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ALONG THE RivER

LIVING

Holiday Style, Cl

Tips for a hassle-free holiday, D 1

unbap UJ;imes - :~ ttttinel
l'rinlcd on IOO"c
Rcl)cled :-le"sprml

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio V~cy Publishing Co.
"

..

~
D ...

$1.50 • Vol. 44, No. 48

Sunday, November 28, 2010

USDA: Ohio top I Deer-gu·n
10 for hunger season set to

open ~onday

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT€MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

164 Upper River Rolad

G;d lpoll1 OH

- (740)446-2265

=========

=

Meigs Co.
sheriff
clarifies USV
inspection
STAFF REPORT

•

POMEROY
Having an underspeed
vehicle
inspected
through the
h 'ff'
s en s
spcction program will
make it legal to operon all local roadwa) s,
Sheriff Robert Beegle
said.
Clarifying infonnation
about the new inspection
program. Beegle said his
inspection only allows
owners of the vehicles to
.receive a certificate of
title and registration. It
does not make it legal to
operate them where they
are not currently permitted.
Earlier this week.
Milldleport
Village
Council heard from restdents in favor of the village making the vehicles
legal for street travel.
The village, however,
outlaws them, and an
inspection. title and registration does not make
hem legal there or in any
village which prohibits
them. Beegle said.

COLUMBUS - The state of Ohio
recently found \tself in the top I0 on a
list no one wants to be recognized for
- going hungry.
Every year the U.S. Department of
Agriculture releases a rep011 on food
security/insecurity which is tenninology used to describe how many people
are going hungry and how many are
not. The recent report reflects statistics
from 2009 which reflect hunger is on
the rise not only nationally but in Ohio
where 14.8 percent of families were
defined as '·food insecure·· which is up
I from 13.3 percent the year before.
These numbers pushed Ohio from 12th
in the nation to lOth in tenns of individuals struggling to feed themselves and
their families.
The report defines food insecurity as
a household-level economic and social
condition of limited or uncertain access
to adequate, nutritional food. Hunger is
defined in the report as an individual! level physiological condition that may
result from food insecurity. Whatever
words and definition are used and how1 ever you slap lipstick on this pig, it's
st~ll a pig and people are still. going
Without enou2:h food to eat 111 the
Buckeye state.~

I

fJJ:n:Jrd:ing to the l:SD)\.
14. 8 jE1XB1t of ari.o
ilni1iEs were cEf:ira:i as
f ax1 insa:.w:e" tJridl is z.p
fran 13.3 IEIXB1L tiE ya:u:-

Annual event promises
economic boos , too
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

8$!EED@MYDA.LYSENTINELCOM

l:efcce. These numbers

p.1S1m C1lio :fum 12th in
tiE mt:im to lOth in ta:"m s
cf :irriiv:id.Bls stru:J.J]in] to
:iB:1 tlEir f anil:iEs •
People in Ohio aren't alone in this
pickle, of course. Arkansas topped the
Jist of food insecurity at 17.7 percent
with Texas (I 7.4 percent) and
Mississippi ( 17.1 percent) close behind.
Neighboring West Virginia's rate of
food insecurity was figured at 13.4 percent.
·
The report has two classifications of
food insecurity. There is "food insecure" which means households dealing
with at least three of these severe conditions: worrying about whether food
will run out before money can be
secured to purchase more; the food pur-

1

Please see USDA. A2

0 christmas q-'ree
I

Tyler Adkins
from Bob's
Market and
Greenhouses
in Gallipolis
was hard at
work Friday
stocking the
lot on Eastern
Avenue with
Christmas .
trees, another
sure sign that
the holiday
season is
upon us.

Please see Deer, Al

Youth deer kill:
.Gallia up, Meigs
down slightly

Andrew
Carter/photo

WEATIIER

COLUMBUS - With a pre-hunting: season
population estimate of 750,000 white-tarted deer,
the Ohio Department of :Natural Resources anticipates 115,000 to J 25.000 deer killed during the
nine-day deer-gun season.
Approximately 420,000 hunters are expected to
participate in this }ear's season. which begins
Monday.
The start of the annuFer a liS:::irrj
al post-Thanksgiving
of
d:er dB:k
season stirs interest
among merchants and
st:at:Um .in 1-Eigs
others who stand to
arri Gi11ja
bcnetit from an imporcn.rnt.iEs I E£e
tant economic impact.
as well as the hunters
Page A2.
taking to field and forest.
The upcommg season will again include an extra
weekend of gun huntmg on December 18 and 19.
according to the Division of Wildlife.
Deer can be hunted with a legal muzzleloader,
handgun or shotgun from one half-hour before sunrise to sunset through December 5 and December
18 19.
The white-tailed deer is the most popular game
animal in Ohio, frequently pursued by generations
of hunters. Ohio ranks eighth nationally in annual
hunting-related. sales and tenth in the number of
jobs associated with the hunting-related industry.
Each year. hunting has a $859 million economic
impact in Ohio through the sale of eqmpment, fuel.
food, lodgmg and more. The impact in Meigs
County is significant too, as restaurants, equipment
suppliers. hardware stores and other businesses
cater to the hunters, many of whom come from out
of the county.
Hunters may take only one antlered deer. regardless of zone, hunting method or season. A deer permit is required in addition to a valid Ohio hunting
license.
Approximately 60 to 75 sale~ agents throughout
Ohio will be testing the newly designed fishin_g,
hunting and trapping license and pennit sales sys-

Bv BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MVDAIL VSc~ NELCOM

High: 49
Low: 28

- -- - --

Dec. 3 deadline to donate to Gallia
Co. Community Christmas Program
BY AMBER GILLENWATER

INDEX
4 SECIIONS- 24 PAGLS

.

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Sports
B Section
c 2010 Oh1o Valley Pubhshmg Co.

.IIIli~ I!IJIJIII!1!1!I!lllllll.

MDTNEWS@f.1YDAILYTI'IIBUNE CO'I

GALLIPOLIS - The deadline to
make donations to the Gallia County
Community
Christmas
Program
(GCCCP) is Friday, Dec. 3. The
GCCCP is a volunteer effort to collect
provide gifts and food which will be
distributed to children and senior citi~:ens all over the county.
Jn 2009. with the help of volunteers
ti·om local agencies and organizations,
schools. businesses and churches, the
program, fonnerly known as the Angel
Tree program. a~sisted over I ,000 children and 250 senior citizens with gifts
and food in time for Christmas.
However, given the current economic
environment. the volunteers are expect-

ing more applications than ever, therefore, time and monetarv donations will
be invaluable for the success of the pro-

gram.
In past years, "angel trees" have been
placed at the Gallipolis Walmart and Kmart which held the names of needy
area children and seniors. However, in
an attempt to improve the program, a
small group of volunteers will process
the wishes as needed and the various
organi1.ations involved are combining
their services to prevent duplication of
applications so more families can be
reached.
According to data collected from previous years, it takes approximately $35$40 to sponsor a child for Christmas
Please see GCCCP, A2

1

UNDATED - Gallia County youngsters
bagged I 0 I deer and Meigs County youth bagged
121 deer during the seventh annual youth deer-gun
season. wh:ch ended Sunday.
The season is open to hunter~ 17 and under. and
those young hunters harvested 9,024 deer this year.
Gallia County's 20 I 0 harvest "as up seven from
2009, when young hunters bagged 94 deer.
The Meigs County han est is do'' n from last year
for the youth season. In 2009. the season re~ulted
in the harvest of J59 deer. This year's statewide
harvest is also down by about 300 deer, from 9,331
last year.
Tuscarawas County hunters bagged the most
deer in Ohio during the season. \Vith 434. Knox,
Holmes, Washington and Licking counties were
next in line.
It is e~timatcd that 40,000 hunters took to the
fields and forests during the two-day event. according to the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
The season was open in all 88 Ohio counties, and
the hunters lllliSt have completed the basic hunter
safety course, have a license and worn hunter
oran~e. They also must be accompanied by a nonhuntmg adl.lt.
It IS one of four special youth-only hunting seasons, designed to offer a safe early huntmg experience for youth. Special days are also set aside for
other game, including upland game, wild turkey
and waterfowl.
Youngsters and all other hunters will have a
chance to take a deer next week, as the deer-gun
season opens statewide on Monday.

�-- ---

-~--

----

-----

·-

---.......

-

~

-

j
Gallipolis man pleads Deer check stations in·
guilty to burglary
Meigs, Gallia counties
1
BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - A Gallia County
man recently pled guilty to two counts
of burglary in the Gallia County Court
of Common Pleas and was also recent.----=--...., ly sentenced in the
Gallipolis Municipal
Court on a disorderly
conduct charge.
Timothy
B.
Sturgeon.
30,
Gal!.ipolis, entered a
guilty plea on Nov.
18 in the common
pleas couJt in relation
to
two
burglary
.__.....__ _ __, offenses
that
Sturgeon
occurred in Gallia
County earlier this year.
On June 21 and 25, 2010, Sturgeon
burglarized two homes, one located on
Keeler Road in Addison Township and
one located on Evans Heights near
Gallipolis, both second degree felonies.
On July 19. 2010, Sturgeon was
arraigned and entered a not guilty plea
to the charges against him, but later
pled guilty after negotiating a plea
•
agreement.

A pre-sentence investigation has been
ordered in this case and sentencing has
been scheduled for .10 a.m. on Dec. 28
in the common pleas court.
Sturgeon was also recently sentenced
on a charge in the Gallipolis Municipal
Court.
On Oct. 14. the defendant was sentenced to two days in jail and six
months of probation for a disorderly
conduct charge that was filed with the
court in August. Sturgeon was also
ordered to pay $105 in court costs. $85
for a probation fee and a $25 fme.
As a condition of his probation,
Sturgeon was ordered to report monthly to the probation department.
Moreover, on Nov. 18. a community
control violation was filed with the
court as Sturgeon had allegedly not
reported for his monthly meeting on
Nov. 15.
A warrant was issued for the defendant and he was later arrested on Nov.
21, admitted to the violation and was
sentenced to 28 days in jail.
The defendant was given credit for
three days served and must pay a $25
probation violation fee in addition to
the other fines and fees established in
this case.

Four arraigned in Gallia
County Common Pleas Court
BY AMBER

GILLENWATER

MDTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

•

GALLIPOLIS - Four individuals
were recently arraigned in the Gallia
County Court of Common Pleas on
charges of theft. drug trafficking,
receiving stolen property and passing
bad checks.
Sharon L. Waugh. 24, Gallipolis. was
arraigned on Nov. 22 and charged with
one count of passing bad checks. She
allegedly issued checks between Dec.
14-Dec. 29, 2009 to Foodland with
knowledge that the checks would be
dishonored. The checks totaled
$3,922.77.
During the arraignment, the defendant pled not guilty to the charge
against her. A status conference in this
case has been scheduled for Jan. 10,
2011. A negotiated plea agreement may
be filed in this matter by Feb. 22. A jury
trial has been scheduled for March 21,
2011.
Gary C. Casto, II. 35, Gallipolis, was
arraigned in the common pleas court on
Nov. 22 on two counts of trafficking in
drugs. Casto pled not guilty to the

charges against him.
A status conference in this case has
been scheduled for Jan. 12, 2011. A
negotiated plea agreement may be filed
to the clerk of courts by Feb. J8, 20 11,
otherwise a jury trial has been set for
March 17, 2011, in the common pleas
courtroom.
Lorra Huffman, 45, West Columbia,
W.Va., was arraigned on Nov. 22 in the
common pleas court on one count of
theft. Huffman pled not guilty to the
charge against her.
A status conference has been scheduled in this matter Jan. 11, 20 11. A plea
agreement may be filed by Feb. 28,
2011. A jury trial in this case has been
scheduled for March 29, 2011.
Terry Waugh. 26. Patriot, was
arraigned on one count of receiving
stolen property on Nov. 23. Waugh
plead not guilty to the charge against
him.
A status conference in this case has
been scheduled for Jan. 13, 2011. A
written plea agreement may be filed
with the clerk of courts by Feb. 28,
2011. A jury trial has been scheduled
for 9 a.m. on March 28, 2011.

USDA
fromPageAl
chased didn't last and there's no money
to purchase more: balanced meals are
not an affordable option.
Also included in the classification is
"very low food security'' which are
households where the food intake is
reduced for individuals and normal eating patterns are disrupted because the
household lacks money and other
resources for food.
Nationally, the USDA report states
14.7 percent (17.4 million) of U.S.
households were food insecure at some
time during last year - the previous
year's numbers were 14.6 percent.

There were 5.7 percent (6.8 million) of
US households which had low food
security during last year - the previous year's numbers were also 5.7 percent. remaining unchanged.
The report also states that nationally
50.2 million lived in food-insecure
households, including 17.2 million
children in 2009 Of these people, 12.2
million adults and 5.4 million children
lived in households with very low food
security. Overall. households with children had nearly twice the rate of food
insecurity as those without children.

Deer
Hunters are encouraged to kill more does
this season using the
reduced-priced antlerless
deer permit and donate
any extra venison to
organizations assisting
Ohioans in need. The
division is collaborating
with
Farmers
and
Hunters Feeding the
Hungry to help pay for

the processing of donated
venison.
Hunters who donate
their deer are not
required to pay the pro-·
cessing cost as long as
the deer are taken to a
participating processor.
Counties being served by
this program can be
found online at fhtl1.0rg.

GCCCP
fromPageAl
gifts. With 1,300 children
and 300 seniors expected
to apply this year, over
$50,000 will be needed.
No funding will be provided other than donations. For convenience,
White
Oak
Baptist
Church, a volunteer organization, has set up an
account through Ohio
Valley Bank for individuals wishing to make a tax
delluctible
monetary

donation.
Donations
must be received by Dec.

STAFF REPORT

UNDATED - There are 19 deer
check stations. in Meigs and Gallia
counties, according to the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
Division of Wildlife (ODNR). A complete guide to locate check stations
across Ohio can be found on the ODNR
Web site at www.ohiodnr.com.
Below is a list of the deer check stations in Meigs and Gallia counties with
addresses. phone numbers and hours of
operation included. This Jist was taken
from the .ODNR Web site.

· Meigs County
Baum Lumber Company
46384 SR 248
Chester, OH
Phone: (740) 985-3301
Hours: Monday-Friday. 7:30 a.m.-5
p.m.; Saturday, 7:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
Hill's Citgo Service Station
Elm St.. SR 124
Racine. OH
(740) 949-3099
Hours: Call for schedule.
Dettwiller Lumber
634 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH
Phone: (740) 992-5500
Hours: Monday-Friday. 7 a.m.-5:30
p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday,
I 0 a.m.-4 p.m.
Pick &amp; Shovel Grocery
SR 124 &amp; CR 1, Salem Center
Langsville. OH
Phone: (740) 742-0602
Hours: Monday-Thursday, 7 a.m.-9
p.m.; Friday-Saturday. 7 a.m.-10 p.m.

Twin Oaks
3 miles N. of Pomeroy
Pomeroy, OH
Phone: (740) 992-4250
Hours: Monday-Friday, 5 a.m.-10
p.m.; Saturday, 6 a.m.-10 p.m.; Sunday,
8 a.m.-10 p.m.
T-N-T' Pit Stop
28451 SR 7
Middleport, OH
Phone: (740) 992-6200
Hours: Monday-Friday, 5:30 a.m.-! 0
p.m.; Saturday, 7 a.m.-10 p.m.; Sunday,
8 a.m.-9 p.m.
Little John's Deer Processing
48240 Riebel Road
Long Bottom, OH
Phone: (740) 985-3626
Hours: Sunday-Saturday, 7 a.m.-9
p.m.
Country Corner
29539 SR 143
Albany, OH
Phone: (740) 698-0533
Hours: Sunday-Saturday. 9 a.m.-6
p.m.
124 Mart Exxon Station
Intersection of SR 7 &amp; SR 124
Pomeroy. OH
Phone: (740) 992-9160

Hours: Monday-Saturday. 5 a.m.,
midnight; Sunday. Noon-4 p.m.
I
Reeds Country Store
66155 SR 124
Reedsville. OH
Phone : (740) 378-6125
Hours: Monday-Saturday, 8 a.m.-8
p.m.; Sunday. Noon-4 p.m.

Hot Spot
53160 Beginning Rd (St Rt 124)
Portland, OH
Phone: (740) 843-5484
Hours: Monday-Sunday, 6 a.m.-10
p.m.
Bale N Eggs
41176 State Route 692
Albany, OH
Phone: (740) 698-0911
Hours: Sunday-Saturday. 10 a.m.-8
p.m.
B &amp; D Market
41995 State Route 7
Tuppers Plains, OH
Phone: (740) 667-3198
Hours: Monday-Friday, 7 a.m.-IQ
p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m.-10 p.m.: Sunday:.
lO a.m.-8 p.m.

Gallia County
Bodimers Grocery
SR 850 &amp; Jackson Pike
Rodney. OH
Phone: (740) 245-5253
Hours: Sunday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-11
p.m.
Bidwell Hardware
8997 SR 160
Bidwell, OH
Phone: (740)446-8828
Hours: Monday-Saturday.
p.m.: Sunday, 11 a.m.-5 p.m.
Par Mar
15054 SR 160
Vinton, OH
Phone: (740) 388-9913
Hours: Sunday-Saturday, 7 a.m.-Hi
p.m.
Mercerville Convenience Store
9239 SR 218
Crown City, OH
Phone: (740) 256-6650
Hours: Monday-Saturday. 7 a.m.-9
p.m.; Sunday. 11 a.m.-7 p.m.

I I

O'Dell Lumber Co
61 Vine St.
Gallipolis, OH
Phone: (740) 446-1276
Hours: Monday-Friday. 7 a.m.-5:30
p.m.; Saturday. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.: Sunday~
10 a.m.-4 p.m.
Owsley's General Store
24866 S.R. 7
Crown City, OH
Phone: (740) 256-6495
;
Hours: Monday-Thursday. 8 a.m.-a
p.m.: Friday-Saturday. 8 a.m.-9 p.m.·
Sunday. 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
(Online: Ohio Department of Natural
Resources. www.ohiodnr.com)

Our Best Savings of the Year

fromPageAl
tern during the 20 l 0 fall
hunting season.
This test will be for
licenses and permit sales
only, electronic game
check begins in spring
2011. Pilot licenses and
permits will look different,
but will still be valid. Each
license buyer must have a
Social Security Number
recorded in the system.

&gt;ll&gt;unbuv l!l:imrg -&gt;ll&gt;rntinrl • Page

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, November 28,2010

Food Ministries.
One-hundred percent
3.
of the money will go
In addition to gifts, toward fulfilling wishes
sponsors can donate for less fortunate seniors
funds toward the P.ur- and children in the counchase of food for fam1lies
ty.
and seniors. The cost to
For further infonnation
feed a family of four for
about
the GCCCP, conone week is $31, while
senior citizens can be tact Dana Glassburn at
sponsored for $21 per . 446-3222, ext. 229, or
week. Food will be pur- Marcella Taylor at 446chased through Angel 7000.

FINE JEWELRY SALE

Our Entire Inventorye

50°/o OF·F

with individual selections up to 70°/o OFF
Please Note: Recognizing the difficult econon1ic
times - we will donate in your name 10 o/o of
your holiday purchase to the charity or church of,
your choice.
""Offer goud on Purchases through 12/31/10 on Cash or Check Payment. Credit
Cards will be a 7% donation. Purchase must be a minimum of $100.00.

151 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
740-446-2842

• Layaway for Christmas only 10% down I
• Free Gift Wrapping!

,,

�eA3

iunbap ~imes -ientinel

Sunday, November 28,

MOMENTARY MAESTRO ·;:

CHALLENGE WINNER
.-

-----

•

Submitted photo

Norris Northup Dodge, Inc. recently part1cipated in the 2010 Dodge Ram Truck Sales Challenge. Participating
in this competition were sales teams from Dodge dealerships across the states of Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and
Kentucky. The sales team of Norris Northup Dodge, Inc. was awarded the State of Ohio 2010 Ram Truck Sales
Challenge. Norris Northup Dodge, Inc. achieved the highest percentage of truck sales among all four states.
Pictured from left to right are Bryan Williams, Bob Mackey, Kevin Edwards, Bridget Cales, John Thomas, Dave
Fennessy, Mike Northup, Neal Peifer. Kevin Young, Jon Folden, Jamie Adamson, Randy Massey and Jason
.

orthup. - --

Gallia County calendar

I

Legion
Post
161
Christmas Supper,6 p.m.,
Ewington Hall. All members, family and friends
are welcome to attend.

Card Showers
Tyler Kelley is being
treated at the Vanderbilt
University
Medical
Center Burn Center in
Nashville, Tenn. Cards
may be sent to him at the
following
address:
Vanderbilt Univ. Medical
Center, Tyler Kelley,
Room
11215,
1211
Medical Drive. Nashville,
TN 37232.
Kay Hockman, a former resident of the
Cheshire-Addison area,
is recuperating at Logan
Health Care in in Logan.
Cards may be sent to her
at 20444 State Route 93
S., Lot 24, Logan, OH
43138-8406.

Birthdays
Lou Long Will be celebrating her 80th birthday
on Nov. 30. Birthday
cards r:nay be sent to Lou
at 951 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, OH 45631.
Adrian "Abe" Spencer
will turn 72 years old on
Dec. 8. Birthday cards
may be sent to Adrian at
8548 State Route 160,
Bidwell, OH 45614.

