Rtdge Church homecomIng, 9 30 a.m. Bud
Hatfteld
speakmg.
Special stngmg. Abby
Hammond Ha1t1 msssion
tnp presentation after
lunch.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Revivals
church of Chnst m
Church Events
Gall polls meets at 234
Sept. 13-19 Kanauga
Chapel Drive. Sunday Church, with evangelist
Sunday, Sept. 12
meetmg t1mes are: 9:30 Paul Bartrum
POMEROY - Annual
am., Btble class, 10:30
Harvest Fest1val, St. John
a.m , worshrp, 5 p m ..
Lutheran Church, Ptne
Sept 18·25 Garden of
evemng assembly The My Heart Taber acle
Grove Road 11 a m
church meets at 7 p m 4950 Oh o 850 8 d
Wednesday for B b e Time 6 p m Spe ~
study
Web
s te
Mark
Dun ap
La ry
www chapelhlllchurChapman,
Rev
W1lhams
chofchnst.org
Vance,
Calvtn
GALLIPOLIS - The J.R.
Galhpohs
church
of Mmnts Spectal stngtng
Chnst meets at 214 each servtce
Upper
Rtver
Road
Sunday serv1ces mclude
10 a m Btb e study, wtth
classes for all ages, and
11 a m worshtp B1ble
study 1s also held at 7
p m. Wednesday. Web
stte www.galhpolischurchofchnst.net.
Wednesday, Sept. 15
ADDISON
Business
and prayer meetmg, 7
p.m., Addtson Freewill
Bapttst Church.
Thursday, Sept. 16
ADDISON - Ladies Aid
Meettng, 7 p.m., Add1son
Fre9WIIJ Baptist Church.
Saturday, Sept. 18
ADDISON
Fall
Harvest Benefit Sing, 6
p.m., Addison Freewill
Bapttst Church. Special
smgtng by Bnan and
Famtly Connectton, New
Ctty Smgers, Victory River
Quartet and Open Rat!.
RODNEY - Rodney
United Methodtst Church
homecomtng.
Softball
game. 6 p.m. Bonfire,
weiner roast, 7 p.m.
Rodney UMC is located
Cardiologist Vipin B. Koshal, DO, performs transcsophagcal
at 6611 Ohio 588.
Sunday, Sept. 19
cchocardiogram (TLE) procedures in the cardiovascular
ADDISON - Sunday
catheterization laboratory at O'Bhmcss. 'Il1is procedure
~1. 10 a.m., Addison
Freewtll Baptist Church.
previously was not available in the Athens area. \'\'hen the
Eventng seMOe, 6 p.m. Past
results from standard cchocardiography :-;tudics arc not
Rick Barcus preaching.
PATRIOT
St.
suflicicnt or when a cardiologist needs a closer look at a
Martrn's Lutheran Church •
patient's heart, a TEE is a valuable diagnostic test.
homecomrng.
Church
located
on
German
Board certified cardiologists Vipin B. Koshal, DO; i\1rtdtell
Ridge, Patriot. Potluck
dtnner at noon
}. Sri\ er, DO, and Charles F. Bott1 Jr., MD, arc killed in the
RODNEY Rodney
diagnost and trc.1tmcnt ofcardiovascular disea e and perform
United Methodtst Church
homecommg 10 a.m. Brent
procedures in the O'Bicness Catheterization Laboratory.
Watson. guest speaker. The
Gracemen tn concert.
for more information ahout heart care en ices at O'Bicne ~.
Otnner follows service.
call M1dOhao Cardiolng) and Vascular Consultants Ill the
GALLIPOLIS - The
church of Christ 1n
Cornwell Center at (740} 566-4890.
Galhpohs meets at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
Charles F. Botti Jr., MD
a.m., Bible class; 10:30
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.,
O'Blcncss Hc.lrt Services
evening assembly. The
Away
church meets at 7 p.m.
Mcmm·ialllospital,
Wednesday for Bible
study.
Web
stte:
www. chapel hillch urchofchrist.org.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis church of Chnst
meets at 214 Upper River
Road Sunday servtces

A Heartbeat

,,
u

Sunday, Sept. 12
POMEROY - Meigs
County Tea Party 9/12
ProJeCt,
1-4
p.m.,
Pomeroy parkmg lot
gazebo, variety of speakers, free iced tea, hot
dogs.
REEDSVILLE - Sixth
Annual
Neighborhood
Day,
sponsored
by
churches
in
the
Reedsville and Long
Bottom communittes, 1
p.m., Bellov.lle Locks and
Dam. Music by George
Hall. Recognition of Olive
Township
firefighters,
Squad 90 volunteers.
RACINE - Kerwood·
Htll reunion, 1 p.m.
Covered d1sh dmner at
Star M1ll Park, Racine.
Monday, Sept. 13
POMEROY The
Meigs
County
Agncultural Society w111
meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
Coonhunters Build1ng on
the
Rock
Springs
Fatrgrounds.
POMEROY
- Big
Bend Farm Antiques
Club monthly meeting,
7:30 p.m.,
Mulberry
Community Center.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
regular meeting, noon,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.
POMEROY - Metgs
Band Boosters, o p.m. m
the band room at Meigs
Htgh School.
POMEROY - Metgs
County Republican Party
Executive
Committee
meettng, 7:30 p.m at the
Courthouse.
Tuesday, Sept. 14
TUPPERS PLAINS Tuppers Plams Regional
Sewer District 7 p m.. at
the offtce
POMEROY
Salisbury
Township
Trustees 6:30pm at the
Roush
m of Ma
POMER
d
Town p
p m at town ha
SYRACUSE
The
Board of Trustees of the
Syracuse
Commur. ty

O'BLENJ3SS

�--

- - - --~--~~--~~~-- ------------------------------------~~.-~

Page 1\.4

~unbnp ~itnes -~entinel

m:imes . ~entlnel

~unbap

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(7 40) 446-2342 • FAX (7 40) 446-3008
www.mydailytrlbune.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Diane Hill

Andrew Carter

Controller

Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director

C(mgress sllall uwke uo fall' respertitrg au
t'sMblislrmeut of religiou, or pro/ribitiug tlrr free
e.wrcise thereof; or abridgi11g tire freedom of
speeclr, or of tire Jlress: or tire right of tl~t• pe~ple
peacet~bl)• to asumble, mrd to petitiou tire
Gol'erumem for '' redress ofgrier•auces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUI:t OPIN I ON

Frightening experience
Dear ~d i t or :
In regard to the shooting that happened in
Dexter last month. I feel compelled to share my
personal experience from that night.
On Aug. 12. as a car (which we later learned
matched the same description as the one uwolvcd
111 the shootmg) came roaring down our dead-end
street at 11· 30 p.m., I had an instant gut feeling of
danger. I am not a fearful or paranoid person - I
used to sleep v. ith m) windows open when I lived
in downtown Cincinnati-- but that mght I had an
in tant. mstinctt\e ''fight or flight" response.
I knev. that, at the speed they were driving. they
were not neighbors. I chose "tli ~ht" and immedi
ately \\COt mstde. but if ever there was a time that
I would have reached for a gun in self-defense,
that night was it. That was e\en before I learned
that this car had shined n spotlight mto my hance's
windshield as he drove past on the main road. just
a fev. mmute betore they drove (followed him)
down our de.1d-end road at a h1gh speed.
-\fter repeated harassment O\er the past three
year&lt;&gt; (m ludm spothghtmg deer and 'itolen propcrt b another roup of )'nuno people m the
e h r ood v. c recent!) 111\ e"&gt;ted m ecunt~
amer
h
"' nd he ed next t he
hou e We h." oot \: f om thts m 1dent '' h1ch
cle I) show&gt;; someone 111 the pa enger ~eat of
th1s car taking a spothght out and shmmg 1t on our
propert) even as the) sped off.
Half an hour later. v.hat is hkely the same car
load of 111d1\ iduah pulled into the Crawford'&lt;; drivev.a). They too ha\e been repeatedly harasc;ed b)
) oun people for a penod of time. Knowmg that
T: ma v.-ru av.oken from a deep sleep b) a carload
ot unknown md1viduals (and of unknov.- n age and
gender . and knov. mg that she v. ac;; alone at home.
1 do not que uon Tania Crawford's decisiOn to
re.u:h tor her "Un an self-defense She called the
pohce more than once that night
We all knov. that li' ing in a rural area v. ith a
small police force means that you're ne-.er exactly sure how long it v.JII take for help to amve.
even when the danger is immediate. J was surpri'ied v. hen I found out that the car contained two
19 year olds and two 14-year olds Sull. I have
been shocked to hear people use the v.ord "kids"
so much. A 19-year old ts an adult. legally and
morall) responsible for one's own actions: the fact
that the ) oung men had 14-year old guls with
them is an entire!) different is ue.
I may sound unsympathetic, but I am in fact a
compassionate. communit) -mmded individual
\\ ho belie\es deeply m the potential of young people to do great things. 1 also full) support Mrs.
Crawford's decision to wield a gun in what clearly was. protecting herself as she and her property
were threatened.
What J personally experienced that mght was a
far cry from mnocent, 'bored teenager" behavior
- it was frightening and threatening, and our
communi!) should not tolerate tt from people of
any age.
Leslie 1/orner

Dexter

~unbap

\n:itnes -~entinel

RecJder 5ervioes
Correction Polley
Our rna n concern 1n all star es IS to
be accurate If yo11 know of an error
1n a story please ca I one of our
newsrooms

Q\l_r ruln.n~.tmbers .arel
U:nbunr • Gallrpohs, OH

(740) 446-2342
Senltncl • Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992-2155
1\ro:umr • Pt Pleasant WV
(304) 675-1333

OYI wtbslteur.e:
U::nbunr • Galhpohs, OH

www.mydallytrlbune.com
Scntmel • Pomeroy. OH
www.mydallysentlnel.com

1\rnrslrr · Pt Pleasant, WV
www.mydallyreglster.com

Our t·!D.Ill.l_ddrHm.m..:
U::nbunr • Gallipolis OH

45631
Penod1cal postage
pa.:l al Gallipolis
Member: The ASSOCIBted
Press, the West V1rg1ma
Press ASSOCIBIIOn, and the
OhiO Newspaper ASSOCiation
Postmaster: Send address
corrccl•ons to lhe Gati,polis
Da•Jy Tribune, 825 Thrrd
Avenue Gallipolis OH 45631

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route
4 weeks ••••••• , ••• '11.30
52 week s ••• • ••••• 1 128.85
Sunday ••••••••••••• 1 1.50
Subscrtbors ShoUld remit In advance
direct 10 tl1e Galtipolls Dally Tribune.
No SlbscriptJonby mal permitted In
areas where home carrier serv1e0 Is
avallablo

mdtnews@mydalfytribune.com

Mall Subscription

Srntmrl · Pomeroy OH

Inside County
. •35 26
. 470 70
52 Weeks
. .1 140 11

mdsnews@ mydallysentlnel.com
i)t!llfltr • Pt Pleasant, WV
mdmews@mydallyreglster.com

(USPS 436-840)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Published every Sunday 825
Third Avenue. Gallipolis OH

12 Weeks
26 Weeks •

Outside County
.156.55
. '113.60
'227 21

12 Weeks .
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

Sunday. Septe mber 12,

2010

Remembering the victims of 9I 11
II 's hard to believe that 11 has
been nine years since the cowardly terrorist attacks of f ucsday.
Sept. 1 I, 200 I. Using four commercial mrhners ac; thetr weapons,
19 men. financed by Osama bin
Laden's radu:al lslam1c tenorist
group al-Qaeda, forever changed
the course of U.S. and world Iustory, as well as the hves of thousands of families.
More than 3.000 people lost
their lives on that terrible mommg l can't 1magine what the loved
nine years ago. The majority died ones ot those who lost their live.:;
when the twin towers of New at the World Trade Center, the
York Oity's World Trude Center Pentagon and that lonely patch of
western Pennsylvania wilderness
crashed to the ground after being
must go through every time they
set ablaze by jet fuel. Nearly 200 tum on the television or radio or
people v.ere killed when a thi1d pick up a newspaper and are
plane rammed into the Pentagon, forced to relive those events My
the seat of U.S. military might in heart nchcs for them. So, too.
our nation's capital. A fourth jet. does my heart ache for the victims
which some analysts believe the themselves.
terrorist-. were planning to use in
Who v.as lost on that day?
another strike on Washmgton. Someone's mom and dad. grandD.C.• was downed in a rural area parents. sons and daughters; proin western Pennyslvama, thanks ductive. positive. noble. worthy
to the heroic actions of the pat;- souls. snuffed out by a mindless
sengers and flight ere\\.
hate so intense that words can't
The terrorist actions of ''9111 ," even begin to describe it.
as we have come to call that fateTo think about the human
ful day. spawned the current mih- potential that was lost on that day
tary campaign in which we as a boggles my mind. Great thinkers
nation find ourselves embroiled 111 and doers, creative men and
Iraq and Afghani~tan. Jt's become women who inspued their famia political hot JX1tato that both lies and friends, good people '' ho
sides of the aisle in Congress have were pillars of their respecti\ e
tossed about, especially during communities; all taken away us.
election cycles.
presumably before their ttme.
"Ground Zero." the site of the Included in that number are the
forn1er World Trade Center, has hundreds of first responders who
also become a political football. lmd do\lin thetr lhes in the effort
with debates ranging from what to sa\e the Jhes of others. Such a
type of memonal to 9/ I I should traged). Such a Jo s.
be erected there to the current flap
How one person or a group of
over a proposed mosque that an people could inflict such evil
Islam1c group wants to build in upon a fellow human betng is
beyond 111) understanding. Even
the area.
To me it's sad that lost in the though I've never served in the
politicizing and the race to grab military. I think I have a basic
headlines are the victim of those understandmg of the reasons
horrific attacks and their famtlies behind armed conflict and \\ar

Andrew
Carter

between nations. There are noble
rcasonc; to take up arms against
another country. and less than
noble reasons. to be sure.
But war. in my trll'm"'"'"'·lr
thinking (and I'm probably
111 thinkmg this way), involves
fonnnl actwn between nations or
military factions who send out
orgnmzed anmes to do battle, not
the cowardly. wholesale slaughter
ot 111nocent people on their way to
work or out for a day of sightseeing in the Big Apple.
I don't v. atch television programs about 9 l I or read much
material about the tragedy. The
few times that I have settled in to
watch a program based on the
events of the. day. J find myself
becoming tcmbly sad; sad for the
victims. their f~milies and the
countless others who have been
affected by the monstrous acts of
a few who were told they were
doing the work of God.
"Jius weekend the news pro
grams and printed pages wiU fea- •
ture many stories about 9 II. We
will all relive the tragedy for a few
dn)s and then go on with our lives.
However, as we mark this
observance of 9/11, let us m
pact with each other in good
From this day forward, may
covenant • with each other as
Americans. as good people. to
always think of those who lost
their lives and those who lost their
loved ones and friends. and
remember to pray for them every
time we think of or hear of or read
about 9 II.
And be)ond that, let us agree to
pray for those who call themselves our enemies. those who
v. ould stnke out at their fellow
human beings m hate. for they are
the ones who need prayer above
all.

(Andrew Carter is the

ma11~ing

ed1101 ofOiuo \'a/lev PubUshi11~.}

FACT CHECK

Obama ~ tone hifts on health care
Bv C ALVIN W ooDWARD

n e \\hen mo t of the changes

4 and CO\erage is
take hold
ASS CA D
umno;ured, costs
extende
er the longer term
\\lll g
President Barack 0
told as control k -.k m.
voters repeated)) dunn the
•••
health care debate that the overOB AMA: .. We took evef) tdca
haul legislation would bnng out there about hm\ to reduce or
down fast-rising health care at least slow the costs of health
costs and save them mone). care over time.''
t-;ow, he's hemmmg and ha\\ ing
T HE FACTS: One idea that
on that.
most experts belie' e \\Ould do the
So far, the Ia" he signed ear- most to control health costs
lier this year hasn't had the directly taxing health benefits
desired effect. An analysis from \\as missing 111 Obama's- plan.
Medicare· s Office of the Opposition from unions and othActuary this week said that the ers was too great. and Obama
nation's health care tab will go himself had campaigned against
up - not do\\ n - through 20 19 the idea.
as a result ofObama's :.v.eeping
Some of the maJor cost conlaw, though the increase is mod- trollers that did make it into the
law - including c1 tax on highest.
Obama offered some caveats \alue insurance plans ~ don't
start until 2018. That tax was
when asked in his new confer
ence Frida&gt;' about the apparent v. ate red dov. n and del a) ed. and
other co t control approaches
~iscrepancy be tv. een what he
promised and "hat's actuali) also softened atter opposition
happening so far. On severn! from hospitals and other interest
other topics. too. his rhetoric groups.
Health
spending
alread)
fell short of a fu ll accounting.
accounts
for
about
17
percent
of
A look at some of the claim:.
at his nev. s conference and how the econom) and IS projected to
grow to nearl) 20 percent in
they compare with the facts·
OBAMA: Sa1d he never 2019.
•••
expected to extend insurance CO\OBAMA: ··so these policies
crage to an additional 31 million
people "for free." He added that of cutting taxes for the wealthi"we've m:tde huge progress" if est Americans. l)f stripping
medical intlatlon could be awn) regulations that protect
brought down to the level of over- consumers. ntnning up a record
all inflation. or somev. here slight- surplus to a record deficit tho-;e policies finnll) culminated
1) above that.
THE FACTS: Those claims in the worst financial crisis
may be supported 111 the fine print "e · ve had since the Great
of the plan he pitched to Congress Depression.''
T H E FACTS: The president
and a skeptical public months
ago. But they were rarely heard probabl) meant the broader ecoback then. " My proposal \\ould nomic crisis and not the meltbring down the co~t of health care do\\ n of the hnancial industl")
for millions - fu nulies. business- when he talked about the "tuu111
True enough.
' es and the fedeml government," cial cnsts.
George
W.
Bush
entered office
he declared in !\larch.
Last August he predicted: "The "ith a $236 billion budget sur
American people are going to be plus in 200 I. and in January
glad that we acted to change an 2004. before Obama was sworn
unsustainable :.ystcm so that more into ofl icc, the Congresswnal
people have coverage, we're Budget Oft icc projected the
bending the cost cun e. and we're deficit for the fiscal ) ear 200Y to
be $1.2 trillion.
getting insur:mcc refomlS."
But the surpluses the govemO n Fn uay, he conceded:
" Uending the cost cur\e on health ment fore sa" in 200 I "ere
cure is hnrd to do.'' 1be goal : based on a bubble econom) that
''Slowly bring do\\ n those costs.'' was bound to burst. And the
The White I louse contends that defic it Obnma inhaited was
nit hough health care costs \\ill only partly trom Bush's fiscal

&amp;

E RICA W ERNER

..

polictcs.
•
Mostly it \\as a result of a
reces ion that sapped tax revenues, increased the costs of
safet)
net
programs
and
demanded more government
spending to stunulate the economy. As recently as 2007, the
budget deficit was just $161.5
billion The current annual
deftctt is nov. an estimated $1.5
trillion.

•••
OBAMA: Asked how he can
lecture Afghan President Han1id
Karzai about corruption v. hen it's
fueled in part b) U.S. aid dollars.
Obama ~aid; 'T ve said to my
national secunt) team ... Let's be
consb.tent in terms of how we
operate across agencies. Let's
make c:;ure that our efforts there
are not seen as somehow giving a
"ink and a nod to corruption."
THE FACTS: While acknowledging the c:;ituation is mes.
Obama seemed to minimize it.
"Arc there going to be occasions where we look and see that
some of our folks on the ground
ha\ e made compromises v. ith
people who are known to have
engaged in com1ption?" he asked.
"You know. \\e're. reviewing all
that eonstantl) and there may be
occasions where that happens.''
The l ' nited States spends more
than $100 billion annually in
Afghani ... tnn. the world's secondpoorest nation and one of the
most corrupt. U.S. officials
acknO\\ ledge that a significant
percentage of the U.S. bankroll
enriches shad) chamcters even as
it nul) finance \\Orth) projects. or
is stolen outnght.
The CIA hn::. paid Afghan warlords and po" er brokers for years.
rei) ing on them a" infonnants and
as le\erage in the country's inter
nat ethnic and tribal sq
Intelligence officials say
are cheap msurance. but development ofttcials nnd diplomats say
the mone) supports a culn1re of
bribcf).
Obama pledged to keep up
pressure on Karzai. The Afghan
leader recent!) intef\ened to free
a presidential aide arrested on
suspidon of soliciting a bribe.
U.S. im estigators played a central
role in lingering the aide.

�Sunday, Se pte mber·

12, 2010

W.Va. advisory.
panel endorses
~.s. 35 toll plan
CHARLES1 ON, W.Vn. {AP) - An advisory
panel has endorsed the str1te 's plnn to put toll plazas
on a segment of U.S. 35 to provtde fundmg to complete the highway's upgrade to four-Jnne status.
The Route 35 Local Advisory Committee voted
unanimously Thursday to endor e tolls of $2 for
passenger vehtcles and $8 for commercial trucks.
the Charleston Gazette reported. "The proposal was
presented by the tate Parkways Authorit) and the
Dhision of Highway .
The proposal calls for constructmg toll plazas at
the north and south ends of the 31.88-mi le section
through Putnam and Mason countie . Money from
the tolls would be used to upgrade the final 14.6rnile stretch to the Ohio River.
The road ts a major highway connecting
Interstate 64 to Ohio. and toll are een ns the only
way to complete the upgrade.
Stnte highwa) engmeer Marvm Murphy said
West Virginia only received about 200 million of
stimulus fund for road construction statewide.
Completing the U.S. 35 prOJeCt is expected to cost
$190 million. More than $450 million has been
, spent so far to upgrade the road.
The state has apphed ior supplemental funding
from the stimulus 1 1GER grant program, but
said that progrum is only awarding a total
million for all projects nationally. He said
if the stnte recetved a grant. it wouldn't be
enough to complete the upgrade.
"I think people are res1gned to the fact that we
need thi road, and the onl) way we're e\er going
to get it is as n toll road,'' aid committee member
Charles Lnnham.

Citizen Corps to discuss
pets in emergencies
GALLIPOLIS - "Pet in Emergencies" \\ill be
the topic of di cussion at the next GaiJin Count)
Citizen Corps meeting. planned for noon on
Thesday, Sept. 14 at the Courtstde Bar and Grill m
Gallipolis. Those who want to order lunch should
arrive at 11:30 a.m.
The fall Community Emergency Response Team
(CERT) training will nlso be discussed at
Thesday's meeting. CERT training provides 18
hours of free instruction in preparing for and
responding to home and community emergency
situations.
The advanced course CERT Animal Response
just been de .. eloped and may be offered m the
re for tho e who have completed the initial
training The course mcludes information
about dome uc and farn1 animals. preparation and
precautions to take in emergenc) sitOations and
sheltering animals during dt a ters.
For information, call Cath) Clark, Cit11.en Corps
president, at (740) 446-7943, or e-mail
cwclark a suddenlink.net.

Green Twp. Trustees
meet Monday
CENTENARY - The Green Township Trustees
have changed the time for thetr September monthly meeting• The meeting will begin at 6 p.m. on
Monday, Sept. 13 and wi II be held at the Galli a
Academy High School. 2855 Centenary Road.
Room 0080.

Military support
group meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The River Cities Milita!')
Support Group will meet at 7 p.m., Tue day. Sept.
n the up tairs meeting room at VFW Po t 4464
Third Ave. in Gallipolis. For intonnation. call
•
(740) 245-5589 or (740) 441-7454.

Syracuse food pantry
closed Tuesday
SYRACUSE - ·n1e Food Pantry's visit to the
Syrac1,1se Community Center 1\Jesday has been
cancelled due to the emergeny surgef) of its director, Lisa Roberts.

Basket games Tuesday
POMEROY - 11te Meigs Htgh School Athletic
Boosters wtll hold basket games Tuesda) beginning at 6.30 p.m. in the high chool cafeteria. The
money rmsed will go to support the high school
athletic program. Doors open nt 5:30 p.m

ESC governing board
RIO GRANDE The Gallia-Vinton
Educational Service Center governing board will
at 5 p.m., Tuesday, Sept. 14 in Wood Hall .
131 on the Umver ity of Rio Grande campus.
is the board's regulnr monthly meeting.

Invasive plant workshop
MERCERVILLE l'he Iron Furnace
Cooperative Weed Mnnage1~1~nt '!'eam is offering a
free Invasive Plant ldenllftcatlon and Control
Workshop on Wednesday, Sept. 15. The workshop
·u meet from 5:30-7:30 p.m. nt South Gallia High
hool 55 Old II annan Trace Road in Mercerville.
'ftc regi~ter, contact Annemarie Smith at (740) 589~14 or e-mail Annemarie.Smtth@dnr.state.oh.us.

r

l,om er oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

f1&gt;unbap

Cl:tmr~-f&amp;entmrl

• Page As

Obituaries
Delta Mae Phillips
Delta Mac Ph11lips, 94,
of Crown CitX., pn sed
away on
r hursday.
September 9. 2010, at the
Holzer Senior Care
Center.
She was born August
26. 1916. in Lawrence
County, Uh10, daughter
of the late Lee Taylor and
Ruby
Ransbottom
Hagem1an . Delta wa~
married to Cecil Pete
Phillips in 1935 and he
preceded her m death
She was a homemaker.
Survsving are her daughter, Virginia Stapleton of
Crown City: three grandchildren. Allan (LOIS)
Stapleton of Gallipolis. Judy Well of Crown City,
Betty {Jeff) Belcher of McArthur: one sister, Juanita
Miller of Florida; many great grandchtldren and great
great grandchsldren.
In additson to her parent and husband, she is preceded in death by t&lt;Yin sons; a granddaughter, Lois
Martin; two brothers. Memll Hagerman and Bobby
Hagerman; five sisters, Velma McCall, Sherline
Bog~s. Pauhne Sluclds. Mary Sh1elds, and Evelyn
Adkins.
Services wtll be I p.m .. Monday, September 13,
20 I 0. at the Willis J·uneral Home with Rev. lbdd
Bowers and Rev. James llall officiating. Burial will
follow in Mt. Zwn Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home on Sunday, September 12. 2010, from
6-8 p.m.
• Pallbearers will be David Allan Stapleton, Jeff
Wells. John Wells. Terry Stapleton, Nick Stapleton,
Doug Martin. und Mitchell Waugh.
Please vi;;tt \\Ww.wlllisfuneralhome.com to send email condolences.

Linda Diane Kemper Bumett

Susan West, Bill (Susan) Davis, Jim (}\ay) Davis,
Karen McDade a half-brother Shane Davts and halfsisters Amy dohn) Saunders, and Missy (Casey)
Staten: He also has several nieces and nephews all of
who loved him very much.
Funeral services will be held on Monday September
13, 2010, ut 2 p.m. at Waugh-Halley Wood Funeryu
Home m Gatfipolis. Burial will follow at Mound Hill
Cemetery. Calling hours are Sunday, September 12,
2010, from 2-4 p.m. and 6-? P·~·
.
Pallbearers will be C harhe Bo&lt;llmer, Dave
Burnette, Roger Clark, Mark Davis, Dwayne Will and
John f•mrick.
.
Jn lieu of flowers. please donate to The Leu~em1a
and Lymphoma Society. 2300 Wall Street, SUJte H,
Cincinnati, OH 45212.
An online guest registry is available at waugh-halley-wood.com.
Glen's family would like to extend a heartfelt
thanks to the staff of St Mary's Oncology 6th floor
unit. Also we would like to thank Dr Gerrit Kimmey
and Vickie, Nurse Practitioner for the exce11ent care
that was given to Glen.

Charlene Davis Batey
Charlene Davis Batey, 66, Middleport, Ohio,
passed peacefully from surgical complications early
Friday evening, September 10, 2010, at Morrow
County Hospital Extended Care Facility in Mount
Gilead, Ohio.
Born September 7, 1944, she was the daughter of
the late Dr. Joseph J. Davis and Kathleen Bush Davis
of Middleport, Ohio. As a 1962 graduate of
Middleport High School. she received a Bachelor of
Arts m Apparel Design from Rhode Island School of
Design in 1967. Upon graduation from RISD,
Charlene studied fashton design in Paris, France, at
the L'Ecole de Chambre de Ia Syndicate de Ia Couture
Parisienne.
Surviving are sons, Shawn (Tiffiny) Batey,
Prairieville, La.; Stephen (Kristi) Batey, Middleport,
Ohio: grandchildren, Madison and Mackenzie Batey,
Prairieville. La.. and Stephen Batey, Middleport
Ohio; sisters, Diana Fisher, Lexington, Ohio: Elaine
Preece, Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.. and Joyce Davis,
Gainesville, Fla. She is also survived by three
nephews, Phillip (Stephen}t:&gt; Swi~her, Eric Swis~er.
Pittsburgh. Pa.: Randall (Knsty) F1sher, Strongsville,
Ohio. and their chtldren.
Charlene Jed a varied life ranging from the owner of
the French City Fabnc Shoppe in Gallipolis, Ohio, to
a fashion destgner for some of the larger fashion
houses in New York City. She designed for Albert
Nipon, Maggie Boutique (Maggie London), Adrianna
Papell, Ltd. and Virgo (VT Fashions). Charlene
returned to Middleport in 1997. In the past several
years, she devoted much of her ~ime to her ~andso~,
Stephen, and operated a small mternet destgn business.
Visitation will be held on Tuesday, September 14
from 5-8 p.m at the Anderson McDaruel Funeral
Home in Middlepon A funeral !\ervice will take place
on Wednesday morning. September 15, at 11 a.m. at
the funeral home.
She will be interred in Ktrkland Cemetery, Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
Online condolences may be sent to the family at
www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Lmda Diane Kemper
Burnett, 59. Vinton,
passed a\\ ay at I :30 a.m.,
Thursday. September 9,
2010. at the home of her
sister, Brenda Park. Born
Apnl 22, 1951. m the
Morgan Center commumty, she was the daughter of Everett Kemper.
who survhes in Vmton,
and the lnte Daisy
Annabelle
Rus ell
Kemper, who preceded
her in death on December
31, 2002. She was employed at the Holzer Senior
Care Center, and attended of the Morgan Center
Chn tian Holines Church.
In addition to her father, she is survived by one
daughter, Sabrina (Du tin) Pendleton, of Vinton: two
sons, Paul (Mary Jane) Burnett of Missouri and Sam
(Lola) Burnett of Rockwell, North Carolina; a sister,
Brenda (John) Park of Bidwell; a brother, Sam
Kemper of Vinton: II grandchildren, McKenzie,
All)ce, Daniel, Rebekah, Sa,annah Burnett and Leah
Burnett, Danella Burnett. S) h ia Burnett. Trenton
Burnett, Ashtin Chtldress and Bradle) Childre s: a
'ery special friend, Merrill Holle) of Gallipolis; and
Delbert D. Smith. 51. Reedsville, went home to be
a very special nephew. Aaron Mulholand of Bidwell.
In keepmg \\ ith Lmd~ 's wi he t~ere \\ i.ll be ~o with the Lord Sept. 4, 2010. at his re idence surroundcalling hours. A Celebrauon of the L1fe of Lmda will ed by family and friends after a long, courageous battake place at the Cremeen l·unernl Home. Gallipolis. tle with cancer. He was born Sept. 30, 1958. in
on Sunda), September 12. 201~. at 2 P·!ll· with ~er Canton. Ohio, son of Linda (Teny) Jacobs and the late
uncle Pastor Ted Russell oftictntmg. A pmate famtly Delbert W. Smith. He was a self-employed auto
interment \\ill take place in the Morgan Center mechanic and had a great love for his cars.
He was also preceded in death by two infant sibCemetery following the service Expres ions of sympathy may be sent to the family by visiting \\ ww.cre- lings. Linda Yvonne and Rkky Smith; grandparents,
Ervin R. Smith and Thelma M. Smith; one aunt, Ellen
meensfunernlhomes.com.
Bennett: one uncle, Charles J. Smith; and one niece,
Amanda Nelson.
In add1tion to his wife, Lorri A. Smith. he is sur' ived by a daughter. Christina (Matthe\\) Barnhart;
Glennard f·o ter Da' is.
one granddaughter. Layna Ann Barnhart; three sisters,
56, died peacefully at St.
Brenda (Dale) Web ter of Senecaville, Tami
Mary's Hosplta~ on
Bennett/Michael 1el on of Guysville, and Karen
Thursda). September 9
(Dave) Ford of Wilmont; one tepbrother, Mark
after a long, hard fought
(Jenna) Frease: t\\O stepsister • Tammy (Brian)
battle \Hth lymphoma.
Dalton and Sherry Frea e; and several nieces and
Glen \\a a 1971 gradunephews and great niece and nephews.
ate of Gnlha Academ)
There
be no calling hours or funeral service.
H1gh School where he
Arrnn!?ements by White-Schwnnel Funeral Home in
played football and ..., as
Coolville. You may ign the guest book at
on the Ali-SEOAL Squad
\\Ww.white- chwarzelfuneralhome.com.
m 1970. He married hts
soul mate in 1974. Susan
Marie Tanner. In 1979.
Glen went to \\Ork for
Ohio Valley Electric Compan) where he continued to
work as a unit supervisor until h!s illness,. H~ wa_~ a
former volunteer fircf1~htcr w1th Galhpohs f1re
Department and an nct1ve member of the Chri:-t
Eptscopal Church in Point Pleasant.
Glen ..., as preceded in. death by his m~)ther. ~nn
Davi and his beloved w1fe, Susan. Glen IS surv1ved
by hie: loving children, John and Kristin (Mike)
~ttltbap
-~entittel
Tucker and grandchildren, Andre~·· Kaylee .and
Caden Tucker. whom he adored. He IS also surv1ved
by his devoted fianc~e and hi \Cry best friend, Linda
Subscribe • 446-2342 or 992-2155
Culpepper. his father. Jess Da\ j , e\ eral brother:- and
si ters, Pegg) (Lee) l,atterson. Kitty (Bill) Griffith.

