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.ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

A dog's life
Waiting f9r home, Cl

Travel in the U.S.
Boston's Fort Point Channel, D 1

i&gt;unba!' mtmes -i&gt;entine[
a
l'rlnted on 100',

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

OBTIUARIES

R"9c~&lt;-d "c" 5 Jlnnt

u .,..

$1.50 • Vol. 44· No. 42

Sunday, October 17, 2010

HONORIN G VE TERA N S

Gallia B&amp;E
suspect
locked up

1

Page A3

• Rita J. White
• Marcella G. Durst
·Evelyn M. Fields
• Alice Swiderski .
• Ronald D. Rhea, Jr.
• Dorothy V. Whittington
·ColtonS. Baird

B Y AMBER G ILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYOALYTR BUNE COM

FRIDAYNITE

-scoREBOARD
Gallia Academy 63
Portsmouth 20
Eastern 27
East 7
Wahama39
South Gallia 0
Andrew Carter/photos

Waterford 35
Southern 6

The new veterans memonal commissioned by the 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park Distnct was dedicated
during a ceremony held Friday. The memorial is located adjacent to Haskins Park and the
Holzer Clinic Hike and Bike Trail along Mill Creek Road

Wellston 21
Meigs 0

OOMPD dedicates
new veterans memorial

Coal Grove 52
River Valley 6
-~venswood 27

r ·Pleasant 24

B Y ANDREW C ARTER

Van 34
Hannan 6

MOTNEWS MYOAILVTRIBUNE COM

ALLIPOLIS
A new
memorial to
honor Gallia
County veterans was
dedicated on Friday with
a ribbon-cutting ceremony.
Tbe memorial. commissioned by the 0.0.
Mcintyre Park District
(OOMPD). is located
adjacent to Haskins Park
and the Holzer Clinic
Hike and Bike Trail
along Mill Creek Road in
Gallipolis.
Paul Covey, director of
OOMPD, said the idea
for the memorial was
spawned during park district board talks about
possible improvements
to the trail.
"We just wanted to do

G

Leaf pick-up
schedule
GALLIPOLIS - The
City of Gallipolis has
established a weekly leaf
pick up schedule beginning Monday. Oct. 18.
• Monday: All cross
street and Fifth Ave.
• Tuesday: First Ave.
and Second Ave.
• Wednesday: Garfield
Ave., Ohio 141 and0hio588.
• Thursday: Third Ave.
and Fourth Ave.
• Friday: Eastern Ave.
and Maple Shade area.
Questions or com. .ents can be directed to
the city maintenance
garage at 446-0600.

Please see Vets, A7

Meigs Co. early
voting ,expected
to easily exceed
'06 numbers
A ribbon-cutting ceremony to dedicate the new 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District veterans memorial was held Friday. From left to right,
Richard Moore of the Veterans Service Commission , State Sen .
John Carey, David McCoy of the Veterans Serv1ce Commission,
OOMPD director Paul Covey, State Rep. Clyde Evans, OOMPD
board members Mike Vallee and Gene Wood.

B Y CHARLENE HOEFLICH

High: 73
Low: 41

HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

INDEX
4 SECflONS - 28 PAGiiS

Classifieds

D2-4

Comics

Ds

Editorials

A2

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishm11 Co.

II!I~

. llllll\1!1!1,1111!1!1 1111 .

POMEROY - While the Meigs Local
School Distnct remains in the ''continuous
improvement" category on the State
Department of Education's latest report card.
Superintendent Rusty Bookman says
progress toward an "effective" rating continues to be made.
"T he district is moving forward. changes
continue to be made to insure that all kids are
successful," he said. Bookman attributed the
progress, in part, to a focus plan developed by
district personnel which is being carried out.
in part, with federal funds which continue to
tlow into schools.
He said that by "continuing practkcs put
into place earlier and integrating new teaching techniques and better materials, the district will continue the curre nt pace of
improvement.''
Bookman talked about the contribution of
the district leadership team in compiling

J.

REED

learning data for the
schools, calling the data an
important part ~)f "what drives what we do· in our
schools." He attributed the
professional de\ elopment
programs where the best
teaching
practices are
learned as prO\ iding the
groundwork necessar) to
"t\\ eak current programs:·
Bookman
''We are mm ing forward,
a focus plan is in place. we
look for better results. and we c\:pect the district to 1110\ e into the ODE's etTecth e designation soon," he said.
Bookman said federal stimulus money is
being used for educational materials and additional personnel to facilitate inno\ ative
instrupion in the classn&gt;l&gt;llls, as well as to
expand educational opportunities for underachievers.
As a federall) distressed district in rural
Appalachian Ohio. Meigs Local has J\0\\ been·
awarded $148.749 to develop a system of
communication and collabowtion bet\\ een
librar) media specialists and teachers in all
four schools in the district.
The goal is to increase access of up to-date
school library materials to pro' ide ''ell-

Please see Meigs, A7

Please see Vote, A7

Meigs Local Schools
moving forward academically I
Federal funds
contributing
to progress

B Y BRIAN

BREEDl!MYDAILYSENT NELCOM

POMEROY - The number of \Oters requesting early ballots is already
nearing that from the 2006 gubernatorial election. with two weeks remaining to ca... t them.
According to the ~ le igs Cou nty
Board of Elections, Meigs County ' oters are shO\\ ing a strong interest in ttus
) ear's election, which includes a
close I)-\\ atched race for Ohio gover·
nor. as well as races for U.S. Senate
and other state-level positions.
Last week. the l\teigs County Boru·d
of Elections asked \ oters who plan to
cast ballots prior to Election Da) to
reyuest ballots. nght awa) , to ensure
the' can be matled and returned by the
Oct. 30 deadline.
Deputy Director Beck~ Johnston
said Friday that request spurred . a
"tremendous" response, with the num~
ber of earl) ballot appl ications nearing
900 at the close of business. Those
applications are being both mailed and
returned and in person at the board of
elections.
Applications for earl) ballots are
"coming in drO\ es." Johnston said.
Earl) ' oting tigures will easil} reach
those from the 2006 gubernatorial
election. "hen 1.158 absentee and
provisional ballots were cast. Johnston
said 2. 135 earlv ballots were cast in
the 2008 presidential election.
Early voting began Sept. 28 for this
year's general election. to be held on
Nm. 2. Any registered \ oter may
reyuest an earl) ballot. either b) calling the board oftice or b) \ isiting in
person. Under Ohio's early ' oting pro~ is ion. voters can cast ballots 60 da) s
before the election b) requestmg bat-

Bookman~

WEATHER

•

GALLI POLIS - A suspect previ• ously indicted for breaking into a
Gallia County business has been
apprehended
by
authorities after a
l&gt;econd
alleged
breakine and enterwg offense that
occurred
on
Thursday
in
Gallipolis.
Jason D. Myers.
30. Cheshire. was
located by deputies
with the Gallia
Myers
Count)
Sheriff's
Office after the investigation of a
breaking and entering offense that
occurred at the Pizza Plus Restaurant
in the Spring Valley area of Green
Township on Oct. 14. Myers was
wanted on a prior breaking and entering and safecracking case that
occurred at the Skyline Lanes bowling
alley in Kanauga earlier this year.
Myers was taken into custody and
some of the property stolen from Pizza
Plus was recovered.
Deputiel&gt; report that the West
Virginia State Police assisted with the
case as some of the property from the
breaking and entering was found at a
Mason County. V·-/.Va., residence.
M) ers was indicted in August for
allegedly breaking and entering the
Skyline Lanes bowling alle).
Bond has not been set for Myers. He
remains in custody at the Gallia
County Jail.
Anyone with information that can
aid in the prosecution of this case are
encouraged to contact authorities.

�PageA2

~unba~ ~imes ·i&gt;tntinel

i)unba~

Sunday, October 17,

Tea party still here

\ltimes -j,entfnel

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

B Y MICHAEL R. B LOOD
ASSOCIATED PRESS

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the f reedom of
speech, or of the press; or tlae right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Government for a redress ofgrieva~eces.
T h e First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OPINION

Clergy Appreciation Month
Dear Editor:
October is Clergy Appreciation Month Don't
forget to do something nice for your pastor and
your associate pastors. They are among the
hardest working individuals I know of. They
are also among the most dedicated individuals
I know.
Our church is blessed to have Rick Barcus as
pastor and Matt Smith and Jamie Fortner as
associate pastors. There is no one I know of
who is more deserving of appreciation than
these three men. Our church does appreciate
them and we intend to let them know. On Oct.
I 0, we had a dinner for them after church. Our
entire congregation participates in any way
they see fit.
We are greatly indebted to them for all they
have done the past year. They have blessed us
with spirit-led messages, in songs, in teaching,
i n visitation, in being the leaders that Christ
wants them to be. They do so many things for
our church that I cannot even list them all. I
am sure your church leaders do as well. Make
sure you let them know how much you appreciate them this month.
Mickey Smith
Gallipolis

Poll: GOP leads in Ohio races for
governor, U.S. Senate
CINCINNATI (AP) - A new poll says
Republican challenger John Kasich (KAY'sik) is apparently leading in the race for
Ohio governor.
The Ohio Poll
sponsored by
the
University of Cincinnati shows the former
congressman in front of Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland 51 percent to 43 percent.
Most polls taken in recent weeks have
shown the race tightening.
The Ohio Poll also finds that former
Republican congressman Rob Portman has a
22-point lead over Lt. Gov. Lee Fisher in
the race for the state's open U.S. Senate
seat.
The poll surveyed 705 likely Ohio voters
b~tween Oct. 8-13. The poll has a margin of
error or plus or minus 4 percentage points.

L ETTE R S T O T H E E DITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing must be signed and include address and
telephone number No unsigned letters will be publi~hP.d
Letters should be in good taste. addressing issues, not personalities. "Thank You· letters will not be accepted for publication.

~unbap

\!Cimes -~entinel

Reaner Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stories is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, please call one of our
newsrooms.

Our main numbers are:
G:nbunt • Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-2342
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH

(7 40) 992-2155
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(304) 675·1333
Our websltes are:
f!ribunt • Gallipolis, OH
www.mydallytrlbune.com
Sentinel • Pomeroy, OH

www.mydallysenttnel.com
J.rg•strr • Pt. Pleasant, WV
www.mydallyreglster.com
Our e-mail addresses ar~
tlribunt • Gallipolis, OH
tndtnews@mydallytrlbune.com
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1

Doubters who thought the tea
party would fade away can forget
it. More than 70 of its favored
candidates are on Nov. 2 ballots,
and nearly three dozen are locked
in competitive House races,
according to a state-by-state
analysis by The Associated Press.
From the hundreds of conservative activists who took up the
cause in races this year, these candidates - mostly Republicans emerged to capture nominations
and are running with the support
of loosely organized tea party
groups that are furious at the government
Some of the candidates are
political newcomers who have
struggled to organize and raise
money and have little chance of
winning election. In some states,
tea party groups have been divided over whether to even back candidates or become active in campaigns.
But about 35 candidates appear
to be waging campaigns that have
put them ahead or within striking
distance of their opponents,
according to the AP analysis.
Candidates with tea party ties
are favored to win in Republicanleaning districts in Indiana and
South Carolina. Several are running strong in rural districts in the
West and the suburbs of several
major cities. Three candidates
aligned with the tea party are in
tight races in Michigan, which
has the second highest unemployment rate in the nation at 13.1 percent.
The tea party's legions of backers have Democrats fearing that
2010 could be the reverse of
2008, when 15 million first-time
voters helfed the Democrats win
control o the White House as
well as Congress.
Many Republicans are concerned, too.
Jim Bennett, who saw his
father, Utah Sen. Bob Bennett,
dispatched by tea party activists
who flooded the smte Republican
convention in May, described a
movement motivated and energized "to burn down anything that
had anything to do with
Washington."
"I've decided the Republican
Party in Utah doesn't exist anymore - it's the tea party and the
Democrats," Jim Bennett, who
managed his father's campaign,
said months after the senator was
defeated.
The deep vein of conservative
anger was there in 2008. but ''it's
taken a different turn now that the
Democrats have the White
House," says Larry Grisolano, a
media consultant to President
Barack Obama 's campaign. '·Now
they have something to be
against.''
Most of the House candidates
w1th tea party support are
unknown outside their horne districts: a rancher, a pilot, a pizzeria
owner. doctors and war veterans.

•••

2 0 10

and strong

Their political experience ranges door for him, seeking votes.
from first-time candidates to
If he's elected, slowing spendHouse incumbents who have ing and cutting the federal debt is
become closely identified with "going to be the mantra," Gosar
the
movement,
including says. "We've got to make sure the
Republican
Rep.
Michele government is cut back."
Bachmann of Minnesota.
In the bucolic Hudson Valley of
Former Philadelphia Eagles New York, Republican Nan
lineman Jon Runyan is in his first Hayworth has tea party backing in
campaign - a tight race in New a close race with Democratic Rep.
Jersey's
3rd
Congressional Jo~ Hall, whose campaign has
District. He was recruited by a depicted her as a fringe candidate.
New Jersey legislator. In Indiana, To Hayworth, it's Hall and
Jackie Walorski is a state legisla- Washington Democrats who are
tor who won the endorsement of out of the mainstream.
several tea party groups.
Tea party members "are insistHow much impact the move- ing we pay careful attention to the
ment will have in Congress next size and scope of the federal govyear depends in part on how many ernment," says Hayworth, a memof the candidates win. More than ber of the Hudson Valley Patriots.
a half-dozen tea party-backed "People are acutely sensitive" to
Senate candidates, including ~he growth of Washington spendFlorida's Marco Rubio, Nevada's mg.
Sharron Angle, Colorado's Ken
In Michigan, three candidates
Buck and Alaska's Joe Miller, are aligned with the tea party are in
in competitive races or even tight races. In Detroit's northern
pulling ahead of their rivals.
suburbs, former Army officer
They are relying on support of Rocky Raczkowski is counting on
the movement's dedicated back- tea party clout to help him defeat
ers.
first-term Democratic Rep. Gary
"There is nothing that will keep Peters.
·
them from turning out," said
The tea party is a network ofa
Democratic
pollster
Andre loosely connected communit~
Pineda, who has advised the groups - not an established
Democratic National Committee political party with official nomithts year.
nees - so there is some debate
"The real enthusiasm gap is
about any list of candidates
between tea party folks and
aligned with the movement. Even
everybody else,'' Pineda said. On
within the tea party there often is
Election Day, "they will be
disagreement among rival groups
there."
about the legitimacy of candidates
Thus, January could see a draclaiming
tea party credentials,
matic remaking of the congresparticularly
between national and
sional agenda, with the GOP pos·
local
organizations.
sibly in control of one or both
In identifying candidates, the
chambers.
AP
assessed factors including a
Tea partiers' call for reining in
candidate's
history with the
government and cutting back
spending could affect efforts to movement, the involvement of
address the home foreclosure cri- local leaders and activists in a
sis and any administration campaign, endorsements or supattempts to kick-start the slow port from tea party-affiliated
economic recovery with another groups and whether a candidate is
stimulus measure. The move- running on a platform that dovement's fierce opposition to tails with the movement's agenda.
In some cases, candidates
Obama's health care overhaul
could drive efforts to repeal the defeated establishment-backed
Republicans in primaries. In other
law.
cases,
candidates had the backing
Some tea party-backed candir
dates have called for phasing out of Palin, a tea party favorite, o~
getting
help
fro
Social Security or eliminating the are
Education Department or other FreedomWorks or other group
sympathetic to the tea party
federal agencies.
It's not clear to what degree cause.
Democrats - even those in
new members aligned with the tea
party would cooperate with party strongholds - are not disDemocrats - or even with cen- missing the challenge.
Democratic Rep. Adam Schiff
trist Republicans.
The tea party presence extends holds a nearly 20-point registrafrom Hawaii, where Republican tion edge in his suburban Los
John Willoughby credits his win Angeles district, but he sent votin a three-way primary to the sup- ers a two-page letter contending
port of the Kona Tea Party and the that the election of tea partyMaui Tea Party No Ka Oi, to backed Republican John Colbert
Arizona, where dentist Paul would mean the end of Medicare
Gosar won the support of Sarah and the Environmental Protection
Palin and tea party activists and Agency.
"His campaign is no joke,"
knocked off an establishment
Republican in the state's I st wrote Schiff. who carried the district with 69 percent of the vote
Congressional District primary.
Gosar is trying to oust two years ago. "We have seen tea
Democratic Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick party radicals elected in state after
in the largely rural district. Tea state. We cannot take this threat
partiers have been going door to lightly."

PO L ITI CAL OP INIONS
Support for Wilson
Dear Editor:
I have seen newspaper ads that
criticize Congressman Charlie
Wilson for his stand in representing the people of h1s
Congressional district. I must
disagree with the meaning of the
ads and would like to let the
public know "The Truth About
Charlie Wilson."
Charlie Wilson came to the
U.S. Congress after serving the
people in his district in
Columbus and this spurt of serving continues today:
For the people of Gallia and
Meigs counties he worked without fail to establish a Veterans
Administration Clinic in the
local area so that Veterans would
not have to depend on someone
else or drive for an hour to reach
medical care they deserve.
The clinic is now open two
days each week and will surely
expand with more veterans taking advantage of the ser\lice.
Charlie has also worked with
local medical facilities to
improve health care and services
for all Ohioans. He is in contact
with the people of his district on
a daily basis to make sure all our
needs are addressed and answers
given.
Congressman puts party affili
ation aside and works for what is

best for our are, state and country. His vote against cap and
trade is just one example of this.
Congressman Wilson may not
solve all the problems of those
that seek his help, but he always
has an attentive ear.
I would a~k that you, the voters of this district, keep that
attentive ear in Washington.
Please join me in an effort to reelect Congressman Charlie
Wilson.
Johnnie E . R ussell
B idwell

Thumbs down
to Wilson
Dear Editor:
As the election approaches, I
would like to comment on U.S.
Rep. Charlie Wilson, who is
again running for U.S. representative in our district.
When he was first elected I
called his local office to ask for
a meeting with him on a legislative subject pertinent to Meigs
County.
I offered to travel anywhere in
Ohio or even to Washington,
D.C., at a time of his convenience. When I asked for the
appointment with Mr. Wilson,
his office replied, "He is terribly
busy." I was never given an
appointment to meet with him,
nor was I even asked to submit

my concern in writing.
I can only conclude that Mr.
Wilson does not have time for
his constituents or at least those
from Meigs County. Elected
officials must be available if our
republican form of government
is to work properly and constitutionally.
I vote for the best person for
each office. not the party.
Needless to say. I will not be
voting fo r Mr. Wilson in
November.
Keith Ashley
Pomeroy

Support for
Bossard Library
Dear Editor:
Where can you solve pressing
problems, find answers to bizarre
questions or calm your frazzled
nerves? With help in findi ng just
the "right book," at the Bossard
Library.
At our library - or any I have
visited near or far in over 80
years - there is always a trained,
polite helper who knows just
where the book you need can be
found.
I hope the excellent articles and
presentations about our need for
passing the library levy will cornpel you to vote for it.
B obbi Holzer
Gallipolis

iI

�,--------"------~~------

Sunday, October 17,

f6,unbav ij;;tmrs -~rntmel • Page A3

Pmncr·oy • Middle port • Gallipolis

2 0 10

Obituaries

·.

Deaths

Rita Joan Sptres White, 71, C'hesh,tre, pasc,ed away
October I 5, 20 I 0, at the bmogene Dolin Jones
Hospice House m Huntmgton. W.Va. Born on July 5,
939, in Ky~er, ~he wn the daughter of the late
nis "Bud' Spires ,md IVturial (Athey) Spirec;
preceding het m death were 1\\0 brother&lt;;,
tth Allan, who died m infancy, and Rodney
Ell is Spires, Sr.; two niecec;, Ruth Ann Zwie, nnd
Denise Marie Spires Sexton. two brothers in-law,
Mayo Bales and Walter C. Z" icc;: sister in-law, \ltarie
Spires: mother·m law. Alice White.
She was a 1957 graduate ol Kyger Creek High
School, a member of f·eeney-Bcnnett Post 128,
American Legion Auxiliary and ford ttme served as a
Ground Observer Corp Volunteer.
·
At the age ot 1~1 she accepted Jesus as her personal
Savior, wns baptized and united '' ith the Pomeroy
Seventh-day Adventtst Churl:h. She maintamed her
membershtp there throu~hout her life. She 10\ed to
attend church ,uul worshtp God on his Hoi} Sabbath,
Saturday.
lltrough the years. she held 'nnous offices n her
church and was sen mg as ( hurch ('Jerk. Adult Class
Teacher and Pianist at the tune ot her death She Jo, ed
Gods' Word and had rend tt through se\eral time'&gt;
Her goal was to make heaven her home and help and
encourage others afong the \\a).
On July 30, 1973, she mnmcd Joseph (Junior)
White. who survi\e'l. Together they tenderly cared for
her Mother until her passing. Janunry 20, 1997. Rita
and Junior loved music and were well known for their
mu sical talent. Until their health began to fail. they
had entertained nt many functwns from Open House
the University of Rio Grande to Bob Evans
Parties, Wedding Anniversaries, Alumm
anquets. Regattas, Fairs and Senior Centers. They
also volunteered their ume playmg music at area
nursing home~. 1'he) m1mstered through music nt
many churches m Ohio and West \ irginia.
Htr urvivors also mclude, two sisters. Irma Bales
of Middleport and Ardath Zwies of Pensacola. Fla.. a
brother. Dennis M Spire-; of Stof)s Run Road: six
nel'hews, Ralph Bales, Rutland; Rodne} (Punkie)
Sptres, Rutland; Walter
ies. fexas: Wade Zw ies,
Florida: Tim Spires. Kyger .md Ste\ e Sptres, Stof) &lt;;
Run Road; four nieces: Rhonda Davidson, Wyommg,
Diana Wear , Kyger: Julie Crabtree, Kerr; Cind)
Spires, Rio Grande: a special great mece, Amanda
Wears. Tennessee, along with several other great and
great-great nieces and nephews; e\eral cousin~: T\\0
sisters-m-law. Patsy Spires, K) ger; Ruth Robinson,
Orlando, Fla.; last but not lea t her c.hurch family
The most Important thing m this hfe i'&gt; to prepare
for etemal hfe: Somettmes its hard to understand, And
harder c;llll to say. 1 hy will be done. when !'.Orrows
come. And sadne s hlls our da) But faith was meant
for time hke the e. And if '"e take God s hand. Wtth
lo' m wt dom he wtll help our he.ut to underst nd
hmem ervtce "til be held at 11 a m. on Monday

z,,

October 18. 2010, at Anderson McDamel Funeral
Home Ill Middleport Bunal wtll be 10 Gravel Hill
Cemete1 y. I riends may call un Sunday, October 17,
2010, hom 6 8 p.m. at the tuner.il home.
An on line regi&lt;;try t&lt;; avmlable nt www.andersonmr.;daniel.com.

Marcella Grace (Wilt) Durst
Marcell&lt;~ Gtnle (Wiltl Durst, Xl, Middleport,
pas-;ed away on Octobe1 14, 2010, at Overbrook
Center in Middleport. She was born on April 30,
1929. daughter of the late lssa~. and Lila (Jones) Wilt.
She w.ts a member of the Middleport Church of
Christ.
In add1t10n to her parents, he was preceded m
death by husband. M.tunce Durst; Brothers and
Sister&lt;;. K,1thn n Hy&lt;;ell Rtchard "1lp" Wilt, Dell
WJlt, C'he'&gt;ter Wilt and Kenn) Wtlt
She t'i '&gt;Urvtved by cluldrcn. 'Jean Durst, Maunsha
(Don) Net on, •ranckhlldrcn, Jeff (Roch~le) Nelson,
!\iauma &lt;Mutt) Buker, Alan Durst; Great
Grandl htldren. Emma Baker. Ja~.:kson Baker. Myah
Bakl"r Pc~ton Nel'&gt;llll, Purket ~clson, brothers and
si&lt;;ters, Juha (Bob) Hysell. Eileen (Carl) Searls: Issac
(Jume) Wilt, Jar.;k Jame I W1lt: e\ eral meces and
nephc'' s spec1al fnend. Dom Carder.
Sen tee w1ll be held at 1 p.m on Monday. October
18. 2010. at Ande1son McDaniel Funeral Home in
Pomero~. Otftcwtmg w1ll be AI Hartson. Bunal will
be in Grn\ el Hill Cemetery. I riends may call one hour
pnor to the sen tcc at the funeal home.
An on line registry ts avmlable at www.andersonm
cdamel.com.

Colton Step en Baird

Evelyn May Fields
Evelyn May Ftelds, 76, Hartford. W.Va., dted
Thursday. Oct. 14, 2010, nt Holzer Medical Center.
The funeral service will be held at J:30 p.m., Sunday.
Oct 17, 2010, nt Foglecoong Roush Funeral Home in
Mason, W.Vn , with Rev. Huling Greene and Rev.
Charlie Kea11lS offictatm!_'. Bunal will follow at
Sunrise Memorial Gardens. Vis1tatton will be held
1rom 11:30 a.m.- I 30 p.m. Sul)day at the funeral
home.

Alice Swiderski
Ahce Swiderskt, R7, Mtddleport, and formerly of
Gallipolis. died Fnday. Oct. 15, 2010, at Pleasant
Valley Ho&lt;&gt;pital Mass of Chmttan Bunni will be at 10
a.m .. Wedne da), Oct. 20, 2010, at St. Louts Catholic·
Church with Mon 1•nor ~ tlham Myers officiating
Burial will follow Ill St. louis Catholic.
Cemetel) Servtccs are under the d1rection of WaughHalley- W~d F-uneral Home.

Ronald Dean Rhea, Jr.
Ronald De~111 'Rhea. Jr., 49, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,~
died Thursday, Oct. I4. 20 I0. fhe funeral &lt;;ervice will
be held at 10 am .• Tuesda), Oct. 19, 2010. at Pomt
Pleasant Riverfront Park. Butial w1ll follow at Bethel
Ridge Cemetery in Jackson, Oh10. Visitation will be
held from 6-8 p.m. Monday at Wilcoxen Funeral
Home in Point Pleasant. Condolet1ce&lt;; may be sent to
the famtly at W\\ w. wtlcoxenfuneralhome.com.

Colton Stephen B.urd. son of Benjamin S. Baird
and D,uuelle I ambcrt Caldwell, ''as stillborn on
October 15, 2010. at Cabell Huntmgton Hospital,
Doroth) \ 1rginia Whittington, 84. Southside. ·~
Hunttn •ton, West vu·gtma.
Surv t\ m are ht~ parents. Dame lie Caldwell and W.Va .. d1ed Friday, Oct 15, 2010\ at Pleasant Valley
BenJatllln S Butrd of Btdwell. maternal grandparents, Ho pttal. The funeral en-Ke wtll be held at 1 p.m.:
Danme and Shef) I Lambert of Vinton; pater:nal Monday. Or.;t 18.2010. at Wtlcoxen F-uneral Home in
grandparents, Ste\ e Baird of Galhpolis and Sheila Point Pleasant Vi tation \\Ill be held from 6-8 p.mr ,·
Ftsher of Galltpolis, paternal great grandparents, Sunda) at the funeral home Condolenr.;es 01ay be sent . ·
Larry Crotnli"-h of G lhpoli'&gt; and Donald and Bobby to the famtl) &lt;~t WW\\,wJicoxenfuneralhome.com.
Batrd of Gallipohs matemal great grandparents.
Maq~aret and Chester Johnson of Vinton: one uncle.
Damel Lambert two aunt , Bridgett (Rodney) Pearce
and Melinda' (Timoth)) Ntchol"-On all of Vinton.
lie wns preceded m de tth by a paternal great grandmother, Margaret Cromlic;h, maternal great grandparents Anna Mehnda Hy'&gt;ell and Robert I. Lambert.
Sunda): Areas of dense fog beh\ een 7 am. and 8
Gra' esidc services w til be nt I pm "I uesday. October a m. Otherwise, cloudy through mid morning, then··
19. 2010. nt Gravel Hill Cemetery\\ ith Pastor Randy
Pntter&lt;;on officmtm Wtllts funeral Home i'i sening cleanng, with a high near 73. Calm wind becoming·.
west between 5 amJ 8 mph.
·..
the famt)
Sunda)
Night:
Mostly
clear,"
ith
a
low
around
41.
•
Pie s \I t w'""' w lit f r lh m ,.:om t end
•
lm
\\tnd
•
"' d I
\1ondn): Mostl) sunny. with a high near 69. Calm

Dorothy Virginia Whittington ·.

....

Gallia-Meigs Forecast

.

~-

Monda)

• Wednec;da), Ol:t 20 Oht
Tnck or treat in
South, Neighborhood Ro d Gre 1
Gallipolis
Acre , Texn"' Road and Oh o 14
and Ohio 588.
• Thursday. Oct. 21. All of
G \Ll IPOLIS - The Galhpoli
POMERO) - A delmquent tax
bst for O\\ ners of real e tate and Jackson Ptke, all of McConmc.k Police Department has established
mobtle homes wtll be published m Road and Ohto 160 to the C.S 35 the tnck or treat schedule for 2010.
frick or treat will be helc1 from
The Datly Sentmel on NO\ 12 and b) pass.
These
areas
will
have
the1r
5:30
6.30 p.m on Thursday. Oct.
19. The last dnte und ume to make
pa) ment in the Meigs County h)drants flushed between R am. 28.
Trea&lt;;urer's office to avoid name and 1 a.m. Residents should b~:
publication is Thur!:day. Oct. 28, 4' cautioned that some temporat')
Inside Outside
discoloration of the ,.. ater and low
p.m.
Halloween
presc;ure ma) occur during these
penods.
Fund raiser
at RVHS

Delinquent
tax list coming

for food pantry
CHESHIRE - The Silver Run
food pantf) wtll benefit from a
Candle Comfortz presentation b)
Fonda Rapp Thomas nt 2 p.m. on
Oct. 23 nt the Siher Run Bapust
on Silver Run Road at

Soup-er Saturday
returns
GALLI POLIS - The Soup-er
Saturday free lunr.;h program will
be offered beginning Oct. 23. This
program ts an outreach of Rio
Christian Church in Rio Grande
and is designed to meet the needs
of those who arc stmggling eco
nomically.
Lunch will be offered from
noon-2 p.m. on the following
Saturda) s at Holler Clinic
Sycamore in Galhpolis: Oct. 23.
Nov. '6, Nov. 20. Dec. 4 and Dec.
18.

The kickoff event for Soup-er
Saturday is scheduled at noon on
Oct. 23. Gift bag wtll be gt\en to
the first 30 peQplc. free t-shtrts
will be given away f•or mfonnation, call 245 9873 or e-mail
(Cvaceinter.net.

Hydrant flushing
schedule
GALLIPOLIS
1 he folio" ing
schedule will be used for hydrant
flushing in the Gallipolis area:
• Tuesday. Oct. 19: Eastern
Ave., Maple Shade area, First Ave ..
Second Ave., 1 hird Ave., f•ourth
Ave., Vi nton Ave.. Neil A\e. and
OhwAve.

Twp. Association
meeting Monday

BII&gt;Wbll - Rtver Valle) High
School WJII host Inside Outside
HallO\\een on Saturday, Oct. 30.
1
he e\ ent begins at 7 p.m and w1ll
GALLIPOLIS - The Galh.1
mdude
a 'anety sho\\, auction,
County
Oh10
lo,.,n..,htp
free
mo"
ie and costume judging
Association meeting ''til be held
pnzes
awarded. A concession
wtth
at 7 p.m.. Monday, Oct 18 at the
tand
"til
at
o be a' atlable. The
Senior Resource Center, 1167
RVHS
show
chmr.
choir and art
Ohio 160. Gallipoh&lt;&gt;.
dub are o;ponsonng the e\ent to
money tor both the pertomlFree clinic Oct. 28 mra1 arts
and the Rh cr \aile) Art
(
lub.
Those
attending are a ked to
GALLIPOLIS -. fhe f·1en~h
bnng
lawn
chmrs
or blankets. For
500 Free Clime will be held from
mtormation.
call
Cindy
Graham or
1-4 p.m. on Thursday. Oct. 2X at
An
•tc
Petrie
at
446-2926.
the clinic located at 258 Pinecre&lt;:t
Dnve off of Jackson Pike I he
Veterans Day
clinic serves only uninsured ctti
zens of Gallia County.
Parade

GCSO trick or treat
locations

GALliPOLIS
The annual
\etcrans Day Parade will be held
on llmmla). No\. II m Gallipolis
GALL4POLIS
The Gallta und 1s bemg orp,amzed b) the
County Sheriffs Office wtll have Galha County Veterans Sen ice
uniformed deputie'&gt; in c.trs dtstrib Commi sion (\ SC). Veterans. vettJting candy for trick or treat from ernns group md organizattons
5:30-6:30 p.m .. Thursd 1). Oct. 2S. '' tshmg to partt~lprtte m th~ parade
are asked to contact the VSC
20 I0 at the foliO\\ mg locations
Ofltce
at 446 2005 no later than
• Btdwell Post Offtce
ntcsday,
No\. 9.
• Morgan Center
Pnmde
partictpants
will gather at
• Spnng Valle) (by Veterans
10
.t.m.,
Thursduy.
Nov.
II. at the
oflice)
of
Second
A,
e.
and
Spruce
comer
• Centenaty
to
form
the
parade
order.
Street
• Centerville Village
fhe
parade
will
kave
that
site
at
• Crown Ctty Villagl'
10:30 a.m. ttavel dm\n Second
• Gallia County Courthousl'
Ave.. turn left at Court Street and
• l\tercervllle
stop at the Doughboy Monument
• Greenfield
where a ceremony will take place
• Vinto!'l Vill.tge
The sheriff's ofttce urges nt II a.m. lf the VSC decide;; that
motonsts to drive with caution. weather WJII prevent the parade
watch for children durin • this ttme from occunng. the ceremon) will
and also encourages parents to stay mo' e to the At iel 'I he,ttre and will
near their chtldren for 1 safe tnd: b •tn at the scheduled um~ of 11
•l Ill.
or treat expenence.

igh t: A hght chance of sho\\ers after

mtdnight. Mo tl) doud). w tth a low around 4'2.
Chance of precipitatton i 20 percent.
Thcsda\ : A chan...e of bowers Mostl) cloudy. with
a htgh neic 66. Chance of prectpttatJon is 40 percent:
Thcsda) Night: A chance of sho,,ers. Mostly
cloud)." ith a low around 46. Chance of precipitation
ts 50 percent.
\\ edncsda): A .:hance of showers. Partl) sunny.
\\ 1th a htgh near 61. Chance of prectpttauon is 40 percent.
&gt;:
\\ ed nesda) 1 ight: Partly cloudy. with a low
around 40.
-,
T hursda): Most)) sunny. \\lth a htgh near 62.
T hursda) Night: Partly cloudy, \\Ith a low around
39.

F rida) : Mostly sunn), \\ trh a high near 69.

Keeping Gallia &amp; Meigs
counties informed
~unbaJ' '&lt;Cnnes -~entine[
G a 446-2342 • Me gs 992 2155

Hometown
news for
Meigs &amp;

Gallia
counties
~unbnl'

m:nnrs ·
~cnttuel

~cCoy-?vtoore

'
'Funera{ '}[omes

·:,.

·'

�·~~~~-~- - ~

Sunday, Ot·tober 17,

-

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

Pomeroy • Middle port • Gallipo lis

2010

--

~unbav

&lt;rtmrs -~ent mt'l • Page A4

hristmas cards
n ded for 1092nd
BY DELYSSA HUFFMAN
Jt&lt;

MAN MYDAILYIIE' "TE' "OM

POINT PLEASA~T. W.Va.
Mason County's Operation Soldier
Care Program is continuing, to send
suppltcf. ea~.:h month to member'&gt; of the
1092nd Engmeenng Battalion.
And with the hohday . season
approaching. the need tor Christmas
card&lt;&gt; 1s great.
Al:lOrdinn to Becky Stein-Lambert
of ERA lown &amp; Country Real hstatc,
and one of the Operation Soldier Care
organizers. boxes ot Chmtmas cards
are asked to be dropped off nt the real
estate office or in the b:urcls at several
busmcs' location,, The cards will then
be shipped to the soldiers
Stcin-Lamber1 alo.;o add" thnt the ,ol

diers in the I092nd should tentatively
be back in february.
"We want to be sure we have the
cards now, so we can ship them by Nov.
she added.
The troops. still stationed in
Afghanistan. have benefited much from
the lo..:al program.
Donation':i of cards may bt: dropped
off ut fmth Pharmacy. Auto Options in
Mason. Farmers Bank in Point
Plea&lt;:ant. City National Bank. Peoples
Bank. Point Hnancial ServJCc-Lurry
Jones. Health Aid Pharmacy in New
Haven. B1g Country 99, Ohio Va~ley
Bank and Peoples Fe~ieral Credit
l •nion.
For 1nlonnation. contact St~:in­
L.ambcrt at 304 675-5548

I:·

Terror Town to open Oct.
28 at Bob Evans Farm
RIO GRANDh
The Prench Art
Colony's Ri..,erby Theatre Guild is bu&lt;;y
preparing 1error Town. a Halloween.
haunted attraction to be held at the
Adamsville l.oo Cabin Village on the
grounds of the Bob 1-h ans Fann in Rio
Grande fhe event will open at 7 p.m.
dail) Oct 28-H.
The group is o;;eekmg numerous volunteer; to assist w1th set-up. operations.
and tcar-dQwn An informatiOnal meetmg for those interested will be held at
":30 p.m. at the French Art Colony on
1 uesda). Oct. 19. Volunteer roles
rnclude; construction, staging decorating. sewmg. actors c;;care l:re\\, specml
effects te~hmcwnc;;, gliides'safety nC\\,
and operat1ons c.1ew It If. suggested that
\ olunteers be at leao.;t 16. some except on'&gt; m;P1 be made. Those unable to
attend the me nn '. but o.;tlll \HShmg to
help out, '&gt;hould cont. ct the PAC'\
duectl r Joseph Wr ht
T
\ nt 11 m..

the authentic cabins, and ~urrounding
grounds. Small groups will journey
through the story of a village inhabited
by restless spil its of the ill-fated pioneers along w1th witches and other terrif) ing creatures. Although the event b
designed to be thrilling way to enjoy
the Halloween season, it rs not recommended for )Ottng children due to loud
noisec;; and frightening scenes.
The event IS created by the design
team behind the fonner Haunted Ariel
'[ heatre. 2005 2009 and the ori2inal
Terror Town, from the mid-1990s. ~
More information regardmg Terror
fo,.., n. or other French Art Colony and
River by I heatre Guild e\ents can be
obtained by contactmg the French Art
Colony at (740) 446 3834. The Ohio
Arts C'ounc1l helped fund this program
or organilat!On with state tax dollars to
encourage economic growth, edu~a­
tton, I excellence and cultural enrichment for all Oh1oans

Evenflo Co. to recall some

aestro booster seats
~IAMISBURCJ (APl
b re~alhng near!) 14 000

benflo Co
of its Maestro
combwauon cht d booster seats
becail'..e ot a c.ra.. k that de' eloped in
I iboratol) te&lt;.,h.
The compan) sdid Friday it has
rcce1\ed no repm1s ot the crack occurnng rn t1eld and no injuries have been
reported.
The voluntary recall aftects seats
with model numbers starting with 310.
l'hey were built from Nov. 24. 2009 to
April 9 of this year. Another 4.479 scats
are bemg recalled in Canada. TI1ey
were made through April 26 ot this
year
The company sa)s it will send notices
to registered owners of the seats.
benflo plans to d1stnbute an easily
installed reinforcing bracket that will
11 x the problem.
Consumer Reports magazine said the
recall came after lh test~ showed the
o;;eat can aack and fail in a smmlated 30
mph trontal collision.
Children \\eighmg under 40 pounds
should not use the c;,eat v. ithout the
repair bracket, Evcnflo said in a state·
ment. Those over 40 pounds can still
usc it as a seat belt-positioning booster

until the repatr kit arrive&lt;;, the company
said
Evenflo said it will remove all the
affected seats from store shelve:-.
!'vtodel numbers of the seats can be
found on a white lab•el behind the seat
abo\ e the lu~hest sho~tldcr belt slot, the
company satd. It smd other Maestro
models are not affected.
Seat owners can go to the compan) 's
website, "ww C\ entlo.com. for more
mfom1ation. rhcy can call 1-800-2335921 bet\\ een 8 am and 5 p.m. EDT to
get a free reinforcemt:nt kit.
Consumer Reports said the Maestro,
which costs about $80. can be used
'\ ith its 0\\ n five-point harness as a
conventional child safety seat, or it can
be u~ed b) l&lt;ugc1 cbildren .ts a booster
seat anchored b} a car's seat belt.
An ouNide laboratory hired by the
magaline found that the plastic shell
cracked and the harness was loosened
in two seat&lt;; during a simulated crash.
Both failures came when the scat was
used with its 0\\ n fi, e-point harness,
thl! magazine said.