Church Events
Sunday, Nov. 28
GALLIPOLIS -James

and Laura Rainey concert, 7:15 p.m ., Grace
United Methodist Church ,
600
Second
Ave.,
Gallipolis.
PATRIOT
Orlyn
"Butch" Cochran preach·
ing at Patriot United
Methodist Church.
GALLIPOLIS- Jimmy
Dooley concert, 10:40
a.m., First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave., Gallipolis. Info: 4461772.
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday school, 9:30
a.m., worship service,
10:40 a.m., evening service, 6 p.m, First Church
of the Nazarene, 1110
First Ave., Gallipolis. Info:
446-1772.
ADDISON - Sunday
school. 10 a.m.; evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor
Rick
Barcus
preaching.
GALLIPOLIS - The
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 234
Ch~pel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
a.m., Bible class; 10:30
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.,
evening assembly. The
church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for Bible
study.
Web
site:
www.chape lh illch urchofchrist.org.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis
church
of
Christ meets at 214
Upper
River
Road.
Sunday services include
10 a.m. Bible study, with
classes for all ages, and
11 a.m. worship. Bible
study is also held at 7

Meigs County calendar

Dec. 2-Dec. 4, Bailey
Chapel Church. Time: 7
p.m.
each
night.
Questions call: 446·
2427.

and/or discount for personal traming services
And ahfetime of benefits from we1ght loss'

Changing Your Life... Chang

,,

Michelle Black/photo

p.m. Wednesday. Web
site: www.gallipolischurchofchrist. net.
Wednesday, Dec. 1
BIDWELL Prayer
meeting. 6 p.m., Bible
study, 7 p.m., Mt. Carmel
Missionary
Baptist
Church, Bidwell.
. ADDISON - Prayer
meeting, 7 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church,
with Rev. Jamie Fortner
preaching
GALLIPOLIS - Bibl€1
study, youth group, choir
practice, 7 p.m., First
Public meetings
Church of the Nazarene,
1110
First
Ave.,
Monday, Nov. 29
Gallipolis. Info: 446-1772.
POMEROY - Meigs County Veterans Serv1ce
Sunday, Dec. 5
Office, regular meeting, 9 p.m., 117 Memonal Drive.
GALLIPOLIS - Teresa
Wednesday, Dec. 1
McCoy concert, 6 p.m.,
HARRISONVILLE - Scipio Townsnrp Trustees,
First Church of God, 6:30p.m., fire station.
1723
Ohio
141,
POMEROY - Meigs County Board of Health 5
Gallipolis.
p.m., health department conference room.
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday school, 9:30
Clubs and organizations
a.m., worship service, 1
10:40 a.m., evening serThursday, Dec. 2
vice, 6 p.m., First Church
POMEROY - Meigs County Retired Teachers
of the Nazarene, 1110 Association luncheon. noon, Trinity Church. Eastern
First Ave., Gallipolis. Info: l High School bell choir to perform hol!day mus1c. Bring
44S-1772.
gift books for children. Reservations to 992·3214 by
Nov. 30.
Friday, Dec. 3
Revivals
POMEROY - Meigs County PERl Chapter will
Nov. 28-Dec. 4, Dickey meet at noon, Mulberry Community Center for potluck
Chapel Church. Time: 6 meal. Me~t an'd d_nnks furni~hed, members to bring
p.m .. Sunday; 7 p.m. covc.red.dlsh. Bus1!less meeting at 1 p m .• to rnclude
weeknights. Preachers: J nommat1on of off1cers, group srng~ng and $5 g1ft
Glendon
Simpson. exchange.
Jeremy Simpson. Music
each night.