Delbert D. Smith

Cilennard Foster Davis

''ill

Serving Gallia &amp;
Meigs counties
ncitnes

Subscribe today
Gallia • 446-2342
Meigs • 992-2155

Sternwheel
Dinner Cruise

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

l}.{cCry-%Jore "'
'Funera{ IJ{omes

Scptt.•mhcr 16th • 7-9 pm

Hoarding at Pmncrny Lm cc at 6:30 pm
S110nsonld "' I he l,mllt!i of the Meigs Co. Republinm t•arl)

$20.00 Per Person (Onl) 150 tickets a\ailable)

.

I

�PageA6

j)unbap ~imes -ienttnel

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Party on,
Racine!
Racme's Second Annual
Party m the Park got
underway on Friday
Star M11l Park wh1ch
packed w1th amusement
ndes and games as well
as craft and food vendors. Students from
Southern local were
treated to a f1eld trip to
the fest1val With many
choosing to take a spin
on the carniVal ndes. The
festiVal wrapped up after
a free concert by Bucky
Covmgton who took the
stage at 6'15 p m. on
Saturday. Sept 11 More
photos of the festiVal w111
appear m the Sept. 14
ed1t1on of The Dally
Sentinel.
BethSerg~

Local Stocks
AEP CN't Sl·)
Akzo

36 63

(NASDAQ)

%85
Ashl.md Inc (~'t SE)
48 89
B1g I ot (~'aS~)

3105
Bob I van !NASDAQ)
27 12
Bor Warner (N'I SE.l
4638
C'entur) Alum
AS
DAQ)
II 27
Chnmp10n &lt;NASDAQ&gt;
I 35
Chamung Shop

DAQ)

(~AS

3 50

Cny Holdmg I~ASDAQI
28 50
Collm IN) Sl
S 55

DuPont (NYSl l 4.! 29
US Bank tN'r Sl l
.,.., 6
(Jen 1 tnc 1NY h
I 9
H
)'

p M
9 6

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
Sunda): Pa111) unn) v.nh n h1oh near 78
Sundrt) ight: Mo tl) clear. '' 1th ,, lov. around 54
Monda): Sunn). '' 1th a high near 82
Monclrt) Night: Pn111) cloudy. '' 1th a lO\\ around 53.
'1\Icsdn): Mo tl) sunny. ,., ith a high ncar 81
'Jucsdn) Night: Panly cloud). w1th a low around 54.
\\cdncsda): Mostly sunn), \\Jtlt a h1gh near 78.
Wedncsdn)
ight: Partly cloudy, w1th a IO\\
around 53
Thursda): Pnnly sunny. w1th a h1gh near 78
Thursda) Night: !VIostl) cloudy. ''ith a low around 55
Frida): A chance of shov.ers Mostly cloud), wtth
a htgh nectr 77. Chance of precJpltatJOn IS 30 percent

WITH THE
ONE THING
YOU NEED.

•
Holzer Senior Care Center
p

Rethink Possiblfr

nd
\ ed

••

2
yt

Hol r S nlor C
380 Colon I Dnv

Bidwell Oh o
45614
Tours ltght Rcfrcshmcn
Ent rtamment w II b pr

~

•
•
sw

~ lf!d ~
by
llld ftdml
&amp;UlSlil:lt:lU Oft Anl 11ltw 1m Ill 1101 11m 01 ~ ~

•

�uttbap tJZ(nt

Bl

ntfnel

PORTS

Sunday, September 12, 2010

·~========================================

Southern shuts down Golden Eagles, 16-0

l.ocAL

led wire to wire
alter the1r opcnmg pos
~eo,..,mn. \\h1c.h nllowed
Bll PRE. Oh10
the Purple tnd Gold to
I he o,trcak contmues. not onl) hand fust yet~r
And that 'o; JUSt fine b) coach Kyle W1cklme
the Southern f,uthful
his tJr~t HlrSit)' \\ II
The I ornadoes made but alo;o n.IJ&gt; a four
a 6 0 lead hold up for gnmc regular season
three quarters before lo 111 streak for the
eruptm for 10 pomt
program
do\\ n the stretch to
1 he host Golden
claun a comincmg 16-0 J·c~gle&lt;&gt; {0-3. 0 I). on the
\ICtOr) O\ er ho'it Belpre other hand. dropped a
111 ,, Week ~ Tn Valley program worst
15th
Conference
Hocking strn1uht •rid1ron dcc1
Dl\ is ion matl hup 111 '\lOll m the1r m.lllgural
Washington C'ount)
I \ (' Hockmg cunte'&gt;t.
The
vis1tu1g Belpre hc~d pre\ musl)
I ornadoeo; (I 2. I I served ns u member of
IV(' flocking) ~cored a the •t VC Ohio J)i, is ion
o;enson-high m poinh before this season.
BY BRYAN W ALTERS
CfiiYOA 't'TR BLN COM

6
PotPlca

16

,md

the lr rst hc~l1 .111d on
into the the end of the
th1rd &lt;Juarter. but the
I ornndoeo; found their
rhythm again c:.hortl)
after the start of the
fourth qu.trter.
On the f1rst play of
the
fourth.
Danny
Ramthun booted a 20
Ramthun
T. Barton
yard field goal
gl\
lll£ Southern a two pos
Southern took the c:.ec;'-JOn 9-0 ad\ nntnr.e
openmg possessiOn of "ith 11.56 lett in regu
the game 57 ) ards to Jatron.
pa) d1rt. as T) Ier Barton
Enc Bun,ml came up
gave the guests a 6-0 '' 1th an Interception on
advantage after a one- the cn .. umg Belpre posyard run al the 8:25 session. then Bul7ard
mark of the first quar- finished off the drive
ter.
with an e1ght-) ard scor
That score would ing run nt the 7: II mark
remain the same the rest
of

making it a 16-0
contest
Belpre took its final
drive of the night down
to the SHS 25-yard line,
but Trenton Deem came
a" a) "1th an interception to seal the dea1 on
the trlllmph.
Southern outgained
the ho.-.ts m total ) ards
of offenc;e b) a 195-165
count, including a 70)ard difference (169991 111 ru-.hing yards.
"I he 'Doec; nlso claimed
n 13-9 edge in first
dO\\ m, and finished the
night
plus-3
an
turnovers - including
goin • the entire game

Please see SHS, Bl

Blue Devils
stay unbeaten,
blast Rockets
B Y STEVE EBERT

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

Rebels fall
short against
Trimble
Dave Harris/photo

Meags Char e Barrett (21) breaks through the
by a score of 41 0

d

r day evenrng s g

R1ver Va ley Meags won

Maruaders take early lead to beat River Valley
e' n 1 n .
but II \'icl
the pi }S m
bet\\CCn
CHESHIRE. Ohio
that made Mc1gs opened up a 20-0
the dJffer- f1rst period lead and
em:e as the coasted to n 41-0 win
South O\er River Valley in
Dan. Matney G n I I i a non conference football
Rebels ( 1- actiOn Friday night at
2, 1-1 TVC Chcshtre. The" in is the
Hocking) Marauders s1xth in a
fell
to ro\\ O\ er the Ga1lia
1rimble in County
neighbors.
1ercer
Me1 s O\\ns a 14-3
Hlle, Oh10.
b) a core mark 0\ era II in the
series.
of 54 22.
Me1 s l·acked off to
frimble
start
the contest and
(1-2. 1-1
forced
the Raiderc:. to a
r v c
km I receh ed the four and out • 1 he
opemn k1~koff of the Marauder:. then put
game .md be{'an to together ,, se\ en pia).
march do"n the f1eld
into Rebel terntor)
1) Jer D) Ia carried four
wnes on tl1e opemng
dnvc by the Tomcc~ts, but
B Y GARY C LARK
fumbled on the fourth
PORTS OORRE.SPONDENT
carry. A rccO\ er) by
South Galha's Jacob
MASON. WVu.
Wh1te put the Rebels Isaac I ee led the
beginmng their openmg Wahama White Falcons
dnve on their O\\ll fi\e.
on .t third quarter o;coring
On the fm.t p1.1) from ns~ault to help gt-.:e coach
~crimmngc.
Dann) l•d Cromie)\ Bend Area
Matney took the b.11l 95 grid team it econd con
yards for the fmt score sc~utive
Tri-\nile)'
of the game at the 10:26 Conference "m fridn)
mar~ of the fir~t quarter.
night following a 41-14
J'he two po111t comer- triumph over the \ 1siting
SJOil run toiled. leavin~ Eastern E.t~le . The
the Rebels "ith the 6 0 Hocking Dn 1sron conte t
lead.
"ns pin) cd before a
It did not t.tke Trimble large fathering. at the
long to answer, "nh Mnson Count) school.
I cc ran tor 159 ) ards
Au~tin Ke1th taking the
koff 76 ) ardc; for the m 10 carrie "hile scors first score of the mg on runs of 17. 80 and
contc t. An ext1 a point four ) ards us Wahamn
kick by Jon Stevens gtl\ e erased n 14-13 halftime
the Tomcats the 7 () lend. deficit "ith a third quarconng
pree.
South GaiJin began its ter
next posseo;sJOn at Its A111hnny Grimm added "
46 &gt;ard J l) gallop "hile
0\\ n 25 &gt;:ud Ia nc. Fnced
with a fourth and one. nmnmg for 113 ) ar&lt;ts in
the Rebels took ad\ an- 14 tnes '" ith R) an Lee
tage of n 1 nmhle penalty .md Trenton Gibb" cap
to earn a new set of ping the rnlcon~ huge
offensh e mght "ith a 15

67 &gt;ard dri\ e and
scored \\hen Cameron
Bohn hit Z,tch Sayre
from 22 &gt;~mh out The
l\lck \\ u-. nn ~ood, but
Me1g" held a 6 0 lead
"1th 7:33 left 111 the
penod
Metgs
held
the
Ra1der!". on a fourth and
one and their 0\\11 48.
the muroon .tnd gold
then dro' e 51 ) nrds 111
nine pl.t)., '' tth Bolin
hookmg up "Hh Colton
Ste,., art from four) ard
out Th1 tunc C'hnstwn
Mugrage "ns true on
the e11;tra pomt for a
13 0 Meigs ad\ttnt.tge
It took JUSt se\ en sec
ond for the Marauders
to dent the coreboard

a mn, on the fir~t pia)
after the Mc~rauder
touchdo\\ n. Zach Sa) re
stepped m front of a
Jacob Bro" n pass and
rnced untouched 32
)ards for the score.
Mugragc added the
extra points and Meigs
"as on top 20-0 wath
just 27 seconds left in
the tlr t penod.
fhe Marauders \\Cnt
into the locker room
"1th a 27-0 ad' antage
''hen Jeffer) Roush
scored from 10 )ards
out. Mugrage added the
extra pomts at the 6:06
mark of the first half.
Meig recei\ ed the
second halt k1ckoff and
"put together a mine

phi). 67 yard dfi\C \\ 1th
Rou h goin the fm,\1
three &gt;ard&lt;; tor hts e~
ond o;core of the 111 ht
Mugrng.e added the
extra points at the 7:59
mark
lor
a
34 0
Marauder ad' antnge.
Meigc; fuHShcd the
scoring \\ith 9:1X lett in
the game "hen Billy
Duvall scored lrom 36
)ards out Mugrnge \\as
once ngam true w llh the
e tra point'&gt; .md 1e1gs
\\as on top 41-0
Rh cr \all e) threat
ened late in the game.
drh ing to the Marauder
fi, e ) ard line. But time
ran out on the Raiders.

Please see Meigs, Bl

Big second half lifts Wahama past Eagles

Please see Rebels, Bl

,

Please see Eagles, Bl

GALLIPOLIS. Ohio
- Three weekb and 3-0!
You have to go back to
the pia) off season of
2006 since a Blue De\ il
football team \\On three
~ames tn a ro\\, but that
rs exactl) ''here GAHS
fmd'&gt; themsehes follo\\mg a "lights out" 41-21
conque~t of the Wellston
Golden Rockets ( 1-2) on
Memonal F1eld Friday
C\Cni
ruml \ers and pecial
team pia) s tor both teams
led to mo t ot the scoring
m the game
A Blue
De' il fumble \\as recovered b~ Well~ ton's Ernest
Bro'' n on the GA 38 and
1t onl) took the Rocket's
fiH! pia) s to score: a
three yard Ja) len Prater
pass to Mich.tel Gre) in
the back of the end zone
and follo\\m~ the Bmd
M11ler kick 1t was 7-0
'i&lt;:.itor~ '' ith 8 36 to go in
the fir.t quarter.
It marked the first time
m the &gt;oung ~eason that
the Blue De' its \\ere
behmd tn a game. so tt
remamed to ee hO\\ the\
"ould respond to a little
ad\ er&lt;.Jt)
Re pond the) d1d in the
lonn of " ten pin). 57
) nrd dm e: the final 13
) .trdo; negotiated "hen
QB Ethan Moore hooked
up "ith Joel Johnson,
and after a successful
1\ ler Hannon k1ck the
score \\ ~~~ tied m 7.
The Academy defense
stif1ened ns the ~econd
quarter unfolded. and folIo" mo a Well ton three
and out. the De' ib et up
hop on their O\\ n 43 and
fnsh10ned a econd 57
)nrd dri\e, thi one takmg ctght plc1)
\\ ith
Brandon la\lor' burst
up the middle from 16
yard out hitung pa) d1rt
The Hannon kick made it
14 7 and GAHS seemed
to be m control.
' The Golden Rockets
next dm e stalled at their
O\\ n 39 and then a bizarre
et of circumstances
complete!) turned the
~ame 111 the De' il'~
la\Or.

Bryan Walters/photo

Wahama quarterback Trenton Gibbs (11) delwers a strH arm to Eastern defender
Tyler Hendnx, rtght, durang a f1rst quarter run at Buchtel Stadtum an Mason W Va

'

\\ ellston lined up ''ith
the QB in the shotgun as
it they \\ere going for It
but Prater took the snap
and attempted a quick
kH.:k.
GA'
Aaron
Gmsmger broke into the
backfield and blocked

Please see Devils.•B:S

�~--------------------~--------------------------------~~------~------------------ -------------·--~--~------~--~---~

Page U2. • ~unbill' CE:mtrs ~rnhnrl

Sunday, September 12., 2.010

Pomeroy • Middlep011 • Gallipolis

Meigs

SHS

from Page Ul

from Page 81

Rh er Vnlle) ha,n't
ored lllCt! the fm.t
halt of the1r fi'l' t contest
&lt;~nd thus has a I 0 penod
scoring drought.
Jeffer) Roush led the
Marauders
on
the
ground '' ith 154 ) .1rd~
in I~ tries "Jth two
touch do" ns.
C h.1rhe
Barrett added 66 111 16
carrie~: Billy Duvull
added f1\e c.tme~ for
39 yards.
Bolin \HI., thtce ol
four tn the ntr for 64
yard and' n pa1r of
touchdown~
Barrett
had one catch tor l I
) ard&lt;., Sa) re one for 22
and a core .tnd ( olton
Ste\\ art ont&gt; lnr four
yard and n score
On
defense
the
Marauder
held the
Raider.., to onl) n
) ards m 25 tr1eo; for .111
a-..ern~e of I 3 )Hrds n
carr). Metgs nlso h.1d
the one 'lntcrcept10I1 b)
Bryan Walters/photo
Sayre and a blllCked
Rtver Val ey quarterback Jacob Brown prepares to pass the ball as he IS chased
punt in the fourth pen
by Me1gs' Colton Stewart dunng the second hat! of Fnday's game in Cheshire,
od by Dustin J ee
'T m proud of the OhiO
kid's
torught.' M1nford team next for 57 ) trd..,, Brtn\ none The) arc not a athletic
for 13. Jacob Hefner ''" 1n the past. but they
1arnuder (0,1ch ~1ke \\Cek
K) le Bro\\ n led the one for e1 ht and Au tin are '&gt;till ,, good team.
Chance) o;a1d 'The)
Me1gs is no\\ 2 I and
plnyed well and the) R uder on the round \VhobrC) one for four
\\
1ll
travel to Mmford
'Me1g
\\Cit
"1th
29
)
ard
m
II
played hard, 1t '" rent
Jared next V\eek to pia) the
trtes Patnck \\ 1lhnm., \.:Un hed.'
to get another \\'"
11 ht)
Minford
McClelland .,a1d ufter
The) are gettm • better .tdded 14 m f1' e tnes
•·alcono;. RJ\ er Valle)
every
\\eek.
but Bro\\ n "'· s 'iiX ol II m the , me 'It 1 a t)pl
cnl M1ke Chance) tc till. drops to I 2 and the)
Mondn) '' e need to get the a1r '' 1th an mtercep
back to \\Ork and et t1on for 82 }ards fre) they re well prepdred, "111 hoo;t f·ort Fl)e next
oble had three catche.., and qu1lk off the lme
read)
for n good
'' eek.

without a giveaway.
Barton led the SHS
rushmg attack with 108
yards on 17 carries, followed by Ramthun with
41 yards on 13 totes.
Buzznrd also added 32
rushing yards on eight
attempts.
Ramthun was 3-of-9
passing for 26 yards.
throwing zero touchdma. ns or interceptions.
Buzzard had one catch
for 21 yards. while
Barton had two grabs
for five yards.
Belpre's
Erik
Waderker had 103 rushing )ards on 24 carries.
• wh1le l'yler Watkins
added 14 yards on four

8ry11n Walters/photo

Eastern quarterback Brayden Pratt (3) es sacked by Wahama's Tyler K1tchen dunng the f1rst quarter of Friday
evemng s Tn Valley Conference game m Mason, W.Va
from behind effort... w1th Hendnx for the t\\o pomt third &lt;;trmght, one play
\\ahanl&lt;l turnm • both con.,.ero;1on to "1\C the dri\e \\lth a four yard
l a[lle
m1o;cue'
mto va~IIOI"t a 14 7 lead w 1th burst mto the end zone
3 3~ lett m the half.
'' 1th Wnmsle) knocking
pomts
from Page Hl
A ntn
\\ nhama do\\ n the extra point kick
Folio" mg n coreles
fif&lt;\t penod ( a tem got ane&gt;\\ered the Eastern to g1ve the\\ h1te Falcon
yard Jaunt and a one ) nrd on the board ''hen Brad
~.:ore \\lth another long n 33-14 conte t with
plunge
dO\ e flus tune cm enn • I :07 remaming m the
Stone re~o\ered n fum
The w 111 ' ' as the sec
bled WHS punt at the 44 )Urds 111 12 pia}' the third quarter.
ond in a TO\\ for Wah,una White r tlcon 16 ) ard f.1lcons b,tuled the clock
The tina) Falcon touchas the Bend Area team lme. One pia} later and the E.tgle dctcno;e do'' n came earl) in the
mo' ed 1ts season record I ao;tern struck pn) d1rt before 1 renton G1bb
finn I
stan?a
when
to 2-0 O\ emil and 2 0 when Khnt C'onnel')· capped the sene' "ath a Anthon) Grimm broke
inside the TVC Hock1ng to ed a 16 )nrd halfback one yard run '' uh ·06 sc\ era I tackles on his
[)i\ i wn. htstern sa\\ tt'&gt;
pass to K) le Connel) for remamlllg 111 the first \\3) to a 46 )ard sconng
2010 recotd dip to I 2 on the game~ first points halt The pmnt utter k1ck jaunt. An Isaac Lee to
the season while the l11c PAl kick failed and \\US blocked g1\111g Hijah Honaker pass for
Eagles fall to I I in con- the Earle led b) a 6 0 ~.~..tcm o 14 13 lcc~d at the't\\O point conversion
ference activity
marrm with 10·50 to the half\\ay pomt of the condudcd the Ma~on
En~tern suffered n ec
Count) teams sconng
game
pl.ty in tht• openinn half.
ond hnlf collap'&gt;e after
1 he ccond hnlf '"as nil aciJHt)' and sealed the
Wnh,un.t anc.\\ered the
thro\\ ing a care 1nto the uutml E.l'&gt;tern touch
Wah am a ao; the While 41 14 \\ hite Falcon , icWhite Falcons dunng the do\\ n b) marl hmg 74 l-alcon offense cnught toT).
gnd outmgr. fir:;t 24 yard 111 mne play to 11re. I ee got th1ngs
\\ahama dominated the
mmutes. OffenSI\ el) the gam 11 first lead of the rollm · '' 1th 1111 80 )\trd gam eo; I mal stati&lt;&gt;tic
l agleo:;
ut1l11ed the Ill 'ht lsa&lt;~c Lee put mn .1t the 5 00 mark of \\lth 22 first down and
ground .tttnck of Khnt \\ HS on the board with a the tlmd canto follo\\ed 425 )nrd on the ground
Connel) and the pa Sill" 17 ) ard run to cap the b) a 15 )ard R)un l ce and another 59 )nrds
arm of Bra) den Prntt to sene&lt;&gt;
after 1) ler touchdo,.,.n run JW•t 20 through the mr. Easter
later
after tallted 12 hro;t do'' ns
surpnse Wnhamn nnd Kitchen pro' adcd Lee second
'"h1le p1ckmg up 80
hallt1mc w1th the block that Chnstopher Swne reco\
secure a 14
)ards ruo;hmg and anoth
lead. fhe \lSI tors mam
spnmg Lee free Zack ered nn I .t"le fumble
tnined the edge throu h Wnmo;lc) booted the An mcornplete pao;s on cr 157 passmg.
Khnt Connery paced
the first seven mmuteo; of , pmnt .d ter to &lt;;take the first pmnt utter tf)
the th1rd qu,u1er before \\,h,mM to .1 7 6 ad\an- was follO\\ed b) n I) ler I fi&lt;;tern on the ground
the roof caved Ill on the t 1 c \\ 1th 7:42 left m the K1tchen k1ck followmg \\lth 50 ) ards in 14 carthe second \\liS o;corc ot ne \\ h1lc Pratt connectvisitors \\ ith \\'&lt;~hc~ma o;econd quarter
the h.1lf to make It n .26
I he Eagleo; wasted lit
ed on II of 18 passes for
scoring four touchdO\\ ns
inside a even minute tie tune 111 regnming the 14 game '"1th 4.40 lett m ~ 141 yards Kyle Connel)
grabbed hve reception
edge by gomg 61 yardo; the pcnod.
span.
Anothet
ht~tcrn for 7" &gt;ante; and a score
The
conng ~pree in ntnc pluy~ tullowin~
prO\ 1dcd "hile l'yler Hendrix
enabled
the
WIHte I he en'&gt;lllll • k 1ckoft turnmcr
rnlcons to turn n one Behind the runnmg ot Wahnmn wath n ~'olden caught four aerials for 42
point defic11 into ·• Klint Conner) and the opportumt) to l!ld to 1ts ynnls for the Eagle .
fhe White 1-'alcons
mounlln
lend \\hen
pc~s m ot Bra)den Prnn
deceiving 27-pnint '1cto
Stewart p1ckcd oil 1 ho~t f\ C' foe Belpre next
ry in a •ame thnt \\ ns l~a'&gt;tcrn mmc.hed do\\ n Matt
olfcnng
and Fnd.l)
mght
\\ hile
much closer th.ul the the field and mto the end Prutt
returned
the
llltl'rl·cptlon
l
a~tcrn
trn'
els
to
zone
Connery
''
ent
final score nu •ht mdt
E
l'itcrn
four
)
ani
Waterford
for
n
~onter­
to
the
the
fin.1l
14
)
.trds
for
the
cnte. A pa1r of second
touchdo'' n w1th Pr,llt Jine I ''"c Lee scored ence match-up \\ 1th the
half J no;tern turno,er
connect Ill' '' 1th T) ler the Bend Arc • team'&gt; \\ lltknts
a1ded the htlcon"' come

Eagles

n

''ill

•

totes. Waderker was 1of-7 passing for 21
yards. throwing two
picks. Todd Packard
wns 3-of-6 passing for
45 yards, throwing one
pick.
Rashawn Miller led
the BHS wideouts with
37 yards on two catches. Wes Hatfield h
one catch for 25 yards
and Watkins had one
grab for four yards.
There were a total of
30 penalties in the contest.
Southern
was
flagged 14 times for
I 05 yards. while Belpre
was hit with 16 flags for
103 yards.
Southern returns to
TVC Hocking action
next Friday \\hen the
Tornadoes host Federal
Hocking at Roger Lee
Adams Memorial Field
at 7:30p.m.

quarter on a 27 yard pass
from Charles Kish to
Austin Keith.
The
Stevens kick made the
from Page BJ
score 48-6.
The Tomcats moved
downs.
Trimble's the ball wen toward the
Charles llardy intercept- end of the third quarter.
ed Cory Haner three
hut came out passing teA
plays later to give the begin the fourth quarter:W
Tomcats the ball at the Pressure on Trimble 's
South Gallia 28 yard quarterback
Charles
line.
Kish by Andy Welch,
Dyla run in two plays and coverage on the
later from 19 yards out receivers by Austin
for the tenm's second Combs
and
Dalton
score. 1lte kick was no Matney forced Trimble
good, gh ing ·1 rimble the into three straight incom13-61ead.
plete passes and a
A blocked punt by turnover on downs.
1rimble' J.D. Chesser
South Gallia took
gave the Tomcats good advantage of Trimble's
held position once again. inability to convert on
Three
plays
later. the fourth down. Faced
Tnmble' Jon Stobart ran with ,their own fourth
m for the one ) ard touch- and two situation, Justin
down The South Gallia Northup powered the
line blocked the extra ball through the Trimble
point to keep the score line for three yards and a
19-6
first down. Freshman
South Gallia faced a Ethan Spurlock took the
th1rd and two nenr the next·play 60 yards for a
e d of the first quarter. touchdown, with Haner
t
pair of penalties
converting on the two
d the Rebels back point run. South Gallia
th1rd nd 12 itua- cut the lead to 48-14.
t
After a snck by
Trimble took 12
Tnmble's
B.J. and near]) six minutes
Whneford, the Rebels put the ball in the end
ere forced to punt.
zone on a fourth and eoal
fnmble' Justin Jewell run by Jacob Kish from
nnected with Ausun the two yard line. The
orth on the Tomcat's two point conversion
first play of the second pa s was no good, giving
quarter for a 57 &gt;ard Trimble the 54-14lead.
touchdown.
Steven
A 55 yard run b} South
added the extra point Gallia junior Troy Zinn
kick to make the score put the ball on the
26-6. The Rebels com- Trimble two yard line
mitted their second and set up a touchdown
turnover of the game on run by Northup. Zinn
the next po session, added the two point con·
when Trimble's Cyrus 'ersion run with :42
Jones recovered a fum- remaming in the game.
ble.
Trimble won by a score
Trimble ga\e the ball of 54-22.
back ju t four pia) s later
The Rebel had 285
a Charles K1 h throw an ) ards of offense in the
interception to South game all on the
Gnllia' Danny Matney. ground with nine
South Gallia ''a forced pia} ers carrying the ball.
to punt for the third time Dann) Matney led the
in the game at the 5: I 0 team "'ith I 09 yards on
mark of the econd quar- se\ en carries and one
ter.
core.
D) la took the first pla)
South Gallia turned
of the next Trimble drive senior guard Northup to
57 yardr. for hi second run the ball through the
score of the game The Trimble defensive line in
touchdo\\n run made the second half. Northup
D) Ia the nll-time lcndmg carried the ball six times
rusher in Trimble histo- for 34 yards - all in the
Th
·
econd half - and a two
ry. . e t\\O pomt fconvard touchdown.
version
pn
s
rum
1
South Gallia
Charles Kish to North • The
ga\e the Tomcats a 34-6 defense stepped up in the
lend. D) Ia added a 53 second half• . holding
) ard score "ith :40 sec- 'rrimbk to 13 points in
onds remaining in the the final 24 minutes of
first half. A kick by pla). Dalton Matney.
Steven" ga\e Trimble the Austin Combs. Andy
Welch. Dale Duke, and
41-6 lead at the half.
South Gallia recehed Je se Faulkner \\ere
the openmg kickoff of among the Rebels helpthe econd half, but ing to hold Trimble in
could not mo\e into check in the second half.
l'rimble territory. puntFor the Rebel Friday
ing JU t four play into marked a ea on high in
the half.
pomts scored and total
On it ccond play of yards.
the half, Trimble fumThe Rebels will return
bled the football which to the field on Friday as
,, as recovered by the they host Miller (0-3.
Rebel Dalton Matney.
TVC Hocking) in a
lnrnble scored til the Hocking
game
6 : 17 mark of the third Mercerville, Ohio.

Rebels

t.

Keeping Gallia &amp; Meigs
informed
Subscribe today • Gallia: 446-2342
• Meigs: 992-2155

'

�Sunday, September 12,

Tucker and Quillen win
201 0 club championships
at Riverside Golf Club
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
VSN N COM

MASON, W.Va .
Jeremy Iucker ttnd
Jo)ce Qurllcn \\Oil the
Men's and I udic._' Club
Ch.tmpionship&lt;~
nt
Riverside Golf Club for
the 20 I0 r.oJ f sca&lt;.&gt;on
1 he event was played
O\er the labor Da)
weekc;nd anll Ill\ oh ed
36 hole:. of troke pia)
The bcautJful wea•her
brou ht out 15 pia) ers
for th1s )Car· C\ent
Iucker shot a !.econd
round of 7 ~ to go v. ith
hrs f1r&lt;;t round 6H tor a
total of 141 to wm b)
two shots O\er M1tch
Rou h \\ tth his 143 (73
70) total for the tournn
ment
Qu til en' victory was
a se\en shot \\in o\er
Becky ~nder&lt;~on "ith
thetr totnlo; of 166 (80) fur Qutllen and 17 ~
8 85) for Ander on .
In the ChampJOnshtp
Fhght Jerem)' Tucker
had the low gros" score
of 141 (68 73). Second
gross \\a M1tch Rou h
\Hth 143 (7 3 70). third
gross \\a Jason King
\\ 1th 145 (67 78). f1 rst
nest score wn Carl
K1ng \\ llh 1 ~4 (68-66).
and econd net score
\\as Jeff Arnold wtth
135 (71 64)
The f-Irst Fltght lcm
gro'i score was a I 5R
( 8 I 771
b)
Corey
M11ler
Second gros:.
w sa t1e between Jason
hecker t82 77) and
John Smtth
80 79 )
f 159 t lr t

~unbill' :{!;unrs' ~rntmcl • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middlcpm"l • Gallipolis

2010

In the Second Flight.
first gross was Mike
S1gler with a 171 (H6
85). second gross v.a!&gt;
Btl I Yoho wrth a 173
(H7 86). f1rc;t net was
.I J. f•owlcr with a 136
(68-68), and second net
was Jon McCauley with
n 149(79-70)
In
the
Ladies
DJVJ ion, firca gross
was Joyce Quillen with
a 166 (80 86), second
gross
was
Beck)
Anderson v.ith a 173
(88 X5), thtrd groo;s 'Mt:.
Helen Humphre)" "1th
a 212 (104-108), fmt
net \\as Jo MacKmght
with a 143 (7'2 71). and
second net \vas R11a
Slavm \\llh n 152 (8171 ).
DEBALSKI WIDENS LEAD
IN RIVERSIDE SENIOR
MEN'S GOLF LEAGUE

MASON, W Va. Ed Debalskr of R1ple).
W. V.t .. has scored 164.5
potnts for the season to
le.td second place Mick
W111ebrenner's total of
150.0 points
Claude
Proffitt of Patnot, Ohio,
has 147 5 pomts to hold
down th1rd place.
A total of 76 pia) ers
showed up for play on
Tue d.t)' to makeup 19
teams of four pia) er
11te lov. score of 61
&lt;9 under par) wac; a
three way tie between
the teams of Rtch
Mabe. Claude Proffitt,
B1ll Pethtel and Kenn}
G reenl!. Carl Stone.
Buford Bro,,n. Bill
\\ mebrenner nd r rank
Bro\\ .
Chu .. k
~t nl &gt;
( on
B bb J e R
Phtl Burton
1 he clo e t to the pm

'' inners
were
Bill
Pethtel on the ninth
hole .md Ph1l Burton on
the 17th hole I here ure
o.;till
three
weeks
remnimng Ill the regular
season before the scmot
a\\ .trds dt nnc1 ol Sept
28. A tot.tl of 121 pia)
er8 have pl.tycd at east
one \\eek thu., fur th1s
season
lhe ha" been
an nver.t •e ot 82 player., per ,.,eek tn the sec
ond half of the sea on

2010

RIVERSIDE
SENIOR LEAGUE
STANDINGS

Ld Deb.tlskJ
164 5
M1ck Wmebrcnner 1SO.O
Claude Proffitt
147.5
Don Corbrn
146.0
Bob HumphrC)
144.5
C'arl Stone
144 5
Kenn) Greene
137.5
Paul M.tynard
134.0
Ken Whited
I 31.5
Chet Thom.ts
128 5
Ha'&gt;kel Jone'\
128 5
Bobb) Joe Roush 128.0
hank Brown
126.0
Wtllts Duddmg
123.5
Earl Johnson
11(}.5
Bill Arnott
117 0
Tom McNeel)
115 5
Tom frsher
115.0
Bob Hy ell
115.0
Butch Bookman 113 0
Sktp Johnson
113 0
Curtts Grubb
Ill 0
Dave Seamon
I 1I 0
Jun Blair
110.5
G.try Minton
109.5
Bob Edg.tr
109 0
Jack Malone)
109.0
Bob Stev. art
I 04.0
C'un Lnudcnmlt I 04.0
B11l Winebn:nncr 103 5
RH:h Mabe
103 0
Don \\ ld1e
I 25
J1m 1\1 t
.., ~
I
\
)

Defenders outlast
Grace Christian, 2-1
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BW~LT

OMYO~

YT

N COl,

HUNIING10N.
W Va ·1 he Ohio
Volley ChristHIIl soccer
team ended a two-game
Jo!)ing skid l•riday night
with a hard-fought 2-1
dcctsion over host Grace
Chri tian during n nonconference matchup in
the Mountaineer State
fhe Defender.\ - who
never tmiled in the con1mproved to 2-3-0
te.,t
0\er.tll this se.tson with
the triumph. despite
betng outc;hot 18-8 in the
conte t
OVCS took an early 10 ad\ antage m the 20th

minute
after
Evan
a
Bowman
netted
rebound off the cross bar
GC'S, ho&gt;we\er. knotted thmgs up JUst before
the intermt'&gt; Jon -when
(•than Perry cored m the
39th mmute. makmg 1t a

l .til c.mftest at the break.
The core remamed
that way until the 68th
m1nute, , when Chance
Burle:;,on netted a pass
from Paul Miller to givff
the •ueo;tr; their e\ entual
t•ume winning goal.
Peter Carmen was
~trong m goal in his sea:.on debut. making 17
sa' es Ill the triumph.
Gmcc Chn t1an received
six saves from it goal
tender!&gt;
Ohio Valley Christian
returns to actton Monday
v. hen n tra' e Is to
Chesapeake for a nonconference matchup at
5 30 p m

Lady Raiders top
Coal Grove.in three
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MOTSPORTS MYOA LYTR BUNE.COM

COAL GROVE, Ohto
fhe Ri,er Valley
Lad) Raiders easily
defeated Coal Grove on
., hur&lt;&gt;da) evening in
three sets.
The l ad) Ratders
extended their league
wmnmg streak to 39 with
the '1ctor) O\ er Coal
Gro\C R1ver Valle) -won
b) cores of 25-15. 2519, and 25-23.
Ashle) Randolph led
the team v. 1th 21 pomts
mcluding three aces.
Kmtlyn Roberts had 15

pomts ,md four , ces.
Kate!) n Btr(.hfield had
I 1 point&lt;; and four • ces.
Beth M1 ncr added 10
potnt and one ace.
Ketc1e C.uter had nme
pomts. and Kel'iey Sand
had eight pomt .