Submitted photo

Jane Stowers Craddock (standing) and Trish Stowers Washam are shown with a
photo of their mother, Ruth Stowers, in background.

Hospice room open house
Sunday at Holzer Medical Center
GALLI POLIS - "Mom did &lt;;o much
for uc. and helped so many people and
we eel th1s ts. her '' of contmumg to
h p people.·
mbe
f Ruth
\1 '&gt; 1\\oe
m the
G er I lr
Room at
Holzer Me 1 I (
d
An open house tor the Ruth M.
Stmvers Memorial Smte '' 1ll be held at
1 0 p.m., Sunday, Oct I at and is
!1 to the pubhc.
of care.
losp1ce has tour
whu. . h include: Routme Home Care,
( ont1nuous Care, Respite Care and
General Inpatient Care. The Ruth
Stowers Memorial General Inpatient
Hosp1ce Room "ill be utilized for both
General and Respite Care enabling the
caregh,er to place thelf lo,:ed one in
Holzer scare. It offers care!!tvers peace
of mind while handling personal situations knowing that their loved ones are
being cared for in the best possible
manner.
1 "Holzer Medical Center and Holzer
Hosptce arc very fortunate to have a
General Inpatient Room for the patients
that require special attentiOn during
their illness,'' stated Sharon Shull, RN.
BS;-.;. Director of Holzer Hospice. "I
feel that this addition will be an extension of the excellent care that Hospice
provide:-. for patients. We are \'el) excited to offer thts service ...
The Ruth M . Stowers Memonal Suite
at HMC offers a" arm. home-like environment, with sleeper chair:-. wide
screen tele' ision, microwave. closet
space, and bathroomfshower prh ileges.
In addition, a beautiful sitting area outside the room is also available for family members to use. Children and pets
can visit with permission from the
Hosp1ce staff.
The Stowers famil} has a long-stand-

I

ing relationship with Holzer Health
Systems, beginning when Ruth Stowers
was admitted to Holzer Semor Care for
therapy foliO\\ ing a stroke in :woo. She
wc1s abo a pauent of Holzer Hospice
before her passing in 2002. Her daughter. Jane Sto\,er~ Craddock. has been:l
volunteer for Holzer Hospice an
Holzer Semor Care for several yea
and has contributed to events such as
the Holzer Ho"pice lOth Anniversary
Celebration,
Camp
Beaver
Bereavement Camp. and oow the Ruth
iv1. Stowers Memorial Suite.
"Mom was a happy. fun loving
\\Oman who lived. laughed and loved,"
stated ~Irs. Craddock. "Hospice was so
good to Mom, and we want to give
back for that kindness."
In addition. Mrs. Craddock and her
sister Trish Washam, have recent!)
donated a puppy to Holzer Senior Care
Center.
"We are :..uch animal lovers. \Ve are
enthralled with the idea of having a pet
at Holzer Senior Care for the residents
to have somethmg to pet and to love.
Hope. the current pet at Holzer Senior
Care Center. ''as such a joy to ~1om.
that's why we have made her the mascot for this Hospice Room."
Each patient that stays at the Ruth M.
Stower:-. Memorial Stute will receive a
black Labrador stuff~:d animal to represent Hope. '' ho is pictured in the pho-A
tos utilized of Ruth Stowers.
W
The Ruth .M. Stm\ ers Memorial Suite
dedication i:-. open to the pubhc. The
public is encouraged to attend the dedication. tour the room and learn more
about the services Hospice prO\ ides.
For information. call (740) 446-5074 or
\ 1sit W\\ w.holzerhospice.org.

Live

rg

And mal&lt;e it rain all season long.
Open a new
checking account
and get up to
HURSDAY

$

0*

FRIDAY

Gallipolis 74d-446-0315

By all accounts, better.

�Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

$&gt;unl:Jav

\Etmr~ -$&gt;rnttnrl

• Page As

POLITICAL ADWATCH

With campaign ads, don't trust, verify
•

y CALVIN WOODWARD AND
LARRY MARGASAK
ASSOCIATED PRE:SS

WASHINGTON - Findin&lt;•
. season\
"'
an actua I t.act .rn tIHs
load of campaign ads is like
panning for nuggets. There's a
lot of fool's gold in the way.
In this warped-lens world, a
Democrat who vote~ against
his party more thane\ cry other
legislator exc!.!pt one is branded a lapdog of his party's leadership. A federal deficit from
the past is attributed to a health
care law that did not yet cxtst.
Democrats
blame
Republicans for '' anting to tax
SUVs, groceries and teddy
bears without telling people
that. in rl!turn, most of the
income, payroll and estate
taxes Americ&lt;tns know and
hate would be wiped out.
A look nt some of the wildest
claims of the 2010 campaign
and how they compare With the
facts:
PUZZLING PELOS I PUP,TS:
The
National
• ~epublican
Congressional
Committee, believing House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi to be an
unpopular and imperious figure, has been out with a series
of ads accusing rank-and-file
Democrats of eagerly doing
her bidding.
.. Wa.;hington can be puzzling,"' sa)s one ad against
Alabama Rep. Bobhy Bright
Although he claims to be independent ''he voted with Pelosi
over 70 percent of the time."
THE FACTS: Bright is practically the most disloyal
Democrat in Washington,
judging by the same voting
record that the Republicans use
to point voters to the opposite
conclusion. Of 435 members
of the House, he is 434th in
voting with his part). He voted
with Pelost less often than the
iconoclast GOP Rep. Ron Paul
of
Texas
voted
with
publican leadership (only
6 percent v:.. Paul':-. 76.7
-cent). This. according to a
ashington Post database
- tapped by the GOP. Idaho
Democrat Walt Minnick, the
top maverick in the House,
voted with his pa1ty 70.8 per-

cent of the time.
Such counts have only limited meaning even when used
accurately
because
they
include many humdrum votes
naming a post office.
approving journals of House
actions and the like. What really counts is how a lawmaker
votes on the big, contentio.us
Issues for which party discipline is important.
On the three biggest :.uch
issues, the health care overhaul, economic stimulus and
financial regulation. Bright
voted ag.ninst Pelosi and his
party. Another Demoaat tar
geted as '"Pelosi's lapdog,"
Kentucky Rep. Ben Chandler.
bucked the speaker on health
care and the stimulus.
TEDDY
BEAR
TAX:
Democrats have been nmning
misleadmg ads in more than
half a do7.cn st:1tes accusing
GOP House candidates of supporting a hefty new national
sales tax. In a typical example
from
the
Democrath:
Congressional
Campaign
Committee
series,
Ohio
Republican Jim Renacci is said
to favor "a new 23 percent
national sales tax on almost
everything you buy - food,
gas. even medicine." A cartoonish ad against Mississippi
Rep. Alan Nunnelee levels the
same charge and shows a cascade of consumer goods that
\\ould be hit. among them an
SUV. a child's wagon and a
teddy bear.
~
THE r"'ACTS: The ads conspicuously ignore the fact that
proponents of a national sales
tax would eliminate most of
the taxes that people pay now.
Instead of income, payroll and
other big taxes, money for the
treasury would be raised by
taxing the purchase of goods
and services. 111is crucial part
of the equation is l!lissing in
what voters are told m the ads.
It"s not even an issue GOP
candidates have been pushmg
in their campaigns; rather.
they've indicated they like the
idea when asked about it.
National
consumption or
value-added taxes are used in
some liberal democracies to
help pay for a social safety net.

but they'\e fa ... d to gam poht
ical traction in the United
States. Such taxes arc regres
sive. meaning they take more
from middle-i ncomc earners
than trom the rich, as a percentage of their income.
CROSS-WIRED CROSSROADS:
American
Crossroads, a group launched
under the direction of former
Bush administration operative
Karl Rove. is disparagmg
Senate and House Democratic
candidates in an aggressive
series of ads twisting the facts.
In one. Colorado Sen. Michael
Bennet is described as "the
deciding vote on Obamacare,"'
an overhaul that meant '\ve got
tax increases. billions in
Medicare cuts and record
de tic its."
T HE FACTS: Bennet was no
more the deciding vote on the
health care law than were the
59 other senators who voted
for it. If anything. his vote was
less decisive because it was not
in doubt.
The U.S. posted a record
deficit in 2009. then a slighter
smaller one in the 2010 budget
year that ended this month.
The health care law would
reduce the federal deficit by
$143 billion from 2010-2019,
according to the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office.
An1erican Crossroads may be
a new voice in political advocacy but it resorts to one of the
oldest
dodges
used
in
Washington by both parties:
casting a reduction in spending
growth a~ a "cut.'' The new law
slows projected increases in
Medicare
payment~
to
providers but expands benefits
in the traditional program
instead of cutting them.
However. seniors in Medicare
Advantage
plans
offered
through private insurers can
expect higher out-of-pocket
costs and fewer benefits. That's
because the companies were
getting paid more than it wst to
provide care under traditional
Medicare. and the law reins
that in.
The health care law raiseo;
Medicare taxes on earnings
over $200.000 for indh iduals
and $250,000 for married cou-

pies and imposes a lax on
unearned income for richer
people. It provides tax credits
to help the uninsured buy coverage.
SOCIAL
SECURITY
INSINCERITY: '' If Walorski'.s
plan was in place two years
ago, you could have lost nearly
40 percent of your retirement
savings. Jackie Walorski. We
can't afford the risk." That's a
Democratic ad against a
Republican
candidate
in
Indiana.
misrepresenting
Republican proposals to let
people invest a portion of their
Social Security taxes privately.
GOP candidates Sean Duffy in
Wiscon~in. Dan Benishek in
Michigan and Andy Barr in
Kentucky are similarly depicted as reckless gamblers with
Social Security money.
THE FACTS : The 40 percent
figure bears no resemblance to
Republican proposals.'
It is based on the percentage
drop in the 2008 stock market
crash. Republicans have never
proposed personal savings
accounts for all Social Security
money. And the current House
Republican leadership has not
agreed to support anv private
investment program . ·
The main Republican mitiative comes from Rep. Paul
Ryan of Wisconsin, who would
give \\'orkers under 55 the
option of investing a third of
their Social Security taxes in
personal retirement accounts
managed by the Social Sectuity
Administration. The government would guarantee that
nobody loses money.
JOBS
JUMBLE:
Republicans and their allies arc
attacking the economic stimulus not just as a waste of money
- an arguable pornt - but a
killer of jobs. In Wisconsin,
Democratic Rep. Steve Kagen
is upbraided because he
''promised us jobs, voting for
the $787 billion stimulus. Cost:
another 77,000 jobs lost." In
Maryland, another GOP ad
sa)S. Rep. Frank Kratovil
"promised the stimulus would
save or create jobs but we· ve
lost over 78.000" since he
"oted for it.
THE FACTS: Whatever

economist:&gt; think of the stimulus, they do not think the infusion
of
money
from
Washington actually destroyed
jobs. At worst, it did not create
enough jobs and cost too much
for the employment it did manage to generate. The claim in
the Wisconsin ad and the implication in the Maryland one is
that the stimulus is responsible
for draining employment. The
Republican ads simply record
job losses in a particular state
over a particular time and
imply the blame rests squarely
on stimulus measures.
TAX tANGLE: Democrats
and their allies are eager to tie
Republican-; and their supporters to foreign interests. going
so far as to accuse the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce of
using oversea!&gt; money for political ads helping the GOP, without offering any evidence. The
effo1t goes-beyond that to portray Republicans as guardians
of job outsourcing. In one
example, a Democratic ad
against
Harold
Johnson,
Republican candidate in North
Carolina. shows jeans. a
sweater vest and a baseball cap
and~tates: ""This is a candidate
for congress helping make sure
they're all made in China or
Mexico.
Harold
Johnson
signed a pledge that protected
tax breaks for outsourcing jobs
overseas."
THE FACTS: The pledge.
from Americans for Tax
Refom1. makes no promise to
protect these companies. It says
nothing about jobs. It's a
pledge to oppose tax increases.
Democrats have tried to end
tax breaks used by companies
that ship jobs overseas. and
Republicans have opposed that.
The pledge, however. simply
says the candidate will oppose
increases in income tax rates
and. oppose cutting deductions
or credits unless matched dollar-for-dollar by lower rates.
John Kartch. spokesman for
the group. said it would be possible to end tax breaks for overseas companies while honoring
the pledge. by substituting a tax
reduction of equal value elsewhere in the tax code.

Cuyahoga, Franklin counties account for half absentee ballots
TOLEDO (A P)
Requests
for absentee ballots in Ohio
show that Democrats are outnumbering Republicans in the
state's two biggest counties,
but
there
are
signs
that
Democrats
won't
dominate
early voting like they did t\VO
years ago.
About half of all the requests
for absen"tee ballots in Ohio
have come from Cuyahoga and
Franklin counties, according to
figures from the secretary of
ate's office.
•
I n Cuyahoga Count), which
includes Cleve l and. Democrats
are asking for absentee ballots
by a 2-to-1 marglll, yet registered
Democrats outrwmber
Republicans 4-to- I.
Only a few hundred more
D emocrats than Republicans

have
requested
ballots
in
Franklin
County.
which
includes Columbus. Two -years
ago. Democrats i n the county
asked for twice as many bal
lots.
0' era II. nearly 600,000 people asked for ballots in the first
week of early voting.
Democratic candidates. most
notably Gov. T ed Strickla n d,
are hoping the i r strategy of pi l ing up early votes will produce
the same results it did two
years ago when Barack Obama
won the state on his way to the
presidency.
The governor went on a bu~
tour of the state in the days just
before earl) voting began.
Strickland ex p ressed confidence that his early voting
strategy \Vo u ld help him get re-

elected at a Labor· Day event
last month even when most
polls showed him far behind
former Republican congressman John Kasi·ch
The race ha:\ tightened since
then and early voting could
play a big role in the race.
Earl) voting allows voters to
cast general-election absentee
ba l lots 1n person or by mail. A
federal judge last month ruled
against four people who challenged the state's early voting
system because some counties
pay the postage on ba !lot ap'p I ications and others don't.
Some
counties also mail
applications for absentee ballots to all voters. but not all do
it that way. The board of elections in Franklin County sent
640.000 :}pplications to active

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Most of the early voting in
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cities. In 29 rural counties, less
I ,000
people
requested or
received absentee ballots·in the
first week of early \ oting.
Cuyahoga Count) voters had
asked for 169,855 ballots 111 the
first week. Franklin County has
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No other count) came close to
those numbers.
Hamilton
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'" hich
includes Cincinnati. saw more
Republicans request and retu r n
their ballots than Democrats .
according to the county's election board . Two years ago.
Democrats asking for ballots
had over a 2-to-l edge o v er
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ilunba~ tlttmes -i&gt;entinel

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Gallia County calendar
Monday, Oct. 18
a.m.,
Centerpoint
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Freewill
Baptist
Co. Twp. Association Church, corner of
meeting, 7 p.m., Gallia Centerpoint
and
Co. Senior Resource Nebo roads. Randall
Center, 1167 Ohio 160, Walker
preaching.
Gallipolis.
Lunch
served. No
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia evening service. Info:
Co. Fall Garden Club Pastor Elmer Hill,
meeting,
7:30
p.m., 245·1010.
Care
ADDISON
Holzer
Senior
Center. Guest speaker Sunday school, 1 o
Janet Bolin. Program: fall a.m.; evening serv ce,
p.m.;
Addison
flower
arrangements. 6
Baptist
Info: Katie Shoemaker, Freewill
Church. Pastor R1ck
446-4171.
GALLIPOLIS - Look Barcus preaching.
WILKESVILLE
Good Feel Better program, 6 p.m., Holzer Homecoming, 9 a.m.,
Center for Cancer Care. Wilkesville Methodist
Sunday
Sponsored by American Church.
school,
10
a.m.
Cancer Society.
Dinner, 12:30 p.m.
Thursday, Oct. 21
Afternoon
service,
VINTON
Huntington-Morgan 1:30 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Crime Watch, 6 p.m.,
church
of Chnst in
Vinton Town Hall.
Gallipolis
rneets at
GALLIPOLIS
234
Chapel
Drive.
Bloodmobile,
noon-6
Sunday
meeting
Peter's
p.m ,
St
Episcopal Church, 541 times are: 9:30 a.m.,
Bible class; 10:30
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.,
Tuesday, Oct. 26
evening
assembly.
EWINGTON
The
church
meets at
Amencan Legion Post
7
p.m.
Wednesday
for
161 meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
iBible
study.
Web
site:
Ewington Academy build·
www.chapelhillchurin g.
chofchrist.org.
Thursday, Oct. 28
GALLIPOLIS - The
GALLIPOLIS - Trick
or treat in Gallia County, Gallipolis church of
Christ meets at 214
5:30·6:30 p.m.
Upper R1ver Road.
Saturday, Oct. 30
Sunday
services
BIDWELL
Include
10
a.m.
Bible
Dedication celebration,
study,
with
classes
11 a.m., New Hope
Baptist Church, Ohio for all ages, and 11
a.m. worship. Bible
554.
study is also held at 7
Thursday, Nov. 4
p.m. Wednesday. Web
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
site: www.gallipolisand
Water
Soil
ch u rchofchrist. net.
Conservation
District
PATRIOT Orlyn
annual meeting and
"Butch"
Cochran
awards banquet, 7 p.m.,
preaching, 6 p.m., at
First Church of the
Patriot
United
Nazarene Family Life
Methodist
Church.
Center, 1 110 First Ave.,
Pastor
Jane
Ann
Gallipolis. RSVP by Nov.
Miller invites public.
1. Info: 446·6173.
GALLIPOLIS
Thursday, Nov. 11
James
and
Laura
CENTENARY
Rainey in concert, 6
Parent Teacher confer- p.m., First Church of
ences, 3:15-6:15 p.m., the Nazarene, 1110
Gallia Academy High First Ave., Gallipolis.
School. For parents with Free admission. Love
students in grades 9-12. offering. Info: 446To schedule appoint- 1772.
ments, call 446-3250.
Tuesday, Oct. 19
Have following info availGALLIPOLIS
able: student's name and Christian
Women's
names of teachers with Connection,
noon,
whom parents would like Courtside Grill, 308
to meet.
Second
Ave.,
Friday, Nov. 12
GallipoliS. Speaker:
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia Dianna Sutherland.
Soil
and
Water Mus1c: Karen Polcyn.
Conservation
District RSVP: Nancy, 367board meeting, 1 :30 7443, or Linda, 446p.m., C.H. Mckenzie Ag 4319.
Center, 111 Jackson
Wednesday, Oct.
Pike,
Suite
1569,
20
Gallipolis.
ADDISON - Prayer
meeting and open mic
Birthdays
night, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill
Baptist
Pauline Taylor will cele- Church.
brate a birthday on Oct.
Sunday, Oct. 24
19. Cards may be sent to
ADDISON
her at 7696 Hart Drive, Sunday school, 10
North Ft. Myers, FL a.m.; evening service,
32977.
6
p.m.:
Addison
Freewill
Baptist
Church Events
Church. Pastor Rick
Barcus Preaching.
Sunday, Oct. 17
GALLIPOLIS
1 OOth
anniversary
UNDATED
10 celebration,
10:24
Homecoming,
The Meigs County Tuberculo~is Office would
like to thank the residents of Meigs County for the
warm welcome we have received throughout the
years during our clinics held in all areas of the
county. We travel many miles to provide our free
TB skin testing clinics as a convenience for Meigs
County residents. TB skin testing is a service we
provide fo( schools, students, teachers, bus driver;
and staff in each school district. We also travel to
businesses, various organizations, and fire
departments in the county.
In order to continue to serve our county
residents, we are asking ugain, as we did five
years ago, to support our upcoming Levy that will
be on the ballot November 2, 2010.
Thank you agam for your continued support of
the Tuberculosis Levy which incidcntnlly ha.; been
on the ballot and serving the citizens of ~leigs
County since the early 1950's.
Nancy Broderick, R.N.

Meigs County calendar
a.m., FHst Church of
God, 1723 Oh1o 141
Gallipolis. Meal follows serv1ce. Info
446-4404.
Wednesday, Oct.
27
ADDISON - Prayer
meeting,
7
p.m.,
Addison
Freewill
BaptiSt Church. Rev.
Jamie
Fortner
preachmg.
Thursday, Oct. 28
ADDISON - Trunk
of Treat for children,
6:30 p.m., AddiSOn
Freewill
Baptist
Church parking lot.
Sunday, Oct. 31
ADDISON
Sunday school, 10
a.m., evening service, 6 p m . Addison
Freew1JI
Baptist
Church. Pastor Rick
Barcus
preaching.
Christmas
program
rehearsals begin.
Saturday, Nov. 6
RIO GRANDE
Christmas bazaar, 10
a.m.-3 p.m., Simpson
Chapel
United
Methodist
Church,
Lake
Drive,
Rio
Grande. Info: 245·
5126 or 379-2114.

Oct. 17 singing by
Wendell
Williams.
Serv1cos, 6 p m , Oct.
• '
eaching
by
Robert Parsons. Info:
446-3800
or
4411470.
BIDWELL
Weekend
Revival,
Oct. 15-16, Prospect
Baptist
Church
Fnday, Larry Haley
preachmg and Cherry
R1dge
singing;
Saturday,
Calvin
Minms preaching and
Voices
of
Faith
smgmg.
POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Homecoming
serv1ces. Oct. 15-17,
Chnstian Commumty
Church
Speaker:
Charl1e
Hargraves.
Fnday service, 7 p.m.;
Saturday service, 1
p.m.; Sunday service.
1 p.m. Dinner follows
Saturday and Sunday
serVices.
Church
meets at FOP building
on Neal Road Info:
446-0626 or (304}
675-7776.

GALLIPOLIS
Camp
Meeting,
Revivals
Promise
Land
Community
Church,
HARRISON TWP
Homecommg Revival, Oct 18-13; Oct. 18,
Thompson,
Oct. 14-17; nightly at 7 Bob
Vickie
p.m., Sunday at 10:30 preachmg;
a.m.;
Macedonia Moore, singing. Oct.
Rick
Barcus,
Community Church, 19,
Clayllck Road. Rev.· preach1ng, New City,
Oct.
20,
David Hopkins, evan- singmg.
Andrew
Parson,
gelist,
preaching.
Spectal singing night· preaching; Faith Valley
Trio, singing. Oct. 21,
ly. Info: 446-2303.
R1ck Towe, preaching
and singmg. Oct. 22,
GALLIPOLIS
Darrell
Johnson,
Revival, Oct. 16·17
Debbie Dnve Chapel. preachmg; Carl Payne
Servtces 6 p.m., Oct. Fam11y, smgmg. Oct.
16, preaching by Bro. 23, Jun1or Preston,
Church
Robert
Parsons. preaching:
Services, 10 a.m., Singers, singing.

Public meetings

I

Monday Oct. 18
LETART FALLC'
Trustees, reguJar meet1ng, 5 p.m., u
o..~lJIIdmg.
Thursday, Oct. 21
MIDDLEPORT C1t1zens Association for ,
Improvement of Middleport, 8 p.m., at the Martial Arts •
Center, 129 Mill St., Middleport. Associaton formed
for discussion on eMployment/economtc opportuni- 1
ties, real estate values, recreation and other issues of
concern. For more in}ormat1on call 992-5715.

Clubs and organizations
Monday, Oct. 18
CHESTER -Pomeroy Chapter 186 Order of
Eastern Star, 6.30 p.m., refreshments, practice for
installation, 7:30p.m .. regular meeting, Masonic Hall.
Wednesday, Oct. 20
CHESTER -Pomeroy Chapter 186 Order of EaS}ern
Star, Installation of officers 7:30 p m., MasoniC Hall.
HARRISONVILLE - !/e95 County Fuefghters AsoociaOOn,
7:30 p.m., Scipb TOMlShip Ftre Department Disct.JsOOn
irdudes narroN bar'dnJ, Reedsvi!a torncm ard .klint-lrri::tent
Commard Structure~ durrg the NIMS oooo:lJX
MIDDLEPORT - The Midd eport Uterary Club, 2 p.m.
in the Pomeroy library. Frank1e Hunnel to ff!llteW "Ford
County" by John Grisham. Oleta Heighton, hostess.
Thursday, Oct. 21
PavEFOf - ~ O:u1y AaiOO Teoctas AsiD m •1 lnctool,nxn wtj~Cae.Kaa1aJI,~dot&gt;RTA
Tuesday, Oct. 23
POMEROY - Meigs County Tea Party meeting, 7
Mulberry Community Center. Candtdates to be

•
,
'
,

1

Church events
Sunday, Oct. 17
POMEROY - Rf!lli"al services at the Calvary Pilgrim
Chapel, 7 p.m. Rev. Paul Bates, evangelist, and singers.
Monday, Oct. 18
GALLIPOLIS - Promised Land Church, Clay Chapel
Road off Oh1o 218, caMp meetings, 7 p.m. starting today
though Oct. 23, local preachers and singers nightly.
Thursday, Oct. 21
RUTLAND - Seventh annual Fall Harvest Gospel Sing,
Rutland Civic Center. No admiSSOn. Thursday and Friday, 6
p.m.; Saturday, 1 p.m. Thursday IS open talent night; Friday
and Saturday featured singers, The Hlnsons of Tennessee.
Saturday, Oct. 23
ALFRED - Alfred United Methodist Church will host
a wiener roast at 6:30 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 24
MIDDLEPORT - The Keffers of Nashville, Ga. will
sing at 11 a.m., Hope Baptist Church, 849 High St.

1

j

.
.
•

"'
'

Birthdays
Saturday, Oct. 23
POMEROY - Mildred Ziegler who will turn 90 on Oct.
WID celebrate her birthday on Saturday, with an open
at the Hemlock Grove Grange Hall. Cards may be
to her there or sent to her at 42654 S.R. 681, o~ .....,..,,.,..;
Ohio 45769. It is requested that gifts be omitted.

Cardiologi t Vipin B. Koshal, DO, perform~ tr.lnscsophagl'al
cchoc.u·diogram ('fl:E) procedures in the cardiovascular
catheterization laboratory at O'Blcncss. 1 hb procedure
previously was not available in the Athens area. \'\'hen the
results from standard cchocardiography studies arC' not
sufficient or \\'hen a cardiologist needs a closer look at a
patient's heart, a TF E is a 'alu~blc diagnostic test.

Board-ct!rtificd. c~rdiologists Vipilz B. Ko~lwl, DO, Mitchell
f. Silvc1; DO; and Charles 1~ /Jotti ]r., MD, arc skilled in the
diagnosis and treatment ofc.u-diov.lscular disc.lsc ,md pl'rfonn
procedures in the O'Blcness Catheterization I abot".ltory.
l·or more information about heart care ~ervices at O'Blcncs~.
Cardiology and Vascular Consultants in the
Cornwell Center at (740) 566-4890.

call MidOhio

Charles F. Botti Jr., MD
O'Bicnc!-.s Hc.ul

~l'rviccs

A Heartbeat Away

•

O'BLENESS
Mcm01·iall Tospital
u1 Dri' M&gt;&lt;u1 OH A'
.!0.!
"\\ \\.oblencss.org

''II

..

f'lud for by Me1gs County Tuber• ulOSIS Levy Comnuttce Donru
Schmoll. Treasurer, 1'0 Box 447, PomerO\. 011 4';769

(

�Sunday, October 17,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbap ~ime~ -~rntind

• Page A7

New Home National Bank to open Nov. 10 ,
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

The bank's $2.2 million
investment coupled with
Racine's new Dollar General
Store, the Ohio Department of
Transportation's widening of
the intersection at Fifth Street,
the village receiving grants to
upgrade Sycamore Street
which runs behind the bank
and new Dollar General, all
represent some major dollars
being pumped into Southern
Meigs County.

RACINE - The new $2-million
e National Bank will soon be open
business with an open house event
eduled for 4-7 p.m.. Wednesday.
Nov. 10.
HNB President Bill Nease said the
new bank will open for business before
the open house, possibly on Nov. 1
though that date hasn't been firmed up.
yet. With all the exterior work completed on the building, currently workers are putting down carpeting. washing windows, doing a thorough cleaning, repairing scuffs and waiting on the
furniture to arrive.
Street which runs behind the bank and
Nease said he's pleased with the way new Dollar General, all represent some
the project has developed into a build- major dollars being pumped into
ing with real personality. He added his Southern Meigs County. Add to the
favorite part of the new bank is a chimmix a new $11-million Southern High
ney which raises 20 feet into the air,
School
and American Municipal Power
has stone on one side and cherry wood
looking
to invest a tentative $600-700
and bands of sassafras on the other.
Nease said the woods were "worked million into a natural gas combined
up" locally by Facemyer Lumber cycle power plant in Letart Falls and
Company. The chimney, with its see the new Home National Bank is smack
through fireplace. houses unvented gas in the middle of the growth.
logs which will likely be a focal point.
"We're ready for it...we cap absorb
Despite the opening date being whatever happens," Nease said.
ed back slightly, Nease said the
The new bank will not only be home
ect is basically on budget. By the to its customers and employees but
•
time the building and 1.5 acre lot were home to a new business for Racine.
factored in, the investment comes to Brogan-Warner Insurance will open a
around $2.2 million - an investment
new office, renting 600-700 feet of
not just in Racine but in Meigs County.
space
inside the bank.
The bank's $2.2 million investment
Nearly
300 invitations have been
coupled with Racine's new Dollar
General Store, the Ohio Department of ordered for the open house to celebrate
Transportation's widening of the inter- a building Nease believes will be there
section at Fifth Street, the village for another I 00 years, just like its prereceiving grants to upgrade Sycamore decessor.

l"

Vets
fromPageAl
something very nice for
the community and
something the community could be proud of,'' he
said. "When they started
talking about a veterans
memorial,
everybody
jumped on board.
~e ended up pulling

.
C

We thought. who better to thank than the vets;
if it weren't for them, we
wouldn't have the lives
we have today," Covey
added. "Sometimes we
forget that they're the
reason that we're here
and the reason we live a
free life."
Covey said the memorial was designed by local
engineer Randy Breech
and contractor Jim Blair
built the facility. The
OOMPD secured a
$247,000 grant with
assistance from State
Sen. John Carey, RWellston, and State Rep.
Clyde Evans. R-Rio
Grande.
Covey said the grant
not only covered the cost
of design and construction for the memorial, but
allowed
the
MPD to add 1.3 miles
•
to the hike and bike trail
along Farm Road in overlooking Cliffside Golf
Course
Gallipolis.
Funding was also available from the grant to do
repair work to bridges
along the trail, which
extends from Haskins
Park to Ewington.
Both Evans and Carey
spoke during the ceremony as did Veterans
Service
Commission
members Richard Moore
and David McCoy.
"This is a great tribute
and I just praise Gallia
County for having the
sensitivity to develop
something like this to say

Submitted photo .)

The new $2-million Home National Bank has scheduled an open house for
Wednesday, Nov. 10. Bank officials hope to actually begin operating in the new "
building on Nov. 1 though that is subject to change.

·.

Meigs

'\

fromPageAl
equipped technologically
advanced school library
media centers, and to
increase students· access
to the school library and
library resources.
In addition as a winner
in the Race to the Top
contest, Meigs Local will
receive $520,000 for
school programs requiring specialized instruction.
The district is also
expected to receive
approximately $750,000
from
the
Federal
Education Jobs Fund
program. That money is
designated for use in
providing educational
support for students
through saving or creating jobs for teachers in
the school system.

All of the programs
should
facilitate
improvement in district
performance, according
to the superintendent.
It will take a performance index of 90 percent for two consecutive
years for a district to
move into the effective
rating. The 2009-2010
ODE report card gives
Meigs Local a score of
88 and for the seventh
year assigns the district
the ranking of "continuous improvement.,.
As for the ratings of
the individual schools.
the high school received
an overall "effective.. rating, meeting seven of the
12 indicators and showing an improvement in
the performance index

over the 2008-2009 year
of one point.
The
Middle . ...
Intermediate and Primary ..
schools all remained in
the continuous improvement category. However.
the perfom1ance index ,
ratin2 increased at both ·
the ~ Middle
and ~
Intermediate Schools (no score is given for the
..
Primary school).
At the Intermediate
School the performance
index score went from _
84.6 in the 2008-2009 _
year to 88.5 this year. 1
while at the Middle
School it went from 82.3 ·
last year to 85.9 this year. ~
out of a possible 120 ·
points.

Gallia County veterans were among those who gathered for the ce~emony on Friday.

'thank you' to those of through World War II and
you who have taken time the Vietnam war and all
out of your life to provide the wars that we're fighta service to this country. ing now. We need to
to defend the ideals and cherish our veterans.
values that we believe Cherish their service.
in,'' Evans said. "I don't Cherish their memories,
think that we can do too and support them in
much for our veterans. I every way we can, and
don't think we can do too this memorial will help
much to pay tribute to do that.
our veterans."
"At the same time we
Moore said Friday's cherish our veterans. the
ceremony marked the way we can truly cherish
second occasion in the them. is to cherish the
past two weeks in which freedoms
that
they
he was asked to offer the fought for." Carey added.
invocation for an event "We need to do a better
involving veterans. He Job. all of us. of exercisalso offered the invoca- mg our freedom in this
tion at the opening of the country and making sure
Gallipolis VA Clinic on we protect them."
Oct. 7.
McCoy thanked all
"It's my privilege to be those who had a part in
able to thank our heaven- making the memorial a
ly father for how He's reality.
blessed us," Moore said.
"On behalf of the
Carey echoed Evans' Gallia County Veterans
comments in paying trib· Service Office. we appreute to veterans.
ciate the opportunity we
"We can't do enough to had in putting some of
remember our veterans," this together," McCoy
Carey said. "We can said. "On behalf of all the
never forget the contribu- veterans
in
Gallia
tions that our forefathers County. we thank you for
made. all the way this."

VINOD

H. SHAH, MD

The Holzer Center for Cancer Care
would like to welcome Dr. Vinod H. Shah.
Boar~

certified by the American Board
of Radiology, Dr. Shah brings a high ~
level of expertise to the Holzer Center
for Cancer Care.
For more information about the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care. visit us online at
holzerconcer.org or holzerclinic.com

~HOLZER

CANCER CARE

fromPageAl
county-wide proposal to
renew the tuberculosis
levy.
Johnston said the board
office will be open from
9 a.m. to noon on Oct. 30
to allow a final opportunity for early voting
there. Voters who do not
cast ballots by that time
must visit their local
polling location.

"

l

i•

.
I
I

Vote
by mail or voting at lenged by Tim Ihle. a
the Board of Elections Republican.
County Auditor Mary
The
board
office.
requires identification for Byer-Hill is unopposed
early voting. as. well as in her race for re elec·
voting at the polhng loca- tion.
This year's fall ballot
tions on election day.
There is only one con- also includes 12 county,
tested local race, that for township and village balthe seat on the Board of lot issues, including three
County Commissioners tax initatives in the
now
occupied . by Village of Pomeroy. levy
Democrat
Mick renewals in Middleport
Davenport. He is chal- and Syracuse, and a

.,•

If you would like to learn about Dr. Shah or the services provided by the Holzer
Center for Cancer Care. please call: 740.446.5474 or 1.800.821.3860

�--- ------~-------

Sunday, October 17, 2 0 1 0

~ unbap ~ime~ - ~entinel

Pome roy • Middleport • Gallipolis

• Pa ge AS

Gallia OGS Chapter, Bossard Library team up for workshop
BY AMBER

GILLENWATER

MOl NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

Reference
Librarian
Rebecca Carroll
(left), GCGS
President
Henny Evans
(center) and
Reference
Librarian
Randall Fulks
discuss the
upcoming introduction to
genealogy
workshop that
will be held at
the Bossard
Library in
Gallipolis on
Oct. 23.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Genealogical
Snc1ety (GCGS) _and the reference department of the
Bossard t.lemonal L1brary are teaming up for a
genealogy workshop on Oct. 23 at the library.
l'l~e workshop will be an introduction t.o genealogy
sess1on and w1ll shma.·casc how to begm the often
complicated process of researching family histories.
"I am going to talk about the really basic things of
genealogy,'' GCGS President Henny Evans stated.
"As simple things as. where to find a will or how to
use a census and which census actuitlly begins to benefit you more than just saying the head of household
but gives you other information, and marriage
records, b1rths, deaths and when they start in Ohio."
According to Bossard Library Reference Librarian
Randall Fulks. the workshop will also feature demonstrations at&gt;out how to access the Ancestry Library
and the Ruthc1ford B. Hayes Obituary Index as well
as other databases and Web sites that can be accessed
at the library and focus on genealogical research
The event will also feature a tour of the resources
located in the genealogy room of Bos:.;ard Library and
time will also be provided for individuals to do
research with personal assistance of the reference
staff members and the volunteers of the GCGS.
"We are going to try to do one-on-one help "vith
everybody," Evans -;tated.
fhe workshop is free and the event coordinators
invite both children and adults who are interested in
their family history to attend.
The coordinators of the workshop see genealogical
research as a field that is constantly growing as more
and more mdividuals are becoming interested in their
past heritage thanks to hit television programs like
Who Do You Think You Are?, which showcases
celebnties who attempt to research their family trees.
"I thmk people' nre trying to find their roots,"
Reference I.1brarian Rebecca Carroll said of the
growing trend of ancestry research. "It's a connection
to family."
Carroll also pointed out that Bossard Librar&gt; and
the GCGS have worked together before in workshops
that have benet1ted young individuals involved in 4-H
and the girl and boy scouts, groups that both \VOrk on
famil) history projects. The two organizations also
often refer individuals to one another in their seMch
for ancestry materials.
The GCGS, Which has been charted as a member of
the Ohio Genealogical Society since 1983. offers a
wide range of materials relating to genealogy at their
facility located at 57 Colllt Street in Gallipolis,
including 12.000 original probate court records,
Lineage Society records. information on the first families of Gallia County, settlers and builders and Civil
War families. as well as a growing collection of Civil
War obituaries. The society is also working toward
photographing and cataloging tombstones throughout
the county as a means to provide flllther information
to researchers.
According to Evans, the GCGS has a myriad of volunteers who contribute to their website and volunteer
at their facility. The agency. Evans reported. annually
senes visitors from across the United States and
abroad.
''We're never not busy.'' Evans said. "There is
always something."
Fulks and Carroll reported that the library
genealogical section also stays relatively busy with
local visitors and individuals from various states and
reg10ns. However. the library houses more information about the surrounding states and southeastern
Ohio in general. as opposed to the GCGS. The library,
according to Carroll. also keeps books with information about Native Americans. black history. as well as
a large microtilm collection containing area newspapers from as early as the beginning of the nineteenth
century. C'aroll also discussed that the librar) provides
re:-.earch guides and will provide assistance with contacting other research agencies .
•, he introduction to genealogy workshop will be
heJd between I 0 a.m. and noon at the library on
Saturday. Oct. 23, but the coordinators explained that
they will be available to stay most of the afternoon to
help individuals interested in researching their
genealogical history.
.
Information about the Gallia County Genealogical
Society, OGS Chapter and other resources can be
found at www.galhagenealogy.org. Information and_
resources provided by the reference department ot
Bossard
Library
can
be
found
at
www.bossard.lib.oh.uslref.html. For more information on the upcoming workshop. contact Bossard
Library at (740) 446-7323 or the GCGS at (7401 4464242.