Physical Examination
Exero1se and Nutritional Counseling
Discount membership to Holzer Health Center

~~~~~~~~

I
Brent Saunders was named the 2010 Ohio Valley
Symphony Maestro for a Moment at Saturday's concert. The season opener' was held at the Lillian and
Paul Wedge Auditorium in Pt. Pleasant and featured
the virtuosic guest artists Quartette Gelato. Saunders
thanked his competitors Eddie Lanham and Mario
Liberatore and also the concert sponsor, Ohio Valley
Bank Corporation. Togetl;)er the three competitors
raised over $10,000 in the symphony's annual
fundraiser. Saunders remarked from the pod1um that
his wife asked him, "Can you do justice to The Ohio
Valley Symphony 1f you win?'' Saunders replied.
"There's only one way I can do just1ce.'' and with that
he turned to the orchestra and raised his judge's gavel
and conducted John Phillip Sousa's "Stars &amp; Stripes
Forever."

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

Tuesday, Nov. 30
GALLIPOLIS - AARP
safe driving class, 8 a.m.·
noon.
Ohio
State
Highway Patrol Gallipolis
Post, 396 Jackson Pike.
RSVP by Nov. 24.
· Wednesday, Dec. 1
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Board of Health,
9 a.m ., Gallia County
Service Center. 499
Jackson Pike.
Friday, Dec. 3
GALLIPOLIS
Christmas Bazaar, 9
a .m.-2:30 p.m ., Grace
United Methodist Church,
600
Second
Ave. ,
Gallipolis. Lunch served
from 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
Crafts, noodles, baked
oods and a lot more.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
WCD board meeting, 6
p.m., C.H. McKenzie Ag
Center.
Saturday, Dec. 4
GALLIPOLIS - Souper Saturday, noon-2 p.m.,
Holzer Clinic Sycamore,
Gallipolis. Sponsored by
Rio Christian Church in
Rio Grande. Info: 245or
e-mail
9873
fcc@ aceinter.net.
GALLIPOLIS
Christmas
Gallipolis
Parade, 4:30 p.m., downtown Gallipolis. Info: 4460596.
VINTON
Vinton
Fire
Volunteer
Department fundra1ser. 9
a.m.-5 p.m. , Vinton Town
Hall. Hay rides, face
painting, ornament painting, coffee, hot chocolate, baked goods, crafts.
GALLIPOLIS
Suprise 80th birthday
arty for Robert Hamilton
•
ill be held on from 4-7
p.m . at Vinton Baptist
Church in the Fellowship
Hall. The church is located at 11818 Ohio 160,
Vinton. Friends and family are asked to come help
celebrate this exciting
occasion. No gifts please.
Monday, Dec. 6
GALLIPOLIS - The
December meeting of the
Gallipolis Neighborhood
Watch has been canceled due to the holiday
season. The Gallipolis
Neighborhood
Watch
meets at 7 p.m. on the
first Monday of each
month at 518 Second
Ave. The next meeting
will be held on Jan. 3,
2011.
Tuesday,Dec.7
GALLIPOLIS - Holzer
Medical Center and
Holzer Clinic Retirees
lunch, noon , Golden
a : ;orral Restaurant.
WI' Thursday, Dec. 9
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County Retired Teachers
luncheon, noon, First
Church of the Nazarene
Family
Life
Center.
Program includes "Singalong," memorial service
and
Mrs.
Claus .
Info/reservations: Karen
Cornell, 256-6846.
Saturday, Dec. 11
VINTON - American ·

2010.

Some msurances cover the Med ca Wetght Loss
Program Be sure to checK w+n your 1rsJranoe
prov1der.lf no! oovered by .1sura ethere sa
• disoounted fee of $65 1f pa1d the day of serv1ce
•$65 fee covers p~ys etan offi ' st charge o
iJP.d ISO

"""""'""'"

l

�!!""'-·-------------~-._....- -~---~-~-~-~------~---~-

. ·--~~

PageA4

~unbap ~ime~ -~entinel

~unbap

Sunday, November 28,

tltimes -~entinel

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher

Diane Hill

Andrew Carter

Controller

Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make. tw law res pectin.!! an
establishment of religiotr, or prollibititt)! the free
exercise thereof; or abrid)!ing the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the r(!!ltt of tire people
peaceably to assemble, atrd to petition tile
Gor,ermnent for a redress ofgrie11ances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

JUST SAYIN'

Blackfridayitis
This dude was not
among the millions (and
millions) of rabid bargain
hunters who rolled out
ahead of the rooster on
Friday just to bang elbows
with
their
fellow
Americans in the hope of '
getting a good deal on
something that their kid
will toss aside with the rest
of the unused toys and
other stuff on Dec. 26.
Andrew Carter
Nope. I was still nestled
snug in my bed with
visions of me sleeping
dancing in my head because I suffer with insomnia at
least a couple of nights a week. Too much caffeine ·my
problem is (with apologies to Master Yoda).
Nope, I say again. No crazy Black Friday stuff for
me, or for my good wife. for that matter. My Baby
Girl has wrapped up Christmas shopping for 2010 and
spent Friday with our precocious son putting up the
Christmas tree (And Merry Martha Stewart Living to
you, sir!).
Whenever I hear the term "Black Friday," I always
think of the film "Black Sunday." Ifs a l977 fhck that
details the events surrounding a terrorist plot to attack
the Super Bowl with a blimp. The two have absolutely nothing to do with each other, except for the fact
they both involve stampeding crowds.
Anyway, I have been shopping on Black Friday a
grand total of ... one time. It was a few of year~ ago. I
was getting ready to start a new job and needed some
dress clothes. so I went mall-hopping in Columbus
with one of my brothers-in-law. I was done shopping
after our first stop, but he definitely wasn't. We hit a
bunch of malls. did a lot of walking and he ended up
with one bag of stuff. Mission accomplished?!?!
Now. I'm a mall rat from way back when I was
growing up in Tampa. Fla. When I was in high schooL
we'd head to Eastlake Square Mall or Tampa Bay
Center, hit the arcade, grab some slices from Scotto's
Pizza and wash them down with an Orange Julius,
read some comics at Walden Books; life was good.
dawg!
Despite my affinity for all things mall, I'm not a
crowds guy, which, yes. I realize makes no sense
whatsoever. But it brings me back to Black Friday.
After my own singular Black Friday experience, I
have absolutely no desire to do it again. Getting swept
away by a zombie-like hoard chanting in unison
"Deal! Deal! Deal!" while stonnim.! toward Bed. Bath
and Beyond is a memory I'd rather forget.
"Flee! Flee for your life, good salesgirl! They' ll eat
your cash register! They have no souls!" Brrrr.
Chilling even now!
But. to all my friends who braved Black Friday.
hope you found some good deals.
Me, r ll stick to my midnight runs to a certain big
box store and the occasional mall escapade.
Man. I JIDSS Orange Julius!

mimes -~entinel

Reader Services
Correction Polley
Our main concern in all stones is to
be accurate. If you know of an error
in a story, please call one of our
newsrooms.
Our main numbe(s are:
~nbunr • Gallipolis, OH

(740) 446-2342
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• Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-1333

45631

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pa1d at GallipOliS.
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Press, the West Virg1n1a
Press Association. and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address
corrections to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

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www.mydailyreglster.com

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1

52 Weeks

Poll: Tea partiers)
vtews
rom others •
I

www.mydailytribune.com

~unbap

201u

.

227 21

BY ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

lea party backers fashion themselves as "we the people." but
polls show the Republican Party's
most conservative and energized
voters are hardly your average
crowd.
According to an Associated
Press-GfK Poll this month. 84
percent who call themselves tea
party supporters don't like how
President Barack Obama b handling his job - a view shared by
just 35 percent of all other adults.
Tea partiers are about four times
likelier than others to back repealing Obama 's health care overhaul
and twice as Iikely to favor
renewing tax cuts for the highestearning Americans.
Exit polls of voters in this
month's congressional elections
reveal similar gulfs. Most tea
party supporters - 86 percent want less government intrusion
on people and businesses. but
only 35 percent of other voters
said so. Tea party backers were
about five times likelier to blame
Obama for the country's economic ills, three times likelier to say
Obama 's policies will be hatmful
and twice as apt to see the country
on the wrong track.
These aren't subtle shadings
between tea party backers and the
majority of Americans. who don't
support the movement; they're
Grand Canyon-size chasms.
With Republicans running the
House next year. the findings
highlight the delicate dance facing leaders who will have to
address tea party concerns without alienating moderate voters
who will be crucial in 20 12. when
the GOP hopes to win the White
House and boost its strength on
Capitol Hill.
One certatnty: There are too
many tea party supporters for
politicians to ignore. especiall);
for Republicans. About 3 in 10
adults in the AP-GfK Poll call
themselves tea party backers.
60
4Jercent
of
including
Republicans. In the exit poll in
this month's election. which saw
high conservative turnout. 4 in lO
voiced tea party support. and 2 of
every 3 GOP votes came from
them.
Those are impressive numbers,
though leaders of the loosely
organized movement sometimes
seem to imply that their views
enjey an even broader consensus.

Tea pat1y supporters emblazon
''We the People,'' the opening of
the preamble to the Constitution,
on banners at demonstrations and
on merchandise their groups sell.
And at a campaign rally last
month in Orlando. Fla.. tea party
favorite Sarah Palin said of congressional Democratic leaders.
"It's nothing personal, you just
replace them with people who
will do the job. who will listen to
the people.''
"We are ordinary Americans.''
Jenny Beth Martin. a national
coordinator for Tea Party Patriots.
an umbrella group. "These are
people who care so much they
want to restore our Constitution."
GOP pollster Steve Lombardo
says it will be a challenge for
Republican leaders to find policies that will deliver "a two-fer
for independents and more
extreme elements" of the party.
He and other Republicans say the
answer is to focus on areas of
broad agreement like curbing federal spending, taxes and deficits.
In an early nod to tea party votHouse
and
Senate
ers.
Republicans have adopted' a selfimposed ban on home-district
federal projects called "earmarks .., a symbol of wasteful
spending.
In the AP-GfK Poll, tea party
backers agree with others on the
urgency to address the economy
and joblessness. two of the country's top problems. But they are
likelier to name taxes and the
budget deficit as important issues
and less interested in education
and the environment.
The poll also shows sharp differences between the tea party
and the 7 in lO independents who
don't support the tea party. a
group both parties will target in
20 12. Tea party backers take a far
more negative view of Obama
and his agenda than those independents do and are far likelier to
think favorably of the GOP and
unfavorabty of Democrats.
Tea partiers are likelier to be
white, male. older and more affluent than everyone else, the polls
show - groups that tend to be
more conservative. Yet even compared with the 4 7 percent of conservatives who don't back the tea
party. the views of conservatives
who do support tHe movement
stand out.
Among conservatives who are
tea party backers. 74 percent are

glad Republicans wi II tun the
House next year while Democrats
retain control of the Senate and
White House . .lust 36 percent o
conservatives who don 't back th . .
tea pa11y agree that divided go"
ernment will be good for th-.;
country, likely because of concern
over gridlock. rca party backct"
are also far likeJier than otht:r
conservatives to like Palin, the
former Alaska governot'.
Democrats say the· gap bet\\ et n
the tea party and othet'&gt; will Itt
them cast the GOP as extreme.
··The House and Senat
Republican lea lership are playin
a very dangerous game by :tppear
ing to embrace proposal&lt;; that
many Americans consider out&lt;&gt;idc
the mainstream," snid Jim
Manley, spokesman for Senat .
Majority Leader Hany Reid. lJ
Nev., who was narrowly re-elet:t
ed over tea party favorite Sharron
Angle.
Republicans say 'he hazard the
tea party poses is not its view~ but
some of the controversial candi
dates it backed. such as Angle and
defeated GOP Senate candidate
Christine O'Donnell of Delawatc
Rep. Tom Graves. R-Ga.. \\llll
had tea party backing. said thi-;
month 's GOP victory showed ·
wide support tor controllin•
spending and taxe~ aud creatin•
private sector jobs.
"That is the mandate that's been
given across the country. that s
the voice of the Anterican peo
pie," he said.
The AP-GtK Poll was conduct
ed Nov. 3-8 by GtK Roper Publi•
Affairs
&amp;
('nrporate
Communications and in\ olveJ
cell and landline telephone inteJ I
views with 1.000 randomly cho
sen adults. It has a margin of -:am
piing error of plus or miuuc;; 4. I
percentage points. It included
interviews with 299 tea p:u1y &lt;;up
porters. with a margin of sam
piing error of plu · or minus 7.5
points.
The exit poll involved inte1
views with 17.504 voters. incluu ·
ing Election Day voters and
phone interviews with people
· who voted early or absentee. It.
had an overall margin of sampling
error of plus or minus I point.
(Associated Press News Sun'£'_\
Specialist Dennis Junius. 1IP
Polling Direc10r 7i-emr Tmnp.,Oil
and AP Deputy Poll111g Diremw
Jennifer AgieHa contnlmtcd tu
this report.)

/·

�--

Sunday, November 28,2010

~--

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

\lr:imes -~entinel • Page As

·obituaries
L___ _____________________________
Feds: Somali-born teen plotted car-bombing
Miranda L~~ Harper
Miranda Lynn Harper. 7.
Vinton. Ohio. passed away
Wednesday. November 24,
20 I 0, at Holzer Medical
ter. Gallipolis. Ohio.
was born September
, 2003, in Gallipolis. In
addition to her mother,
Elisha Harper, Miranda is
'!&gt;urvived by he1 bruth~r.
Emery Harper; maternal
grandparents, Jeff and
Lenora Dunaway; uncle.
David Harper, all of L-.---iL...:;...;,-......::._...__...,
Vinton; and several loving
extended family members. Miranda was a first grade
student in the Gallia County Local Schools Home
School Program.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m .. Monday.
November 29, 2010. at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home in Vinton. Ohio, with Rev. Chester Hess officiating. Burial will follow in the Franklin Cemetery.
Friends and family may call at the funeral home at 11
a.m., Monday, prior to the funeral service.
be
sent
to
Condolences
may
www.mccoymoore.com.

Robert E. Barton

NEDRA PICKLER

and spoke on condition
of anonymity, told The
Associated Press that
PORTLAND. Ore. federal agents began
Federal agents in a sting investigating the suspect
operation arrested a after receiving a tip from
Somali-born
teenager someone who was conjust as he tried blowing cerned about the teenagup a van he believed was er. The official declined
loaded with explosives at to provide more detail
a crowded Christmas tree about the relationship
lighting ceremony in between Mohamud and
Portland, authorities said. that source.
The bomb was an elabThe FBI affidavit that
orate fake supplied by the outlined the investigation
agents and the public was alleges that Mohamud
never in danger. authori- planned the attack for
·
ties said.
months, at one point
Mohamed
Osman mailing bomb compoMohamud,
19, was nents to FBI operatives,
arrested at 5:40 p.m. whom he believed were
Friday just after he dialed assembling the device.
a cell phone that he
According to the offithought would set off the cial, Mohamud hatched
blast but instead brought the plan on his own and
federal agents and police without any instruction
swooping down on him.
from a foreign terrorist
Yelling
"Allahu organization, and he
Akbar!" - Arabic for planned the details,
"God is ~reat!"
includin~ where to park
Mohamud tned to kick the van for the maximum
agents and police after he number of casualties.
was taken into custody,
The affidavit said
according to prosecutors. Mohamud was warned
"The threat was very several times about the
real,"
said
Arthur seriousness of his plan,
Balizan, srecial agent in that women and children
charge o the FBI in could be killed, and that
Oregon. "Our investiga- he could back out, but he
tion
shows
that told agents: "Since I was
Mohamud was absolute- 15 I thought about all
ly committed to carrying this;" and "It's gonna be a
out an attack on a very fireworks show ... a specgrand scale."
tacular show."
White House spokesman
Mohamud, a naturalNick
Shapiro
said ized U.S. citizen livi gin
Saturday that President Corvallis, was charged
Barack Obama was aware with attempted use of a
of the FBI operation before weapon of mass destrucFriday's arrest. Shapiro tion, which carries a
said Obama was assured maximum sentence of
that the FBI was in full life in prison. A court
control of the operation appearance was set for
and that the public was not Monday.
in danger.
Authorities allowed the
A law enforcement plot to proceed in order
official, who was not to build up enough eviauthorized to discuss the dence to charge the susinvestigation
publicly pect with attempt.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

•

Robert E. Barton, 72, ~---------~--.
Pomeroy, Ohio, went to be
with his Lord and Savior
on Thanksgiving Day,
a ember 25th 2010. He
born December 13,
1937, to Ardith and Edith
Barton
(Eblin)
in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Along
with his wife, "Bob'' was
owner and operator of
Sugar
Run
Ashland
Service Station for 35
years. He was a member
of the Middleport Church
of the Nazarene. During his Christian service he was
a board member. Sunday school teacher, and treasurer of the Meigs Holiness Association. He served as an
elected member of the Meigs Local School Board for
13 years with several of those years as president. He
also served on the Athens-Meigs Educational Service
Center board for six years. His most important position was loving husband. daddy, grandpa and great
grandpa.
In addition to his parents, he is preceded in death by
his great granddaughter Christa "Allie" Wyatt. He is
survived by his 'wife of 41 years. Patty (Haggy). His
children, Brenda (Keith) Phalin, Middleport; Angie
(Dave) Bass, Syracuse; Joe Barton. Pomeroy: Scott
(Renee) Barton, Syracuse, and Bill Neutzling; 11
grandchildren, Robby (Mart:y) Wyatt, Adam (Brandi)
Wyatt. Michael Wyatt. Tara (Skip) Dodson, Mia Bass.
ELLIOT SPAGAT
n (Amy) Bass, Dylan Bass, Zach Barton,
ASSOCIATED PRESS
an Barton, Alex Barton and Andrew Barton;
his precious great-grandchildren, Olivia Wyatt,
SAN DIEGO (AP)Brennan Wyatt, Chase Dodson. Maddie Vantrease. Investigators suspect a
and Jaylynn "Coal Bucket" Bass, continuously major drug cartel was
brought smiles to his face.
the driving force behind
He is also survived by two sisters. Betty Reed, two long, sophisticated
Middleport, and Judy Denny, Rutland. as well as tunnels
connecting
many nieces, nephews and extended family members. Mexico with the U.S.
Calling hours are from 6-8 p.m. on Monday, that were discovered this
November 29th at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral month along with more
Home. Celebration services will be held at 2 p.m. on than 40 tons of marijuaTuesday, November 30th at Middleport Church of the na.
Nazarene with Pastor Len Powell officiating. Burial
Authorities said an
will follow at Rocksprings Cemetery.
underground
passage
In lieu of flowers. donations can be made in Bob's located Thursday was
name to the Middleport Church of the Nazarene.
similar to one found ear· An on-line registry is available at www.andersonm- lier both running
cdaniel.com.
around 2.000 feet from
Mexico to San Diego
and equipped with lighting. ventilation, and a
rail system for drugs to
Teresa Jean Hall, 54. of Gallipolis. died Thursday. be carried on a small
November 25, 2010. at Adena Medical Center in
Chillicothe. Born November 4, 1956, in Portsmouth, cart.
The
tunnels
are
Ohio, a daughter of Norma Lintz Adams and the late believed to be the work
Bob Adams, she was a homemaker and attended Pine
Mexico's Sinaloa carGrove Holiness Church. She is survived by her hus- of
tel, headed by that counband, Roger Hall whom she married June 1. J 974; try's most-wanted drug
sons, Michael (Naomi) Hall of Bidwell and Erik lord. Joaquin "El Chapo"
ci) Hall of Pinkerton, and four grandchildren, Guzman,
•
said Mike
Aaron Hall. Nathan Hall. Braden Hall and Madison Unweta, head of investiHall. In addition to her father. she was preceded in gations
at
U.S.
death by one brother. Terry Adams.
Immigration
and
Funeral services will be conducted at 1 p.m., Customs Enforcement in
Monday, November 29.2010. at Erwin-Dodson-Allen San Diego.
Funeral Home in Minford with Pastor James Rose
"We think ultimately
officiating. Burial wj]) be in CM Cemetery in Oak they are controlled by
Hill. Friends may call at the funeral home from 4-7
same overall cartel
p.m., Sunday and one hour prior to the service on the
but that the tunnels were
Monday. Online condolences may be sent to the fam- being managed and nm
ily at www.edafh.com.
independently by different cells operating within the same organiza...
tion," Unzueta said
Friday.
The tunnel found
Thursday is more than
seven football fields in
length and extends from
John Thomas Lewis, 90. Murray Road. Bidwell. the kitchen of a home in
died Wednesday, Nov. 24, 2010, at Holzer Medical Tijuana, Mexico. to two
Center. Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m .. warehouses
in San
Monday, Nov. 29, 2010. at Fairview Cemetery near Diego's Otay Mesa
Bidwell. Rev. Harold Benson will officiate. There are industrial district.
no calling hours. Arrangements by Cremeens Funeral
Three
men
were
Chapel. Gallipolis.
arrested in the United

The alleged plot in
Portland follows a string
of terrorist attack planning
by U.S. citizens or residents, including a Times
Square plot in which
Faisal Shahzad pleaded
guilty to trying to set off a
car bomb at a bustling
street comer. U.S. authorities had no intelligence
about Shahzad's plot until
the smoking car tumed up
in Manhattan.
Late
last
month,
Farooque Ahmed, 34, of
Virginia was arrested and
of
casing
accused
Washington-area subway
stations in what he
thought was an al-Qaida
plot to bomb and kill
commuters. Similar to
the Portland sting, the
bombing plot was a ruse
conducted over the past
six months by federal
officials.
U.S. Attorney Dwight
Holton released federal
court documents to The
Associated Press and the
Oregonian
newspaper
that show the sting operation began in June after
an undercover agent
learned that Mohamud
had been in regular email contact with an
"unindicted associate" in
Pakistan's northwest, a
frontier region where alQaida and Afghani~tan's
Taliban insurgents are
The
person
strong.
Mohamud had been in email contact with was a
friend living in Pakistan
who had been a student
in Oregon in 2007-2008,
the official told the AP.
The two used coded
language in which the
FBI believes Mohamud
discussed traveling to
Pakistan to prepare for
"violent jihad," the documents said.
In June an.FBI agent

contacted
Mohamud
"under the guise of being
affiliated with" the suspected terrorist.
An undercover agent
met with him a month
later in Portland, where
they "discussed violent
jihad." according to the
court documents.
As
a
trial
run,
Mohamud and agents
d~tunated a bomb in
Oregon's
backcounry
earlier this month.
"This defendant's chilling determination is a
stark reminder that there
are people - even here
in Oregon - who are
determined
to
kill
Americans," Holton said.
Friday. an agent and
Mohamud drove
to
downtown Portland in a
white van that carried six
55-gallon drums with
detonation cords and
plastic caps, but all of
them were inert, the complaint states.
They left the van near
the downtown ceremony
site and went' to a train
station where Mohamud
was given a cell phone
that he thought would
blow up the vehicle,
according to the complaint. There was no detonation when he dialed.
and when he tried again
federal agents and police
made their move.
Omar Jamal, first secretary to the Somali mission to the United
Nations, condemned the
plot and urged Somalis to
cooperate with police
and the FBI.
Officials have been
working with Muslim
community
leaders
across the United States.
particularly in Somali
diasporas in Minnesota,
trying to combat the radicalization.

San Diego drug tunnel had railcar, tons of pot

I

Teresa J. Hall

Deaths

John Thomas Lewis

Keeping Meigs &amp; Gallia
informed

States. and the Mexican
military raided a ranch
in Mexico and made five
arrests in connection
with the tunnel, authorities said.