Robert&lt;~ had 21 kjJ).,
and tour blocks to lead
the net 1ttnck. Birchfield
had mne ktlls. Carter had
fi\e ktllc; and four blocks.
S.mds h.td hve kills and
one block. t\tisner had
four ktlls. and Randolph
had two kills.
The J\ Lady Ratders
won 111 three sets b~
scores of 16 25. 25-9,
and 25-13
Riley
Holhngsworth had I~
pomts and Cad) Gilmore
had 16 points mthe \\in.
The lad) Rruders w1ll
host Southeastern OR
Monda) at 5:30p.m.

GAHS freshman football team 2-0

R "k "l
~Iebert Be ~ r
C1ene Titom.,

pitons
GAHS beat Warren
2~ I ~ Ia t fhursda)
Logan Alhson had t\\O
touchdowns and 1) ler
B) uc; returned an inter

l.

ceptron for a touchL
do\\ n. Wade Jarrell and
1) Warnimont pas e&lt;l
for a combined I 08 '
yards Jarrell threw a
ID
pa""
Jnquill~ '
Cordell had two inteJ'L :
cept1onc;
and
Reid
Ea-.tman. Btlly Power"
and Byus each had one
ullen:eptton
Brian
\\ tlltam had one sack.
GA US pia) 'i JacksoQ •
at 5 30 p m Thursday •
at Memonal Fteld.
Editor '
note:
lnfnrmatllJII

prm idea-

bv GAHS lOaclt ScofJ

Saunders . )
"T ••

Joyce, Galarrag.a have a low-key reunion

Photo Courtesy of Mike BroccJGAHSsports.com

Galha Academy's Brandon Taylor camas the ball dunng Fnday's wm against
Wellston at Memorial F1eld in Gallrpolis, Ohio.

ate nearly half of the
third quarter clock and
when Wihon crossed the
goal hnc from three
from Page Bl
yards out it "as 34-7 and
for .111 pra...tical purposes
the punt "tth l ny lor the outcome had been
recovering
on
the settled.
Wellston 14 foollm' ing
Titc only "glitch" of
an JJiegal procedure the mght came VCr) late
penalt). Moore h1t Drc\\
Younp, from 15 ) ards out m the thtrd quarter.
wtth I 58 remaining in Follow mg a Dre\\ Young
the half. the Hannon kick one yard touchdo\\ n run
wtth .02.5 to go that ga\ e
fruled und it -wa 20-7.
De' 1ls their tina)
the
Hannon's k1ck off
score
and their largest
landed on the Wellston
23 )ard hne nnd popped le td of the mght at 41-7.
Rockets Au-.tin
strai
up tn the air with the
Osborne t telded the
once agam recov
rt. Th1s time it only ensuing kick off and
frve plays with returned 1t 91 ) ards with
Moore c;cori ng from a no time remaining: the
)'ard out and the Hannon Prater conversion run
C&lt;HIVCI StOll
made the :.uccessful to close 'the
gap to 41-15.
halftime score 27-7.
'I he Galhans rushed
Taking u lesson trom
the Athens game, the for 309 ) ards led by
De' its d1d not let Wtlson, Moore. Ta) lor
Of his
.an) and ) oung.
Wellston
get
momentum
gomg. team's uccess on the
Bcginmng on thelr oy, n ground. Coach Lddy
39. GAHS churned out remarked. " That' the
61 yards on 12 pin) s that bcJuty of thrs thmg! )ou

Devils

l

don't know "ho it'&amp;
goinp to be. 'I ou k'10\\,
this 1'&gt; kmd of like a four
headed monster o to
speak It nught be the
left "ing or the nght
wmg. the quarterback or
the fullb.tck
't ou just
don't knO\\ \\here u's
conunr from. and as long
as tho~e btp guy up tront
keep g1' mg u a httle
space to run. '"e &lt;:an give
it to an) of the e gu)!)
right now!"
No\\ the tenm h ts .1
\\ eekend to cnJO) the \\ m
before conuno back to
\\Ork on Monday to prepare for the SI·OAL
league
opener
nt
Mariettn's Don Drumm
Stadium next l•riday
evcmng. On being 3·0 at
this !Klint, Coach hdd)
l!Oncluded, "I hesc kid&lt;&gt;
are comtng out foc.t&lt;&gt;ed
e\ery \\Cck Thc)'re
workmg hard. Th1s is
e\ er) thing to them flus
ts exnctly wh.tt they
\\ant. I hey re workmg
hard cnou h to earn tt ··

DETROIT (AP) - No
corllro\ ers) this time for
Jim Jo)ce and Annando
Galarraga.
Joyce worked the plate
for Detroit's 6-3 loss to
Baltimore on Frida) mght,
the first ttme the umpire
called n game ""ith the
pitcher &lt;;ince the near-perfect game on June 2.
On that night. Galarraga
retired the first 26 batters.
nnd appeared to ha\ e fint hed the perfect game on
a grounder b) Cleveland'
Ja on Donald.
Jo) ce. though. called
Donald safe. a call he tearfull) acknowledged to be
\\rang short!) after tl~e
gmne. He then made a tnp
to the Tigers clubhouse to
apologile to Galarraga.
Jo)ce received applause
from the Comerica Park
crowd \\hen he "ns introduced belore Friday's
game. He said the butterme didn't go away until
after Galarrnga retired the
side m order in the first
mmng
"Th.tt "as probabl) the
econd-harde t plate JOb of

m) hfe for the first three
outs,'' Joyce md. compar
ing it to the g.une he called
m Detroit the day .titer ht"
mistake "After those three
outs. though, I felt hke I
could go b.tck to bemg Jrm
Jo)ce the umpire··
Jo\ce atd he onl) poke
to Galarrnga to tell hun
"hen he ,., as on Jus la'\t
"annup p1tch before each
mmng.
"There's enou h pre
sure on u '' tthout dum¥.
anythmg o;pechll tod.'l). ·
he satd "He dtd hr" JOb.
and I tned to do mme
Ine p:ur publtcly recon
ctled the afternoon nfter
JO) ce's blunder. "hen
11gers numn~cr Jim
Leyland urpnc;ed the
umpire
b)
sending
Galarrnga to the plnte \\ ith
the lineup cnnl. The p.tir
hugged
n gesture that
cau ed Jo) cc to tear up
ngam.
Jo) ce
and
Galamt"a had one highl)
publicized mectutg th1o;
ummer. "hen the)
teamed up to pre'&gt;ent an
fi\\ard at the ESP't
11tat's "h'. hke Jo)-.:C.

G.1lam gn do" npla) ed the
emottons of J~rida) 's
game
·1 understand the hype
II " a crnz) .,., hat haJh
pencd but he's going to
be behmd the plate for me
man), many more times.''
G.tlnrm!!a said after gettmg a no-decision in
Detro1t\ 6-3 los . "I don't
\Hlllt to make 1t a b1g deal.
and I'm sure he doesn't
He -;ho,.,ed toda) that he is
a profe'&gt; tonal - one ot
the be-.t m the gan1e.''
l'he da) • onl) our note
came before the game.
"hen Jo&gt; ~:e apologized
"lute tclhng media members th.tt he hnd been told
b) MaJor Lc,tguc Bru;eball
not to gi' e in ten iew~
unlcs n rcquec;t had been
ltppro\ cd b) the lengue
office.
During the game. MLB
spokec;m,m
Michael
1ee\an said in an e-mail
that Jm ce \\a... free tO
'\peak after the game if he
chose to. and the 54-)earold made himself a' ailable hortl) after the finbl
out.

4 Person Golf Scra11zble
Saturda) - cpt. 18th
Shotgun Start at 9 am •1cam Rc.•gistration 8:15am

ountry Hills Golf Course
$l1ll pt·r flh•~•·t·
i udmh•,
'kill' J.:llllll'.
:\lu lli;.:an.
l .1111d1 ,1\ •·uri

,,.,.,

Pomcro), Ohio 740-992-6312
Hole ~ponsorshlp~ $50.00 t&gt;e•· sign
Contnl·t Hl'nnl 740·416·0824
J Playt•r l\ ith 10 or under
Handicap on I~ per tcnm
Top 31ellms rccehc eush prizes

Proceeds benefit Mc1gs ll1gh School
Boys Basketball Program for cqmpment
Info call Benn~ E"lng 740-416-0824, te\e Cia} 740-416·7923

•

�Pa ge 84 • sunball U::nnl'S -~rntm rl

Sunday, Septe mber :1 2,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipoli s

2010

The Ohio Val lev Publishing Scoreboard - Week 3 Football
Southl'a tern 38, Mancha tor 14
Ctn Colora1n 34, Lou DuPont Mant..Ji Green v1ew 7
Sparta Hrghland 47 Ga on NorU1mor 6
Ky 7
L e1pS1c 37 Pandora G boa 0
Cm Country Day 21. N B nd Taylor 14 leWis &lt;. ntcr 01 ntangy Orange 35 Spnng Cath Cent 20 Sptlllg NW 7
Fnday s Box Scores
Spnl"'g Kenton R1dge 41 St Par
Cln H1lls Chn I an Acado my 21 Ctn Westerv eN 0
L X gton 10 N can Hoover 7
Graham7
Manemont 17
Southern 1t, Belpre 0
Spring NE 55 Blanche tor 14
Cm McNicholas 48 Medway Ontario 0 Llma B th 26, St Marys M moflal 6
Southern
6 0 0 10
16
Spnng Shawnee 34 Urbana 19
Cin Moeller 51 Clayton Northmont 14 Lima Cent Cat"l 55, Paulding 7
Bolpro
0 0 0 0 0
Cm Ml Healthy 49 C1n Aiken
Lisbon D vld Anderson 20, WellSVIlle 7 Sprmgboro 28 Vanda Butler 14
Spnngflc d 18 Ctn Sycamore 7
Cm N College Htll52 Cln Madolra 13 Lockland 29 R1vers1de Stebbm 7
Scoring summary
Cin NW 45 Morrow Utile M1am1 14
Loratn Cl arv1ew 38 Fairv1ew 13
St Bernard Roger Bacon 52
First Quarter
Lou Tnnuy Ky 22. Ctn Elder 20
Western H lis 21
Cin Oak H1lls 27, lovoland 24
s- Tyler Barton 1 run (kick blocked)
loUISVille 37 Ravenna 34
C1n PMceton 41, C n Glon Este 22
St ClatrSVIIIO 22 Be mont Un1on
8 25
Cm St Xavier 32, lou St XaVIe~ Ky LouiSVIlle AqUinas 31, Smithville 14
0
Fourth Quarter
Lowellv.le 27 New M1dd etown Spnng St Henry 42, Rockford Parkway 6
13
S-Danny Ramthun 20 FG 11 56
Cm Summ11 Country Day 53 Cm
14
Steubenville 34 Brooke w Va 21
S-Erle Buzzard 8 run (Ramthun kick)
Christian 7
Lucasv 19 Valley 49 Coal Grove Strasburg-Franklm 42, lanesv1lle
7 11
3.
Dawson Bryant21
Cln Turpm 50 Cm Indian Hll 0
Rosecrans 7
W-EhJah Honaker 2·27 Isaac Lee 2· Ctn Walnut H1lls 28, Ctn Hughes 8
Macedama Norden 3 34 Chardon Strong VIlle 28 Parmb Padua 14
8
18 Tyler Kitchen 1 14
Cm Wmton Woods 53 F!:llrfleld G
NDCl7
Struthers 20 L bon Beav 12
13
9
F.rst Downs
C n Woodward 46, C n Deer Park 44
M:lgnoha Sandy Valley 28 R1ttman 26
Sugarcreek
Garaway
48 •
41·169 34·99
Rushes-yards .
Trimble 54, South Gallla 22
C1n Wyom1ng 40, Norwood 0
Man f1c!d Mad1son 20 Mt Vernon 16
Gnadenhutten lnd sn Val ey 21
26
66
Passmg yards
Tnmble
19 22 7 6 - 54
C~rclev1'e 35 Williamsport Westfa'J 14
Mansf1c!d Sr 24 Manon Hard ng 10
Sunbury B1g Walnut 1'3 Lew Center.
165
195
Total yards
South Galha 6 0 0 16 - 22
C1rclev1 'o Logan Elm 21 Chill cothe Mantua Crestwood 14 Street bOro 0
Oontangy 10
3-9.()
413·3
Cornp-att nt
Zane Trace 14
Mana Stl'i n M non Loca 27 New Sycamore
Mohawk
38
Upper:
4.()
4·0
Fumbles-lost
Scoring s ummary
Clarksville Cllnton·Masste 28, Pla1n Bremen 0
Sandusky 21
Ponalttes-yards 14·105 16·103
First Quarter
C1ty Jonathan Alder 27
Manotta 35 Cambndgo 21
Sylvama Nortllvlew 21 Tol Rogers 20
SG-Danny Matney 95 run (run fatled)
Cle Glenvil!~ 39, Cle Rhodes 6
Manon Elgm 14 M' G lead 6
Sylvania S6uthview 20 Tol Start 14
Individual Statistics
10 26
Cle Hay 20 M ddleburg Hts M1dpark Marysv1lle 55 Bellofontame 6
Tallmadge 24 Akr Garf10 d 12
Rushing: S Tyler Barton 17· 108 Enc T -Aust1n Kolth 76 k1ckofl return (Jon
16
Mason 28 Gahanna L1ncoln 14
Thompson Ledgemont 18 M ddt I ld
BUZZ£1rcl8·32, Danny Ramthun 13·41
Stevens k1cl&lt;) 10·11
Cle JFK 41 Cle Lincoln W 6
Mass1llon Jackson 16 Hudson 9
Card1nal6
B-Enk Waderker 24·103, TYler T-Tyler Dyla 19 run (kick failed) 5 20
Cle John Marshall 30 Cle Collinwood Mass1llon Perry 20 BrunSWick 3
Thornv lie Shendan 45 New Concord
Watk1ns 4·14, Todd Packard 4·(·14)
T -Jon Stobart 1 run (kick blocked)
6
Massillon Tuslaw 48 Doylestown John Glenn 0
Passing: S-Danny Ramthun 3·9·0 26 2.16
Cle St lgnat1us 28 Lancaster 21
Chippewa 0
T11f1n Columbian 40 Fremont Ross 21
B-Todd Packard 3·6 1 45, Enk
Clyde 17 Bellevue 0
Massillon Wash1ngton 27, Stow Munroe T pp C1ty Bethel 41 Low sburg Tn ,
Waderker 1· 7·2 21
Second Quarter
Collins Western Reserve 22, Creston Fe.! 10
County N 14
Receiving: 5-Tyler Barton 2·5 Enc T- Austm North 57 pass from Justin
Norwayne 14
M;~tewan. WVa
40 Grove C1ty Tlpp C1ty Tippecanoe 21 M1lton Un1on •
Buzzard 1·21
Jewell (Stevens kick) 11 58
Cols. Afncentnc 20, Portsmouth Notre Chnsuan 29
7
:
B-Rashawn M1ller 2·37, Wes Hatf1eld T -Dyla 57 run (North pass from
Damo13
Maumee 22 Tol Bowsher 12
Tol Cent Cath 10 Penn lnd 7
1 25 Tyler Watk1ns 1-4
Char1es Kish) 5 07
Cols Bnggs 41, Cols East 28
M:1yfield 35, Olmsted Falls 24
Tol Chnstlan 28 Ft Loram e 7
T .-Dyla 53 run (Stevens kick) 40
Cols Centeno al 31, Cols South 7
McComb 54 Van Bu1en 3
Tol Whrtmor 69 Fostona 0
Gallia Academy 41, Wellston 21
Cols Grandv1ew Hts. 28, Whttehall McDermott SCioto NW 14 Ch1 hcothe Trotwood-MadiSon 24 Beavercreek 16 •
Wellston
7 0 8 6
21
Yearling 13
Third Quarter
Huntington 0
Troy 49 Fa rborn 6
•
Gallipolis
7 20 14 0
41
T -Kanner Stand ey 27 pass from
Cots Hamilton Twp 49, Cols West 21
Medina 49 Wadsworth 21
Tw1nsburg 14 Aurora 7
Charles Kish (Stevens kick) 617
Cols Hartley 54 Cols Bexley 7
Metamora Evergreen 21
Liberty Van Wert 41 E' da 37
Scoring summary
Cols Manon-Frankhn 12 Ashland 7
Center 14
Versa lies 34 Ft Rcoove'Y 0
First Quarter
Fourth Quarter
Cols St Charles 22, Cols Beechcroft M1am1sbOJrg 48 w Ca•rol ton 0
V1enna Ma' ews 21 leeton a 20 •
W-M1chaol Grey 3 pass lrom Jaylen
12
SG-Ethan Spurlock 60 run (Cory
M1dd etown 49 Lima Sr 14
Vtncent Warren 34 A!hens 28 OT
Prater (Brad M ller k1ck) 8 26
Haner run) 9 10
Cots Upper Arlington 38 Holy Tnn ty Middletown Fe wick 43 Germantown w Chester Lakota W 37 Kotterrng
GA-Joel Johnston 13 pass from
T -Jacob K1sh 2 rl.:'l (pass tailed) 3 39
Catholic Ontano 7
Valley VIOW 34
Fa1r&lt;nont 7
Ethan Mooro (Tyler Hannon kick) 3 44
Cols Walnut R1dge 54, Cols Unden M1lan Ed1son 41 We hngton 7
SG-Just1n Northt..p 2 run (Troy Z1nn
w Jefferson 34 London 18
Second Quarter
McKmfey 6
run) 42
M lford 56 Batavia Amelia 27
W Lafayette R1dgewood 47 Warsaw
GA-Brandon Taylor 16 run (Hannon
Cols Watterson 56 cathedral, Ontario M1llord Center Fa rbanks 37 N A ver VJO'oV 7
kick) 6 28
0
LewiSburg Tnad 34
uberty-Salem 66 DeGr.iff RIVOrSide
GA - Drew Young 15 pass from Moore
T
SG
Columb1a Stat1on Columbia
M1llbury Lake 43, Rossford 19
18
(k1ck !ailed) 1 58
Newbury 14
15
Flfst Downs
9
Mmeral R1dge 24 McDonald 21
W Umty Hilltop 53, Ho gate 22
GA-Moore t run (Hannon kick) 0 29
Columb1ana 40 Newton Falls 7
Rushes yards
32·290 46·285
M nefVil 42 Navarre Fa1rless 14
Wahama W Va 41 ReedsVIlle Eastern
Third Quarter
Columbiana Crestv1ew 28, Zoarvt e M nford 49 P1keton 6
Pass1ng yards
111
0
14
G A -Austm Wilson 3 runn (Hannon
Tuscarawas Valley 21
Total yards
401
285
Mogadore 35 W Salem NW 14
Warren Champion 33 Conneaut 0
Kick) 6.10
Convoy Crestview 22 Hav1tand Wayne Monroe 44 Oxford Talawanda 28
4-13-1
Comp-att·lnt
0.3-1
Warren Howland 25 Warren Hard ng
GA-Young 1 run (Hannon kick) 0·02
Trace 14
4·1
Fumblos·iost
3·2
Monroev;'le 26 Athca Seneca E 19
22
W-Aust1n OsbOrne 91 k ck return
Copley 34 Orrv1lle 33, 20T
Penalties-yards 320
5·25
M B 3nchard R verdale 4 7 R dgeway Washmgton C H 35 Frankfort Adena
(Prater run) 0 00
Cortland Lakev1ew 35 Youngs Chaney R:lgemon120
16
Fourth Quarter
Individual Statistics
21
Mt Orab Wester Brown 21, Waverly 0 Wauseon 25 Swanton 7
W-Osborno 1 run (pass ta1ledl 2 34
Rushing: T-Tyler Dyla 10.216, Bryce Cory·Rawson 49 Dola Hard1n Northern N Ltma S A:mge 28 Garl1e d HIS Waynesfield-Goshen 27 Troy Chnst an
7
Smathers 8·29 Austin North 3-14
Ti n ty 14
13
w
GA
Austin Ke1th 4·12, Charles K1sh 2·6 Coshocton 49 M ersburg W Holme
N 0 msted 21 LakewoOd 17
Waynesvtlle 59 Day Chnst an 14
23
6
F rst Downs
Wyatt Doak 1 5 Jacob K1sh 2·4 28
N A dg
e 28 Lod Cloverleaf 17
Westerville S 34, Grove C ty 13
26·113 53·309
Rushes-yards
Konner Standley 1 3 Johnny Stobart 1· Covmgton 56 Bradford 22
N Rob nson Co Crawford 20 New Westlake 22 Rocky Rtvcr 7
44
80
Pass ng yard
Crooksv1
e
47
Cormng
M
ller
0
1
Londo 14
Wheelersburg 34, Portsmouth 28
389
157
Total yards
Cuyahoga Falls 34 Akr North 0
SG-Danny Matney 7·109
N Roya tor 27 Med1na H gh and 21
Wh1te!'touse Anthony Wayne 35
6-1()-()
Comp-a.. lnt
5-8-0
Spurlock 2-60 Troy Z nn 3·60 J1.~10 Cuyahoga Foils Wal"h Je u11 16 Napo eon 21 Bow 1ng Green 0
Tontogany Otsego 21
• 0
2· 1
Fumbl lost
Bedford 6
Northup 6-34 Dalton Matney 7-31
N o v e York 42 Sugar Grove W1lard 34. carey 14
p
450
1 s yards 2·12
Aust n Ph ps 2 6 BrandOf' Campbll 1 C11yahoga Hts 49 B..rrton Be
u
'4
Williamsburg 54 Fayettev.'le-Perry 7
Da ron 21 C&amp; T
n
0 Jacob Wh
11-( 1) Cory Ha er 7
Cols De Sa es 10 OT
W1 oughby S 52 Euclid 28
lnd vidual Statistics
0
~
20
4
14)
41 W hngton W m ngton 28 H lsbOro 14
Rushing W
en Pr t r 8-60 Passing: T-Ju I J
1 1.0 57 D
w ndham 14 Fa rport Harbor Hard ng
Au n Osborn 14-53 Brad M er 2 2 Cha:1e K h 2·10.1 37 Jacob Kist1 1
0 y c
32 o e C1ty 11
M ae Downer 1 ( 1) Cody Sexton 1· 2.() 17
PoPtz Tech 6
Woodsl1e d Monroe Cent 46, Hanmbal
(-1)
Day Northridge 22 D y Be
SG-cory Haner 0 3 1 0
R1ver6
Passing: W .Jaylen Prater 5-8·0 44
1
Receiving: T-.A.ust1n North 1 57, Dehanoo AyerSVI 23 lima Pc
Wooster 48 Akr Eliot 6
GA-Ethan Mooro 0·10·0 60.
Konner Stand ey 1·27, Wyatt Deak 1· Def1anoe T1nora 42 McGuffey Upp
ng Valley 48 Cots Ready wooster Tnway 41 Apple Cr
Receiving: W-M1chael Grey 2 28, 17, Tyler Dyla 1·10
Sc1oto Val ey 0
Waynedale 34
Austin Osborl"'e 1·3 Dakota Brown 1-4, SG-None
D law
B
ey 40, Akr Coventry 24
Youngs
Ausuntown-Frtch
Matt Atwood 1·10
Rdgeda
Sandusky Perk n;; 7
Pa MSVI e R verStde 0
GA Austin Wtlson 3 27 Brandon
Oephos
W Va 27 W ntersVI e lnd an Youngs Boardm"n14 Akr Hoban 10
Taylor 2·24 Joe Johnstol"' 1· 13 OreN
De nos St
Youngs Ursu ne 14 Mentor lal&lt;e Cath
'ri ung 1 15 Da ton Jarrell 1-t
Dover 17 Ca
e Eastwood 10
0 k
D
esden
Tr
.V
y
55
Z
nesVI
W
OHIO
7
ZanesVII e 28 New Ph lade ph a 0
Meigs 41, River Valley 0
Muskngum 20
0 k H 37 Ironton Rock H I 0
Maysville
20
Me
20 7 7 7 - 41
Ada 38 Columbus Grove 20
Dubl n Coffm n 40 Cols Brookh v n 0 egon Clay 17 Ho land Spr ngf e d 14 ZanesVi e
McConne sv e Morgan 6
R1ver v ey
0 0 0 0 0
Akr East 21 Barberton 14 20T
14
Orwe I Grand Val ey 41 N Jacksor
Akr. Kenmore 44 Oberhn 0
Dub' n
Scroto
31
Worth ngton Jackson·M Ito 0
Scoring summary
Akr Manchester 21, Sullivan Black KilbOurne 14
WEST VIRGINIA
Ottawa·G andorf 26 Del ance l
First Quarter
Rtver 3
E can 39 MalVern 38
Pa nesvt e Harvey 24 WICic. 'fe 18
M -Zach Sayre 20 pass lrom Cameron Akr SVSM 7 Akr Buchtel 6
E Cle Shaw 44 Clc Hts 20
B shop Donahue 44 BeaUsVI e Oh o
Parma 40 Berea 7
Bol n (k ck fared) 7 33
Alliance 53 R1chfeld Revere 27
E Uverpool 15 Youngs East 8
Pataska'a L1ckmg Hts 49 AshV: s 14
M -Colton SteWart 4 pass frorn Bohn
Alliance Marhngton 40,
Poland Eaton 41, Spnng Greenon 7
Bndgeport21 Lew s County 7
Teays Valley 9
(Christian Mugrage kick) 0 37
Sem1nary 24
Edgerton 48 Mendon M1ch 27
Pataskala Watkms Memonal 42 Cols Broad Run Va 42, Jefferson 0
M -Sayre 321NT return (Mugrage kick) Amanda·Ciearcrcek 14, Ball more Edon 38 Hicksv1 e 24
Cap tal 35 Pnnceton 0
M film 18
027
Liberty Union 7
Elmore Woodmore 35 T1ffm Calvert 28 Pen nsu a Woodridge 69 Norton 0
Chapmanv lie 62 Scott 20
Second Quarter
Amherst Steele 62, Vermilion 9
Ftnd ay 62, Greenv1ole 8
Clay County 14 R1tch e County 12
Perry 36 MadiSon 7
M -Jeffrey Roush 10 run (Mugrage
Ftndlay Liberty-Benton 28, Arlmgton 20 Perrysburg 31, Tot Waite 0
Anna 38, Coldwaler 28
Clay-Battelle 48, Paden C ty 14
kick) 6.06
Ansonia 41 New Pans National Tra11 14 Franklin t 9 New Lebanon D1x1e 17
Doddndgo County 45, Calhoun County
PhilO 21 New Lexmgton 12
Third Quarter
Antwerp 42, Tol Ottawa Hills 22
Frcdor cktown 42 Ashland Crestview P1ckenngton N 30 Cols Northland 14 20
M -Roush 3 run (Mugrago kick) 7·59
Arcad1a 34 Vanlue 13
14
Elkms 41 Preston 13
P1qua 27 Xema 21
Fourth Quarter
Arcanum 21 , W Alexandria Twtn Valley Fremont St Joseph 34, G1bsonburg 10 Pomeroy Me gs 41, B dwell R1vc Valley Fayettev111e 41 R1chwood 6
M -Billy Duvall36 run (Mugrage k1ck)
s. 20
Gahanna
Cols
Academy
34
Frankfort 15 Grafton 6
918
Archbold 59 Sherwood Fa1rv1ew 21
Centerburg 21
Sc otov n 31
r1 James Monroe 34 Oak H II 13
Ashtabula Edgewood 25, Ashtabula Gallon 22 Bucyrus 13
James Wood Va 28 Musse man 7
Federal Hockmg 0
M
RV
Lakes1do o
Gallipolis Gal1a 41 Wellston 21
l berty Hamson 26 Webste County 6
Portsmouth W 49, S Point 6
23
5
First Downs
Galloway Westland 28, Tot Scott 0
Avon 23, Lora1n Admiral Kmg 0
Powell Olentangy Uberty 61 Delaware Man 28 Wests1de 8
50·285 25·32
'Avon Lake
St Jean Do Brebeuf Garrettsv lie Garf1eld 34 Andover Hayes 3
Rushes yards
Martinsburg 11 Thomas Jot&gt;nson Md
68
82
Secondary Ontano 0
Pymatumng Valley 6
Passtng yards
7
Racme Southern 16 Be pre 0
114
Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon
18, Gates Mills G1lmour 27 Gatos M1lls Rl'ad1ng 34 Cm Purcell Manan 30
Total yards
353
Matewan 40 Grove C ty Chnst an Oh o
3-4..()
Comp-at!·tnl
6-12·1
Northwood 12
Hawken 6
29
Reynoldsburg 47 Logan 7
Fumbles-lost
1·1
1·1
Batav1a Clermont NE 14, Batav1a 0
Geneva 24 Orange 22
Meadow Bridge 4&amp; M1d ard Tra11 7 •
R1chmond Ed1son 46 We •, W Va 0
Pena!t es-yards 2 20
3·25
Beachwood 57, Richmond His 7
Genoa Area 51, Port Clinton 0
R1chwood N Un Dn 17 Ma ·~n Mount Hope 45, G lbert 6
Be!lefontame Benjamm Logan 26 Girard 20 Warren JFK 14
Mountrun R1dge Md 37 Hedgesv
Pleasant 13
Individual Statistics
Glouster Trimble 54 Crown C1ty S S Char aston SE 21 London Mad1so
Mechanicsburg 21
14
Rushing: M-Jeffrey Roush 18·154, Bellv1lle Clear Fork 41, Cots. Gallia 22
Oak Glen 27, Wintersvile tnd1an Creek.
Pla1ns 14
Grafton Midvlbw 35 Medma Buckeye 7 Salem 21, Beloit W Branch 18
Charhe Barrett 16·66 Billy Duvall 5·39, Independence 14
Oh1o1
Cole Turner 1·33 Zach Sayre 6·28, Berhn Center Western Reserve 33,. Granville 27 lancaster Fa1rf1eld Union Salineville Southern 34 Toronto 0
Oakland Southern Md 55 Moore! eld
Ct&gt;ns Jones 3·7, Taylor Rowe 2 ( 1), Southington ChalKer 0
6
Sebnng McK1nley 33, Youngs Chnsllan 7
Bethel-Tate
14,
Goshen
9
Greenfield
McCiatn 42, Bainbridge 14
Denms Teaford 1-(·5).
P·keView 32, Liberty Rale gh 20
RV-Kyle Brown 11·29, Patnck Beverly Ft Frye 27, Waterford 0
Pa1nt Valley 7
Shadystde 28 Cad1z Hamson Cent 22 RIChmond Ed1son Oh1o 46 We1r 0
W1lhams 5·14, Jacob Brown 9·(-11)
B1shop Donahue, W.Va. 44, Beallsville Greenwich S Cent 56, Crestline 26
Sheflleld BrookSide 21, Tot Woodward Robert C Byrd 42 North Manon 36
14
Grove City Cent Cross1ng 34, Cols
Pa ssing: M-cameron Bolin 3-4·0 68
Sherando Va 41, Wash ngton 6
14
RV-Jacob Brown 6·11·1 82 Austm Bloomdale Elmwood 20, N. Balt1more 8 Franklin Hts 20
Steubenville Oh1o 34 Brooke 21
Shelby 34 Ontano 31 OT
Whobrey 0.1·0 0
Brocksville·Broadvtew Hts 35, Parma Groveport-Madison 34. Dublin Jerome S1dney Lehman 34 Lewtstown lnd an Wahama 41 ReedsVIlle Eastern, Oh1o
Receiving : M-charhe Barrett 1·38 Normandy 5
28
14
Lake 6
Zach Sayre 1·22, Colton Stewart 1-4.
Brookville
46, Camden
Preble Ham11ton 30, Cln Taft 14
S1mon Kenton, Ky 33 New R chmond 6 Wheeling Central 4 7 t-4cK :'\ley D C 34
Ham1tton Badm 31, Hamilton Ross 13
RV-Trey Noble 3·57, Kylo Brown H 3, Shawnee 22
Wnt County 51 G1lmef County 18
Solon 31, Montor 21
Bryan 26 Delta
Hamler Patnck Henry 49, Montpelier 7
Jacob Hefner 1-8 Austin Whobrey 1-4
Bucyrus Wynlord 27 Howard E. Knox 6 1 Hanoverton Un.ted 14, Rootstown 0
Wahama 41, Eastern 14
Byesv1lle Meadowbrook 21, Sarahsville Hamson 24, K1ngs Mills Kmgs 21
Eastern
0 14 0 0 - 14
Shenandoah 12
Heath 18, Ut1ca 6
Caldwell24. BarnesVIlle 21
H1ghlands Ky 34, Cm. Withrow 27
Wahama
0 13 20 8 - 41
Campbell Memonal15 Youngs L1berty H111iard
Bradley
42
Thomas
Scoring summary
14
Worthington 21
Second Quarter
Can Cent. Cath. 35, Warronsvllle Hts. Hilliard Darby 34, Nowark 14
Hilliard DaVIdson 35, Tol St Fmncts 14
14
E-Kyle Connery 16 pass from Khnt
Connery (k1ck !ailed) 10 50
Can Glenoak 27 Green 23
Hubbard 43, Ravenna SE 7
W -tsaac Leo 17 run (Zack Wamsley
Can. South 62 E. Polostme 14
Huber Hts Wayne 31, Lou Seneca. Ky
kick) 742
Canal Fulton Northwest 25. Akr. 7
SpMgfreld 20 •
Independence 42, Rocky River
E-Khnt Connery 17 run (kick blocked)
Canal Wonchester 21, WesteM.!e Cent. Lutheral\ W 34
328
Ironton 24, Chillicothe 6
w- Trenton G1bbs 1 run (k1ck blocked) 3
Canal Wmchester Harvest Prep 50, Jackson 42, McArthur Vmton County 6
o·os
Bloom-Carroll 24
Jefferson Area 34, Brook11eld 27 20T
Th ird Quarter
W -lsaac Leo 80 run (pass Jailed) 5·00 Cardmgton·Ltncoln 24 Caledoma RIVer Jeromesville Hillsdale 40, Loudonville
w- Ryan Lee 15 run (Tyler Kitchen
Valley 20
27
Carlisle 41 , Day Oakwood 7
Johnstown Northndgo 45 Millersport 8
kiCk) 4'40
Carrollton 49, Uhnchsv1lle Claymont 14 Johnstown Monroe
42
Hebron
-Isaac Leo 4 run (Wamsley k1ck)
Casstown M1am1 E 24, Un1on City Lakewood 13
1 07
MISSISSinawa Val ey
Kent Roosevelt 38, Akr F1rostono 23
Fourth Quarter
castalia Margaretta 58, Kansas Lakota Kenton 54 L1ma Shawnee 14
W -Anthony Gnmm 46 run (EliJah
19
Kirtland 54, Bay Village Bay 13
Honaker pass from Isaac Lee) 10 00
Celma 22. Wapal\oneta 13
Lofayette Allen E 29, SpenceMIIo 0
Centerville 24, Kottonng Alter 7
LaGrange Keystone 33
Oberlin
E
12
22
Chagrin Falls 21, Mogadore F•eld 14
I Flrelands 14
33 Fostoria St
Fnst Downs
Chagrin Falls Kenston 19, Lyndhurst Lakeside Danbury
51-425
30·80
Rushes-yards
Brush 14
Wendehn 20
157
59
Passtng yards
Chesterland
Geaug11 41, Eastlake N
Lakewood St Edward 27. Youngs
484
237
Total yards
12
Moon~3
12·19 1 5-12·0
Comp·att-tnt
Chillicothe Un1oto 22 Albany Alexander LeavittSburg LaBrao 19, Cuyahoga
1-1
1·1
Fumbles-lost
21, OT
Falls CVCA 9
5·50
Penalties-yards 5·25
Cm Clark Montessori 50, Cm Lebanon 35 Sidney 6
Finneytown 14
Lees Creek E Clinton 48, Jamestown
Individual Statisti cs