Amber
Glllenwater/photo

I

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Evans &lt;NASOAQI

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US Bank (NYSE) 22.54
Gen Electric (:'&gt;lYSE) 16 30
llarlcy-Davidson
(NYSE) - 32.30
JP Morg:111 &lt;NYShl
37.15
Kroger (I';YSh)
22 01
I td Brands &lt;NYSb)

29.2(r

~mfolk

61.51

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OVBC (NAS DAQ) 18.64
BBT (NYSE)- 22.64
People~ (NASDAQ) 12.46
Pepsico (1\:YSE) - 66.68
Premier (NASDAQ)
6.43
Rockwell (NYSE)
61.92
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Royal Dutch Shell 63 53
Sears Holding (1\,ASDAQ)- 74 90
Wai-Mart (NYSE) 53 35.
Wendy's (1\:YSE) - 4.90
WesBanco (I'\YSE)
17.40
Worthington (NYSE)
15.07
Daily stm:k reports arc
the 4 p.m. ET closmg
quotes of transactions for
October 15. 2010, provtded
by Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac M il l ~; in
(iallipolis at (740) 441944 1 and Lesley Marrero in
Poult Plea.;ant nt (304) 6740 174. Member SIPC.

AT&amp;T is the offldlllwnAessiPOf'SC)r of Ohio 5tet1e ~
~ OSU to~ for~ news, 5J)edll Q!l(n.llld elduslve ~ tormt dt1M!:red lo ,w lliraiS ~

~~~117&gt;!\~M
••am..~~T31EMJm,

Sl

~

h -4 2Sll Ui08

•

..

4099l~

�~unba!J

PORTS
GALUPOliS - A tiCheclulo of upcoming
oo11ege and h91 8Chool wl1lty IPO'ting
cwenta llwOMng te rr'a from Oa
Inc!
Meigs COl.f1tlCS

Mwi.I1.~1B
Volleyball

Poca at Point Pion nt 6 p m
OVCS at Chesnpcnke 5 30 p m

Bv DAVE HARRIS

Wednrsdoy, OctoOOr 20
Volleyball
HaMan at Sl Joseph C
pm

6

t

OHIO TOURNEY
SCHEDULE
M2rull!Y,Jki.DlN!J..B
Dlvlalon II Volleyball
{10) Vmton County at (7) Me gs 6
pm
Dlvlalon IV Volleyball
(10) hanlon SJ 111 (7) Southern, 6
pm

JuminY.. ~IM!.Ll&amp;
0·2 Soc:c:er
(7) Gallla Academy at (2) Warren 6
pm

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Wellston shuts~
out Marauders
SPORTS CORRESPONOE.NT

llmdl!Y.~ 11
Volleyball
Point PleasaF't at W yne 6 p m
Hannan at Sherl'lllln 6 30 p n

Bl

!Cltimes -~entinel

PO.MI;ROY. Ohio
Wellston scored a pair of
earl) touchdo"' ns and
v. cnt on to defeat Meigs
21-0 m 1 VC football
act1on Frida' night at
Bob Roberts· Field. The
game could very v.ell be
the final contest played at
the field. as work is continumg on the new stadium at Meigs High
School. lronicall) it \\as
Wellston who opened the
field 60 years ago losing
12·0 to the Pomero)
Purple Panthers.
Wellston took the
opening kickoff and just

fh c plays Inter took the
lead "hen Ja) len Prnter
hooked up w1th Austtn
Qo;borne on a 55 ) ard
scoring pa s The p.tss
for the extrn points \.,.ere
no good. but the Golden
Rockets held the earl) 6
0 lead c~t the 9 40 mark uf
the fi11.t penod
A Marnudcr nw.take
led to the Rocket&lt;; 'iecond
&lt;;core. with Chrtsu:m
Muorage in punt formation for the :vtarauders,
the snap \\ent ovet l11s
head and Mugrage wn'&gt;
tackled at lm. own I 0
y~mllllle. hve playc; later
Osborne scored from a

Please see Meigs. 83

Dave Harris/photo

Me1gs' Zach Sayre (14) carries the ball dunng the f1rst half of Friday evening's TVC
Oh1o game against Wellston at Bob Roberts F1eld in Pomeroy, Oh1o.

Wednesday, October 20
D-2 Volleyball
(5) Waverly at (4) G11 a Academy 6

•

pm.
VC.Mclgs Winner at (2) W rren 6
pm

Ihii!I!W.. ~to~

D-4 Volleyball Sectional Finals
Fed Hock·B pre w nro
1 (3
Eastern 6pm

(5) South Ga a
Wobstor, 6 p m
ISJ·Southcrn
w ncr

at

(21

Waterford 6 p m
Sll.1lttd.IY.;0ctober.23

Eagles
rebound with
27-7 win
over East

0-3 Volleyball Sectional Final
(5) Rtvcr Val cy at (4) Tnl1'1bl 4 p m

Editors Note:
River Valle~ came up
short in its \\eek 8 Ohio
Valle~ Conference game
at Coal Ciro\ e on Frida)
evening.• falling by n
score of 52-6.
Complete information
about the Raiders game
was not a\ailable at press
ime and "'ill appec1r in
e Tue da) ediuon of

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPOATS@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Galbpolis Dail\
Tribune and 77w Dml\
Selllinel.
Mike Brace photo/Courtesy of GAHSsports.com

Gallia Academy's Austin W1lson runs for one of h1s s1x touchdowns dunng Fnday evenrng's SEOAL game
agamst Portsmouth at Memonal F1eld m Gallipolis, Oh1o.

Wilson, Blue Devils burn Ports.mouth, 63-20
BY STEVE EBERT
SPOf\TS CORRESPONDENT

Southern
falls to
Waterford
Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SH.AWl.EY MYDA

•

TR a NE COM

WATERI-ORD. Ohio
The
Southern
Tornadoes dropped a

T

V C

lf ocking
game
at

GAl.I .IPOLIS. Ohio In a gaml' reminiscent of
•1
professional Arena
l•ootball League contest.
the Ciallia Academy Rlue
De\ its scored early.
quickly. often, and seemingly at will m routing
Portsmouth 63-20 in
SEOAL
pia)
on
Memorial F1eld Frida)
evening.
GAHS (6-2. 3-l) scored
touchdo\\ ns on their first
even possc ...sion" m
moving out to a 49-14
lead after three quarters
before tuming the game
over to the underclass-

men. "'ho mounted t\\ o
scoring dnves of their
own m the final l\\elvc
minutes.
The Blue Devil&lt;&gt; took
an early 7 0 lead at the
8:03 mark of the first
quarter when Au'&gt;tin
Wilson put the tinbhin£
touches on a six pia) 45
) ard dri\ e '' ith a one) ard
burst up the middle "ith
the T) lcr Hannon k1ck.
splining the upright" Bt"
play \\ns a chumin • 24
'ard effort from ~emor
i'ullb&lt;~ck Jared Golden
from the PHS 48 to the
24!
It \\ ould t.tkc the
1roJnns (3 5. 2 3) less
than 90 seconds to

•

~,~. ~~.:t:~~ Wh1te Falcons soar
~v~~l~;~
~~I ·past South Gallia' 39-0
35 6.

Ramthun

Gray

•

Southern
(2-6) took
first po&lt;;session in
the game.
but turned
the
bnll
over on an
interception
b)
Water f ord's Billy
Cr 0 c k.

T

h
e
W II d c n 1 "
( 4-4) took udvanUtge of
the turnover, with a two
yard tou chdown run b)
Levi Porter at the H:50
mark of the opening
period . .
.
Waterlord ~!rove tnto
Southern lerntory for a
second time, but lJIIarterbnck Trevor I ang
threw an Interception to
Southern's Zac Beegle.
Southern coul d not cup-

Please see SHS, 83

Wahama clinches share of
TVC Hocking crown
BY BRYAN WALTERS
rfflA EAS MYDAILI'TB BUNE COM

MASON, \\.Ya.
They say defense wins
championsh1ps. Wahama
.
h h
sho\\ed, agam. w ) t at
statement holds so much
truth.
·1he White Falcons
limited visiting South
Galli a to just 87 yard~ of
total offense and posted
their fourth shutout of an
oppmH:nt this sea~on
during a 39-0 triumph
I riday night in a Week 8
1
gridiron mntchup at
Bachtel Stadium.
The ho"t Falcons (7-0.
7 0 'I VC Hocking) making their league
debut this fall
clinched at least a share
of the 2010 1VC
!locking Di\ is ion cham

•

pion..,JHp \\ ith t~e lopsided 'ictof). doing so m
a 'er) t) pical fash1on
this season.
\\aham.t. \\ hich has
not allO\\ ed .t single
point in O\ er 12 qu:u1ers
of pin). posted its third
conseculi\ e
shutout
\\ hile racking up 400
yards of total offcnse
against the Rebels (4 4 .
4-3). WBS
the !'\o. I
team ft om Class \in the
SSAC pia) oft ratinrc; the
last t\\0 wt•cl\s - has
now outsl'orcd I VC
Hocking opponents tim.
scasnn b) ll whoppmg
287 41 margin.
l'he White l·akons
who ha\ e been dll Ill de
pendent 1or sc\ era I ) c.u-;
ha\ en 't had the

Please see Rebels, 85

answer Wa) ne EHtns the ent1re Port~mouth
hauled in a 21 )ard ...cor- defense into the end zone
ing strike from quarter- as his second and third
back ~ 1ason Jnrdan set up effort-; re ulted in n II
b~
a 5R ) ard Kyle fvard run to pav• dirt
Sunpson kick off return to mcreasing the Aca,dem)
the GAHS 24 to begin the lead to 14-7 after one
dri\ c. The Nate ~ewton penod.
·1 aking up where the)
succel&gt;slul PAT knotted
left off. the Gallians held
the score at 7-7.
Once agmn the a~re - Portsmouth to ) et another
sn e De\ it
haa nn three and out. and took
an \\ er. and once again ju t se\ en play to negotispec tal team c. pia) ed a big ate the 44 ) ards to the end
p.1rt This ume Wilson zone \\ ith .t short \\ tlson
rctumed the TroJan kick ·burst from the l getting
o!T 32 )ards from the GA the job done Another
com ersion
16 to the 48: setting the Hannon
Blue &amp; \\ hite up in the expanded the lead to 21 7,
~hort field 7 play and 52
Portsmouth then taged
) ards later. QB Ethan
Please see Devils, 83
\1oore seemmgly took

SCIOTOVILLE. Ohio
\\hen you get
knocked off the horse,
you ha'\le
to get back
in the saddle.
Coming
off
its
worst performance
of the sea... on
last
Ky. ConnerY w e e k
aoainst

T~imble,
h
e
Eastern
football

t

e a m

t

returned to
its
winning ways
Friday
night after
posting a
27-7 \ ictor) O\ er ho't
Scioto\ ille East in a
8
gridiron
Week
matchup
in
Scioto
Count).
The \ i ttmg Eagles
(5-3) picked up their
fourth win in their lal&gt;t
fh e conte b and kept
the1r shm play off hopes
nliH· with the triumph.
handing the Tartans (35) their third consecutl\ e home loss in tlie
proces.... EHS also led
\\ 1re-to-wire in the nonconference matchup.
Eastern took a 7-0
lead in the first quarter
after a 23-)ard scoring
run by T) ler Hendrix at
the 7:27 mark, then
Bra\ den Pratt added a
one:) ard plunge '' ith
4:04 shO\\ing to gi\e
the guests a 14-0 edge
alter one quarter of
pl.t).
K) le Conner~ ga\ e
the gue:.h a comfortable 21-0 cushion after
a 91-yard jaunt to pa)·
dirt with II :37 showing
111 the ~cctmd quarte-r.
but the ho,ts countered
\\ ith a one-) ard scoring
run b) Justin Crager
ju!\t before the end of
halftime for a 21-7 conte.;t nt the break.
llendrix added hb
s~cond ~coring run of
the night at the 8:44
mark of the fourth quarter, campcring in from
Snrnh Hnwley/photo
South Gallta's Austin Combs (17) and Josh Cooper fi,c )ard-.. out to \Hap

(21) defend a pass m the end zone durrng Fnday's
TVC Hocktng game at Wahama

Please see Eagles. Bl

'

�Sunday, October 17,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

The Ohio Vallev Publishing Scoreboard - week 8 Football
R-Chad Small 3 run

Country Day 3
Lucasvtlle Valley 21 , Portsmouth W. 14 Tallmadge 28, Wadsworth 14
Cin. Oak Hills 35, UbcrtyTwp,J.akota E. Lyndhurst Brush 39, Parma Normandy Thompson Lodgement 29, Brookfield
pp
R
24
6
10
Friday's Box Scores
17
First Downs
10
Ctn. Shroder 47, Cm Hughes 24
Magnotta Sandy Valley 52, Bowerston Thornville Shendan 42, Dresden Tn·
Rushes-yards
45-240 38-190
Ctn. Turpin 17, Ctn. Walnut Hills 7
Conotton Valley 19
Valley 14
Wahama 39, South Gallia 0
64
12
Passing yards
Cln. Winton Woods 55, Milford 14
Malvern 37, Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 21 Tl'ltn Columbtan 48, Wtllard 22
SGallla
o o o o- o
Total yards
304
202
Ctn. W1throw 48, C1n Western Htlls 14
Manchester 48, FayetteVIlle· Perry 10
Tlpp Ctly Bethel41, Arcanum 14
Wahama
13 7 6 13 - 39
Comp-att-lnt
10.17.0 2·7-1
Ctn. Wyoming 55, Cin F1nneytown 20
Maple t!lts. 38, Canfteld 21
Tlpp Ctty Tippecanoe 40, Riverside
Fumbles lost
1
0
Ctrclcville
34,
Lancaster
Fatrfreld
Union
Manon
Elg1n
40,
Gallon
Northmor
0
Stebbtns 9
Scoring summary
Penalties-yards 6·28
5-37
21
Marion Pleasant 7, Caledonia R1ver Tel. Chnsttan 70, Lakeside Danbury 0
Firat Quarter
Tel. Rogers 40, Tot. Bow&amp;her 14
Ctrclevtlle Logan Elm 30, Bloom-Carroll Valley 6
W- Ayan lee 2 run (ktck blocked) 5:11
Individual Statistics
21
Marlins Ferry 13, St. Clatrsvllle 7, OT
Tol Scott 36, Tol. Woodward 22
W-Ayan lee 28 run (Tyler Kttchen
Rushing: PP-chris Blankenshtp 19· Clarksv•lle
Clrnton·Mass•e
49, Marysvtlle 34, Dublin Jerome 6
Tol. St. Francls 39, Tot. Start 20
kick) 2•26
116, JaWaan Wtlliams 22·100, Enc Washington C.H. 0
Mason 19, w. Chester Lakota W 12
Tot St. John's 40, Oregon Clay 7
Second Quarter
Roberto 3 20, Jorrod long 1-4.
Clayton Northmont 39, Kettering Maumee 38, Bowling Groen 0
Tot. Whitmer 21, Tol. Cent Cath. 20
W- EIIjah Honaker 17 pass from
A-Cole Starcher 23·131, Jeremy Fairmont7
McComb 40, Arlington 27
Tontogany otsego 45, Gibsonburg 0
Trenton Gibbs (Kttchen kiCk) 0.25 1
Lawrence 6·48, Dustin Dento 1·6, Cle. E. Tech 14, Clo. Hoy •2
McDonald 34, Sebnng McKtnley 0
Tronton Edgewood 34, Cin. NW 27
Third Quarter
Chad Small 5·5, Lance Casto 1·2, Cle. Glenville 53, Clo John Adams o
McGuffey Upper Scioto Valley 21, Trotwood·Madtson 18, Troy 0
W-Gibbs 7 run (kick failed) 8 22
Bobby Rymer 1.0, Luke Cortey 1·(·2).
Cle.John
Marshall38,
C~. Uncoln W. 0 DeGraff Riverstde 18
Uniontown Lake 29, Massillon Jackson
Fourth Quarter
Passing: PP-Eric Roberts 10·17.0 Cle. Rhodes 34, Clo. Collinwood 0
Modtna 35, Mayfield 7
6
W-Kitchen 24 pass from Gtbbs (run
64
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 52, B1dwell Medina Htghland 48, Barberton 26
U·bana 41, LOWJstown lndtan Lake 13
lal1ed) 10 38
A-Colo Starcher 2·7·1 12
R1ver Valley 6
Metamora Evergreen 23, Wauseon 7
Van Wert 3 I, St. Marys Memona! 7
W-Anthony Gnmm 5 run (Krtchen
Receiving: PP- Javtaan Wtll18ms 5· Coldwater 42, Mana Ste n Marlon Local Middletown 38, Fatrflekl 2
Vtenna Mathews 40, Cle. Hts. Lutheran
kick) 4'13
30, Layne Thompson 1-15, Brandon 21
Mrddletown Madison 23, Camden E 16
Toler 2·11, Toby Marttn 1·4, Chrts Collins Western Reserve 42, Ashland Preble Shawnee 21
Vncent Warren 17, Ch!lhcothe 13
SG
w
Crestv1ew 35
Mtllord Center Fau'banks 48, Rtdgeway W
Lafayette
Ridgewood
19,
Blankenship 1·4.
First Downs
6
18
A-Jeremy Lawrence 1·14, Kurt Cols. Afrlcentrlc 32, Cols South 13
R dgemoot 8
SJgarcreok Garaway 13
Rushes-yards
36-87
48·218
Schtndler H-2).
Cots Beechcroft 26, Cols Brookhaven Mmeral Ridge 46, Hanoverton United W Liberty-Salem 55, Jamestown
0
182
Passing yards
1o
37
Greenev~ew 7
Total yards
87
400
Gallla Academy 63,
Cols Ccntenntal27, Cols. East 8
Mrnerva 36, Belo1t W. Branch 7
W Unity Hilltop 28, Montpelier 6
().5.3
Comp-att-lnf
7-13.0
Portsmouth 20
Ools Grandview HIS. 55, Sugar Grove Mtnford 59, McDermott Sc10to NW 20
Wahama, W.Va 391 Crown Crty S.
Fumbles-lost
2·0
2.0
Portsmouth
7 7 0 6 - 20
Berne Union 0
Mrnster 26, Versailles 23
Ganra 0
Penalties-yards 5-21
6-45
Gallipolis
14 21 14 14 - 63
Cots. Independence 68, Cots. West 30
Mogadore 41 , Wtndham 22
Wapakoneta 17, Uma Shawnee 0
Cots Marian-Franklin 34, Cots. Mogadore Freid 17, Ravenna SE 14
Warren Champion 41, Newton Falls 14
Individual Statistics
Scoring summary
Eastmoor 27
Monroeville 56. Ashland Mapleton 26
Warren Hardtng 20, Massillon
Rushing: SG-Dalton Matney 8·25,
Firat Quarter
Cols Mtfflin 52, Cots Linden McKtnlay Morrow Little Mtami 13, Wtlmtngton 6
Washrngton 6
Jacob White 13-24, Danny Matney g. GA-Austin Wilson 1 run (Tyler
12
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 60, Crestltne Warren Howland 27, Ntles McKtnley 0
18, Justin Northup 2·16, John Johnson Hannon kick) 8:03
Cots. Northland 34, Cots. Whetstone 6 21
Warren JFK 28, Louisville AqUinas 20
2·11 , Josh Cooper 1· 1, Cory Haner 1·(• P-Wayne Evans 21 pass from Mason Cols. Ready 35, Waynesfield-Goshen 0 Mt. Gilead 20, Delaware Buckeye Valley Waterford 35, Racine Southern 6
8).
Cols. Upper Arlington 72, Galloway 14, OT
Waynesville 55, Day. Northridge 12
Jordan (Nate NewtOI) &lt;ick) 6:25
W-Trenton Gtbbs 12·71, Anthony GA-Ethan Moore 11 run (Hannon
Westland 0
MI. Orab Western Brown 28, Batavta Wellston 21, Pomeroy Metgs 0
Gnmm 11·56. Ryan Lee 10·53, Isaac kick) 2·26
Cots Walnut Rtdge 27, Cols. Bnggs 20 Amelia 14
Wellsvtlle 21, Leetonia 11
Lee 4-29, Crandale Neal5· 17, Clay Van
Second Quarter
Cols. Watterson 31 , Cots. DeSales 7
Mt.. Vernon 28, Pataskala Watkins 1 Wostervtlle S. 56, Westerville N. 0
Meter 3-4, Zack Wamsley 1·2, Josh GA-Wtlson 1 run (Hannon kick) 7 49
Columbta Statton Columb1a 47, Medtna Memorial 21
Wheelersburg 42, Waverly 7
Haddox 1·1, Tyler Kitchen 1·(-15).
Hebron
P-Collln Staker 26 pass from Jordan
Buckeye 14
N Lewisburg Triad 27, Mechantcsburg Whltehaii-Yearhng
62,
Pllsslng: SG-Cory Haner D-3·2 0, (Newton kick) 5:50
Columbiana 40, New Mtddletown 7
Lakewood 6
Danny Matney D-2·1 0.
Spnng. 14
N. Olmsted 34, Mtddleburg Hts. Whitehouse Anthony Wayne 51 ,
GA-W1Ison 9 run (Hannon kick} 4:27
W-Trenton Gibbs 7·13·0 182
Sylvania Northview 15
Columbiana Crestview 47, N. Uma S. Midpar1&lt; 24
GA-W1Ison 39 run (Hannon kick)
Receiving: SG- Nono
Range 7
N. Ridgeville 54, Oberl•n Flrelands 21
Williamsburg 19, BataVIa Clermont NE
0•279
W-Tyler Kitchen 5·113, Ryan Lee 1·
Third Quarter
Columbus Grove 49, Pauld ng 30
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 42, Lucas 7
52, EliJah Honaker 1·17
21
V/lntersvtlle lndl8n Creek 33, Cadiz
GA-Wilson 10 run (Hannon kick) 7.16 Convoy Crestv1ew 36, Spencerville 14
Copley 23, Green 13
N. Royalton 41 , Parma Hts. Valley J;arnson Cent. 6
GA-Wilson 67 pass from Moore
Wellston 21, Meigs 0
Cormng Mtllor 23, Stewart Federal Forge 20
Woods! eld
Monroe
Cent.
21 ,
(Hannon kick) 4 ·30
1
Wellston
14 0 0 7 0
Hocktng 6
Nelsonv. !e-Yor1&lt; 40, McArthur VInton Barnesville 6
Fourth Quarter
Ma1gs
0000-0
P-Jonathan Royster22 pass from
Cortland LakeviOW 42, Leavittsburg County 6
Wooster 28, Mansfield Sr. 20
LaBrae 20
New Albany 41 , Sunbury Btg Walnut 0 Wooster
Tnway
41 ,
Zoarvtlle
Jordan (Newton kick) 9·48
Scoring summary
Cary-Rawson 76, Vanlue 32
New Bremen 28, Rockford Parkway 21 Tuscarawas Valley 19
GA-Juslln 8a ley 39 run (Hannon
First Quarter
Coshocton 28, Uhnchsvllle Claymont New Concord John Glenn 7, ZanesVIlle Worthington Kilbourne 62, Grove City
ktck) 6:29
W-Aushn Osborne 55 pass from
20
MaysVIlle 6
Cent. Crossing 28
GA-Nick Clagg 64 run (Louie
Jayton Prater (pass Ia led) 9 40
• Engstran kick) 3:10
CoVIngton 28, Ansonia 21
New Lebanon D1xte 30, Milton-Un on 6 Xenta 34, Fa rborn 13
W-Osborne 1 run (Osborne run) 5·19
Creston Norwayne 21, Dalton 12
New Matamoras Frontier 49, Valley Youngs. Austintown-Filch 48, Massman
Fourth Quartet'
p
Crooksville 20. New Lexington 0
Wetzel, W.Va. 20
Perry 10
GA
W-Brad Mtller 2 run (Stove Carper
Cuyahoga Falls CVCA 42, Can. Ttmken New Richmond 21, Goshen 7
Youngs. Boardman 41 , Can. Glenoak
19
Ftrst Downs
9
kick) t :09
Newbury 41 , Richmond His. 12
13
23
Rushes-yards
27-88
39·382
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 35, ere. North Hardtn, Ky. 37, Ctn HtiiS Chnsttan Youngs. Mooney 23, Akr. SVSMI 6
120
128
Pass1ng yards
w
M
Benedictine 7
Academy 29
Youngs. Ursufine 24, Steubenvtile 3
Total yards
208
510
First Downs
11
7
Cuyahoga Hts 34, Gates Mtlls Hawken Northwood 57, To!. Ottawa Hills 19
Zanesvtlle 39,logan 10
10.20-1 6-7.0
Comp-att·int
49·143 37-73
Rushes-yards
7
Oak Hill 40, WiUow Wood Symmes Zanesville Rosecrans 31 , Grove City
1-0
Fumbles·lost
3-0
97
115
Passing yards
Chnstian 7
Day Carroll 18, Day. Chaminade- Valley 13
4-25
Penalties-yards 4·20
Total yards
240
188
Julienne 14
Olmsted Falls 31 , Berea 7
Zanesville W. Muskmgum
39,
10.21·1
Comp-att-int
9·13-1
Day. Jefferson 44, Troy Chnstian 42
Ontano 26, Bucyrus 15
McConnelsvtlle Morgan 10
Individual Statistics
Fumbles-lost
2·1
0·0
, Orange 33, Wickliffe 14
Rushing: P-Mason Jordan 7-3, Day. Oakwood 51 , Monroe 34
Penalties-yards 8·55
1·5
WEST VIRGINIA
Wayne Evans 1-(·4), Cameron Cosby Day. Thurgood Marshall 58, Day. Orrvtlle 35, Mansfteld Madison 14
Orwell Grand Valley 41 , Andover
1·0. Jonathan Royster 5·15, Brandon Belmont 0
lndlvlduol Stotlstlca
BoiiDJro St John, Ohio 26, Paden City
Defiance Tlnore G7, Oef•anco Ayersvtlle Pymatumng Valley 7
Wodebrrok 4-4, Andrew Gulley 9·70.
Rushing: W- Austin Osborne 14·71, GA-Austtn Wilson 15·139, Nick Clagg 0
20, 30T
Ottawa·Giandorf 35, Lima Bath 28
Jaylen Prater 10·33, Trenton JayjOhn 6· 2-84, Justin Batley 1·39, Jared Golden Delaware Hayes 28, H1D1ard Bradley 24 Pandora-Gilboa 45, Van Buren 14
Bluefield 24, Wt f18111 Flemtng, Va. 8
171 Brad Mtller 7·17, Timmy Ervin 2·5. 8·54, Brandon Taylor 5-27, Ethan Delphos St. John's 49, Ft. Recovery 0
Boonsboro, Md 40 Ber1&lt;eley Springs 3
Parma 24, Garfield Hts. 16
M-Jeffery Roush 20.74, Zach Sayre Moore 4·39, Cody Russell1·(·2), Tjaye Delta 42, Swanton 14
Pataskala Licking Hts 52, Millersport 0 Braxton County 28, Tyler Consolidated
5-38, Charlie Barrett 4-3, Dillon Boyer McCalla 3·2
PembeMIIe Eastwood 75, B oomdale 0
Dover 66, Byesville Meadowbrook 7
1·2, Cameron Bolin 6·(·21), Chnsttan Passing: P-Mason Jordan 10.20.1 Dubltn Scioto 13, Powell Olentangy Elmwood 0
Bridgeport 27, Grafton 6
Ml.lgrage 1·(·25)
Uberty 3
Pen'nsula Woodridge 38, Rootstown 21 Capital 40, Spring Valley 14
120.
Passing: W-Jaylcn Prater 9-13-1 97. GA-Ethan Moore 6-6-0 128, Tjaye E Liverpool 52. Oak Glen. W Va. 12
Clay County 34, Sherman 7
Perrysburg 21 , Holland Springfield 2
~meron Boltn 9·19-1 105, D11Jon McCalla 0.1.0 o.
Clay-Battelle 34. Cameron 0
Phtlo 21 , Warsaw RIYOr Vtew 7
Eaton 35, Franklin 0
Boyer 1-2-o 10
CraiQ County. Va 57, Montcalm 0
PICkenngton Cent. 64, Newark 0
Receiving: P- Wap1e Evans 3-29, Edon 28, Oregon Strltch 20
E. Liverpool, Oh10 32, Oak Glen 12
Receiving: W-Austin Osborne 4·80, Coll1n Staker 2-51 , Jcnathan Royster 3· Elida 65, Cefina 21
Pickerington N. 28 Lancaster 21
Austin Cratg 2·14, Mtchael Grey 1· 15, 25, L J. Adams 2·15.
East Fairmont 27, Preston 6
Euchd 19, Cle. His. 6
P1qua 20, Sidney 0
Ernest Brown 1· 12, Teddy Compston 1· GA-Oalton Jarrell1-15, Austin Wilson Fatrport Harbor Hardtng 42, Burton Plam C1ty Jonathan Alder 49, Day. Fairmont Sen or 28, Elkins 21
Fayetteville 29, Mount Hope 14
6.
Ponltz Tech. 14
Berkshire 12
3-90, Tyler Eastman 2·23.
Frankfort 35, Petersburg 13
~Zach Sayre 4-41 , Colton Stewart 2·
Fa1rv1ew 38, Bay Village Bay 14
Poland Sem•nary 34, Youngs. East 14
Greenbner East 27, James Monroe 6
43, Dillon Boyer 1-10, Cameron Bolin 1·
Findlay 24, Uma Sr 14
Ravenna 40, Akr. Coventry 6
OHIO
Ftndlay Ubarty-Benton 55, Data Hardtn Rayland Buckeye 40, Belmont Un10n Greenbner West 58, WebSter County 0
10.
Hurricane 46, Princeton 13
Ada 56, Lafayette Allen E. o
Northern 0
Local 33
Independence 20. L1berty Raletgh 8
Waterford 35, Southern 6
Akr Eliot 27, Akr. Garfield 21, OT
Frankfort Adena 40, Wtlllamsport Reading 28, Cin. Manemont 21
Southern
0 6 0 0 5
Akr. Firestone 63, Akr. North 0
Westfall 7
Reedsville Eastern 27, Portsmouth JeHerson 35, Hedgesville 21
Keyser 28, Shady Spnng 21
Waterford
7 7 7 14 - 35
Akr. Hoban 14, Chardon NDCL 0
Fredericktown 48, Uttca 20
Sctotoville 7
Richfield Revere 19, Lodt Cloverfeaf14 Lewis County 21, Phtlip Barbour 11
Akr. Manchester 68, Navarre Fatrless 0 Fremont Ross 21, Napoleon 14, OT
Uberty Hamson 46, South Hamson 36
Scoring summary
Fremont St. Joseph 38, N. Balttmore 6 Rtchmond Edison 24, Bellaire 21
Albany Alexander 28, Athens 27
•
First Quarter
Alliance Marlington 35, Can. South 18
Ft. Loram1e 40, Day. Chnstian 14
Richwood N. Umon 48, Cardtngton- Logan 14, Herbert Hoover 7
Magnolia 35, Robert C. Byrd 7
W-Levi Porter 2 run (Lev•
Amanda·Ciearcreek 35, Ashville Teays Gahanna Cots. Academy 50, Cots. Lincoln 13
Man 54, Gilbert 0
MCCutcheon kick) 8:50
Valley 12
Bexley 7
R1ttman 44, Smtthvtlle 37
Marttnsburg 52. Pari&lt; Vtew-Stert.ng, Va.
Second Quarter
Rocky R1ver 50, Vermtlion 21
Amherst Steele 28, Brecksville· Gahanna Lincoln 38, Grove City 14
W-Trevor Lang 1 run (McCutcheon
BroadVIew Hts. 14
Gabon 54, Fostoria 33
Rocky River Lutheran W 14, Lorain 3
Matewan 50, Burch 6
Anna 35, St. Henry 7
Gallipolts Gallta 63, Portsmouth 20
Clearv1ew 6
kick) 10:09
Meadow Bndge 44, Summers County 0
S-John Gray 4 pass from Danny
Waynedate
45, Gart•eld HIS Trinity 25, Parma Hts. Holy Salem 27, Ltsbon Beaver 7
Apple
Creek
Moorefield 49, East Hardy 19
Doylestown Ch1ppewa 14
Nomo 14
Salineville Southern 49, L.owellvl11e 7
Ramthun (converSion laded) :39
Morgantown 44, Brooke 20
Third Quarter
'
Archbold 35, Hamler Patrick Henry 14
Garrettsvl e Garfield 34, Streetsboro 6 Sandusky 21, Marion Hardtng 7
Musselman 35, Hampshire 0
Atttca Seneca E. 34, Kansas Lakota 7
Genoa Area 41, Mtllbury Lake 0
Sandusky Per1&lt;tns 20, Clyde 17, OT
W-Porter 2 run (McCutchoon kick)
Atwater Waterloo 24, E. Can 14
G!ousterTnmblo 60, Belpre 7
SarahsVIlle Shenandoah 37, Hannibal Front1er, Oh10 49. Valley Wetzel 20
6:30
N1cholaS County 62, Oak Hnl 7
Fourth Quarter
Gnadenhutten lnd•an Valley 23, Rtver 13
Aurora 37, Perry 7
Parkersburg 53, Cabell Midland 35
Avon 35, Gratton Midview 0
Masst !on Tuslaw 21
Shadyside 28, Toronto 8
W-Chad Offenborger 46 pass from
Pend eton County 33, Tucker County 6
Avon Lake 6, Westla&lt;e o, OT
Greenfield McClain 28, Washmgton Shelby 49, Norwalk 7
Lang (McCutcheon kick) 10:41
Perry Traditional Academy, Pa. 39, A
Bainbridge Paint Valey 13, Chillicothe C.H. Mtam• Trace 21
Sherwood Fairview 56, Edgerton 13
W-Matt West 34 run (McCutcheon •
Greenville 44, Jsy Co., lnd 0
Sidney Lehman 36, Delphos Jefferson Wheeling Central 28
Hunttngton 12
kid&lt;) 1:51
Poca 34, Winfield 29
Greenwich S. Cent 54, Plymouth 7
15
Batavia 28, Bethel-Tate 21
Pocahontas County 46, Tygarts Valley 6
Be!latre St. John 26, Paden C1ty, W.Va. Groveport-MadiSOn 41 , Reynoldsburg Solon 45, Macedonia Nordonia 0
s
w
Ravenswood 27, Po1nt Pleasant 24
21
Southeastern 16, Ptketon 14
20. 30T
15
6
Ftrst Downs
Belletonta•ne 21, Sp•tng. Kenton Ridge Hamilton 42, Ctn Sycamore 7
Sparta Highland 62, Morral R1dgedale Rtpley 24, SissonVIlle 23
24·37
48-205
Rushes-yards
Ritchte County 42, Doddridge County 22
12
Hamilton Ross 34, Norwood 0
28
165
102
Passtng yards
R1ver V1ew 50, Midland Tratl 14
Bellevue 21, Upper Sandusky 17
Havtland Wayne Trace 27, Antwerp 21
Spring. Cath. Cent. 55, Spnng. NE 13
139
370
Total yards
Bellvrlle Clear Fork 48, Ashland 33
Heath 27 Granville 17
Spring. Greenan 35, Bellefontaine RiverSide 41, Nttro 3
8-20-3 8-15-1
Comp-att-int
Roane County 54, Calhoun County 6
Berlin Center Western Reserve 35, N Hicksville 63, Holgate 14
BenJamin Logan 27
0·0
1·0
Fumbles-lost
Scott 20, Mount Vtew 6
Jackson Jackson-MiHon 13
Hilltard Darby 35, Thomas Worthington Spring. NW 28, St. Paris Graham 14
10-105
Peoalttes-yards 9·71
Bndgeport 42, Beallsville 0
0
Spring. Shawnee 35, New Carlisle South Char1eston 56, St. Albans 7
St Marys 41. Gilmer County 18
Brooklyn 28, Oberlin 7
Hilliard Davtdson 27, Dublin Coffman 3 Tecumseh 21
Individual Statistics
Tug Valley 26, Wtlliamson 14
Hubbard 35, Youngs Liberty 0
Springboro 49, Miamisburg 42
Rushing: S-Tylor Barton 7-37, Enc Brunswick 36, Strongsville 33
Untverstty 48, John Marshall 14
Hudson 14, Twtnsburg 11
Spnngfield 34, Beavercreek 10
Buzzard 2·12, Danny Ramthun 8·7, Bryan 16, Ltberty Center 6
Bucyrus Wynford 25, New Washtngton Huron 32, Oak Harbor 26
St. Bernard Roger Bacon 18, Hamtllon Van 34, Hannan 6
Jesse Cope 7-(·19).
Wahama 39, Crown City S. Gallia, Ohio 0
Independence 25, Middlefield Cardtnal Badtn 8
W-Levl Porter 25·84, Matt West 8·66, Buckeye Cent 13
Washtngton 39, East Rock1ngham, Va. S
17
Stow-Munroe Falls 26, Elyria 19
Levi McCutcheon 11-45, Trevor Lang 3· Caldwell 34, Beverfy Ft. Frye 7
Cambndgo 24, New Philadelphia 14
Ironton 37, Cots Hartley 16
Strasburg-Franklin 27, Newcomerstown 7 Wayne 20, Tolsla 12
2.
Westside 58, Wyomtng East 28
Ironton Rock H11135, S. Point 28
Struthers 62, Conneaut 7
Paaslng: s-oanny Ramthun 8-20.3 Campbell Memonal31, Gtrard 21
Can McKinley 28, N. Can. Hoover 17
Jackson 33, Marietta 10
Sycamore Mohawk 53, Tlfftn Calvert 0 Wtrt County 13, Wit!iamstown 7
102.
Woodrow Wtlson 24, Hunttngton 20
Canal Winchester 17, Cots. Hamtlton Joromesv•lle Hrllsdalc 38, W. Salem Sylvania SouthVIew 34, Rossford 12
W-Trevor Lang 8·15·1 165
NW 7
Receiving: S-John Gray ~8. Tyler Twp. 14
Barton 1-6, Trenton Deem 1 -6, lac Canal Wtnchester Harvest Prep 28, W. Johnstown-Monroe 45, Danville 14
Jefferson 21
Kent Roosevelt 56, Akr. Springfield 35
Beegle 1.0, Jesse Cope 1.0.
W--Lev• McCutcheon 3·63, Chad Carey 68, Bascom Hopewell-Loudon Kenton 58, Oeftance 6
Kettenng Alter 31, Middletown Fenwick
Offenberger 2·62, Colton Brown 1·24, 14
carrollton 32, canal Fulton Northwest 28
Levi Porter 1-14, Hunter Munjas 1·9.
31
Kings Mtlls l&lt;lngs 49, W Carrollton 14
Casstown Ml8ml E. 42, w. Alexandna LaGrange Keystone 28, Shelheld
Ravenswood 27,
Twin Valley S 28
Brookside 6
Point Pleasant 24 OT
Castal18 Margaretta 44, M1lan Edtson Lakewood 20, Cuyahoga Falls 14
PPHS
0 21 0 0 3 - 24
22
Lebanon 28, Vandalia Butler 24
R~S
13 0 0 8 6 - 27
Cedarvtlle 40, S. Charleston SE 13
Leos Creek E. Clinton 42, Blanchester
Centerburg 27, Johnstown Northridge 7 12
Scoring summary
Chagnn Falls 28, Chesterland W. lelpstc 56, Arcadta 0
Firat Quarter
Geauga o
Lewrs Center Olcntangy 27, Westerville
R-Cole Starcher 60 run (John
Chagrin Falls Kenston 55, Painesvtlle Cent. 20
Soritchf•eld kid&lt;)
NO\\ you can eastly
Harvey 17
Lewis Center Olentangy Orange 41 •
A- Jeremy Lawrence 37 run (kick
sec und purchn~e the
Chesapeake
35,
Proctorville
Fairland
Cols.
Franklin
Hts
14
tailed)
photogtophs thnt fentured ~ou or
12
Lewtsburg Tri·County N. 42, New Paris
Second Quarter
someone .&gt;ou lo..no~ in our Sports
Chtlllcothe Zane Trace 31, Chtllicothe Nat1onal Trail12
PP-Brandon Toler 6 pass from Enc
Unioto 14
Lexington 41 , Millersburg W Holmes 7
Sed1on! Wilh ea:.). online access
Roberts (Jerrod Long ktck)
Ctn. Anderson 24, Cin. Glen Este 7
Lima Perry 53, Fostoria St Wendehn 28
to all llf' our photos {even those
PP-Chrts Blankenship 69 run (Long
Cln. Clark Montessori 50, Hamilton Lisbon David Anderson 24, E. Palesttne
that didn't mnke the prtnt edition).
kid{)
"'" w.mydailytrlbune.com .&gt; ou can order the photos m the
NewMtaml7
7
PP-Toler 5 pass from Roberts (Long
Crn. Country Day 22, Lockland 14
London 13, H1llsboro 7
kick)
:.iz.e:. that ) ou "ant right from our
Cln.lndtan Ht1155, N. Bend Taylor 14
Lorain Admiral King 26, WarrensVIlle
Fourth Quarter
\\ehsitc.
Ctn.
La
Salle
31,
Cin.
Moeller
21
His.
14
R-Dusun Derlto 6 run (Lance Casto
Cm.
Mt.
Healthy
35
OxfOrd
Talawanda
Loudonville
20,
Howard
E
Knox
0
pass from Starcher)
c85allipolls Ii)atlp m::nbu nc
20
LouiSVIlle 44, Alll:lnce 14
Overtime
Cln N. College Htl 25, Cln. Summit LovciMd 21, Hamson 13
PP -Jcrrod Long 30 FG

PREP )i'&lt;&gt;&lt;rl UALL

•

I

'

•

�Sunday, October 17,

2010

sunbcll' ~~~~r~.Srntmcl • Page B3

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Devils

SHS

from Page BJ

from l,agc BJ
I

their most impressive.:
retaliation of the game.
moving 80 yards in on ly 6
plays: the Collin Staker
reception from Jordan at
the GAHS 26 closing the
.p to .2.1~14.
Cnach Edd) could he
heard exhor1inf:l his troops
on the ljidclllte telling
them , "I want tn be uP.
two score.., at the half. '
His Devils did him one
better in very short order.
Wilson returned the
kick off all the way to the
Portsmouth 30 with 5·40
remaining. and a 13 y,trd
Taylor run, a 9 )ard
Moore keeper. and a
Wil&lt;&gt;on 9 yard burst wllh
Hannon
sul-ce.,.,full)
kickin~ the extra pomt to
make rt 28-14.
Then follm\Jnr- a Blue
Devil defensive stop, the
Academy took the b.IIJ on
their ovvn 19 yard line
~' ith unly 1·22 remainirtg
111 the half and executed n
flawle'&gt;s '&gt;Coring march.
takmg only :55 to punch
in the fifth touchdown of
the half with Wilson ram
bling the final 39 yards to
ake it 35-14 at the mter
tission.
An) adjustment&lt;; the
Trojans attempted to
make to stem the De\ rl
touchdov.n fe&lt;&gt;t \\ ent for
naught n GAHS took the
second halt k1ck oft right
do\\ n the field m onl\
eight pia) s to up the margin to 42-14 and the rout
was on. Moore had .t nice
26 yard QB keeper to the
Portsmouth I4 to get the
Dev its into the Red Zone,
and then Wilson negotiated the final ten yard'S.
Before pulling the
Devil starters for the
e\ ening. Moore hooked
up with Wilson on a mcc
catch and run good for 67
yards and tt wa" time to
let the undercln~srnen get
.;;omc PT (playing time).
Portsmouth would ndd
a final score with 9.48 lett

pas!&gt;ing for I02 yards,
one touchdown, and
three interceptions.
T) ler Barton had
c;even carrie~ for 37
) ards. Eric Buzzard
carrt.!d the ball twice
for 12 ) ardc;, Ramthun
had eight carries for;
se,en yard'i, and Jesse
Cope had even carries
tor : llC~"ative I9 vards.
0
•
"
(,r,Jy h.td
five catches'',
for 68 yards, BartOl\·~
nnd 'I renton Deem each
had one catch for six- 4
yards. aod Beegle and 7
Cope each had one "'
catch for no gain.
Wnterford had 370 i
yards of total offense: ••
Porter led Waterford, ~
with 25 carries for 84"
yards, followed by West
with eight carnes for 66 ·:
~ ard .
McCutcheon ·1
vv ith 1I carriec; for 45~ '
)Urd,, and Lang v.ith ':
three curries for tvvo.l

itallzc on the turnover
Waterford added lh
second score ot the
p.:ame when I ane run 10
from one ) ard out J'he
I cvi McCutcheon kick
gave Waterford the 14..0
lead
I he Southern offen .. e
took
advantage of
Waterford penult ic to
score jtht before the
half. Danny Ramthun
connected with John
Gra) on a four yt~rd
touchdown
pass.
Southern wuled 14 6 ut
the half.
Waterford dominated
the Sl:Oring 10 the second half, With Porter
adding a tvvo )&lt;~rd run
in the third quarter
"~
Chad
Offenbergcr y&lt;~rdo;.
l ang wa~ 8-15 in the
scored on a 46 yard
pass from Lang at the air for 165 yards,.one, . 4
begmmng of the fourth touch dO\\ n. and one -.
Mike Brace photo/Courtesy of GAHSsports.com
Gall a Academy's Ethan Moore carries the ball as he avoids a Portsmouth defend- quarter, and Matt West interception.:
scored on n 34 yard run Offenberger had two'·,
er during Friday's SEOAL game at Memonal F1eld 1n Gall pols. Ohto.
near the end of the catches for 62 yards and :,!
in the game when the yardage GA ll S had 617 there."
a c.,core. McCutcheon "')
quarter.
'I rojans convt:rted a 4th and the Troj.ms )51'
In other SEOAL action
had three catche~ for 63 •'
Southern
had
134
Wil'ion again had the fridn) evening. Jackson
and 5 at the GAHS 22;
yard"
of
total
offense
yards.
··~
Jordan connecting with hot hand for the Blue irnpnl\ed to 4.{) in league
Southern
will
host
and
commtttcd
three
Jonathan Royster for the De'il" "ith a lot of help play \\ith a 33-10\\111 at
touchdown wtth the ktck trom hrc; friends. sconng l\1,trictta cO 5) Warren turnO\ers rn the game. frimble next Friday in a ,;
for the extra" failing.
on touchdown nrm; of I () 3) upset Chillicothe (3- Ramthun '' ts 8 20 TVC Hocking game. - ~1
ljaye McCalla led the I. 9. 39. 10 and 67 )ftrd" 1) 7 13. and Logan lost a --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--·;
JV's onto Memonal fteld He also acl:ounted for ~ 18 non conference game at
•
rushinr yards on 16 car- •
for the final mne mmutes &lt;~11 purpo!&gt;c y..rds tor the Zanewille W-1 0.
ries. "htle Crager
and it didn't take the game
Next up rs the final regadded 31 ) ards on eight. I
)Oungsters long to ~core
Blue Devtl mentor
l.tr cason road trip to
from Page Ill
tote&lt;;. Crager \\as also' • I
themselve&lt;;. Justin Bailey Mike l·ddy. commentrno \\ ,, hmrton Count) to
2 of-16 passing for 29
tacked on the eighth Blue on lw. emor back smd. "I take on the Warren Local
\-Urds, mcludin2 one
De\ il c;core of the night don't care wh.lt anybody Warriors. \\hen a'&gt;ked up the corlle~t at '27-7
Auqin.·. ·
on,, 39 yard run vv ith 8.29 sa\ s No 7 (Wri&lt;&gt;On) is the about the upcoming
Conner)
led
the interception.
to go. and then Nick bc·st player m this leaoue g.unc:.... Coach Edd) Eagles vv 1tb 159 ruo;hmg Loop hauled in one pass. • •
•clago put the icing on the He pro'te5 rt C\ety \\eek. remarked. "A5 far as ) ards on rune carn~'i. for 26 yards ana··
cake eludmg pll \\Ottld-be Win or lose, he\ n bir mo\ ing on. it's just what "hile Hendrix added 85 Bel\ en I had one catch. ,
:.;
Troj,m tacklers on a 64 pia) guy. He doe., It we've done nil year. We yards on I 2 totes. Pratt for three ) ards.
btc.,tern has now won
y,ml nrn to the house \\ith oflen~ivcl). dcfen'&gt;ivcly. don't \\OO)' a vvhole lot '"as 2-of-6 pass in • for
traight against _1
GAllS. foreign exchange and .:;pectal team~. li e'~ about e\erybodyelse. We 77 )'anls. thrO\\ in!j one t \\ o
'&gt;tudent Louie Eng~tran unbelievable!"
just \\Orry about us. interception. Connery Sciotoville Last.
· ,·
"hery one ol thc'&gt;c We've uot to do what we had one ct~tt:h for 52
The Eagles return to'·}
converting the extra point
kick for the final 63-20 kid'&gt; e&lt;tmed thi.:; 'tctory. It do to the best of our abih- ) ards and Hendrix TVC Hocking action· •
juc;t so happened thdt t) and then see what hap- hauled in one pass fur Friday when they travel' '\
margin of victory.
1 he two teams com- ( \u'&gt;tillJ wa&lt;; the 'll) pen~."
to Stewart for a Week 9. ·.;
25 yards
bined for 1008 ) ards total holdrn!' the bnll "hen rt
Game time next Frida)
Cody Belveal paced matchup with Federal
offer~se. adding rushing.
cros.scd the •oal line evening in Vincent is. 7:30 the lartan~ with 33 Hocking at 7:30 p.m.
.
paso.;mg
and
return · E' erybody elc;e got tum p.m.

Eagles

...

Sarah Hawley/photo

Meigs quarterback Cameron Bolin throws the ball during the second half of
Friday's game at Bob Roberts F1eld in Pomeroy, Ohio.

Meigs
from l,age BI
yard out with 5·19 left rn
the first pcnod. Osborne
added the extr.t pornts
and Wellston "as on top
14-0.
After
that.
that
Maraudel' defense stiffened and ) ard&lt;&gt; ''ere hard
to come b). not onl) for
Well ston but for the
Maroon and Gold also.
The Marauders drove
to the Golden Rocket two
yard line in the sewnd
period, but the Rockets
able to hold on
ns when Cameron
in's pass to Colton
Stewart fell incomplete
at the 3·34 mark of the
tir~t half.
Vrllon Boyer rctumed
the second hall kicknff
23 yard for Meigs to the
Metgs 42. the Marauders
then picking up yardage
on the ground drme to
the Wellston fh e. and
had a first and goal. But
BoJin \HIS hit hard and

coughed up the football
nnd Jake Byler recovered
for Wellston to end the
threat.
On the next series,
Meig!&gt; drove to the
Wello;ton 19. but the
Golden Rocket defense
st1lfcned and held once
again on downs.
!VIeigs held Well ton
late 111 the conte&lt;&gt;t w1th
Jeffe
oush and Bohn ·
tackling Prater at the one
) ard line on fourth and
goal. Mcig'S then turned
the ball over on dm\ n
when Roush vv as stopped
on a fourth and inche~ for
no g.tin at the Meigs 11
yard line vv ith juc;t 2·45
lett in the contest.
'11tree phi) s later, Brad
Miller ..cored the games
linal touchdown with
I :09 renutimng in the
contest, Steve Carper
added the extra point'&gt; for
the 21-0 Well stun ''in.
With the los~ Meigs
drops to 3-5 overall and
0 3 in the Oh10 Division.
Wellston is no\\ 3-5 and
1-2 in the conference
Meigs leads the nil urne
series '' ith a 23-17-1

murk.
"J'he kids pla)cd really
h.ml." a disuppointt;ll
Mike C'han~..ey satd after
the contest "Our ext·cu .
tion on a couple of pl.t) s
rcnll) Jed to costl) error....
We hme two \\ceks lett.
and \\ e "tll strck togcth
er and pin\ h,1rd the rec;t
ot the \\ .t) ...
Rou&lt;;h
led
the
Marauders on the gro.md
with 74 vard m 20 c.tr
ric~: Znch Sa)'re ndded
38 tn fi, e tnes. Bolin "as
I0 ot 19 pas mg wrth ,IJl
mterccptton tor 105
) nrds; Zach ~n) re "ao;,
one for two tor 10. S.t) rc
caught four pa ses for 41
)'ar&lt;ls and Colton StC\\ nrt
two lor 43
Oshor ne led \Vdl&lt;;ton
with 71 ):trdli in 14 car
ncs; Prater added 33 in
10 tries. Prater was nine
uf 13 in the .ur "1th an
interceptiOn for 97 ) ards.
Osborne caught fom for
80 and Austin C'rnrg I\\ o
tor 17
Meig&lt;&gt; "iII tra\ el to
McArthur next \\Cek to
pia) \ inton Count).

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�Pomeroy~

Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Gallia Academy's Peyton Adkins, left, leads the pack
out of the starting gate dunng Saturday's SEOAL CC
championships in Centenary, Ohio.
Bryan Walters/photos

Pictured above are members of the 2010 AII-SEOAL boys cross country team. Standing in front, from left, are
Wes Cochran (Warren) M tchell Grose (Manetta), Reed Fobes (Marietta). Matt Watts (Gallia Academy) and
Greyson Cantley (Warren). Stand ng in back are Alex Wesel (Marietta), Brad Ullman (Warren), Derrick
Kettenng (Warren), Gage-Freeman (Warren) and Sam Garrison ·(Marietta).

Gallia Academy's Matt Watts breaks away from the
pack during Saturday's SEOAL CC championships in
Centenary, Ohio.

2010 SEOAL CC championships
Team scores/lndhidual results
GIRLS
P1ctured above are members of the 201 0 AII·SEOAL girls cross country team. Standing 1n front, from left, are
Peyton Adkms (Gallia Academy). Halle Richards (Warren), Erica Dawson (Marietta), Mckenna Warner (Gallia
Academy) and Emily Garrison (Manetta). Standing in back are Megan Blevtns (Warren), Julie Fobes (Marietta),
Audra Metzler (Chillicothe), Samantha Barnes (Gallia Academy) and Colleen Miracle (Marietta).

Warriors, Lady Tigers repeat
as SEOAL CC champions
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALT£ S MYOA LY'"R BUNE COM

CE~T~NARY.

Ohio
Something
old.
Something new. A whole
bunch of orange and
even more blue.
Those were the main