U.S. authorities have
discovered more than
125 clandestine tunnels
along the Mexican border :;ince the early
1990s, though many
were crude and incomplete.
The passage found
Thursday is one of the
most sophisticated to
date, with an entry shaft
in Mexico lined with
cinderblocks and the rail
system, Unzueta said.
U.S. authorities do not
know how long the latest
tunnel was operating.
Unzueta said investigators began to look into it
in June on a tip that
emerged from a large
bust
of
marijuana,
cocaine and methampethamine by the San
Bernardino
County
Sheriffs Department.
U.S. authorities fol:.
lowed a trailer from one
of the warehouses to a
Border Patrol checkpoint
in Temecula,
where
they
seized
27.600 pounds of marijuana. The driver. whose
name was not released,
was arrested, along with
two others who went to a
residence in suburban El
Cajon that had $13,500
cash inside.
•

"That (trailer) was'literally filled top to bottom, front to back,"
Unzueta said. "There
wasn't any room for anything else in that tractortrailer but air."
Three tons of marijuana were found in a "subterranean room" and
elsewhere in the tunnel
on the U.S. side, authorities said. Mexican officials seized four tons or
pot at a ranch in northern
Mexico, bringing the
total haul to more than
20 tons.
The discovery of the
cross-border tunnel earlier this month marked
one of the largest marijuana seizures in the
United States, with
agents confiscating 20
tons of marijuana they
smuggled
said
was
through the underground
passage. That tunnel ran
the length of six football
fields under the border
warehouses
in
and
Mexico and San Diego.

One of the warehouses
involved in the tunnel
discovered Thursday is
only a half-block away.
In Thursday's discovery, the tunnel's cinderblock-lined entry in
Mexico dropped 80 to 90
feet to a wood-lined
floor, Unzueta said.
From the U.S. side. there
was a stairway leading to
a room about 50 feet
underground that was
full of marijuana.
"It's a lot like how the
ancient Egyptians buried
the kings and queens,"
Unzueta said.
Several sophisticated .
tunnels have ended in
San Diego warehouses.
ICE began meeting with
landowners last month to
warn them about leasing
space to tunnel builders.
"These owners of
warehouses, they need to
know their customers,
they need to know who's
in there leasing these
things," Unzueta said.

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�~-~--~- - ~

Sunday, November

----

Pomeroy • Middle port • Gallipolis

28, 2010

fb unbap \Cimr.s -$rntind • Page A6

CHURCH NOTEBOOK
.

· Armstrong marks anniversary
B IDWELL - Mt. Ca1mel Missionary Baptist
Church will celebrate the 17th pastoral anniversary of
Moderator, Rev Gene A. Annstrong on Sunday, Nov.
28. Morning worship begins at 10:45 a.m. Afternoon
worship will begin at 3 p.m. Rev Calvin Minnis.
Pastor of Corinth Baptist Church along with the choir
and congregation will be the afternoon guests. Dinner
will be served following morning worship. Everyone
welcome.

Dooley in concert at First Nazarene
GALLIPOLIS - Gospel music artist Jimmy
Dooley will be in concert at 10:40 a.m., Sunday, Nov.
28 at First Church of the Nazarene in Gallipolis. The
church is located at 1110 First Avenue. Gallipolis. For
information. call 446-1772.
·

Raineys in concert at Grace UMC
GALLIPOLIS -· James and Laura Rainey will
bring their New Beginnings Tour to Grace United
Methodist Church in Gallipolis this Sunday, Nov. 28.
The concert begins at 7:15 p.m.
James Rainey is a veteran of southern gospel music,
with over 20 years experience playing piano for a
variety of groups, including The Hoppers, The
Greenes, The Singing Americans, Rusty Goodman.
The Stampi and others.
Grace United Methodist Church is located at 600

Second Avenue in Gallipolis. For information. call
446-0555.

weeknight. Special music, will be presented at each
service.

Church of Christ meets

St. Louis craft and bake sale Dec. 4

GALLIPOLIS - The church of Christ in Gallipolis
meets at 234 Chapel Drive. Sunday meeting times are
as follows: 9:30 a.m., Bible class: I 0:30 a.m .. worship: 5 p.m., evening assembly. Bill Mead will be
speaking Nov. 28. The church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for Bible study. In keeping with New
Testament teaching and example, the Lord's Supper is
remembered each first day of the week and singing is
vocal, with no instrumental accompaniment. Free
Bible courses are offered by mail, and there are
Christians who would be glad to study the Bible with
you personally in your home. Just send your name
and postal address to the address above, or call 4461494 to take advantage of either service. Visit our
Web site www.chapelhplchurchofchrist.org.

GALLIPOLI S - The Catholic Women's Cl
St. Louis Parish will host a Christmas craft and
sale from 9 a.m.-3 p.m .. Saturday, Dec. 4. T he .
will be held in the Activities Building at 85 State
Street. behind the sanctuary.

Revival at Dickey Chapel
UNDATED - Glendon Simpson and Jeremy
Simpson will be the guest preachers for revival services Nov. 28-Dec. 4 at Dickey Chapel Church.
Services begin at 6 p.m. on Sunday and 7 p.m. each

Teresa McCoy in concert
GALLIPOLIS - Teresa McCoy will be in concert
at 6 p.m., Sunday. Dec. 5 at the First Church of God
in Gallipolis.
McCoy is an accomplished vocalist in several genres, including musical theater, opera and oratorio, anq
traditional and contemporary Christian music. She is
music director at First Presbyterian Church in
Beckley, W.Va., teaches music at Concord University
and seves as musical director for Theatre West
Virginia's summer stock productions. McCoy is married to Jim McCoy. They .have three child ren,
Meredith, Marjorie and Andrew.
Firsr Church of God is located at 1723 Ohio 141,
Gallipolis. For information, call 446-4404.

Notebook
Meigs BOE special meeting
POMEROY - The Meigs County Board of
Elections will host a special meeting at 8:30 a.m.,
Monday, Nov. 29 to discuss the 20 ll budget.

Board of health meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Board of Health
will meet at 9 a.m.. Wednesday, Dec. I in the conference
room of the Gallia County Service Center, 499 Jackson Pike.

SWCD December meeting
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District's December board meeting will
be held at 6 p.m., Friday, Dec. 3 at the C. H. McKenzie
Agricultural Center.

Christmas craft, bake sale
VINTON - The Vinton Volunteer Fire Dept.
Auxiliary will host a Christmas craft and bake sale from 9
a.m.-5 p.m. on Saturday. Dec. 4 at Vinton Town Hall. All
proceeds will benefit the Vinton VFD. Santa Claus will
beavailable for photos. For information, call 388-8538.

I

UWGC Breakfast with Santa
GALLIPOLIS - The United Way of Gallia Co.
Breakfast with Santa Fundraiser will be held from 8l 0 a.m. on Saturday. Dec. 4 at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 35.85
Akzo (NASDAQ) 56.63

Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 51 70

Big Lots (NYSE) 30.92

Bob Evans (NASDAQ)
- 32.11

BorgWarner (NYSE) 60.62

Century Alum (NASDAQ)- 14.23
Champion (NASDAQ)
-

1.16

Charming Shops (NASDAQ)- 3.84 .
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 32.56

Collins (NYSE) - 56.41
DuPont (NYSE)- 46.31
US Bank (NYSE) 23.97

Gen Electric (NYSE) 15.80

Harley-Davidson
(NYSE) - 31.33
JP Morgan (NYSE) 37.50

Kroger (NYSE) - 23.07
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
33.75

Norfolk So (NYSE) 60.84 •

OVBC (NASDAQ) 19.96

BBT (NYSE) - 23.34
Peoples (NASDAQ) 12.72

Pepsico (NYSE)- 63.90
Premier (NASDAQ)
6.42

Rockwell

(NYSE)

-

67.09

Rocky Boots ('IASDAQ)
-9.11

Royal Dutch Shell 62.23

Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 66.06
Wal-Mart (NYSE) 53.74

Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.89
WesBanco (NYSE)
18.09

Worthington (NYSE)
15.97

Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. ET closing
quotes of transactions for
Nov. 26. 20 I0, provided by
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 4419441 and Lesley Marrero in
Point Pleasant at (304) 6740174. Member SIPC.

fREE: SH PPlNG I 1 a~ M

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
Sunday: Sunny, with a high near 49. Calm wind
becoming southeast around 6 mph.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 28 .
Monday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 58.
Monday Night: A chance of showers. Cloudy, with
a low around 44. Chance of precipitation is 50 percent.
Tuesday: Showers likely. Cloudy, with a high near
54. Chance of precipitation is 70 percent.
Tuesday Night: Rain and snow showers likely.
Cloudy, with a low around 35. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent. •
Wednesday: A chance of rain and snow showers.
Cloudy, with a high near 42. Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent.
1
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low
around 26.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 44.

ATT.COM

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�Places te o, Things to Do,
Parade , here's Santa ~ ay•
....._.. NoVi ntber 7 n
¥eJUber2

•

�THE SPIRIT OF GIVING

Gallia County volunteer,
community leader Jessie
Payne named Christmas
parade marshal for 2010

Jessie Payne

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia CoWlty
"Dad didn't want me to be selfish," said
Chamber of Commerce is proud to Mrs. Payne. "He sajq the good Lord gave us
. I
annbbnce Mrs. Jessie Payne as this a lot of time to live and help one another.''
File photo
yeah Christmas Parade Marsh 1.
Payne IS the daughter of the late Santa Claus is always a major feature of the Gallipolis Christm.as Parade. 1't"\is
With the theme "The Spirit of Henry and Nan y Hutchinson. She and year's parade is set for 4:30p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 4.
'
· 11
Gi7fng," Mrs . .Payne is the !perfect fit. her husband, Adam (Mike) Payne have
rt •
•
J
I
Sin¢e September 1973, she has . spent been married f9r 62 years and have two
'I'
countless hours volunteering at Holzer daughters, Car.olyn Casey and Sharon
¥edical Center in a variety of capaci- Winston, six gtkndchildren and seven
tiep. In addition, Mrs. Payne lserve:s on 1 great grandchildren.
The GaD.ia r€:bunty. Cha10b~r
th4 Community Action Bo~u;d, _Se):enity
She, was b~m jn Gallia f=ounty and
• Cbrn)nerce Urges YOU to Pl~se
House Board, Black History Board, gradu~ted in ;tpf7 froP} 1 &lt;j:cidmu~ Hi~h
ancipation Celebrahon)36ard,, Galfia School. She l:tt~r attenderl thelUmvemty
· :'
SHOP LO&lt;JALLY FIRST
ounty
Economic
Development 1 of Rio Grano~,Mher~ hf.lsh.fdied law.
~;Fo~.THE'HOLI~A~st
ssociatiol) and j vice pres!dep! of the
·Pleas&lt;i take~~ mothent to !lappla\td tl1e
allia CountY NA.AtF. She' is also the woman who 1hs tgiyen so;rhu~h of ~er
. l"fJ"...
1 .We are ALIJ ·winners ,when ihe
unday . School Superintendent at fife in the se ice bf 'otheD&gt; and learn a
&lt;:__}
stays
in
OUR
community!
\..,_;.)
little from her generosity. Don't let the
Corinth Baptist Church in Oak Hill.
· Mrs. Payne recently received a citation Holidays be the only time you are in
Reminder: Christmas Parade will be
Saturday, December 4th at 4:30 pm.
f.~qm the Ohi~ f-I,ouse of ~~prese9~tiye. ·:The Spirit of qiving." ~
.,.
Deadliae to
is Monday, November 29th,
to{ ?,3,500 hqlf~ of 1vplqnteerr,..se,ry\cF1 , . J'he 201 0 parafi.e is sc9~dul~d t~ peg in
Theme: "Spi~lt ·
Pan(le M.arsh~ Jessie :Pant_e.
Wl\y volunteet iiO.rnl.lcb DIJier .t:J.me7 •• at. k30 p.m .• on. Saturallv, Deo. 4 in
' .. - • -..,,.. ~.a
Mrs. Payne gives the credit to her father. downtown Gallipolis.
••

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~

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money~:

•

�• Mason County
prepares for
holiday season
Bv HOPE ROUSH
HROUSH@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

•

•

POINT PLEASANT - It's beginning
to look a lot like Christmas in Mason
County.
Light decorations have already
popped up at Krodel Park in preparation
for the annual Christmas Fantasy Light
Show and plans are under way around
the county for other holiday celebrations.
Krodel Park's Christmas Fantasy
Light Show is officially open for the
season. The light show will be open
from 5:30-9:30 p.m. nightly through
Dec. 31. A variety of animated light displays are featured at the light show,
including Point Pleasant's own legendary Mothman creature. There is no
admission fee for the show, however,
donations are encouraged and appreciated.
File photo
On Saturday, Dec. 4, Christmas will
The Mothman is one of many colorful
be celebrated 17th Century-style with displays visitors will see at the Krodel
Fort Randolph's Christmas on the Park Christmas Fantasy Light Show.
Frontier. The event will take place from
10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will feature a variety of demonstrations. Christmas on the children.
Frontier will be the last fort event for the
Henderson will celebrate the holidays
2010 year.
Dec.l8-19 with their annual Christmas
The New Haven/Mason Christmas Parade and events. The parade is set for
Parade also will take place 11 a.m. Dec. 5 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 18, and Toys and
4. For more information, call the New Treats with Santa will follow at the
Henderson Community Center from 6-9
Haven city building at 304-882-3203 .
Starting Friday, Dec. 10, the West p.m. The town's Christmas dinner will
VIrginia State Farm Museum's Holiday take place Dec. 19 from 2-6 p.m. at the
Light Festival will begin. The show runs community center. The dinner is free for
from 6-9 p.m. nightly through Dec. 20. all local residents. For more information
During the festival, Santa Claus will be on the upcoming parade and dinner,
featured nightly and there will be free contact Henderson Mayor Jack McCoy
hot chocolate and cookies available for at 304-675-5722 or 304-675-1682.

• Page 3

'Christmas S~rise:'
Community play set for
Dec. 4 in Point Pleasant
BY DELYSSA HUFFMAN
DHUFFMAN@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

POINT PLEASANT - A new play by the Point Pleasant Community
Players will present "Christmas Surptise" on Dec. 4 at the Lillian and Paul
Wedge Auditorium at 7 p.m.
Written by Nancy Hamm, the three act play is being sponsored by the.
Mason County Ministerial Association. According to Hamm, the play is set
in the modern times, but also takes the audience back to ancient Bethlehem.
"We have a large cast of all ages and more than 10 churches are involved,"
Hamm said. "There are still a few jobs that we need help with, so if anyone
is interested, they may contact me."
This is Ha.mm's fifth community play. Admission is free, but donations are
b~ing accepted at the door. All proceeds will benefit the Samaritan's Fund
which assists the needy in Mason County.
For more information, contact Hamm at 304-674-2453.

Holiday Savings Sale

40-75% OFF
Girls Bedroom Suites
Sofa &amp; Loveseat
Assorted Lamps
Chaise Lounges
Sofa Tables
End Tables
Coffee Tables
Pictures
Cocktail Tables
Bob Timberlake Cocktail Cabinet
Ottomans Nice Selection of Chairs
(lnduding Leather)

50% OFF Ail Chrisbnas Decor

~iture Galleries
151 2nd.Ave Gallipolis,OH 45631
740446-0332 · www.to

..,

I

I

�• Page 4

----------------~--------------------------------- ·

Gallipolis gets ready for holiday season
French Art Colony hosts 16th Annual Holiday Tour

GALLIPOLIS - Nestled in the
Appalachian foothills, Gallipolis is
blessed with a spectacular natural setting, and some of the region's most distinguished Victorian architecture. The
City of the Gauls is memorable at any
time of the year, but dresses in her very
best for the holiday season. Trees are
trimmed. Lights are strung. Gracious
homes are warmed by log fires and candle light. Best of all, it's a seasonal
celebration everyone is welcome to
share at the 16th annual Holiday
Homes Tour.
No place decks the halls like Old
French City and this "must see" event
invites you into beautifully decorated
homes, public buildings, churches and
museums in Gallipolis and Gallia
County. Sponsored by the French Art
Colony. the Candle Light Tour runs .
Friday evening December 3rd, from 610 p.m. Guests may also use the
unmarked portion of their tickets to
complete the tour on Saturday afternoon. from 1-5 p.m.
This year's host property is Riverby,
the French Art Colony's .historic Greek
Revival mansion. Constructed between
1855 and 1858, it's notable for a floating stairway. which spirals gracefully
to the third floor. The long curved
handrail was expertly fashioned from a
single piece of wood. The ups5airs provides an elegant setting for the
Gallipolis Junior Women's Club
Christmas Tree and Wreath silent auction, while downstairs, the French Art
Colony is hosting its annual Arts and
Crafts Fair. It is a warm and welcoming
environment where guests can get out
of the weather, sample cookies and
beverages, purchase holiday presents
and enjoy Riverby dressed lin her finest
for the holidays.
Sites on the touP vary fro historic to
contemporary, with an eclectic mix of
styles. Each one has a story to tell and
everyone will be trimmed in thei11 holiday best, replete with glittering light,
evergreens and precious family heirlooms.
.
A circa 1895 brick Queen Anne style
home - converted to a duplex in the
thirties, will showcase the spacious sec-

ond floor 3-bedroom apartment of a
local surgeon. This charming home,
overlooking the city park, was originally built by a banker, and has been featured in Mid-West Living.
The Sibley home on Second Avenue,
features a "bandstand corner," brimming with memorabilia related to the
City
Park
historic
Galli polis
Bandstand, the town's most enduring
and visible symbol. Mrs. Sibley is
descended from the Sterlings, the father
and son duo that erected the bandstand
in 1878, as a memorial to soldiers in the
Civil War.
The
Francies
Residence
on
Portsmouth road is a charming home
that boasts a very interesting history.
The original house was built and
owned by Francis Holcomb on lot #8.
The house was positioned facing
Chicamauga Creek and is said to have
served as officer's headquarters·during
the Civil War. In the 1930s. a basement
was dug on the next lot. # 14, and the
house was turned around and moved on
logs to the present location.
The Wickline home on Garfield
Avenue is part of a newly constructed
duplex. It features a deck, where guests
can enjoy a view of the Ohio River. Ms.
Wickline collects Santas created by
Brad Painter, a local artist and teacher.
She also collects the Cat's Meow
wooden replicas of many interesting
local buildings. Her Christmas tree is
traditionally decorated in crystal. While
she doesn't collect antiques, one of her
favorite things is a small table in the
living room purchased by her grandfather as a gift for her grandmother, when
they married.
Our House located on First Avenue·is
a three-story brick tavern in the Federal
style built by Henry Cushing in 1819.
The tavern boasted (a taproom, dining
room, and the other usua1 facilities, as
well as, a large ballroom for social
f'uhctions. Visitors today will step back
in time to when proprietor Henry
Cushing invited weary travelers to stay
at his inn. Our House will be decorated
in primitive Colonial decorations and
costume guides will escort visitors
throughout t~e museum. Period

.

•
Photo courtesy of the French Art Colony

This circa ~ 895 Brick Queen Anne home to be featured on 16th Annual Holiday
Homes Tour!

refreshments from the 1800s including
cookies, tea and spiced cider will be
served.
In nearby Rio Grande, stop in at the
newly redec'orated President's residence on the University of Rio
Grande campus. Then spend some
time at the Greer Museum, filled with
fascinating works of art. Built in
1884, the Romanesque Revival building was originally a general store.
Resplendent in garlands and mistletoe, the university's Madog Center
for Welsh Studies creates a seasonal

tableau worthy of Dylan Thomas' "A
Child's Christmas in Wales." Housed
in the expansive Elizabeth Davis
building, the center takes its name
from Madog ab Owain Gwynedd, a
Welsh prince who, according to legend, sailed to America in 1170, over
three
hundred
years
before
Columbus.
For more information regarding
ticket prices and additional homes on
the tour, please contact the French Art
Colony at. info@frenchartcolony.org
or (740) 446-3834.

•

�• Page 5

as

�• Page 6

------------------~------~--------------------~·

Visit Santa Claus at Gallipolis City Park
Santa's House is located at the corner of Second Ave. and State St. in Gallipolis.
Santa will be available right after the Christmas parade at 5:15p.m. on Saturday
Dec. 4 and from 2-6 p.m., Sunday, Dec. 5 through Wednesday, Dec. 22.

Christmas Parade
at 4:30p.m.
Santa's
House
open at 5:15p.m.

6

5

2-6 p.m.

2-6 p.m.

-

12

-

-

13

2-6 p.m.

19

8

7

-

15

14

20

2-6 p.m.

2-6 p.m.

2-6 p.m.

9

2-6 p.m.

21

2-6 p.m.

22

· 2-6 p.m.

2-6 p.m.

23

2-6 p.m.

17

16
2-6 p.m.

2-6 p.m.

24
Christmas Eve

2-6 p.m. ,

25
Merry·
Christmas
.

2-6 p.m.

26

2-6 p.m.

27 .

2-6 p.m.

28

. '~

2-6 p.m.

29

30

31
New Years Eve

.
.
,.

..

'

�41-·-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------·-P_a_ge--7

Pomeroy Merchants
Association·announces
planning for Chrisbnas . Middleport holiday kickoff
STAFF REPORT

POMEROY Final plans for
Christmas events in Pomeroy were discussed by the Pomeroy Merchants
Association.
George Wright. who is handling
downtown decorating, reported that
most has been completed. The figures
which adorn the mini-parks on Court
Street are in place and the iighted greenery and wreath.s on the period light posts
are in place. A for decorations in the
gazebo, again this year Trinity Church.
the New Beginnings United Methodist
Church, and the Sacred Heart Church
will create lighted holiday displays.
Plans vere completed f6r the annual
- candy to be held at Peoples
on Dec. 4. cookies at Ohio Valley
on Dec. 11; and crafts at Farmers
Bank on Dec. 18. Prizes will be $50 for
the first place winner, and a gift of
File photo
choice from the bank where the contest Kids of all ages are looking forward to a
is being held to the second place winner. visit with Old St. Nick.
As for the sale of the new limited edition Christmas bulb Edna Weber report- take place on Court Street. Santa will
ed that 65 remain for sale in several again be at Peoples Bank to. meet and
downtown locations, including the greet the children and to be phobanks. The bulb which features an etch- tographed with Santa. Pets can also be
ing of the Meigs County Courthouse is included in the pictures. Treats will be
in a brilliant red gloss.
distributed by Santa.
Plans are moving forward for the
A report was given by Tina Rees on
annual Christmas parade which will be the Peoples Bank program of providing
held on the Sunday after Thanksgiving. coats for kids. She noted that over 60
Again this year Ton~y Dingess is the had already been delivered to Meigs
chairman. It was not~cl; that pets will be Elementary and Carleton School and
included in the parade. will be judged more will be delivered once the lists of
and awarded after judging which will need have been provided by the schools.

File photo

Middleport
will be
alive with
activity
ouring the
annual
Christmas
parade on
Dec. 4.

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT - Holiday music
will fill downtown Middleport on Dec.
4, a horse-drawn carriage will offer free
rides through town, and a Christmas
parade with Santa will kick off the holiday season there.
The
Middleport
Community
A ociation plans an afternoon and
early evening filled with holiday activities, using the traditional theme, "The
Christmas Village." Debbie Gerlach,
association pre {dent. said the parade
will begin at 4:30 p.m., but a tree lighting, musical entertainment and free
refreshments are planned for the afternoon.
· Carriage rides wiH be offered by Mike

Roach at 3 p.m .. beginning at Peoples
Bank. The Middleport Ministerial
Association will light the village
Christmas tree. on the "T," at 3:45p.m.
Following the parade, Santa will meet
with children at the bank for free photographs and refreshments. The association will serve cookies and hot drinks.
and carolers will sing in the downtown
business district. The Big Bend
Community Band, directed by Tonej::
Dingess, will perform holiday music
from 4 to 4:30 p.m.
Gerlach said the parade is open to all
entries, and pre-registration is not
required. Lineup begins at 4 p.m. at
Dairy Queen. Groups with questions
may contact her at 992-5877 or Kathy
Mullins at 992-7278.

I

t

t

. I

418 Silver Bridge Plaza, Gallipolis 740-446-3484

�Ohio Valley Symphony Chrisbnas
S ow set for Dec. 4 at Ariel Theatre
GALLIPOLIS - With temperatures Carol. "The Fir.·t • 'oel." "God Re"t Ye
in the 70s until a couple of weeks ago, it Merry Gentlemen.'' ''Here We Come Amight be difficult to get into the holiday Wassailing," and "0 Come All Ye