PREP Ji'OOTHALL

Ru shing : E--.Khnt Connery 14·50,
Brad Stone 3 16, Kyle Connery 1·6,
Josh Shook 2 5 'Tyler Barber 2 3,
Brayden Pratt 5 (·2)
W-lsaac Leo 10·159 Anthony Gnmm
14·113 Ryan Lee 10 51, Kane Roush
4·42 Cmndol Neal2·25 Trenton Gibbs
6 16 Tyler Roush 2·9, Joshua Haddox
2·6, Zack Wamsley 1 4
Passing: E-Brayden Pratt 11 18 1
141, Klint Connery 1·1·0 16
W-Trenton G1bbs 5 12 0 59 Tyler
Roush 0·1·0
Receiving: I; Kyle Connery 5·73,
Tyler Hendnx 4 52 Max Carnahan 1·
18 Klint Connery 1·11, Ryan Amos 1·

u

s

'

w

Prep Scores

~rtsmouth

~tew

so.

a

Getvour

w

o

online

w

w

www.mvdailvtribune.com

�Sunday, September 12, 2010

Pomeroy • Middlcpm1 • Gallipolis

fbunbaP m:mtNi' -~entind • Page Bs

Floyd Mayweather

Jr. jailed in Vegas
domestic
. case

Steven M. Falk/Phlladclphla Dally Ncws/MCT

Philadelphra Eagles' Chris Gocong is charged with pass mterference as he defends against Tampa Bay
Kellen Wrnslow during the thrrd quarter of an NFL football game at Lincoln Frnancial Field,
October 11, 2009, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Ex-Browns TE WinsloW ready
to play former team
much attention for a the field.
career-threatening
Recovenng from his
motorc)cle accident and sixth knee
urger).
squabbling with the front Winslow at out numeroffice.
ous practices during
Short of playmakers. trammg camp and had
the Bucs Y.elcomed just a few n.tp dunng a
WrnslO\\ Y.ith welcome smgle prcse.tson game.
arms. 1 he one-time Pro
Bucs coach Raheem
Bowl selection Is making Morris acknowledged
the most of a fresh start. the tight end receives
1 he Buc... acquired c;pec1al treatment. But he
Wino;loY. m ellchange for doesn't .tpolo~rze for It
n
ccond round draft
"'It's 'ery h rd for me
p ck m 2009 and a fifth· to ~.:omp am bout the
rounder tJu ) ear then thm
th t he h
t
1 n d h1m to a 36 I done All he d d "
nulhon contrad exten
«.::orne here nd break.
SIOll that made h1m one record (for ught ends)
of the highest paid tight we had standmg for a
ends in the f·L
lung time,' Moms s rd
1 he 6-foot-4, 240The
coa h
pounder h.t' O'~~ ercome
Wmslo\\
""
urger) on both knees. bnght spot o
"Every uun that '' ent suftered a broken Jeg that that \vasn't
on up there '' 1th ended hrs roo}ae season
CJe,eland was a g.rov.ing and reccJ\ed mjuries )car
" I look fornard to bet
from the motorcycle
procec;~ for me I really
grew up and matured. It ern h that sidelined h1m ter and bigger thmgs
from hrm this year,''
wa
hn~
up iliere 10 2005
because we v.eren't wmA )!Car ago. he led Morris sa1d.
The deal sending
ning n lot and rt was just 1 ampa Ba) with 77
Winslow
to the Browns
frustrating at time . But receptions for 884 yards
I'm here no\\ and I'm (both club records for a wns made a little than a
after
Eric
having fun.''
tight end) and five touch- month
Mangmi
was
htred
,,s
The 27-year-old son of dtm ns. He al~o led the
Hall of Farner Kellen team in receJvmg yards coach. Mangini said he
Winslow had a pair of eight times and led or did not meet Winslow
80-catch seasons for the tied for the lead in re::ep- before the trade . and
Browns but couldn't tions m 12 of 16 games. re,ealed little about Y.hat
escape the perception of
I earn mates laud hi~ went into the decision to
being a talented but trou- toughness. 1 hey rave unload one of the team's
blesome pia) er.
about his work ethic and top pia) ers.
"It "'a':i an opportunity
Despite
impressi\ e "illingne~. to do whatstatistics. he recch ed as C\ er it takes to sta) on from a trade perspecth e

TAMPA. Fla. (AP) Kellen \Vinslow hasn't
forgotten C'le\ eland. but
he has mo.,.ed on.
The former Brown
tight end faces his old
team for the first time
Sunday when he begin
his second season with
B.1y
the
Tampa
Buccaneers. Yet the c;eventh-)ear pro m rc;t&lt;; rt
won't feel drfterent from
any other me
"It'~ re II\ JU t nother
team It
ble mg to be
here It ''here 1 ''ant to
be I'm fortunate ,· atd
Winsloy,," "'ho pent
often tumultuous
with the Bro\\nS
bemg traded to
r~a Bn)' m February

that \\C talked about, and
it's the decision that v.e
made at that point,··
Mangmi said. "Look.
he:s a very good player
and I reall)! respect the
things that he does as a
player."
BroY.ns rookie safety
T.J Ward "'ill draw the
assignment of covering
Win:-;IO\\ on Sunday. He
knows it's a tall order.
"He· a vel) good. ath
tH:: t1 :ht end He has
t h nd H
h~
I
\\
I
~

hrm. 1 d I m
on
to go 111 there and try to
compete I'm trying to
ff et m) immaturit} r
k of expenence b
t f tudy."
WhJle \\ mslo"' 1d e
doe n t ha' e any special
feehng about facmg his
old team. Morris isn't
bu) ing it.
''I'm !;Ure he has some
fuel. I'm sure he has
something hidden away,
some articles stowed
a\\ ay somewhere, something that was said negative about thi young
mnn,"
Morri~
said.
"That's what gets him
~omg. That's'' ho Kellen
rs ... He goe out. He
prepares. he practices. he
pia&gt; • he lo,es the game.
He II use anything for
motl\ation . That's the
kind of gu) he is ··

s break slump, beat Pirates 4-3 in 12
NNA11 (AP)- grounder to ~hort~top
A broken-bat grounder. A Ronny Cedeno, v. hose
low throw. A dropped low thro"' to the plate
ball. A lot of things '' ent bounced off the min of
ri~ht
to
help
the catcher Chris Snyder for
Cmcinnati Reds break out an error. allowing He1sey
of their deepest slump of to score.
"Bases loaded. nobody
the season.
.
They'll take it all.
out, put it in play and
possible.'"
Franci~&gt;co
Cordero anything's
blew n two-run lead in the Gomes said. "I shattered
ninth. but the Reds recov- my bat"
Plate ump1re Tim
ered on Jonny Gomes·
bases-loaded ~rounder in fimmons was read' to
the 12th inmng Frida) call He1sey out when he
night. gettmg a slump· sa\\ the ball drop from
busting 4-3 victory over Sn)der's glove.
"I botched it," Snyder
the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The NL Ccntml leaders snid. "Inexcusable. I ju"t
had dropped a seac;on- clanked it. Ronny did
high five 111 a row, whit- everrthing he could.
tlin&amp; their lead O\cr St. That s a tough play on his
Lours from eight to fi\ e end. I had to P.ick him up.
games. The Reds· come- I didn't do it. ·
Jordan Smith (2-2)
back win and the
Cardinalo;' 8·6 lo s in . retired the lac;;t two
Atlanta rebuilt the cush- Pimtes.
1ne Reds had to go 12
to six.
's been a while since innings- matching their
celebrated." marm~er longest game of the seausty Baker said. 'It son - to pull it out after
Cordem tailed.
feels like a month ."
Cordero en me on with a
The slump lasted nnly a
week. It ended with more 3·1 !ead in the ninth and
lt•t It slip away in 15
dnuna.
Chris Heisey started the pitches. He gnve up sin·
12th with a bunt single gles to four of his five
off Wi)fredo Ledezma (0 batters, including runcoring hits by Jo e
2) who then hit Joey
and
Pedro
V~tto. Scott Rolen sin- Tabatn
gled off Joel Hanrahan to Al,nrez. It was Cordero's
eventh blo\vn save in 42
load the bases. Gome
broke his bat on a soft chances. ending his

streak of 11 straight.
''To (Cordero's) credit.
he hasn't been out there
in six da) s,'" Baker aid.
"Before that, he "'as
thro\\ ing great."
left-lwnder
Cuban
Aroldis Chapman pitched
the lith, fanning two of
the three Pirates. Eight of
his I0 pitches hit triple
digits on the radnr gun,
topping out at I 03 mph.
The Reds have "'on 19
of their last 25 games
against the Pirntes. who
have clinched their record
18th trnight lo ing enson. With 80 wins.
Cincinnati is on the ve~e
of emerging from It
longest Josmg streak 1~ ,,
half-century - no \\111·
ning record since 2000.
Until Cordero' meltdO\\ n.
right hnnder
Homer Baile) "'as in line
to "'in his sixth straight
against the Pirates. The
right-hander struck out a
cnreer·high nine in seven
innings. a\lowmg only
Snydcr'o; solo homer.
Bniley is 5·0 in six
career slnrts against
Pittsburgh "ith n 1.52
bRA. l·ivc of tus 15
career ''ins .~rc againc;t
Pittsburgh.
The Reds scored three
nms with tv.o out in the
third inning otT lcft-hander Pnul Maholm. Rolen

had an RBI double. Drew
Stubbs singled for a 2-1
lead. and Paul Jani h ingled home another run.
Janish. filling in at shorttop while Orlando
Cabrera recovers from a
tnuned abdomen. has hit
safel) in a season-high
seven games.
1\:eil
Pittsburgh's
Walker turned 25 and 'ingled off Cordero in the
ninth, extending his
career-best hitung treak
to 16 games. It's the
longec;t b) a Pirates rookie in~e Rennie Stennett
~lit in 18 strnight in 1971.
Votto turned 27 and
\\ent 0 tor 4 wtth three
strikeout . He "'as al-;o
hit by a pitches t\\ ice.
OTES: The Pirate
released
INF
Aki
lwamura. who batted
.182 in 54 games. C Erik
Krotz cleared wah ers and
"'ns assigned outright to
the minors .... The Red~
ncuvnted
OF
Jim
hhnnnds
(strained
nhdominal nw-;cle) and
Rll ~like Leake (tired
pitching shoulder) off the
15-da) DI . Leake won't
p1tch for nO\\, but could
be used to hit or ron ....
Bench coach Chris Speier
coached third base in
plnce of Mark Bell)', who
had a ore back.

LAS VEGAS (A P) with a copy of the docuBoxer
floyd ment when he was
Mayweather Jr. was released from jail, Clark
jailed briefly J·riday on n County courts spokesfelony charge after his woman Jillian Prieto
ex-girlfriend a11egeu he said.
beat her and stole her
Mayweather is considcell phone during an ered one of the sport's
argument in front of top performers, with a
their three chi ldreri.
record of 41-0 and 25
Mayweather. 33. said knockouts. He goes br,
nothing as he was • the nickname "Money·
released from the Clark and earned more than
County jail on $3,000 $20 million in May from
bail aher being booked h1s fight in Las Vegas
on a grand larceny against "Sugar" Shane
charge. He could face up Mosley.
to five years in state
May"' eather
made
prison if he i convicted headlines earlier this
of taking items valued at month with an online
video laced with expleless than $2,500.
He is scheduled for an tives and sometimes
initial appearance Nov. racial runts against box9 in Las Vegas Justice ing rival and Philippine
Court.
sensatton
Manny
Mayweather's lawyer, Pacquiao, who faces
Richard Wright, denied Antonio Margarita on
Mayweather was guilty Nov. 13 at Cowboys
of the criminal charges Stadium ncar Dallas.
based on allegations by
Fans have called for
Josie Harrts.
Mayweather to fight
"He did not commit Pacquiao in what could
any grand larceny," be the richest fight in
The boxing history. but
Wright
told
Associated Press ...Josie negotiations have stalled
can't find her iPhone. amid suggestions from
We're attempting to find Mayweather's camp that •
it or replace it. We'll Pacquiao has used percooperate in the inve ti· formance-enhancing
gation. We expect to get drugs.
Pacquiao
the matter resolved.'' An responded
with
a
tPhone typically co ts defamation lawsuit that
less than 500.
is still pending.
In a request for a
Mayweather said durCiark Court Famil) ing the \ideo that he's
Court protection order. on vacation "for about a
Harris said Mayy,eather year'' and would easily
threatened to kill her in defeat Pacquiao after
a confrontation about 5 that.
Pacquiao dismissed
a.m. Thursday at a home
she says is listed in his Mayweather's video as
name in southwest Las an "uneducated roessage,'' and Pacq4iao 's
Vegas.
She sa1d he was angf) trainer, Freddie Roach,
bout her a relationship labeled it "a really cheap
rth another man.
low blow."
The document sa) s
Mayweather has been
Harris anq Mayweather arrested several times
hved together for seven since 2002 in battery
)ear and separated in and 'iolence cases in
May after 15 "on and La Vegas and in his
otT' years.
hometo"' n of Grand
It say Harris ought Rapids. Mtch.
another protection order
He was convicted in
fi, e years ago and 2002 of misdemeanor
alleges that Ma) weather battery stemming from a
battered another former fight "'ith tY. o women at
girlfriend. The docu- a Lns \~egas nightclub.
ment does not mention He received a suspended
an iPhone.
one-year jail sentence
Harris also filed a and was ordered to
police
complaint undergo impulse-control
Thursday. It hns not counseling.
been made public.
He was fined in Grand
The nine-pa~e request Rapids in February .2005
for a protectiOn order nnd ordered to perform
alleges
Mayweather community service after
pulled Harris'
hair, pleading no contest to
punched her in the head misdemeanor assault
and twisted her arm and batter) for a bar
v.hile she screamed for fight.
their children. ranging
He "'as acquitted by a
in age from 7 to almost
'e..vnda jury in July
11. to call 911.
2005
after
being
"He
yelled
and accused of hitting and
screamed that he "'a
kicking Harris duting an
going to kill me and m) argument outside a Las
bO) friend."
Harris Vegas nightclub.
"Flo) d
ha
Harris.
then
25.
wrote.
threatened to have other recanted her allegations
people do harm to me as and lestified that he
well and if (there) is a lied to police because
way I can be protected she
was
angry
from that please help Mayweather left her for
me."
another woman.
Police said Thursday
Harris told jurors that
that Harris was treated ~1ayweather was a
at a Las Vegas hospital "tedd) bear inside" and
for minor injuries.
said she knew "no matA judge JJranted a 30- ter what I did. he would
oay protective order and never put hi:&gt;. hands on
:vtay \\eat her was served me."

For lnnial evaluations or follow-up visits for total
joint replacement, w~ offer office hours at:
3554 U.S. Route 60 East,
Barboursville, WV

Next clinic date is Friday, Sepl17
Call (614) 461-8174 or 1-800-371-4790
for an appointment.

Specializing in total joint replacement

�Pugc H6 • ~unblw 'CCmtrt\ ~cntmrl

J&gt;omcro) • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 12,2010

Meigs Basketball Golf Scramble
POM~ROY. Ohto
The Meigs Boys Basketball
Program will be holding u golf scramble on Saturday,
Sept. I 8, at Kountry Hills Golf Course m Pomeroy.
Ohto.
,
Registration begms at 8:15 a.m • wlth a 9 a m. shot
gun st&lt;lft.
All proceeds will benefit the Mc1gs Hagh School
Boys Basketball Program.
PriLes will be awarded to the top three teams.
well as longest dnve. putt. and closest to the pin
F'or more information or to register contact Benny
P.v. mg at 740 416 0824 or Steve Clay at 740 992
6312 or 740 416 7923.

1st 4 games of
March Madness to
be in Dayton, OH

David Pokress/Newsday/MCT

New England Patnots quarterback Tom Brady ( 12) potnts out blockmg targets before taktng the snap against
the New York Giants at the New Meadowlands Stadtum m East Rutherford N.J , on Thursday, September 2.

Business as usual as Brady practices'after crash
I· 0 X B 0 R 0 U G II .
Mas . (AP)
1om
Brnd) went through h1s
u&lt;;ual stretching Then he
thre\\ passec;.
Leo;;s than se\ en hours
after being mvol\ed m a
l\\ o-car crash near h1c;
horne m Boston's Back
Ba) on 1 hursda). all
appeared normal a&lt;;
Brad) practtced w1th the
New En lund Patriots for
Sunday'&lt;; cc.enson opener
agamo;;t the C'incmnntJ
Ben ale;
fhc t r qunrtcrb. d.
I ; on h,., b l k l n the
field 1 hand und r h1
1 t H
c
h th n d d tl
amc ' nh h1 n ht
Then the tv.o tune Super
Bow I M \'P stood up and
rnn about 40 ;c~rd~ to one
end of the f1eld .md
began throwm '·
There v.ere etght h1gh
lob~ to re Cl\ Cf'i runmno
lon the nght 1de, then
c1 ht to th lett 111en he
tossed e1 ht soft hners to
the n ht. nd d1d tbe me
to the left

the Ioder room during
the 45 minutes in \\ hich
reporterc, and cameras
were allo\\ ed msidc.
Belichtck had no news
~onkrence o;;cheduled for
Thursday and didn't
o~ddress the crash publid).
"He's here. He's read)
to go," ught end Alge
Crumpler said before the
afternoon practice. · I
think e' erybody s \\Or·
ried outside this locker
room. but I wouldn't be
worned .IOOUt 11 '
B I} 1 111 the

''I \HI hopmg. obv1
ously. that he was OK.'
ouh1de lincb.1cker 1ully
B,mtn C'ain said. "I &lt;;U\\
hun walking 111 lie had a
~mile on l11s fal:e, no
abrasmno;;, o,o I thmk he·
tine."
Brad} participated in a
''alkthrough prnct1ce at
I0:45 a.m , about hour
hour... &lt;~Iter the \:rash
1l1cn he w ~~~ on the t1cld
wtth h1s team mutes. ull1n
full umtorm, for the lui
practt\:e &lt;&gt;hOJ11) .titer I
p m Durin th
11
nunutc med1
11.
~ nod h
t thr

''
repnr
dun t \:O\ er the Patli o
to Gtllette Stndtum
Br.td). who onl\ spc l..s
to
the
medta
on
\Vcdnec;;da)c;. \\,Isn't 111

on t 'i 1.1me
n .n)moremht
do t thmk clllythm ,·s
rea II&gt; gu.mmtced to us
be) nnd v. hat \\ e ha\ e
today." Brad) an~wered.

No. 23 West Virginia needs OT to beat Marshall
Hl NTINGTO~.
W.Y.t. CAP) - No. 23
West \ irginia rnll1ed
from 15 points down in
the fourth qu.trter to
force overtime and
lyler Bit,lncurt's 20
) ard fteld goal in the
fm,t extra session lifted
the Mountaineerc; to a
24-2 I "1ctory O\ er
Marslurll on Frid,t)
night.
Brian Anderson threw
three touchdown pas!ics
tor Mar~&gt;hall (I I) and
the I hundering Herd
appeared to hn' e the
outcome 111 hnnd after
jumpang ahead 21-6
earl) 111 the fourth.
• We~t Virginia ( 1- 1)
tv. icc dro\e more than
90 yards tor a touchdown do\\ n the strelch.
indudin~ Geno Smith's
5-yard 1 D toss to Will
Johnson wHh 12 seconds left. Smith then
threw to Jock Sander-.
111 the b.tck ot the end
zone on the 2-pOJnt
conver~ion tr) to ~end
the game into overtime
tied nt 21-21.
After Bitancurt's third
field goal of the game.
Marshall's Tyler Warner
n11ssed
a
39-) ard
attempt wide right to
end it.
"Mountaineer&lt;; never
said
West
quit,"
Virginia conch Bill
Stewart. who needed
the late herOJcs to a' oid
what would have been
the most disappointmg
loss in his three ~ea
sons.
" l·veryone
'' ho
counted us out. 1t was
just a bump 1n the

road.'' Stewart satd
"You saw rcsoh e and
gnt and a team "ho
became tighter. I love
these gu)s. It wasn 1
prett). but at '' .ts JU"t
the 'iecond o,une of the
season.··
We~t
\ ug11Ha
impro.,ed to 10 0 all
time against M.trsh.tll
Except for the1r tJr&lt;;t
meeting in 191 I. tlu
one was the llosc&lt;ot m
the. series between the
Mate'o,
onl\
Bowl
Subdivh.ion schooh
Dec;pite being u hea')
u ndcrdog and gett mg
OUt&lt;;COred 141 4~ Ill
tour games &lt;.Jilce thetr
series rec;umcd in 2006.
there wus a sense that
Marshall wa-.n't goinf
to lte dmvn uga111 t 1t
northern neighbor.
Marshall coach Doc
llollidny.
the
Mount.1ineer · recruit
1110 coordinator the p.1~t
two seac,on~. brou •Ill
rnstde knO\\ ledge of hts
former team. I ormer
WVL! oftensi\ e •r.tdu
ate assistant J,du.m
Seider 1" M.trsh.tll's
running b.tck~ t:oad1
and rec:ruittn • coord11tn
tor. while three ex gt',td
uatc asststants at WVl
have similar role::. at
M.trshall.
We~&gt;t
Virginia's
offen c was ~Iuggish at
time~ for the o;econd
strnight \\ eek
1 he
Mountninecro; cot 111sidc
Marr.hall's 30 yard lint.:
tour time~ in the first
three quarter::. but came
:may with only two
field go.tls.
Bnnncurt';; 45 ) ard

attempt \\as blocked t&gt;}
Johnn) Jones late 111 the
thtrd quarter. fhat gave
Jones six blocked field
goals for h1c, career.
includ mr, one ill 0~ io
State last "eel..
\nder-.on then dro\e
~1ar-.hall "6 } ards 111
"c' en pia) s. capp111g
the drn c "1th .1 12 y&lt;trd
fD toss to Antt~vtous
\\ ilson on the fiN pl.t)
of the fourth quctrter f01
a 21 6 le.td.
West Yirginta looked
.t'i 1f tl \\Ould become
the Iate'&gt;t B1g £ ac;t team
to l&gt;tumble on the road.
tollow mg Pttt&lt;;burgh.
ConncctJcut
and
C'incmnatt trom n "eek
e.ulter
Marshall had a chance
to pad it-. lead aft~r
Sm1th fumbled at the
West \ irgini.1 16. but
M.ushall'!.
Tton
Marttnez tumbled the
ball """a'
to the
1ountnine~K at the .1.
Smith
and
Noel
Devu1e then "cnt to
work
De\ tne. v. ho rm;hed
for I 12 &gt;ard~ on 23 car
ric . capped the dr 'e
\\ith "4;ard s\\eep
around left end \\lth
5:12 rematning to cut 1t
to 21 I ~
1 he Mountaineers •ot
the b.tll back again at
the1r 2 )ard line \\ith
3:09 left
Smith. \\ ho complet
ed '2 of 45 (M'i'&gt;C'&gt; tor
J((l ).trd&lt;; Ill hi&lt;; '&gt;CCOnd
carect ~tart, went 9 of
I~ on the dm e and kept
it g•&gt;mg wtth ,, 20 \ .ml
-.crumbling run.
M.lrsh.tll's
Omar

BrO\\ n \\as called for
pa'&gt;'&gt; interference "1th
-\5 seconds left. giving
\\e~t Virginia a first
dO\\ n at the 1 hundenng
Herd 2
After SmJth "as tack
led for ,1 los b).\ inn)
Curr) at the 5. he found
Johnson in the right
corner of the end zone
for a touchdown on the
next pia). then hit a
\\ tde open Sanders for
the coil\ ersion tr).
West V1rginia got the
ball first m overtime.
Smith lo::.t 9 yardc; on a
run on the fir..,t pia). but
th1ng ... got better from
there. A 11 ) nrd pas to
1 a\ on Austin \\as fol
lowed b) run" of 7 and
2 ).trd-. b) De,ine to
put the ball .tt the 3. settmg up Bitancurt's go·
ahe.td f1eld goal.
Andre Booker lost 8
) nrds on ~1ar'&gt;hall'::.
f1rst pia) of O\ crtune
and Anderson then
t\\o ~traight
thre\\
int:ompletions.
\\ nrner'l&gt; field goal tr}
o,cnt a groan through the
record ~tadium cro\\ d
of 41.382. \\hi le we~t
Virgrnia'&lt;;
sideline
erupted in JUbilation.

Thank You

Crown
Excavating

INDIANAPOliS
(APJ
The Umversity
of Dayton will host all
tour ftrst·round games
of the newly expanded
men·._ basketball tournament next March, the
NCAA said Thursday.
games
wi II
Two
match the tournament's
lowest &lt;,ecds. Nos. 65
through 68. with the
winners nd\'ancing a
No. I 6 c;eeds to pia} a
top &lt;;eecl. "I he other t\\ o
games w111 match the
last tour of the 37 atlarge qualifiers.
The 68-team f1eld
will
be announced
March 13. with firstround g.tmcs taking
place "I ueo,dct}
und
Wednesday, March 1516.
The "Hrst rour" for
mat had been the last
undecaded
question
.1fter the NCAA's muchdebated deci~ion to
expnnd its marquee
e' ent. The
NC' AA
announced in April that
1t would add three
te.uns to the field, the
expansion smce the
11.1m nt went from
ms t 65 m 2001.
Ohto, has
earl)' "pin)
111
~a me every ) ear
111ce then
Gene Smith. athletic
nector at Ohao State
nd the new chair of the
01\ i ion
I
Men's
Bao;;ketbnll Committee.
cited the sizable crowds
O\er the pac;;t decade in
picking Da)ton to host
the maugural F·irst Four.
The NCAA did not
commit to holding the
f1rst four games in
Del) Lon be) or~d 20 I I.

"We explored differ
ent options, including
playing the first-round
games at multiple sites
as well as the possabllit} of playing all games
on one day. but we
came to the conclusion
that Dayton as the best
Iocat1on to host all four
games for the 20 II
tournament,'' he said.
''Moving forward • •
will conduct a thorou
evaluation. as we do
with all rounds of the
champion~&gt;hip. with the
student-athlete experience being our top prionty."
The NCAA decided
against a larger expansion to 80 or even 96
teams. It settled on 68
and its ne\\ 14-)ear.
$10.8 billion television
package v. ith CBS
Sports
and
Turner
Broadcasting not onl)
ensures that e'Very game
will be televised but
gh es the NCAA sole
authority to expand
again.
All four First Four
games will be broadcast
on Turner's truTV cable
channel.
The at-large teams
\\ill be seeded where
the) would normally .
placed in lhe brack
meaning a first-round
game betv. een two No.
I0 seeds would re ult in
the winner ad' anci ng to
play a No. 7 seed. There
was concern that the
\\ inners v. ill have an
,tdvantage in the second
round. ha\ ing already
pia) ed and won. and
committee
members
have acknowledged that
some big-name teams
could be ousted early.

Home Solutions

New Home construction On Your Property
• large owner's su1te
with Whirlpool tub and
sperate shower
• large walk 1n closets
• Atrium open to
second floor
• Covered front porch
• Laundry/mud room

• 4 Bedrooms
• 2.5 Baths
• 2 Car garage
• 2,212 sq ft
The Lexington

$157,700.00
MENTION
THIS ADD FOR 10% OFF
OF ALL OPTIONS

2,2l2sq tt /Qe ftJrll
at $15 '700.00

HGR Home SolutiOnS

All homes
boast a
3 year warranty

Scott:740HB~3762

Fax: 86&amp;538·9787
scottft hgrhomesolutionS com

Call today to tour a local build!