story lines to come away
from
the
20 l 0
Southeastern
Ohio
Athletic League cross
country championships
held Saturday afternoon
at Gallla Academy lhgh
School m Gallin County.
The Manetta girl..; and
Warren boys repeated as
team champion" in the
ftrst-ever league meet
held on GABS soil, and
all 20 All-SEOAL pertanners - both boys and
girls - d~nned &lt;;chool
colors of either blue or
orange.
GAHS junior Peyton
Adklll" captured her
tlurd consecutive llldividual crown in the gtrls
race. while la&lt;;t year's
male
runner-up
Warren
junior
Wes
Cochran
brought
home his first SEOAL
individual t1tle.
The Warriors - with a
team score of 30 pomts
won its third straight
SE:OAL team title, fending
off
runner~up
Marietta (35) by !Jvc
potnt~. Logan was third
w1th
a
102, while
Jackson (II (i), Galli a
Academy (130) and
Chillicothe ( 157) rounded uut the SIX team totals.
Portsmouth had only
four nmnero.; m the event
and did not qualify for a
team score.
Cochran. the first of
five Ali-SEOAL per
ltHmer; fo1 the Warriors,
posted a winning time of
l(i:l9.4
fnorethan.15
seconds faster than the
rest ot the 63-partkipan~
field. Mitchell Grose ot
Marietta was the overall

mnncr up with a time of
16:36.1.
Cochran noted afterwards that it wa~ a day
that he - and his teammates would nevet
forget.
"1t's a pFetty nice feelmg. especially after
being second last year.
1t 's a rough course that
takes a lot of energy out
of you. but it still feels
pretty good to be the
champion.''
Cochran
sa1d. ''l will say this
though. it feels e\ en better to be league championo,; with my teammates."
Warren coach Rich
Hoffman was also ecstatic for his program. particularly in the fact that it
was not a given that the
.Warriors \\ould pull off
the three-peat
"Overall, we were 'ery
pleased "ith how e\·crythinb went. We knew it
was going to be close.
and it was. but our top
six again stepped it up
just like they have all
season long,'' !IotTman
said. "!v1arietta had me
sweatmg early on and 1
wasn't sure how it was
going to turn out there,
especiallj on a new
course, but the kids took
e\ erything in stride and
it worked out for us."
Reed Fobes ( 16:51.9)
of ~1arietta was third,
while
Matt
Watts
( 16:59.8)
of Gal Ita
Academy and Greyson
Cantley ( 17:08.9) or
Warren rounded out the
top·li\ e finishe-;.
Last year's champion
Alex
\Vesel
of
l\1ariettr/ was sixth
with a time of 17:22.5.
followed hy the Warren
trio of Brad Ullman
( 17:34.3).
Dernck
Kettering ( 17:35.5) and
Gage Freeman ( 17:3R.3 ).
Sam
Garrison
of'
l\l,trictta \vas the final
All-SEOAL competitor

in the bovs race after fonners, Leeper also
placing lOth with a mark noted that the Lady
of 17:39.5.
Tigers were about as
On the girls side of solid on Saturday as they
things, Adkins claimed could h:l\e been.
her third straight SEOAL
·'Gallia Academy has
title with a winning time really given us all we
of llJ:O l.l - tin1shing could handle and more
39 seconds ahead of the over the last few vears.
rest of the 54-competitor so to get out of here on
field. Halle Richards of their home course with
Warren was the overall the title is a solid accomrunner-up with a time of plishment for our kids,''
19:40.1.
Leeper said. 'Today was
Adkms · and her sister all about pack running
- fom1er GABS stand- for us, having only 65
out Lauren Adkins seconds between runner
have won the last six
No. 1 and runne '\o. 5.
SEOAL girls titles conIn any group of cross
secutively. with e:~~:h
owning three crowns on countr) girls. that's a
nice margin to be comtheir prep resumes.
But despite the indi- petitive '~1th."
Erica
Dawson
of
vidual glory, the younger
Adkins~ was a little dis- Marietta was third overcouraged not to come all with a time of
away with the team tro- 20: I0.5. \vhile Mckenna
phy in her own backyard. Warner (20: 16.1) of
She, however, quickly Gallia Academv and
noted that it was still a Emily Garrison (i0:31.2)
special moment for her ,of Marietta rounded out
and that the better team the top-five.
Megan
Blevins
won on Saturday.
··We've been training (20.35.5) of Warren was
hard all season and we s1xth,
Julie
Fobes
wanted that team title. (:W-41.8) of MHS placed
but Marietta just came seventh
and
Audra
up a I ittle bit better than Metzler (21 :02.6) of
us today. It's a little dis- Chillicothe
finished
appointing. but they def- eighth.
Sam
Barnes
initely earned it,'' Adkins (2~1 :06.4) of GAHS and'
said. "It never gets old Colleen
Miracle
winning the individual (21:10.6) of Marietta
title, but this one has a rounded out the final t\vo
little extra meaning to it i\11-SEOAL spots.
since it was at home. It
Gallia Academy was
was really nice to finally
second as a team with 40
w1~1 one at home."
points. while Warren
~larietta coach Dale
(53) and Chillicothe
Leept:r was just as
( 103) rounded out the
praiseful of the GAHS
standings.
program in discussing four-team
Jackson.
Po11smouth
and
his
squad's
second
Logan
all
had
less
than
straight SHOAL crown,
especially
after
a five runners and did not
tiebreaker decided last qualify for a team score.
Complete results of the
year's
championship
bet ween
those
two 20 I0 Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League cross
schools.
· But with five girls fin- country championships
ishing in the top-11 and are available on the web
four All-SEOAL per- at www.baumspage.com

I. Marietta (36): 3. Erica Dawson 20:10, 5. Emily
Gamson 20:31. 7. Julie fobes ~0:41. 10. Colleen
Miracle 21: 10. 11. Lizzie Frazier 21:15. 16. Abby
Kete !'Sen 22: 19. 21. Amelia Cain 23:51.
2. Gallia Academy (40): l Peyton Adkins 19:01,
4. Mckenna Warner 20:16, 9. Samantha Barnes
21 :06, 12. l'vladison Holley 21:36. 14. Hannah Watts
22:07, Elizabeth Holley 23:22, 25. Taylor Queen
24:50.
.
3. WatTeu (53): 2. Halle Richards 19:40, 6. Megan
Blevins 20:35. 13. Cassandra Thompson 21:54. 15.
Kalli Ross 22: 16, 17 Annie Kubala 22:24. Lana
Sydenstricker 23:39. 22. Amber Ullman 2A: 17.
4. ChiJlicothe (I 03): 8. Audra Metzler 21:02 . .20.
Alyssa Mathis 23:48. 38. Emm) King 27:00. 44.
Hannah 1'\elson 27:21, 50. Shelb) Oliver 30:52.
Allyson Shoemaker 34:23.
Jackson (no score): 36. Jessica Ridgeway 26·45,
41. Kimberly Woollet 27:16. 45. Nicole Dake
27:'26. 48. Halev Shank' 27:50.
Portsmouth (no score): 32. Shae Cartee 26:07.49.
Ashlyn Loveless 30:49.
Logan (no score): 33. Sydne) Hunter 26:23. 35.
Mikala Rooker 26:40. 40. Katie Driggs 27: II.

BOYS
I. WaiTen (30): I. Wes Cochran 16:19.5. Grey-;on
Cantley 17:08, 7. Brad C)lman 17:34. 8. DeiTick
Kettering 17:35, 9. Gage freeman 17:38. 11.
Marcus Harding 17:59, d Jacob freeman 18:46.
2. Marietta (35): :!. Mitchell Grose 16:36. 3. Reed
Fobes 16:51,6.AlexWesell7:22, IO.SamGarrison
17:39, 14. Nick Hannuksela 18:37. 15. Avery
Phillips 18:39, 16. Nathan Diehl 18:40.
3. Logan U02): 18. Seth Vennillinn 18:57. 19.
Nic Fidler 18:59. 20. Scott Burgh) 19:03. 25.
Kenton Lawson 19:2 I. 28. Colin Brooks llJ:25, 29.
Josh VanBibber I 9:25. 31. Rob Meyer 19:45.
4. Jackson ( 116): 12. Ian Kilgour 18:10. 13.
Logan Mullins 18:30. 37. Matthe\\ Collins 20:16.
38.~Erick Morven 20:20. 4'2. Adam Neer 20:36. 46.
Levi E:dine .21:18. 49. Justin Molihan 21:31.
5. GalliaAcademy (130): 4 . .\latt Wntts 16:59. 35.
Quenton tvkKinnbs 20:14, 36. Timm) Warner
20:15, 53. Casey Lawrence 22:06, 54. Logan
Greenlee 22:13, 55. Ben Bush 22:43. 57. Patrick
Brown 23:38.
6. Chillicothe ( 157): 21. Ben Huller 19:10. 32.
Seth McGuire 19:51. 39 -\rink Parker 20:22. 60.
Brandon.Bonar 26:05, 61. ~at~ Dresbach 26:36.
Portsmouth (no score' 22 .. Kyle Johnson 19: II.
26. Zack Kammler 19:21. 47. Alex Richardson
21:19.59.Justin \iesser25:18.

fI

�.-----~----------------~~---------~

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

sunbm' ~mtl'S ..Scntmcl • Page B5

Jan Haddoxlphoto

Point Pleasants Tylun Campbell runs w1th the ball during Friday's non-league
game at No 1 Ravenswood

Big Blacks fall to No.1
Ravenswood in OT, 27-24
BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPOflTS CORR SPOND NT

R \ V b N S W 0 0 D.
W.Va.
In a gam~: tlwt
111itel) hvcd up to its
lhng, the se\enth
anked Pomt Plcas.mt
Big Blach and the top
R.n ens wood
ranked
Red De' il~ needed
overtime hetore a '' m
ner could be deter
mined And '"hen the
dust had settled. the
home standing Red
De' ifs pulled out an
exciting 27 24 'H. !Of)
0\er the locals
The game pro" 1dcd a
'1rtual roller co,tster
ride for fanos of both
schoolc; ns f1rst one
team and then the other
would bring their fol
lowers to the heights of
blis!&gt; onl) to be fol
lowed b) feelings of
agon) when the pendu
lum c;wung the other
direction. ''1 his ''as a
great ht"h 'i~hool foot
:lll game bemeen l\\O
ry good footb.tll
tms," satd ~ cre~tf.tll
Da' e Darst after the
game. "I think thl'; 1s
what high school football is all about I'hts IS
'"h) \\e play the game.
Both te.un~ pl.tyed ·•
fantastiC football game
and I kno\\ our fans
really prov1ded a park
for our gu) s.'' added
Darst.
But. in the end. the
Big 131aeks managed
onl) a 30 yard Jcrrod
Long field goal in the
overtime period. "hile
the Red De' i Is got a 3
yard touchdown run
from big Chad Smalls
to cla1m the win. It
'"asn 't just the end that
brought heartbreak to
the Big Blacks and the1r
fans. but the "ay the
end came.
After playing to a 21
I score .titer four
quarter&lt;;, the teams
• found themc;chec; facing 0\ cnimc. Point gut
the ball ftrst and \\hen
faced with a iourth
clown nnd three trom
the Rnvcnswood 13
\ ard line. the local!".
~lecided to go for the
field goal. I ong's kkk
was true and it then was
the job ot the red Hnd
black defenc;e. to try to
win the game for the
Big Blacks.
The
Red
De' ils
picked up nllle yards on
their first three pl.t) os
and were lookmg c~t a
fourth do\\n and one
&gt;ard to go from the
eleven ) clfd Ii ne. The
home team lined up for
the crucial fourth down
play. but the Btg Black&lt;;
fortunes were about to
ke n very had tut n.
,
onung
otf an injul)
•

t1meout, the locals were Hve
pht)S
I mer,
I lagged for h:n ing too Roberts
and
Toler
nutn) men on the ftcld honked up c~gain, this
'' hil!IJ re ulted in a first time on a 5 yard touchdo" n for the Red down pl~ty that sent the
Dcvib. Two
plaj~ Big Blacks in the locker
later. the Big Blacks room with a 21-1 ~ lead.
''ere flagged again, this
It stuycd that \VH)
t1mc for encroachment until the tlurd pia) of
'' hich gave Coach Dick the fourth quarter \\hen
Sturm's boys a second Duc;t1n Dento capped a
and go,ll from the three 26 )ard Ravens\\ood
) .trd Ime. It took the drhe \\ilh c1 fi,e yard
Red Devils just one plunge tnto the end
play to cash in ''hen the zone. Starcher' pd s to
264
pound Smalls l ance Casto tied the
bulled his way into the game and et up the
end zone to brmg an bizarre. excJting fuush.
end to the exhilarating Lawrence set up the
contest.
touchdown with a fine
• "I'he) caught a few punt return that took the
breaks in the game. but ball to the Po111t 26) ard
the bottom line l'i that line.
thC)' got 11 done in overPmnt had opportuni
time and we didn't.'' ties to pul some dissaid
Darst. "Both tance bet\\een themteams had the same selves and the .Jackson
oppnrtunity to get the County boy~:.. but " con"'in, but unfortunately troversial
I umble
for us. Ravenswood brought an end to one
\\as JUSt a little more up dri'e
deep
into
to the task than \\e Ravenswood territor).
\\ere. But. J am very That came on the B1g
proud of our kids. We Blacks· firM pos e5sion
played \\ell and we of the second half" hen
showed a lot of charac- the) put together a 14
ter. 1 here is no quit in pia) dri\ e that took
thts football team." some ~e\ en n1mute'i off
concluded Dar... t.
the
clock. Chri
Ra\ens\\OOd got out Blankenship took
ot the blocks ver) handoff
and
wa
quickly. building an stopped near the Red
early l\\O-touchdown De,il 20 )ard line. His
lead and the game took for\\ ard progress '"as
on the appearance of a stopped and the pht)
rout. Fleet quarterback probabl) should June
Cole Starcher raced 60 been bh)\\ n dead. But.
yards for a touchdown when it "asn't. a late
on the game..,· first pia). fumnle re~ovcred by
and then on their next Ra' ens\\ ood ga' e the
senes. the Devils got a home team a fir&lt;;t down
3 7 ) ard touchdown run at their own 35 ) ard
from Jeremy Lawrence. line.
John Scntchfield made
~tarchcr emerged as
one of t\\O PAT'~ and the games· lending
JUSt hke that 1t was 13- ru her "ith 131 yards
0. At this point. the on 23 carnes. But. the
game '"as just four min- H1g Bl.tcks •wd t\\o
Lites old.
ru~hers reach the I00
Tite B1g Blacks punt- )ard
plateau
\\ith
ed on the1r fir t t\\O Blanken'ship'
116
posses ions, but then ) ards leading the "a).
put together an impres- JaWaan
Williams
sl\ e 13-pla). 60 yard
ptcked up I 00 ) ards on
dri\ e capped by Eric the
ground.
Quarterback
Eric
Robert-: 6 yard touch
do\\ n pac;c; to Brandon Roberts was I 0 of 17
Toler. I ong's
e1tra ft1r 64 yards through the
air. lie
thte\\
t\\ o
point made,it 13-7.
After
forcing
a touchdo\\ n pa~-;es, both
Brandon
Raven~wood punt. the to
t'okr.
local~ needed just one Willinnf..s l.ttched nnto 5
pl.ty to change the \.'Om- Roberts passes
plexion of the game.
Defensn el&gt;. the Big
Chris Blankenship took Blacks "ere led b) Trey
a handoff, made a 'nice LIVingston who had II
cut back again~t the tackles. Jason Stouffer
grain. and raced 69 recorded I0 tackle.,,
yard for the touch- '"hile l'oler. DonO\ an
down Long's
extra Po\\ ell. 1 ob) Martin.
point ga\e the B1g and Casey Hogg all had
Bl.1cks a 14-13 lead
9 tops.
Game two of th1s
After an exchange of
punts. Point's Anthon) three game ro.tcl w lllg
Darst ga\e his team takes the Big Blacks to
great field po~it1on ~ladison next J·nda)
when he intercepted a \vhen the) take on Scott
Swrcher aerial and II igh School in a
returned it to the Red Cardinal Confercn~t'
Devil IS )arc.l line. contest.

Tim Tucker/photo

The Wahama White Falcons huddle up after Fnday's game ayamst South Gallia to
celebrate the v1ctory. The wm clinched a share of the TVC Hockmg tJtle for the
Wh1te Falcons with one league game remammg.

Rebels
from Page Bl
chance h1 win a league
champion&lt;;hip since they
were members of the
Little
Kanawha
Conference. For WHS
coach Ed Cromie). now
in his 16th season.
Friday was long O\ erdue
for th1s program and this
commumty.
"It·., our first venture
in a long time into a
league, so to come in
and be as succe~sful as
\\C ha\e been tluc; )Cans
really, reall) satisfying,"
Cromie) said
And the defense, as
ha~.; been the case since
the opening game at
trimble, wa!&gt; agmn a
maJor part of thi~ latest
'ictory.
Wahama finished the
night plus-3 in turnover
differential and held the
Rebel-; to JUSt six first
downs and zero pa::;sing
) ards in the contest
1-;aac Lee had two of the
interceptions .L one
"h1ch led to se' en
point... in the opening
penod - "hile D.J .
Gibbs ended the Rebels·
final dri\e of the night
'" ith a late pick in the
founh
It's that l-and of production - rather it be
the fir'it unit or the second unit - that has
made \\ ahama 's de.fense
so ~olid th1s year.
··our defen'i\ e output
is something that ''e've
learncd to c~lllnt on. I'm
prett) pleased with ''hat
''e ' ve done there.''
Cromie) said. "We ·ve
played some different
people and extended our
depth a little bit in the
last fe\\ week~ because
those kids ha\e ...tepped
up and pia) ed like we
thought the) cou Id."
After forcmg SGHS to
punt on the opening
dri' e of the game.
\\ ahama took O\ er po
ses •on at ns O\\n 27)ard line \\ith e\en
nunutec; left in the fir.,t
quarter. Six pia) s and 73
) ards Inter. \VIIS had 1ts
first lead of the night at
6-0 after a I\\O-vard mn
b) R) an Lee at "the 5: II

mark.
Isaac Lee ·s first interception came on the
enc;uing dnve, which
gave the White Falcons
posses&lt;.JOn at their own
35 with 3: 15 left in the
opening canto. Two
pla)S and 35 yardc; later,
Ryan Lee added h1s sec
ond scoring run after a
28 yard jaunt at 2:26
made it a 13-0 contest.
Late in the first half,
Wahama su~ce sfully
gambled on a 4th-and-9
Situation ''hen Elijah
Honaker hauled Ill a 17yard paso; from Trenton
G1bbs to gi\e the hosts a
20-0 ad .. antage . WHS
CO\ered 7 3 \ ards in ix
plays on the coring
drhe that ended with 25
second~
remmnmg
before the half.
\Vahama was plus-2 in
tumoverl-i at the half and
held a commanding 21 o54 ad' ant age in total
varus of offense. SGHS
had just t\\O tirst do\\ ns
at the intermtssion. compared to eight b) lhe
White Falcons.
WHS took the second
half
kickoff
and
marched 63 yard&lt;. to
paydtrt. as Gtbbs capped
the nine-pia) dme at the
8:22 mark after a se\ en) ard run on 4th-and goal
made 1t a 26-0 conte t.
The Falcons then \\Cnt
on a 12-pla). 4q ) ard
scoring dn\e between
the thtrd and fourth
qunner; that resulted 111
a 32-0 ed"e, a~ Gtbb:.
found 1\ ler Kitchen
with ;r 24-yard scoring
pa&lt;&gt;s at the I0:38 mark or
the founh.
,\nthon\
Grimm
added the· final score of
the night with a fi\eyard run. cupping a ninepia). 66-) ard drh cat the
4 : 13 mark tor ,, 39-0
lead.
The While falcon
\\ere as balanced offensively as the) \\ere
defensi\ el). churning
out 218 ru hmg ) ani on
48 carrie and another
182 yards on 7-of-13
pa sing. The Rebels
\\ ho had thetr t\\ o-game
\\inning streak c;napped
- mu!&gt;lercd onl) 87
mshing yards on 36 totes
and went 0-for-5 pa.,sing, which induded
three interception ....

\\ ahama had 18 first
do\\ n'S in the contest,
three times as man) as
the guests SGHS was
flagged fi\ e timec; for 21
) ardc;, while WHS wac;
penalized six times for
45 yards.
Gibbs led the White
Falcons w1th 71 rushing
)ards on 12 carries. followed by Grimm with
56 &gt;ardc; on II attempts.
Ryan and Isaac Lee also
had respective rushing
totals of 53 and 29
)ards.
G1bb
finished the
night 7-of- I' passing for
182 )ards and t\\O TDc;.
Kitchen hauled in a
game-high fi' e passes
for 113 )nrds.
Dalton Matney led the
Rebels with 25 rushing
yards on eight carrie .
follo\\ed b) Jacob White
"ith 24 &gt;ards on 13
totes. Danny Matney and
Justin Northup also
added 18 and 16 rushing
yards. respectively.
Cor) Haner was 0-for3 passmg with two interceptions. while Dann)
Matne) "as 0-for-2
passing wtth one pick.
The
only
thing
bet\\een Wahama and an
outnght TVC Hocking
utle is Miller. "hich is
ttl! (\\ o weeks a\\ ay.
The \\ hite Falcons "ill
host Hannan on Friday
in .t non-conference
mntchup of Ma~on
Count) program&lt;&gt;.
C'romlev noted that the
falcons ~ cannot get
wrapped up in the TVC
Hocking cha~c thi~
week. There are more
important things to focus
on.
"\\ e ah\ a) s work to
get better at thing .... You
always ha' e mbtake ...
that ) ou nee-d to correct
during an) ball game.
That's \\hat "e'll focus
on this \\eek.," Cromie)
said. "We're not going to
worry about finishing
off the league right no"
because "e ha\ e a 'Cf)
Important non-league
game to get read) for."
South Gallia - another first-' ear team in the
T\ C Hocking - "ill
make it league and
home finale next week
\vhcn it host:, Waterford.
Both contesh will kicklift' at 7:30 p.m.

•

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Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

UNIVE lzSITY OF l~IO Gl~ANl)E ATHLETICS

RedStorm soccer defeats Cedarville RedStorm JV-basketball to a
have a unique opener
By M ARK W ILLIAMS

SPECL4L TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL

unassisted goal. It was
the first of what turned
out to be n huge gnmc for
Hewitt-Hsher. lie totaled
two g(jals and one ass1st
in leading the ReoStom1
past
their
former
American
Miocust
Conference foe.
Rio would up the score
to 3·0 less than a minute
Iuter when sophomore
forward Scott Bibby
found the back of the net.
Sophomore
forward
Richard lsberner \\as
credited with an assist on
the pia).
Cedan ille (9-5) would
cut the deficit to 3-2 \\ ith
back-to-bad• goals in the
64th and 71 st minutes
rec;pectively.
Rio would tack on two
more goals · before the
final gun. Lopes scored

in 84th minute on an
assist by Hew itt-1 isher
and Hewitt-foi.,hcr cln.,~d
out the scoring in the
gsth minute w1th the
assist going to senior
midficlder
Dylan
Williams.
out--;hot
Rio
Cedarville. 25·6 lor the
game and held a· 12..2
advantage in shots on
goal.
Sophomore goalkeeper
Jonathan Viscosi did not
record a save for the
RedStorm
while
Cedarville nct-minder
Kc\ in Bcndc1 stopped
seven R10 .tttempts.
Rio continue" it'&gt; current road swing Wtth a
Mid-South Conference
tilt on S,tturday versus
Georgetown
College.
Kickofi IS set lor 6 p m.

our guys ready ~cause · ~
um,erstty as a whole.
"In talking to Coach we have a Jot of young
Shoemak.e1. they started a players."
"We want them to
RIO GRANDE. Ohio pro~ram from actually
I he University of Rio hav1ng a camp, because enjoy the day. I don't
Grande mcn'1&gt; junior var- they had a national team wanl to s~1y take some ,1
sity basketball S4Ultd will and it (the island) hnd pressure off. but it is an ~
open the season October been destroyed by a vol- exhibition setting, it's not ·,
23, but the opponent is cano. When he started a situation that a lot of .
telling me the story, I jayvee programs get," ,j
not a traditional one.
The RedStorm JV team definitely wanted to be ArrowoO&lt;I added. ''Jt will
will square off \\ ith a get involved and the be a good experience. we
group of young men from more and more we should have a pretty good "
the island of Mont!&gt;errat. thought' about it. we crowd so it gets things
1tp-off i" &lt;&gt;et for 6 p m. thought it would be a off on the right note and
mside the Ne\\ t 0 'er great win·\\ 111 tor our hopefully we can contin- ·'
ja) vee program, for ue to flow with that.
Arena.
Monl'-ierrat IS a British Montserrat and for the We're looking to just get
terrttory located in the umversit),'' Arrowood out and pia) hard. cut 1
1 eeward Islands, which said. "I think wtll be a down on turnovers and
i&lt;&gt; n part of n chain of great day and a great execute our system, •
"e're exc1ted about it.''
for
C\ eryone
1slands in the Canbbcan event
Arrowood says he
uwolved."
Sen
This game wlll be a doesn't know a lot about •
The Volcanics, as the
Volcanics.
but
basketball team is called. part of a busy tour for the the
that
will believes that that they
look part in a camp thi&lt;&gt; Volcanic~
summer hosted by Ohio- mclude a game versus will be a 'ery athletic
Chmtmn team and good test for his '•
Chillicothe
Athletic Ohio
,,
Director and former head University on l•riuay group.
''All I've heard is that '
coa~h at Paint Valley
night. u ~ame versus
on they definitely have a
lligh Sehoul coach, Dave Ohio-Chillicothe
few guys that can jump ...,
Sunda)
as
well
as
a
tour
Shoemaker.
B Y MARK WILLIAMS
Shoemaker selected a of both Ohio State and out of the gym,'.
SPECIAL TO THE TIMES.SENTINEL
national team from the West Virginia University. Arro\\Ood said. "They're
"The fact that the going to be excited to '
group of campers and 11
RIO GRANDE. Ohio
t'&gt; thts group that will Cniversity of Rio Grande play on a college campus J
- The University of Rio
Of
pin) the RedStorm JV as is going to be lll\Oivcd m front of. hopefully a )
Grande
RedStorm
a part of their tour '' ith th1s. ,,s well as orne prett)' decent crowd. ~
women's
basketball
of the prenuer unhersi They·,e got some talent- •
through the region
team has been picked to receiving 69 points. some respect nnd be able
Montserrat has not had t1es in this area, 1 thmk ed players. from what I
finish 6th in the Mid- including one first-place to mo' e up thnt li t:·
an) organized ba'\ketball this bodes well for us md understand the) have a
Georgetown College since the mid- I 990's.
South
Conference vote. The Patriots are the
for the direction we're point guard who has '
Coaches' Poll released two-time reigning MSC recei\ed nine first-place
1 he ISland has an trying to go," ArrO\\OOd dream'i of playing col- )
votes and is the fa\ orite acti\e -.olcano that has sa1d.
Toumament champions.
lege basketball at some ·•
on Thursday.
to
"in the M1d South caused
Lindsey Wilson is
Arrowood discus ed le\ el. The coach -.eems to ·
Rio Grande received
considerable
45 points in the voting. third in the preseason Conference in 2010-11. damage to a good portion \\hat he hopes to see thmk it could be an
Coaches
were
not poll with 67 points. Georgetown rcce1ved 81 of the island. One of the from his team on opering NAIA Je,el or a (~CAA) ;
•Division II level. so
allowed to vote for their Jncluding the final first points from the confer- ways the government has mght.
ence
coaches.
indudmg
they're going to have '
"It's
also
a
gpeat
vote.
place
helped in the rebuilding
0\1.:11 team.
MSC
newcomer all but one first-place process is to get the chil - chance for our team to some athletic players.
Rio Grande head
coach David Smalley b Shawnee State is fourth vote.
dren involved in sports get on the floor, it's• an The coach said basket- '
The figers have won and
the
Montserrat exhibition settin~ and ball J.Q. right now isn't '
alright with where his \Vith 53 points and
basketball also we come 111. as their strong suit. so we· re ..,
team is predil·tcd to tin- Georgctmvn College is or shared se\ en t)l the Vnlcanics
MSC'
rc~ular
last
nine
ja)vee, \\C arc n little btl probably g~)ing to be out- .
team b a part of that.
ish. "Top to bottom the lifth \Vith 48 points.
season
tttles.
athletically,
different. we have three matched
Volcanics
are
The
Following
Rio
strength of this league is
Pikeville Georgeto\\ n won the made up of 12 players games that following maybe height-wi.;e and '
just
phenomenal," Grnnde,
week so this is going to &lt;&gt;peed. but I think it will
Smalley said.
.. I he College (36) is picked to l\1SC Tournament last with four alternate&lt;;.
Rio Grande jumor var- be a good chance to get be a good contest for our
level of play in the :Vlid- finish seventh while St. season after finishing
to o;Jty
conch
R) an our bugs out... Arro\\Ood guys.''
South Conference super- Catharine (23), UVA~ second
There will be no ..
Campbeils\
ille
dunng
aid. ''It's a chance to see
Arrowood
ees
this
as a
sedes my expectations, I Wise (16) and WVU
tremendous opportunity ourselves agamst some ,tdmis ion charge for t.
had my eyes opened up Tech (13) round out the the regular season.
"You
can
take for his program and the prett) good athletes. get game.
(last season) to the fact poll.
Georgeto\\
n
College.
1
Rio Grande finished
that this is one of the
premier NAIA Division the 2009-10 campaign think in most people's
1 leagues in the country with a 16-15 overall mind was obviou&lt;&gt;ly the
and it shows year-in and record and went 7-7 in No. I team." French
the
Mid-South said. "Then you thrO\\
year-out.''
in the next four. fh e. &lt;;tx.
"I thought we did Conference.
sometimes
seven. )OU
some nice things last
The RedStorm will
year and we have every- tip-off
the
season, can thrms, them in. shutthe supporb perfor- •
bod) back." Smalley November 6 at 6 p.m. fie them up nnd come
Bv MARK WILLIAMS
out with an~ of them
mance-dri ven athletics 1
added. "The bad thing versus Sinclair College.
SPEC A.. TO THE T '.!ES·SENTINEL
'' hile defining expectais, all the other teams
The
Mid-South from t'' o to stx or se\ en.
It
"ill
be
interesting.
the
tions and standards that ~
have everybody back: Conference regular scaKANSAS. l\Io. -The
very.
'er)
league
ts
drive
successful teams :
nobody really lost any- ~on
tips-off
on
Univer..,ity of Rio Grande
anJ athletics depart- :'
thmg. We snuck up on December 16 with the good. Vl'ry b:tlnnccd is among 103 NAIA
ments.
·
some peor.tc last year. MSC 'l(mrnament set for after George to\\ n and Institutions to receive a
Institutions were mea- r
but I don t think that's March 4-6 in Frankfort. it's been proven that just five-star rating on the
because vou' rc at the
sured based on a demon- ·
going to happen this Ky.
bottom tlie )Car before NAIA's new Champions
strated
commitment to '
year becau~e l think we
doesn't mean that ) ou of Character Scorecard.
Champions
of Character .,
made some people stand
ReoSTORM MEN
To be con~idered for
can't
get
up
near
the
and
eamed
point'
in each ,
up and look at us and I
the de ignation an instiPICKED 8TH IN MSC
top."
of
the
following
cate- .1
think we're going to
HOOPS POLL
Campbellsville is pro- tution has to score a min- student-nthlete that i gorie : character training.
have to be hitting on all
jected to iinish second in imum of 60 points on this being recrUited b) a I the conduct in competition ..•
cylinders. we're going to
Rio
RIO GRA~DE. Ohio the conference accord- scoring S) stem.
at
the at:ademtc focus. charac- .
have to stay healthy. but -The Univer... it} of Rio
Grande
ch1eved
69 programs
Uni' er&lt;.it)
of
Rio ter recognitton and char- :;
l think we've got the cal- Grande RedStorm men·., ing to the preseason poll. point .
promotion. 'l
iber of team where we basketball program has The Tiger recei\ed 67
Ken
French.
Rio Grande. "I think that's acter
can create some issues. been tabbed to finish 8th points. Campbellc;\ ille Grande head men·~ bas- one of the things that Institutions earned point...•
won the confercn\.:e last
ba ed on exceptional stu
• I'm o.k. with where we
ketball coach and liaison makes Rio \ef) pecinl. dent-athlete
in
the
~lid-South sea on '' ith a
12-2
grade point ..
il
is
the
qua
lit)
of
the
sware, bein~ six out of 10, Conference
to the NAIA·s Champion
.\ten's league mark.'
3\ erages and b) obtain- •
dent-athletes
that
''
e
that's ~1ves us some Basketball
Coache!l-'
St. Catharine College of Character lnitiati\ e, ha\e and that' character- ing zero eJections during ,
motivation and maybe Poll, which was released
is
third in the poll w1th talked about what the " ise." French '\aid. "We competition throughout
some drive to get better, on Thur:-Oa).
58 points, including the Champions of Character ha' e a lot of dtfferent the coun.c of the academbut I also know and
Scorecard is. "lt'!lo a
Rio Grande received final lirst-pl.tce vote.
•
understand the brutal 23 points in the voting of
scorecard that's kept athletes in each program ic )CUT.
Uni\ers1ty
of
the
that
are
very
high-charFi'e
Star
Awnrd
recipi.1
traveling and playing the league's coaches.
Cumberland~
an!) throughout the year and acter kids. now I'm nL)t ents \\111 be recognized •
Thursday/Saturday kills Coaches
were
not Pike' illc College each what ) uu do is. ) ou enter s:l\ ing that C\ en IClllll ts llll the NAJA Champion~
a team like us."
information into the
''That's a tough turn- allowed to vote for their received '57 points frnm computer system. at the full of angt•ls. -1 undcr- of Character website. and •J
team.
the coaches' to lie for
recci\e a special web J
~tand that. "e :-till ha\ e
arouno, Thursday to own
Rio Grande head fourth. while I inti cv NAJA in regard to what our fair share of little 'banner and certificate
Saturday,'' Smalley :;aid. coach
French does Wilson College is pro )nu're doing Champion' things that happen on noting
the
honor. •
Campbellsville is the not putKen
Character-\\i-;e,''
a
lot
of stock in jected to finish st;.;th of
Pre ident-..•
athletics '
ca.mp~ts .. but never an)
MSC preseason favorite
French
said.
"It'~
e'ief)45 points.
thtng of the nl.ljor \an- &lt;hrectors and conference •
in 2010-11. The Tigers the preseason polh and \\ ith
WVU
Tech (31) is thing from sportsman- et)."
he
believes
his
team
will
commis ioner.., ,It award
received 80
voting
ship to how man) people
"It peaks \Oiumes to. \\inning colleges. uni,.erpoints, including eight be better in 2010-11. picked to fmio;h just you had ejected to how
of the I 0 first-place "To me it (the poll) ahead of Rio Grande the) do ncademicall} and not onl) to our student- sitie or conference:. :llso
votes.
"This year in doesn't mean a lot. it while MSC new\.:omer things along the line of athlete'\, but our o.tches "ill be recognized at the
the
Mid-South doesn't carry a lot of UYA-Wise (20) and hO\\ many crvant lead- in each of our programs 70th Annual :'\AlA •
Conference poll there is weight \\ith me:' French Shawnee State (II) com- ership projects that ) ou and \\hat the) 're looking k'\ ationnl Com entil)n in
some concrete evidence. said. "We rna&gt; not have plete the I0 team coach- hn\c going in the com- for in the t) pe of kids that April.
The s~.orecard procc-....,
~\ant to recruit and brinf.
J think the conches hnve anybody that wows any- e&lt;: • poll.
Rio Grande finished muntt). so 1t's cove~ a ullo our program .
t!&gt; based on the .:\AlA's
hit it on the head as to body on our ro"ter. but
of
diiTerent
areas
...
lot
program flagship
some of the top teams," collectively, a!) a group Rth out of eight teum
"\Ve're Vef). \eT) French added. ~
last season in the MSC
of
Charncter.
,
Champions
According
to
the
Smalley
said. they're going to be pret- and
compiled a 5-2(l proud of the fact that '' e KAlA's press release "hkh empha..,izec: the ,
"Campbellsv ilie, that's a ty good."
''They're going to .fun overallmnrk in 2009 I0. arc a live ... tar in:-titu o'er 70 pcr~ent of the five core vnlue~ o.
no-brai11er, they have
'I he regular season tion." French added. schools in the NAtA integrit), res~ct. re~pon
to
watch, they're going
basically
everybody
begins. Nm ember 5 6 ''It's (the :-corecard) new, scored tht• requtrcd hO sibilit). "portsmanship 1
back and had n good to be intense, very pas- "ith
the Gim anni's Tip- used to ynu just sent a point~ or higher.
sionate
about
playing
the
and ...en ant leadership. '
recruiting class, the.ir
off Clas~k. Hto (~t.uHle report and then tht')' rccro k,tnl mor~ about the
just a very. very solid game of basketball and will
rdca..,e
abll
The
faCl'
Ohio- ognizt•d you as a
they're going to carry a
N A It\ Champions of ·
detaikd
hn\\
this
sC&lt;lrcteam."
Chmnpion"
of
Character
Chillicothe in the openCampbellsville
has Jot of pride playing for er. 'I ip-ofl' is set for 6 institution.
Now. curd svstcm \\as de\ c 1- Character Scorecard and ~
the
Rio
Grande
prowon or shared the MSC
of
one
report.
it's opeo. • 'I ht• Scorecard Fi' e Star Award visit
mstead
regulnr season title each gnlfn." French addeo. p.m.
an
on-gomg
~corccard
or "as rrafted In con\ crt the W\\ \\ .Chnmpion~ofChnrn
The
!\lid-South
Busch. I
of the last two seasons, ·•we •re pleased so far.''
•
grade sheet that ) t'U have NAtA's vision and strate- ctennrg. Kathv
"Presea~on pot ls arc Conference regular sea
Champions of Character
into
mea•atrnhle
goals
g)
'i ncluding a perfect 14-0
to
continuou,)\
update
son
tips-off
on
and tn monitor pmgre s cnordmator, \\ill di..,trib- s
march through the regu- not even worth the pape1 December 16 with the throul!hout the \·ear.''
they're
printed
on.''
lar season in 2009·1 j).
French also agrees \\ ith tO\\ ards tid\ uncing char- ute ,., eb banner' and cer;~
said. .\ISC 1hurnamcnt set for
University of the French
nntion that thi honor ,,ctcr dri\ en intercollc- tificntes to all awar~J.' •
the
Murch 4-6 in hnnkfort,
"Hopefully
we'll
prO\e
a
Cumberlands is proJectis n credit to the l) pe of gl;tte athletic&lt;&gt;. 11tc imtia- recipient... .
j
ed to finish second after lot of people wrong. earn K~
CbDARVILLE, Ohio
- "I he l niversit) of Rio
Grande RedStonn men's
soccer team, ranked No.
2 in the latest NAJA Top
25 r~ttin~. had a huge second halt en route to a 5-2
victory
over
the
Cedarville
Yellow
Jackets on Thursday
evening at Cedarville.
• Rio Grande {13-0)
grabbed a 1·0 cad in the
37th minute when senior
midfielder
Ederson
Lopes scored an unassisted goal, the first of two
goals on the night.
The 1-0 lead held up
until the 57th minute
when sophomore midfielder/forward Oliver
He\\ itt-Fi.sl1er added an

Bv

MARK WILLIAMS

Pf.CIAL TO THE T MES SENTINa

RedStorm women picked .to
finish 6th in MSC poll

RB~+.!y ~IA:D,

---~

Rio Grande among NAIA's
Champion of Character Schools

•

•

�,
Sunday, October 17, 2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

fS&gt;unba~ 1ttmr15 -~rntintl • Page B7

Wildlife also afocus if new
· Leading Creek book
No doubt many of you
recall the late Robett L.
Wingett, former newsan and Ohio Valley
ishing
. Company
lisher. "Jim," he'd
say, lecturing me ~n
timeliness when I would
be late getting a story
~ritten, "We're publishmg a newspaper, not a
history book."
I always realized that
today's news is tomorrow's history, and I tried
to write my stories with
that thought in mind. and
on rare occasions t actually got to write what I
considered
historical
material. Which leads to
the subject of this week's
column: A new history
book. Leading from the
Past: Stories of the
Leading
Creek
Watershed.
will
be
unveiled Nov. 4. 4-6 p.m.
at the Meigs County
Public
Library
in
Pomeroy.
The project. funded in
part
by
the
Ohio
manities Council. was
by a small group of
•
volunteers and staff
through the Leading
Creek Watershed Group
and its host, , the Meigs
Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
Over the years, while
working at The Da,ily
Sentinel, I was involved
in several history projects including the 1994
Meigs County !75th
anniversary
(quinseptumcentennial?) tabloid
"Remembering the Past
- Shaping the Future,"
the Rutland Bicentennial
in 1999. and the 50th
anniversary of D-Day in
1994. I always enjoyed
those projects, especially
the interviews. and so I
was excited to participate
in the Leading Creek stories project. It also tied in
really well with my activin the watershed
r the past 10 years
king with the Meigs

1

In the
Open
Jim Freeman
SWCD.
The Leading Creek
watershed. located mostly in western Meigs
County but also in small
portions of Athens and
Gallia counties, is a
microcosm of south'e astern Ohio. Its I 50-squaremile' area shares most of
the traits, both good and
bad. found in our part of
the state. but it also has
its own unique history
and characteristics which
are outlined in the book.
The goals of the project
were to educate people
about the history, environment and culture of
the
Leading
Creek
Watershed through the
stories of those people
who live there. As a contributing author and
interviewer. it was only
natural that all of my stories eventually boiled
down to the wildlife tish and animals - that
call the Leading Creek
Watershed its home.
In some of the stories.
life-long
residents
remember times when
there were no whitetail
deer or wild turkey to be
found, and call to mind
when those animals started to appear, or they
recall catching fish from
the streams, supplementing the household food
budget during tough
times, or playing in the
creek, enjoying the cool
pools for swimming or
ice skating.
The late Marjorie Rice,
whom I interviewed this
past spring. recalled

when Little Leading
Creek first began to fill
with sand from the strip
mining, killing all of the
fish in that particular
creek. Farther upstream,
lifelong watershed resident
Gene
Jeffers
recalled catching and eating fish from the creek,
along with frogs (all you
could eat). snapping turtles and clams.
Retired
natural
resources professor Dave
Enterline even , gave his
professional assessment.
Game
animals
like
white-tailed deer and
wild turkey are very
plentiful in the woods
and fields along Leading
Creek. along with nongame animals. reptiles
and amphibians.
"We
have
good
amphibian and reptile
population around here,"
he said. ''The creek has a
variety of salamanders.
the two-lined and dusky
and a few others. l've
seen the Black King
Snake here which is
about as far north as they
are supposed to get. hognosed snakes, turtles one or two snappers - a
lot of box turtles,
Those are just three of
the people whose stories
are included in the book.
to see more you '11 have
to read it for yourself.
Initially. under the
grant agreement. copies
of the book will be donated to local libraries,
schools, non-profit organizations and government agencies. However,
beginning Jan. l copies
of the book will available
from the publishing company Lulu.com.

Jim Freeman is wildlife
specialist for rhe Meigs
and
Water
Soil
Consen•ation District.
He can be contacted
weekdays at 740-9924282 or at jim.freeman@oh.nacdnet.net
•

•

•

Browns' Dawson Still kiCkln'
ing up to the Atlanta ~arne,
knowing he had a cnance
Lou ''The Toe" ma&gt;:be he to rewrite the record book.
"But in the heat of the
should be called Phtl ''The
moment. everything felt
· Foot."
Over a dozen mostly normal.'' he said.
When he left the field.
awful seasons of football