o;pirit this year. The Ohio Valley Faithful... Fowler described the -&gt;ymSymphony has the perfect solution.
phony as both noble and joyous, with
Join the OVS at 8 p.m. Dec. 4 at the inspirations as wide ranging as Bach
~,.;\riel-Ann Carson Dater Perf6rming
and 19th-century Russian nationalists.
Arts Centre for the "Christmas Show."
Fowler noted it makes a perfect comThe annual celebration by southeast panion for "Men of Goodwill,'' a short
Ohio ·s only professional orchestra has set of variations on "God Rest Ye Merry
become a regional tradition. Music Gentlemen" by fellow Britop Benjamin
director Ray Fowler has again assem- Britten. That more somber take on
bled a tray of musical treats for the Christmas is also slated on the more trawhole family reflecting the season's ditional first half of the program. The
many moods - joyous, somber, child- second half celebrates the American
liRe, and everything in between.
popular· holiday tradition, including
The evening is again sponsored this takes on "The Christmas Song.'' "White
year by Holzer Clinic. Further funding Chtistmas," and "Sleigh Ride.''
for the Ohio Valley Symphony is pro''The Christmas Show" reflects the
vided by the Ann Carson Dater OVS mission to make great orchestral
Endowment.
music easy to love. The public is
Although he's been doing it for years. encouraged to attend OVS rehearsals
Fowler says he never tires of uneat1hing for free at 7-10 p.m. Friday, Dec. 3, and
musical surprises for the Christmas pro- l-4 p.m. Dec. 4. Open rehearsals are an
gram. Among this year's gems, he said, excellent way for young and old alike to
are excerpts from "The Snowman" by grow comfortable with symphonic
wich Korngold and the "Carol music. They're also a great glimpse
Symphony" by Victor Rely-Hutchinson. behind the scenes at what goes into
Korngold was an Austrian-born c;hild preparing an orchestral performance.
prodigy who fled Europe's wars and
Single tickets to the Ohio Valley
became one the greatest film composers Symphony's "Christmas Show" are $22,
of Hollywood's golden age. Rely- $20 (senior) and $10 (students). Tickets
Hutchinson was born in 1901 the son of. and more information are available
Britain's Cape Colony in southern through the Ariel-Ann Carson Dater
Africa but lived in Britain most of his Performing r\.rts Centre box office.
life.
(740) 446-2787 (ARTS), at 428 Second
2010 marks the hundredth anni ver- Ave., Gallipolis, and through the OVS
sary of th~ first performance of the Web
site,
orchestral ver ion of "The Snowman," a www.ohiovalleysymphony.org.
ballet written when Korngold was II.
There's a second musical treat in store .
Played for Austrian Emperor Franz thj.s year. Relive the joy of the OVS's
Josef II, the premiere caused a sensa- 2009 holiday concert with "Christmas
tion. Fowler finds the achievement with the Ohio Valley Symphony,"
remarkable. "The quality of the emo- broadcast over West Virginia Public
tional content is so beyond his years, so Radio. Mona Seghatoleslami hosts the
ruature," he aid. "He obviously was event, slated to air at 9 p.m. Dec. 21 and
born as an older person."
2 p.m. Dec. 24. For those away from the
Rely-Hutchinson's ·symphony builds bhio Valley, the concei1 will even be
its four movements on famous tradition- ·streamed over WVPR's Web site,
al Christmas carols - the Coventry http://wvpubcast.org/.

Ohio Valley Symphony

co-e OD over to Bob's . . .
For All Your Christ-as
Decorating Needs
Fresh Cut

Christ~nas Trees ..
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PJ•Ic Hutter (c:;u.2 .. 11

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�~.._--~--------"!'-----~~---"'!"""""~~--~-~~-- ---- ....-

~unbap

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uttmes -~enttnel

PORTS
I&gt;

t=

Sun&lt;f:ay, November 28, 2010

J

GALLIPOLIS - A schedule of upcoming
OOIIege and hogh school varsity sporting
evenls 1nvolv1ng teams from Galha. Mason
and Meigs counties

SaturdaY. .Novemb~r 21
Girts Basketball
River Valley at Meigs. 6:30 p.m.
Southern at Rock Hill. TBA

Monday,. N.ovember.29
Girls Basketball

The Wahama
· football team
celebrates following their
31-14 victory
ov.er Wirt
County on
Friday
evening at the
Point
Pleasant
Athletic
Complex in.
Point
•
Pleasant, •
W.Va. With
the victory, :
the White :
Falcons will"
advance to
the Class A
State
Championshi
p on
Saturday,
Dec. 4, in
Wheeling,
W.Va.

South Gallia at Eastern, 6 p.m
S. Point at Gallia Academy. 6 p.m.
Tnmble at Southern, 6 p.m.

Tues.Qay,.JiQYembe!...3D
Girls Basketball
Wahama at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Chnstian at Buffalo. 7:30
p.m.

Wednesday,.. OecembeiJ.
Girls Basketball
Meigs at Warren . 6 p.m

Newton rallies
Auburn past
.Alabama, 28-27

l

•

TUSCALOOSA. Ala.
(AP) - Cam Newton
threw for three touchdowns and ran for another, leading Nq. 2 Auburn
back from A 24-point
deficit Friday for a stunning 28-27 victory over
No. 9 Alabama that kept
the Tigers on course for a
shot at the natioQ.al championship.
Auburn ( 12-0, 8-0
Southeastern
Conference) trailed 21-0
before it even picked up a
first qown, and Alabama
(9-3, 5-3) had a 314-2
lead in total yards at one
point in the first half.
But Newton, with the
signature performance in
what has become a season of controversy, rallied the Tigers for a victory that left the crowd of
more than 10 1.000 in
tunned disbelief when it
was over. He threw scormg passes of 36 yards to
Emory Blake. 70 yards to
Terrell Zachery and,
finally. a 7-yarder to
Philip
Lutzenkirchen
with 11 :55 remaining
that gave Auburn its first
lead of the day.
It held up, keeping the
Tigers perfect heading to
next week's SEC championship game against
South
Carolina.
If
Auburn wins that one.
the reward will certainly
be a spot in the national
title game.
'
Newton also had a 1yard TD run, and this
may be the performance
that locks
up the
Heisman Trophy - if
allegations that his father
sought a huge payout for
the quarterback to sign
out of junior college
don't weigh too heavily
n the voters· minds.
Certainly on the field,
Newton has no peer.
It's unlikely that any•
one in the country could
lead a team back from

Please see Rally, 84

Sarah Hawley/
photos

White Falcons tame Wirt County in semis, 31-14
Wahama to face either Matewan or
Wheeling Central in 1st state final
Bv GARY

CLARK

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT PLEASANT
- Tyler Kitclien caught
a pair of touchdown passes from Trenton Gibbs in
addition to booting a 21
yard field goal and three
point after touchdown
kicks to lead the Wahama
Falcons past
White
fourth rated Wirt County
by a 31-14 margin Friday
evening in the semifinal
round of the Class A
playoffs.
The win was the 13th
triumph of the year for
the top ranked and undefeated Mason County
team
as
Wahama
advances to next weeks
Class A state finals. WHS
will meet the winner of
Saturday's
MatewanWheeling Central contest
at 7 p.m. next Saturday at
Wheeling
Island
Stadium.
Kitchen and Gibbs was
joined in the offensive
spotlight by senior running back Ryan Lee who
ran for 108 yards and a
score as the White
Falcons tallied 212 yards
on the ground offensively
in addition to gaining

Jets blast Bengals
EAST
RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) Even missing a shoe,
Brad Smith didn't miss a
step.
The
Jets·
Mr.
Everything sparked New
York to its second-best
start after scoring on an
89-yard kickoff return during which a cleat
slipped off - and also
had a 53-yard touchdown
, run in a 26-10 victory
over the Cincinnati
. Bengals on Thursday
ight.
"He's a phenomenal
•
athlete,' coach Rex Ryan
said. "Everything we ask
him to do, he does. •·
With or without all of
his footwear.
"1 think all that running
in the backyard with no
shoes on with my brother,'' the versatile wide
receiver said with a big
grin, "that helped."
Hours
after
New.
England beat Detroit to
improve to 9-2, New

York
matched
the
Patriots. The two meet
for the AFC East lead in
their next game, a meaty
Monday night matchup
Dec. 6 at New England.
"We have our work cut
out for us, but.! think this
team will respond," run- .
ning back LaDainian
Tomlinson said. "They
took care of their business and got to 9-2 and
we had to taK.e care of our
business.''
The impressive start is
eclipsed only by the 1986
squad that won 10 of its
first 11. And the Jets did
it by overcoming a sluggish first half and sending
the
struggling
Bengals (2-9) to their
eighth straight loss.
''We're try in~ to make
the most of it, ' Bengals
receiver Terrell Owens
said. "It's something different in every phase of
the game every week. We

Please see Blast, 84

another 54 yards through
the air.
While the Bend Area
offense was experiencing
another
productive
evening before a huge
following at the Point
Pleasant High School
Athletic Complex it was
the Falcons defense who
came up big once again.
The locals limited Wirt
County to a mere 53 net
yards on the ground
while coming up with
three turnovers.
Zac Warth picked off a
pair of Tiger pass offerings WJth lsaac Lee and
D.J. Gibbs collecting
another as the WHS
defensive unit forced the
visitors to abandon its
ground attack and take to
the airways.
Warth's first interception came on the second
play of the game and set
up an early White Falcon
score to quickly set the
tone of the evening.
Warth picked off a Taylor
Campbell pass at the
Tiger 35 and returned the
interception to the Wirt
County 13. Two plays
later Anthony Grimm

Please see Semis, 83

Wahama head coach Ed Cromley, right, talks with Colton McKinney during the
second half of Friday evening's state semifinal contest agafnst Wirt County.
Cromley's White Falcons will play in their first state championship contest n~xt
Saturday in Wheeling, W.Va. against either Matewan or Wheeling. Central.

Experiencing PAIN
from kidney stones?
Pleasant Valley Hospital offers several lithotripsy options
for patients suffering from kidney stones:
Extra Corporeal Lithotripsy (focused shock waves to fragment a s(one)
&amp; Laser Lithotripsy (using Holmium Laser for fragmenting a stone)
Urologists on the medical staff at Plea.vant Valley Ho.vpital:

Mel Simon, MD

Shrikant Vaidya, MD

256 Pinecrest Drive
Gallipolis, 0~

2520 Valley Drive, Suite G 16
Point Pleasant, WV

740.446.0021

304.675.6060

�_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.,._ _

~

· -

- - - - - ---- ---- .,.-- ... .

Page B2 • $&gt;unbm' tt:'nnl'S-ii&gt;rntinrl

..........

- ---..__,.-~'T""~,.,--,--~~~__,..,~;-"":7"~--

---."!"=--...--...=-...

......

----~

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

....--....______zq,..___

-~

~"i

Sunday, November 28, 2010

•·
EHS CROSS COUNI'RY
A\'\1ARD WINNERS

2010
2010

EHS FOOTBALL AWARD WINNERS

Eastern holds 201 0 Fall Sports

Banquet~

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPOATS@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM

TUPPERS PLAINS.
Ohio - Eastern High
School recently honored its fall sports athletes with a banquet at
the high school.
Members of the cross
country. golf. volleyball.
football,
and
cheerleading
teams
were recognized at the
event.
Cross country coach
Josh Fogle recognized
varsity runners Emeri
Connery.
Nikki
Gilbride and Shl!lby
Smith.
Reserve checrlem.lcrs
were honQred by advisor
Dee
Cross.
Reserve cheerleaders
were Hannah Adams,
Katlin Clark. Haileigh
Bush, Shaye Selbee.
Varsity cheerleader
Megan Carnahan, Kori
Collins, Morgan Hall,
Danni Maxey. Morgan
Pratt, Kristin Fick.
Emmi Tuomikoski and
Mallory
Nicodemus
were honored by advisor Betsy Nicodemus.
Varsity Go If team
members were recognized by coach Randy
Wachter.
Boys team
members were Jay
Warner.
Christian
Amsbary,
Chris
Bissell, Luke Kimes.
Sam
Collins.
Tim
Elam. Derick Powell.
Kyle Young. Tyler
Hen~l ey, Jack Kuhn,
Josh Parker and David
Warner.
Girls golf team member~
were
Megan
Carnahan.
Jessica
Cleland. Ashley Miller,
Jenna
Burdette,
Samantha
Cline,
Cassidy Cle land and
Hannah Hawley.
Varsity football team
members were recognized by head coa~h
Dick Tipton. · Team
members were Ryan
Amos. Klint Connery,
Kyle Connery, Tyler
Hendrix.
11m
Markworth. Brayden
Pratt. Michael Scyoc,
Ryan Shook,
Brad
Stone. John Tenoglia.
Lonnie Westfall. Tyler
Cline, Paul Morrison.
Marshall
Aanestad.
Alex
Amos.
Max
Carnahan.
Randal
Da' i~. Tim Minear.
Dylan Morris, Ethan
Nottingham.
Kirk
Pullins.
Garrett
Ritchie. Joey Scowden,
Josh
Shook. Tyler
Barber,
Zach
Browning.
Roger
Bunce,
Thunder
Clonch. Chase C&lt;)(lk,
Cody Rayburn and

•
Wyatt Westfall.
Reserve • volleyball
players were recognized by coach Kim
Hupp.
Reserve team
members were Rachael
~1arkworth,
Paige
Cline, Molly Dunlap.
Katie Keller. Whitley
Leach, Jordon Parker.
Madison Rigsby, Erin
Swatzel and Lindsay
Wolfe.
Varsity
volleyball
players were recognized by head coach
Howie
Caldwell.
Varsity team members
were Beverly Maxson.
Britney
Morrison.
Janae Boyles. Baylee
Collins, Brenna Holter,
Kelsey Myers, Jamie
Swatzel.
Autumn
Trussell,
Breanna
Hayman, Ally Hendrix,
Brooke
Johnson.
Shawna Murphy and
Kiki Osborne.
'J'he Don Jackson
Sportsmanship Awards
were
presented
to
Erneri Connery (cross
~ountry), Jay Warner
(boys golf). Ashley
Miller (g irls golf).
Kelsey Myers (\·otleyball) and Brayden Pratt
(football).
Coaches Awards for
golf were presented to
Kyle .Young and Jessica
Cleland. David Warner
and Samantha C.line
earned
the
Most
Improved Awards.
Volle) ball
special
a-.vards were presented
to Brenna Holter (best
defensive
player),
Ra&lt;.:hacl

2010

EHS VOllEYBALL ALL-ACADEIVIIC

2010

EHS GoLF ALL-ACADEMIC

Mark worth

(coaches
award).
Beverly Maxson (I 10
percent award). Brooke
Johnson and Baylee
Collins (back row specialists). Jamie Swatzel
(most
kills)
and
Britney Morrison and
All) Hendrix (most
points scored).
Football
special
awards were presented
to Tim Mark worth ( 110
percent a\vard). Ryan
Shook
(most
improved). Ryan Amos
(coaches award). Klint
Connery (best back).
Braydcn Pratt (best
offensive player). Tyler
Hendrix (best defensive player), Lonnie
Westfall (best offensive lineman) and John
Tenoglia (best defensi\e lineman).

2010

EHS CHEERLEADING AIL-ACADEMIC

.
CHECK US our ON 11-IE WEB:

www.mydailytribune.com OR www.mydailysentinel.com
--t--

�Sunday, November 28,

2010

' Pmneroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbm, ~iml'S' -~cntmrl • Page B3

Gary W. Green/Orlando SentlneVMCT

•

Miami Heat's LeBron James (6) watches the final seconds expire during the Heat's 104-95 loss to the
Orlando Mag1c at Amwny Center in Orlando, Florida,
on Wednesday, Nov. 24.

Cavaliers prepare
for LeBro , v·sit
CLEYELA D (AP) LeBron James is coming
back to Ohio for his first
NBA game incc spliumg
this summer to play in
Florida.
King James \\011 t get
the usual royal treatment.
''It ., going to be 10
time:; \\ONe than when
Carlos Boozer came
back," said "lilwaukce s
\\ ho
Drew Gooden,
played !'our season!&gt; in
Cleveland. ''I think 20.000
fan~ are going to have
headaches.lrom booing.''
Indeed, the Cleveland
t~·ms are going to let Jum
hear it. But the Cavalier;
\\aJ to make sure that s
all t ~y re doing.
Tb en~ure the afct'V of
payers
an d ...anc;. an d •ease
I
'al
concerns about potcnu.
trouble, the team IS beeting up secunl) 111 and
aro nd Qmckcn Loans
Arena for Jmnes h) peel
return on Dec. :! \\ ith
~1iami, a gam~ C'lcveland
fans have eager!) a\\ aited
since July when the two
time )eague MVP famously announced his decision
to join the Jlcat.
James said hiday night
in Miami that he ha~
already sta11ed cnvic;ioning
his retum. ·
' 11 c; goino to be a real
hostile en~ironment. 1
know." James said before
the Heat hosted the
PhiladeiiJhta 76e!1&gt;. "ft s
going to be prett) intense"
Still. he has no worries.
Tile Heat hm e been
ill\ohed "ith the: planning
of ~ome c;ecunt) related
issues ~;urrounding the
game, ,md James has n
sense of ''hat to expect
that night.
"I m not con~cmcd at
all,'' Jameo.; &lt;;,tid. ''1 he
lenfue ts a g~d Jengw:
am they do thetr best to
try to mak(' o;ure uc; player..,
nnd the fans have a great
time in those gmnes.
We re gom~ in there to try
to get a wm. But at the
~me ttme. I know tt II be
prett) hostile.''
Ca,aliers '&gt;pokehman
Tad C.trpcr c;aid team
want'i '·to make people
feel ..,afe LOmino to the
game." and that lllcludt:'&gt;
James.
The Cmaliers have been
working with the: league
and cit) ofhciab since the
NBA s schedule \\8~
released in All!'llst. The
main go,tl ic; to pro' ide a
secure em Ironment for
evetyonc '' tthout compm
mising the 111hcrcnt advantage Cleveland ha... 111
playing at home.
. nte team is asking funs
to refrain !rom wcarmg
any profane or vulgar
clothing directed nt J,mtes
or his family. and any
obscene '&gt;tgns will be confiscated. However. that
dresn t
mean
the
Cavaliers are telling folks
not to express their opinions tO\\ ard the super&lt;;tar
forward.
1lte) just want to keep it
clean.
"We think this is a great

opportunit) for our fans to
positively shO\\ the1r support for their team, the
organization and the cit)."
Carper said. '"1llere i::. a
wa) to express ,yourself.
enjo) yourself and show
)OUr txcitement without
crossing the line and
exccedmg the boundaries
that are in place."
There will be uniformed
police and undercover
officers stationed near
~tim11i s bench and along
the tunnel leading to the
visitors locker room.
Instead of sef\·in~ plastic
beer bottle-;, vcnoor; will
pour be\eragec; into cups
to prevent nn)onc from
using containers a:, projectiles.
In :!001. Cleveland fans
bombarded the field at Wahama junior Isaac Lee (5) runs past a handful of Wirt County defenders durmg Fnday mght's Class A too
Brown'" StadiUm \\-lth ball semtfmal contest at Ohio Valley Bank Track and Field in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
~
thousand$ of plastic botllec; - some of them full
penalty to maintain pos- vards in 23 Lttrries with Campbell. Wirt Cour tv
of liquid - after a contraquarterback,
session.
Wahama drove Anthon) Grimm finish- starting
vcrsial call in a loss to
ing
just
five
)
ards
s,l)
of
completed
four
of 0 for
Tiger
territory
deep
into
Jacksonville.
from Page BI
where Gibbs agam con-· a 1000 y~trd season with 38 )ards before ex1ting
NBA c;pokesman Tim
Frank said the league does
nectcd with Kitchen on a Grimm tallying 42 yards the game With an injury
not comment on ~security hulled his way in from a nine yard scoring toss. in II attempts. Isaac Ice ncar the end of tht.&gt; first
matters.
yaro out to afford Kjtchen again added the added 38 y&lt;mlc; in eight half. Brindo was inter1 he Cavaliers will
Waharna the early edge. PAT boot to len!!then the carries with Trenton cepted three times and
&lt;tdjust their in-game secu
Falcons edge \\';ith 4:24 Gibbs gaining 30 ) anls Campbell once by the
rity ~Jrocedures accordino- Tvkr Kitchen kicked the remaining in the third in six tries.
WHS defensi\e secp;&gt;int
after
to
give
.
the
ly, ( w,'~~'r
.-- said. There will Falcons n sudden 7-0 canto.
Gibbs· completed three ondary
be peNonnel on the lcx)kWager led the Tigers
Wirt County answered of seven passes on the
out for any inebriated lead only a minute into
ing corp with six
recei\
54)
ards
and
two
night
for
the
Bend
Area
teams
secpatron-; causing trouble. the contest.
for 78 ) urds
catches
touchdown!&gt;
\\
ith
the
ond
half
touchdown
by
f•alcons
The
Whtte
and the team 1s prepared to
remove anyone from the extended itc; advantage to marching 65 yards in 10 sophomore quarterback while John Nemeth bad
arena who doesn t compl) 14-0 early in the -;econd plays. Behind the mn- being picked oft twice three grabs for :!5 yarHs.
w1th rules.
Wahama ''til put Its
period "hen n ~hart tour ning and pac;sing of Kitchen had two fD
hm5 entering the arena yard punt by the Tigers Brindo the Tigers mo,ed receptions for 29 yards number one rating and
will pass through full- £ave the locals excellent to the Falcon 12 where with R) an l ec owmng a itc; unbeaten 13-0 record
bod) metal detector;, tteld position at the Wirt Bnndo culminated the 25 ) an:l grab.
on the line in the Clas A
h' h
be .
For\\ irt Count} Dalton champ!Om.htp game next
w tc 1mve en 111 P.lace Count) 38. Six playc; series with a 12 ) ard
~:-inoe O\\ ner Dan GJlbert
Bnndo p1cked up 50 Saturd&lt;~) evt:ning Jn
later frenton Gibb&lt;&gt; stnke to John Nemeth.
bought the team in 2005.
yards
in 16 cctrries in Whec:ling a!!&lt;~in~t cit) 'er
Brindo
also
passed
to
found
Kitchen
across
the
"We ha\-c a htgh ,tanl.&gt;ylan Wager for the addition to conncctino on sixth anked \\heeling
dard for securit) that middle.
Kllchen hauled m the two-point conversion to eight of 15 aerials fo~ H5 Central C8 4) or seventh·
exceeds ''hat the ~BA
requires from us," Carper pass and wa'&gt; hit at the make it a 24-8 affair \\ith yards and n -;core. Taylor ratc:d Mate\\ an ( 10-2).
-;aid "Wed:n t want peo- five but the senior wide I :0 I left in the quarter.
Wahama came right
pie to feel like they re in a rece1ver ran riolll over
WAHAMA-WIRT Co. Box ScoRE
police state. We re going the defender and into the hack with a time conto tak.c the IJt'l&gt;J&gt;t:r ~tens t:nd zone lor the score. suming, 12 play. 52 yard
"
Wahama 31, Wirt County 14
that need to he taken, but
Kitchen also split the drive for the Falcons
0 0 ~ 6
14
'"e want fans 10 come 11prights with the point final tullv of the night.
W1rt Co
7 10 7 7 - 31
do\\n and have a good after kick to give Behind the running~ of Wahama
time."
Rynn l.ce and Anthony
Scoring summary
~ext week. Carper and Wahama a 14-0 lead with
locals
drove
Grimm
the
I
0
I:!
to
pia)
in
the
half.
First Quarter
other team ofhcials plan to
W -Anthony Gnmm 1 run (Tyler 1&lt;. \.t: 'n l&lt; ct&lt; 11 00
WHS took mhantage to the Tiger one where
appear on radio and local
Second Quarter
television to remind fans of another glitch in the Lee bounded over the W- K11Chem 20 pa , I om
1i anton G•bb (K ct'en k ck) 10 12
planning to attend the Ttgets punt team pia) to goal line for the score.
W-K1tct1en
21 FG 0 00
point'
Kitchen
s
extra
add to thetr total before
game to act proper!).
Third Quarter
('Jevelnnd fans don t the halftime intermi'&gt;- kick made it a 31-8 conW-K tc n 9 pa rl)n- G b (K t
seem as edgy as they were sion. At its own 25 \Vu1 test with 6:39 left to play.
WC-J n Nemeth 12 p ss I r. 0 O"
WagET
Wirt Count) never pass from Bnndol 1 01
in July. \\hen James went Count) was forced to
national TV to punt but the snap from ga\ e up however and
Fourth Quarter
011
announce his' intentione; center sailed over 11gcr marched 75 ) ards in 10
W-Ayan L
1
tK' h
b
WC-Bnndo 4 run run 1.11 ed
during an ESPN special punter Ryan Litton s pia) c; to conclude the
dubbed "The Decision··. head.
nights ~coring activity.
we
w
\\hich has been spoofed
Once again the Tigers
Litton
scooped
up
the
14
17
First Downs
dozens of times. Short!)
rode the service::. of Rushes-ya•ds 28-53 55·212
after James revealed hic; loose ball but wus quick
Passmg yards
1?3
54
chotec to tean1 up with Iy ..,mothered at the Brindo who rambled
O\'er
from
four
yards
out
Total yards
176
26b
Falcon
nine.
1
hree
pla).s
All Stare; Dw)ane Wade
12 25-4 372
Comp atto~nt
for
the
score.
The
point
later
W
liS
was
faced
and Chris Bosh. a fe\v fans
21
Fumbles lost
00
burned his jersey and oth- With a fourth und goal after run \Vas stopped
Penalhes-ynrds 5-3&amp;
6·55
shot1
und
Wahama
held
a
-;ituation
from
the
four
ers threw rocks at his
downtown billboard.
and Kitchen was called 31-14 lead with 3:01
And
"hile James upon to knock down n 21 remaining in the game.
The tinal three minutec;
acknowledge:;
that yard field !!Oal as time
Cleve lund mii?ht not be the expired m the half.
saw Wahama lose a fumbest place to ne a LeBron
The White Falcons ble before Warth came
fan that night. some of his extended its lend to 24-0 up with his second pick
friends and family will midway through the third of the night and Gibbs
likel} attend the game quarter when Isaac Lee added another mtercepan) way.
.tion for the Waharna
":Yiight be hard to keep picked oft a Dalton defeno;e.
Brindo
offering
at
the
them a\\ a) from that
Ryan Lee led all
game," J~m1es said. "They Tiger 41. Aided b} ,1
ground
gamcrs with IOl:t
roughing the kkker
• want to sec it too.''

Semis

�I'age H4 • ~tmb.w U!:mu'S' -~l'lltmcl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis '

MAC Football Roundup
Kent State ends Ohio
MAC title hopes, 28-6

&lt;;econd quarter with an 8-yard touchdo\\ n thrO\\ to Jalil Carter nnd a 3 Iyard sconng pass to Jere-my
LaFrance, giving Akron a 12 0 lead
after consecutive mi~sed cxtm point
a ttc m pts.
The Bull-; (2-10. 1-7) got on the
board late in the third after a 12-play.
83-yard drive ended with a 13-yurd
touL·hdown pass from Jerry Davis to
t\kx .'lelllz. making th~: scorl' 1~-7.
l A 15 yard touchd&lt;m n pnss from
Nicely to Gar) Pride with J :30 left in
the third gave the Zips a llJ. 7 lead .

KE ~T. Ohio (AP) - Eugene Jarvi~
ran for 106 yards and a touchdown to