Getvour

spor

online

�Cl

LONG THE

IVER ·
Sunday,Septe01ber12,20tO

•=========================================

T

u

ICHIGAN

tPrize crowds
•

BY DAVID RUNK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ArtPrize. the Grand Rapid.s art show and
competition that surprised locals by drawing
tens of thousands of visitor::. when it debuted in
2009, is back for a second year.
And it's expected to be even bigger this time.
The southwestern Michigan city's vibrant arts
scene will get an infusion of energy from I, 713
artists displaying tllcir works for 19 days in 192
venues, from plazas. hotels and museums, to
restaurants. coffee shops and parks.
One of the most unusual aspects of the event,
which runs Sept. 22-0ct. 10, is that the public
decides the top I 0 winners through "American
Idol "~style voting. Last year, more than 37,000
people voted on their ArtPrize favorites either
online or by text message.
Artists from 21 countries and 44 states are
taking part in the competition, which offers
}449,000 111 prizes decided by the public,
induding a top award of $250,000.
"It's de-;igned for maximum openness in par·
ticipatJon.'' Art Prize founder Rick DeVos o;a1d
Ill an 1 ten aeY. "The extent to "'h1ch people
ot It the first year and ran "'ath it even further
a .,., e had imagined was amazmg.''
aul Ha, director of the Contemporary Art
useum St. Louis, s.tid winner::.
mo~t art
competitions are decided by a few professionals.
''It's very rare to have such democracy in art,
the fact that the public \Ote counts," said Ha,
Y.ho i'&gt; scheduled to speak in ArtPrize's lecture
series. Ha did not attend Jast year but received
a barrage of enthusiastic e·maiJs from artist:-;
Y.ho did participate. He plans to spend four
days exploring this year's event and the host
City.
The success of the inaugural ArtPrize caught
many off-guard. Throngs spent hours or day.s
walking between the 159 venues that displayed
the work of 1,262 arti~ts. Some restaurants ran
out of food and were forced to close early
Organizers had also expected most visitors
would be in their 20s or 30s. but all age~ turned
out. This year's .schedule includes .some familyfocused events ~uch as neighborhood block
parties.
"I didn't even think of children when coming
up with the initial concept." DeVo.s ~aid. "The
extent that it was embraced by families, and
served as really an inspiration for kid.s to get
x.cited about art and making things. was real' really gratifying.··
•
'DeVos is grandson of multi billionaire Rich
DeVos. a co-founder of direct-sales giant
Amway Corp., and son of Dick DeVos, a former
Amway president who unsuccessfully ran for
Michigan governor as the GOP candidate in
2006. In starting ArtPrize. Rich DeVo.s' longterm goal IS to encourage the growth of the
area's creative culture. In the process, he's
helped to raise Grand Rnpius' profile as an arts
destmation.
While the public gets to make the big-money
award decisions, this year's ArtPrize al~o
includes juried awards worth at least $5,000
each. Judged by experb, the categories include
best two-dimensional work: best three-dimensional work; best time-ba.sed work of perfor·
mance, film or video: and an award for use of
urban space.
The biggest challenge for visitors will be
deciding what to see and what to skip. The
event's seven main exhibition center~ including the Frederik Meijer Gardens &amp;
Sculpture Park, Grand Rapids Art .Museum. and
Grand Rapid.s Public Museuo1 - make a good
·
ping-off point for visitot-;. With the excepof Meijer Gardens, all of the venues are in
downtown area.
Art Prize is also turning the city's Old Federal
Building into "The Hub" where artists can
meet, trle event's speaker series will be based,
and visitors can get information and technical
help with voting dr mapping.
Joseph Becherer, the ~1eijer's chief curator,
sa 1d ArtPrize 1s an important part of a transformation he's seen since moving to the city. of
200,000 nearly two decades ago.
"People arc thinking about and beginning to
Jive with the vbual arts in a very different
way." he said.

of

•

Lori Niedenfuer Cool for the Grand Rapids Press/Mllve.com

ThiS Oct. 7, 2009 f1le photo shows a viewer lookmg at "Open Water no. 24,• by Ran Ortner on display at The
Old Federal Bwldmg in Grand Rapids, Mich dunng ArtPrize. The piece won the top prize at last year's competition.

Brian Kelly/AP Photo

This Oct. 11, 2009, photo shows crowds gathered in front of the Old Federal Building in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
dunng ArtPrize. ArtPrize, the Grand Rapids art show and competition that surprised locals by drawing tens of
thousands of visitors when it debuted in 2009, is back for a second year.

Brian Kelly/AP Photo

This Sept. 28, 2009
photo shows people lin·
ing a bridge near down·
town Grand Rapids,
M1ch., during ArtPrize.

"

�PageC2

i&gt;unbap ~imes -$entinel

Sunday, September 12, 2010

COMMUNITY CORNER
The pligh\ of the cong(egatton of the Hemlock
Gro-.e Christian Church
by a fire delibemtely set
by three young people, tS
felt not only by those
parishioners, but many
others who are repulsed
by the wanton destmction of a house nf Croci.
Numerous

churches,

org.mizations .md busanesses ha\e stepped for'' ard to help those v. ho
attended that little country church in its effort!&gt; to
begin rebuilding.
There ha\c been sC\Cral monctal) contributions
and ome money-makmg
pr.ojects like ) ard sales
and dinners to help. ·I11e
latest to announce is the
St. Paul Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy \\bach \\all
ho t a benefit paghett1
dinner on Fnday, Sept.
24, \\ ith sen ing 1rorn II
a.m. to 2 p.m.
•••
'
Exercising as .1 \\ay of
staymg young and acll\C
in life is catching on \\ ith
more and more people
At
the
Mulberry
Commumty Center par
tic1pation in the Women's
Shape-Up
Htne&lt;;s
Program ts expanding
v. hich means more 'olunteers
\\ ith
some
knowledge ot excrca e
equipment nrc needed to
ru; i t in the operntlon
ll \\ .ts JUst a fe\\ v. ceks
ago that equapment v. .ts
donated for the program•
and set up on the stage m
the g) mnasium at the
Center. Attendance hJo;
really picked up recently
and there a a need fop
expandmg hour&lt;;
The problem IS that the
progmm I'\ opcmted by all
volunteers 01i., mcano; the
mall fee p trons pay , oe~;
dtrectly mil.' the Mea ''

Charlene Hoeflich
Coopemtl\e Parish's food
pantry and the expenses
of other assi tance for
needy f,umlies.
The current operating
hours are Tue'\days and
Thursda) s, 9 to 11 a.m.
and 4 to 6 p.m. but are
bemg
expanded
to
include a
Saturday
schedule of 9 to J1 a.m.
But there's that problem
of \Oiuntccrs to help.

...

When you c1dmire the
beautiful flowers in pots
along Main Street in
Pomero), and in baskets
hanging on the period
lump posts. remember
n's
the
Pomeroy
Merchants A&lt;;sociation's
contribution to dov. ntO\\ n beautificatiOn.
But that and other programs of the group need
the public's support of tt's
efforts This month's fundrni'&gt;ing project is the duck
dcrb) at the Riverfest. By
"adoptmg" one of the
numbered ducks which
\\ 111 float do\\ nri ver
tO\\nrd un imaginary finl'ih hne in the mer
Suturda) means you are
contnbutin~ to makmg the
town heauttful.
fhere ·., much to be
&lt;uned b) the $5 adoption fee "J t onl} are you
hclpm th Merch nt~ an

their project, but you are
taking a chance on winning $500 or one of
numerous other prizes to
be awarded after the
derby race.
•••
Did you know that resadents, organizatiOns tnd
businesses contributed
enough backpacks and
school supplies to -;end
252 children to school
prepared to learn. That
\\aS how many the Meigs
Cooperative Parish gave
out an .t three-hour period on the day before
school started.
• ••
If there was C\er a group
of people who IO\ed thetr
v. ork and the place where
they worked, it \\as
emloyee of Veterans
Memorial Hosp1tal.
One of them once commented that her co-workers were just like family,
that she loved workmg
there. and how distre-;sed
she was when "the hospital closed
As we all know the
hospital closed several
years ago. job disappeared, efforts to reopen
it were futile. and
employees moved on.
But the) ha\e nc\er
forgotten their happy
days ,no; employees of
VMH and they meet )Car
after year to celebrate
that. They'll gather
together Saturday at the
Mulberry Community
Center. I to 4 p.m. to
reminisce about tho e
day and the good umes
they shared.
There \\ill be .t d1splay
of memornbtlia. plenty of
"rcmembcrin~
when,"
and a memortal table in
tnbute to thetr co-\\orkers who ha\ c p c.&lt;;ed on
It \\ 111 be .1 good day

Modern Woodmen volunteers
beautify Oak Hill community
Local Modem \\ Oodmen
of Amenl.a member.
recently put th tr hands
where therr heart are On
3uly 1. member. of the Oak
H1ll Modem Woodmen
camp (chapter) \\ orked
together to plant flowers
and shrubs m the village of
Oak Hill.
The project v. ns part of
the organization's Good
Neighbor&lt;; Program, n
nationv. ide progrnm th&lt;~t
gh es Modern Woodmen
camps accro s the country
$500 for h:mds-on rep.ur
and community beautification projects. Nearly
500 such proJects benefit
communitac
m the
United States annuall)
"As a member-ba&lt;;ed,
organi1.atton,
fmtemal
Modem \\oodmen tnvc
to ghe member famihe
opportunities to \ofuntccr
and enhance thetr commusays
Emma
nities,"
Wi cman. local Modem
Woodmen camp sccretal).
"Our Good Neighbors

From lett to nght, Modem Woodmen Financial Rep
Alberta Lewis, Crystal Davis and Emma W1seman.
Prog~.un

does both."
Founded in 1883 as a
fmtemal benefit society.
toda) modem Woodmen
of America offers financial
sen tees and fraternal
member benefits to indi-

'iduals and famihe
throughout the United
St.1tes. The Organi1.ation's
Oak Hill camp pro\ tde&lt;&gt; a
number of \Oiuntccr ser'ice and social activities
for local members.

Church Notebook
WCG fall retreat
GALLIPOLIS - The WCG fall
retreat will be held Saturday. Sept. II at
the First Church of God. 1723 Ohio
141. Gallipolis. The e\Cnt is scheduled
from 10 a.m.- I p.m The gue t s{'Caker
will be Roberta Me.,~ner. llcr toptc will
be ''Twelve Keys to the G1ving Life."
Th RSVP. call 446-1390 or 446-2946.

Po·wer Force
coming to Gallia Co.
RIO GRANDI~
JohtJ Jacobs' Next
Generation Power Force ''ill conduct
programs at area schools and a crusade
Sept. 15-19 in Galli&lt;~ County.
The cn1sadc \\ill be held at 7 p m. daily
Sept. 16·18 at the University of Rio
(irandc Lyne Center. Admio;s1on to cms:u.lc is free. A love ollcring will he taken.
For inf01mation, call D&lt;~le Geiser at
(740) 645-6496 01 (740) 245-59~4.

Singing in the Hills

event wiJI take place on Dodrill Koad, 21/2 miles north of Vinton on Ohio 160.
Featured groups include The 'Wilsons,
The Hinson Revi-.al. Gloryland
Believers. New Southern Harmony, Vicki
Moore. Rick 10\\ c. College Hill Praise
and Worship Dance Team .md others
There v. ill be games for children. a
bounce house and a concession tand.
Those attendmg should take a lawn
chair. Admis ion is free. For infomlation. call 388-8645 or 645-47J0.

Rodney UMC
homecoming
RODNEY Rodne)
Ulllted
Methodist Church will ho t homecoming
services on Sunday. Sept. 19. Sen ices
begin at I0 a.m. The Gmccmen will be in
concert. Brent \Vatson, assist&lt;~nt !.upcnntendcnt ot the Foothills District, will be
the guc:st speaker. A cany-in dinner will
be held followi ng the scrv1ce.
Homecoming ncti\ ities scheduled for
Saturday, Sept. 18 include a soltb,lll
game at 6 p.m .. n honlirc rU1d wcmcr
roast at 7 p.m., cornhole and ladder ball
games. Church oftici,ll aid this will be
the kickoff for fall youth group meeting
'""~oc;t·~~L~. .MC is loc.lted ut 6611 Oh10

Ohio Valley Symphony
season ~pens Oct. 2
BY THOMAS CONSOLO

How do you top a yearlong 20th bhthday celebration? If you're the
Ohio Valley Symphony,
the answer is with more.
That's how music director Ray Fowler sees the
2010-11 season, at least.
After the ~uccess of the
gala 2009-I 0 ea on, he
said, 'Thas season will
surpa s that." He cites
both the v. orld-class
soloists and some of the
major pieces set ,to
recei\ e their regional
premieres.
Fowler, who has conducted the OVS since its
first concert- played 20
years ago on borrowed
folding chairs in an
unheated Ariel Theater
- will be on the podium
for all five 2010-11 programs. •t hey' II include
first-time appearances.
from four guest artists,
two nights focpsing on a
single composer and the
traditional holiday program What has surprised
Fowler is how so many
facets of the year fell
together so well
The serendipity starts
\\ ith the first sho\\ on
Oct. 2. h features the
Quartetto Gelato (that
translates as the Ice
Cream Quartet), an
unusual
combinataon
with a fun-filled attitude
toward music. The foursome- an oboist, a \lOIinist \\hO doubles as a
tenor, a cellist and an
accordionist
are
famous for a unique
blend of classical masterworks, operatic artas. SJZzhn tango . and gypsy
nd folk son
The&gt; p
pep
The) re a v

ent. and It qlllte a coup
they're coming.'
L.ora Snov.. the orche executio,;e director
pal ob01 t. h
n a fan of the group he
d When he contacted
them. the October v.eekend just hap~ned to be
open on the1r schedule.
The quartet and the OVS
v. ill perform at Point
Plea ant Junior/Senior
High SchooL (The rest of
the season is at the on:hestrn ·s pemmnent home, the
Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Perlorming Art~ Centre in
do" ntown Gallipolis.)
I November's program
brings ·cellist Joseph
Johnson to Galhpolis for
the biggest blockbuster in
the olo cello repertoire.
Antonio
D'orak's
Concerto for Cello and
Orchestra.
Finding
Johnson. former principal celli t of the
Mil\\ aukee Symphony
Orchestra .md no\\ of the
Toronto
Symphony
Orchestra. \Va another
stroke of luck for Fov. ler.
The conductor said he
heard of Johnson becau e
he had worked with a
violinist whose playing
Fowler really likes and
respects. Of the 'cellist
he said. "Hb playing is
SO \'Crx, \Cf)' solid,'"
It wtll be the concerto's
first performance by the
OVS, and it's the centerpiece of an all-D,orak
program. The Czech
compo er is an audience
favorite thanks to hi
eemingly bottomle s
supply of beautiful
melodies. Fov. ler 10\ es
the mu ic, too. but he
aid he didn't et out to
build an ali-D\orak program. He said the rest of
the e\ening - movements from the Serenade
for Strings and both sets
of Slavonic Dances fell together naturall)
around the gue~t artist.
1l1c other compo er portrait close~ the season April
30 with a look at Fell'\
Mendelssohn. A child
prodigy, Mendelssohn first
pctfonned in public at age
9 and burst on the composition scene with his Octet
and "Midsummernight's
Dream" 0\e.rture at the
ripe age of 16. The com-

•

••••

• ....,IUI'UIO&lt;I

......

tlu.,
.

Quartetto Gelato

Shakespeare play in his 30s
for inspiration and wrote
more music for the play.
including the "Wedding
March'' that has ince
accompanied countless
newl&gt; weds dov. n the rusle.
Rounding out that program as the OVS premiere of Mendelssohn's
sparkling
Violin
Concerto. It's been a taple for 'iolini ts &lt;;ince it
debut, a milestone for
C\ery \ tolm tudent and a famou ly insurmountable goal for Jack
Benn) It's anything but
in urmountable. though,
for llya Kaler, the
Russtan-born VIrtuoso
joining the OVS for the
concert. Kaler is the only
vtohnist to \\in gold
medals
at
the
T 1k0\· k), Sibelius
Pagamm "aohn comns He has recorded xtensa\ely m the former So' iet Union and the
Umted States. He aJ&lt;;o
cache&lt;;
at
DePaul
nt\ersity an Chtcago.
In bet\\een these mu ial portraits are the holida) program and a night of
Broadway etas ics. Fo\\ ler
sav he never tires of
unearthmg musical treats
for the Christma program, nov, a regional tradition and scheduled this
year for Dec. 4. Among
this year·~ gem . he said,
arc 'The Snov. man" by
Erich Komgold and the
"Carol S) mphony" by
Victor Hely-1 Iutchinson, a
South African-born British
compo cr from the first
half of the 20th centUI).
Fowler described the symphony a both noble and
JOYOUS. \\hich made it a
good companion for fel)o\\ Briton BenJamin
Britten, \\ho e more
of
ombcr
''Men
Good\\ ill" i al o lated
Korngotd.
a
late
Romantic-era
child
prodig). v. rote has faary
tale "The Snowman" at
nge 11. J·owler finds the
nchtc\ cment remarkable.
"The quality of the emotional content is so
beyond his year , so
mature:· he satd. ··He
obvi{lllsly \\us born as an
older person.''
In March. the OVS
welcomes
Margaret
Carlson to the Ariel
Theater. The Grammy
nominee has elected a
line-up of fa\Oritc b)
Amenca's finest· Rodger:nnd
Hammerstein. Lerner and
Lov.e, Hnrold Arlen,
Cole Porter and Stephen
Sondheim - all \\ nh the
lu h support only a full
orchestra can pro' ide
Fov. lcr counts the e cia sic songs as imporcant
American music - and
music that is slipping

through the cultura.
cracks as schools an
community companies
move on to more contemporary shows. Carlson,
he said, brings a freshness to these standards
which will v. in the audience's heart.
It's a cason designed
v. ith a little of everything, and that's all part
of the orchestra's mission, accordin~ to Lora
Snow. It's a mtssion that
hasn' t v.a-.ered in the
past two decades: to
bring live, professional,
orchestral mustc to the
region; to pro\ ide its performers with a positive
atmosphere: and to instill
a love of music in children through education
and exposure to great
music. (OVS rehear . . als
are open to the public for
free. and children are
welcome. Rehearsals are
Fri. 7-10 and Sat. 1-4 o.
concert weekends.)
The
Oh10
Valle)
Symphony
remains
outhea t Ohio's onl)
profes ional orchestra,
and its ~rmanent home,
the Anei-Ann Carson
Dater Performing Arts
Centre. is the keystone to
cultural life in Gallipolis.
Gallipoli city mana~er
Randy Finney agreed tt's
an important part of the
city. Among other benefits, he said, 'The Ariel
allows us to showcase
downtown." Finney said it
\\a), a great sign to see
people on the sidewalks
and cars on the streets on
concert nights. 'They'\e
done a great job," he said
of the OVS and Ariel.
"and it'· important to continue de\ eloping culture."
Fov.ler, too. looks forward to more de-. elopment from the orchestra
and eeing it become atA
e\ en
tronger group"We 're already starting
out Grade A, and then v. e
can ~o further."
Wath such a wide variety in store. it' time to
lock in a ~eat now.
Sub cribe today by calling the Ariel box office at
(740) 446-ARTS (2787)
for more information or
by going through the web
ate at ohio\ alle) symphony.org.
Partial funding for The
Ohio \ailey Symphony i
prO\ tded by the Ann
Carson Dater Endowment.

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia infonned
~unba,

tcnnrs -~ennnel
Mergs · 992 2155
Gal1a • 446-2342

NEW VENDORS
Stop;, and take a look at our
NEll' liVl'ENTORY!

J?RENCH CI1''Y ANTIQUE
&amp; CRAFT ~IALL
31A Ohio Ril'er l.,laza •Gallipolis
740-446-9020

�-----------------------~~- ~

'

PageC3

~unbnp times -ientinel

Sunday, Septentber 12, 2010

Angelina Jolie meets flood victims in Pakistan
JAI OZAJ. Pakistnn lives have heen deva-,tat- red qripe -the kind of
tAP) - Ame1 ican mo' ic ed by the floods, mclud conservatiVe
clothing
stat An~elin&lt;~ Jolie met ing mothers who lo•a wom by many Mus lim
flood VICtims in north- their children and an women in Pakistan.
Pakbtan and elderly Pakio;tani couple
The floods began in the.
to the interna- who feared they would northwest at the end of
community to pro- never he able to rebuild July after extremely
vide aid needed to help the home they lost.
heavy monsoon raino; and
•·t am 'ery mo\ed by slowly surged ~outh
~he country recover from
11s worst natural disaster. them and I hope that I am along the Indus River,
The flow of aid money able to. today and tomor- swallowing up hundreds
has stalled in recent days. row, be able to do some- of' ill ages am! towns and
and officials expressed thing to help bnn~ atten- killing more than 1,700
hope the t\\O-day visit by tion to the situatiOn fo~ people. Another 17 milJolic
who sef\es ~ls a all of the people in need lion have been affc.:ted
"goodwill ambassador" for in Pakistan," Jolie told by the floods .. and many
the U.N.'s refugee agency reporters after 'isiting a w11l need emergency
- will convince foreign refugee camp in the assistnnce to survive.
countries and individuals Jalozai area.
The United Nations
She toured the area issued an appeal for $460
to open their wallets.
The 35-year-old actress wearing a long black million in emergency
said Tuesday she met robe and a black head- funds on Aug. 11, but
with many people whose scarf adorned with a thin only $294 million, or 64

percent.
has
been
received so far, and donations have mo1 c or less
dried up in recent days.
Ajuy Chh1bber, a U.N.
assistant secretary general, said he hopes Jolie's
visit will have "a very
big impact" on the
inflow of aid money and
w1ll keep people focused
on the crisis.
"We need more ... wellknown figures who can
keep the spotlight and
focus because people
tend to forget internationally." said Cbhibber, who
i11 also the U.N. development agency's regwnal
director for Asia. He
spoke to reporters during
a vis1t to Islamabad.

At-home traditions to make first day of school fun
Bv MELISSA
KasSLER DUTTON
FORTHEASSOOATEDPRESS

Rebecca Miller Wilson
wants her three children
look forward to the
·st
day of school, so she
•
makes a celebration of it.
She hangs signs outside their rooms, pre~
pares special foods and
takes lots of photos. The
traditions case the transition back to school nnd
give the kids a reason to
be excited.
"J want to set them up
for enjoying school," said
Wilson, of Phoenix. The
first day should "set the
tone for ho\\ the school
year should go."
Back-to-school tradilions at home can help
children adjust to the
changes a new year
brings, said Tim Sullivan.
founder of School Family
Media, v.hich tocu es on
mcrcasmg
parental
mvolvement m &lt;;chools
"An)'thmg that encour•
agt.'s the thought that
school1s a special time IS
thing," Sullivan
from his office in
renthem, Ma... !&gt;.
Parents \\ ho make a
fuss about the first day
back also are sending the
tmportant message that
"school .., a priority in our
family,'' he added
Jesstca F1 her of San
Diego serves her s1x chitdren homemade apple
pie for breakfast on the
first day of school. It's a
sweet way to signal their
return to their homeschool ~chedule.
"It hcJps to mark that

shift and make 1t really
fun - not somethmg
they dread," said Fisher.
who started the tradition
four years ago.
The pic does lessen the
pain of returning to
school. saiU her 8-yearold son, Cal val)'
''The fir&lt;&gt;t day of school
is both good and bad.'' he
.satd. "It's the end of summer vacation, which
makes it bad. but we get
pie for breakfast so that
makes it good.''
Keeping the traditions
simple makes it easier to
do them year after year,
said Alanna Stang, executive editor of Marzlw
Stewart Uving magazine.
"Simple and thou~htful
i:-. always the best.· she
said. Small gestures
"show kids someone is
thinking about me"
Having first-day-ofschool traditions also
gives parents the opportunity to mark milestone~
m children's hves that
m1ght othern-1'\e et overlooked. Stan md
"In our fust-paced
lives. the meaning of the
moment can get lost in
the shuffle,'' she said.
She suggests finding a
mix of traditions that
involve !;mall surpnses
for the children, and projects that parents and kids
can work on together.
In addition to preparing
treats, Wilson take her
children shopping and
lets them each pick out a
new backpack Sh~ takes
photos of the kids with
the ne\\ bags, which often
reflect then de\eloping
personalities or interests.

''It's fun to sec some of
the ch01ces they've m.tde."
she said.
Shopping for school supplies has already become a
tradition for Summer
Werchowski of Dublin,
Ohio. and her 4-year-old
son, Miles. When he was
preparing for preschool last
year, they bought supplies
for him and some of his
fiiends. They passed out the
supplies at a back-to-school
p.U1y, which they plan to
throw again this year.
Werchowski also crealed a way to help Miles,
who couldn't wait for
school to start. count
down the days. About a
month before school
began, she placed enough
pieces of candy m a jar
that he could have one a
day until school started.
"It saved m} sanity
because he could ph)sically see it was getting closer
and closer,'' she aid ''lt
stopped him from asking
C\el) two rrunute .'
She plans to fill the Jar
tor man} )ear&lt;; to come
She al o 1 contmumg a
tmdition her own mother
started: t~king yearl)
photos m the morning
and in the afternoon on
the first da} of c;chool
''I looked all cute in the
beginnmg.'' he aid. B}
the end ot the da), "1 JUSt
looked like I had been
through a war."
She hopes the photos and
activities will create hfe
long memories for Miles.
''Looking back on my
childhood. that's what I
remember -all the special traditions we had,"
said Werchowski. "That's

where my memories lie.
I'm hoping it will be the
same for him."
Here are more ideas for
back-to-school traditions:
• Pack a note with a loving message, joke or drawing in the child's lunch box.
• Make a bracelet or
neck1ace, or braid a pair
of shoelaces together that
the child can wear on the
first day.
• Decorate a backpack
With a beaded key cham,
homemade pompoms or
a name tag.
• Hide a smaJJ treat,
such as a sticker or small
toy, m the child's pocket.
• Decorate the student's lunch bag or box.
• Make a special breakfast, dinner of afterschool snack.
• Take a photo before
school and have it pnnted
or in a frame when the
child gets home, or break
out the scrapbook and
show the ch1ld that this
mLle&lt;.tone is alre d) part
f)
famth h
• Me.tSure th
he•ght and \\e
record u m a peuo.l
place on the e\C ot the
fust day of school.
• If the child is riding a
e or scooter to !ich
corate it "1th flag.;.
~treamers.

• Buy an extra set of
school supplies and
donate it to an agency
that helps needy families.
• Ask children what
they want to be when they
grow up. and preserve
therrans\\ers with a video
camera or \Oice recorder.
(Soun:e: Martha
Stewart Ul•ing magazme)

p·
h d ."Ji
dd
.h
.
.
Revlew: lng a an y I unes a -on Wit promiSe
LOS ANGELES (AP)
- Apple Inc.'s new musicdisco\ er)' feature. Ping, 1s
a potentially useful addition to iThnes. With it, you
can see what songs your
arc buying and recsome of your
,.,. . .,,..., to them.
It's great that Apple is
finally incorporating clements of l.:ala.com, which
offered simihu o;odal-discovery tools until Apple
bought the startup in
December and shut it
down a few months later.
And if people u...e Ping to
honestly discuss music. It
could be valuable to me as
a consumer and help
music sales, too.
Ping is a good start, but
I hold out hope for some
improvement.
To use Ping. you must
mstall the newly released
iTunes I0. It vmrks fine
on my Windows XP laptop. but requires Mac
users to have at least the
Mac OS X I 0.5 operating
system. or Leopard.
which came out m 2007.
Upgrading the operating
will cost about
It's not likely worth
expense just for Ping,
which itself is free. as is
the iTunes o;oftwarc.
Ping starts out by having you fill out a simple
registration fo1111
You can have Ping automatically display the
music you like based on
• songs you've already purchased. Or you can choose
what to like and di-,play.
which is what 1 did; I put

up such artists as Ltly
Allen. Owl City, Co\\ boy
Junkies and Je\\ el.
After that. Ping recommended :-.orne artists and
people that J might be
interested in following,
which would then allow
me to see what thev arc
buving, recommending
and commenting on.
I found Ping's suggestions simplistic at best.
however. Lady Gaga.
Katy Perry, 02, Taylor
Swift
and
Da\e
Matthews Band came up,
as if Ping merely picked
the mo t popular artists,
not ones related to music
I liked. How about some
obscure artists I wouldn't
have found on my own'?
I tried folio\\ ing a few
artists that I liked. but not
all were on the sen ICC
yet. It will probably take
a while for Ping to get
populated with artists to
the same degree as sites
such ns MySpace.
Pjng got a little more
interesting when I looked
at the recommendations
beyond the artists. Ping
suggested I follow Rick
Rubin, the co-president
of Columbia Records:
Jason BentlC), the music
director at one of Los
Angeles' NPR stations.
KCRW: and Alexandra
Patsavas, a music supervisor who picks songs fur
TV shows and films.
All three people are in
the Los Angeles area, and
I initially thought they
came to me because of
the location I speciticd in

my profile. But colleagues in New York and
Seattle got the arne three
recommendations.
In any case. they are
generally respected pickers of music. and they
already had thousand of
foliO\\ ers b) the time I
followed them.
Refreshingly, Rubm
didn't just pick artist..,
signed by Columbia
Record-.. although some
ofhis pick were. including countl) singer David
Allan Coe.
The "Recent Acttvity"
section of Ping shows
\\hat people and artists
that you follow arc buying, liking and commenting on. It looks a lot like
Facebook. so it seems
familiar and is easy tL&gt; use.
When someone you follow recommends a song.
you can listen to a snippet
Without going to another

page,
much
like
Facebook's iLike application. which is nice. You
can also buy the song
nght there. But the free
previe\\ is just a 30-&lt;,econd chp. not the fulllength version available
on MySpace and sometimes on Facebook. which
is not nice - 30 econd~
j., too sho11 for me to
make a buying dcci~ion. I
still ha\e to go elsewhere
to catch full song stream:-..
When I first checked
out Ping. the comment-.
section helow the picks
was a -:.illy free-for-all. A
lnt of the comments I
read were woefully irrelevant and sometimes
offensive. Thankfully. the
default ...etting is to hide
all but the most recent
comment, and it appears
Apple has installed some
filters to remove much of
the junk as well.

The mentbers of the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church would like to thank
everyone that attended and or
donated to our yard
sale. Your purchases
and donations will
help us to ntove
forward towards a
new church building.

We appreciate your support.

Mohammad Sajjad/AP Photo
Hollywood actress and the goodw1 I ambassador of
UNHCR, Angelina Jolie VISits a camp setup for people
displaced by heavy floods, In Mohib Banda near
Peshawar, Pakistan on Tuesday, Sept. 7, 2010.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

Too proud to beg
Dear ])r. Brothers:
I'm really womed about
my sic;ter I think &lt;,he's
just one or two paychecks
away from losing her
house. \Vhene\er I offer
her some help. she JUSt
smile.., and says everything is all right. She was
always the kind of per&lt;;on
who would pnde herself
on never asking anybody
for anything. I don't want
to
make
her feel
ashamed. but I also don't
want her
and her 7year-old daughter - out
on the street! How can I
make this right! - S.V.
Dear S.\~: I am o;ure
your sister appreciates
your big heart, and she i~
gomg to really appreciute
whatever you can do for
her. I don't Know wh) ...he
wouldn't accept )OUr
help, unlec;s she doesn't
"ant to be a burden \O
u and hone ... tly teels
) ou c.m't afford to
her wJthout hurtmg
rself or your O\\ n
tamily. if you have one.
Another possib1ht} J'&gt; that
he is working on a plan
"1th her financial institutiOn but doe&lt;&gt;n 't \\ant to
bother you \\ ith all the
details. and things really
v. ill turn out all nght.
There are many programs
in place now for peoJ?IC
who are in trouble \\ 1th
theu home payments. and
perhaps she is not as bad
off as }ou are imagining.
That said, it probabl)
\\ould be worth 1t for you
to make one last attempt
to help your si ter out
First. make -.ure that you
indeed can afford it. and
that the lifeline you are
planning to thrO\\ her
won't dmg ) ou down as
\\ell. H you can afford to
gtve her only a little help
that she can ne\ er repa}
and that will not make a
difference in the long
run, she may just be tl)'ing to keep tlungs simple
But if you can painlessly
help her :-.a\e her home.
tell her so. The other
option for) ou if your sister is too proud to take
financial help is to ~ffer
1 !O take her and your mece
111 1f worse does come to
\\ orst. She mJy take ) ou

,

Dr. Joyce Brothers
up on that one. as she
\\ill want the best for bel'
dau~hter. and you are
family. Then you can
take it a step at a time.
• ••
Dear Dr. Brothers:
Last week I caught up
v; 1th a friend I haven t
seen in 20 years. While it
WJ&lt;:. mce to catch up for a
b1t, I made the mistake of
gi" ing him my e-mail
address. Now he write.s
me e\ ery day and even
has in,.ited me O\er to hi
house for dinner and t£Y
meet h1s farmly. We did-'
n't e\en ha\c that much
in common to begin with~
How can 1 get him to just
lay off a bit without hurtB.B
ing hi:-. feelings?
Dear B.B.: It is nice to
catch up "ith old friends,
and the Internet has made
reunion poo;sible that
ne,er would have happened just a generatiOn
ago. E'eryone \\ants tp
find old friends, and Ill
some cases, rekindle a
romance or start anew
\\ ith a relJtion hip that
\\ent bad It's \CI) possible that your new ''old
friend" either w1shed he
could ha\e been closer te&gt;) ou b.tck in h1gh school
but didn't have the social
qanding then. or wa-. too
sh). Or. he ma) ha'e
found, after reconnecting,
that you ha\e a lot more
m common no\\ than ) ou
used tu

01

that he hru;

changed. or ) ou have; m
illl) case, he likes the idea
of being your friend.
What can you do in this
sttuatton? 1 would say
just nde it out. It could be
that the novelty of hn\'ing
) ou as a link: to the past is
•
\\hat appeals to him.

e~~- 'IH401tt 'Rea/4

Hootst Oepf'ldab eKno; edg~ab e

AM tor~ts ~ utua Pa ~ette
agency represents tilt !lest of ll:
hg ~ sk ed 1 d ' I d9ffiC!rl
who represent Moto: m

514 Second Avenue
Gal' po 1s. OH

740-441·1111

�......................