for the Cleveland Browns, Dawson's wife. Shannon.
there have been two con- was waiting for him along
stants: change and Phil with the couple's young
Dawson splitting the sons. Dru and Beau.
Dawson had managed to
uprights.
Despite playing on some control his emotions all
wretched teams, the 12- week, but once he was
year veteran kicker has with his family. the softspoken Texan finally
been better than good with one of the steadiest broke down.
''That's when it hit me
and most accurate legs in
the NFL since 1999. On that it happened." he said.
Sunday in Pittsburgh, a "One of my boys ~aid.
city where he made one of 'Dad. that's pretty cool.·
first and biggest kicks That's when all the emo1is pro career. Dawson tions carne. It gave me a
surpass Hall of Farner little shot in the arm. that
Lou "The Toe'' Groza tor after all these years. I got
the most career field goals something positive done
and I feel good about it. ..
in team history.
Dawson's career has
His next made field
goal, No. 235, will move been both outstanding and
him past Groza. whose clutch. His 83 percent
mark he zeroed in on as accuracy rate is ninthsoon as he beat out two highest in league history.
other kickers to make the and he has booted 12
game-winners. In '99, his
Browns' roster.
last-second field goal in
"It's a goal I've had Pittsburgh's Three Rivers
since the day I got here;· Stadium
helped
the
Dawson said. "Had I Browns avenge a 43-0 loss
announced that back then. in the season opener. In
I probably would've got- 2007. his game-tying 51ten laughed out of town. yarder at Baltimore struck
It's heresy, you know. I the upright and bounced
wanted to see where the off the metal support neck
bar had been set here."
behind the crossbar as
It's about to rise.
time expired, forcing overLast week, Dawson tied time in a game the Browns
Groza's record by making won on his 33-yard field
19-yarder
against goal.
a
Atlanta, a chip shot for the
Later that year. he
35-year-old. whose ability kicked two field goals in a
to kick in bad weather has blizzard against Buffalo,
ome legendary in making one kick by aimvel and.
ing at the corner pylon to
• , Physically, you can't overcoml?ensate for 50
have a shorter field goal mph wmds whipping
than from 19 :· said through Browns Stadium.
Dawson, the only member
Neither snow, nor rain,
of the Browns' expansion nor wind. nor lousy fields
team still on the roster. nor pressure situations
''It's as close as you can have stopped Dawson
get. That took a little of the from kickmg the Browns
to victory - just not as
pressure off."
Dawson, though, has many as he would have
always been his best when liked.
"He's the best in bad
the stakes are highest. He
admitted being "pretty · weather or bad field condinervous" in the days lead- tions,'' left tackle Joe
BEREA. Ohio (AP) -

In the city that gave you

!

I

I.

I

Thomas said. "J sit next to
him in t~ meeti!lgs and
talk to htm all the time. He
always l~ents the poor
field condtttons. but f say
·that's vour advantage
because you are the best at
it in the NFL. You're more
valuable than anyone
else.· There are lots of
guys who kick in perfect
conditions in San Diego
and they are great kicker~.
"But that's not what's
hard about being a kicker.
lt's about kicking in the
cold when it's 30 degrees
or less and the winds
blowing or you're kickin~
on an unstable field. Phtl
still drills them at crunch
time. I hope he·~. here for
another
years.
The wms have been few
and far between for
Dawson. ~hose Browns
~ave ~e,n JU~t 60-121 durmg, h!s ttme m Clevelan~:
He s m the final year of his
contract and there are no
~uarantees he will be back
111 201 1.
Although he has been
one of the league·., elite
kickers. Dawson has
ranked near the bottom in
salary. He has asked for a
long-term deal in the past.
but
despite
being
promised by several
regimes that he would get
one, the team hasn't made
good on its word.
It's hard to imagine
Dawson kicking for anyone but the Browns.
Coach Eric Mangini
would
not
address
Dawson's future. saying
contract matters are handied by general manag~r
Tom ~eckert and pres1dent Mt~e. Holmgren. .
Mang•!!•· thou~h. dtd
have htgh pratse for
Dawson.
"The things that he's
done as a Cleveland
Brown have been exceptiona),'' he said. 'Tm looking forward to him break
ino the record this weekend. I want all touchdowns
but a field goal mixed in, a
game-winner would be a
nice way to break the
record."

!2

Submitted photo ••

Point Pleasant coaches Chip Wood, left, and Justin Weaver, right, are pictured with •
seniors Zach Sayre (14), Preston Rairden (15), and Parker Hill (13) at Thursday's ....
senior night contest in Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Point soccer wins on Senior Night ·
TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MOTSPORTS@MYDAILYTAIBUNECOM

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va. The Point
Pleasant boys soccer
team defeated Winfield
3-l
on
Thursday
evening in a senior night
game in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.
Six minutes into the
half
Point's
Wyatt
Wamsley found Parker
Hill who scored the first
on Point's goals.
Point added two goals

POINT
in the second half Steve
Porter scored the first
goal of the second half
on and assist by Trenton
Bailes. Winfield cut the
lead to one on its only

goal of the game.
Hristian
Lenkov
scored the final Point
Pleasant goal on an
assist by Rogan Park to
give Point the win in its
final regular season
game.
Point Pleasant recognized seniors Parker
Hill. Preston Rairden
and Zach Sayre during
the game.
Point will open sectional tournament play '
at home in the coming
week.
- '•

Changed Roethlisberger
returnS against Browns·
PITTSBURGH (AP) accepting of a balanced
Ben Roethlisberger offense, rather than one
cast a wary eye upon the that allows him to throw
dozens of reporters who .35 times a game.
showed up for his first
"The guys on the team
pregame practice in nine opened their arms and
months and questioned welcomed him back,''
aloud, ''1 thought we'd wide receiver Hines Ward
gotten this out of the way. said. "We missed him. ..
but obviously not."
Allegations
that
No. not yet. Not even Roethlisberger sexually
close. There's still a step assaulted a Georgia colleft in what might be lege student in March did
termed the rehabilitation not result in criminal
of Ben Roethlisberger. charges against him, and ·
he has proclaimed his
the football player.
innocence. But Lhere is no
question his widely porgame that counts. still trayed image of a barhasn't thrown a meaning- hopping. immature. pamful pass. still hasn't pered. indulgent athlete
proven he's. the player he with a sense of entitlewas before his aberrant ment hurt him and the
behavior led the NFL _
image-conscious organiI
.
.
·
at h1s ,own tea~ s urgt~00 zation he plays for. The
- to suspend hun for stx job of repairing it is not
games. later shortened to yet completed.
Roethlisbcrger
\vas
four.
.
.
.
Ro~thllsberg~r s self- equally embarrassed and
desc~!bed "anxiOus .. n.er- humbled by his troubling
vous months of wmtmg offseason. one that might
end Sunday. when the have cost him his Steelers
Pittsburgh Steelers quar- career if it weren't for the
terback plays a regular- fact it's difficult to tind
season game for the first l&gt; 102 million franchise
time since Jan. 3. The quarterbacks.
.. At times when things
Cleveland Browns ( 1-4).
who
sacked happen in your life it
Roethlisberoer
ei~ht causes you to reassess
timec; during a 13-6 upset your approach. 1 think
victory in December that that's what he·~ going
ultimately
scuttled through." coach Mike
Pittsburgh's
playoff Tomlin said. "I stjJl think
chances. will be on the Ben is Ben. Sometimes
opposing sideline. eager \\hen you're faced with
to mar the two-t1me adversity,
particularly
super Bowl winner's adversity that's created
by you. there's an assess·
return to .the NFL:
R~ethhs!Jer¥er s sus- mentor there's an evalua
penston dtdn t nun the tion of some of the deciSteelers season. as so.me sions you've made.''
While Steelers fans
around .the leagu~ antictpated: mstead. hts team- have shown an eagemess
mates used the quarter- to forgive. Roethlisberger
back\ absence a~ a mot'i- also understands he might
,vator while gomg 3-l. not get another chance at
Their defense is playing redemption should he fail
much like that of their again.
2008 Super Bowl-win"Second chances are an
ning team. and their av.:esome thing and that's
revived running game is all I've asked for." he
one of the NFL's best.
said. ·'I want to be a
The Steelers proved Steeler for life. I love
they could change for the playing for tl1is city and
better
while these fans. lt's something
Roethlisberger was awa}. that's very important to
Now he wants to prove me. I know a lot of people
he's changed for the bet- say ·I don't really care
ter. too.
about the fans and what
Teammates say a player people say about me.·
who once seemed intent Well. I do. 1 want people
on livino up to his ''Bio to accept me and to
B .. e
.
l
e
en . persona ts no ~mger einbrace me as their quaraloof or.condescen~mg to terback and as a Steeler."
Roethlisberger insists
some of them .. He s been
mo:e
outgomg
and he's not intent upon
pattent wtth Steelers s~tp­ quickly reshaping an
porters. espectally dunng offense that was decideda training camp in whic~ ly unbalanced without
fa~s who 0~1ce talked of him. The Steelers are
reJecting htm chose to eighth tn rushing but a
embrace him. He also dead last 32nd in passing
appears to be more after starting No. 3 quar-

I sn~; f~~lmha~~~~et:~~:

.

terback Dennis Dixon
and No. 4 Charlie Batch
during his absence.
Roethlisberger's return
should
create
more
downlield opportunities
for wide receiver Mike
Wallace. who averages
23.4 yards per catch. and
allow tight end Heath ·
Miller to be used more as •
a receiver than as a blocker. But the Steelers still
Plan to eoive plentv• of car- '
ries
to
Rashard
Mendenhall. who averages I 02.8 yards per ~
game.
"The key for me is not ,
try to force anything. and .
not go out and try to be ~
S u p e r m a n . " ,.
Roethlisberger said. "Just
go out arid play my .•
game."
Roethlisberger'.s fir~t 1
game back will be •
Browns rookie quarter- ..
back Colt McCoy's first game.
period.
With ·
Seneca Wallace and Jake
Delhomme injured. the _
Browns have little ctioice
but to start a third-round
draft pick from rexas .
who wasn't supposed to .
get on the field this season.
NFL
quarterback
debuts don't get much ·
rougher than this. facing '
the Steelers and James '
Hamson. Troy Polamalu •
and Aaron Smith in Heinz
Field - and during a ·,
week when the Browns ',
were practtcing \vithout :
seven injured regulars. ·
But the Cardinab · cause
seemed next-to-hopele:-.s
last week. before undraft- :·
ed rookie quarterback
Max Hall managed to
beat the Super Bowl ..
champion Saints 30-20.
albeit without a touchdown rushing or passmg. •
"I'm e\cited about it."
said McCo). who ts
expected to give wa) at
times to Joshua Cribbs in
a wildcat offense that was
effective
against ,
Pittsburgh last season
''You can tell 111)- team- ,..
mates. they're all joshing
with me and giving me a ,,
hard time. I'm really ..
excited Back in the hud- ..
die, bal:k calling plays."
Cunousl).
\h:Coy's ,
t.'omments sound much .
those
of
like
Roethlisberger and his ..
teammates.
"Ben's liJ...e a little kid.
the fir~t one out there fl)r
practice, read) to get
started," Ward smd. 'Tm
excited to get out there
with him and get things '
going."

�:q

Page

a o

t

co .. a

•-=

. .... -

~.

ns • eunlhll' :t!:11nrs -en•ntmcl

4

4

9

J)om e roy • M iddle por t • Gallipo lis

'

S unday, October 17, 2010

Collaros' 5 TDs lead Cincy
over Louisville 35-27 ·

Ed Suba Jr/Akron Beacon Jourru~VMCT

Cleveland Browns quarterback Colt McCoy scrambles out of the pocket againt the
Ch1cago Bears defense during the f1rst half of NFL exhibition action at Cleveland
Browns Stad1um 1n Cleveland, Oh1o, on Thursday, September 2.

McCoy ready for ~teelers
BI·RE: :\, Ohto CAP) Colt McCO) made it
through
pr.H.:tice
unsl:&lt;tthed Next. he hn
to !&gt;unhe Pitt&lt;&gt;hurgh's
petrifying defense.
Barring an unforeseen
dc,elopment.
Cle\cland'o;, rookie quarterback \\Ill make his
first "\I I ..,t,trt Sunda;
\\hen the Bro'" ns 'i&lt;&gt;ll
the blltt crazed tcelers.
'"ho nrc ccnam to come
after M&lt;.:C'O) from the
moment he steps on the
turf at Hemz held
It·~ n d ..unting task for
nn\ one
especmll) a
\\Ct behind the ear&lt;; QB.
"It'&lt;, go t1me," Bro\\n&lt;;
oftensi\e
coordinator
Bn::m Daboll said after
pmctice on F-rida). "He's
tacing the o. I defense
m the league. What better
Yul)' than to start out
ag.linst the Pittsburgh
Steders! 1 hi.; is whnt
he's nlwn)s dreamed of."
Me( oy has been thn1st
into the &lt;;tnrting lineup
foliO\\ ing injurieo; to Jnke
Delhommc and Seneca
\\all ace. who nrc both
nur&lt;;ing
lugh
ankle
sprain"&gt; and could be
s1delmed for se\ernl
\\-eeks. Bro\\ ll" coach
hie Mangtm refused to
rule out Wallace and
Oelhomme for Sunday.
but neither looks read) to
play.
Del hom me ''ore a protectn e ,., alkmg boot 111
the locker room. .tnd
Wallac.c s.ud ht~ ankle
had unpro\cd "" he
slipped on his giant, plastic boot Both were ltsted
as doubtful
a 25 percent chance of pl.tyinr on J·ndny\, injury report.
Mangini.
perhaps

\\anting to keep the
Steelers guessing. has
refused to officially
announce that ~1cCoy.
the former 1cxns star and
the i'!CAi\'s winninge::.t
quarterback. will start.
But almost e\eryone else
has indicnted that McCoy
will open behind center.
''I renlly like Colt
McCoy.'' Browns defcnsi\e coordinator Rob
Ryan said. "I've een him
light our defense up for
three \\eek so it's good
to ha\ e him t~ctually play
ngamst somebody el e ..
McCoy hasn't played
in a regular-season game.
and Ryan knows his baptism b) the black and
gold \\ill include the
usual heavy dose of
Steelers blitzes sent in by
Pittsburgh
defensive
coordinator
Dick
LeBeau.
"You know LeBeau is
going after him," said
Ryan. who admitted he
would do the same to a
rookie QB "The young
man is exciting to me.
but I'd be lying if you
don't go after a young
quarterback. of course
you do."
McCoy has impressed
hb coaches and teammates this "eek. He's
taken control of the huddle. studied hard and
doesn't seem at allmttmidated b) the chance to
step in and start. McCoy
became accustomed to
playing in big games during lour )Cars starting for
the Longhorns.
This is just another step
up.
"The guy's a leaJcr:·
Ryan said. ''He', mature.
He doesn't look like

much. He's a competitive
guy and I'm excited to
watch hint get out there
and play. You've got to
play sometime. Now
there would be easier
starts than playing the
:-.1o. I defense. but this
kid will probably do
great."
The Browns selected
McCoy after he slid to
the third round in April's
draft. The~ didn't intend
to play htm in his first
senson.
But
with
Delhomme and Wallace
hurt, the team didn't have
any other options and so
they've turned to the 6foot-1
McCoy, who
passed for 13.253 yards
and 112 touch do\\ ns in
college.
Mangini was pleased
with McCoy's progress
this week in practice. He
thinks the 24-yenr-old is
prepared to handle the
pressure.
He want~ McCoy to
play his game and not to
become O\ erwhelrned or
tr) to do too much.
Or the Steelers will eat
him alive.
"You can't force the
ball· into spots against
thts defense. )OU can't do
it." Mangini said. "There
are too many opportunities when you do that for
them to make big play .
You ha' e ju t got to be
smart and ) ou·' e got to
make good deci ions and
you·,e got to go to the
open player and make
~ood rends and do a good
jOb Of COIIlJOIIing the
defense with your eyes
and understanding what's
happening.
"Those are the things
th~tt I expect from him."

LOUISVILLE.
Ky.
(AI') - Armon Binns
knew it wpuld work.
Binns alerted quarterback Zach Collaros that
he could get open
against
a
certain
Louisville defensive formntion. He ran right past
a defender - just as he
predicted - to catch a
62-yard touchdown pass
in the fourth quarter
Friday night, sending
Cincinnati
past
Louisville 35-27 in the
Big East opener for both
schools.
Simple as throw-andcatch.
"I was just telling
Zach, if he sticks it in
there. I'll go get it:' said
Binns, who ran past cornerback Bobby Burns.
"It worked out for us:·
Collaro!&gt;
threw
a
career-high five touchdown passes - three to
Binns - and Cincinnati
(3-.3) overcame the loss
of another receiver. D.J.
Woods left in the third
quarter after banging his
head on the ground and
losing his helmet on a
touchdown catch.
The two-time defending Big East champions
already were short-handed at receiver with Vidal
Hazelton out with a season-ending knee injury.
"We've
suffered
through some adversity
all year and there was
absolutely no panic on
the sideline.'' coach
Butch Jones said.
Binns· 62-yard touchdown decided a game of
try-to-top-this pi'ays. He
also scored on catches of
4 7 and I0 yards in the
best game of his career.
Collaros was 18 of 28
for 275 yards with a pair
of interceptions. His
final throw to Binns was
the clincher.

Bengals' Odom gets 4-game suspension
CINCINN/\11 (AP)
The
Nl·L
•eJected
Ant\\ an Odom \ .tppeal
on I taday and o;uspended
the Benu.th defen"&gt;hc
end tour game" for 'iolating its policy on perlormam:e enhancing sub
&lt;;tctnCC!&gt;.
Odom \Ht5 suspended
before the start of the
~ea!&gt;on
but appealed.
hoping to have the sus
peno;ion reduced or elimi
nated. 1 he league stuck
with the tull four games.
Jle would ha\c likclv
nus sed the next couple ';r
games Hnyway. Odom
hurt his right knee during
a 24-21 loss to nunpa
Ba) on Sunday nnd \\ore
a brace thts v.cek. The
Bengals (2 1) ha\c their
b)e tht" v.eckend.
After the rest of the
team \\ orked out on
Wednc&lt;&gt;d:t) before dts

formance-en hanc i ng
drugs). More det.tils to·
come but for no'' it's a
league is ue that's under
appeal. Just know that I
v. ould never cheat to gam
an edge in this game that
I love."
The league doesn't
persing, Odom said he
would probably be side- reveal "hich substance
1i ned for a game or two was in' olved.
Odom tore hi~ right
nfler the b) e because of
the knee injury. He'll be Achilles' tendon last seaeligible to return from the son, but made a full
su.;penc;ion on 1\tonday. re~O\ cry anu was ready
Nuv. 15 and would be for training camp. lie has
eligible to play a home started tlm•c games and
game again~! Buffalo thl! missed time with an
injured left wrist. Odom
following Sunday.
Odom contended he Jed the team '' ith eight
didn'tuse a performance- sa~.'k~ last seu~on even
enhunl'ing drug. When though he played in only
the
suspension
"as six gaml'S b~cause of tlw
tcvcnlcd in the pre~ea­ injury.
He has no sacks and
son. he tweeted: ''Yes, I
tested posttive for a only eight tackles - tied
bnnned substance but it for 12th on the team
"asn 't steroids or {per- this season.

"He wa~ telling me he
can get by that corner,''
Collaros said. " ( just
trusted him. All day. he
made plays for me."
Bilal Powell ntn for a
career-high 209 yards
and two touchuowns.
keeping Louiwille (3-3)
in the game. He had an
electrifying
X5-yard
touchdown run. thnt
helped the Cardinals
take a 24-21 lead into
halftime.
"That was an unbelievable run," conch
Charlie Strong said.
''Everyone else needs to
play like him.''
The Cardinals managed only a field goal in
the second half. Out of
timeouts.
Louisville
went for it on fourthand-goal from the 12
with 4:20 left. Adam
Froman's pass was broken up by Camerron
Cheatham
and
Cincinnati ran out the
clock.
Louisville also mis~ed
two field goal attempts.
. ''Again and again. it
came down to us stopping ourselves," said
Froman, who was 18 of
27 for 179 yards.
The Ohio River rivalry
- a keg of nails goes to
the winner- got off to a
raucous start and never
slowed down.
Collaros rolled dght
and saw Woods running
several yards beyond the
coverage for a 47-yard
touchdown
on
Cincinnati's first play. In
the end zone, Woods got
a 15-yard penalty for
going face-to-face and
talking trash at safety
Shenard Holton - just
the start of a lot of jawing
and
shoving
throughout.
The trick plays and big
plays kept coming, too.

Louisville ranks third
nationally in sacks, but a
little defensive decep•
tion set up its first touchdown. Tackle
Ore
Scruggs dropped i
pa~s
coverage
and
picked off Collaros, who
never saw him. Scruggs'
first career interceptio1i
set up Froman's 11-yard
TD pass.
•
dazzling
PoweJI 's
touchdown run revved
up Louisville.
A half-dozen Bearcats
got their hands on
Powell but couldn't
bring him down on an
85 yard scamper that
tied it at 14 late in the
first quarter. The tackleshredding runner has
three TDs of at least 70
yards this season.
The Cardinals also
emptied their play book.
Froman lateraled to
receiver
Doug
Beaumont. who threw a
pass to Froman that went
for 28 yards and set up.
field goal.
Nothing tricky abo
Cincinnati's
passing
game. Receivers ran past
defenders for their big
plays.
Which would carry the
day, Powell or Collaros?
Powell broke a 46yard run on his first
carry in the second halfl
but Collaros kept going.
too. His 14-yard touchdown pao;s to Woods put
Cincinnati ahead 28-24.
Woods' head slammed
on the ground after a
ha rd hit in the end zone.
his helmet rolling off.
and he was slow getting
up.
Woods went to the
sideline. got tested for a
concusc;ion and didn't
return. leaving it up to
Binns to make the pi
that mattered most.

Coming Soon•••
tell your friends

&lt;!Dnllipolis IDnH!' {[ribnnr
"\\" .m y daily tribunt;.com

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'

Cl
Sunday, October 17, 2010

A dog's life: Waiting for hotne

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA LYSENT NELCOM

•

ROCK SPRINGS - People
abandon people everyday and for
every one person who's abandoned, it seems there are I 0 dogs
who've met the same fate.
Many of these expendable
dogs make their home at the
Meigs County Dog Shelter simply because they have nowhere
else to ~o. However, unlike some
of thetr human counterparts,
these abandoned dogs are willing
to trust people again in exchange
for a place to call home.
October is Adopt A Shelter
Dog Month and there are dogs of
all shapes and sizes now available for adoption at the Meigs
County Dog Shelter. The cost to
adopt is $21 per dog. plus the
cost of a mandatory dog tag
which is now $8. The shelter is
open from 8:30-11:30 a.m.,
Monday-Saturday or an appointment can be arranged• outside
nonnal bu:siness hours by calling
992-3779. The shelter also has
photos ol available dogs for
adoption on pettinder.com and
can be reached via email at
meigscountydogshclter&lt;Ct 1yahoo.
com.
Meigs County Dog Warden
'lorn Proffitt said the dog:s who
arrive at the shelter are good
dogs in need of equally good
homes though those homes are
scarce these days. Proffitt says
he place~ more dogs with rescue
organizations than through local
adoptions. though he hopes that
changes. Prof11tt explained he's
tned to upgrade the shelter and
works often with rescue organizations to save unwanted dogs, a
problem he feels could be avoided if people \vould spay and
neuter their pets.
Proffitt added another sad fact
is most of the dogs he receives
arc strays. many with collars
indicating they once had a home.
Unfortunately. thl·se dogs arc
~trays nohody calls about and in
way, having something and
then losing it is more cruel than
never experiencing having a
home. bcspitc this. all dogs (like
most people) seem to know
home when they eventually do
find it and find it's worth the
wait.

Garbo (foreground) reaches to find whiit
sunshine
makes it into
her kennel at
the Meigs
County Dog
Shelter. Garbo
is described as
a loving, mellow dog who
calmly waits for
the home she's
never had.

Pedro, a
Chiqu~qua

mix,:
is an older dog •
at the shelter
and though
many consider
older dogs the
most unadopt· :
able, often the~:
are the best,
most appreciative companions. The clock
is ticking on
Pedro who
deserves to live
out his life in a
home, not the
shelter.

a

•

�--~__,....~---

----- ---

Sunday, October 17, 2010

COMMUNITY CORNER
Going to bed hungry or
cold must be just awful.
Here in Meigs County
we have several places
offering free food to those
who need it. We even
have some assistance to
familie~ who can't pay
their utility bills and are
threatened with shut-offs.
And then there are others who just need a nice
wam1 blanket to snuggle
under when the cold
winds blow and the snow
flies.
It's people who arc cold
that have touched the
heart of June Kloes and
inspired her to start a
"Share a Blanket" project
in Meigs County.
She is collecting used
blankets to distlibute to
those in need. No she's
not looking for new blankets; used is just fine, and
frayed is no problem, but
she would like them to be
clean.
The drop-off place is
Trinity Church, corner of
Lynn and Second in
Pomeroy. If that's not
convenient just call 9923764 and someone will
come by to pick up your
contribution. June envisions "Share a Blanket"
as ,a county-wide project
and invites churches
everywhere
to
get
involved in giving.
She cites the scripture
- "Do not forget to do

Charlene Hoeflich
good and to share with
others for with such sacrifices God is pleased."

•••
Speaking of doing for
others .......
The Meigs High School
Cheerleaders are sponsoring "Cheers for Our
Soldiers'' and will be
sending care packages to
deployed troops sometime soon.
They are inviting the
public to join with them
in the project. At Friday
night's last home football
games, the cheerleaders
put boxes out for contributions.
Things ranging from
peanut butter to batteries.
from phone cards to disposable cameras are still
being collected for the
program. So for those of
you who haven't yet contributed, but want to be a
part of this remembrance

We all love a surprise
find and 12-year-old
Dylan Weaver who Jives
in the Laurel Cliff community was quite excited'
when he found a large
balloon floated down in
his front yard.
The balloon had traveled all the way from
Wisconsin finding its way
here. Attached was a card
with the name and
address of the launcher.
So as any curious young
man would do, Dylan has
written him a letter about
his find.

•••
Getting a certificate of
recognition from Gov.
Ted Strickland was a big
deal for Kathleen Scott
who on the very day of
the presentation had
turned 105 years old.
It was given to her by
the governor's wife· who
was in town for the opening of the Democratic
Party headquarters in
Middleport.
Mrs.
Strickland made the presentation even more special by playing her guttar
and
singing
Happy
Birthday to Kathleen,
who, incidentally. is
doing just fine.

Dear Dr. Brothers: I self or your relationship. Instead of just
asking him if he loves
you or if he would still
care for you if you both
were poor. try taking
away some of the financial support and see
what happens. Tell him
he's going to have to be
responsible for his own
expenses you can
start with a defined area
if that's easier, like his
car- and don't pay for
him anymore. You can
give him a reason, or
not - whatever makes
you comfortable . Hi:-;
reaction should tell you
a lot. Don't gi\'e in and
go back to the way it
was, though, unless you
really don't mind being
a sugar mama.

•••
Dear Dr. Brothers: 1
love my grandmother
very much, but unfortunately l .find her somewhat embarrassing to
be around. I certainly
do~'t want my friends
to meet her. Why? Well.
it is simply that she has
a lot of old-fashioned
prejudices and isn't
equipped to welcome
many of my best buddies. She is very outspoken about gay people not being allowed to
marry and poor people
abusing the welfare system - and anyone who
isn't
her
religion'?
Forget it! Can she
change?- B.K
Dear B.K.: That is a
very good question, and
without knowing your
grandmother at all, it is
impossible for me to
answer. I do know that
people who have held
lifelong attitudes about
controversial topics are
rather
unlikely
to
change them at the last
minute, as it were unless. perhaps, you
were to ask her specifically to consider some

Dr. Joyce Brothers
--------information that may
previously
have
escaped her eye. Your
grandmother may be a
lovely person who is a
captive of the age in
which she was raised or
of attitudes that she
simply never examined
or was asked to rethink.
She may have Ji\tle or
no experience with gay
people. poor people or
people of other religious persuasions some people just don't
have much life experience outside of a small
inner c1rcle
I am not trying to
make excuses for your
grandmother. You have
a choice you can
explain to your friends
that your grandmother
holds some wrong ideas
and
apologize
in
advance, hoping that
nothing too embarrassing is said. Or you can
continue to shut her out,
or you can t,ry to educate her. Perhaps meeting some of your nice
friends will show her
the error of her ideas in
a way that nothing else
could do. But it is going
to be up, to you to
decide where your comfort zone begins and
ends. You sound like a
thoughtful person. and
I' rn sure you 'II do the
best you can.
(c) 2010 by King
Features Syndicate

The staff of
Michael &amp; Friends,
Adrah Neal, Ellen Price, Michelle
Williams &amp; Abby \leal, welcomes

~unbap

BETH NUTTER

~itnes -~entinel

Beth will be available on Tuesday,
friday &amp; Saturday at the Spring Valley.
location or appointments can be mad~ ·
by calling 446-0698.

Meigs • 992·2155
Gallia • 446-2342

Coats for Kids

•••

Living with boyfriend means
taKing care of him

Keeping Meigs &amp;
Gallia informed

m:tmes -f$enttnel • Page C2

program, just leave items
at the high school. Debbie
Evens,
. cheerleading
coach, will see they get to
our troops.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

have been Jiving with
my boyfriend for about
three years. He moved
into my apartment with
a few things. I basically
bought some extra furniture. and then 1 found
out he had only about
three outfits. so I
bought
him
some
clothes. Since then he
has started using my car
because his has steering
problems, and he really
doesn't do much grocery shopping or sharing of bills. In short. he
has a part-time job but
says he can't afford to
pay for things. I tove
him. but J don't enjoy
feeling like his mommy.
Help!- S.S.
Dear S.S.: It sounds
like you are a very good
person to take care of
your boyfriend and still
feel loving feelings
toward him. It is natural
to want to nurture and
please our mate, but
when all the nurturing
is connected to dollar
signs, it makes things a
bit more complicated.
You might begin to
wonder whether your
boyfriend loves you
back, or whether he is
just becoming very
comfortable with your
level of care, attention
and financial support.
So, though you may
feel that things are
going fine in your love
1ife and you don't really
want to rock the boat, it
may be a good time to
figure out what is the
glue that's holding your
relationship together.
You must be prepared
to face some unpleasant
realities if necessary
and take some steps to
change things if you
find out that you are
being used or even
relied upon in a way
that doesn't make you
feel good about your-

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Charlene Hoeflich/photo
The kickoff to this year's Coats for Kids program of People's Bank. Pomeroy, was
held Friday with a soup sale. This is the 26th year for the program where good
used and new coats are provided to Meigs County students identified by the
schools as in need of a warn coat. They will be distributed in early December. Last
yea: 116 coats were given out. Here assisting Samantha Lavender, left, project
chairman for the bank, are left to right Kathlyn Hill of Southern, Allie Rees of
Hocking College, and Andrew Roseberry of Southern doing some community service. Students from other schools will be helping out with other projects. Nathan
•
Roush selects the soup he wants for lunch.

Church Notebook
Bishop to speak !Iomecoming
at Wilkesville
at St. Peter's
GALLIPOLIS - The Methodist
Right Rev. Thomas E.
Breidenthal. bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of
Southern Ohio, will lead
services on Sunday, Oct.
17 at St. Peter's Episcopal
Church in Gallipolis.
Breidenthal is chief pastor
and spiritual leader for
more
than
25,000
Episcopalians in southern
Ohio. He will preside
over the Eucharist (communion). preach and
administer the sacrament
of confirmation to four
people during the 10 a.m.
service. A reception . will
be held following the service.
The parish of St. Peter's
dates back to the 19th
Century. The Diocese of
Southern Ohio covers 40
counties and includes 82
congregations. It is a
member of the Eptscopal
Church of the United
States of America and
part of the worldwide
Anglican Communion.
which has a membership
of 70 mHlion.

l

WILKESVILLE
Wilkesville
Methodist
Chw-ch will host homecoming services beginning
at 9 a.m.. Sunday, Oct. 17.
Sunday school begins at
10 a.m. A carry-in dinner
will be served at 12:30
p.m. The afternoon service
will begin at 1:30 p.m.

Bean dinner at
RodneyUMC.
RODNEY
The
Rodney United Methodist
Church
Community
Center will host its sev-

enth annual bean dinner
and auction on Saturday,
Oct. 16. Beans, cornbread, hot dogs and
desserts will be served at
4 p.m. The auction will
begin at 5 p.m.

Church of God
centennial
GALLIPOLIS - The
First Church of God in
Gallipolis will host 1OOth
anniversary sen ices on
Sunday, Oct. 24. The service begins at 10:24 a.m.
The church is located at
1723
Ohio
141,
Gallipolis. A meal will be
served following the service. For information, c.

446-4404.

-

Karena Roberts
at

Meigs Family Eyecare
Pomeroy, OR
recently completed training at
Interstate Optical in
Indianapolis, Indiana
This training prepares K,.,,...n,.l
for aU challenging optical
situations &amp; needs.
Call 992-3279 for an
appointment.

Guarding Angels would like to thank the following people
and businesses for all of their support in our fundraiser on
September 18, 2010. It was a huge success.
• Norns Northup Dodge
• Tom's Auto Clime
•Auto Zone
• Golden Corral in Gallipolis
• Burger King in Gallipohs
• McDonald's in Gallipoli~
• Subway in Gallipolis
• Dairy Queen in Gallipolis
• McClure's in Gallipolis
• Sherwin Williams
• Dominos in Gallipolis
• Zanz•'s Piaa in Gallipolis
• Sonny Adkins
• Kev10 &amp; Sandy Dennis
• Jean Louden
• Amy and Shannon Louden
• Dan Blazer
• Foodland on Jacbon Pike
• Aaron Metzler
• GeGe Forgey
• Kayleigh Denny
• Nancy Lee
• Siders Jewelers in Gallipolis
• Floral Fashions in Galhpolis
• Judy Jones
• Colony Video
• Margaret Evans- Galhpolis Court Judge
• Brittany's Fashions
• Anna Hershberger
• L~nda Angels
• Brittany Marcum
• Gar). Jill, Andrea Strauch
• Steve Hague
• Barb and Mark Cline
• Julie Denne)
• Justin Pallon Gallia County Commissioner
(Cand•date for State Senate)
• Brett Boothe Engineer for Gallia County
• Dean Evans- Common Pleas Judge
• Charhe Wilson- US Congress
•!•ruth's on Jackson Pike
• Cliffside

,

• ~1ontgomery\ Barber Shop
• Acquisitions in Gallipolis (MTS Coins)
• Bidwell Hardware
• Auto Trim Center in Gallipolis
• Karat Patch in Gallipolis
• Basket Delights Gallipolis
• Carquest in Gallipolis
• Thomas Do-lt Center in Gallipolis
• C\S in Gallipolis
•The Korner
• Demse R1chards
• Tammy Groves
• BecJ.;y Repenhoff
• Guarding Angeb Pre-K Cla~s
• Guarding Angeb Toddler Class
• Guarding Angels Infant Class
• Guardmg Angels Preschool Class
• Thomas S Moulton. Jr. - Probate Judge
• Melissa Santos (Mary Kay Consultant)
• Guinther's m V~nton
• R&amp;C Pack.mg in Bidwell
• French Cit) Wholesale in Gallipolis
• Demse Payne
• Sparkle Suppl) 10 Gallipolis
• Bob E\ ~ in Rio Grande
• Guarding Angeb Board Members
• Guarding Angeb Staff Members
• Steve and Cari Blouir
• Vinton Baptist Church Members
• Jason ShenllCandidate for Gallia County Commissioner
• Harold MontgomeryCandidate for Gallia County Commissioner
• Darla SaundersCandidate for Gallia County Auditor
• Dean Evllls·
Candidate for Common Pleas Court
• Fred DeelCandidate for State Representative
• John CareyCandidate for State Representative

i;

•

�Sunday, October 1 7,

Pome~·oy

2010

~ unb llJ' n:: tmc~ -~r ntm e [

• Middleport • Gallipolis

• Page C3

Wheeler
anniversary

Hysell reunion

Charles and Kay Wheeler of
Albany celebrated their 50th wedding anntversary on Oct. 15 with
friends and relatives at a ceremony
where they renewed their wedding
vows.
Chatles .md Martha Kay (Rosser)
wc1 c marned Oct 15, 1960 at the
Methodist Church in Beaver. Ohio
by the late Rev. r rank Harding. The
couple founded and operated the
Oasis Therapeutic Foster Care in
Albany.
Mrs. Weaver Kay is a retired
teacher from Alexander Local
Schools. The Wheeler's children
attending were Darlene (Don) Carr
of Lake.land. Fla.. Bill Wheeler of
namehne : Charles and Kay Wheeler
Albany; Carl (Cathy) Wheeler of
Albany; Mary (David ) Bailey of Albany, Angela Buckale" of Cincmnati; and
April Wheeler of Chilhcothe. The Wheelers ha\e 16 grandchildren and 10 great~
grandchildren.

RACINE
1be 21 '' .mnual fattlll) reunion of the descendents of Dcmcr and
Frances (Sv.tck) Hysell v..ac; held at the Star Mtll Park in Racine, Sept. 26.
T
Forty-three fnmtl) members \vere present for an afternoon of fun and visitmg. A
potluck dinner wn enJoyed b) all and candy treat bags v. ere n1.1de for the children.
Jane H) sell prc&lt;;lded O\ et the busine s meeting \\ ith the ssecretaf'} -tree~ urcr's
report bemg gh n b) Dt.tnn Maxv.ell. The marriage of Luke and Jenrufer Ruof on
Aug. 5 wus noted as v.as the death of Ralph Painter on Sept. 15.
A Christmas Party \\ 111 be held on Dec. 5. at 12:30 at the Bradford Church of
Christ Activity Bmldmg. Nc.xt year's reunion v. ill be held at the park on the fourth
Stephanie Wisner and Jo~h Wood
Sund.ty of September.
were united in marriage Aug. 21.
Present for the reunion were G.try Hysell of Pomero), Connie Thomton of 20 I0, nt the Foundry Park Inn and
Dayton. Daniel Thornton of Columhus, E\elyn an~ Ivan Wood of Chester, Rodney Spa in Athens. Ga.
Wood of Chester. Jane, Hi ll and Cody Hysell of Pomeroy, Gary and Bonnie
Josh is the :-on of Dr. Randy
Warner of Chester. Jason and Amanda Warner of Chester. Jo&lt;.h and Andrea Clegg Wood and wife, Beverly, of Atlanta,
of Chester, Diana ·and Bill Maxwelll)f Chester. Randy. Emily, Shelby and Emma Ga.
ng of Rutland ,Bethany and Derrick Bolin of Pomeroy, Becky and Bill
Stcffi is the daughter of Richard
Wisner and wife, SuLanne, of
tber~cr of Racine, Keith, Julia, Jordan and Olh ia Wood of Chester. Jim and
Bmg of Chester. Lindsey und Jonathan Wolfe of Chester. Madeline Painter Tallahassee, Fla.
of Middleport. Sandy, Tr,\\ ts .md Holly Painter of Middleport. Donald, Steven and
The \\ edding was performed by
Stephanie Hysell of Pomeroy, Carter Jones Mike Jon, and Robert Welch.
Dr. Randy Wood. father of the
groom.
The scripture reading from II
Corinthians 13:4-8 was read by the
bride's cousin. After the iing ceremony, the couple observed Holy
Mr. and Mrs. Josh Wood
Communion.
The six bride's attendant v.ere
sorority sisters of the bride.
The eight groom's anendantc; were law ~chool friends and fraternity brothers of
the groom.
•
The weddmg party joined the couple for a buffet dinner and dancing at the
Cheryl Bu h. 1 student at Radford
Melting Point.
Uni\ersity in Radford. Va.. ha heen
The couple spent their honeymoon at a resort in the Dommican Republic.
inducted into the National Soctcty
Stefli graduated from University of l•londa and in May 2010 from the
of Collegiate ScllOlcirS.
University of Georgia Law School.
:
The membership which is by mviJosh ~aduated from the University of Georgta and in May 2010 from thetation only. IS offered to those fre-.hLJnht:rstty of Georgia Lav. School.
men and sophomore students \\ ho
Both are attorneys at Jaw firms in Atlanta, Ga.
carry a 3.4 grade p&lt;\tnt a' crnge or
Josh 1s the grandson of Rev. John Wood and wife, Ruth, of Gallipoli-..
hi her and rank in the top 2{) percent
of thcir college classes.
Bush is the daughter of James und
Ruth lFI)) Bu h of Virginia Be.1ch,
Va .. and granddaughter of Bctrbara
Jim fry ot PomcrQy who attendthe induction ceremon) She is
J the granddaughter of Suzanne
Chuck and Linda Blake of Mason.
o;h of Racmc A reception v.as
and Chuck and Linda Faulk of
folio\\ in' the ceremony.
Cheryl Bush
Pomeroy. Ohio. v.ould like to