he Ip Kent Stale end i n-statc rival
Ohio s hopes of rl'ach ing the i\lidAmerican Conference title game in a
28 -6 up~ct on Friday.
Ohio &lt;; loss sends t\.liHilli or Ohio to
the Mt\C title gnme to lace Northern
lllinors in Detroit next Fnda). The
loss also napped the Bobcllt&lt;; (8 4.
6-1) eight -game winning streak on
the road in MAC play.
Kent State (5-7. 4-4) fini-,hed \\ith
at least a .500 in the conterence pia)
for the fourth time in ~even '&gt;ea-;ons
TOLEDO, Ohio (AJ&gt;) - Wide
under coach Doug Martrn. who satd
on Sunda) he ''ill resign after the 1 receiver Eric Page caught t\\ o touchdo'' n passe~. threw n TD pa&lt;&gt;o; and
game.
The Golden Flashes never trailed in I returned two kickoffs for score&lt;; to
the contest. Jtunping out to a 14-0 lead Toledo to a 42-31 win over
lead in first hal f alter Luke Batton s Central 1tchigan on Friday.
Quarterback Terrance Oweno; was
touchdown off a fumble recmer) and
Spencer Keit h s 1-yard rushing 24 for 32 for a career-high 30..+ yards
and three toul·hdowns and &lt;.'aught a
score.
Ken! State :. defense finished with 2R-yan.l TD pas~ from Page.
The Rockeh (8 4. 7-1 Midseven sacks, rel·overed two fumble-,
American Conferen&lt;.:e) snapped a
and had two interceptions.
five-game losing streak against the
Chippewas (3-9. 2-61. the defending
contcrence champion~.
Toledo JUmped out to a 2~-7 lead
on Owens 3 TD pa-;sc&lt;; - 75 yards
AKRON, Ohio (AP)
Patrick to Kenny Stafford and 9 and 25 yard&lt;;
Nicely lhrcw for three tom·hdowns to to Page - and Page s fir&lt;&gt;t kickoff
lead Akron past Buffalo 22- 14 on return of 99 ) ards.
Frida), gi\'rn thc·Zips therr first ,~ ic­
After the Chippe\\ ac; scored I 0
tory of the season .
points. Page returned another k1ckoff
'Akron (1-11, I 7) fl\orded its fiN 95 yards for a TO.
winless sea-.;on since moving to the
Central Michigan blocked a punt to
Football Bowl Suhdi' ision in 19X7. make it 35-24. then Page hit Owens
However. the II losse5. arc the mo&lt;;t with I0:39 to g~).
for the Zips in the 23 )Cars since
With its fir~t '"inning record since
making the transition into the FBS.
2005. Toledo is hoping for 1ts first
Nil•cly got the scoring started in the 1 bowl bid ~1nce 2005.

Toledo slips past
Central Michigan, 42-31

Akron avoids winless
season, beats Buffalo

Rally
from Page HJ
such a daunting deficit at
Bryant-Dcnn) Stadium.
whcr~ Alabama hnd won
20 in a row. Newton didn t do much on the
ground, rushing for ju&lt;;t
39 yards and enduring
plenty ot big hits in the
backfield, including four
sacks.
But Newton hm,ed
l1! &lt;; no slouch with hi&lt;;
ann. either. completing
13 of 20 for 216 yards.
The improbable comeback wouldn t ha\'e been
po!)sible without some
help from Alabama. I.a!-&gt;t
year s lleisman winner,
Mark Ingram, fumbled
the ball away at the end
of ll long run ju~t "hen it
k'oked like the Tide was
about to blow the Tigers
all the way back to the
Plain s.
Another fumble. this
one coughed up by quarterback Greg McElroy
after a big hit b) Nick
Fairlev - and recovered
by Fairley - cost the
ide ,mother scoring
hance deep in Aubum
erritory near the end of
the first half.
Alabama '&gt;till led 24-7
going to the locker room.
but yet another miscue
probably hurt the Tide
most of all. On Aubum s
second play of the SeL'
ond half, Newton threw a
deep pa-.;s for Zacher)
the
sideline.
dowu
Alabama safety Mark
Barron came racing O\"Cr
and appeared to have a
chance either at the interception or a big hit on the
receiver
He got neither. Barron
actually got to the receiver a little earl) and slid
by him. Zacher) came
down with the ball and
kept on going for the
touchdo\\ n that cut the
detidt to 24- I4.
The comeback was on.
The Tigers never slowed
down.
Alabama. la~t -;eason s
national champion, ;;tart
ed out like a team that
deserved a shot at
d~fcndins ih title. even
a1ter lo'\ses to South
Carolina and LSU.
The Tide M~or~J on its
first three possessions.
carving up Auburn with
J\kEiroy s pinpoint pass
es. He completed hi~ first
12 passes. including a
68-yard touchdO\\ n to
Julio Jones and a 12 yard
scoring tosc; to Darius
Hanks. Ingram started.

\

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Blast

lowed '" ith a three-and- alyst when you re on th~
out. but Sanchez gme it field...
Smith
said
back "ith a ternble pa&lt;;s '1lttt r, ,., mt it r, re&lt; II)
from J&gt;age HI
to
linebacker
Rc)' about that '"hen ) ou rc
Maualu •a.
down a little bit. ju;;
''A ternbk decrsron," being ,,bJe to be
tind way!". to put ourselves in the hole. I m Sanchez c,aid. "I should spark."
have sailed that rnto the
l~cvor Pr)CC socked
out of answers."
New York has beaten ~tands and hit Fircmnn Car~on Palmer in th
end zone tor a &lt;;,af t)'
Cincinnati three time~ in Ed"
Maualuga
s
I
1-yard
making it :26 10 \'dth
less than a year. rncludto
the
Jet~ 37 set
return
(l:52
lett.
ing the regular-season
It wal&gt; nnother di ap
finale that got the Jet&lt;; up the Bcngals in good
1 into the playoffs, then in shape. and they were point111g lo"&lt;is for the..:
• the wild·caru pune the aitkd by :1 15-yard Bcn~als. who lo...r to the
rou~hing the passer c;~ll
Buffalo l3ilh on Sunda)
following week.
Santon io
Jlolmc" agamst lhcdigbo on in !!amc they led ~I 14
but \H:-rr outr,~.:ored ~ 0
o;cored his fourth touch- fourth down. ,
f·aced
with
another
in second hall.
down in three game&lt;; on
··we re JUSt not v.m
a 13-yard reception from fourth drm n, Cincinnati
sent
Aaron
Pettre)'
out
ning
~.~rnes. · P,tlmer
Mark Sanchcl after
for
a
tying
27-yard
field
''and
that s a II ur,
!'aid,
Cincinnati s
Andre
Caldv. ell had a punt goal, but he wa-; wide trating a-; it o I' in th1
learuc ··
deflect off him \\ hile he left.
Jhedigbo
made
up
for
·1 he
anticipcltCl
w,t&lt;; blocking Sanchez
his
penalty
on
the
next
matchupc;
b l\\-CCI
was 16 for 28 for 166
drive
''hen
Ste' e Cincinnati ~ d) namk
~ ards wit.h the TO and an
Weathertord punted and rccen ing duo ot Owen
rntercept1on.
oft
icials ruled it hit and Chad o~ho~IJH.\
Smith had three carCaldwell
and lhedigbo and New 'rak. c; &lt;;,hut
ries for 55 yards, a catch
reC()\
ered
at the 14. do\\ n
cornerb,t&lt;:k
1or 23 yards and the long
Ben~als coach Marvin
Darrelle RcvJ-; .uH
kickoff return. accounting for 200 all-purpose Lcw1-; surprisingly did Antonin &lt;_'ronwrtit• In
not challenge the play.
ished decided!\ in th
yard&lt;;.
Alter a 1-yard rlln by JcL&lt;&gt; fmor
•
"We call him ·Shbh. "
0\\Cn'&gt; lini&lt;;he;d "rtr
Jet!-&gt;
:.afety
James Shonn Greene. Sanchez
lhcdigbo said. "The guy round l lolrnes - his three recepLionc, lor I
can do &lt;tnything h~ s favor ite target lately
yards. while &lt;kho&lt;.:inlo
zipping a&lt;.:ross the mid- had four l: tche&lt;; fl!I ~I
~"'ked to do.··
It looked a&lt;; though dle of the end ;one for a yards.
\lew York was h~aded touchdown and a 17-7
"No point in gellinr
mad." Ochodnco said
for yet another frcnzred lead.
··1 :.hould be doing
finish after consecuthe backfhps in here and "We re do ...e. I he "cor
road overtime victories celebrating." Sanchel rmght qnt reflect it Bu
were followed by getting ~aid ... But a1&gt; a competi- for a mi-;hap here.
the winning touchdown tor I know we should mishap there. \\e rl' i
Sunda) with 10 seconds have \\on. this gorng thi!. one.''
Nutes:
I he
Jet
left agamst Houo;ton.
away. We drdn t becau&lt;&gt;e
But it took Ne'' York of the poor play of the improved to 4 ~ or •
Thanksgiving. \\hile th '
on f) I\\ o pia) s to go quarterback.··
Bengal&lt;; made thei
ahead alter halftime.
Pcttrc) kicked a 28
Sanchel hit Holmes for yard fielc.l goal to make It debut on the hlllida\ ..
16 ) ards, then Smith a three-point game wrth Jim Leonhard &lt;, interrep
tion of P&lt; Imer in the o;r&lt;. .
used superb block., by 12:33 remaining.
Dustin
Keller
and
But Smith. ~~ wide ond quarter wa, the Jet~;
D Brickashaw fenwson rL·ceivcr and converted first in sc,cn game5 ,
to :speed do\\ n th~ left college
quarterback. New "\nk ~ lon~•c-;
sideline untouch~.:d for a took the ensuing kickoff. dmught smce 19 79. .
got a f'ew nice block:-; finished with 4Y ):ud-; ,
53-yard TD run.
"I had some tremen- and had a nice cuthack on I J carrie.:;. and i-; 2\)
dous blocks and I before losing a shoe :m :t) from pa&lt;;r,ing I ril ·
would ve felt sick if I midway through the Dicker 'on for "ixth on :
cfidn t score because of return and zipping down the c:&lt;ueer li-;t. :.. Palrnc1 '
how well it was execut- the right sideline for a was I 7 fur 3S for 135
) ard~ with n I D and t\H
ed ... Sn.ith said.
touchclown.
interception&lt;..
l11e Jel!. defen~c fol"You want to be n cat

AP Photo/Dave Martin

Auburn's Cameron Newton (2) reacts following a second half Auburn score during a 49-31 win over
Georgta in an NCAA college footba I game at JordanHare Stadium in Auburn, Ala. , Saturday, Nov. 13.

!hings off '' ith a 9-yard
r J) 11111, and it looked a-;
though Ingram had a shot
to make it 2~-0 \\hen he
caught a short pass nnd
headed down the sidc1in e.
But
ln!.!ram
"as
tripped up a~bit. began to
stumble and. whill' trying
to keep hi-; balance. had
the ball punched out
from behind by Antoine
Carter at the J9. The ball
rolled all the wny to the
back of the Auburn end
zone. where Demond"
Washington fell on it for
a touchback.
The comeback didn t
start .
immediate,ly.
Ne\\ ton finall) completed a pass. and Auburn
li.nall) picked up its initial first down on the next
play. The Tigers then
punted it ~1\\ay again. and
Alabama drm e to fir.,t
and-goal at the Auburn 3.
ThL' Tigers uefelhe final
ly stiffened. benefiting
Iro111 a dropped pass by
TrL·nt Richardson that
-.hould 'e been a TO.
Alabama settled for
Jeremy Shellev s 20-\ ani
field goal. •
•
That would be it tor the
Tide. other than another
field goal b) Shelley
after Auburn fumbled a
punt.
h was time for the Cam
Newton Show.
No matter what. he fig-

ured to be the center of
attention. Newton hus
been under scrutin) sinc.:L'
reports emerged alleging
hi" father. Cecil. tried to
-;ell the quarterback s ser
vices for :ts much as
S 180,000 when he was
being recruited out or a
'1\:xm. JUnior college.
Alabama
certain!)
didn t rc'iil&gt;t taking a
poJ.;c at Nc\\ ton. When
he canlL' on the field for
pregume warmups. the
loudspeaker
blared
... , ake f'he Money And
Run. When Newton trotted back toward the
locker room. someone
thrc\\ fake mone) at
him.

He appeared to take rt
all in &lt;&gt;tride. leading the
Tigers onto the field as
he alwa) s docs just
bcfnre kickoff and run
ning all the way to the
far end of the fiL·Id.
where a small contingent
or
oran~l."-and-bluc
Auburn
lans
was
crammed into a corner
of
Bryant Dennv
Stadium. surrounded b~·
Alabama fan&lt;;,
•
Then the game began.
and for the heller part of
t\\0 quarters it looked
like a total rout for the
horne team.
At the end. though,
I\ewton was tal..ing a
victor)
lap around
Bryant-Denny Stadrum.

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Sunday, November

2~ 2010

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...

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il&gt;tmba)' ·-m:imes -~entinrl • Page B5

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Thrnovers dooln Pitt as
WVU rolls in 35-10 rout
Miami (Ohio)
.guard Chris
McHenry, left,
andOhio
tate guard
•
William
'
Buford battle
for a loose
ball during
the first half
of an NCAA
college basketball game
in Columbus,
Ohio, on
Friday.

PIT'f.SBURGH (AP)
Brandon Hogan s
interception and fumble
recovery led to. touchdowns in the first half,
Geno Smith threw two
scoring passes to Tavon
Austin after halftime and
West
Virginia upset
Backyard Brawl rival
Because
of
the
Pittsburgh for the second turnovers, Pitt never
straight season. winning developed any offensive
35-10 on Friday.
consistency or rhythm
Pittsburgh (6-5, 4-2 in
Big East) had a clear path despite holding a I 11-7
to the conference title edge in total yardage late
and an automatic BCS in the first quarter and a
bowl bid, only to fumble 205-75 advantage at halfit
away
with
fou r time.
Pitt quarterback Tino
turnovers that repeatedly
gave West Virginia s Sunseri threw an 8-yard
offense excellent field scoring pass to Devin
position.
Street with 2112 minutes
The Mountaineers (8- left in the tirst quarter to
3. 4-2) were seemingly tie it at 7. Pitt then forced
out of BCS contention West Virginia to punt. but
following
successive
Dion Lewis fumbled durlosses to Syracuse and
Connecticut. Now, they ing a 9-yard reception
can play in a major bowl and Terence Garvin
- likely, the Fiesta - if recovered. Lewis ended
they beat Rutgers on with 34 yards rushing
Dec. 4 and Connecticut after having 155 against
(6-4. 3-2) loses to West Virginia last season.
West Virginia didn t
with Miami going with- Cincinnati (4-6, 2-3) on
or · South turn that mistake into any
out a field goal for the Saturday
first 8 minutes and the Florida (6-4, 3-3), also on points, but Hogan later
Buckeyes also misfiring Dec. 4.
recovered a Ray Graham
UConn, which was fumble and Smith took
a lot. Ohio State was up
rooting for Pitt to lose.
28-16 at the break.
winds up with the auto- advantage by finding
About the qnly player
matic bid if it wins out Noel Devine for 48 yards
who had the range was
because it owns the on a swing pass. Smith
Thomas, who cam off
tiebreaker over West found Will Johnson on a
the bench to hit 3 of 4 Virginia and Pitt, even if 2-yard touchdown pass
shots from the field for multiple teams tie for the on the next play, putting
nine points.
conference title.
the Mountaineers up 14The Buckeyes are off
West Virginia scored 7 with 4:33 left in the
to a strong start despite quickly in each half. with second quarter.
losing the consensus Smith finding Austin
Smith then threw his
national player of the behind
mistake-prone two scoring passes to
year, Evan Turner.
Panthers
cornerback
"Thad · will moan and Antwaun Reed for a 71- Austin in the third quargroan and all he II do is yard scoring pass play ter. the second coming
go 29-4 the next year,'' with 1:37 gone in the with l :29 left to make it
Coles said. "I ve never third quarter, making it 28-10.
Pitt then lost any
seen a team lose great 21-7.
The
Mountaineers chance it had of getting
players and be is as
good as he is that next scored three touchdowns back in it when a snap
in the second half. two sailed over Sunseri s
year.''
At halftime, Ohio more than they ~ad after head on a second-and-6
State s 24 senior foot- halftime in their first five play from the West
ball players were intro- conference games com- Virginia
9.
The
duced to a standing bined.
Mountaineers recovered.
Last season, West
ovation. The eighthThe loss likely dooms
ranked Buckeyes play Virginia put Pitt out of the Panthers to yet anotharchrival Michigan at the Top 10 by beating the er lower-tier bowl one
Panthers 19-16 on a lastOhio Stadium.
second Tyler Bitancurt. season after late-season
Coach Jim Tressel
field goal. This time. the losses to West Virginia
then spoke briefly about Mountaineers likely put and
then-unbeaten
the
seniors
before the Panthers out of a Cincinnati cost them the
telling the crowd, "And major bowl.
Big East title.
'
we need you to scream
and yell all afternoon
because this is 'The
Game! "
Even Coles. who s
never played or coached
for the Buckeyes. got
BEREA, Ohio (AP)
undergocaught up in the fervor.
The
Cleveland
ing
off"Go Bucks!" he said
season
as he left the postgame Browns have signed
punter Reggie Hodges
k n e e
interview room.
to a two-year contract
surgery.
extension, locking up
T h e
the potential restricted NOTEBOOK Browns
free agent.
recently
Hodges said Friday waived Zastudil.
game. there were rumqrs
that the sides recently
Hodges is averaging
tloating around that one
finalized
the
deal.
44
yards on 5 I punts
more
loss
to
the
Hodges
played
in
eight
and
leads the NFL with
Buckeyes and the coach
games
last
season
for
11
punts inside the
of the maize and blue
Cleveland after Dave opponent s
10-yard
might get a pink slip.
Zastudil
was
injured
line.
History is on Ohio
Hodges also made
State s side. Besides and averaged 39.8 yards
45
punb.
He one of the Browns
extending their own on
mark for domination in assumed the starter s biggest plays. running
the series, the Buckeyes job in training camp 68 yards on a fake in
need a win to tie the Big this year when Zastudil an
upset of New
Ten mark (set by Ohio couldn t
kick
after Orleans.
State from 1972-77) for
consecutive conference
titles. They enter the
game tied for first with
Wisconsin and Michigan
State. which is in the
uncomfortable position
of actually rooting for its
biggest rival.
A win would also likely stamp the Buckeyes
(ALL Lom]Jer~r !')rlucts)
ticket
to
a
Bowl
BASKET
GAMES FUNDRAISER
Championship
Series
game.
Sponsored by: UniveBity
No matter the impact
of
Rio
Gamde Women's Basketball:ream
of the "new" Big Ten
next season, no one
believes there will be any
Saturday,Dec. 4,2010
less passion, any less
Doors open A 1:00 PM
enmity surrounding the
dames begin@ 2:00 PM
game.
Rodriguez, more than
20 Games $2
most people. knows that
4 Special Games $l5
v.m t change. He cites
Pre-register forbt~~hioteta
an example from a year
Bevet'ag4\lb Bam Set
ago, when his team was
($247. tYalueFar more dmf
busing to the Ohio State
And a~ncer,r~t puhase
game.
"I saw a couple of
Call:Coadh Smalley
elderly women, probably
in their late 60s, give us
the middle-finger salute."
he said with a laugh.
Some thing:-. never
change.
1

AP Photo

Lighty leads No. 3 OSU past Miami, 66-45
a

OLUMBUS. Ohio
David Lighty
wasn t even aware 1t
was his JOOth career
victory until someone
told him.
Yet he played like he
wanted it to stand out
from the other 99.
The fifth-year senior
s cored 19 of his 21
points in the second
half to lead third-ranked
Ohio State past Miami
of Ohio 66-45 on Friday
night.
"I
was
bricking
everything in the first
half:' Lighty said with
a laugh. ''You put a couple
up,
eventually
they 11 go in. I was hitting them and my teammates found me so it
was a good thing for
us."
He didn t sound as if
would set aside a lot
room in his scrapk for getting to I 00for his career.
"It s an accomplisheJIIlent, ·• he said. "I ve
been here for a while,
so you re going to get a
lot of wins I guess. But
you ve got ~ to keep
going."
Lighty, who missed
most of the 2008-09
season after breaking
his foot. al so had to
recover from another
broken bone in his foot
before this season.
He hit all four of his
3-point shots after the
break to spur a lethargic

W )-

I.

)

l

Ohio
State
(5-0) Buckeyes went cold
offense.
late in the first half. By
Coach Thad Matta the time they were
was glad Lighty a"&gt;sert- done. they had pulled to
ed himself.
28-23.
"It ~ort of fell in his
"lt was a unique game
hands," he said. "We because of the limited
got the ball moving possessions,
said
there a little bit and a Matta. who was an
couple of the actions we assistant
at
Miami
ran freed him up and along with Coles in
allowed him to go. It 1994 95 under Herb
was big to see him get Sendek. "Miami came
going like that."
in and was going to try
Freshmen
Deshaun to bring the shot clock
Thomas
and
Jared into play and I thought
Sullinger added 15 ·and our guys defensively
12 points. respectively.
did a good job of keepSullinger. in particu- ing our composure."
lar, made a difference
William Bitford, back
when he hit four easy after missing the last
baskets inside after tak- game with back spasms.
ing lob passes. It helped scored on a drive before
establish Ohio State s Light) went end-to-end
superiority inside.
with a steal.. Lighty
"Sullinger is one of twice tossed entry passthe smartest kids I ve es into Sullinger for
ever seen as a player,·· easy lay-ins, making it
said
Miami
coach 36-23 and effectively
Charl1e Coles. "He s stemming the threat.
Adrian Dantley at 6-8.
Every time Miami
Dantley was 6-4. That s made a mini-run at the
who that kid is. He s Bu'c keyes.
Lighty
not the best freshman in seemed to counter with
the country - he s a a 3.
top 10 player in the
''It was kind of clear
country. Right now."
(Lighty was
taking
Orlando Williams had over) because after he
13 points and Julian hit his first one, he kept
Mavunga II for Miami hitting.'' Sullinger said.
(2~4). ~which lost its "It was obvious we
third in a row.
wanted to go to Dave
What at one time because he was making
appeared to be a rout plays off the bounce
became a close game and also off open
..., hen the Red Hawks treys.··
suddenly starting makNeither team p)ayed
ing shots and the we II in the · first half,

Browns sign punter
Hodges to 2-year contract

New Big Ten could force changes on The Game
COLUMBUS.
Ohio director Dave Brandon
- Adding to the played for the iconic Bo
pressure and importance Schembechler at his alma
A .the Michigan-Ohio mater. He also doesn t
~ rivalry is that the
believe
things
will
teams
have
always change.
played the last game of
"Next year, when it s
the season.
Ohio State week. if you
l s final. There s no ask me if there has been
disputing the winner. any diminution of the
And the winner has brag- rivalry. I guarantee you it
ging rights and the loser will be every bit as
awful memories for an intense as it has ever
entire year.
been.'' he said.
Well, maybe not anyMost of the players feel
more.
the same way.
Starting in 20 II. ~The
"A lot of people say
Game" will still be the Michigan has stumbled.
final one on the schedule. not been at the top of the
But the teams will be in pyramid the past couple
opposite divisions of a of years. but I don t think
12-team Big Ten, with a that you can hold a
title game the following Michigan team down for
week.
that long." said Ohio
Finality? It s possible State defensive lineman
that the I 08th showdown Dexter Larimore, refercould be followed by yet ring to the Buckeyes
another meeting of divi- record run of six consecsional
champion utive wins against the
Michigan and Ohio State Wolverines.
"They re
in just seven days.
going to be in the next
"1 m not sure that when couple of years a very
1e up next year for dominant team. Having
hio State-Michigan us in two different divi•
g
the•e will be any sions will make it even
less excitement or any- more of a rivalry."
thing will be taken away
Others aren . t so sure
from it:· said Ohio State that Saturday s matchup
coach Jim Tressel. aster- between the Wolverines
g
8-1
against (7 -4. 3-4) and eighthichigan. "Maybe some ranked Buckeyes ( 10-1,
f those byproducts will 6-1) won t be the end of
be added. but I don t an era.
know how you could lose
"It is going to be differanything from this game. ent with a championship
l just can t conceive of . game next year'?" asked
that.··
former Ohio State and
Michigan
athletic NFL offensive lineman
~AP)

lf

-

~

- --

Jim Lachey, now a radio
analyst for the Buckeyes.
"Historically. if you beat
Michigan you felt good
because all you had left
was your bowl game.
Now, you beat Michigan
and you have to go lay it
on the line on the field
one more time the following week."
Ex-Ohio State coach
Earle Bruce, who was 54
from
1979-1987
against
Schembechler
and the Wolverines, is a
traditionalist who has
seen ''The Game" almost
every year.
"It changes it a lot.
really .,_ more than I
would like to see it
changed," Bruce said.
Whether it s the end of
an era or adds flavor to
the game remains to be
seen. 'There s no question
that this year s meeting
has a lot of risk and
reward.
The Wolverines a.nd
lightning-quick quarterback Denard Robinson
need a signature win to
show that coach Rich
Rodriguez is making
progress in his rocky
three years at the helm. A
win would silence a lot of
critics who say Michigan
with a world-class
offense and a porous
defense - is no longer a
top-tier team in the Big
Ten and years away from
vying fo_r a title ag.ain .
Even m the d;ws leading up to this week s

r. -

PL

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--.,..,..~~~---~ ·-------- -----""""'_,_

______

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

___

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Michigan, OSU embrace
an injured young man
COLUMBUS. Ohio
(AP) - Brock M~akr
has been a guest of
coach Jim 'J'~esscl at
Ohio State practice ....
H: s just not welcome
this "cdc
Someone
( po~sibly
'l're sel - Brock can t
remember for sure) told
him in jest that he couldn t come during the
preparations tor the
game against 1\lichigan
because he might be
spying on behalf of his
brother.
Brock s brother is
Michigan offensive lineman Elliott Mealer. E'en
though Brm:k will be
rooting
for
the
Wolverines on Saturdav
at Ohio Stadium. he has
a unique perspective on
the rivalry: He s seen the
best of both -;ides.
"That makes it that
much greater for me that
I reallv feel that God s
just pl;t) ing this all out.''
he said from his home in
Wauseon. this week
before heading up to
Ann Arbor. ~1ich .. for a
physical therapy workout.
·'To have just all these
pieces fall in place like
thev have, has made it
that much more incredible. It ::. Ohio State and