~--------------------------------~------- ---~-------~~--~--------~--~~.-~~--.-~~~--~~----~

iunbap 'ttmes .g,enttnel

Sunday, Septeinber 12,2010

LAWSON

l3Il~TH

A.-.hlcy and Mt&lt;:hacl I a\\ on of I ong Bottom
mnoun c the btnh of a !-iOn. Nuthamel Joe) La\\ o;on.
born on Sept 6 at the 0 Bh::nc'&gt;s Mcmonal lfospttul
111 Athens

Craft socials tu
do-it-yourselfing
.into a party

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fellure

Mr. and Mrs. Fred Miller

F E L L U J:z_ E 5 0 T H
A N N I V E I~ S A I~Y

M I L L E I~ 5 0 T H
AN N IV E ItS A ItY

Robe!l nd Dotue I cllure of G&lt;illipolio; celebrated
theu 50th \\Cddrn' ,uumcr.-...uy \'vlth their f,unilies on
Sept. II v. 1th .1 rcLeptton 11 the llohd.ty Inn.
fhc couple w 1.-. nMntcd on Sept 16, 1960, ,11
Mudsoc Methodtsl (_ hurch by the RC\. J 1ank
I cnton
The Jellurc ha\e t\\O chrldicn, (hmtt (Bert)
Col\ m of Bloomrn •d 1le, Oh10. md Kctth (Bethan) 1
f llur f (,aJhp 1h.,
I he) h t\C thr e •r, ndduldrcn. Garrett and
MIl h It ( uh Ill md Brod) fcllure

Ftcd .md Ruth l•ulks Mtllet .uc cclcbratmg their 50th
wedding annivcr\,uy \\ 1th then l.tmil&gt; 111 Columbu'i.
I red, the son of the l.ttc lm .md ( J.mdc Miller. and
Ruth. the d 1ughtcr of the late Gl,ld) s and John
Br.unmcr, were mt~n ted Sept II 1960. at the hN
( hurch of God m (ralltpoh 1ltc Mtller'&gt; .1re the p.trents of two sons I ed II (Ktm) of 1\icw Alb.m) and
John (Chona) of ( &gt;lumbu" I hc) h \C lt\e grand
chaldrcn. Prcd Ill. tudcnt at (r.trdn r \\ebb m North
Carolin.t. Jo JC, Geor •e .tnd Alben of ev. Albanv
.md J.tck: Miller of Columbu-;

Dustin Travis, Adison Lynn and Alexa Jade Mooney

MOONEY

Bll~ THI)AY

Du'&gt;t n 1 r 1\1 ,md Alcxct J.tdc twm~ of fra\ ts and A hera (Ht~lley) Mooney of ( rm\'n Ctt). celebmted the1r
n Au ' 31 20 I 0 fhey celebrated by pia) ing and eatm • p111a und c.1ke w1th I&lt;~Imly .md fnends
l'hcv ha\c on .,,,tel Ad1son Lynn Moone).
llletr p.ttcrn,tl gr.mdp.trcnh arc I CI n .md the late Hollts Mooney of Galltpoh~. I hetr Ill.JlCJ nal !!I andparent'
, rc Twy .md Rochelle Jl,llley .md Paulette Halle), all of Ci.1llipolis
u ... t huthd 1'

Right at Home: a look at some clever gadgets
Bv KtM

COOK

If \ OU folio\\ te'-h
bl ., or \\ Itch .1 k\\
uttom rei h ) u k.n \\
th.tt Ill\ nlt\ c mtndo.; .trc
h , ., c )mtn up '' Hh
ncv. househ Jd., ad •cts
m tnll make hfc caste!
Hetc'o.; a look .tt 1 fey, of
the more m •em us ones
I uc J,tcob of Bola
Rnton I l.t cut .It c., .m
onhnc ~.lei 'el '&gt;11-. c.\Ilcd
('Jc\ cr,mdl .1o:;y conr Ht•
o;corn.., o:;Jll)' llemo;, .md
&lt;;3) '&gt; th.tl lu l' lrJl tl pi,ICC
on hts 11 t 1 JHOduct
should b u lui m the
Jon • term
It o;hould oh c 1 re,tl
d .md t 1k httl dfon
~1mpl
•.., bc'&gt;t
Prdcmbl) Jt th rc ult of
( n 111 I out of the bo"
thmkm .md ' htl tt .,
n t
ntJ. I rt nK tl tt
look.., wol J 1b 'a) 'i
Ue
ltke..,
R.tcor'~
{,ra\ Jl) btkc r 1 k 1 free
't tndm '&gt;turd) 1ack . ..,o
no holt ... 01 uppmtm
v.,tll '&gt;lmJ., to worry
.thout Jl'.., •rent lor a
ICntal home. stor.t •e .1rc,1
01 •arage \\here the 1 H.:k
m.ty need to he 1110\ cd
11om tune to tune, t~nd j.,
,1\,ul.thlc ,Jt Amazon com
tor '1.41.) 99 fhc Ne" hnc
fold1n • kttdtc n calc •t'h
, nod 1&lt;; well It ll-OIIl
pact d1 •at.ll o,c,ll tlhll
unfolds lor \\Ct •lun
coll•r" •.., mto 1 lc~.: k
'tt:: I &lt;.\ hnd r md C\ n

ha:-. .t bmlt-m ttmer
(Amazon. 39 99).
Auo;trahan
engmecr
\\ tl-.l n Lee "useful RcZap
ball\:!) charger not onl}
rcplem..,hc.., the JUICC of
rechar cable battencs but
\\Ill 11 o re\t\e non
rcch.lrgc.Iblc.-... from the
tuu o.;t AAAA to a 6V
Jantem h.1ltel) It use'&gt; a
microproce...-.or. and ~bo
...cn .. s as a batter\ te'&gt;ter
J. \en C ,md [) batt~neo; can
be Jc\ J\ed 111 the ReZap. At
pctrc.I"Url'~ com. $59 95.
II )Oll \e C\el been
perched high on a ladder
mst,lllmg .1 ptcture or t,m
\\hen you d10pped the
c 1C\\ &gt;ou 'II .tpprecJate
the Ill •enutty of former
St mtord student Andre
\\ oolery. "ho deo;igned
the M.1gnoGnp \Ht.,l
band It\ a hand), mag
ncttud. ballt'&gt;llc ny Jon
cutf ) ou can dock 'imall
har h\arc on \\htle )OU
\\ork fhcrc .trc tool belts
.md e\ en su~pcnder'\ Ill
the product line, '' htch
stIll'&gt; ,11 '!&gt;15 95 at
111.1 •no 'riP ~.:om
llunkGeek.com's
.1
'fC.tl destmation f01 u~e­
lul g.tdget hunter&lt;&gt; Nc' CI
lmd the Jam IUZZ) or the
milk mold) 11 )llU'\c got
D.tyo:; Ago f1 idge timers
"tuck on the container...
Afltxt:d b) either magnet
or udJOn cup, the timers
c,m be set to count ofT
J.t)" 01 hour~ fhe)'lc
h ttlcry run and rcus.1blc
I" I I I p tck Ill oranre.

June or bla~:k. for$"' 99
It your ptcky httle eater
\\ ould rather dm e dump
trucks around th.m ~ O\ cJ
up suppc1 ord r a Kad
(on truction utcn 11 t
A compartmenkd plate
c\en ha., 1 cool ramp
($14 95). and th u cn.,•l
et mclude&lt;; l bulldozer
pusher. front hMder
spoon and I01 k!Jft fork
($1795! l\Cr)thm 's
dbh\\ .tshcr s,tfe and
PVC/BPA/phth.ll.uc free
The h cclo,1det Pro
-;oJ,u ch&lt;~rger t$79.99)
uses sun cneJg) to 1O\\CJ
up .1 ho~t of electronics.
C\en power gobbhn • c
1eaders. port,lble 1)\ D

pl.t) er., .md cameras
And th1' 1tem from
ThmkGcck at1 fie, the
'cit'\ er and e,t.,y" cnten.1
rn th ta ... uest '"J) The
1\ltm Donut Fac.tof)
( 19 99l look., hke a
I orcman nil. but bake&lt;;
up h lit .1 dozen mrmdou hnuts m under fi, e
mtnuh:s S fe enou h for
lid-. to us... the apphance
uses fill) c,torc bought
dou •hnut mtx. fhere's
no deep trymg lll\Ohed.
.md you control ho\\
n1uch ... ugar goes on top
once they 'rc b.1ked A
pe1 feet back-to 'chool
!'tft tor the •adgct lm mg
colic •c ... tudcnt

I.:.VANST0!\1. Ill (API
Gathered ,uound
dozens of t.tblc more
than II :'5 women arc
v.orkmg on craft proJ ·ch
on a &lt;.tormy I nday Ill ht
st.tmpm button turmng
old T htn mto tote&lt;. and
u-.m era) one; to create
cro..,., :-.t1tch ll.lttcrns
1 he stran •ers
mostly m thetr 20 and
~Os
ha\O paid ~25
each to spend .1 mght ,Jt
the
011c 1 •o
Cr,lft
Soctal. "Juch Oig.uut.crs
bclic\e ao:; the Jl.llJOn's
btggest cr.llt pa11y It'-.
held four timco; a ) car in
suburban Chrcago
The dr,m ollenng
crafters a chance to ll)
ne" techmq~e
find
mo:;par.111on ,md s.tmple
ne\\ matenals
More than that Craft
Socaal ts a ch, nee to
butld commumt) for a
ncv. encrallon of d -ttyour c1fer-. v.ho foliO\\
p pular aaftmg blog
search You Tube 'Ideo
nJ post the1r own tutonal., onhnc
Craftm • 1 kmd of a
ohtai) thin
)OU do II
Ill &gt;our b.tscment or on
' ur duun ' room t.1ble.
, nd )'Our hu&lt;iband J&lt;; like.
"hat arc you dom •?"
.. atd Am,tnd.J Ed" ,udo.;.
2 who took. O\ cr the
old ChtcJ •o C'r .tft
1 I
II t1m after
f rm1 h r
c n m ctal rc I
P pi arc era\
communrt). so we
nake tuff m ke
r ~nd
nd meet '' llh
er people
'lo f r then: h. ' four
C r tt S 1.11
uttend.lllce
has
r v.n .tt each or •amz.e o.;
., 1d The) credit T" ttter,
\\ ord of mouth and pub
llt.tl) from u handful of
craft hlog •er&lt;&gt; They hope
the so~a.tls could be omc
a" popul,tr as the Stitch n
Bttch mo\cment thnt
introduced kmttmg to a
new generalton about .t
dcc.1dc ,1 ;ro
Ed" ,udo;
h,l..,
h.td
inqmrie" from oth r com
munit1c., about h( ldmg
'tmdar pante..,, and some
'&gt;lmtlar cffon... arc .tlread)
under '' &lt;~&gt; else\\ here
The Dl"l me •,\ 'illC
Ets) com organtte cr.tft
mghts m 1\:C\\ York and
SIll hmlCl'iCO "hale
Sv. ap 0 Ram.1 R.tma
offer; clothmg "" appm •
parties \\here p.trtJcJ
pants exch.m c clothe~
and then learn hm\ to
.titer them mto 'iOIIlCthmg
nt'\\ 1\ J,m&gt; mdepcndetll
.trts. &gt;arn and f,tbnc
store.-.. host sm •Jc 111 'ht

e\cnto; \\h re cu&lt;;tomer
can ct help on proJect
or JUSt v. rk m the comp.m) of oth p,
( attltn Kurmt 26 of
( hH:.l o folded paper
mto mtnt
flo\\ Cl"') 1
the C'ralt S Cl I m June
She h
"atched the
~ocJJI fO\\ m cr the pust
yea• from a collectiOn of
fncndo; u m eJch other'.-,
rcmn.mh t tht'&gt; e\ent
Wtth ., I or .mtzed proJect'&gt;. and a sic" of offiCJ.ll '&gt;pon ..or from urea
be•1d, yarn, tabric .md
st,unp shops
I he ~octal she .-.aid, •.
.1 ch.mce to mmgle wi
llke mmdt:d dabblers
"It's reall&gt; mce to
come to 'Cther "tth people who are .~.., ob~es ed
.ts I am 'idtd Kumn.
v. ho JJ.,t.-, card makmg.
kmttm s v. mg. jey,eJr) makm p per craft •
cmbrotdef).
quiltmg
.md felt proJed., amon
her mten::st
Suste Ztegler .t 42year old qUJlter from
Gra) slake, Ill. \\ho
tau •ht a roup at the
C'r.1tt Soctul how to
embrmder srud the gathermg 1s n ltme-honored
''a) for today\ crafters
to build community.
beyond the \ inual ones
thcy'\C created 111 the
blogospheic.
"f or our grandmother&lt;.,
there v.ere &lt;..e\\ mg ctrcles
and there were craft
gutlds at church," c;h
md "People ha\ e alw
ottcn together to
And we can connect that
\\d) m the modem da) ·
Edv. rrds I o produces
smaller crafting panaes.
chargmg bctw een $25 and
50 per per.,on. dependIll on the proJects
Hen: are her tips for
thro" m a smaller craft
!otOcaal for fnendc;:
• Choo~e proJects" i-,ely T1 y to o.;elect ones
cngt~gmg enough that
C\Cl)onc \\ant-; to tl), but
unfamthnr enough that
e\cryone I'i I 110\ICC
• Mdten,tls are key.
Brmg ')our O\\ n. or make
u de rr hc,t ot "h,lt upphes guc-,ts need to bnng.
• Ha\C a sample of the
fimshed proJect on hand o
uco;ts c.m sec \\hat tt '' 111
look hke Project can !!Ct
comphcated, and mJn)
pe pie le.1ITI better b) -.ecm rat! er than heanng A
• M.1k.e -,ure thenplenty ol \\Ork space
m ,ulable tor C\ en one
• Bnng n. cb.s
be\cra"C'
but nothmg
Jlcohohc 1f the cr.tft
Ill\ oh c., toob or matenals
th.ll could be dangcrou-.

and

:Happ, {jrtandptvtmU 9)ay1
f.H•m tfte llua

Clq tr-ey

cvt

(lgmg J;

H

To honor
grandparent
and to
sll9nglh9n
th9 bond
betw9en
grandparents &amp;
grandchildren
on SGpt 12

and every day'

Area Agency on Aging

Walk-ins \\elcome
Mon &amp; Wed 9-7, Tues, Thurs &amp; Fri 9-5 Sat 8-12
Famil) Practice
Jenne Ingles Nur c Practitioner
21 Cen"tral A\e. • Gallipolis
740-446-6965 • 740-441-7510

'

�-

~-- --~ ~

...

·· ----.

-- -------PageCs

j,unbap fltimes ·i&gt;entinel

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Cooked or raw, tomatoes pack nutritional punch
Bv JIM ROMANOFF
FOR TliE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Conventional wi dom
that cookmg vepetatend to dimmish
their nutritional prowess.
And while there i1&gt; some
truth to this, it isn't
always the case.
Cooking tomatoes docs
diminish their torcs of
vitamin C, but it also
concentrates other nutrients, such ao; lycopene
(found in red tomatoes),
a powerful antioxidnnt.
. Cookmg tomatoes also
1s great from n culinary
standpomt. Heat intensifies their flavor and
brings out their rich
sweetne s by caramelizing the natural su$ars.
This 1 an espec1ally
good technique ''hen
v.orking wnh out-of-season tomatoe .

With this recipe for
g.lZpacho, you can have it
either way.
Traditionnlly, gazpacho
is n fresh, pureed tomato
soup of Spanish origin. It
typlc,tlly is made with
lots of garlic. onions, bell
peppers and cucumbers.
This Jtalian-styJe take
on the refreshmg soup JS
easoned ..., ith fresh basil
and oregano along with a
liberal shot of balsamic
vinegar. The addition of
ome fresh mozzarella
cheese adds the protein
and substance to turn the
soup into a satisfying
lunch or light supper.
Sene v. ith grilled slabs
of cru ty whole-grain
bre.td to complete the
meal.
For a cooked ver ion of
this recipe. spread the
diced tomatoes on a
rimmed baking sheet and

roast at 400 f• until they
start to brown. Let them
cool, then proceed with
the recipe.

2 tablespoons chopped
fresh oregano
3 cloves garlic, minced
l/2 teaspoon kosher
salt, or to taste
Ground black pepper,
to taste
6 ounces very small
fresh mov..arella balls
In a large tiowl. combine
the
tomatoes,
cucumber, bell f.epper,
onion, vinegar, oi , basil,
oregano, garlic. salt and
pepper. Stir to combine
Let the mixture rest at
room temperature for 15
minutes.
Using a food processor
or blender and \\ orking
in batches, process the
tomato mixture until it is
chunky smooth, about 10
to 15 pulses in a processor. Transfer to a bowl,
cover and refrigerate for
at least 1 hour.
To serve, divide gazpa-

TOMATO AND JTALIAN HERB GAZPACHO
Start to fini'&gt;h: J hour
35 mmutes (20 minutes
active)
Sen ings: 6 to 8
5 cups cored and diced
tomatoes (about 4 large)
I large English cucumber, peeled and dtccd
(about 2 cups)
l medium red bell pepper, cored,' seeded and
coarsely chopped
1 medium red onion,
chopped
1/3 cup balsam1c 'megar
1/4 cup extra-virgin
olhe oil
113 cup chopped fresh
basil

Larry Crowe/AP Photo
Tomato and Italian herb gazpacho is seen in this July
19, 2010 photo. You can use either cooked or raw
tomatoes for thrs gazpacho leavmg you wtth a great
robust flavor no matter whrch you choose.

cho among bowls and top
with mozzarella.
Nutrition infonnatton
per serving (values arc
rounded to the nearest
whole number): 169

calories: 110 calories
from fat; 12 g fat (4 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 17
mg cholesterol; 10 g carbohydrate; 5 g protein; 2
g fiber; 141 mg sodium.

,

A simple bean salad that's good and good for you
Be tdcs being nutritional dynamite. canned
bc.mo; nrc nvatlable in
Beans are some\\ hat of a numerous shapes, sizes
nutritional num le worker. and fla\ors, makmg them
Along \\ 1th being .m a fa,orite among gourmet
excellent source of pro- cooks. ·1ltey can usually
tein, the) 're packed wath be found alongside the
fiber and other plant- canned \egetables at the
based nutrients. Plu • grocer, but be ure to
they're extreme!) lo\\ in check the ethnic aisle as
fat, can prolong the feel - well for some of the le s
ing of fullne s after a common 'anetie .
meal, and can help conAlways nnse and drain
trol blood ugar le\ el
canned beans before using
Many people arc hesi- them to remo\e excess salt
tant to cook \\ ith beans and indtge tible sugars that
because they think of the are in the cloudy liquid.
dry one . which can
Because they're so rich
require &lt;;oaking overnight in protem, beans can
and. depcndmg on the Vtui· replace 1o0me or all of the
ety, len~) cooking on the meat called for in many
stO\ e But canned beans dt he They also c~ be
are a converuent must ha'e pureed ( wnh e..1!; orungs)
for an) ~lth) panti)
to make qu1ck dip dlld
The ood n v. I" th t spre ~ Or tmpl) dd
unhke
m n)
other orne to
aldd for extra
canned product , beans protem. fla\ or and texture.
thetr nutnent durThts summery salad
the cnnning proce s.
tars black-eyed peas, a
BY JIM ROMANOFF

FOR THE ASSOCIATED I'RESS

bean named for a prominent
black
~pot.
Chockfull of fresh tomatoes and par ley, and
tos ed in a lemony drc sing, the dish is reminic;cent of a Mtddle-Eastern
tabbouleh salad. but
much more satisfying and
nutrit10nall) balanced.
Sened as a main orstde
dish, black-eyed pea •
tomato and p.trSlc) aJad
i a dehc10u ly cool addition to any &lt;;ummer meal
and perfect for breaking
the Ramadan fast.

1/2 teaspoon salt
l/2 teaspoon ground
black pepper
J/4 cup extra-virgin
olive oil
Tho 15 112-ounce cans
black-eyed peas
I small red onion.
quartered and thinly
liced
I pint cherry or grape
tomatoes, hal\ ed
3/4 cup coarsely
chopped flat-leaf parsley, (&gt;Ius a few prigs for
garn1sh •
Larry Crowe/AP Photo
In a medium bowl, combine the lemon juice, gar- Black-eyed peas, tomato and parsley salad is seen in
lic, sugar, Dijon mustard, th1s July 2, 2010 photo. Hearty enough for a main dish
salt and pe{&gt;per. While or served as a side this salad is packed with fiber, prowhisking, drizzle in the tein and other plant-based nutrients.
olive oil Whisk until completely emul&lt;afied Add the parsley and marinated rounded to the nearest
back-eyed peas d red black-eyed pea mixture. \\hole number): 190
1
11 t
mer 11
thoroughly to coat. calorie!&gt;: 86 calories from
p
on "Jth additional fat: 10 g fat (l g saturatand pepper. Sef\e ~ar­ ed. 0 g trans fats); 0 mg
cholesterol: 23 g carbo~ed \\ Jth parsley pngs.
• utnt1on information hydrate~ 8 g protein; 10 g
per en ing (values are fiber. 848 rng sodium.

BLACK-EYED PEAS,
TOMATO AND PARSLEY SALAD

Start to fmtsh I hour JO
nunutes (I 0 mmutes OC1IVe
Senm 6
I~ c.up len
u
2 clove arh m n
I tea poon o;;u~ar
1 tea poon DIJOn mustard

Rick Bayless throws a fiesta wit new cookbook
Bv M ICHELE KAYAL

Marguritas are fre hened v.1th blood orange
or cucumber, and gus ied
Rick Ba) less ha spent up with Champagne for
three decade tea mg out the perfect brunch cockthe secrets of Mexican t,lil. Lmle tips - for
cooking. from street stall instance, skip the salted
grub to high-end restau- rim and shake your sodirant fare. Now the um directly into the drink
Chicago
restaurateur - make you look like a
captures the essence of a fiesta master. And soft
wand Mexican r,arty in drinks made from puck'Fiesta at Rick's '
cry
tamarind, fresh
This sixth cookbook by v.atem1elon, or rice and
Bayle s turns cla ic
almond bring Mexico to
upside down while actu- your backyard.
ally enhancing their
In chapters arranged by
for
authenticity, with more type of dish than 150 recipes that\\ ill instance. "nibblel&gt;" or
guide ,YOU from a pre-din- tapas, or street food ner drinks party to a pael- Bayle s takes home cooks
extra\agan7.a for the from basic lime-ande neighborhood.
onion ce' iche to red chtli
you knew tuna tartare, from butterguacamole? Think again flied \\hole fi h mannated
Bayless enes up a half- in chilies, garlic and SO)
dozen recipes for the sauce to a tequila-spiked
iconic dip that incorpo- pacUa for 30.
rate items like smoky
And who kne\\ that
bacon. toa~ted pumpkin potato salad -that staple
seeds, or subtly sweet of the American summer
picnic
could be reinmango puree.
F&lt;lR

sotv.TEDPRESS

vented \\tth beef, mocado and smob.) chtpotles'1
Bayle') e pouses fresh
ingredients and pam taking techniques, but aspiring chef with more
dreams than time will
appreciate his concess1on to daily realitie
with sub titution!&gt; like
frozen tamarind for
fresh. and recipes such a
"easy" mole, made in the
slow-cooker.
Full-blo\\ n
fiesta
menus end each chapter.
offering
step-b) -step
plan for a part). includmg the luxury guacamole
bar that helped Bayless
v. in the fir t season of
"Top Chef Ma ters."
There' e'en a playlist.
that unfortunate de,elopment in cookbook publi bing that requ1res
chef to di\ ulge "hat
music they (or their publie relations people) think
goes best with their food.
•••
"Fiesta at Rick's'' by

Rtck
Bayle "
v. 1th
Deann Bayle s (W.W.
Norton. 2010)
•••
BEEF AND POTATO
SALAD WITH SMOKY
CHlPOTLE
This meaty potato
salad
from
central
~1exico IS traditionally
served as an appetizer,
mam course or taco fiJI.
ing. says Rick Bayle s.
author of ''Fiesta at
Rick' .'' He sayl- the
salad can be prepared a
day or t\\ o ahead, then
refrigerated. Let tand at
room temperature for an
hour before sen ing.
AI o, if making ahead.
add the avocado onl) just
before !ien in~.
Start to Fimsh: I hour
Senings: 8
12 ounces ste\\ ing
beef. cut into 1 inch
cubes
2
clo\es
garlic,
chopped
Kosher salt, to ta~te
3 medium boiling pota-

toe . peeled and cut mto
In inc~ pieces
3 table poons cider
vinegar
2 to 3 canned chipotle
chilies in adobo, temmcd,
seeded and thinly liced
I small red onion, cut
into l/4 mch dice
3 tahlesroons olhe oil
1 med1um avocado.
peeled. pitted and cut
mto 1/4 inch dice
In a medium aucepan
O\ er htgh, brin~ I qu.U1 of
water to a boll. Add the
beef, garlic and I teaspoon of salt. Bring. to a
boil. then reduce heat to
medium-)0\\ Skim off
any foam that ri es during
the first fe\\ minutes of
simmenng. Parually co\er
and immer unbl the meat
1 tender enough to fall
apart. With a lotted
spoon. remove the meat to
a plate to cool, re erving
the liquid in the pan.
Add the potatoes to the
pan, if necessary adding
'' ater to
additional
-

Speed dating gets a revival among 20-somethings
NEW YORK (AP) a way to polish up the datfor Jme? Got ing skiJis that online datfi\e mmutes and some ing and social networking
sites, such a Facebook.
Ray Ban wayfarers?
Speed dating. a party ha\ e helped to obliterate.
" I don't think it's betwhere groups of people
have micro-dates O\er the ter, but I do think it's
cour e of an evening in a more fun." Segal said.
sort of amorous musical "We do try to make it
chairs is being rebmnded fun, lighthearted and for
as a younger. hipper alter- a younger cro\\d."
Since it began six
nat he to online dating.
In
Brooklyn's months ago. the e\ ent has
Williamsburg neighbor- gained enough momenan event called tum to warrant a second
'Internet Killed Your night. Soon hipster speed
Socml Skills" IS dra\\ ing dating will come to nearcrowds
every
first hy Pru·k Slope.
And a slew of other datThursday of the month,
fi lling a b,tr with a sea of mg agencies arc otlcring
20-somethings in fedoras. specialized speed dating
Julia Segal, 25, founded sen ices to clients. Speed
the event, nicknamed Dating Connections, a
Manhc~ttan-based speed
"hipster speed dating," t1
Lookin~

dating agency, has hosted militury en ice and ath10,000 daters O\ er the letic ability are common
past two years. with many among of their clients.
Jacob Thour, owner of
daters looking for -.ery
Speed Dating Coruteetions.
specific kind of dates.
Speed
Datmg smd 1t only make ense
Connections primarily to whittle down the numfocuses on ethnicity-based ber of people in the datdating; the majority of inl! pool.
"E\crybod) is looking
their events are tor Asian
and Indian client . But for something specific in
like many agencie • they C\ er) person," he said.
also offer a variety of spe- "An athletic per on
cialized sen ices· D.uc doesn't \\ant to date a
based on pet ownership, couch potato.''

ELLIOTT'S

~Hmbn,,

'O:nnrs

~rntmrl

-

.Auto-Owners Insurance
urn • HOME

\&gt; ~

~ere

• CAR • BUSIJ\T.SS

-For

you ~~11 ...
Luclu \ emergenct s don't happen eveq cia,, bat when
the) dot n't 1t mcc knm,,ng I Ube here to belp you
through 1t?
As n local independent insurance agent rept-e enting

Auto· 0\\net'S lnsmnncc, lm your net "hbor ·someone you
kttO\\ omeone vou can tru t.

APPLIANCES • ELECTRONICS
3 17 Stntc Rt. 7. G ullil)olis. Oh 45631
740-446-8051 • 1-800-377-2532
--

Keeping Meigs &amp; Gallia informed

ensure the potatoes are
CO\ ere d. Simmer over
medium heat until tender,
about 15 minutes. With a
lotted spoon, scoop the
potatoes into a medium
bO\\ I and sprinkle with
the \inegar.
Break up the meat and
stir it mto the potatoes,
along \\ ith the chipotle.'),
onion and olhe oil. Allow
it to cool completely.
Sea on \\ ith alt. Cover
and refrigerate until
about I hour before sen·ing.
Just before en ing. stir
in the a' ocado.
Nutriuoo mfonnation
per sen ing (value!&gt; are
rounded to the nearest
''hole number): 209
calorie : 120 calorie~
from fat; 13 g fat (3 g aturated; 0 g tran fab); 27
mg chole terol; 14 g carbohydmte; 11 g protein;
3 g fiber; 130 mg l-odium.
(Rec1pe from Rick
Bmles~ · "Fie~ta at
R1ck 'v,'' Norton 2010)

10 (7/r ofl' AII am&gt;lia nccs with this ad !

$25 ofl'" all HD'l.,V"s
-

-

/usura/Ice Plus Agencies. Inc.
It-' ( ·ourt Sln"t'l 1:\('rtK., from lhl' ( ·nurlhuu"l'l
Pnml·rn~

7-W-992-6677

" \\ \\,ll-kour l.l·om

�PageC6

i unbap times -ienhnel

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Teens mimic 'Glee' at summer camp and into fall
MATTHEWS,

N.C.

(AP) - For 17-yc&lt;~r-old

L izzie Gue:;t, the TV

~how "Glee'' was a lifechanger. so when she
heard about u summer
camp based off the hit.
she Juo;;t had to enroll
And given a chance
for an encote, she signed
up ag.tin.
fhc Charlotte Academy
of Music's first Glee
Camp i.n June sp~u·ked so
much mtercst !rom students cage• to replicate
what the) saw on TV. the
academy add~d a second
camp, plus created a Glee
Club that stmted practicing last week. The camp
was among a handful
across the country that
rode the wave of 'Tilee"
popularitr to create a
'ihow cho1r comeback.
At the Chatlotte-area
camp, 12- to 17 -yearolds ~pent their days in
a\t orange room with
brown curtains that
blocked the sunshme,
learning to sing. twirl and
march in sync.
" It wa'&gt; just the most
fun in the \\Orld," &lt;;aid
Guest, ol Hunter \ ille.
"When I was younger, tt
wao;; uncool to be in choir
and show choir and all
that kind of stuff. but now
they see these people who
are doing tlns. and they're
sounding amazing.... It\
making people think that

thi&lt;; 1'1 actually accept
Robcrt'iOn, -.pokcsman lor
uble, dlld it'-; not JU&lt;;t Cahlomia-based Nution.tl
dCceptable. Jt'&lt;; .twe'&gt;ome. As-.oclation of Music
People who .trc t,tlented Merchants.
"Many
.tre now cool."
school&lt;; .H.:ross the country
"Glee,'' l·ox ·, h1t fresh- continue to reduce rnustc
m.tn musical-dramecly. and arts education or cut
scored 19 hmmy nomina music programs altogethtion"&gt;, the mo ... t of :my CI. Yet, accordtn~ to our
-;eries thts ye~u. It \'.On late&lt;~! rc-;ean:h, kJCI&lt;; \\ant
four, including bc'&gt;t sup- more th.m ever to learn
pmtmg .tdres~ .md direct
hO\\ to play mstruments,
111* for a comedy scrie'
Join the glee club, or per'We'r~
mling.. th~t form i~ school muc;icab."
\\ave nght now, &lt;;,nd
That 'S lueled not only
Regina Ziliani. director by "Glee,'' he said, but
of the 2-yem-ofd acade- al!\o other muo.;t( making
my, which pflcrs pri' ,lle TV sho'~., such as
music and voice le%ono;, "iC.trl)," "Big. 1m1e
partly to fill 111 mu&lt;;tcal Ru-;h" and the "C.1mp
gaps
in
schoob. Rock" mo\JCo.;.
"l•verybody
i&lt;&gt; ju~t
It\ diflicult to mca-;ure
ob~c'iscd with 'Glee."'
the current popularity of
But its popularity glee camp!&gt; and club~.
comes a'&gt; budget c.tt&lt;; with officml., .1t natlon.tl
prompt schools to further mus1c and camp o•ganishrink their mu'iic.tl z.ttton-. -saymg they
offering~ for student.,
h.t\ en 't trncked , it But
Nonprofit community the number of accredited
ru1s prO\ tders. many of petformtll£ arts camps
which pru1ner with local \'..t'i .theady on the rise
schools. .1lso have been before the fir&lt;,t season of
forced to reduce thetr "Glee" .urcd .1 year ..tgo.
offering'&gt;, cut staf1 ,tnd from 527 m 2001 to 804
offer les&lt;:. financial .ttd in 2007, according to the
amid
the
rece~"IOil,
Indiana-ba'&gt;ed American
accordmg to the National Camp Aso.;oc.muon.
Guild forCommunit) Ans
"Anecdotally, \\e kno\\
Education's Ma) 2009 that sC\eral camps ha\ e
survey of its members
udded or re\ t!.ed thetr
''With o;;hows like 'Glee' music program t.&gt;tfenng&lt;.
retuming thi&lt;&gt; tall, kid'&gt; are based on the populant}
gl)mg back to -;chool \'.ith of TV sho"' 'i and
a rrt!,tlcr de-;trc to nMkc mo\ ie&lt;&gt;" o;md a-.soctation
mu-;rc."
satd
~con C'I·O Peg Smith "Camp'&gt;

th.tt ..,peciahzc m mus1c.
theJter, and the pcrforming all~ are popular
options for families.
n1ere truly ~'&gt; a camp for
every chtld."
At
the
Charlotte
Academy of M U'ilC. teen&lt;&gt;
llatd Glee Camp boosted
theu self-esteem. and
parent-; who attended the
end of-week
perfor
m.tncc satd it o,howed.
"She's been really
happy. She goc'&gt; around
smging all the tJme,"
Su'ian Gue'it said of her
d.tUghter. Liuie.
Fifteen-yeaPold Malik
Jefferson of Charlotte,
who wore his collar up
while practicmg to signify his 10\c of ·go., mustc.
,.,.as excited about his
first solo to Journey's
"Don't Stop l3clieving."
"It certainly hao; boost
ed hio.; confidence," s.tid
hi-. mom, Mercedes
Jefferson. "I've not1ced a
big difference juo;;t from
hstenmg to him practice
throughout the \\eek."
Ltter th.tt week, he
audttioned for and made
the cut tor Glee Club.
Camp mstructor Tracy
Da,is D1\enpon expects
to do it again next summer.
"1 think they all come
to Cctmp becau&lt;&gt;e they
\'.ant to .tsptre" to be like
the ~ast of' Glee. she said.
"They get a glimpse of
what actually happens··

Seanna Adcox/AP photo

Thts Aug. 20, 2010, photo made from v1deo shows,
from left to right, Samantha Savery, 14, of Marshville ,
N.C., Malik Jefferson, 15, of Charlotte, N.C., and
Ashley Martin, 17, of Mint Hill, N.C., as they participate in Charlotte Academy of Music's Glee Camp.