announce the engagement and forthcoming marriage of their children,
Kimberly Blake and Radley "RC'
Faulk.
Bl,tke is a 2001 graduate ofWahama
High School. She is employed by the
Mason Count) E~lS.
F,!Uik is a 1999 graduate of Eastern
B Y L EANNE ITALIE
High
school. and a 2005 graduate of
ASSOCIATED PRESS
the University of Rio Gmnde. He is
by t~c Mason County 911
NEW YORK
Picture Wtlly Wonk;t's mistress and you've got CdtHiy employed
Center and l'v1ctgs County EMS.
maven Dylan Lauren. especially the Dylan Lauren propelled tnto happ)The couple will \\ed on NO\. 20 at
land for Halloween.
6:30 p.m. at the Kountl) Resort in
The founder and chtef executi\e of the Dylan's Candy Bar emporiums Pomeroy. Ohio. The gracious cu~tom
RC Faulk and Krmberly Blake
.md the sexy offspring of Ralph and Ricky Lauren write in a ne\\ book th,lt of an open wedding is being obsen ed.
Halloween's definitely not just for kids. It's the perfect excuse for grO\vnups to lose thetr mhtbitions. and it's a great v.ay to tap into all those childhood memories about cand)
Lauren emote tn her "Dylan's Candy B.1r: Unv.rap Your Sv.eet Life
myd a ilyse ntinel.com
"Candy IS magic' Cand) is unagination! Cand) IS art! Candy is alv.ay m
mydail yt rl bun e.co m
fashion! Cand) ts JO) !''
,
..
So what's in the candy queen s candy bov.l come All Hallows E\e? Ftve
•csttons for D) Jan Lauren:
• AP: What's your fa, orite candy bowl mix to gi\e out on Halloween?
DL: 1 think the clas&lt;&gt;ic kiddie mix of mini candy bars - 3 Musketeers,
KitKats, bags of M&amp;M's - and boxec;; of nostalgic classics. Dots.
JuJubces. Jujyfruits. And ot course cand) corn are best' Then gummy. sour
and chocolate f,ms .111 can find something they like.
AP · Growing up, whnt candy did you most look forv. ard to getting?
DL: I ne,er liked dried fruit, nut:- or apple,. BOOO! 1 hne gumm1es so
boxes of Jujy truits. whe1e there arc a variety of Oavored gummics, or find.
. .
.
ing an untraditional candy I' ve ne,er had.
AP: Some people are trying to make Hallowec~ a health1e1 hohdc~y. lor
Xever before open to the public- .\ince 18951
kids in particu lar. but you unabashedly ce!cbratc 1ts candy goodness . I hi\ c
you ever expelienced the w1.1th of the antt-sugar movement?
.
Stmday, October 24, 20 J0 at 2:00p.m.
DL: Halloween is the best excuse to eat the candy you want an? ktds. ot
With musicfi·om members o[The OJuo,T'alle} Symphon)
all ages up to 90 can participate ,md splurge. Healthy fun optt?ns hke
Admi.).)101l $10
chocolate cQvered frUJt (raisins, nuts, pomegranate) or 100 calonc snuck
,)a., • ••.•.•.• •.• .... .. .. . . .... .... ... .
I, .., • • • • ••
•"* .,.,.. • " ,•, ••••.,·•·• .,._.., ,.. • • "'• • *
packs or dark chocolate are fine.
AP: Js Halloween your favorite holiday?
))L: Actuall) Easter ts because 1 prefer spring bright colors an~l collect
rabbit . But I do look fon\ ard to putting on a costume and eattng e\ en
more candy than I already do.
Saturday. J.lovember 20. 2010. Noo11-S p.m.
AP: Has fear taken the fun out of trick-or-treating?
DL: Maybe &lt;;eeing scary costumes and crazy drunk people pro~ oke fear. •
Vendors to serve all your" edding need:s.
but hopefull) the can.dy is all scaled and ~e~ure as pe?ple who gtvc cand)
to tnck o' treater enJOY the pleasure of gtvtng. and \ICC ve1sa.
0
Door Prizes :X Gifts for the Bnde *Admission S I0

\Visner-Wood
wedding

Bush inducted
into national
society

engagement

Candy. queen Dylan Lauren
talks Halloween

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�Sunday. October 17,

2010

~unbap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

U::imrs -~enttnel • Pagt:

Jackie Simoni, Lyal
Lauth/AP photo
This product image released
by Jackie Simoni shows a
dog weanng the PupL1ght.
Six ye4rs ago Jackie Simoni
invented the Puplight, which
fits on a dog collar, to help
make dogs safer after dark.

Melissa Nelson/AP photo
This Friday, Oct. 8, 2010, photo
shows Haley Smith, 20-months·
old, as she practices her signs
for mother and father at
Malena's Mini School in
Pensacola, Fla S1gn language
has long been a technique for
psychologists working with very
young children, but parents over
the last decade or so have
embraced the practice with special classes, books, DVDs and
online programs.

Babies learning to sign
while learning
.to crawl
•

Dog collar light inventor
selling to government

BY MELISSA NELSON

BY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Sue

MANNING

ASSOCIATED PRESS

PENSACOLA. Fla .
'leacher Robyn Gates places three chubby babies in
LOS ANGELES - Jackie Simoni is a computer geek tumcd invelliOJ of a '-1 - il
their highchairs at .M alena's Mini School and begins sign language lessons.
cial light to make dogs safer after dark. Now, she's also a government conll ·u.:t' .
"Can you say 'Thank you'!''' 'ihe a~ks . Her students drool. laugh and s4uirm.
Simoni im en ted PupLight six years ago. She came up \Hth the idea of a li ht
then bab) Haley re:.~ches a tiny h&lt;llld to her mouth and touches it to her out- that attaches to a ~ollar while f~mbling with a leash, flas~light, poop ba~o; and ni
o;tretchcd palm. makmg the proper &lt;; Jgn .
mal rcpellant dunng a walk wtth her 90-pound. very -;oc1al golden rctne'ier.
•
Sign language has long been a tcchni4uc for psychologists v.orking with very
[I took 15 prototypes. but the lights are now sold at Petco, her biggest custom r. •
young childre n, but parents over the la-;t dccaue or o;o hmc embraced the prac- Cabela's outfitters and on Amad&gt;n.com. "I thought I would ...en a million a yea
tice v. ith spec ial dasses, booh. DVDs and online pro~rams. Interest 1s so she said.
intense, in fact, that infant and_toddler psycholo~ist RuhJ! D. Briggs wonders
So far, the number b closer to 150,000 at $19.95 each. But Sil}loni \; luck cot ld
whether some pare~t s no~ ...ec 1t as a mu&lt;a-do m!lesto_nc.
.
be changing.
.
"I worry 1t Is bcmg seued _upon as panaeca 111 child. rean~g b_y marketers 1 The Secret Service has been using the lights for a couple of years. A few \\C A
wanting to capitahz~ on \cry m_nocent p:!rcntal dcm_e s lor theu· chlldre_n to do 1 ago, she got a five-year. $125,000 contract v. ith the Gene1 al Sef\ icW
well," said Briggs. lrom J\lontcl1orc \1edJC3l Center 111 the New York C1ty bor- Administration so she can sell to more than 1.000 other government dcpartm&lt;'nh, :
ough of the Bronx.
said Rita Haake, program manager of the Center for Entreprcncw ship nt I c
Parents don ' t need to &lt;.,pend hundreds of dollars and hours each day on baby College of DuPane in Illinois.
sign language, she said . Instead, she suggested starting with a few signs. Patty
"Th~e process that Jackie had to go through is thorough and substantial. ' I he I d
cake is a sort or -..ign language, she ..;aid.
.
. .. era! government evaluates the product offering and then negotiates for beo;t p Jt;
''When you say ' yeah· and they clap became they arc happy, that 1s a s1gn,
ing from the company," said Haake. who helped Simoni with her GSA applicauo 1.
she ~aid.
.
. . .
All Si1~1t1ni has to do now i-. contact ~he departments that u"e dogs and sell th m ~
Bnggs and other experts, ho"' ever. do behcve that baste ~1gm~g r~duces fru..,. on PupL1ght. then they can order the hghh through the GSA.
tration for babies and toddlers by helping them express some of their needs and
Hot prospects include: the Federal Emergency ~lanagement Agency, wit h 1 .., 1
wants before than .can say the \\ortlo;; .
.
.
canine search and rescue corps; the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco, Fireau no; , t.l
"It doc.., work ," s.1id t-.lary Hen,on .\lcMulkn, an early chlldhoo.d edu~atwn Explosives for airport detection and narcotic-. canines: and Custom..; and Bo11
profeso;or at Jncliana Uni\ersity with more than 30 years of expenence m the Patrol for dogs that search for narcotics or find themselves in dark border tunn I
field.
Haake said
Within "'ceks after the) arc born, babies begin to understand a _bit of what is
PupLight was recently one of six products- out of 1.300 entries - chosen
bemg -.aid ~mmncl them. -;he said. "At 6 months. they arc lcarmng more and the Edison Nation product search competition. Edison Nation is running tde\ is1
more '' ords and "ithin a year they arc learning hundred~ and hundreds of infomercials through October to detem1inc if it will sponsor the light in a n at• ~
word-.:' tvk~1ullen said .
al direct saks ad campai!m.
But most children can ' t speak clearly until around 2. By sh~&gt;wing infants the
That could mean sales in the millions and licensing royalties. said Simoui. v. o
simple si••n'&gt; for \'.Ord~ such a&lt;; hungry, milk and more. most mfants will even- Ji,·es in suburban Chicago.
tually sta~t to use tho..,c "igns to tell the parents v. hat they need.
Four year:-. ago. Robert Eschen berg. 43. an auto repair technician from Vcntu
"Babic-. are able to u~e their hands far soo11er than they can verbally address Calif.. and his v.ife. Kim. adopted Maggie, a 10-month-old Lab mix \vho had been
abused. Every once in a while. she would freeze in fear.
their needs," she said .
~kl\1ullen said she \\as in a preschool classroom recently and watched an 8On a \\alk one night, a neighbor complained that she couldn't .;cc 1\laggie. c\ l
month-old boy who hecome upset when a tc,tcher he liked. named Mona. left though E-.chenberg w:.~s carrying a flashlight. At a dog show. the neighbor foun a
the room. The hahy used hi' tiny hands and signed "More Mona hug pl.ease."
PupLight and bought it for the dog.
"'
San Diego mom Mont.t Z. Briant began studying baby sign language Ill 2900
"Mag!!ie was a little leery of it at first. but when it got dark and I reac h~d do 1
when pregn:.m t with her first child . The signing '' orkcd so \\CII that. Bnant to turn ii: on, something chan~eJ in her. Her_chest popped out and she s~mt d
began teaching cl&lt;lSSes to_other mother~ .
.
,
strut. She wa~ proud. Maggte now had a JOb and that gaYe he1 conhd~.:n
"For the first couple of years I was ~ctually paymg t~? teach _the classes. I d Eschenberg smd.
.
.
rent tJ1e room and only a couple of people would ~;omc. she sa1d.
They would meet people on the1r walks and the people would :mule mtd -,(.;.
But 111 2003. a publisher asked her to \\rite a book about signing for babies. about the light. "It helped in socializing her." he said.
:;
The book has ..;incc been translated mto six languages . At one point, Target was
The Eschenbergs have since adopted a friend for ~laggie. a 7 month-oiJ -"'
ordering 700 copies of the book each day, she s:.Jid. Briant has since created Dalmatian mix. And the first thing they did was order a Pt1pLight. ''Olll _girl "
::
other books and educational material-. . Her neighborhood cla:-.~es are hugely referred to as the do!!s with headlights." Eschenberg said.
~
popular. She has up to 70 parent... and babies in each of her s!x-weck sessions.
PupLight \\as the highest rated dog light product tcsted_by Whole Dog J~ut ·I ~
The idea of teaching babies to -..ign became more popular atter the 2004 com- in January 2008. "£\cry dog owner v. ho helped us test thi&lt;&gt; product ao;ked It tit Y ~
cdy !'Meet the !~ockcr~" in which ~obcrt De ~iro played _an UJ?tight g_randfa~her could keep it after our trial was complete~. There rea~ly isn ·tan) better testau 1t ..
determined to make h1s grando;;on mto a prod1gy by teachmg hun to stgn. Bnant to a product's ease of use and usefulne-.s, the magazme wrote.
-'
s&lt;tid.
PupLight got a four-paw rating. meaning it was "as good as it gets; ptodud '&gt; :
''It was a movie that e\ eryone sav. and it brought it into the mainstream. A lot fully approved bv WDJ."
of people thm1¥h.t it was trick for the ~a by to do_ th~t. Of cour~e:.they do_n 't learn
The light did inore than make dog~ safer. It mad~ Simoni smarter, she :a
~
with a lithe dr_IIImg a~d na-.h ca.rds hke they dtd m_ the m_o\'le. she -.atd.
H~l\ ing learned all her lessons. and notmg ho\\ many tt.mes ..;he bonmved the ii••I h 1
Indeed. babies don t neccssanJy learn the Amencan S1gn Language way of from her dog. Tangent. and her 3-yem·-old golden retnc,·cr Sargent, she h •.., LO , 1making every sign.
.
up with a light for humans. It\ called NekLight.
.
.
.
.,";
"It has to be a natural experience between a caregiver and a baby. It a baby
Simoni. 60. knew nothin!! about engineering. packagmg. marketnH&gt;, patcntu • ~
stm1s to do something '' ith their hands and you rc~llize that is the baby's sign shipping, shO\\ ing and aJ( the rest of the tedious. time-consuming. dctaih th ._
for "more." encourage that and recogni/1? that and that is tine be tv. ecn you and inventing re4uircs. She could find nething li~e .her light on the mmket. ~o start
your baby." she said.
looking for ways to make her own. Instead ot b1g bulky headlamps. she lound "
Mc!\lullcn said parents and teachers should make learning signs fun and could usc LED lights.
.
warned parents about the many. many products offering to teach babie~ to sigt~.
In the tirst protol) pes. Tangent's nose blocked the light. his fur bloc k.ctl the h•
Parents don't need to buy e\erything and shouldn't feel pressured that their and the batteries didn't last long enough.
baby has to learn ~ign language to be on track with other children their age. she
She went through an c_ncyclopedia of 250. dog~ and mea~ured the ttlt .ot the
said.
heads. "Poodles hold their heads almost stratght up and beagles hold the•r hc.11.. ~
The cost of classe" varies widely. Fur example. one San Diego teacher almost straight down:· she said. She figured out a way to adju..,t the til~
charges $125 for six. 45-minutc group lessons. while a Portland. Ore .. teacher
Tangent is tall but her neighbor had a miniature dachshund ami the ~~~'ht h1t t1
charges $89 for the same
.
.
ground. She devised a way. to adj_~st it. .
.
Chlocy Lisk, 2. began lcarmng to s1gn at I0 months. She has been communtShe kept dropping the hght ott her kitchen counter unttl sh_e came up '~ 1th
eating wi~h he~ 1~arcn!s through sign language for more t~an a ):car:. "F~om a polycarbonatc case and a collar of reinforced n~·lon. 'fhen she loun~ an engmt:
selfi h poult ot '1ew. 11 has cut down on my ov. n level of lrustratwn. sa1d her
Like Eschenberg. Deb Seyfer ot St. Paul. Mum .. hkcd ~cr PupLrgh.t "o nm .
father. Bill LP;k.
she sent Simoni a note. Butch. her 8-year-old Lhasa apso. 1s small Sl1 1t '"as had ~
When Chlocy cries. she often uses sign language to express things like "hurt" to sec him in the dark and it is dark a lot in Minnesota. she said. The Pupl it ht t &gt; t,. ~
or "hun&amp;ry or "milk." .
.
.
. .. . ..
.•
.. care of that, she said.
.
.
.
.
:
Bill Ltsk JOkes !ha.t h1s daughter a\'oJds the s1g~1s lor ttred and sleep
She got hers f~ur year-. ago at a pet expo 111 ~lmncapohs and she has onh h
~
hecause ... he docsn t hke to take nap-. Her parents l!gured that out through the to change battencs once.
proce-,.., of elimination. he said.
"And he's not encumBriant recalled tlwt her daughter used sign language at 14 months when she bercd by iL at all." said
pointed to the leaf on a eucalyptu~ tree in a parJ..: and signed '"moon.'' She 1 Seyfer. fello\\ ship conrdithought the lea~ lnoket~ like the moon .
:.
na~or at the Uni~cr"i!) of
Around that tunc. Bnant took her daughter to -.ee a fncnd who wa-. very prcg- Mmnesota. "It s hghtnant and told her that the woman had a bab) in her stomach. When the baby \Vetghl, l"Omfortable and
came, her daughter made the -.1g_ns f01: "bii:d·· and "out."
.
.
.
seem-. quite indestruc"\Ve had recently been to the San Dlt!go Zoo and seen hatchhngs 111 the Incu- tiblc. He 1s very low to the
'8~ 'i&lt;U&lt;UJ~
bator" she said.
ground and it\ been
In ~thcr cases . .;igning can be \ital. One of the babies in Briant's classl!s dropped a few times by
t)i~ute~z,
spilled s&lt;..tlding ~?ff~e on his font _and h&lt;tc..i to be taken to the h~spital. He us~d me and it's held its own."
sign lan"ua••c \\ htle 111 the bark ol th~ ambulance to say that hts father was 1n
Christopher Columbus
the car J~chi~HI the ambulance. He used it again "'hen he pointed to the gauges
on the equipment in the emergcnc) room and u~ed
portrayed by Hank Fincken
the sign for "clocks."
"The Slzame and the GlotJ"
"Sometimes (toddlers) ha,·c so much more to say
WEIGHT LOSS
than just their basic needs and. s1gn .Jan~uage c~tn
RAVENSWOOD MEDICAL CENTER
JHOVJde nice sharing ,md hondmg expcncnccs lor
USING THE PRESCRIPTION DRUG PHENTERMINE
Tuesday, October 26th, 20/0
that," Briant smd

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~I

�Sunday, October

17, 201 0

~ unbap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

W:tmes -~ent inel • Page Cs

In autumn, cin easy meat pie to leave you satisfied
BY JIM ROMANOFF
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Whether it's for a
Halloween party or
Sunday in front of the
widescreen for a football
arne, good food for a
bering should be
. flavorful and easy
prepare.
With this rustic pork
and veal pie. you can
put a checkmark next to
all three.
For the savory filling of
this freeform meat pic.
you start with pre-shredded cabbage. which is
sold near the pre-washed
salad mixes at your grocer Then you adq convenient, ground pork and
veal along with canned
tomatoes and spices.
After it is simmered to
let the flavors meld. the
filling gets wrapped up in
store-bought, refrigerated
pie crusts and baked until

golden brown.
For added convenience. the pie can be
baked a day ahead and
reheated in a 350 F oven
for 30 minutes. or until
heated through.

Rustic Pork &amp;
Veal Pie
Start to finish: I hour
10 minutes (40 minutes
active)
Servings: 6
2 teaspoons extra-virgin oil
3 cloves garlic. minced
6 cups shredded green
cabbage (1/2 small head)
I /2 pound ground pork
1/2 pound ground veal
1 cup canned diced
tomatoes, with juice
2 tablespoons tomato
paste
r
I teaspoon dried thyme
leaves
1/4 teaspoon ground
allspice

l/4 teaspoon cinnamon
Salt and ground black
pepper. to taste
2/3 cup shredded extrasharp cheddar cheese
1 package refrigerated
piecrusts (two 9-inch
crusts), at room temperature
Heat the oven to 450 F.
Coat a large baking sheet
or piua pan with cooking spray. Set aside.
In a large nonstick skillet over medium, heat the
oil. Add the garlic and
saute for 30 seconds. Stir
in the cabbage and saute
until softened and translucent, about 5 minutes.
Add the ground pork
and veal and cook. breaking it up as finely as possible with a wooden
spoon, until no longer
pink, 8 to I 0 minutes.
Stir in the tomatoes,
tomato paste, thyme, allspice and cinnamon.
Cover and let simmer for

7 minutes. Season with
salt and pepper. Uncover,
stir in the cheese until
melted. then set aside to
cool slightly.
Meanwhile, on a lightly
noured surface, place one
piecrust on top of the other.
Dust the top crust with
flour and roll the crusts out
together into and 18-inch
circle. Fold the circle in
half. transfer it to the prepared baking ~beet or pizza

is golden-brown on the top
and bottom and completely cooked at the folds.
Nutrition information
per serving (values are
rounded to the nearest
whole number): 578 calories: 31 3 calories from fat
(54 percent of total calories): 35 g fat ( 14 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 85
mg cholesterol; 44 g carbohydrate; 21 g protein: 3
g fiber; 525 mg sodium.

pan and unfold.
Place the pork and veal
mixture in the center of
the
piecrust
circle,
spreadmg it out in an
even layer and leaving a
4-inch uncovered border.
Fold the edges of the
crust up over the filhng,
forming pleats and leaving a roughly 2- to 3-inch
opening at the center.
Bake the pie for 25 to 30
minutes, or until the crust

Rocksprings

Halloween's classic scary face as a cookie
BY ALISON LADMAN
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

l

lasses and spice
for great autumnal
rs. In this cookie
sandwich we've taken a
chewy gingerbread pumpkin cut-out cookie and
added fun jack-o-lantern
faces and a lightly sweetened cream cheese filling.
If your dough gets too
warm. put it in the freezer for 5 minutes for easier cutting.

Jack-0-Lantern
Cookies
Start to finish: 3 hours
( 1 hour active)
Makes 20 cookie sand·
wiches
For the cookies:
• 3 112 cups all-purpose
flour
• 2 teaspoons cinnamon
• 2 teaspoons ground
ginger
• !~2 teaspoon ground
/2 teaspoon allspice
/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking

soda
• 12 tablespoons ( 1 112
sticks) butter, room temperature
• 2 cups packed brown
sugar
• 112 cup molasses
• 1/4 cup milk
. For the filling:
• Two 8-ounce packages
cream cheese. softened
• 1 cup powdered sugar
• 1 teaspoon vanilla
To make the cookie~. in
a medium bowl, whisk
together the flour, cinnamon. ginger. cloves. allspice. salt and baking soda.
In another bowl, use an
electric
mixer
beat
together the butter and
brown sugar. Mix rn the
molasses and milk. then
the dry ingredients.
Refrigerate until firm,
about 2 hours.
When ready to bake,
heat the oven to 350 F.
Lightly coat 2 baking
sheets with cooking
spray or line with parchment paper.
On a lightly floured surface, and working with
half the dough at a · time,

roll out the dough to 1/8
inch thick. Use a 4-inch
pumpkin-shaped cookie
cutter (and rerolling
scraps as needed) cut out
a total of 40 cookies.
Use a paring knife or
very small cutters to cut
out a jack-o-lantem face
on 20 of the cookies.
Transfer the cookies to the
prepared baking sheets.
leaving I iJ;~ch between
each cookie. Bake for 12
to 15 minutes, or until
golden around the edges.
Transfer the cookies to a
rack and allow to cool.
·To make the filling. in
a medium bowl use an
electric mixer to beat
together
the
cream
cheese, sugar and vanilla
until smooth and creamy.
Add a tablespoon of
filling to the bottom
cookies (without faces)
and spread to within a 1/4
inch of the edges. Place a
top cookie on each to create a sandwich. Store in
an airtight container in
the refrigerator between
layers of waxed paper or
parchment.

lrr ,,·i/1 he acctptiiiJ: canned guod do11atiofl~ at the elllmnce that will he111jit our

local food pantry a\ we llril'e to gin• bar!. to our CII/JIIIIIlllity.

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Octo~er 18, '2.01
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Wilson Bails Out Wall Street While Unemployment In Ohio Skyrockets.
Charlie Wilson supported bailouts of Wall Street, big banks and a failed trillion dollar stimulus
bill that creat ed debt not jobs. Wilson and Pelosi's big spending program is threatening America's
financial fut ure. Can we afford Charlie Wilson?

Wilson Sold-Out Ohio Seniors and -Supported A Government Ta~e-Over
of Health Care.
Pelosi,s governm ent t akeover of our health care syst em cut Medicare by $500 million, increased .
premiums, cont ained billions in new taxes and will ration care for our seniors. 1 It's bad for America
and bad for Ohio but when Nancy Pelosi needed Charlie's vot e, he stood with her, not Ohio .
.comla!tlde/SB10001474052970203517304)74303903498159292 html

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Sunday, Octohe•· 17,

~unbav

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

'Q::tmes&gt; -~entine( • Page C6

Philly book publisher the BRAAAINS! behind phenom
BY JOANN LOVIGLIO
ASSOCIATEDPRESS

PltlLADl:.LPIIIA
'l11c undead have created

a" hole new li fc for Quirk
Books. the brains - or
rather the BRAAAI!'\S!
- behind the monster
best-seller ''Pride and
Prejudice and Zombtes.''
Quirk .•m independent
publisher that started with
a series of tongue-incheek guides for sun, i\mg highly unlikely mislot1uncs. has estahlisheJ
the hybrid "mashup"
genre bcndmg of out-ofcopyright das~ic-. and
horror-lied kitsch.
"It has in a way
become kind of a modern, or a postmodcrn.
classtc.'' said Quirk president and fowndcr David
Borgcnicht, whose ISperson staff works in an
mconspicuou~ building
on a cobblestone-paved
in
side
street
Philadelphia's Old' City
neighborhood.
''That
\\ asn 't at all our intent. It
was simply too crazy not
to publish."
Ever look at something
and ask yourself why you
didn't think of it first 1
That's one "ay Quirk
comes up v. ith its titles.
''When \\ e have an idea
,md say. 'If this wa:. a
book. I'd buv it,"'
Borgenicht said. "that

instmct is key."
It was creative director
Jason Rckuluk'li idea to
add lumbering hordes of
discourteous llesh-eutcrs
to J anc Austen's I 9thcentury comedy of manners,
"Pride
and
Prcjutlicc," spawning a
monstrous hit.
"Pride and Prejudice
and Zombies," Quirl..:'s
tirst foray into fiction,
debuted in April 2009 at
No. 3 on The New York
Times bcsl-!ieller list. It
!iince has sold more than
a mill ion copies. been
translated into nearly two
do1en language'&gt;, heen
made into a graphic
novel and an iPhone
game, and been optioned
for the hig screen
"Quirk has great quality to their books and an
mcrcdiblc design ~Cil';e ,''
of
said
University
Baltimore
professor
Arnold T. Blumberg.
who teaches a cla-.s on
lombies in popula1 culture. "It's kind of heat1cning· You hear about
how old-fashioned print
i~ dying ami here'.; a
company creating things
that get widespread
attention, good-looktng
books that stand out on
the shelf. that you want
to own."
·
The book's success
says as much about the
tcomc nature of "Pride

and Prejudice" '" it doe::.
about the popularity of
:t.ombics, he added.
''Jane Austen, and that
one book especially. has
become a major cultural
toucho;tonc for so many
people," he :-.aid.
The runaway success
of "Zombies'' e . . tabli..,hed Quirk, a privately
held company that doc::.
not release financtal
data, as creator of the
mashup genre. It also
a cottage
launched
industry of copycats
from "Jayne Slayre" to
"Little Vampire Women."
''To some extent it saturates the market, but at
the same time we know
what made ·Pride and
Prejudice and Zombies'
work wasn't just the
title." Borgenicht said.
" It's a lot more thoughtful, hard work in order to
create something that
will be remembered and
read. ·that goes beyond
being just a gratuitous
novelty."
When the blogosphere
"&gt;tarted buzzing months
before the release of
"Zombies,"
Rekulak
knew the company had a
hit and wanted to capitalize on the momentum. He
quickly came up with
"Sense and Sensibility
and Sea :Vlonsters,"
released just li\'e months
after th predecessor.

which also became a
best-seller with more than
375,000 copies in print.
"There are discussions
and urticles about the
(mashup) trend, what it
all means, where it came
from. I can say undisputedly that it came from
Jason at Quirk Books,
directly from his head,''
said ''Sea Monsters''
author Ben H. Winters.
Winters, who also
wrote sci-fi Tolstoy
"Android
mashup
Karen ina'' for Quirk, said
the company's success
lies in its "clearly defined
aesthetic."
"It's parody but it doesn't feel cynical,'' he said.
"They're laid back,
funny, interesting people
doing laid back, funny.
interesting work.''
Quirk recently left the
Victorian era for space.
the final frontier. with
"Night of the Living
Trekkies" and its heroes
using their science-nerd
knowledge to battle zombies descending on the
hallowed ground of a
Star Trek convention.
..All the Treklde stuff
checks out." Rekulak
~aid. •·we have yet to
receive a single angry letter - and you know if
there was a problem.
we'd get them."
About a decade ago.
Quirk made its bones with

outlandi~h

how-14' handbook&lt;, combining information and humor with
clever l$raphic design and
packagmg. "'I he WorstCase Scenario Survival
Handbook," c:o-wdften hy
Borgenicht and released
in 1999, offers funny-buttrue illustrated tips on !;Urviving &lt;,hark attacks,
quicksand and other
implausible calamities.
"It became a huge hit
and got us up and running as a real company,"
Borgenicht said. "It's the
best busine'is plan ever
- get a best-seller right
out of the gate."
More than a dozen
''Worst-Case"
books,
cards, games and calendars followed. which
"brought us financial and
industry capital and gave
me the clarity of vision
about the kind of books I
wanted us to do, which is
really
entertaining,
crossover books.''
Quirk has ~ince published 200-plus titles with
irreverent takes on history,
dating. childbirth. cooking, pop culture. fitness
and careers. Among the
less risque titles, found in
places ranging from
Williams-Sonoma and
Urban Outfitters to bookstores and comic book
shops: "BooLe Cakes,"
Encyclopedia
"The
Shamerica." and "The Big

Book of Porn."
"Every aspect of the
book has to work as hard
as it can: great concept,
great title, great package.
great writer, great marketing," Borgenicht said.
"If you have that. you've
got something of val
Ideas are usually
crated by Quirk's
ative team. Once a concept is green-lighted,
freelance writers are
hired to work with inhouse editors and graphic
designers - a setup that
allows the company to
.control more of the rights
to their titles and more
easlly adapt them into
other formats.
Readers should expect
more mashups with classic novels as well a-; alloriginal content like'
"Trekkies" in the coming
year. Borgenicht also hinted at a "sci-fi sla~h political satire" book on deck
for 2012, in time for the
next presidential election.
"We provide something that's entertaining
and informative and cool
that you'd be proud to
display on your coffee
table, or the back of your
toilet.'' he said. "And.•
know, for my mo ,
we're perfectly happy to
be on the back of your
toilet - more reading
goes on there than at the
coffee table."

Snooki, Gaga and Buzz hot for Halloween this year
The NRF said more
people plan to dress up
for the holiday than e\'er
NEW YORK - ln"ide before - 40.1 percent
a Ricky's NYC store. compared with 33.4 perLucie Sudmcier selects a cent last year and the
Hogv. arts uniform from highest percentage since
racks filled with sexy the group stm1cd tracking
pm1tes. blue Avatar make- Halloween trends in 2003.
"We expect 20 I0 to be
up and vampire fangs.
"1 was going to be u the year of the costume,"
runaway bride. but when said NRF spokesv.oman
J sa\\ this costume, I had Kathy Grannio;, who cites
to grab it. said the 19- the {'OOr economy ns a
)ear-old. "My friends posstble reason people
knov. me as the HatTy are investing in some fun.
"It's relatively affordPotter nerd. I ha\'C a
able. purely dbcretionary
Harry Potter tattoo!"
hot
for spendmg and a great v. ay
Potter's
Halloween tht-. &gt;·ear. to kick back and forget
including
promment about what lies around
billmg on kid costume the corner.'' she said. "We
li-.ts for the first time ever. saw a nse like thio.; in
accordmg to a ~un ey con- 2008 a'&gt; well as in 2002
ducted by BIOresearch for after 9-11."
Thi'&gt; season's Halloween
the
National
Retail
Federation. But he's going cm.tume trends also
to ha\e some pop culture include rises in clascompetition as retailers sics. humor and lightstock a v. ider variety.
hearted gear:
Think Snooki \Crsus
Top Adult Costumes
Gaga, Buzz Lightyear
versus Spiderman.
BY MARGIT DETWEILER
FOR 1'HE ASSOCIATED PRESS

According to the NRF
survev. ''witches'' are still
the No. I costume for
adult&lt;~, followed by vampire-., pirates and nurses.
''Nurses and political
costumes completely fell
off the list last year,"
Grannis said. "It was
right when health care
was in the news e\'ery
day and we had already
been through an election
year. Both categories are
back on thi~ year."
While cla~sic costumes
~till top the li~t . Grannis
cited a rising influence of
pop culture. Leading the
paek is a ce11ain blonde
chameleon who's tailormaJe for the holidav.
"In our online business
it's Lady Gaga hands
down." said Todd Kenig.
chairman of Rkky's
NYC ''The wtg,, her
outtits, the accessories.
it':-. all Gaga."
.
Ricky's NYC sells no
less than SC\Cn different full
Lady Ga~a costume~ &lt;md
dozens ot her acce~sorie-...

including a hair-shaped tank and fake set of according to the NRF
ripped abs underneath.
survey, and several retailbov. and soda-can wig.
"The 'Jersey Shore' er., specifically cite the
Expect MTV's Jersey
has been hot. even since Mad Hatter as one of the
Shore characters
Snookte, Pauly D and the beginning of the year top costumes for adults.
Retailers report big sales
The Situation - to be a when people started
hot ticket for men and throwing Jersey Shore in scaly blue Avatar cosSnooki parties,'' said Dorice tumes and Mario Brothers.
women.
wannabes will sport Dionne. senior \'ice pres- along with "classic'' and
orange ''tan" makeup. a ident of merchandhing more Twilight-modem
skintight leopard dress for iParty. "I can't tell vampires.
Humor ·and lighthearted
and the quintessential · you how many fake tat"pouf' wig. while men toos we've already sold.'' looh are back in· a big
The characters in way as welL led by giant
can become DJ Pauly D
with a spiky wig. or ''The "Alice in Wonderland" yellow bananas and wooly
Situation'' with a muscle are another big trend, sock monkeys.

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$unbap ~tme~ -~entinel

lVI

Dl
Sunday, October 17, 2010

•
/
/

Adam Hunger/AP photo

This photo shows a family as they feed pigeons on the Fort Point Channel harborwalk across the Boston Harbor from downtown Boston. The harborwalk is a broad
public walkway with seating, cafes, artwork and access to water taxis and ferries.

Fort Point Channel: Boston's newest destination.
B Y R ODRIOUE NGOWI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

•

BOSTON - Fort Point Channel
was once nothing but swampland and
tidal marsh. In the 19th century, it
became an industrial center, warehousing wool from around New England.
Today the 55-acre landmark district
abutting South Boston has reinvented
itself as an artists' colony, complete
with lOfts, studios, galleries and museums. Many of them are located in the
distinctive red-and-yellow brick-andgranite buildings that once housed factories .
The revitalization of Fort Point
Channel, located near South Station,
has brought trendy restaurants, bars
and of course tourists. making the
neig_hborhood a new destination with a
long history that even includes a connection to the Tea Party - the original
one, that is, from l 773.
Sue and Bob Schmidt. exploring the
·neighborhood on a visit from Chicago.
sat in a waterfront plaza in the area
sipping coffee as a couple of pigeons
pecked on crumbs under their table
and seagulls perched on a nearby railing.
"It's very tranquiL very tranquil. As
you can .see. the birds are going to
come up and sit with you." Sue
Schmidt said. "People are very friendly and everything is quaint and easily
accessible."
Fort Point Channel's transition from
industrial to up-and-coming has takeh
place over the past three decades.
About 300 artists live in the area now,
one of the highest concentrations in
New
England,
said
Gabrielle
Schaffner of Fort Point Arts
Community. a nonprofit group run by
members of the neighborhood creative
community. The artists hold simultaneous open houses during the Fort
Point Open Studios weekend. drawing
thousands of visitors twice a year: with
the fall event held Oct. 15-17.
In addition to being an attractive
destination for art enthusiasts. the area
lures fami lies. shoppers, diners, history buffs and others seeking alternatives to the cobbled alleys of Beacon
Hill the Freedom Trail, Faneuil Hall
.
and ' Boston 's other more -frequented
locations.
One of its prime attractions, the
Boston Children's Museum. offers
interactive, hands-on and creative

exhibits. including a three-story climbing structure made up of curved platforms rising up a glass lobby with a
panoramic view of downtmvn Boston.
."It's pretty vibrant and I like the way
it's integrated into the port. You can
see out,'' said Madeline LaPlante. 24.
visiting from Indianapolis.
Nearby is the Boston Fire Museum.
which features antique firefighting
equipment. along with fire alarm displays, photos and other artifacts. from
one of the oldest fire departments in
the nation.
One of Fort Point Channel's newest
galleries is located in the headquarters
of Grand Circle Corp.. a travel tour
company. The gallery offers vintage
travel posters commemorating the socalled "Golden Age of Travel." the era
before World War II when travel was a
romantic experience and travelers
dressed up for trips on ocean liners and
trains. Other exhibits at the gallery
include stunning aerial photography
· by Bradford Washburn, a mountaineer
and · cartographer whose pictures
include some of the world's most
demanding mountains.
A five-minute walk from Fort Point
Channel, visitors will tind the Institute
of Contemporary Art. a waterfront
mt~~&gt;eum conceived as a laboratory for
promoting innovative approaches to
art, including visual arts, film. video.
performance and literature.
ln the works for 20 12 is a $25 million museum and three replica ships
commemorating the Boston Tea Part}.
when colonists disguised as Indians
stormed a British ship and dumped
crates of tea into the water to protest
taxes. Historians believe the episode
Doubletree, Adam Hunger/AP photo
took place in Fort Point Channel. A
This
file
photo
released
by
Doubletree
shows
the
exterior
of the Boston Children's
previous museum devoted to the Tea
Party was destroyed in 2007 by a tire Museum in Fort Point Channel, Boston. The museum offers interactive, hands-on
and creative exhibits, including a three-story climbing structure made up of curved
sparked by lightning.
•
Fort Point Channel's culinary platforms rising up a glass lobby with a panoramic view of downtown Boston.
scene is booming too. Notable spots
include three restaurants from chef
Barbara Lynch: upscale Menton, borhood included a wild Russian and drinks.
One final attraction is HarborWalk,
where the standard prix fixe dinner restaurant and bar on a ship docked
menu is $95: Sportello (the Italian in the harbor and a bar with peeling a broad public walkway with seating.
word for "counter."), specializing in linoleum floors and a bare light bulb cafes. artwork and access to water
taxis and ferries .
·
simple Italian dishes; and Drink, a hanging from the ceiling .
T hat old bar is now t..ucky's . Juliane Buettner. 28. visiting witn
laid-back bar known for creative
Lounge. a popular garden~Jevel a companion from Berlin. crossed a
cocktails.
Priscilla O'Reilly. who's worked hangout with no sign out front. fre- bridge to Fort Point Channel to enjoy
for Grand Circle Corp. for 16 years, quented by tourists, artists. stylish HarborWalk and take some pictures
says it's a remarkable transformation ;;ingles and others lured by live before their cruise ship departed
from the days when the only places 'bands, DJ music, the ambiance. food from Boston. "We are just walking
to grab a bite or a drink in the neigh -

'

•

�-------------- --

....

-~·-,.-....-

Page 02 • 6unbap ~imti ·6tntintl

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

___

...

"-"'!"'""":'-~,...-~----------------...--"-!-------...-

Sunday, October 17, 2010

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

\ll:ribune - Sentinel - l\egister
,

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Calf

ADI
GIVE-AWAY: Poodle
Free Home
&amp; Maltese Mix 304·
Security System
812·7334
with S99 installation
and purchase of
700
Agriculture
alarm monttorlng
services from ADT
Security Services
Farm Equipment
Call 1-888-367-2171
STIHL Sales &amp; Sei'VICe
Now
Ava•lable
at
400
Financial CarmiChael EqUipment

~unbap

How you can have borders and oraphics
added to your classified ads
{I~
rn
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
•~
Graphics SOC for small
~
S1.00 for Iaroe

~

Daily In-Column: 9:00a.m.
All Dls;play: 12 Noon 2
Monday-Friday for Insertion
Business Days Prior To
In Next Day's Paper
Publication
Sunday In-column: 9:00a.m. Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper
Thursday tor Sundays Paper

• Start Your Ads Wltll A keyword •

200 Announcements

Lost &amp; Found

m

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

{)utlliru
Wor.d Ads
Display Ads
Monday thru Friday

JUST SAY
CHARGE III

;;;;;;;;;=A=uto=s~=o;;;

OS Hyundat XG 350
graylblk intenor. Exc
Cond. Pnce to sale.
446·8919 or 446·
2651

98 KIA Sephia LS, 4
cyl, auto trans, very
good ttres, 30 mp.
~~~===~ runs
very
good,
$800, 740·992.0255
Yord Sale