Michigan that happened
for our fa1~1ily. Since it s
the greatest rivalry in
:-ports, it just makes it
that much more incrt•dible in my mind. It makes
me believe that much
more that I m supposed
to be doing thi:-. that I m
supposed to overcome
this challenge.''
The Mealers grew up
as a' id Ohio State fans,
thnnks to their dnd,
Dave. a good-natured
bear of a man.
Brock Mealer is. for
the most part, paralyzed
from the waist down.
His injuries occurred in
a horrific accident on

Christmas Eve of 2007.
Brock was in the passenger scat and his father
was
driving
their
Mercc.:dcs-Benz SUV to
midnight mass in a small
town
near
their
Northwestern
Ohio
hnme. Brock s mom.
Elliott and Elliott s 17vear-old
girlfriend.
ilollis Richer~ v.ere in
the back.
A 90-ycar-old man ran
a stop sign. T-boning the
~lealen.
vehicle and
flipping it on its right
side. Elliott. who had
just completed his senior
year of high school and
would start cla~ses at
Michigan in January.
climbed out the broken
ba&lt;:k window with his
mother. They found
Hollis dead beneath the
vehicle. Dave \Vas also
dead and lying on top of
Brock. who \Vas pinned
by the vehicle s twisted
metal.
Elliott. a 6-foot-5.
3 13-pounder. tore his
rotator cuff attempting
to free his brother.
Brock. just 13 hours
short of graduating from
Ohio State. was taken to
a hospital and spent the
better part of four
months
undergoing
surgery and therapy. He
was told he would never
walk again.
Just a few mont'ls after
he was released from the
hospital. he returned to
finish his degree in economics at Ohio State.
"Coach Tressel had
invited me to a practice
because he knew I still
had to. get back down
there to get my degree:·
Brock said. "I called to
ask about coming into a
practice and one of the
things I asked them wa~
to make ..;ure that Tyson
Gentr)
would
be
around.··
Gentl). a former walkon punter and receiver

for the Buckeyes, fell
awkwardly whik tr) ing
to make a catch during a
practice in April of 2006.
He suffered a broken
vertebra in his neck and
his spinal nmll&gt;ustaincd
damage. While continuing his education, he
became a fixture at Ohio
State s practices. He
continues
his
rehab
today. and stilI hopes to
walk.
"I was amazed," said
Brock, 26. "I m always
looked at as having a
great attitude, but he
really hac; a great attitude. It picks me up."
After he graduated.
Brock returned home
and continued his hurd
work to al&lt;~o regain the
ability to walk. Four
times a week. he drives
himself to Ann Arbor to
meet with University
Michigan trainers and
strength coaches.
Just last Sept. 4. he led
his brother and the rest
of the Wolverines onto
the tield for the seasonopener
against
Connecticut. with the
help of t\VO canes and
leg braces. He was afraid
he d fall down in front
of the 113,090 in attendance at The Big I louse.
He shouldn t have
worried. with all of those
people standing next to
him.
"'(Someone) told me
that I would be.: the only
person in the stadium
that everyone was cheering for." he said. ''I ve
been fortunate enough in
life. whether Ohio State
or Michigan, everytxxJy s pulling for me."
:\ow
Brock
has
become ju~l one of the
guys who goes through
grueling \\orkouts at
Michigan. The pia) ers
look over at him and
marvel at his will. at
\\hat he s alrcadv overcome. at what lies ahead.

or

lie is certain he II
walk, and soon. He s
regaining some sensitivity in his feet: He squatlifted a 45-pound weight
this week. He can
already take a few steps
at a time.
l s not just his body
which has changed.
Brock once said he
couldn t wait to get out
of college because he so
disliked making presentations before a cla~s.
After the tragedy, h~
realized he had a story to
tell. He now can t wait
to get up in front of
schools and
church
groups to tell how his
life was spared. how his
family stildiers on, how
sometimes ,you have to
overcome an obstacle
that looks insurmountable.
"I ve found." he said
simply. "a calling to do
that."
Michigan coach Rich
Rodriguez has been one
of his biggest supporters.
•'\Vhatever you need.''
he told Brock. ··you ve
got it."
Tre:-sel
and
Ohio
State s doctors and train·
ers have all done what
they could for Brock.
too.
When the Mealers
held a golf tournament
to raise funds in Dave
Mealer s
name
for
spinal-cord
tnJury
research. Tressel sent a
signed helni!t and footbail. It was a big hit with
the many Buckeyes fans
who were his dad s
friends. Rodriguez and
the Wolverines also sent
a few sirmed items.
The funds from the
silent auction and the
tournament? They were
split between the universities. two rival schools
working together to help
one family.

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Q~

Clausen cleared, will start against

CHARLOTI'I.:.,

N.C.

(AP)- Carolina quat1er-

back Jimmy Clausen has
been cleared to play following a concussion and
will seek his first win as
an i\FL starter Sunday
against ex-Panthers QB
Jake Delhomme and
Cleveland.
Clausen practiced for a
third strrlight day Friday
after
missing
last
Sunday s
loss
to
Baltimore and coach
John Fox says doctors
have signed off on his
return. Clausen, who was
injured on the final often~h e play ~ov. 14 at
Tampa Bay. was listed as
probable.
"1 think he had an outstandmg week of preparation," Fox said. ''From
my understanding is he
had no side effects and
we antidpate he II be
good to go on Sunday...
The rookie will be

matched
against
Ddhomme, Carolina s
former QB who v. ill start
for the injured ·colt
McCoy and provide
another odd twist in the
P&lt;mthcrs miserable season.
Carolina ( 1-9) released
Delhomme in ;\larch following an IS-interception
sea::.on in 2009.
"Obviously. Jake was
down here in Carolina for
a long time and d1d great
things
down
here,"
Clau~en ~aid. "He s one
of the quarterbacks I like
to watch and get bits and
pieces that they do to try
to help my game. It II be
good to finally meet him
for the first time."
Even though Clausen is
0-4 as a starter. has completed just 48.6 percent of
his passes and has one
touchdown pass and four
interception!&gt;,
the
Panthers
desperately

needed him to return.
There is nothing hut
uncertainty behind him
with Matt Moore lost to a
season-ending shoulder
injury.
Brian St. Pierre. \vho
started Sunday s 37-13
loss to the Ravens I 0
days after being signed
off the street. has a sore
throwing shoulder. He s
li::.ted as probable after
being limited in practice
thi~ week. but hinted earlier in the \'.eck he wouldn t be able to pia}.
Rookie Tony. Pike is
probable after being limited all week, also wtth a
sore
throwing
arm.
Behind him is Keith Null.
who was signed to the
practice
~quad
on
Tuesday. Fox said the
backup would he a
··game-time
decision"
and didn t rule out promoting Null to the 53man ro~ter.

B~owns

''It s comforting to have
a guy that can start the
game,'' Fox said. " I m not
sure about our depth situation going into this
game. We 11 sort that out
as we move fonvard ...
Fox said he would split
carries in the backfield
with Mike Goodson and
Jonathan Stewart. who js
probable after practicing
Friday. Goodson had two
100-yard rushing games
filling in for Stewart the
last two weeks.
Left 2uard Travelle
Wharton... (toe). safeties
Jordan Pugh (hamstring)
and ~tarcus Hudson
(ankle) and running back
Tyrell Sutton (ankle) are
doubtful and have not
practiced all week.
Cornerback Captain
Munnerlyn
(shoulder)
and receiver Brandon
Larcll (concussion) practiced Friday and are probable.

Magic hold on for win against Cavaliers, 111-100
ORLANDO. Fla. (A P)
- Dwi~ht Howard had
23
pomts
and
II
rebounds, Jameer Nelson
scored 20 points, and the
Orlando Magic beat the
Cle\'eland Cavaliers 111100 on Friday night.
J.J. Redick, starting for
the sc~.:ond straight game
in place of the.: i'nJured
Vince Carter. added 15
points for Orlando, which
won for the sixth time in
it~ last !"&gt;even games.
Quentin Richardson and
Rashard Lewis had 14
apiece for the.: Magic,
who put all five &lt;~tarters in
double tigures.
Antawn Jamison came,
off the bench to score 22
points and Mo Williams
contributed 20 for the
Cavaliers.
who
fell
behind by 12 early in the
second quarter and couldn t get the deficit undel'
10 the rest of the game.

Cleveland trailed 10592 with 3:03 left in the
~ame when the Cav::.
decided to intentionally
foul Howard on three
straight possessions. He
missed hts first three free
throw attempts. then
made the next three
before the Cavs abandoned
the
strategy.
Howard was 13 of 24
from the free throw line
for th!.! game.
The Magic had an Itpoint advantage stm1ing
the tinal quarter. and
though it never went
under I0, they couldn t
put a\\ ay. the game until
Nelson dnlled a 20-footer
to give Orlando a 110-97
lead with I :42 left.
Orlando hit four of
eight attempts from 3point 1and in the first
period and shot 63 percent from the field while
running out to a 32-21

lead. Howard had 12
points in the qmtrter from
m~idc the P.aint and
Nelson contnbuted 10,
including a pair of 3pointcrs.
The second quaner was
more of the same. with
Richardson hitting all
four of his 3-point tries
and the Magic goino0, up
by as many as 17 before
'setting for a 62-49 halftime edge.
Cleveland stayed within strikin~ di,.tance by
~citing a iittlc something
from
everyone
who
played. Ten of the II
players who played in the
half scored at least one
basket. but none could
establish enough rh) thm
to lead a comeback.
Williams. who had I 0
points despite hitting only
two of six field goal
attempts. was the only
Cnv to reach double fig-

ures by halftime.•
Back-to-back driving
layups from Nelson ga\ e
Orlando an 81-63 advantage with 4:43 left in the
third period. but the Cavs
wcl\!n t done. Jamison
started an 11-4 run with a
layup and finished it with
long jumper as
a
Cleveland pulled within
H5-74 by the end of the
qum1cr.
NOTES: Lewis was 9
of I I on 3-point attempts
in three games before
making only two of six
against the Cavs. Cavs F
J.J. Hickson. the team s
third-leading scorer, basIl t reached double tigures in his la~t six games.
Orlando was 14 of 31 on
3-point attempts. llu s
its :.ecpnd-most productive night from behind the
3-point line this season.

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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Meigs County gar e

•
eir

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFUCH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OMEROY - When it
comes to talent in
arranging flowers and
accessorizing them
just right for the season, none
can do it better than Meigs
County Garden Club members.
Their creative expressions in
holiday
arrangements, wreaths
•
and swags, gift wrappings and
table settings, along with numerous horticulture exhibits filled
the auditorium of Carleton
School over the weekend for the
annual Christmas flower show
of the Meigs County Garden
Clubs Association.
"A Christmas Carol" cy
Charles Dickens was the theme
of the show which included
competitive as well as non-competitive classes for adults and
children. Judging the exhibit
was an accredited judge of the
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs.
Taking the best of show and
the creativity award in artistic
arrangements was Sheila Curtis.
Her best of show design was in
the class ''Marley's Ghost," a
vibratile design, in which she
used chains to produce sound.
Charlene Hoefllch/photos
She received the creativity
Sheila
Curtis
was
both
the
top
winner
of
best
of
show
and
creativity
in
artistic
arrangements.
Here
she
display
her best of show
award for her arrangement in
award
in
"Marley's
Ghost"
a
vibratile
design
using
chains
that
clank.
"Ghost of Christmas Past." It
wa8' designed with magnolia
leaves and vine painted a florescent green.
Joy Bentley won reserve best
of show with her arrangements
in the "Scrooge" class, an allr
greenery piece. She also took
first place with her outdoor
wreath, and won the horticulture
award for her display of plants.
Peggy Crane took the blue ribbon for her table setting in the
"Christmas dinner at the
Cratchits. ''
Winners in the junior division
in artistic design were Deanna
Sayre, best of show, and
Hannah Crane, reserve best of
show, with Adriana Sayre winning the blue 'ribbon in ornaments.
Other blue ribbon winners in
the
show were Janet Bolin,
•
"Ghost of Christmas Present,"
Peggy Crane, "The Cratchit
Home," Melanie Stethem and
Shirley Hamm, "Tiny Tim," and
Diana Ash, "Ghost of Christmas
Junior exhibitors winning top awards were from Joy Bentley took the horticulture award, first place in outdoor wreaths, and
future." In the invitational class
the left, Deanna Sayre, artistic arrangement in reserve best of show in artistic design.
"Christmas Day" using a
the "Bah Humbug" class; Adriana Sayre, a tree
Madonna with Child, the winner
ornament using plant material; and Hannah
was Joy Bentley.
Crane, an artistic d~sign in "Bless Us Everyone."
Blue ribbon winners in the
horticulture division
were
Barbara Mora, narrow leaf evergreens; Joy Bentley, broad leaf
evergreens, berried branches,
succulents and contrived flowers
where Shelia Curtis and Pat
Holter also took blue ribbons.
Diana Ash was the blue ribbon
winner in both blooming ~nd
Numerous beautifoliage house plants.
ful wreaths, for use
indoors and out
In the junior division, blue ribmade by garden
bons went to Isaiah Bullington,
club members
. Ty Collins, and Breanna Manual
were featured in
•
for dried roadside material;
the annual
.
Adriana Sayre and Deanna
Christmas flower
Sayre for Christmas ornaments
show. Here Diana
made with natural materials.
Ash and Linda
Deanna Sayre took the blue ribBlosser (front), a
bon for her anangement in the
blue ribbon winner
artistic design class "Fairy
in wreaths, look
over the entries.
Garden."
In the category for creative
design in wreaths, Linda Blosser
took first place in the category.
for use indoors, whi.Je Joy
Bentley took the top award for
an outdoor wreath .

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iunbap" ~imeg -ie'ntinel

Sunday, November 28, 2010

A fresh use for classic Old Bay crab cake recipe
B Y MICHELLE LOCKE
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Nigella. Jamie. Mrutha
et al get most of the attention when it comes to talking about recipe expertise.
But for many Americans,
there's no higher authority
than the back of the box.
Food trend observer
Phil Lempert thinks more
producers should be taking advantage of that.
"Companies should be
changing up their recipes
on the back of packages,"
says Lempert, who is
as
the
known
"Supermarket Guru.'' "So
many consumers are bored
with their food. They're
trying new recipes."
StilL with customers
often wildly loyal to old
favorites, companies tend
to proceed cautiously.
At McCormick &amp; Co..
Inc., the decision some
years ago to change the
side-of-the-can crab cake
recipe on tins of Old Bay
Seasoning came only after
consumer testing in the
Maryland area. crab central and Old Bay's No. 1
market,
says
Laurie
HaiTsen, director of consumer communications.
The big change was
dropping baking powder
and Worcestershire sauce
an9. adding prepared mustard and more Old Bay
Seasoning. In an e-mail.
HaJ.Tsen said the changes
were made to improve the
overall flavor of the crab
cakes.
Tom Douglas. a Seattlebased restaurateur and
author of "I Love Crab
Cakes!" uses his own
preparation rather than
Old Bay when making
crab cakes. But he thought

the change made sense.
"When I have crab cakes
in crab cake country, I
tend to think of them as
very mustard-y and. of
course, Old Bay-ish." he
said.
If you are nostalgic for
the original side-of-thecan crab cake recipe from
Old Bay Seasoning, we've
got you covered. We
reached back to the old
favorite, still posted on the
company website, and
used that to create mini
crab cakes that are served
over roasted potato rounds
and topped with a spicy.
creamy remoulade.

CRAB CAKE
POTATO STACKS
Start to finish: 1 hour
Servings: 20
For the remoulade:
1/4 cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons hot
pepper jelly
I teaspoon
capers, chopped
1 tablespoon
sweet gherkin, chopped
1 tablespoon
chopped fresh parsley
1 teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce
Salt and ground
black pepper, to taste
For the potatoes:
10 baby red potatoes
2 tablespoons
vegetable oil
Salt and ground
black pepper. to taste

For the crab cakes:
2 slices stale
bread, crusts removed
2 tablespoons milk
1 tablespoon
mayonnaise
1 teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce
I tablespoon parsley

Larry Crowe/AP photo
Crab cake potato stacks made w ith Old Bay Seasoning are seen on Nov. 9, 2010, in Concord, N.H. The back .
of the can or bag is where many home cooks look when trying out a new recipe for dinner.

1 tablespoons
baking powder
I teaspoon
Old Bay seasoning
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 egg, beaten
1 pound lump crabmeat
Heat the oven to 400 F.
To make the remoulade,
in a small bowl which
together the mayonnaise,
pepper
jelly,
caper,
gherkins, parsley and
Worcestershire
sauce.
Season with salt and pep. per. Set aside.
Cut 2 ends off each
potato, then cut each in
half across the center to

create 2 rounds. Place in a
bowl and cover with hot
water, allow to rest for 10
minutes.
Remove the potatoes
from the water and dry
well. Place the potatoes on
a rimmed baking sheet
and toss with the oil and
salt and pepper. Arrange
the potatoes in an even
layer on the. baking sheet,
then roast for 15 minutes.
Use a spatula to flip each
round, then roast for
another 15 minutes, or
until they are crispy and
browned on the outside,
and tender on the inside.

While the potatoes
cook, make the crab
cakes. Crumble the stale
bread into a medium bowl
and add the milk. All the
bread should absorb all
the milk. Add the remaining crab cake ingredients
and mix until incorporated.
"
Form the mixture into
20 m1mature patties.
about the size of a tablespoon.
When the potatoes are
cooked. transfer them to
paper towels to drain any
excess oil. Carefully place
the crab cakes on the hot

pan, and return to the
oven. Cook for 5 minutes,
then tum on the broiler.
Watch carefully. Brown
the crab cakes one side,
about 2 minutes, then flip
the crab cakes over and
broil them until browned
on the other side.
To serve, aJ.Tange the
potatoes on a platter. Top
each with a crab cake,
then a small dollop of the
remoulade. Serve immediately.

(Recipe adapted by
Alison Lodman from Old
Bay Seasoning)

A savory, cheese course-ready take on cheesecake
BY ALISON LADMAN
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The goal liberate
cheesecake from the
. dessert course. And it
was easier than we
thought.
While rich, creamy
cheesecake is a fine way
to end the meal. we didn't think it had to be
sweet to do so. We wanted a savory cheesecake.
one that could finish the
meal as a cheese course.
And so we cut the sugar
and substituted blue
cheese for part of the
cream cheese.
f.,nd since blue cheese
pairs so nicely with fmit,
we added a topping of
pears poached in red
wine and balsamic vinegar. A black-pepper walnut crust accentuates the
play on sweet and savory.
The combination
is

breathtakingly rich and
satisfying, as well as
visually stunning. It is
the perfect way to end a
holiday meal.
But note
this
cheesecake is exceptionally rich. Serve it in small
slivers. Both the cheesecake and pears also hold
well and can be prepared
a day or two ahead. The
pears can be served
warm, room temperature
or chilled. To reheat the
pears. simply place them
and the syrup in a large
saute pan and heat over
low.

BLUE CHEESECAKE
WITH CABERNET
CARAMELIZED PEARS
AND PEPPER-WALNUT
CRUST
Start to finish: 6 hours
(45 minutes active)
Servings: 24
For the crust:

1 cup walnuts
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup all-purpose flour
112 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons
ground black pepper
6 tablespoons
butter, melted
For the filling:
1 pound (two 8-ounce
packages) cream cheese,
room temperature
8 ounces strong blue
cheese, such as roquefort
114 cup
all-purpose flour
1'/4 cup sugar
3 eggs
For the pears:
4 fresh, firm pears
such as bose
I 112 cups
cabernet sauvignon
114 cup balsamic
vinegar
112 cup sugar
Pinch salt
Heat the oven to 350 F.

In a food processor,
pulse together the walnuts, sugar, flour, salt,
and black pepper until
the walnuts are the size
of small peas. Add the
butter and pulse until the
mixture is just moistened. Press the mixture
into the bottom of a 10inch springform pan.
Bake for 15 minutes. or
until golden around the
edges and fragrant. Leave
the oven on.
While the crust bakes,
mix the cake filling.
In the bowl of a stand
combine
the
mixer,
cream
cheese,
blue
cheese, flour and sugar.
Mix on medium-low
until well combined.
scraping down the sides
of the bowl several times.
Add the eggs, one at a
time, beating and scraping the bowl in between

until the eggs are thoroughly incorporated.
After the crust is
baked, pour the filling
into the pan and bake for
another 30 to 40 minutes.
or until the center just
barely jiggles when you
shake the pan and the top
slightly puffs. Rem~ve
from the oven and set
aside to cool to room
temperature, about l
hour. Refrigerate for at
least 4 hours (and up to 2
days) before serving.
To prepare the pears.
peel the pears, then cut
each half lengthwise.
Scoop out and discard the
core. ·
•
In a deep saute pan.
combine the wine. vinegar, sugar and salt. Bring
the mixture to a simmer
and add the pears. core
side down. Allow the
mixture tto simmer until

the liquid is syrupy and
the pears are caramelized
and tender. occasionally
basting the pears with the
liquid, about 20 minutes.
Set aside to cool to room
temperature.
When· ready to serve,
run a knife around the
edge of the springform
pan to loosen the cheesecake. Remove the sides
of the pan. If desired, run
a long spatula under the
crust and slide the cake
onto a serving plate. Top
the cheesecake with the
caramelized pears.
Nutrition information
per sen·ing (values are
rounded to the nearest
whole number): 246
calories; 144 calories
from fat; 16 g fat (8 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 62
mg cholesterol; 19 g carbohydrate: 6 g protein: 2
g tiher: 238 mg sodium. •
I

J

Art Smith, Elmo team up to cook up good nutrition
B Y MICHELLE L OCKE
!=OR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

"C" is for cookie.
And "N" is for nutritian.
The folks at "Sesame
Street" are hoping to
spell out a message of
eating well with a new
initiative
aimed
at
fighting hunger.
The program, "Food
for Thought: Eating
W~ll on a Budget," is
bejng put together by
Se.same Workshop, the
nonprofit organization
be}'lind
"Sesame
Street." It's aimed at
the 15 percent of
h()J.lseholds in the U.S
-·
accounting
for
awroximately 9 million children who
do:n 't get food that
meets basic nutritional
needs due to financial
instability.
:we found there were
re~lly
very
~ew
re!lources
engagmg
young children and
helping them engage
n~ only in healthy
habits but also in knowing · that as a family

they're not alone in
this," said Jeanette
Betancourt, vice president of content design
for
the
education,
research and outreach
department of Sesame
Workshop.
The program provides families with an
'educational outreach
kit which includes a
video featurin~ four
new
Muppets,
the
"Super
foods"
banana, cheese, wholegrain roll and broccoli.
The video also features
Elmo and friends. plus
real families, as they
try new foods. learn
about healthy snacks
and discover the importance of sharing a meal
together.
And, of course, the
broccoli knows how to
boogie.
"All our 'super foods'
actually sing and dance
and encourage the kids
and Elmo to try new
foods and try new
snacks. to eat healthier." said Betancourt.
The
food
Muppets
aren't joining the offi-

cial ··sesame Street''
cast. but they will be
featured on a December
show.
The 400,000 kits.
available in English or
Spanish, will be distributed through sponsors
UnitedH ealthcare and
The Merck Foundation,
as well as other organizations.
"Sesame Street" has
been spreading the message of good nutrition
for some time. Big blue
Cookie Monster learned
a while back that cookies are a "sometime"
food. The new initiative
promotes the idea of
"anytime"
foods,
healthy snacks like lowfat yogurt or cheese and
whole-grains.
·
There also is a budgeting segment w ith Art
Smith, former chef to
Oprah Winfrey. For
Smith, who grew up
watching
"Sesame
Street," cooking for
Elmo
1s
"truly
a
dream.''
" It's amazing to be a
part of something that 1
care so much about." he

said.
In the video, Smith
and Elmo make a "really delicious healthy
stir-fry·· with chicken
and spinach. He also
suggests "one-pot wonders" for parents who
want to cook dinner but
don't have a lot of time
or energy for the task.
"The lovely thing
about food is we all
share, we all appreciate:·
he said. " It's that common ground where we
all come together."
And how does Elmo
feel about this?
According to Smith.
"Elmo's a foodie. He's
~ot the most amazing