Michael Yarlsh/AP photo/Fox

This file publicity image released by Fox shows, front
row from lett, Dijon Talton, Lea Michele, Amber Riley,
Jenna Ushkowitz and Chris Colfer as they perform in
"The Power of Madonna" eptsode of "Glee," which
aired Tuesday, April 20, 2010, on Fox.

Danielle Staub leaving 'R~al Housewives of New Jersey'
LOS ANCELES (AP&gt;
Bravo is cleaning house.
The net\\ ork announced
Monday that Daniclle
Staub, the fire-&lt;;tartcr on
"'n1c Real Hou e'' tves of
~e'' Jcrse)." would not be
tu mng to tht: '&gt;how
fhrou hout the tumul
u-.
e~ nd
eason
lit.1ub enraged Carohne
:V1anzo, her M&lt;;ter-m law
J tcquelinc Launta and
famtly fnend Teresa
Gmdtce. though Staub
seemed to make amends
at the end of Monda) 's
union eptsode.
The reunion was
D melle\ lu'lt appear
nee on 'The Re.ll
Houo;cwt\e" ot New
Jer:-.ey,'" satd Andy
( ohen. Bravo's senior
'ice president of original
programming and de\elopment who al-;o host"&gt;
"The Real Hou&lt;~ewhe-;"
reunion shows. "We
thought the hugs were a
great wa) to end two sea&lt;;On'&gt;
of
bitterness

bet\'.ecn the women.''
It\ the latest m a ~erie'&gt;
of ''Real Houo.;cwi\e., ·
dep&amp;~rtureo.;. SarcastiC chef
Bethenny J r.mkel, \'.ho
~tarred earlier tim )Car 111
the 'Pill oft Bcthcr lV
Gettm
M rned "
uptt .,
h ut he
pr •n n~v
1 I t
\\eekl) m a11ne 1 -,t
\\ eck that ... he dtd ot
w.mt to return for .he
New York edttton '&lt;;
founh outing becau-.\:
last season "'a&lt;; '\cary
and painful''
'Do I expect her t be
holdm¥ an .tpple at the
beginnmg of the "hO\'. '
Prob.tbly nut,'' '11d
Cohen. "She'&lt;; had great
~UCCC'\~ with her 0\'.ll
show On the flip side. I
do hope to see her in the
'Housewhe'i' uni,erse in
some \\.t).''
Lao;t month, encrgettc
entrepreneur l.r'i,l Wu
Hmw.ell "'a' .ll"o officially rc\ealed to not be
among the Atlanta ladies'

CNN names Piers
Morgan as Larry
King's replacement
NEW YORK (AP)
British tabloid veteran
Piers Morgan, hired by
CNN to "tart as Larry
King·~ replacement as a
prime-time intetviewer in
January, promised that he
·came here to win.''
CNN nailed down the
· final piece of 1ts primetime
makeover
on
Wednesday, after months
where it was clear the
"America's Got Talent"
paneli&lt;&gt;t was its top
choice.
King,
who
announced in June he
w.ts leaving "I arry King
Live," will have his final
show on Oec. 16.
Negotiation'&gt; dragged
while CNN worked out a
deal that allows ~!organ
to continue on ''America's
Got T.tlent" and his
British talk shO\\, "Piers
Morgan's Life Storie.,:·
on Brit:•in's lTV.
" I didn't come here to
Jose," he s.tid. "I have
always ~pent my life in
ferocious ratings or circulution wars. It's what
gets me going in the
morning, and I want to
combine brilliant inter
view'&gt; with great ratin~s •·
That would be fmc
with C'NN: King wa~
once cable 1 V new-;' top
gun but now rune; third in
his 9 p.m ET time slot.
Fox New&lt;&gt; Channel's

•

I

•••

Sean Hannity l1.1s meraged 2.27 million \ie''crs tht!'. year .tt that hour,
MSNBC's
Rachel
Maddo"' has 931.000
viewers and King ,1\crages 702.000, .tccordlng
to the Nielsen Co.
Another
prime-time
C~lN -;hO\\ \\ith fom1er
Ne\'. York Gov. Eliot
Spitler and columm~t
Kathleen Parker i&lt;&gt; star1mg
on Oct 4. C'NN has stmg
gled in prime-tunc \'.tth
new"&gt; vie\\Cr' more interested 111 opinionated shows
on l·ox and MSNBC.
Mor~an said followlllg
King ts "like replacing
Frank Slllatra at the
Sands." l-Ie -;aJd he considered it the btggeo;t
interviewc1 job m the
world, Md one th.lt hc'c;
long had his e)c on.
CNN ll S. Prc&lt;&gt;icknt
Jon Klein said Morgan
had .1 "per&lt;astcnt agent."
The pgcnt. John !•err ite1,
e-mailcd Klein \'.ith
link-;
to
some of
Morgan's interviews carIier thio.; yc&lt;~r, before 11
wa.., kno\\ n CNN wus
considering
repla.:e
ments for Ktng Klem
s.tid he "\\as JU-.t blo\'. n
away by hi" talent, Ius
ability to hone in on
facets of people\ per
son.tltttcs you IIC\Cr
knc\'. were there"

thtrd -;ea&lt;;on. premiermg
Oct 4. Cohen smd tt's
bcc.lUsc she ''mO\ ed far.
fm-. far ouhrde of
Atlant.l" Ne\le 1 ekes.
K1m Zolct k 'ihcrec
\\ httf1eld .tnd Kandt
R
\ 1 I t
h

"There's big, big, big
drama and big, big, big
turnoH!r tor the Bravo 4 year-old franchise, an tension," satd Cohen.
fmnl·hio;e Only brash ong- entirely new grouP. of ''They all lh e near each
mal hou C\'. ife Vtcki "Real House\\ i' es • in other. and it's amazing.
Gunval-;on remams on the Be,erl) Hills is prepanng You' 11 see "'hat it means
0 n
C unt} edttion. for Jt&lt;; close-up. debutmg to be someone's neighbor
Oct 14. Cohen promised in Beverly Hills. You
"' lc t
!lo,j \\ York.
etum to over-the-top have to walk a mile to get
ence and .t family to your next door neighDlJC '\llmlar to the
bor'-.. house. Adrienne
Jerse) series \'.tth a and Lisa live acros" the
R H
\\ tth Jl
\\
Sisters "'ho happen to street from each oth.
party-cra-;her Mtchaelc
connected to the 1've never seen "'ealth t:
that scale ..
S tbt. 1s curreQtJy atnn" Htlton family.
N &lt;&gt;e 1 on )
Bra' o is constantly
The Beverlv Hills cast
mcludes:
~ Adnenne searchmg for new ca-,t
hen -;Jtd \\hen
, ou' ne\'. "R
Maloof. w ho&lt;;c family member&lt;;, both in existi U~\'.1\C ," he loo!Q. t
O\'. ns the Palms Ca-.ino
ing and potential locale-..
mJependent.
strong. Reson in Las Vega : according to Cohen.
attra~tt\ e and wealthy
Camille Grammer, ex- That means interviewing
women who are typicaU) wife of "Frasier" star and filmin~ test footage
mothers that are married. Kehey Grammer: Lisa of
po~s1ble
"Real
dtvorced or engaged. He Vanderpump. a trans- House\'.i,es" \\ith their
said ne\'. cast members planted British re-;tauru- friends and families.
should ha\e a connection teur; Taylor Armstrong. Cohen said the network
to the ext'iting ''Real wife of \Cnture capitalist has attempted to wrangle
House\\ i\es."
Atlanta Russell Armstrong: and a Texa:-. edition for the
additions Parks and Bailey. Kim and Kyle Richards. pa"t 1\\0 years but
for exrunple. \\Cre friends fonncr child stars and "never hit tt" with the
aunts of Paris Hilton.
right group of women.
of Bwruss and Lekes.
m production
It&lt;; a hefty runount of

(

.urly m
" td Coh~.:
I can't c;ay
t
cNt: ·
f.t\onte from the t •
l yn e ( 11rt m
sp.tlt'} moth ..
ro\\dy k .... n t c dau 1te
mtrodu~.:ed dt the be mnmg of Or-ange Count) ~
fourth '\Cason. posted on
her J·.tcebook profile last
month that '&gt;he would not
be returning to the &lt;ho\'..
Cohen wouldn't comment on the most recent
c.t&lt;:&gt;t changes with the
Or,mge
County
entourage becauo;;c the
sixth season IS currently

\\ hile se\ era! women

are mO\ ing on from the

Holzer ~~N~~!~d Living
National Assisted Living Week
Celebration and Activities Schedule

September 12th- 18th

t's Day
Sun~~; 12th
at Lunch Time

" Progressive Party"
Ffilday Seot. 17th
food and Music

with DJ Kip Cirueser at

�Dl
Sunday, September 12, 2010

•~====================================

H

~ottage .style's

cozy chartns

WoolrlchiAP photo

WoolrichiAP Photo

Th1s product 1mage provided by Woolrtch shows the Capote Hudson's Bay blan"ket
and pillow sham This fall we're seemg the homey charm of cottages, farmhouses
and woodsy cabins as a trend among shelter retailers.

This product image released by Woolrich shows their buffalo check· bathroom
accessories. This fall we're seeing the homey charm of cottages, farmhouses and
woodsy cabins as a trend among shelter retailers.

BY KIM COOK
FOR THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS

Many dread the first chilly night that signals fall's
approach, but the seasonal shift also can be a welcome relief.
Anticipating crisp days and a nice pot of soup on
the stove helps shake off the summer doldrums. And
this fall. we're seeing the homey charm of cottages,
farmhouses and woodsy cabins as a trend among shelter retailers.
This style partners handmade elements with vintage
fabric prints and wicker, wire and wood to give interest and texture to rooms. Think afghans. embroidered
pillows. felted wool and quilt!i. Patterns range from
. uaint floralc; to craftwork graphics. in colors both
.
brant and gently faded.
Garnet Hill offers hooked wool pillows and rugs
with images of buttons. mittens and roosters. Flannel
and percale bedding is printed with folk art stencil
motifs and autumn fn1its.
Martha Stewart's collection for Macy's features soft
knit throws, and pillows and bedding in richly toned
plaids. gentle monochromatics and Chantilly prints.
'Pottery Barn references the early homesteads with
antique wooden dough bowls. grain sack pillo\\ covers. and a selection of serveware crafted from rattan
and chicken wire.
Patchwork quilts and lace curtains. and designer .
Mina Javid's clever "wrought iron" headboard decal,
look retro yet fresh at Urban Outfitters.
Anthropologie has pretty lampshades wrapped in
calico print ruffles. Find here too some great castbrass hooks shaped like old keys, crewelwork drapery, candle holders inspired by vintage thread spools,
and wonderful ceramic knobs topped with tiny floral
tea saucers. Grandma would approve.
Target has stoneware canisters and wicker ba~ketry
for style-centric storage; rustic pig and hen figural~
are inexpensive and fun. accents.
While it's easy to do a feminine room with many of
hese style elements. that':. not the only option. With
. stripe:. and bold graphics. or just the infusion
autumn's rich. dark colors - plum, apple, persimmon, gunmetal. teal and mustard - the look swings
more toward cabin than cottage. Plaids such as tartan
and buffalo are holding strong in fall fa.shion: we' II
see upholstery, rugs and other soft furnishings carry
the trend home.
The iconic striped Hud.son's Bay blanket can be
found at Woolrich; there's a lovely fringed pillow
sham in the collection. too. And red and black buffalo-check bath accessories add a great lodge look.
Pottery BarniAP photo
Jt's easy to go too kitschy with this style, so be prudent. Keep the ducks and baskets to a minimum: This product image provided by Pottery Barn shows their Provence organic bedding. This fall we're seeing the
homey charm of cottages, farmhouses and woodsy cabins as a trend among shelter retailers.
you'll have rooms that look cozy. yet current.

•

,

•

�·-~-~------~~-

- ·- - -- --

Page 02 • &amp;unbap ~imn-&amp;mtintl

Sunday, September. 12, 2010

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

,. ;.
~-----------------------------------m;ribune - s ·entinel - l\egister

I

.\

~.,

CLASSIFIED

mdtdassu~de-~~!~~~~~xm~com

Meigs County, OH

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

m;ribune

..

To Place

Websttes:
YNm mydallytrlbune.com

www.myda1lysentinel.com
www.mydallyregJSter com

l\egister

Sentinel

c:.r;~::; (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (3Q4) 675-1333
Or Fax To (740) 446-3008

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

-

JUST SAY
CHARGE ITJ
VISA

~

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD HOIICED

Monday thru Friday

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WIUTE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

•POLICIES*

200

Display Ads
All Dlaplaya 12 Noon 2
Busln~s Days Prior To
Publication
sunday Dlsplaya laOO p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid"

Oucrtptloa • Jnclttft A Price • Avoid Abllrtvlatlons
• lnthlde Pbone Numbu And Addres• Wilen Heeded
• Adl Sllould Run 7 O.p

Notices
NOTICE

Miscellaneous

Pets

Repain

OHIO Joe s Tv repa11 on M n1 Fox Terner/Jack Remmgton model 11·

VALLEY PUBLISH NG

most

makes

&amp; Russe for sale 740· 48

auto 28Ga ,

CO recommends lha' models House calls 379-2282
Un~que
litUe gun,
yov do you
busineSS
304·675·1724 _ _ - - - - - - - very clean $575
know v.1th
and ;;;.;;.;...;;..;:..;;;...;;.;...;..;_
Lost Bubbly Taby people
ALSO
1916
D
ye ow cat Belongs NOT to send money
700
Agriculture Mercury d me, very
500
Education
to Ruth Young 740· through the mau urtll

446..0264

Lost Blond Yor1&lt;
shire F No ta I
about 1Olbs Sophie
small reward 740·
794..0321

Lost F Red P1t Bull

wta redd1sh gold coat
&amp; nose gold/amber
eyes has wh te on
chest &amp; toes &amp; some
wh1to on nose Last
seen on At 588 newr
Texas Rd weanng a
blue collar Ch Ids
pet
740-531..()493
leave mess Reward

Lost F Beng elfox
hound dog Tn color ·
red color Reward
$100 sale return
740-446-4249

have nvestJgat ng

you

lhe offer na

Lessons
Services
=;;;;;;;;;;;~ Beg1nner Clogg1ng
=
TueSday,
Home Improvements Classes.
Sept 14 6 OOpm.
SUMMER SPECIAL Mulberry Commumty
1 Driveway Seal,
Center, 2nd floor,
Coat1ng &amp; Repajr,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 740·
2 Gutters cleaned, 992·7853, 740·444·
rep~med &amp; Installed.
2119
3 Pa~nting &amp; yard
wor1&lt; &amp; m1se odd
JObs
600
An~s
Semor d1scount,
liCensed &amp; bonded
Home ph 304·882·
Livestock
3959
Ce I ph 304-812·
Boer goats 18 bred
3004
names due to de JVer
Other Services
In Oct
1 bi e
I

300

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

..
Dependable.
rtrustworthy-Chnstlan
lady wdl clean your
home or office Very
reasonable
rates
DISCOunts g1ven to
Lost·
redtwh elderly,
verterans,
Australian Shepherd m.1tary, &amp; teachers
F. Racine area 740· Call Dawn at 256·
6306 or 645-6589
949-1325

$2 200
Sen''"S
""
enqu1res only 740·
446-3845
leave
message

~======

""

Pets

======;;;;;
7
wk kittens long
haired.:; tiger striped
~ ~ yellow m. 446•

57

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
/t~
Borders $3.00/perod
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
ta
Sl.OOforlarge

'-.l
1m
•~

POUQE.S 0t1o *lty PUblllhlr(l ....,_the d;IIIIO tell!. reject. or carpi an, lid 11 q tlma Elrore mUll bt rtpOittcl on tne 1111 clay o1 ~iCallonlnlllht
Tri!MH&gt;ert nel.flegflllf wl bt ~til no llOIIIhln 1110 CCIII ollhe if*e occupied by the 8101 Q Oily tho llrll ~ We st.l nell bt llalllt lor
lilY Iota or cxpen:~~ IIlii rwu111 tcmlhe pUbllc8tlon 01 0111lnl0n otan a!!vertllemllll Contcllon IIIII bt IlliCit In lht filii naDitlt tcll1lon. • Bo•!UIIbtr
Itt llnp CIOnlkii!Ul • Cllrtnt 1119 c:arG ~ea • All r=J eclvtll!lenltrU 11t IUbJociiO IN fldertl Fell Houllr4l Act o1 19&amp;8 • Thll
~ only netp wtrteclldl mNI 1'(1 E0E staro~ WI 11111 1101 tnoll'.t9) . - p i l!lf ~ Ill flollllon o1 lilt bw Wll net bl reapc~Wllllt lolllf1
1!1011111 an tciiiUn our lilt phonQ.

• Start Your Ad5 With AKeyword • Include Complete

Announcements

Lost &amp; Found

Word Ads
Dolly ln -Columm VaOO a.m.
Monday-Friday tor Insertion
Jn Next Day'a Paper
Sunday ln·Columna OaOO a .m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

For-,

r-LGoking
A New Horne?

rare $575 1921 D
Liberty walking half
Form Equipment
dOllar, moe $350
John Deere 5210 Senous calls only
tractor, 2950 hrs 740·533·3870
excellent cond1t1on Tilt a hft·for scooter
$10 750 fllrm 740· or wheel chair fits
379·2789
1nto 2 in trailer
~.....~-~~­
STIHL Salos &amp; Service hitched call: 304·
Now Avallablo
at 675-3753
Carmichael Equ pment - - - - - - 9X11 Lifestyle Rug
74o.44 a-2412
Cream Shag Pd:
Garden &amp; Produce $900 00 Se1'1ng for
$275 00 FIRM can·
HIChards
Brottters 304-941-4653
Fru 1 Farm xes......w.e = = = = = = =
Yard Sole
have app!el Mon thru
Sat 8-12 &amp; 1-6 Sun
9-5 Many varieties Raco yard sale at
Star
MI
Par1&lt;,
aa able jellies jams Racme on Sept 14
Cl der, appie butter
Co Rd 46 2054 from 9-6 Sept 15,
0 rpheus
Rd from 9-4 &amp; Sept 16,
from 9·2 Last dayt l~~~=
Thurman
Oh clothing
$1 a bag
=7=40=2=8=6-4=584=== and other rtems one- - - - - - - h 11
Hay, Feed, Seed,
a
pnce.
Grain
Enterta nment
centers, soia. chrurs,
Lg Round Bales of reclmers.
bakers
Hay for Mulch can rack, sets of bunk
740·992·7603
beds, desks, tables, 02 vw New BeeUe
===~=== books, toys, chest of Turbo lots of etras
Want To Buy
drawers
w/mirror, good cond. 740-245.
pictures,lots of kids 0619
Elderbernes, spice ctothmg from birth to - - - - - - bushberrles,
6 years and lots of 03 Honda CRV call
pa~paws,
black mise Largest sale 740-446·1714
walnuts,
740·698· 'Thanks tor your 2005 Buick Park
6060
support
Avenue, sen1or lady
G nseng- want to buy
driven
always
other
botamcals.
garaged,
leather
Twin Oaks SeMce
heated seats, 1ke
Sta•1on
junctiOn '=
new
cond tion.
RTifJ3.
Campen I RVs &amp;
60,000
m es
Wednesdays
12·1
TraJ1en
$10,900,
740·541starting
22
4323
September, call 330- 95 Chevy M H Road = = = = = = =
Vans
674-4195 for price Trek 2t0 Popular,
hst
74647 m1ies, 350
1
- - - - - - eng .• ale, sleeps 4, 998
runs good $14 000 Plymouth Voyager
900
Merchandise 740-446-4325
runs good,
$700
740-992·5712, 740·
24 It goose neck
707·9173
Equipment f
trailer for sale. Good
Supplies
cond See at 6778
Want To Buy
lincoln P1ke Patnot.
Black
Beauty Asl&lt;1ng $1 ,995
Oiler's ToWing Now
sandblast sand $6 - - - - - - - buy1ng tunk cars
per 100·1b bag, ten 07 Bracken R1dge w/motors or wlout
or more $5 each 40' camper, country 740-388·0011
or
blue &amp; beige, 3 slide 740-441·7870
No
304·773·5332
outs, lull s1ze bath &amp; Sunday call
Miscellaneous
kitchen, 2 bedrooms,
shdlng glass doors,
For Sale Winchester exc.
conditiOn,
30-30
$450,
~;;;;;;;;;;;
Contender
$25,900 .:=
221 beautlfull.
$600, S&amp;W 1oes 740·247·2475
For Sole By Owner
10mm $500 can ~======
6 apts $137 000
74()..388-8221
Motorcycles

TrY the
Classifiedsll

==-====

=======-

====Auto:;:;;'==;;;

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

-======= - = " = = = = =
'Land (Acreage)
Apartmenfs/
Townhouset
Gatlia Co. 14 acres,
water
+
septic Beautiful
1SA
$34,500 or Kyer 16 apartment in the
acres
$15,9001 country
fr~hly
Moigs Co. 8 acres pa1nted very clean
$19,900 More ® WID hook up n1ce
wwwbrunedaod com country setting only
or call740-441-1492, 10 mins. from town.
we finance'
Must
see
to
~~~~=== appreaate. Water
pd. $37SJmo 614·
0 6 acre located 500 595-7n3 or 740645·
ft behmd mason co 5953
Ins call 304·675· - - - - - - .;
3.753
- . . _ _ _ _ _ N1ce
2BR
apt.
appliances,
wid
hookup, water pd,
good locatiOn on
,~
Centenary close to
Apartments/
hospital. No pets. call
after s. 740-445.
Townhouses
9442
2nd floor 2 BR - - - - - apartment,
1BR nicely furniShed
overlooking Gallipolis apt. No smoking. no
c1ty p a'"•
.._
pets. $400 mon &amp;
LA.,
kl h _,., ·
dep. 740-446-4782
tc eutulntog area, 1
112
BA, Middlepof1
Beech
washer/dryer. $600
mon + dep. 740-446· St.. 2 br fumashed
4425 or 740-446· apt., utll. pd. deplref,
2325
No pets, 740·992•
- - - - - - - 0165
Nice 2 &amp; 3 BR apt. - - - - - - Gall1polls $600 mo Middleport N 4th
Ave., 2 room ef!iency
_,
Incl
w /..,g
&amp;
washer/dryer
No apt •
No
pets,
deplrel,
pets 740-591.5174
740·9920165
Pleasant
Valley
Apartments 1s now 1--2BD
_R_M_A~P""'r""'s~
in
tak~ng
applications Pt.
Pleasant
all
lor 2, 3. &amp; 4 br HUD u1l ties paid ca 304·
SubSld zed
360..0163
Apartments
Applications
are Spnng Val ey Green
taken Monday thru Apartments 1 BR at
Thrusday
9:00am- $395+2 BR at $470
1 OOpm Of!1ce Is Month 446-1599.
located
at
1151
Commercial
Evergreen
Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV
Commerctal bu 'd ng
(304) 675·5806
for rent 740-446·

======;;;;;

===Lots====

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;

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

• Hometown News
• Area Shopping
e Local Sports
e Community,
Calendar
... and much more.

&lt;!@allipolis 11Bailp ~rlbune
flolnt ~~Ieasant i\eglster
The Daily Sentinel
$unbap \reltnes -~enttnel

rem $2030 mo. 740·

5 piece bedroom
sufle.
large
refngerator, tables &amp;
other p1eces. 740.
949-3601

2007 HD Hentage 446..0390
Soltall 4,695 m1tes- ~~===""""""'=
Houses For Sa e
Showroom
co nd
$16,000 negotiable For sale by owner
740-446..0121
modular home 4
acres, country s tt1ng
In Memory
In Memory
7 miles from Vinton
of! of St At 325 3BR,
o~pb 1-dwurd Bo•H·n \\11$ born
2BA,
garden
Septembc.'r 19, 191 and \\ent to be \\Jtb the
l.ord em Sep!embc.'r II, 2009 Joe proudly
tub ,d1n1ng room lg
Strved h1• Cl•untry 10 the US :-lavy and "as a
living
rm..
utility
len ms busb.1nd, father, and gr:mdfilthcr
room, all appliances
God Set'S thai be 1s getung t1red and a cure IS
nc•l 1&lt;1 be So he pl•ces b1s anm around htm and mcludmg
\\btspers, "Cnme \\ltb me" \\ ath teartul eyes
24
"e lei hm1 co as he sfoy,Jy shps u"av Althoush washer/dryer,
pool
Yoc h\\e hun Jearh. we ,,mnot make bam stn. A above
prcclnus heart \\Ill stop beating, hard \\or(mg
detached 30x56 3
h:md~ "111 In~ to ~~ All hts Yo ooderlul
tucmoncs "all be kept the best hu th1s, God bay garage, $95 000
\llll prove to u , he ooly rakes the Besl" There call 740·742·1900
I n't a d.l) lhal j;OC'S by Without )ClU lD our
th&lt;IU hts All tbc memones "e •liMed \\Ill ne•er
be forg &gt;ttcn And 111 our he:uts \\C lmo" )OU
nl\\ •ys be b) our s1de, making sure we
folio" down tbe nght path leadms to )'OU Soon
we v.all all be reurulro "1tb )OU up m hea•cn
wuh Our l.ord and lloly I ather UptJI then, you

,.,u

Jllll nus..~ and ln•ed here on roJtb
\\alb All Ourlmc MU), Tlllll. Pam,koe, Bnan,
Ant;le, Joey, Knty Josh and Budd)

art:

1

FIND AJOB
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

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

6565
Houses For Rent
New home In City,
2BR. 1 BA.LA.DR,K
Must have excellent
reference. Call for
details. 446·2801
Tara Townhouse Apt
2BR 1 5 SA, back
patio,
pool,
pl:lyground No pets
$450 rent 740-645·
8599

1SA $350/month in
Syracuse
Deposit,
HUD approved. no
pets 304-675·5332
weekendsi740..591·
0265

�Sunday, September 12, 2010
Help Wanted

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

Help Wanted

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

FACTS/New Alternatives An alcohol and other drug
counseling/prevention agency
located in Gallia and Jackson
Counties, 1s seeki.ng an
amb1t1ous mdividual to fill the
following positions:

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER

12 1

.D I~:$1·-·1:..1..WJi1I·••r.J.,i
,ijJIMH·•JI'I..I.IJI&amp;iifi··
l.t v W
Jl 11 I
t I d x
M
NI!WIChann
el 3 Ton gltl
Sdrfdd
Amcnca'1 ruMJ~t ltome Amenca 1 lunn ~~!tame U:tr~e Makeover llomn Th

Vld.as

Mentonng Coordinator/
Prevention Educator Part-t1me position - Seeking
an energetic individual to worl&lt;
with youth and adults in Gallia
and Jackson counties.
Coordinate a successful
program, work w1th local
referral sources, match and
momtor mentor/mantee
relationships, plan and
Implement program activities,
seek new adult and youth
partiCipants to the program.

&amp;unba!' 1timt!· mtind • Page 03

News

ty•
Masterpiece Mystery I
!IT. M tt •

VIdeos

Edition •

N;rturc

r

It cavy
Sed;Won

POV II
New~

Nows

11

Tha

cma

Clwdand

So Oll!ld

Slmpsons

Show
Great ~cenlc Rlllway

17

Journeys

n

Big Brotfier

0~

Setrtf!d
T

( 15) [nt.

Tonight
Wall toWal
Sports
Sl!lnfeld
'C.tll

NPWS

d

L !WI

Numblrs

Fnthu\lasm F:ntllu\lasm
fl~;i Score Footbal
SporuC~tf1'

Poker ~ r1d
Bllnglng Down the House •

SecretarY • Part-time position

mthe Galha office • A minimum

of one (1) year exP.erience 1n
general secretarial duties and a
h1gh school diploma.
Must posse accurate sk1lls m
Word and Excel P.rograms and
be dependable w1th
good telephone skills.
Send resume by September
21, 2010 to: FACTS, 45 Olive,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45614 or
FAX (740) 446-8014.
EOE, M/F/H
Auction

Auction

Hung 'l

tO.

1r

Ertourage

** Fast&amp; Funous
** * lnglourtous Basterds

AUCTION

..

eplembcr 18th, 2010
S&gt;rrtcusc Communll) lluilding
'rncusl', Ohio 45779
• \\ atrh for signs
Antique· Collectable · Houo;chold
0\ hR 200 BF.F.R SIGNS
Auctioneer: 8ilh R. Goble Jr.
lie.# 1379ln fa,O'r ;tate of Ohio
7 40-416-1164

. MONDAY TELEVISIO!N

4

co

~~~Tu~Sttoru~p c ~~~ # ~S5~8)

'

Gill

Not ld ntttlc.Jtton ~~
re 1 te 1
Brm
rnend nd good oppet1te
f
"tl be
T\ ed b' c mmuntt\

7

(]E)

8

CD

At
REQl IRED to

..... ..-

~GUI;ID iE
l..,~

'

MONDAY PRIMETIME

;Emml bill) ngg"&gt;olbo) goblc yilhoo com
I

..

10
11

17

en
am
a.a

NI!Ws

Date:ine NBC

Ne:ws

Datlng n the Dart

Fctd!t

lafayette· The lostllero N1gh11y

Ncm ne

BustnMs
NC:WS
NC:WS

ABC Worfcf

EntCftillrvn

New~

ert Ton ght

CBS [Vcmng Jeopardy I

Wheel of
Forrune

New~

Smarter 5th Paid
Grad!!!
Prugra

MS

13 C"i:!INMS

N
B~s

y

wo ada
alf Ml!ll

PBS

Datng m the Dart t

New~

ABC News

News

( lS) Dmd

N gtrtllne
The 81~

Rang

CSI MlllfTII

IITI

mb"

lmwman

eary

Two and a

Eyewltnru News a• Ten

H Men

I~Ho

family Guy The
Smpsons
C a!l t Rose

nt1s

CBS hen ng U
News

Ne~~n

tJS)D:IYid

side

Lettwman

Ed ton
'iaubs

ScrJbs

Po es
K.rt
11
SporuC~er

L

Ml!t-Mother Ml!t-Mother

Til&lt;&gt; 700 Club

Auction

Auction

FORECLOSURE
Propel'h to be sold at Trustee'

le

1o on Count) Courthou e
Point Pleasant. \\ \

cptcmber 27, 2010 • 10:00 am

735 Barnett Rd •• Point Plensant. \\ \
J DR. 2 bath. approx. 1,344 q ft.
2 car garage
J&gt;ropert) to be sold "AS IS,
"Where Is"
\\ould make a great rental propert).
1\llnlmum Bid Onl) $30,000
Questions, call D:ne nl
888-376-3192 ext. 5

Auction

Auction

FORECLOSURE
~llluable

Ime tment Propert) for~ lc ,
Property to be sold at Shenff' Sale
Metr ( ount) Courthouse
Pomero), OH
September 17,2010
JO:IIOAM

J"R 265 Number Nme Rd, Reeds\llle,
OH, Approx 11 Acres
1638 I anc:oln Hetghts. PomerO), OH
2 BR I bath, pprox 718 sq ft
1053 Vme St. Mtddleport, OH
2 BR. I bath. npprox 940 sq ft
570 S sc~ond St. \1tddleport, OU
~ BK. I b.tth, apptox 1,784sq ft

604 Bro.td\\il) "it(\\ 7th St), Rncmc,
OH
2 BR I bath, approx 83i sq ft
U755 l S ~ ~. Pomem). OH
lBR I b th, appro:.. 825 sq ft

'5265 B.tlkstreet Rd, Dextcr,OH
lnku ~1435 Bowles Rdl
3 BR I 112 hath, npprox 1,320 sq ft
~&lt;;261 Dexter Rd, Dexter, Oli
3 BR. I bath, approx 1,100 sq ft

Propentcs Y.lll be sold scparntel)
" Ar:. Is". "Where)~" sale

aren't only 'for
buying or selling
ite ...s,.. you can use
this \Nidely read
section to ""ish
so~~neone a
Happy Birthday.
provide a Thank
You,. and place an
ad ••1n IVIe~~nory''
o'f a loved one.

MAKE
SOMEONE'S

Fo,- ... ore in'for.rnation,.. contact,your
local Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

r&lt;!iSallipolis

DAY!

~ail,, -a:r: ~rtbtttte

(740) 446-2342

Tl1.e Daily

Sent:i1~el

(740) 992-2155
~Potttt: ~Pleasat-.t:

3R.e-gi.Stt&gt;r

(304) 675-1333

�-

---~-~~~~--._..