RIVER
CITY
FELLOWSHIP You
price most rtemsl
Sat Oct 16, 2010
Silver Bndge Plaza
Gallipolis sam to
3pm for 1010 Call:
Michelle 645-4943
Yard Sale Vent!ess
LP Free Standing
Gas Ftreplace, New
Craftsman
Chipper,Shreader,
Kitchen
Cab1nets,Sofas,
Recliners.Ant1que
Dresser, Old Wicker
Fumiture.Brand
name
clothes. Household
Items 5546 St Rt 7
S Oct 16 &amp; 17
1000

Recreall_onal
Vehicles

Campers/ RVs &amp;
Trailers

For Sale By Owner
2005
28X80
Champtan
Home
3BDRM, 2BA., on
6ares
close
to
cornstalk. 304-6756640
4BDRM. Brick, 1 112
BA . Sun Room, 2
car garage roc. m pt.
pleasant
304-675-

92 Ford Explorer 7747
4x4, needs work,
Houses For Sale
$600 OBO, 74G-992·
5712
Home In Gallipolis, 2
story, 3BR,
1BA,
Want To Buy
carport, deck.2 out
=====;;;;;;;;= butldings, 4.5 car
Want to buy Junk garagelshop
Asking
Cars, call 740-368· w/carport.
$112,000
Call
7400884
578-6687 or 352·
~-~--~- 817-8652
Oiler's Towtng Now
buying junk cars - - - -......- w/motors or w/out. House for Sale 4
740·388..()011
or bdrs·2bath,
Family
740-441·7870.
No Rm, LR, 2 car
Sunday call
Garage, 20x40 in
ground pool 900sq
foot
Storage
Umt&amp;More
$250 000.00 or OBO
===;;;;;;;;= = - Homewood Dr. 3888070

·=======

For Sola By Owner
35 Hinkle Ave. 2
story, 4BR, 2BA,
forced a~r &amp; heat, lot
rent $2030 mo. 740·
of renter damage.
446.()390
$24,000. 446.()822

6 apts $137.000

2004 Jayco Camper
31ft. Long $6,400.00 - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ph. 740-446-6754
Card of Thanks
Card of Thanks

2000

Automotive

The family of

~======

James A. Rife

Autos

would like to thank our
friends. neighbors for
prayers. flowers and food.
Thanks to Andersons for
their service. Rev. Herman
George. and Rev. John
Chapman for their
support.

.=

'93' Chevy Lumma
Euro 4dr V-6 ACNew Brakes, Battery.
Good
Tires. Clean, Greal
Mileage-very reliable
144,900 miles 446·
Giveaway a childs 4922
huffy bike &amp; ~o
Forsythia
Bushes
(you dig) 740-446· 03Neon standard-air
$3200 OBO 256·
8896
1539
87 Chrysler
2
door
FIREWOOD &amp; HAY Lebaron
FOR SALE 304-882· $1500 OBO 2666002 or 256·1233
2537

)

•

�a a

Sunday, October 17, 2010

a

jS

&amp;unbap ~imt~·&amp;tntintl • Page 03

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

Help Wanted

Houses For Sale

Help Wanted

Purt - tunc positton
asstst indt\o •duals w nh

dl abtlttte m

1

I

LOOKING
FOR
DEAL? FINO US
NOWI!I
4anoakwoodhome c
omf737 &amp; Facebook

hrs/wk. Must have h1gh
school Jiplomu 01 Gl•D, valid
drwc1 's tcensc, three years good
Gt~llia Co Kyger 16
t.lt iving experience nnd adequate acres $16,500 or
nutomob le msurance $8.97fhr
Brumfield Ad 51
County.

tr.linmg
Send te une to

acres
$7&lt;4,900'
Me gs Co 8 acre
homeslto $19,000
More
@
www,brunertand com
or call740)441·1492,
Wofmnncel

Buckeye Communlt) Scn•iccs
P.O. Box 604
Jal·ksun, on 45(.40.
Dcadhac for applicants· 10 21/10.
Pre--emplo)'ment drug tcstmg.

lots

!·qual Opportunity l·mployer

L------------_J'

SHOP
SSIFIEDS

3500

te ope!) "'g

or

Holzer Senior Care Center
has the folio" mg posmons "' atluble:
• RN Supenisor P.drt l1mc
( 2:00 pm 12:00 am)

• S'l • A - Part fune
• DII:TARY AIDE P.1rt ltme
• HOUSEKEEPJNGILAUNDR\'Pnrt 11me
Now acceptmg apphcauuns for the
Nurse Atde Trammg Class
Please contact:
Barb Peterson·
Managl'r of HR·I:ISCC
46-5001 or petl·r:-on@holzer.org
Visit us on the ncb at W\H\,huller,org
bqual OpportUnt) Emphl) er

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

4
br,
bath
garage
detached
acre &amp; 112 land,
newly
remodeled,
located 1 m1le out
CR 10 Langsv•lle
$650 per mo $650
dep
No Ut•lltJes
Paid, also 3 br 1
bath
fum1shed
mobile home, water
&amp; trash pad. $450
per mo , s450 dep
located 1 mile Off
Kingsbury
Ad
Pomeroy Lease &amp;
references required
No Pets Allowed
740-416-2960

Beautiful
1BR
apartment in the
country
freshly
pa ntod very dean
WID hook up niCe
country sett1ng only
10 mtns. from 'town
Must
see
to
Water
appreciate.
pd $375/mo 614595·7773 or 740645·5953 1BR nicely lum•shed
apt No smoking, No
pets. $400 mo. +
dep. 740-446-4782
Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1 5 BA, ,back
pat10,
pool,
playground. No pets
$450 rent 740-3670547
semor
Middleport,
living, 2 br, furnished
apt., dep. &amp; ref., no
pets. ut1!1ties pa1d,
740-992·0165
Help Wanted

OUt\LJEICATIONS:
M1n1mum of three (3) months
111 tJtutJOnal or commcrc1al cook1ng cxpenence h1ghl)
preferred Must be able to hft up to 50 pounds nnd \\Ork on n
tom rete floor. Demon\trutcd Willingness to work With dl\'l'ISC
popul 11 t1on neccssal) t\ppht·anh must h;l\c 1111 e~tabl.-hld
1&gt;attcrn uf good "ork hai&gt;Jt~ nnd pcrformant'e as well as meet
O&lt;.:cupatJOnal Hc.dth Mt·dlt'al Standards for posted
pos1tJon/class1ficutton Startmg ~alnry 1s S I 0 43 per hour
Hours of \\Ork "'111 'al) and \\Ill be scheduled as needed.
OCTOBER 26.2010

AI 1 Apphcntwns must L&gt;c submillcd clcrtrolllcall) .11
\\ W\\ ,oh 1otmh er~ll) ;ohs.t omlnppl1cants/Ccntral 'qtu&lt;.:kHnd:S

72R7

Apphcnllons must be suhmllled no later th.u• the application
de.tdlme If )Oll ha\c questtons or need ass•st.tnce completmg
.)OUr npphcauon. ple.•se feel free to e-m•ul sheppard" oh1o.edu
or cull 740-593-0312
Opponunlly Affmn•t•ve Action

E.mplo)cr

Available
October
22 house for rent 1n
Pomeroy,
$750
deposit requ•red, call
or
740·992·7511
740 591..()800

cat-------

JilllL&gt;UTIES Asstsl In the production of h1gh liUalll) food
productli b) usmg st.uHiardl.l:cd recipes, and followll'g
dcp..rtmcntnl and Health Department gu•dchncs. Performs
other related duues as o~sstgned.

IS 10 f:qual

Sorry no pets, Call
Wayne
lor
1nformat1on 404-4563802
6 Rms &amp; Bath
Appliances
Furnlshed,
t22
Cedar St Gallipolis,
NO SMOKING &amp; NO

Very nice home lor
rent In M1ddlepoort
good neJQhborhood
newly
remodeled
New appliances, 2
bedrooms, 1 bath,
large kitchen, sun
room, central air &amp;
heat N1ce outdoor
spaces No pets, non
~S-pn_n_g.....
Va-11ey
.....,G~reen smok•ng Call 740Apartments 1 BR at 992·9784 or 740$395+2 BR at $470 992-5094 tor more
Month 446-1599
details.

2 br apartment w/
k•t app ale &amp; gas
furnace WID hookup
1n
Pt
located
Pleasant
304-6756375 or 804-6778621

Auction

LARGE

Auction

~~

AUCTION~
Sat. October 23, 2010
lO:OOA.M.
Auction \\ill Be Heh;l At Rick Pearson
Auction Center. Loattl'd At Route 62
North, Mason WV. \\l''ll Be Selling
Estutc Items From Jim Walker Of
Gallipolis, OH, And \lso Estate Items
From \ irginia l&gt;a' ics Of Gallipolis,
Oh,Anrl Others.

F

IT!.JBE

Beautiful 4pc. Olell} Poster BR Smte,
Rope 1\\Jst b) \\ 1llet, \\alnut Poster
Red, N1cc Earl;, Flat \\all Cupboard;
Sellers Kn~hen C:•bmel, h111cy Walnut
BoHkcnse; 4 pc. Chctr) BR Smtc b~
D1ll.1e; 3 pc Bassett Oaf... BR Su1te,
Moms C'harr. \\alnut Lamp 1able, Oak
\\a h Stand. Cedar Che~l. Desk and
Cha1r.
\\alnut
Drop Leaf
Table,
\ u..'1onan Chrurs. Reel mer Marble-Top
\\ashstand, Small Marble Top Tables,
Mutclung Walnut Chma Cnbmet and
Sideboard: Lo\c Sent. ~md more.
IJ:U1 '..OF SPF~'l EREST
Bruns\\ ick Pool Sttck m Case s1gned b)
\\ llhe Hoppte, Rare \\afer Iron. and
Rnre l une Squeezer

§ot Somethin8 to sa
to that Syecia{ Someone?

2BA, 18

LA

I

DR

MISCt:I.I.A~EOUS

I.a\\ n Mo\\ crs. ) nrc! fools. Bo1&gt; Lots;
Gcneml Household. Nc\\ Crafts: nnd
much more.

Fam•ly
relocating
looking lor a N ce
Home ,Condo or ,.,,.,...,~,.,"',~,~
Large Apt. Prefer ~~.w::..:....-==------------~K!l:::t...:.:...a...t.:J
I
Downtown Galhpolls ======~
'
Area 1·716·913·2415
Help WantedHelp Wanted·
Part1
Have References
General
General
Time/Temporari.. .~
Manufactured
4000
HEALTH Matu e
worker Part-Time 2days per
HOME
Housing
NEEDED needed lor part lime week. must have.
AIDES
~~~~~~~ PAID TRAVEL TIME janitor work Call valid dnvers l100nse• :
n
AND
MILEAGE Norma at 304-531· Apply
person: • ,
Rentals
6868
for SpaCial
EXPERIENCE
Care ~
2BR Mob1le Home NECESSARY
appointment
Must Cleaning
1743 ,J
water, sewer trash APPLY
@ be 55 or older and Centenary
Ad ! :
pd.
No pets, RESCARE.COM IF WV reSident
GallipoliS,
:
Johnson's
Mobile YOU HAVE ANY
Restaurants
Home Park
740- QUESTIONS
Exp Person to assiSt
PLEASE CALL 1• w/m king on modem ,= = = = = = =
446•3160
da•ry farm housing &amp; We
are seeking
888-794-4490
utJ ues can be a part management
~3~B~R-.-2~B~A~.-~s""'
57~5 - - - - - - - of
package
fax cand•tates
who
mo+dep+uU. 1722 5 COST TECHNICIAN resume w/ 3 ref. to believe
that
Chatham Ave 74o. Immediate openmg 304-675-5074
teamwork plays an ~
645·1646
lor team or-ginated
Important part in their. •
~~~~==~ 1nd1vidual
Must
development
and ....
Sole~
have excellent baSic -::;=M•e•ch=a-ni;;;c.s==· also the success of
the company Other
math sk11ls profiCient 2000 Patnot 14x70 In Excel &amp; Word ADVERTISEMENT
attributes need to be
Mobile Home with H1ghly
mot1vated
leadership
sk1lls, •
Searching
for
Vi1ny1 Sld1ngIsh.•ng1ed w1111ng
to
learn Mechamcs and Parts result
onentated- •
Roof
S17,000.00 Tral01ng
prov1ded
ensunng
customer.
Truck Dnvers lor our
740-645-7306 Must Must be wilhng to
sat stactton
and
locat1on
Jackson
Move
travel and work OT Mechanics should be traing is a key part to ,
at d1fferent plant sites able 0 troubleshoot, success We offer. .,
due to the revoMng
paid vacations, 401 k
d agnose and repar•
nature
of
the CAT
equpment program.
uniform
constr/plant upgrade Parts Truck Onvers and meals. If you are s
Drivers &amp; Delivery prOJects
Tra1n ng
Interested you can •
••
will be reqUired to
w•ll
reqUire
10
to
12
obtain
a
Class
A
send an ema11 to• • •
A &amp; J Trucking m
Excellent BK9771 @att.net. or : •
Marietta, Oh is hlnng weeks starting pay COL
$16/hr
If qual '•ed
call t -7 40·446·3400, •
COL A Drivers for
Benel1t
Package
•
fax
an
updated
EEO
and
USERRA
or you can also apply ,
local &amp; Reg•onal
Ple.ase 1n person at Burger
Routes
Applicants resume to: 614-716· Employer
2272 denoting "Cost
K1ng 65 Upper Rtver
must be at least 23 Tech" on the cover submt your resume Road,
Gallipolis,
yrs have mm of 1 yr
to
JObs@walkerExcellent cat com or mall one Oh•o E.O.E
of commercial dnVJng page
to Cecil I Walker
exp Clean MVR. companyI EOE
Mach1nery Co. P. 0
Haz-mat Cert. We
Box
2427
feature
weekend
wv
home lime, Excellent D1rect Care- A part Charleston,
health
&amp; dental time d•rect care 25329ATTN· Human
Insurance,
401 (K) posttion for A1pley Resource
provid ng Department
Vacation
Bonus WV
commun
ty
ski I
pays and
safety
wrth
an
awards.
Contact train ng
w•th
Kenton at 1·800-462· tnd1vldua1
Medical
MA/00
Mon.,
9365 FO F.
Thurs ,
9am-noon,
Tues, Wed. 7am- Come
Join
the
Best Spee~anzed Is 1pm Must be able to Fun !Extend1care
oocas onal Health SeMces, Inc
currently
seeking work
evening
and has
experienced.
exoung
professional flatbed weekend hours.
opponun ties
at
dnvers We offer
Rockspnngs
compettJtive pay With For all posit•ons· Rehab•lltallon Center
a weekly guarantee H•gh school diploma in
Pomeroy,
of $750 We offer ReT or GED requrred OH·LPN/STNA
diem of $50 per day. Cnmtnal background Needed We offer a
We have a full benf1t check requned. Must competitiVe
salary,
reliable tuitiOn
package
tncludmg have
and re mbursement
med cal dental, hfe, transportation
a
d1sablhty S more. valid auto Insurance comprehenSive
Must have Class A Hourly rate starting benefits
package,
hour and opportunity for
COL w1th 2 years ep. at $8·9 50
on professional growth!
&amp; good
driv1ng based
Apply Apply at the facllity or
record Please call exper1ence
at online
or online
800-849·1818
at
apply
online httpJ/www pa1SWV CO www extend care co
www bestspectaiiZed m or call (394)373· m We are located
1011
com
at 36759
Rockspnngs
Ad,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
EOE

:======= ,= ======

=

... THE
NEWSPAPER
·HAS
SOMETHING •
FOR YOU!!

Auction

HUGE ESTATE AUC1'10:\'

SA1'URDAY. OCTOBER .23. 2010
@ IO:OOam

Need a
Job Done?

Shop

AUCTION CONDUCTED BY:

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION COMPANY
#66
RICKY PEARS0:"-1. JR. #A 1955
Ltcensed &amp; Bonded for the State Of\\ \'
304·773-5447 OR 304-593-5118
"" \\.Dlll'tiunzlp.com

CASH OR CHECK \\ J'rii ID

Auction

Estate of the late \tt\RTHA YOU.:\G
Me\ EY \\ 1do" of the late CHARLES
:\lr\ EY. Mr~. McVc) passed rn June of
th1s ;ear at the age of 78 )Cars. Due to
•mposs1ble parkmg at the McVc)
Res1dcnce in Athens all must be mo"ed
to the .Shade Comnmnit) Building in
the mall Athens Count) Yillage of
SHADE. OH (former Shade H1gh
School)
Shmk is located on old U.S Rtc 33
ubuul ft nules south of A then~ .

,..... l CTlO:"iJo:ERS ='iOIE.
Please •ckr to '' \\\\ .:ntcllollll)l com fur
ptcturcs. Seeing ts bellC\ mg Lot~ uf
unusu.ll items. Hnng u fnend T"'u
aucuon nngs \\e:tthcr penmttrng

'

Say it in
rfhe C[assifiedsJ

COLU~CJ.J..IU£S

Dupont Blasung Mochme #2, Se\eral
Car.mg Sets, some \\ tth Stag Handles.
0\,J Clock, Large Collcct1on of Wood
C.1r. mgs, Large B•sque hgunnes;
Bnggs lobacco llum•dor, COlH'OO
C'lock. Onental F•gunnes,
Large
Selecuon of P1pe Puruphernalm, Pipes,
Holders, etc , Car' cd and lnlatd
Clgnrette Box: To) Cannon, \\ooden
Mnsk, Burgon &amp; Ball Sheep Shears. Old
Sc.1les. Thimbles, Set ul Leg Iron~:
Great Selection of l'lt·tmcs and Frames;
hl:1d.: ,\lemomblllll l1gg. Mother of Pearl
Handle S1h en' life. 12 Gal Stone (..'rock:
6 G.1l Chum. Pottel), Stems: Various
Metal hgurine:;, the hsts goes on

.

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

New gas furnace AC
7mles At2N
Nice 1BR house in No Smok1ng No Pets
Gallipolis
Walk to $425 m $400.Dep
everything you need 304-675-2381
Very clean unit, w11h Ref Raq.
new pa1nt. $275 per ~~~~"==~
mo/$100 sec. dep
Want to Rent

CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
AFFORDABLEI
Townhouse
apartments
and/or
small houses for rent
Call 740·441·1111 for
app tcat1on
&amp;
tntormation

For
lease
1BR
unfurnished 2nd floor
opt
near Gallia
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. reqwed,
max mum occupancy
2• S3SO mon. 740•
446-3936 or 740·
446-4425
2nd floor 2 BR
apartment
overlooktng Gallipolis
C1ty
Park,
LA.,
k1tchen/d mng area 1
112
BA
washer/dryer $600
mon + dep 740-446·
4425 or 740-4462325

1·3 bed room house
for rent In Syracuse
NO
pets
HUD
approved call 304·
675-5332 Weekends
740 591..()265

Housea For Rent

1n
3
bedroom,
Pomeroy,
1
in
Middleport, 740-591·
6827

Uke
New,
Completely
Renovated Inside &amp;
Out, 1 Bed, 1 Bath
Apt's at 677 Oliver
St , Middleport, Pnce
at
$415
Starts
Includes
Water,
Trash
Free Rent Special Sewer &amp;
Reference &amp; DepoSit
Ill
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and Requtred 740-416up Central Air, WID 6629 or 740-416·
hookup tenant pays 6622
otoctrlc Call be!Woen
thO hours of 8A·8P
EHO
f'J•ce,
Clean
Ellm Vlow Apts.
EffiCiency 1 BDRM
(304)882-3017
Ref , Dep , NO pets
Twm Rvors Tov.er IS 304·675-5162
acoepting applat ons
for walling lflst for HUD ~----~~
subsidiZed
stove/refr
1•8 R 2br
apartment
lor the furnished,
CIA
$385 00 a mon +
dep 304-675· 7783

Houae• For Rent

K

1 &amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
2BR APT Close to houses 1n Pomeroy &amp;
Holzor Hosp1tal on SR M1ddleport NO Pets.
160 CIA (740) 441· 740·992-2218
0194

Ohw Um\ersll) 1 accepllng appllcatwns for casual FOOD
Sf.RVJCE \\ ORKERS m Dm111g Serv~ce October 12 • 26.
2010. Vmt \\\\W ohiOUnt\erSll)JObs com for postmg dct:uls.

OhiO t mvers1ty

Very Nice 2 &amp; 3
BEDROOM APTS.
Gallipolis
Clty.$550.00 &amp; up
Includes w/s/g &amp;
Washer &amp;Dryer NO
PETS...
740)591·
5174

PETS $550mth plus
DepoSit
740)4463945

PUBLIC POSTING OF A NOTICI&lt;: OF
\'ACASCY
.FOOD SERVICE WORKER

AI'I'J.ICATJOJ'II Dt:AI&gt;I.INE:

Lot us treat you to a
SPECIAL $99 Moves
YOU Into Valley Vcew
Apartments 800 St
At #325 Thurman.Oh
740)24545685
9170 1&amp;2 Bedroom
With
Apartments
Appliances
Furmshed &amp; Ons1te
Laundry
FaCility
Water/Sewer &amp; Tra h
Included
Rental
Assistance may be
available
Metro
Accepted TDD#419·
This
526-0466
lnst1tut on Is an equal
opportun ty proVIder
and employer

Real Estate
Rentals

eldortyld sabled.
675-6679

Do )OU \\ant to make a diffcrt&gt;nce'!
If) ou arc compa,'Slonnte and
committed to pro' lding Qual it) Care
come and ben pnrt of our Long Term
Care J&gt;h ision.

Apartment•/
Townhouses

Apartments/
Townhouses

I

JoinA Winning Team

Mobile home lots to
rent ot GaU1polls
Ferry WV $100.00
monthly.
304·675·
6908

Apartments/
Townhousea

The
Classifieds

Sellmg urms from an 8 room lwuse "uh
a 4 room furmshed basemem 1~h1ch IS
t'qlllllllelll to a 12 room lwuse Ew•l)
room u jammed-packed full n·uh jusr
enough spal e to jind tlrr 11 a\ through the
home. E.1t1alr uhat tlu old hou'e Jwlds
1'
mzclrar
nr
r/ur
timr!
AU IU.\IOBILE: 2000 Che') Cavalier
l..S
" onl)
~ .814
milc,-clcan
automobile~ A:-..TIOUES \\Ill include
Furniture Large Quanti!) Of (.lass ..\:
Chma Small Ant1ques Qmlts &amp;:.
&gt;tr
Good ( 'o,tume Jc\\CII). l:&gt;uJI, &amp;:. Doll
!louse. ~hllh.•rn fum1ture &amp; Al'Cc:,sones.
I tlls ul K1khen Item' !\1.11l) Se\\ing
1tems. Small Room Full of Christma'
Dc~orn11ons Large Quanti!) of Small
Decorator hem,, Llmued f.d1t1on hem'
I ools &amp; fi hmg Item

s,

HOl Sl: IS CHOCK-H. IL'
1emts Cash or good chl."':k auctton da)
l'os1t1' e lD Food.
F..\l'l'lltor Ju:uuta H.ut AI!OrJl&lt;'): s~otl
Rube \1hrn' Co. Pmbate II .:!0 I0 II II
AUCTIONEER:

OTTIE OPPERMA~
&amp; CHRIS COLLINS
Ottic: 740-3gs-7J95.
~l'C

\\cb,ltc l'ieturcs &amp; Fher:

\1\1 \\,opawrntan-uudion,.~.om

or Alll·tion Zip #12726

�-

Page 04 •. &amp;unbap ~imts ·&amp;tnttntl

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

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

--------------------------~~--Auction
Auction
Auctlo
l'l .BLIC' AUCTION
9939 S R 682, Tlw Plains, 011
Sat u rda~. Oduht••· 2.3. 10:00 :t.m.
UIIUCilOill '• hom Kt 31 north\\CSI or J\th~.:ns. CJ(II

Rt

II

1182 go thwugh 1he Plc~ms lo house un nght or frn 1 Kt
56 linton Street, turn on Rt ft82, house on left. bcmecn ortcr
I :me &amp; Wtldwoud I .me watdt rol Sl!"llS
:"ol rLQllilli ,'\: (" )LI.Fr£1Rl 1· S~ Dtnncr hell,
trhcr
pump. B &amp; 0 l.ull&lt;:tn, 2 kerosene lamps, ca~l tn'll sktlle
c;"t mm lnlll. tcc tong~. snme cookbooks, 'ct of
~t.nnk·"· Jl.tll .lc\\cl l&lt;.t (te.tpot, ptllhcr. 2 set~ salt/1
Cicamcr/sugJr InI\\ I sen mg hem Is), 10+ (llC~cs of
glaSS\\:tr(' &amp; nulk rlass. IIlii h.tsket R'&gt; PrusSia u?kl.
1•the~ mts\ cii.Ul&lt;:\lliS t•lass\\ ar(, roppcr buLkct K S(Hihlw
pl.mter. pu'h plow, SC}lhe. I h.1o,1er st}lc l&lt;lhmct top o
mdk LilliS, J gallon ;;rock. 3 Iter plant table, lamp t;l
l.uldcrh.llk dt.urs, lcathl'r se.ll roc.:ktng ch:m. Fisher
\\ood !ugh dtair. cluldr~n\ games &amp; III)S IJom 60s, ch1
tnhlc &amp; hl) ho\, Htg 13,11\d l I' ICL'&lt;Hd~. l!ld record c
~Hnnonh.ill bed lrame, qurlt fnunc, 2 l..;mc t~dar
blankl'l c.:hest, so~ dlllctte t.Jhlc. 60s klldtcn cuhmct, ol
sdtuol desk. 2 ( oke bottle lr.t) s.
G~S: ll.ur•n~tl&gt;ll RKhanls 410 h1ll 1" rhnkc, M1
#J9"i 12 ga .• Stc\ens 12 ga., WmLhcscr M.A 12tuhc fe
nfle. l'c!Jpsc double barrel shutgun, Santa I c J94l) Ma
19 W. Dantasl U'&gt; Double Barrel. An~.1ke Model 99,
Dul'blc barrel, S\\ord &amp; J\X 7 fi2, H Jerl{'\11 De C1•lom
I illlt.lgc 1952, 1939 XVIlal 7.J'i tmlssJng rllp). lsai. L
"&gt;MI ~ I4J I. Rcmrn"ton US \lode! ol I I) 17, Be
I mnklm BB &lt;Jun Model \40, &lt;lrossnwn Arms 760
m&lt;.stcr BB (,un, Mnrlm :V1udcl 1()0 (lllJSSII\S bolt), Wm
Model 1890 22 shon O..:t.1gon barrel unl), Nc" 1:
Hrc.mns 22 l'\H· G.mlncr AI p1stul. \\nod hill) sut·
clc.uung ktt. g•m c:tbmct.
!!0 SUIOLH 1'\JRNI~Hl:'-IGS &amp; :\~CELl \:'\
I '1:\1 ': sc' eral hurncanc St} lc 1:-tmps, 5C\ era! fr,uned
mclmhng \\. httt•'s ~1111. llak hcdroom sel. maple I\\ Ill
chest ol &lt;Ira'' crs, pam ted h,md made chma hutl'lt, ne''
dinmg t.thk "14 c.hmrs. 11,1k h.• II st.md, (l;tk tea c.1rt, S
Foster Collect ron t\\ tn trundle hed \\II m.Jitrt•ss/
\\/nurror &amp; mght st:uul, oak student dcsk/charr, lrlmg ;;a
maple gos~1p bench, maple rod:mg dtrm. ~mall cuno l'
m.llchmg "1ra &amp; lmcse.tl. t•nd 1:-tbll's. room dl\ idcr, ro~
bmrded rug. Jewell) nrntotre. tllstume JC\\Ch). basket-,
lots of kntck kn&lt;tck&lt;&gt;, Collt'L'IIon nl ( llllgcrbrcad
assortment ol 'rdeo cassette tupcs, VCR, (Onsolc ster
refngcrntor. G1bson upright fret:zcr, Kenmme \\.1sher &amp;
sm,lll krlchen apphanrcs. dishe~. (lots &amp; pans. 'et of C
llomestead C'hllla, \ill 1111111 cleaners. C.ISJO kc) no:tr
gas gnll. park bench &amp; charr. plastiC la\\11 cham. hir
sc' era! hm n ornaments &amp; gazing balls, outdo&lt;.tr
ba:&gt;kethall st.mll/hnop. 2-aquariurm \\I:Kcessorics,
6afe. h.mdttJp cqmpment, m.tss.1gc t:thlc, lots ol Ch
decorat10nsn ft tree, nssolllliCnt of \\Ctgbts, Nord1c
treadnull, Muu trampolme. cannmg J!lrS, f 1sher Pnc.:e c
chtld's booster tar s&lt;."at,
TQ~ &amp; \ IIS(;EI.l .\~EO S&lt; pl1"' for JD lawn
In'' n tractor 11rc challls, 8 lt. alum mum step laJde
handled ) arJ g(lnlen tools, 2 "heel b:uro'' s. load
Cnt~.:h Ali'c tr.tps. prlc of t•ld copper "uing. :•nl
mrsccllaneous ttems
f ER:\ I S: n"h ur clteLk '' JX"IIJ\ c I D No Credit
ChcL·ks (l\er $1000 must h:l\ e h:mk authontallon ol
a' mlanlc. J\11 ,ales arc final I ood '"II be :n mlahl

.1114
tctda
JIJlCr,
nton
dish,
corn
I}. 3c, 2l'nL·c
ren's
met,

,berg
nrgcl
MU:.
ltluc:t
ia R
hgo\~

anun
mmp

pnnh
·d &amp;

Jllets.
bint'l.
1 s11c

scat,
.u.1or.
long
mder.
other
'ards.
lund:-.
i\ot

100

l egals

100

~------------_,~------------~~----~
legals

100

legals

PUBLIC NOTICE In
Nov. the Vrllage of
Vtnton will have a 5.5
operating levy on the
Is
ballot.
This
renewal for street
lights. Brenda Burris
F1sca1 Off1cer Oct 17,
19, 20, &amp; 31, 2010

Dtvrsion ~xpansion acceptable by the
150
Mill
Street Village. The lease
Middleport. Ohio In agreement will be for
accordance wrth the a five (5) year term
Plans
and and up to four (4)
renewals and thereSpecrlicattons
prepared by RVC alter a new lease
Architects, Inc.. 131 agreement will be
West State Street, reqUired
The brd
Athens, Ohio 45701 proposals, provided
LEGAL
NOTICE
Btds will be received by the bidder, will be
Morgan
Township
sent to the Village of
for
CONTRACT!.
meeting moved to
General
Racrne,
Clerk
October 21, 7·00pm
ConstruclionA pre· Treasurer's
Office.
Due
to
Holiday
bid conference wrll located
tn
lhe
events. Paula justus.
be held at 150 Mill Municipal Building at
clerk. Oct 15, 17, &amp;
Street,
Middleport, 405 Main Street. P.O.
19,20t0
Ohto
45760 on Box 39g, Ractne,
Sealed proposals will Wednesday October Ohio 45771 . Sept
be received by Meigs 6, 2010 at 3:00 26. Oct 3,10,17.24,
County
p.m.The information 2010The
Racine
Commtssioners
at for Bidders, Form of Vrllage Counctl may
100 East Second Proposal, Form of accept the lowest
Street,
Pomeroy, Contract,
Plans bid, or, select the best
Ohio
45769 by. Spec1f1cations, Form bid for the tntended
Weqnesday, October of Bond and other purpose,
and
20 2010 at 1·00 p.m Contract Documents reserves the rrght to
and
opened may be examined at accept and/or reject
tmmedtately
the following offices. any or all bids and/or
thereafter,
for RVC Architects. Inc any part thereof and
furmshing
the 131
West
State will award a contract
material
and Street Athens, Oh1o to the highest bidder
pcrformlflg the labor 45701 Meig:; County which is in the oest
for the execution and Commissioners 100 interest of the Village
construction •
ol; East Second Street of
Racine.David
Project
#100506 SUite 301 Pomeroy, Spencer,
Meigs County Job. &amp; Ohio
45769 Clerk/TreasurerVillag
Family
Services· PAPER
e of Ractne
Exterior Employment DOCUMENTSContra
DiviSIOn Expansion ct documents may be
150
Mill
Street obtained by paying a
Middleport. Ohro
non·refundable fee tn
In accordance with the amount of $25.00
the
Plans
and (twenty·five dollars)
Specrf1cations
per set payable to
prepared by RVC the Meigs County
• cLASSIFIED$
Architects, Inc.. 131 Commisstoners. All
aren't only for
West State Street, Bidding documents
buying or selling
Athens. Ohio 45701. wtll be forwarded
items. you can use
Bids will be received shipping
charges
this widely read
for CONTRACTl
collect.
Contract
s ection to wish
General
documents may be
someone a
ConstructJonA pre- ob1arned by Prrme
Happy Birthday,
bid conference will Contractors
from
be held at 150 Mtll RVC Architects. Inc.,
provide a Thank
Street,
Mtddleport, 131 Athens. Oh1o
You, and place an
Ohro
45760 on 45701,
Telephone:
ad ••an Memory"
Wednesday. October (740)
592·5615AII
of a loved one.
6. 2010 at 4 00 p.m. questions regard1ng
The 1nformallon for the
plans
and
For more informaBidders, Form of specifications should
tion, contact your
Proposal, Form of be addressed to
local Ohio Valley
Valentour,
Contract.
Plans John
Publishing office.
Specrfications. Form Architect or Penny
of Bond and other Mullen.
Contract Documents Assoctate.Each btd
may be examined at must
be
the
lollowtng accompanred by a
(740) 44
offrces .RVC
BID
GUARANTY
Architects,
lnc.131 meeting
the
West
State requirements
of
StreetAthens, Ohio Section 153.54 of the
(740) 99
45701 Meigs County Ohto
Revised
~ oi nt ~ I ea.sa
Commissioners! 00
Code Bids shall be
East Second Street. sealed
and
(304 ) 67
Suite 301Pomeroy, addressed to· Meigs
Ohio 45769PAPER County
DOCUMENTSContra Commissioners. 100
ct documents may be East Second Street,
obtained by paying a Swte 301, Pomeroy,
45769.No
non-refundable fee in Ohio
the amount of $25.00 Bidder may Withdraw
(twenty-five dollars) h1s brd w1th1n sixty
per set payable to (60) days after the
the Meigs County actual date of the
Commissioners All opening thereof The
Biddmg documents Me1gs
County
will be forwarded Commissioners
O'Dell True Value Lumber
shtpptng
charges reserve the right to
Case XX Pocket Knives
collect
Contract waive
any
Chnstmas Delivery Just Arrived
documents may be 111formalities or to
40+ New Case Knives.
obtained by Pnme retect any or all bids.
New Stag Patterns
Contractors
from (10) 3, 10, 17, 2010
61 Vine St.. Gall•polis 446·1276
RVC Architects, Inc.
131 Athens, Ohio REQUEST
FOR
45701,
Telephone. PROPOSAL Not1ce
(740)
592-5615.AII to
Wireless
quesllons regarding Communication
the
plans
and Vendors
In
specifications should accordance
wrth
be addressed to sectton 721.03 of the
John
Valentour, Ohio Revtsed Code,
Apply in Person
Architect or Penny sealed bids will be
Mullen,
received
by
the
Smith
Associate Each brd Racine
Village
be Council, PO Box
must
Chevrolet- Buick
accompamed by a 399, Racine, Oh10
1911 Eastern Ave
BID
GUARANTY 45771, until 12:00
Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631
meeting
the NOON. on Monday,
reqwrements
of October 25. 2010.
Section 153.54 of the The bids will then be
Revised opened and read
Ohio
Basket Games
Code.Bids shall be aloud at6.10 P.M. on
Sponsored b) Galllpolb
seated
and Monday, October 25,
addressed to: Me•gs 2010
tor
the
L.adi~s of Harle) #3750
County
followtng FOR
Pnx·eed' lo benefil rh..- Oh10
Commissioners. t 00 .LEASE OF REAL
Valle) Chapter l'l rh..- "oational
'1ultipk Sder..:"i' &lt;;,..._.,,.,~
East Second StreAI. E~TATE
Suite 301, Pomeroy. BELONGING
TO
rhur,dil). 0\:IOber 21 . 20 I 0
Ohio
45769 No RACINE
VILLAGE
Doors c1pen 5:00pm
Btdder may wrthdraw FOR
THE
Games 'tart 6;00 pm
hts bid within srxty PURPOSE
OF
G.1lha County
(60) days after the PLACEMENT OF A
Semor Cit1z~n \ Bldg
actual date of the TELECOMUNICATI
20 Games· $20
opening thereof. The ON TOWER The
3
special
games- $5 carh
Meigs
County Village of Racine, a
Earl) bird tick~ts qualify for
Commissioners
•Municipal
u special door pnze
reserve the nght to Corporation·.
will
Call 3XX·-ll607 or .167-025 I
watve
any accept proposals for
informalities or to the lease of property.
Conccsswns Door Pri1c'
reject any or all b1ds owned by the Village
'
'iO SO dr:t\\ ing
(10) 3. 10, 17, '2010 of Racine, near the
' lllb 1s m Jill "•') .tft1liatl.'d
·water
Village's
WJ!h the Lon):aberger c~&gt;mp:tn)
Sealed proposals will
Tower· located on
be received by Meigs
Greenwood
County
Cemetery Road an
O'Dell True Value Lumber
at
Commissioners
area
approximate
Sllhlleaf Blowers starting at
100 East Second
100' X 100' for
$149.99
Street.
Pomeroy,
provtding adequate
Sbhl Chatn Saws starting at
Ohio
45769 by;
telecommunicatron
18999
Wednesday, October
for the citizens of the
Sllhl MechaniC on Duty M·F, 9·6
20, 2010 at 1:00 p.m.
Village of Racine.
61 V1ne St Gallipolis 446· t 276
and
opened
NEGOTIATION OF
rmmediately
CONTRACT &amp; TIME
thereafter,
for
Look Good Feel Better
LINE The Village
furnishtng
the
Program Sponsored by the
Council reserves the
material
and
American Cancer Society
right to negotiate an
perlorming the labor
Monday, October 18th
option to lease for
for the execution and
$500 a year up to 2
600 pm at the
construction
of:
(two) years and if
Holzer Cancer Center.
ProJect
#100506
option is exercised a
Me1gs County Job &amp;
'Lease
Agreement
Family
ServtcesConlract" wtth the
lnterior Employment
highest bidder will be

RfAD All ABOUTIT
The

in the
aily Sentinel

\!Cbr ~alli lis 719ail~ &lt;n:rrbu1
~br lf)oin l)lrasant il\cgis

•

THE

MAKE
SOMEONE'S
DAY!

@allipoli.s IDa (p -m:ribun:c

0\\':.'IIER: Eilct·n Bog~' h) Rebecca Cac-,ar. t&gt;O
SHAMROCK ,\lTTIO:'Il SER\'JCE
At CTIO:Sf.ERS: John Patrick ''Pat" Sherida
Kern Sheridan 8 o\d, :\like Bo\d, Brent Kin
En{ail: Shnmrock\ul·lion@a~l.com WEB:
'' W\\.'&gt;hamruck-auctiuns.com
PH: 740-592--Bl() or l!00-419-9122

The D a ily

.fiND It At

Bulletin Board

in the

A uction

Auction

Aucti n

Help Wanted
Lot AttendantFull Time

EVENING ESTATE AUCTION
18 .J acobs Drhe. Athens, OH
Thursday. Octoher 21, ~:00 p.m.
DIRE~'IJ.ONS: hom Rt J3 or Rt 50132, exll on Ea
Street, turn ca~t. then turn \Ill Gmham Dnvc. go unl.'
corner of Jacobs Dme. \\atdt h11 srgn..,.
~~UQt~ &amp; COLI.H;TIJU ES; kt!roscne lamps.
"rck, ('oc:t Cola ICC ptck. rook hooks, npron-;, hankies.
some costume JCWCII). Gnswuld &amp; Wagner mm sk1ll
rolling pm, 3-lSA Hull J\rl 'ascs, t 1SA potter) bm\ Is.
acamcr/sug.•r bowl, gallon nod; pr, salt Jar. set of ch
ol Currier &amp; h es l'hina, green dcpre"ion glassware,
milk ~;Ja,s p1.:ces. nestmg hen. glass salt bo\.
salt/pepper t:ollcllron. duldrcn's t•hina tea set, an
glass\\l.lre, I ~.ns M:Ntnic apron &amp; olh&lt;·r p1ct:cs, lJ S
"s\\eethcm1" ptllu'' CllH'rs, tJ S Ann) hat, tal'klc ho\
lures (some old \\ 011d lures). 2-old composJtron dolls

mcr·~

mhcs,
ts. old
tcC11V
a; lois
·e, era I
·cH•ral
otlwr
Ann)
full ol
1-R &amp;.

H).

HQl SEllOLD ;Ft 'K11\ISIII:'&gt;IG.S: newer oak hbr&lt;u)
bookshdf. Hro) hrll sola , 2 rt!l'll!lcrs, 'l rocking t:h;ur~
wlll'c table &amp; end tahlcs, lamps, Hullm a wall dock
l'Onsolc IV. me~ pie console stcrt•o, SO+ alhum,frerord
R tra( ks. record t-ab met, maple dtina lnndt. Smgcr
marh111c 111 maple cabrnet. ladde1 hack &amp; pl:mk bottllll
3 maple bedroom •cts cnmplctc (double heds.
\\lmrrmrs, chests uf dr..mers, mght stands), dresser
Lane maple Lcd.u th&lt;."~t. \\1111 minor. oak portable
cahmct, Jots of kllchen luppcn\ art•, 1•) re\, granII
tll~he:., poh, pan• &amp; ~mall appliarll'Cs, Cit:, Cil:. llliL
Montgomer)' \\.ard upright lrcctl.'r, Hoo\er upright'''
q111k broom, Cwsle} &amp; Oa~ts dehumichf1ers. small GE
Ro) al portable I) pel\ nter. Sllltcascs, L'amems.
lramed prints, \\ood slor.•ge ~abtnch. limn chau
canmng ~uppfie, ml'ludtng prcssllll' canner. ('I
det·or.•tions, &lt;Hld lots rt\OIC
T OOlS C'r.•ltsnmn 5" bc:nl'h g!lmlcr. I rUle:: (,iant am
prk. lots ol hand tools, g:•rdt•n 8: l:m n tools, ~111
sere\\~. hand s:t\\s, leal hhmer. \\ccd C.th:r. H &amp; I
trunmcr, and other items.
J ER:\I S: Cash or dteck \\lposiiJ\e I.D No Credit
Checks mer S I()()() mu~l h&lt;l\ e hank authnn tall on 1
;n atlahlt-. ;\II s:tles ,1re frnal h11&gt;d ''Ill he a\ a1labl
re,pctnsihlc for loss or ;Kl'Jdcnts.

rv.

ble &amp;
maple
maple
some
C\\ ing
chaJrs.
rcsscrs
lamp~.

itdtcn
ware.
1\\ (1\1!,

pa&amp;
1rtahlt·e\ er.tl
grrll,
islma~

I. h1 lo
holts,
ht•dge
( 'ards

lunds
Not

LS'Ii\TE OF Lt&gt;ta lhucl Bernard.
,\tlu·ns Count\ Case #2110910-'9
hY (;ar n· lluntt&gt;r. :\ttorne) &amp; Fidudary

SHAl\tiROCK AUCTION SERV CE
.\l lCTIO!':h.ERS: .John l'ntr k k " l' at" Sht••·idt
Kern Sheridan Boyd, .\like Ho)·d, Rn•nt Kin
·Jo,m ail: S ham rol·k,\ul'lion@a ol.l'Ulll
\\ EH: \\\\ \\,shmnnKk-audio n,.cum
I'Jf: 740·59 2-4.' 10 or I!HII -419·9122

- 2342

'

Boat Storage
Now available at the
Old Coast Guard
Station
in Henderson, WV
304-675-2424

Ready for
Christmas pictures?
The Purple Turtle l1as
many new dresses in
stock ...don't watt too late
to get your Christmas
dresses for gifts and
Christmas cards'

The Purple Turtle
300 Second Ave.
446-1998
Family Healthcare Inc

Basket Garnes
Thursday, October 21.
2010 6:00pm
Carleton School, SyracuSP.
Doors open at &lt;;'()Q pm
20 games. extra games
raffles and door prizes $20
Concessions Avatlable
All proceeds go to our
office Indigent lund.

Any questions and
ticket Information,
please call the office at
7 40-992·0540
or Joyce 992-3804
Sherri 416-6999
Wanda 740-517-0893
0

Basket Games
J Guiding Hand School
' Thursday, Oct. 21,2010
6 pm
446-6903

•·
.•

•'

�Sunday, October 17, 2010

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

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

CROSSWORD

Tom Bati uk

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris ·Browne

,.. Mo'foi(;E
rtiEN Y~86Cr41J5c
-rnAT'6
J~ ~A~~~
Vl~ffe

It

MOt/~

,.N

1
Jr
•

8...__,;._........~L--'o~_,__.---J
HI &amp; LOIS

&amp;unbap ttfmtt -&amp;tntintl • Page 0 5

By THOMAS
ACROSS •
1 Smallest
mammal
6 Singer
TQn
10 Molar. for
one
11 Bends out
of shape
13 Hawauan
greeting
14 Ready to
SWing
15 Finger
count
16 "My country- of
thee"
18 George's
lyricist
brother
19 Casino
camera,
informally
22 Yr. parts
23 Embedded
spy
24Ta ke as
one's own
27 Prepared
the f1sh
28 Window
section
29Pe rmit
30 Empty
wish
3 5 Building
w ing
36Poem of
praise
37 "Puthappy
face"
38 Weeper of
, myth
40 Psychlatrist Alfred

JOSEPH
42 Old N ick
43 Emulated
Greg
Louganis
44 Hardens
45 Future
flowers
DOWN
1 Map
diViSIOn
2 Like
SWISS
cheese
3 TV's
Arledge
4 Cardinal
number
ending
5 Unspecified
st uff
6 Overflow
ing
7 Small rug

8 Singer Roy
9 Glisten
12 Didn't go
17 " - been
swell!"
20 Louvre
entrance
designer
21 Ham et up
24 Tack on
25 Film
rushes
26 Bob
Marley
song

27 Takes off
the top
29 Bntish co.
abbr.
31 Chnstmas
tunes
32 Figure
out
33 Kicked, 1n
a way
34 Rushing
measure
39 Smidgen
41 Conk
out

NEW C ROSSWORD BOOK I SCnd $4 75 (check/m o) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1, PO Bo&gt; 536475 Ottando Fl 3?853-6475

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

GTARING A"f' A
Ba..ANK GCReEN
16 L.IKE MGI71 fA1"1NG

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

·rvE SEEN ONDER LORETT~S THUMB FOR SO LONG I SEE
THE WORLD THRO~ RO~E-cOLOREO FINGERNAIL~...

11APPY BIRTHDAY for

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

by

5

Dav~

Grct!n

2 3 7

! - - 1- --r---

.

9

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Monda)~

Oct. 18, 2010:
fhL., year, you will get a new
beginning if you can give up cert&lt;tin
ways of thinking. You tend to be
harck&gt;St on yourself, and can get
dcprGscd if you don't learn to let
go. You rmght v. ant to indulge yourself more often without breaking the
b.mk If you are single, many people
could be intrigued by you, but
cho...1sing the right person could take
a lot of talent. f( you are attached, the
tv. o of you ,,iJIIx'COmc even closer
if vou plug in a little more romance.
PISCES Thr Stars Shout thr Kmd of
IJay Ycnl'lll!nrtr: S·Dy11mmc; 4·
PoSJtwr; 3-Avernge; 2-So-&gt;a; 1·Difficult
ARIES (Mardl21·April19)
*'*"* :KnO\\ \\hen to back up and
handle a math'T different!)' Someone
vou trust could be extremely idrohstlc but not very practical. Y9ur
instincts serve \'Oll Well. l),m't force
yourself. Usc time as your ally.
Thmght: Vanish '~ hile you can.
TAUR US (Apn120-May 20)
** ** * A boss might be
extremely idealistic. for -;orne, thts
person could be i'ln .lUthority figure
in your life. rhis person':. idealism
m1ght be inspimtional; your job \\ill
be to harness it. Torught: Off to the
b')'lll or whc.rc people are.
Gam.a (May 21-June 20)
***** When qu£&gt;~tioning
wh1ch way to go, others drop Uw
dcosion (ln you. l)o nL'Cded
research_ but understand that )'Our
sourtt5 are off. Cre.1tiv:ih~ opttmism
and facts braid together ~nder your
gu1danre. Tonight: Could be late.
CA!'jCER (June 21-july 22)
* * *** A p.1rtrwr l)r asscx i.1!l'
sometime-. is verr },metical or \'cry
h.-,rdhcaded. Usc this tratt ao; an asset
as you eye a long·tcnn doo&lt;:ion.
I ravel and educ.-Jtion could lx&gt;
involved. Toss ncgo:lth•ity a-.idc.
Ionight: St'ek out more ide,,.,,
LF:O Quly 23 Aug.~)
***** \\'urk with oth..~rs, and
gwc tuU .1tt~nhon to ca,ch mdiVJdual.
)ou might want to n.~rganize rour
schedule. Don't be stem. even 1f you
nrc questiorung the validity of anoth·
t•r':- 1dt'il. A f.1mily member's gestun;'
c.)uld mean,, lot. 'lbnight: \'io.;lt O\Cr
dinner.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-5ept. 22)
* * ***Others dommate, and
you might not be sure which""} to

.

go. Ustcn to a neighbor. rclahve or
someont: you set' daily 1hLo; }X'rson'
perception, though rosy .mq opt1·
mbtk, mtght bt• valid. hnught.Ju.;t
don't be alone.
UBRA (Sept. :B-Od. 22)
* ** Forus on one task at a time
You ha\ e unusual crcab\ t~ and
ideas. You could be a li!tk' too
uptight. Rclux nnd lx' \\ dhng to
indul~e a little mow. Jhat might
look hke an ca--y conversation or
rnro. Tonight Do ...omethmg JUst for
vou.
• SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov 21)
**'**"'* First decide that there 1...
no obstacle that vou cannot find a
way around. Coinmunicalion could
be dvnarmc. csped&lt;tlly if you let go
of preconceiVed ideas. 'lou are' our
harshest cntic Rememlx&gt;r that Be
generous \\1th a loved one. fonight
Leave todav behind, and start the
e'·cmng fn.;;h,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Vcc. 21)
'* ** * If you can handle a
domestic matter head on. ) ou will
.,tay on top o( any L':&gt;ue. E"tablishing
a home-based bu.,tncss m1~ht be a
smart m•l\'e. Brainstorm With others,
and you'll find nn unu.;unl path.
Tonight: At home.
CAP R ICOR."i (O....&gt;e. 22-Jan. 19)
'****'lou are in the home
stn&gt;tch. Some people might st.'l' \'Ou
d'i rigid He willing to ncx nnd allo\\
in m,)J'C creathity 'wu could find a
mt.&gt;eting or key person to lx•
extremely helpful. Usc your ability
to commumcatc to realize a dream.
TOnight liang out w1th a fnend.
AQUARIUS Oan 2CHcb 18)
**** At tim~.-&gt;;&gt; you ha\ e a ten
dcncy l~l go ovcrb,),,rd and "ondL·r
what needs to lX'CUr. If \'OU .lrc \\ill·
ing to change, vou'll dL'&gt;CO\icr the
power of opcnnt."'' lldp l: moonc
get past a grudse. and enh"t hi_., or
her help. 1onight Hm• Sl\ er.1ll'lt.~d
ed items on the way home.
PISCF_'i 0\,b 19 M.1rch :!0)
***** )ou are on top of \'Our
game Don t worry about,, di(fJCult
a ....;ociat!!- 'lou wdllcam a lot nbout
what is atltng this person but onlv
on his or hcr schedule A d1scw;_...1on
h&lt;'lps P•lint tL1 .m~ltlwr kC) go.1l.
!(might \Vhatt'\'L'r puts,, smrlc lln
your face

Jqcqudme B1gar l$&lt;'11 t ITJ'&lt;nu;t
at JrttJf:l/n 1 •V.Jncqu.·lm• I~ar.o:&gt;tn.

•.mvdailvsentinel.com. •.mvdailvtribune.com
I

�PageD6

~unba~ ~Urnes -ienhnel

Sunday, October 17, 2010

USDA to issue major annual program
payments to farmers, ranchers ·

1

WASHINGTON
Agriculture
Secretary
Tom
Yilsack
today
announced that during this month,
USDA will uistribute approximately
$1.6 billion in annual Conservation
Reserve Program !CRP) rental payments and $3.8 billion in final 20 I 0
(.hrect payments to America's fanners
and ranchers.
"October is an important production
month because CRP rental payments,
direct and counter cyclical payments
(DCP), and now Average Crop
Revenue Election IACRE) payments
are paid during this tirst month of the
Federal fiscal year," saki Yilsack.
"These funds support the agricultural
economy and responsible stewardship
of America's production acreage."
Beginning today. producers holding
744.000 CRP contracts on 416,000
farms will receive an average of $52.56
per acre in CRP rental payments.
Producers earn an average of $3,955
per fann enrolled in CRP. Included in
the totals are 402.000 contracts (4.6
million acres) for continuous CRP
enrollments and 342.000 contracts
(26.7 million acres) enrolled under general CRP sign-ups.
Currently, total CRP enrollment

stands at 31.3 million acres, making
CRP the largest public-private partnership for conservation and wildlife habitat in the United States. l'h1s voluntary
program helps agricultural producers
safeguard environmentally sensitive
land and provide millions of acres of
habitat for game and non-game wildlife
species.
USDA also issues non-rental CRP
payments throughout the year. These
payments for certain contracts include a
50 percent expense reimbursement for
establishing and managing cover as
\veil as incentive payments for
enrolling eligible high priority conservation practices.
table
located
at
A
http://ww\v.fsa.usda.gov/Internet/FSA_
File/apporttable.pdf lists enrollments
by state, number of contracts. number
of fam1s, acres enrolled as of the end of
the 2010 fiscal year and CRP projected
rental payments for fiscal year 2011.
Beginning Oct. 12, final direct payments for the DCP and ACRE programs
will be made to more than l.l million
producers on 1.7 million farms enrolled
in these programs. Participants in DCP
or ACRE had the option of rect:iving a
22 percent advance direct payment

when the farm was enrolled or delaying
the direct payment until after the end of
the fiscal year. ACRE revenue payments are scheduled to be made at a
later time.
T he Secretary said that a final peanut
counter-cyclical payment will be made
this month 'which, when summed with
the advance payment, totals $47 million. T he 2009 counter-cyclical payments are for producers on farms with
base acres of peanuts and upland cotton
enrolled in DCP and ACRE. The ACRE
revenue payment date and rate will be
announced in the future. Final countercyclical payments will be made as follows:
The final 2009-crop peanut countercyclical payment (CCP) rate is $25 per
ton or $0.0125 per pound. Producers
with peanut base acres who accepted a
partial payment in March 20 l 0
received $9.20 per ton or $0.0046 per
pound . They are due an additional
$15.80 per ton or $0.0079 per pound.
The final marketing year price for
2009-crop peanuts is $434.00 per ton or
$0.217 per pound.
·
The tinal 2009-crop upland cotton
CCP rate will be determined after Oct.
8. The 2008 Farm Bill authorized a par-

tial CCP payment in March 2010,
a final payment made at the end of the
marketing year. Producers with upland
cotton base acres who accepted a partial payment in March 2010 received
$0.0 I 03 per pound.
Since the effective price for wheat,
barley, oats, corn, soybeans, grain
sorghum, dry peas and lentils exceeds
the target price, as required by statute,
the Commodity Credit Corporation
(CCC) will not issue any 2009 CCP
payments for these crops.
Counter-cyclical payment rates for
sunflower seed, canota, crambe,
flaxseed, mustard seed, rapeseed, safflower, sesame seed, large chickpeas,
and small chickpeas wiJl be determined
as soon as practical after the market
year average price is published on Nov.
30, and for rice, after Jan. 3 I, 20 ll.
Based on market price information to
date, no counter-cyclical payments are
expected to be issued for these crops.
For more information on CRP.
or ACR E. producers should coot
their local FSA office or visit FSNs
Web site at http://www.fsa.usda.gov.

D
.

Extension SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
Corner ·
suNoAv PRIMETIME

As the leaves fall and
cooler weather returns,
so does the ~lulticolored
Asian lady beetle.
This irritating pest has
been in the forests
around us and now
needs a place to overwinter. your home. The
10
primary food for these
11
beetles and thc1r immature larvae are aphids &amp;
1'
::ocate insecb found on
13
the new growth of our
(ores b.
18
24
As colder tempera25
tures arrive in the fall
26
the beetles seek a winter
27
29
home that IS sheltered
30
from wind, rainfall and
31
34
cold temperatures. In
35
their
native
lands
37
(Korea,
Japan
and
38
39
Russia), they would
40
seek out caves however
42
here they have a tenden57
cy to seek uut light col58
ored buildings .
60
Scouts seek out the
61
best available sites in
6'
the area and then signal
by
emitting
a
pheromone to attract the
rest of beetles. Beetle
proof your home by
caulking
windows.
installing door sweeps.
install insect screening
over attic w1ndows and
vents, and replace or
repair damaged -;creens.
If you are planning to
use insecticides or other
chemicals as a deterrent,
apply just before the
scouts seek an overwintering place. In other
words, NOW! Expect
beetle movement into
their winter shelter just I 7
after the first heavy
8
frost. Read the pesticide L
10
label before applying. In
most cases. an applica11
tion of a residual
1'
pyrethr01d
pesticide
(like
'&lt;kltamcthrin,
13
cyfluthrin. tralomethrin)
011 tlu: south and west
side of the house especially around openings
should suffice.
Residual pyrcthroids
pesticides work best as
the active 1ngredient is
micro-encapsulated and
will release the pesticide
ove1 several weeks. For
more information get a
copy of Ohio State
University
factsheet •
215R
"Multicolored
Asian Lady Beetle"
from our office or the
internet site, www.ohioline.osu.edu.
(Hal Kneen i.1 the
Extemion Education for

Meigs and
Sc ioro
Cmulliev, Ohio State
Unil•ersiry E.rtemion.)

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