Page 04 • &amp;unbap t!timttt-ilentind
Help Wonted

\\1ork

Help Wanted

fmm Umnc!

l{e~ruit NK \ mcmhcN und lakt•
donatfuns ror I'UIISCr\ Ulh C puhtiC,tl

urganizuliuns
f1 om thr lomfor t of) our O\\ n home!

lm n our t..:.nn md lind out \\ h I Ul.tk
lulu( l'llllllllll' 9f OhM~ hl'~t
unpin)

1 1

(_ ull I oda\ rur \our nppuintnll'nt!
1-HHM-2'\7-5647 EX1 2373
\ppl) onlim· at
http://jubs.infu~hion.rum

Houses for Rent

Education

Downtown Galltpolts
3 br 1 5 bath central
carpotlhardwood
floor
k1tchen
pphcanc
m uded
wa hertdryer hook
up No Pets Ample
storag
avatlable
Deposal
Requared
&lt;111740 446·7654

The
Athens Me gs
Educational Service
Center
nas
a
Po taon Opentng for
a
Part Tim
E.ducataonal Atde tn
th
Integrated
Preschool classroom
at Tuppers Plaans
lor tho 2010 2011
School Year Th1s Is
a 9 month pov !ron
for 5 hou s per day
no
benefats
Applicants must pass
a
cr1m1nal
background check
and
meet
all
requarement needed
to
erve
as an
Educataona'
A1de
Salary w II be based
on qu:'lhfacataons and
expenenco
Subm
letter of 1ntorest
resume
and
rete onces to John
D
Costanzo
Superintendent,
Athens Meigs
Educational Servace
501
Center
Rachland
Avenue
Suate #108 Athens
OH
45701
Application
Deadline September
2010
12 00
13
NOON The AME:SC
Is
an
Equal
Opportunity
Employer/Provider

House
for
rent
Vinton 2 11? BR
wth
larg
lot
buald119 $525 mon
&amp; dep AI o 3Br
mobal In Galllpohs,
$450 rnon &amp; Dep
call after 2 pm 740388 8000 0
140388 9003

4000

Manutactured
Housing

Mobile Home
ewer trash
pd
No pets
Johnson s
Mobile
Home Park
740
446 3160

s

6000

Employment

The

H&lt;Jiler Senior Carr:_Ccnt(•r
th f Ill'" Ill" po 111on '" .ulable
~op r' •~or ful tunc l::o.empt
(2 (){tpm 12 00 am~

• R!'ll

Food Services

Nace 16x80
3 Bedroom
Country
settmg rhe
Athens·Meags
t
740·339·336&amp; 740- "-d
o;;. ucataona
ervace
367-()266
Center as seek ang a
P rt l1ame
2BR mobile S400 a
OffICer
d
mon $400 d p HUD Atten ance
h
k
appr No smokmg no (20 rs per wee
WI th no benefits) Ior
pets 304 849-2932
Ath ens
Coun tY

Shop

h

R&amp;J
Trucktng
~
seektng
CDLdr vero; to run loca
nd reg onal routes
W I atur v; ekend
Oil' t rr e for reg ona
dnver Local drvers
o e
n ghtly
Exc llent pay Health
Ins wtth dental &amp; Rx
opt on
401 (k)
Vacaton &amp; Bonus
pays
&amp; safety
Ouahhed
awards
applicants must be at
least 23YI'S have 1yr
ot commerCia ~rfV•
exp clean MVR

the
Experjence 1nJustace
Juvenale
System IS preterred
Salary w.l be based
on
traanang and
expenence
mu:1
Applicants
prov1de the1r own
transportation
Please submat

Need someone for
K&amp;D OJ Serve
KaroakeiDJ
Bus ness must have
valid drivers he nses
be sober w1 work
y
yourse
&amp;
owner
send
resume to Box 88
Rutland. Oh 45775
or ca11740-742-7709

• I I'N Part lm1 IDa\ I 'c.:nmgs)

• l&gt;a t tl) A1dc Part I wu:
• llou keepmg. I ·undl) Part ltm
tliO\\

ncrrpting upplic.ttion~ fur the

Nurse \ide h .tining Clnss
l'lcasl' Cont:tct:
B trb I'd rson M.m.agcr of UR USC (
740 446 'iOf)J or peter on • holzer org
\r Jill on th \\t::hnt \\\\\\ holz rorg
I qual Opportunll) lmplo)cr

Auction

Auction

I'UBLJC AUCTION
SAHIU&gt;A\, SEP'U,l\IBhR 1!!, 2010
Hl:OO \.l\1.
132
S I'O~IE ROAI&gt;
Al ROSS FROM \I~ 1'0~
ELI 1\lENl'\R\ SCHOOL

ran

Auction

Auction

. . --...-...........____

"""'!""_~--------

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

House for sule or
rent Preuy rloan
3BR
Downtown
Gallapohs close to
Wa hangton
E1em
R nt $750 no utlthte
Sal $99 000 KellyJo 645 9096 or 446
4639

Need a
Job Done?

_______

\I'll ON, 011
I&gt;IRM liONS: hom Gallipolis take
OH 160 North appro' I 'i n11lcs tu
Vmton. hc.1r left on Kc) stone Ro.td, go
I I 0 nule to aucuon
Mr~ I om (armon of Pedro, OH has
mmcd to a nuNng home The f&lt;llllll)
\\111 be lllO' mg the Items to the .tbm c
lo' lllllll for ,,,le
:1 bedroom sets. sm.111 cluna c.1bmet.
rClonl c.tbanet, RCA Yrctor record
pl.l)Cr, stcrcl' cabmcts (radio &amp;
turnt.thlc). .offcc &amp; end tables.
rcfngemtor. metal kah.:hcn c.thancts. Gl·
d~cr. 40" clcdnc ~lot l'omt stu\ e
qualts, ltncrs. old accord, old books,
VII'S I apes, kero l.unps, !\ld O) h)
p.tltcm teapot, Hohn.ul fenton, C.tmt\,tl.
AHlll s.alt &amp; peppca shaker l:ullcttton.
old '&gt;piC-~! r1d. ~Cl, ftgUtlllC' l:USIUITIC
JC\\CII), bJU\\11 ol,tss \ tsC, gaccn \\:ltcr
set, Homer 1...111ghhn l'nsctll.t p.altcrn
appro\ 30 p1eces, kat utenstls, pots &amp;
p.ms. non ,f..lllets, kern hc.tters, plCIIK
l.tblc, push mowers, \\ heelbarnm s.
bench gnnller, ham! ) ard tools, I&gt;Oft h

rv.

We

company s sue s
Your n d to be
result o aentated that
as aO"laeved thru you
abahty to be ' cu ed
and orgamzed The
team
that
you
managte
1s
succ sslu by a w n
win atmo phere We
offer vaca•,ons 401
K wage ba ed on
result uniforms and
meals If tnt rested
contact by E Mall at
WYii'\'i1Q.brill ao.U:Q
m. olface fax at 1
740 446 3400 or an
person at Burger
King 65 Upp r Racer
Road In Gallapohs
Ohio F Of
Help Wonted·
General
;;;=;;;..;.....;;._~Grand Opening
J &amp; J lndustnes 1s
relocatang •' maJor
medical
dev1ce
faca !y to Gallia Co
•10 to 15 full t1me
positions
•4 day work week
·u hr shtlts
•$14.25 to start
"$450/wk
Clenca
Custome
servtce Repaar
Must be neat m
appearance Must be
over 18 yrs o d Call
740-446-3057
or
304-709..(}016
$350 sign on bonus
Dont
miss
opportunltylll
...;...;....
_ _;....__
Acceptang
applications lor pan
liM ca ha s apply
n pero;;on at ParM
15289
#J8
Hunt ngton
Ad
Gal' po'as Ferry or on
onhn
at

Na y N
3 to 4 h
5days a
actavte
house clean ng
have
own
transportation
&amp;
refe·ences
No
smok1ng Call 740·
710-3100
Medical
Overbrook
Rehab1htataon Ce ter
as currently seek1ng
soMeone With a Tram
LI-te
Traaner
Certifacataon to teach
All
CNA classes
Interested applicants
should pack up an
apphcat on at 333
Page
Street
Madd eport Oh or
contact
Mache le
G 1more RN DON at
740 992-6472
Overbrook ts an EOE
and a Partlctpant tn
the
Drug
Free
Workplace Program
Homemakers
needed for the areas
Southside. Buffalo
Hannan &amp; Milton
W1: Traan Immediate
posataon
avaalable
Must
be
CPR
certafled
ABODE
Healthcare
Sev1c
Inc, 304·586 9441
866-327 7262

Get AJump
on
SAVINGS

"" ang
f hc(.k AU&lt; I lONZII'( OM tor more
mfo picture~
\uctionrcr: l'inls " lkr" l sa.tt'

740-.\I'!S-8741
I 1ccnsed .and hooded 111 the state of
Ohto
tERMS Cash or apprmcd check All
s.tles .trc anal Not responsible fur
lost stolen uems or actldcnh
All
mnnunccmcnts d,l\
of ,,lie l.tkc
p1cl.Cdlncc O\CT pranied nmtenal

Shop the
Classifieds!

100

Legals

HIO SOIL AND
WATER
ONSE:RVATION
COMMISSIOI'&lt;
El CTION l [ GAL
NOTICE' Tll
Oh o
oal
and
Wat r
Conservation
Commt aon
w 11
cau e ra 1 ctaon of
Supervasors of the
~eaq Soal and wa• r
Conservatu:m o1 ~rlct
to
be
held
tn
ccordance
wath
Chapter 15 15 ol tt•
Oh'O Revased Code
R tdent
or
landowners
firms
nd corporations that
own land or occupy
1md 10 M ,0 and
are 18 years of ag
and older may vote
to
Superv sor A
non re •dent
landown r firm or
corporal on
must
prov Cle an off davit of
el glbt •y
whrch
mcludes des•gnu1aon
of
a
voting
r presenta11ve pnor
to ca tano a ballot
T ere are three ways
an ehgable voter can
1 a ballot ( 1) at
the annual moetmg
whch wll take place
September 28 troll)
6 00 p m to 7 00
at the
P fT'
( 2)
SWCD off ce from
8 00 0 m to 2 00
p m on September
or (3) vote
28
absentee
by
requesl!rg th proper
absentee
requ st
to ms
from
the
SWCD offac at the
r ow ng address
We gs So1l and Wat

====
Con ervat1on 01 tnct
33101 Hiland Road
Pom •oy OH 45769
(740) 992 4282 One
(1) SuperVISOr wnt be
fected
Nom1nees
are 1
Ball Baer 2
John Tl'lls 3
September 12 2010
REQUEST
FOR
PROPOSALThe
Gallaa
County
Department of Job
and Fam !y Servtces
(GCDJF-S) •s 1 ..,wng
a
Request
for
Proposal (RFP) for
Famtly Stabthty and
1i en
Pregnancy
PreventiOn Servtces
an
each
school
D1stnct wrthan Gallaa
County for the 2010·
2011 school year
begannang upon the
date the contract 1
s1gned (estama1ed on
or before October 1
2010) and runmng
through the end of
school year 2010·
20 11 (approxtmately
June 2010) wath the
opt on to contanue
the contra t for an
add tonal year of
serv ces for school
year
2011-2012
Requ1rements
for
these programs are
outl ned 1n a Request
For Propo al (RFP)
package ava able at
the GCDJF-S
We
welcome
your
subm ss1on
of
proposals
lor
programs whach wall
prOVIde
effective
serv ces to meet
TA"'F Purpose #3
and or #4 s fol ows
3)
Prevent
and

Sunday, September 12, 2010
100

Legals

reduce
out-of
wedlock pregnanctes
and establish annual
nurraeracal goals tor
preventing
and
the
reductng
1nc donee of these
pregnanCies, and 4)
Encourage
the
formation
and
mruntenance of two
parent lam es The
evaluation cntena to
be used an rating
you. proposal are
also tncfuded m the
Request
For
Propo alpacket VVe
strongly urge you to
rcvtew thnm prior to
completaon of the
Request
For
Proposal tn order to
better
understand
how the contracts will
be
awarded
can'lot
Contracts
exceed the amount
of avaa able funds
and Will be awarded
contingent on the
avallabaltty
of
funds Available
Funds $100 000 00
In order to ass st you
tn completang the
RFP
a
B•dder's
Conferences w be
held on Thursday
September 16 2010
begannang at 10 00
am at the Galla
County Department
of Job and Fam ly
Servace at 848 3rd
Avenue
Gal•pohs
Ohao
45631September 10
&amp; 12

NOMA
WHAT

STYlE...

~.
...THE

NEWSPAPER
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!
/~

,.---=~~=---,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

l•••••••••••••••~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~.;;;;;;;;;;;..

ulletin Board
BASKET GAMES
Ga aAcademy Hgh School
Cafetena
Saturday September 25 2010
Doors open at ooon
Games beg nat 1 00 pm
'l nch &amp; refreshments ava able
Ti
so be sold at the door
Spo sored by GAHS Athletic
Boosters &amp; B ue Angel Vo eybal
Peaseca
Karen 740-446·3621 for tiCkets

French City Mall
Homemade Quarts of Apple
Butter Available $7 00
AI proceeds go to the
Emanctpat on Celebratton

The Right Paw
Dog Obed1ence Classes
Sept 18 2010
Call 446-1864

Farmers &amp;
Sportsmen Day
Bob Evans Shelter
House
Saturday, Sept. 18
6:15pm
Sponsored by
Gal11a County Conservation
Club

THE GREENBRIER
November 20,2010November 21, 2010
$160 person (double
occupancy)
Includes LUXURY LODGING
'&amp; TransportallOn
AND $20 per person slot play
mNEW Cas1no HIStone Tour
&amp; Afternoon Tea
Bus w11lleave PVH lower level
park1ng lot at 9 30 a m
Saturday and return at 5p m
on Sunday To make
reservattons please call
PVH Commumty Relattons
(304) 675·4340: Ext 1326
Gladly accept cash. payroll
deduction check and cred1t
cards
LIMITED SEATS'

St Martm s Lutheran Church
Homecom1ng
Sunday Sept 19
Potluck at Noon
German Rdge Patnot

�Sunday, September 12, 2010

&amp;unbap t!im~ -&amp;mtintl • Page os

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

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

CROSSWORD
By liHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Played
1 Those
roles
pooplo
40 Therefore
5 Totals
41 Roqutro
9 Become
Wild

BEETLE BAILEY

Mort Walker

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

10 Dull folks
12 Patnot
Ethan
13 1ntent look
14 Freeway
problem
16 Drenched
17 Precedrng
ntghts
18 Peaceful
protests
21 Susan of
"L.A. Law"
22 Power of
the
movtes
23 Bullwinkle's pal
24Some
drner
seating
26 Used a
chair
29 Kin of
"pssst!"
30Verne
captarn
31 Tax agcy.
32 Settled,
as a bill
34 Singer
Page
37Tenant's
paper
38 Place

DOWN

1 TV soap
"One Lrfe

"
2 Astrono11 Hardens
mer
15 Enorgrzo
Edmond
19Ticks off
3 Fencrng
20 Grft from
swords
Santa
4 Brstro list
22
Dorothy's
5 Crunch
dog
targets
23 Srngor
6 Ponod
Orbrson
7 Enttce
8 Peaceful 24Chide
25 Pearl
9 Showed
producer
surpnse
26 Peaceful

27 1ickled
28 Drank to
excess
29 Hula
swayers
30 Nephew's
SISter
33 Astronaut
Shepard
35 Luggage
10

36Groom's
answer

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patnck McDonnell

HAPPY BDm IDAY for Monda),

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

~t 13 2010:

11us )~ you will break preccdmt
Md o~ up ton.~ possibilities
Certun Situations need your focu and
din.'Ctncss. At the same timt', you
remrun anchored. allow!O!? for an evt_--n

SlllOOther moment. You "ill dtsoover
that good will heads m your dll\.'Ction.

At the ::-rrnt: tunc, your ~~iblliti ~
i.rlcreasc, perhaps addmg additional
p~ure.lf you rire ~le, you suddenly have qwte the p1ck of Ullors.
You cnn afford to take your time dccid
mg who is right for you. If you arc
attached, despite some issues, the h\ o
of you ;w able to flow more muruscn
This newfound closeness m.1kcs both
of you happy again. SAGriTARil..'S

,
THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

can trtggcr you.
The Stars Slw..v tht• Knul of Day }ou'l/
Hm..... 5-Dynamu; 4- PeNtrw. 3 Ar~

h) Davl..' Grl..'l..'ll

6

5

9
2

4 9 t- 7 )

--

7
·-

5

- r--8

-~

5

1 3 7 4
9·tt -~r

1
12 7 8 4
7
5
I
6
4
6 9 3

" ••• It has no sugars and Is all
natural ingredients."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

**

J

I~
~

I

6

5

2

1·11

I~

8

u

9' .,

fii..

~·

6

L

• I"·'"' I
·~ a

~~

I

~~
I

1"-'UJ 0

c ' £ 6 9 g 17

G J17 g B IL
£ ~ 9 6 17 ~
fr ~ g 9 £ , 6
!'
G f-B 9 +- g
L £ ~ G
B 6--f -17 t- g .....9
~ 9
~ G L B
1ft
1g £ L 6'- v

9 £ ~ 6
g G B L
v BL G
L 17 £ ~
B g 6 9
~ L G £
rg
£ 6 fv
- ·G ~ 9 B

~

2-SMo 1-Difjicult
ARIES (l'.,.tarch 21 April19)
*'* Respond to nn mquuy onlv
onre you detenrunc that this person JS
ready to hear tre response A I«'V f'-'1'
son m your Ue rould be overl) £&lt;.~
&lt;1nd touchy. You will h.we an opportu
ruty to de41r the rur. 10night. Jhink m
~rms of the big pic:ttlre.
TAURUS (April20-M.1y 20)
*'* *** Deal du'Cdly WJth •;orne-one" ho can affect much of "'h.1t goes
on in your life. Your f;Jtigue ILn,•d IS
~;ubjt..'Ct

to change. You might "'ant to
rethink a ~-m.1\ m.1ttcr. Be cnn.&gt;ful
not to puSh someone into a comer.
Tonight A talk estabhsht.w.; n strungL'r
mutual ba:.c.
GEMINI (May 2.1-Junc 20)
**"** Defer to others under
standing wh;tt is gomg on behind the
scenes. Your ~\'It)' will soar once

*

you clear out a dlfficult problem. A
boss or a."\ authoritv ftgurc IS challcng
mg. Tonight Let the good tmll"' lx.1;1Jl.
Cfu-..:CER (June 21 Juh 22)
*'*'* Stick to the bas1a; un•il you
get through a ccrtam amount of

your llln.ltc ab~htics Tonight IL~ the
Y.'l'l-kcnd spmt amtmue
VIRGO (Aug. 23-&amp;t'l22)
*'* )ou an! ronung from &lt;1 !'ot.~
pot \'.'here \ ou dt&lt;;eovcr the difference
hL'l\\'l'\.'1'1 fnends and fc~mil)~ '1h! ded
SIOn&lt;i you have made might not have
been as grounded as you think. You'll
ha\c an oiJrturuty to change direction-;. IOnl
Mosey on home.
UBRA ~1't 23-0ct 22)
*'*"**'* f..:ccp the ronvcr.;ation
acbvt• and ) ou 11 dtc;rov~r a \\role
llC\\ pte NJX'CtiVe 'our UU'l.'ltc ('J'I('IID'
and li\"dinc rommurucatc the
l"&gt;S('flre of\\ h.1t as gomg on. Keep sharmg. iU1d you might be surpl'lSt.~ by the
nug&amp;&gt;ct tft.1t drops on' ou. Tonight
li.lngmg out wtth favonte JX'()_ple.
SCORPIO (Ott 2.3-ll;o\~ 21)
*'*'*'* "-rep talking and shanng
'ou ~able to make all the differerire.
Jlonor wlun au arc, and move a pzqL'Ct fo~ ard o.hcrs diSOO\'Cf that you
had a firmer P,P on a situation than
thcv did. Tonight l.A-m't you \\'an! to
tre:~t ~OUJ'!rlf or a friend)
SAGriTARIUS 0\'. 22-U.&gt;e. 21)
*'*'*'**Clear!)~ &gt;'OU have a lot
gomg for} ou Investigate a !iituatton
wtth a Ill'\\found openness and duection. lnVL~ttg.1tc \\hat someone prescnt3. lhis inform.ltion might ctdd con
fliSion to a work related matter.
Ton1ght. The \~orld Is your O}'!-.icl:
CAPRICORN (lA'C. 22-jan. 19)
*'* Knm' when to lie back nnd not
push. Your instmcts me right-on.
Invcstig&lt;~tc a pci'S&lt;"lrul! rna tter more

thoroughly bdore making a decision.
Be ckar about your ch01ccs and din.&gt;ction. 'ou m.'Cd to listen more. Tonight
Take some much nC\.~cd timcouts.

AQUARIUS Oan.. 20,reb. 18)
*'*'*** Op_'ndoors mther than
shm th.~ shut Your ab1hl) to underbnd \\hat IS happcrung crul dlange
'\our dtrectton A frimd.;}up grows
because of a dtscusston. lhe comfort

ermnds and must-dos. A commwuc..1

k.n,"t: I n.'lll.\U'l'i "JX'Oal.md uruquc
hxught ~~'lllg to haw fun onlv m
the nuddlc of tnl' i\ight

Opt for something &lt;'as\'; bu! squL'CZe m

PISCES (h-b 19 Man:h 20)
*'**'* A boss has a lo1 of encrgy
Your abi ~· to mo\&gt;e in a llC\\ din.'Ction
nnd cll-:u out c1 pmbl~m m.1rks your
dca ons If) ou fL'l'l ' oo cannot sup-

bon oould ~a long-o\etduc ron
'crsation. The une'p."'Ctl'rl ndd~ u\Sight
nnd dllllCt\Slon to a !'dtuabon. Torught
some exeiOSC.
LEO Oulr 2)-Aug. 22)

***'*

~orthcommg news might be
more cxating than } ou thought. Ihe!\'
is n lot of e.xatcment u1 cle.mng out a

m.1ttc.r th.1t could Ul\ olw frio.:nds

nnd I or money. You will gJrn thmugh

port nnother pcJ"S(Xl's deosiOJIS, you

might m.-..-d to make a move. 1i.might.

1hl' onl}' are;\, • r L" yes.
]acqurlme Bz:;:ar rs c&gt;n thr lntmll't
at Jzttp fu 1.1 JIU'I]urlmdngarcom.

•.mvdailvsentinel.com •.mvdail~ribune.com
I

�~unbap

PageD6

\Citnes -ienHnel

Sunday, Scpten1ber 12, 2010

EXTENSION
CORNER

Lee Relch!AP photo

A squash plant that has been attacked by a quash vrne bore
n n N w P tz N Y Around now rs when
many gardeners start complalmng about therr squash p ant about how th y look d hea thy and then all of a
sudden flagged and took a turn towards death You can d a w th th prob m but mostly for next year The
p t s an n
c
dt
squash vme borer
best t me for aetron was earl er th s season The

Who's to blame for summer's
wilting squash plants?
wluch h s po r d
hk~ fr

m s ,.,d 1 t

IIGHI OFf MS.\\ \I

A I&gt; I UE CUI PRil IS ...
\r m e t called the

qu h \'me
borer lod ed m the tern 1
re pon 1ble tor your qun h writ
111" Ho" th.1t msect ot there rs c1
tory that began m pnng or early
ummet when a pretty moth With
n orange and black body crept out
of the sml. -;trctched 1t coppery
green and elect• wmgs, and looked
around for .t mate She C\ idcntly
found one. 111d soon after that
ou •ht out your squash plants
lnste.td of squash. he also might
ha\e ettled. in decreasmg order of
preference. for a gourd. cu~.:umber
or melon plant
l pon hnd1ng a smtable P.lnnt,
he proceeded to It~) her fertthzed
eggs on the stems or lc.1f talk
near the b.1 e of the plant. e , "s
wh1ch. Wtthm a \\eck. hat~:hed rnto
larvae. The larvae bored 11110 the
tern and ate o much that there
e\ entually ''as not enough tem
ttssuc to conduct water to the
leaves.
\mla! r he leaves went hmp. and
that's what grnbbed your attentiOn.
T&lt;~ke n look at the ba e of the stem
now. and )Oll Will see a hole out of

t

HI:\

t r

t

-. r I ., n
lo tm
It ht
llow
'' ater h ht and &lt;llr to p ss but not
\\ alc;;lua ml~.:ecoloreJI, 1that ., the
moths real name I he ~:o\elln • 1s
only needed earl) 111 the e.tson.
dunng e g Ia) 111 • and. llY'' a).
needs to be remo,cd l.1ter ~o that
bees can polhnate the blo ...oms
A ph) steal barner ,., I 00 pcr~:ent
effect•' e. but )'OU ~ould. mo;tcad.
tf) repellent Some •ardencrc;;
clmm that M \\ alshtn ''ill a\ o1d
plants that reek ot c mpl 01 bl d.:
pepper or turpentme
Another lme of d fe e 1 to kill
the larvae '\ ou can do th 1t b fo
the) e\ en •et mto the tt: m 1f ., ou
repeatedl) do" -;e the b · of the
plant \\ nh an m edH. td su~:h "
rotenone p) rethnn or b tt r
became tt 1s tox1c p 1ft II&gt; to
that Jan a and 1ts rel1t1\ c B fK
B1 K is short for B, ~:rllus
thunngien::.1s subspe ... t s k rstakt
\\ h1ch you can p1~.:k up m the ar
den center under fnendly n une.. ,
such as Thurktde.
Once the laf\ac .tre mast m. •et

e

'o tte method for dealmg
\\ lsh1 1 1 to keep my
qu. shes h ppJly •ro\\ mo m ptte
nt her pr -;ence. I merely place
bn ks at mten nls O\ er port1ons of
my qua~h 's trarhng stetm. inducm ne" roots to orow at those
pOl liS
I , n ae only lod "e in the portiOn
of stem nght near ''here the
edhn ono1nally emerged, "o
new roots gro" m farther along
the \tem ~:an upport the plant e'en
f th1s olde t port1on dte
!'Jot 11 qthl h are equall} sus
~ptlbl to th squa h \me borer.
Bu temilt qu.l"&gt;hes (pear-shaped)
d
rnll) re lc s u ~epttble than
buttercup quashe'&gt; (turbanh,lp d)
Summet squashes are 'ef) u c t1ble to attack and thetr stems
do not tretch out enough to allo\\
ne,.. root-; to fonn along their
len••th No nMtter. By the time m)
ummcr squa&lt;&gt;h plants ha\ e
slumped. I .un rehe\ ed After all.
ho'' mu~:h lUCchmi can an)One
eat)
'' rt

M

Date-nut bars for dessert on the go. Or the trail
Serv1ngs 15
FOO THE SOCIATED P
For the squares
2 teaspoons 1nstant espresso or col·
Whether tt's a ptcm~:. back) nrd fee
barbecue or c.tmpmg tnp. summer
2 teaspoons van lla extra t
mean plenty of al fresco duung
3 4 cup granu ated sugar
And that mean de sert need to be
2 age e9gs
outdoor&lt;;y a well
1 egg wh te
fhe best S\\ eet'&gt; for omg au nat
114 teaspoon sa t
ural are ones that requrre the
2 cups fme graham cracker crumbs
fewe t plates or uten 1h and
213 cup chopped dates
uJVolve httle or no Cleanup. Thmk
112 cup chopped pecans
cooktcs. bro'' nie'&gt; and b.tr
For the gaze
These date and nut squares wtth
1/2
teaspoon mstant espresso or
an e pres so dt 1zzle can made
coffee
ahead and packed in a lrghl\\eight
1 tablespoon hot water
plast1c container for portability
1/2 cup powdered sugar mo e 11
lnst.lllt espresso is used to 1lnv01
both the squares and the dnnle. needed
Heat the oven to 300 F Coat a 7-by·
Look for it WJth other mstant cof
11-mch
bakmg d1sh w1th cooking
fees or consider using one of llC\\
spray
Set
as1cfe
h•gher (1unlity lllstant coftee bem
In a large m1xmg bowl st r togeth
old 10 mdJVJdunl servmg packets
the espresso (or coffee) powde and
•••
DATE AND NUT SQUARES WITH vanilla unt I the powd d sso ves Add
the sugar eggs egg wh te and sa t
ESPRESSO DRIZZLE
Start to fm1sh· 50 m1nutes (15 m n· then use an e ectr c m xer o h gh to
beat unt th ck and pa e about 2 rr n
lrtes actwe)

Bv JIM R OMANOFF

utes W1th a rubber spatula fold m the
graham cracke crumbs dates and
pecans unt I JUSt comb ned
Scrape the batter to the prepared
ba~ g pan and smooth the top Bake
for 30 to 35 m nutes or unt I the top
feels dry and the bars feel set when
p essed at the center
Transfer the d1sh to a rack to cool
corrpletely
To make the glaze, rn a small bowl
drssolve the espresso (or coffee) pow·
der m the hot water Wh1sk m enough
powdered sugar to make a th1ck but
pourable glaze W1th a spoon. dnzzle
the glaze over the bars Let stand until
set then cut mto 15 squares
Nutnt1on mformat1on per serving
(va es are rounded to the nearest
who e number) 148 calones 40 ca o·
nes from fat 5 g fat (1 g saturated 0 g
trans fats) 24 mg cholestero • 26 g
carbohydrate 2 g protem 1 g frber
113 mg sod u

Don't be scared when your inquisitive ch1ld
brings m large t;fltcrplllars found tn wilds nround
your home
Throughout OhiO five 1nch. hairless, blue-green
catet p11lars .tre ern wlmg around looking to burrow mto the ground to over" mter m lis pu pate
(restmg) stage before It transforms ttself and
emerges next sprm ' ,ts a Royal Walnut Moth.
1 h1s caterptllar 1 known a the H1ckor)'
Horned De\-Jl due to It 1ze and 1mpre s1ve socalled armament It ha two or.mge p1nes With
bla~:k ups that pomt .tddlllonnl abdommal segment ha~ 1 4 horter spme that are enurely
black
The caterptllar' common name come from its
preferred ho t &lt;h•ckor) tree) and aggressive
beha\ tor When d1 turbed. the caterptllar whips
11 head and thorax around g1vmg the convincing
unpre ...swn thc1t tt 1 try111g to 1mpale the offendmg 1rntant. The caterpt liar cannot stlllg or cause
any real damage, but not for lack of effort .
I he Royal Walnut Moth (Citheronia regalis)
has a wm ' s.pan of 4-5 inc..hes. The light colored
forew111 ·~ have )ellow spots and orange vei ns
which run to the outer margins. The h i nd wi n ~
are orange "1th yellow patches near the moth_.
bnght orange. ha1ry body. Mated females lay
eggs on lea\es of h1ckory, c~sh. lilac, sumac.
yen more .•md "al nut trees.
1 he resultm caterp•llar feed at mght and
~pend the day Ill h1dmg. Typ1cally, there are only
a fe" caterpillars on an md1V1dual tree. so they
~.:au e httle damage de pite the1r large ize. Don't
"orr) about spraymg for thts msect, JUSt share
the JO) of "atchmg thts 1mpre 1\e caterpillar
and adult moth. l·or further 111formation on giant
or
monster
~:aterptllars
go
to
",.," oh10hne.o u edu and look under extension
fact heet In G 2015 "Man ter Caterpillars."
•••
Are ) ou re d) for the 12th annual Ohio
Ptwpa\\ hstt\-al bemg held Sept. 17- 19 at
1 , ke Snowden east of Alb.my on US 32.
Celebrate Oh10's de tgnated native fruit. the
Pa\\ paw ( Asumna tnlobc1). Pa" paws are
r ferred to " the ·Poor Man's Ba nana· or
H
ter banana I he natl\e Indians and early
10n u ed this fruit as we use
Th1 fruit that can be eaten
l oked mto , puddtng. used an muffi ns
much more.
the pa\\ p 1" 1ce cream, frozen paw
• or man) other product bemg made
vJtamJn rich fru1t. learn about how to raise
1 frmt and the centur) long election of paww -. anetJe lookmg for a better fruit that IS
n keepmg. "OOd tastmg. and more shippable
There 1 an adm1 10n tee of IX dollar per
person O\ er 12 ) ear of age. Further information 1s avmluble b) acces ing their website,
\\" w oh10pa" pa\\ fe t com. See you the re
Saturdn) afternoon.

•••
Fann Science Re\lew (Sept. 21-23) tickets are
still a\ a1lable from our office at a cost of five dollars each whtle they lnst. Spend the day enjoying the
many aspect of
Ohio's largest industry.
Agnculture!
(Hal 1\ nec11 1s the Agnculture &amp; Natural
Rewur, t: ~ E.J.tell'iWII Educator for Me1g~ Count).
BuckeH' /hils EERA, 0/uo Swte Utm ersit\
Exte11 1011.)

livESTOCK REPORT
GA Ll~!POliS - United Producers ltrc. trUlTicel
report from Gallipolis for sales cotrducted on
l\ ed11esday, Sept. 8, 2010.

Feeder Cattle
275-415 pound , Steers. 90- 140. Heifers, $88$ I 25. 425 525 pounds. Steers. 90-$130. Heifers.
Sli·$120. 550 625 pound • Steers. 90-$ 120,
Helfer&lt;;, 88 105: 650-725 pound , Steers. $90110, Heifer . $XS $102; 750-850 pound . Steers,
90 105. Herfers. 85 95.

Fed Cattle
Ch01ce. teers, 88 91.25. Heifers. $86-$90;
Select. Steet:5. 4 87. He1fers, 83- 86.

Co\\s
\\ ell Mu ledFie hed. 53 61: MedJUm/Lean.
S45 52. Ttnnll •ght. 35- 44; Bulls. 48-$70.

Back To The Farm
Co'' Call Pmrs, 450 750: Bred Cows.
750: Bnby Calves 20 40: Goat • $ 19-SlO
l ambs, 124 $126: Hogs. 59 dn.
M.mute to gtve a\\,1). \Villln,td for )Oll.

Upco1ning specials
Sept. 15
Oh10 ApprO\ed l·eeder Sale
Sept 15
60 hd. precond. heifer 650 lbs
D1rect .lies and free on tnnn '1 its. Contact
De\\,\) ne nt ( 740) 339-0241. Stac) at (304) 6340224. or Luke at (740) 645 3697. or' tsit the
"ebsJte at w"" uproducers com

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="573">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <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>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10024">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <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>
    <elementContainer>
      <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="12269">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <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>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12268">
              <text>September 12, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="598">
      <name>batey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="90">
      <name>burnett</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="299">
      <name>davis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3814">
      <name>hagerman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1999">
      <name>kemper</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="318">
      <name>phillips</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