tood vocabulary."
We talked to the little
red guy himself- or at
least Kevm Clash. who
plays Elmo- to get his
take on eating well.
"Trying someth ing
can be hard. You may
not like it when you
first see it, but you
won't know until you
take a bite and try it one
time," El mo/Clash said.
" J ust remember th at
you should realize what

is a sometimes food.
what is an anytime
food. It's very important because that keeps
you healthy and strong
and Elmo always says.
'Eat
happy.
play
healthy."'
(ONline: Materials from

the outreach kit will be
al·ailable for free on
www.sesamestreet.org/fo
od. Video content from
the project will also be
ami/able for a free download on Leam Along with
Sesame on iTunes a nd
Ama:on VOD.)

First Presbyterian
Church
165 North Fourth Street
Middleport, Ohio .
Invites you to a

C hristmas Dinner

Saturday, December 25, 2010

II

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PageC3

iunbap ~imes -i~ntinel

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Cyberthieves still
In
September. the
bureau and its counterparts in Ukraine, the
Netherlands and Britain
took down the ring they
first got wind of in May
2009 when a tinancial services firm tipped the
bureau's Omaha. Neb..
onice to suspicious tnmsactions. Since then. the
FBI's Operation T1ident
Breach has uncovered
losses of $14 million and
counting.
Overall in the la&lt;;t two
years, the FBI has opened
390 cases against schemes
that prey on businesses
that process payments
electronically through the
Automated
Clearinghouse,
which
handles 3.000 transactions
every five seconds In
these cases, bureau agents
have uncovered attempted
thefts totaling $220 million and actual losses of
$70 million.
But the court records of
Operation Trident Breach
reveal a surprise: For all
the high-tech tools and
tactics employed in these
computer crimes. platoons
of low-level human foot
soldiers,
known
as
"money mules," are the
indispensable cogs in the
cybercriminals · money
machine.
A dozen FBI criminal
complaints filed in New
York provide an inside
look at how this cybertheft
ring worked:
Operating from Eastern
Europe and other overseas
locations, the thieves used
malicious
software.
known as malware, to

BY ALICIA CALDWELL

AND PETE YosT
ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON
Sitting at a computer
somewhere overseas in
January 2009. computer
hackers went phishing.
Within minutes of casting their electronic bait
they caught what they
were looking for: A small
Michigan company where
an employee unwittingly
clicked on an officiallooking e-mail that secretly gave cybetthieves the
keys to the finn's bank
account.
Before company executives knew what was happening, Experi-Metal Joe.,
a suburban Detroit manufacturing company, was
broke. Its $560.000 bank
balance had been electronically scattered into
bank accounts in Russia.
Estonia, Scotland. Finland
and around the U.S.
In August. the Catholic
Diocese in Des Moines,
Iowa. lost about $680.000
over two days. Officials
there aren't sure how
hackers got into their
accounts, but "they took
all they could" before the
bank notil:ed what was
going on, according to
Jason Kurth. diocese vice
chancellor.
The diocese and the
Sterling Heights. Mich ..
company were among
dozens of individuals.
businesses and municipalities around the country
victimized by one of the
largest cybcrtheft rings the
FBI has uncovered.

r~ly

on human foot soldiers

infect the computers of
unsuspecting users in the
United States by e-mail.
The malware-infected emails were written to look
like they came from a
company manager or colleague who might send an
e-mail message to everyone in a company, such as
the head of human
resources.
When the e-mail recipient clicked on an embedded link to a website or
opened an attachment. a
Trojan horse virus called
Zeus installed itself and
gathered usernames. passwords and financial
account numbers typed by
the victims on thetr own
computers. The hackers
then used this information
to move the victims'
money electronically into
bank accounts set up in
the United States by the
money mules
The money mules set up
shell bank accounts to
receive the money. Then
they withdrew the funds
from the shell accounts in
amounts they thought
were small enough to
elude detection by banks
and law enforcement. In
some
cases:
the
cyberthieves bombarded
telephone
numbers
attached to the targeted
accounts with calls to
block the company from
calling to verify the transactions.
The mules sent most of
the stolen funds overseas
electronically to accounts
controlled by the ring
leaders; the mules usually
kept 8 to J0 percent as

their cut.
For instance, the. FBI
said money belonging to
one TD Ameritrade customer landed in the bank
account of a fake company,
the Venetian Development
Service
Construction
Corp., which was registered at an unmarked.
two-story brick building
in Brooklyn. The sole
name on the construction
company's account was
that of one of the money
mules. Eventually some of
the money wound up in
accounts in Singapore and
Cyprus and some walked
out the bank's door in the
pockets of mules. TD
Ameritrade spokeswoman
Kim Hillyer said the company has reimbursed customers who lost money.
Just like in the illegal
drug trade, the ring leaders overseas reaped the
big profits but relied on
the mules to do the risky.
dirty work.
For each shell account,
a mule had to walk into a
bank, in full view of surveillance cameras and
leave copies of personal
identification documents.
The ring leaders hid
behind computer screens
overseas.
Operation
Trident
Breach found many
are
Eastern
mules
Europeans who came to
the U.S. on student visas.
Among the allegations
in the FBI's criminal
complaints:
One mule was an
immigrant
from
Moldova who within a
few months of her anival

in New York this year
had opened at least six
bank accounts using a
trio of names. Another
mule. a Russian nationaL
opened eight accounts at
three different banks using
tive different aliases.
The criminal networks
used so many money
mules that full-time
recruiters were needed.
One recruiter placed
advertisements
on
Russian language websites seeking students
with U.S. visas.
A pair of Russian
roommates living in
Brooklyn worked together. One smuggled at least
$150,000 in cash to
Russia.
hackers
in
arranged for fake passports to be smuggled into
the U.S., and acted as a
middleman picking up
and delivering stolen
money from other mules.
The other roommate
opened accounts with
fake names and false
passports in New York
and New Jersey this
summer.
This cybertheft ring
zeroed in on individuals
and small- and mediumsized businesses because
they usually have fewer
computer security safeguards than huge companies. Among its targets:
municipalities
in
Massachusetts and New
Jersey. the account held
by a hospital at a
California bank and the
computers of at least 30
customers of E Trade
Financial Corp .•
Like a number of vic-

tim!&gt;, Ex pet i-Metal has
sued its bank over the"
thefts.
A lawyer for ExperiMetal,
Richard
Tomlinson. said the
thieve~ emptied the company's account and 'then
tried to siphon another $5
million · out through an
empty savings account of
un Experi-Metal employee. They actually transferred another $1.34 million hefore the bank shut
down the mystery wire
transfers.
Tomlinson
said.
According to court
records. the company's
bank.
Dallas-based
Comerica Inc .. has recov.:
ered all but the compa~
ny's original balance of .
$560.000.
Tomlinson
said tht.: bank should be
liable for the company's
losses because the wire '·
transfers were obviously
dubious ·- the company
hadn't made any transfers in more than two
years and never to
Eastern Europe.
"Canada was maybe as'
exotic as we got and it
was maybe three or four _
years
before
this,"
Tomlinson said.
Comerica says it wasn't part of the problem.
"This was caused solely by the actions of that
(Experi-Metal
Inc.)
employee:· a lawyer for
the bank wrote in a court
filing. "The criminal that
accessed Experi-Metal's
accounts was able to do
so only becaus,e Experi;
Metal gave him its key."

3 big developments make AIDS outlook more hopeful
BY MARILYNN

MARCHIONE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

In the nearly 30 years
the AIDS epidemic has
raged. there has never
been a more hopeful day
than this.
Three striking developments took place Tuesday:
U.N. officials said new
HIV cases are dropping
, dramatically worldwide. A
study showed that a daily
pill already on pharmacy
shelves could help prevent
new infections in gay men.
And the pope opened the
way for the use of condoms to prevent AIDS.
"I don't know of a day
where so many pieces are
beginning to align for HIV
prevention and treatment,
and frankly with a view to
ending the epidemic," said
Mitchell Warren. head of
the
AIDS
Vaccine
Advocacy Coalition. a
nonprofit group that works
on
HIV
prevention
research. "This is an
incredibly
opportune
moment and we have to be
sure we seize it."
President
Barack
Obarna said the groundbreaking research on the
AIDS drug "could mark
the beginning of a new era
in Hl V prevention."
The U.N. repo11 said
that new cases dropped
nearly 20 percent over the
last decade and that 33.3
million people are living
with HIV now.
"We can say with confidence and conviction that
we have broken the trajectory of the AIDS pandemic,"
said
UNAIDS
Executive Director Michel
Sidibe in Geneva.
Health officials credit
part of the decline to wider
condom use, and on
Tuesday. in a histmic shift
in church teachings. the
Vatican said that using a
condom is a lesser evil
than ·infecting a sexual
partner with HlV.
Condoms remain the
best weapon against
AIDS. and the new prevention pill is not the
chemical equivalent. But
scientists called it a true
breakthrough. The pill.
Gilead Science's Tmvada,
is already used to treat
people with HIV. A threeyear global study found
that daily doses cut the risk

\

of infection in healthy gay
and bisexual men when
given with condoms,
counseling and other prevention services.
The dmg lowered the
chances of infection by 44
percent, and by 73 percent
or more among men who
took their pills most faithfully. Researchers had
feared the pills might give
a false sense of security
and make men less likely
to use condoms or to limit
their partners, but the
opposite happened risky sex declined.
The results are "a major
advance" that can help
curb the epidemic in gay
men. said Dr. Kevin
Fenton, AIDS prevention
chief at the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control and
Prevention. But he warned
they may not apply to people exposed to HIV
through male-female sex,
dmg use or other ways.
Studies in those groups are
under way.
Because Truvada is
already on the market. the
CDC is rushing to develop
guidelines for doctors who
want to use it to prevent
HIV, and w-ged people to
wait until those are ready.
As a practical matter,
plice could limit use. The
pills cost $5.000 to
$14,000 a year in the
United States, but roughly
$140 a year in some poor
countries where thev are
sold in genetic form.·
Whether insurers or
government health programs should pay for them
is one of the tough issues
to be sorted out, said Dr.
Anthony Fauci. director of
the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious
Disea-;es.
''This is an exciting finding," but it "is only one
study in one specific study
population," so its impact
on others is unknown,
Fauci said.
His institute sponsored
the study with the Bill &amp;
Melinda
Gates
Foundation. The finJings
were published online by
the New England Joumal
of Medicine.
It is the third AIDS prevention victory in about a
year. In September 2009,
scientists announced that a
vaccine they are now trying to improve protected I
in 3 people from getting
HIV in a study in

Thailand. In July. research Institutes, a private founin South Africa showed dation affiliated with the
that a vaginal gel spiked University of California:
with an AIDS drug could San Francisco. But many
cut nearly in half a men don't or won't use
woman's chances of get- condoms all the time, so
ting HIV from an infected researchers have been
partner.
-testing other prevention
Gay and bisexual men tools.
account for nearly half of
AIDS drugs already are
the more than 1 mill ion used to prevent infection
Americans living with in health care workers
HIV. Worldwide. more accidentally exposed to
than 7,000 new infections HIV, and in babies born to
occur each day. Only 5 to infected mothers. Taking
10 percent of global cases these drugs before expoinvolve sex between men. sure to the virus may keep
'1'he condom is still the it from taking hold. just as
first line of defense," taking malaria pills in
because it also prevent') advance can prevent that
other sexually spread dis- disease when someone is
eases and unwanted preg- bitten by an infected mosnancies. said the study quito.
leader. Dr. Robert M.
The strategy showed
Grant of the Gladstone great promise in monkey

studies using tenofovir
(brand nan1e Viread) and
cmtricitabine, or FfC
(Emtriva). sold in combination as Truvada by
California-based Gilead
Sciences lnc.
The company donated
Truvada for the study.
which involved about
2,500 men at high risk of
HIV infection in Peru.
Ecuador, Brazil. South
Africa, Thailand and the
United
States
(San
Francisco and Boston).
The foreign sites were
chosen because of high
rates of HIV infection and
diverse populations.
More than 40 percent of
participants had taken
money for sex at least
once. At the start of the
study, they had 18 part-

ners on average; that
dropped to around six by
· ·
the end.
The men were given
either Truvada or dummy
pills. All had monthly visits to get HIV testing;
more pills and counseling.
Every six months. they
were tested for other sexually spread diseases and
treated as needed.
After a median followup of just over a year,
there were 6+ HIV infections among the 1,248
men on dummy pills, and
only 36 among the 1,251
on Truvada.
Among men who took
their pills at least half the
time, the risk of infection
fell by 50 percent. For
those who took pills on 90
percent or more days. risk

O'Bleness Memorial Hospital welcomes Mussaret Zuberi, MD,
to our active medical staff as Chief of Emergency Medicine
Service at O'Bleness.
Dr. Zuberi is board-certified in internal medicine and emergency
medicine, and is certified in aerospace medicine. He received his
medical degree from Dow Medical College in Karachi-Pakistan
and completed his residency in internal medicine at MetroHealth
Medical Center in Cleveland, Ohio.

Mussaret Zuberi, MD
Emergency Medicine

As a colonel in the Unite4 States Air Force (Ohio Air National
· Guard) in Columbus, Ohio, Zuberi serves as Chief of Aerospace
Medicine. ~He is also Chief Medical Officer for Chemical,
Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High Explosives as part of
hoineland security since 2007.
Dr. Zuberi is affiliated with TeamHealth Midwest, which provides
administrative and staffing services for O'Bleness' emergency
department (ED) as well as EDs in several states.

O'BLENESS
Metnorial Hospital

55 Hospital Driv•:. Athens, OH 45701-2302

(740) 593-5551 • www.obleness.org

�~---------~-- ------ - - --

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•

iunbav
mimes -ientinel
"'

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Advice from experts on writing
Bv BETH J. HARPAZ
ASSOCIATED PRESS

.NT~W YORK
- With
college application deadlines'looming. the pressure
is on for high school
seniqrs to write the petfect
essay.
But what are schools
really looking fo'r'! And
what role should parents
play when teens try to sum
up their lives in a few hundred words'?
Here are some insights
from admissions officials
at The Ohio State
University and at Oberlin
College. along with advice
from the author of "Write
Your College Essay In
Less Than a Day."
Ohio State, one of the
country's biggest schools
with 56.000 students on its
Columbus campus, gets
26.600 applications a year
and admits more than
14,000 students "When
you're getting the volume
of applications we do. you
put the greatest weight on
the high school transciipt
and performance in high
school."
said Mabel
Freeman. assistant vice
president for undergraduate admissions.

~ageC4

c~llege

application essays

But like a lot of colleges. make youi· statement and private school with 2,900 for the human being
Ohio Stale also asks appli- defend it. Why would thi~ students. Oberlin received behind the roster of m:tivicants to write 300 words be a place that could help 6.000 applications last ties &lt;md grades. We arc
on why they are interested you be successful?"
year. admitted a third and looking for students who
in attem)tng.
What about the p&lt;u·ent's enrolled 700. Like hun- love to learn. whose invest"Our use of the essay is role'? "I'm fine with a stu- dreds of other schools. ment in ideas and words
to try to determine if this is dent running the app past Oberlin uses the online tell us that they are awm·c
going to be a good match mom or dad, saying. 'Does Common
Application, of their world beyond their
for an in~titution and a stu- this look conect to you'? which includes six essay own homes. .schools.
dent." Freeman said. "We Am I saying things that choices on topics like writ- grades and scores:·
arc a big public research seem right about who I ing about someone who's
Essays also demonstrate
institution. diverse and am?"' Freeman said. had an influence on you OJ writing skills. "We also
urban. For the right stu- "We· re very concemcd &amp;~cussing an issue of per- want lo sec that a student is
dent. this is the right place. · about the student who fin- sonaL locaL national or able to write that first paper
But for some students. it ishes at 1 a.m. and hits international
com;ern. for a freshman seminar
could he overwhelming."
send without anybody Oberlin also ha" a supple- whil~ avoiding careless
She added that ''the looking at that app in the mental essay with a theme mistakes that will drive
found on many apps: faculty crazy:· Chermonte
essay will never tnnnp the light of day."
transcript. but it can be the
On the other hand. par- "Given your interests, val- said.
tipping point."
ents must not be so over·· ues. and goals. explain
Parents. she added. '\:an
Students who &lt;u·c unable involved that they write the why ObeJiin College will be great critics and edito visit the campus should essay. One year, Ohio State help you grow (as a student tors." In one essay Oberlin
try to find an online video asked applicants to suggest and a person) during your received, an applicant protour and look at the college a course they might add to undergraduate years."
fessed admiration for Julie
website and other mateJial their high school curricu" It is a way for om 'faymor. an Oberlin grad
so they can show in their lum if they were principal. admission..,
committee who created ''The Lion
essay that they understand One writer suggested an members to get a sense of King"
musical.
what the school offers and advanced biology course, fit between the applicant Unf01tunately. the appliwhy it's a good match.
adding something like. ''lf and Oberlin. and allows us cant spelled it as "'I he
As for the 300-word my son had such a course, to envision how this appli- Loin King," an error that a
limit. Freeman says. ''most he would be in better cant may become patt or parent proofreader might
of my faculty and admis- shape."
the fabric of our communi- have caught.
sions professionals are not
"lt couldn't have been ty." said Debra Chcm1untc.
Wissner-Gross. author
sure that any 17-year-old more blatant" that the Oberlin's. dean of admis- of ''Write Your College
has much more than 300 applicant's parent had writ- sions and finan~ial aid.
Essay in Less Than a
well thought-out words to ten the essay. Freeman
She said admissions offi- Day" (Random House.
say on any topic. Make said.
cers "arcn · t looking for $15 ), says the hardest par1
your point and be done.
Oberlin College, also perfection in I 7- and I 8- of writing a college essay
Organize your thoughts. located in Ohio. ts a small . year-olds. We ;u·e looking is tinding the right topic .

"Eve1yonc has stories to
tell. and you dun 't have to
be the top student to have
a great story," s&lt;titl
Wissner-Gross.
who&lt;;c
website
is
EducationalStrategy.org.
" If you lind that you'1e .
laboring over il. it prohJbly isn't the tight story. Jf
it's the right story. then
you'll he dying to tell It
and it' ll be fun to write."
She added: "'Il1e ·main
thing colleges want to
know is why they should
accept you. You want your
cs~ay to tell them thai &lt;.~-.
directly as possible:'
Depending on the
topic. "the best way to do it is to tell a real slmy that ~
gives them one slice of :
your life rather than tr)
ing to summarize your
life in 500 \\ ords. Think
of a good story that ;
shows you1
greate-st
achie,ement so far. It
doesn't have to be that
you cured cancer or pub
lished a novel. It could he. ·
an at.:t of compassion UI ,
community seJ vice, or
something rl'lated to a
job, or how you dealt
with a challenge or a ·
hardship gmwing up."

Quidditch catches on at college campuses in Ohio
Bv KEVIN Jov
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

COLUMBUS - As
Ohio State students
or
tossed ·Frisbees
lounged on the grass
nearby. a dozen others
ran around toting balls
and brooms - dodging
and weaving, throwing
and diving. engrossed in
an offbeat game that
attracted gawkers and
giggles.
Their amusement: a
pastime once confined to
the pages of a fantasybook series.
Nowadays. though. the
pursuit of the mythical
quidditch thrives well
beyond Harry Potter's
Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry.
And mere "muggles"
(nonmagical people) can
even pa1tak~.
"It's kind of the bestkept secret on campus,"
said Carly Kestler, 22. a
senior who founded the
OSU Quidditch League
in 2008.
The high-flying game
conceived by British
author J.K. Rowling m

her Han-y Potter books
has placed a growing
number of real-life college players under its
~pell albeit in modified form . The one-time
courtyard lark among
some New England
undergraduates is now
engaging more than 800
teams worldwide. fueled
by open-minded athletes
with a deep emotional
connection to the popular
novels.
"People are immediately curious," said Alicia
Bradford, communication director for the
International Quidditch
Association. a New York
nonprotit group that regulates the game and helps
coordinate matches.
"Exposure is a big part
of what's driving our
growth."
The association hosted
the
fourth
annual
Quidditch World Cup in
New York. where 46
teams. induding those
from Ohio State and
Miami universities, have
signed up to compete.
In previous years. the
annual tournament was

staged at Vermont's
bucolic
Middlebury
College, where Alex
Benape adapted the game
111 2007. The inaugural
cup drew just two teams.
Quidditch has since
found plenty of traction
in Ohio, said Peter Chen.
a Purdue University
sophomore and Midwest
representative for the
region's 200 squads.
In the spring, more
than 200 students at
Denison
University
joined a quidditch interest group on Facebook.
An informational meeting 111 October at the
University of Cincinnati
attracted 45 people.
Ohio State President E.
Gordon Gee, who last
year bragged to Time
magazine about the
"Nimbus 2000" broomstick replica kept in his
office. is so taken with
the Columbus club that
he has invited its 50
members to a private
screening next Saturday
of the upcoming movie
"Harry Potter and the
Deathly Hallows: Part 1."
At Miami University.

where the game was
awarded club-sport status
this fall. participation has
grown from 20 students
to 120 - now &lt;&gt;omprising nine teams plus a
traveling squad - and
gained enough spectator
momentum to pack the
sidelines during quidditch face-offs. said
Matthew Pet rinc. the
group's vice president.
"It's a little nerdy. but
it's a coni nerdy." said
Perrine. 19, whose dormitory today will host a
party where fans can
view a live wcbcasl li-mn
the New York games.
"There are so many
Harry Potter fans who are
intrigued."
Many present-day college students were in elementary school when the
first Potter novel made its
U.S. debut in 1998. They
grew up \Vith the characters of Hat ry. Ron and
Hermione
Collegiate quidditch is
played on an oval-shaped
pitch
absent airborne
players, of course, but
including familiar. fullcontact J1allmarks found

the iktional competi- univcr ~ities y.,ould need ~
tion.
to stgn on to warrant
''It's kind of like rugby considenttion). but man)
and team handball or players fJ own on the ,
dodge ball." said Jcn idea.
Nygren. 20. co-founder
"Quidditch has always
of the Deni-,on Death been coed. e\1.~11 in th~..·
Eaters.
books," Moody said. ''If
In other \Vords: It's not it became NCAA-affilifor the fainthearted.
ated. it would completely
''You are running every ruin what the sport is."
second.'' said Alexis
A shared love ol'
Moody, 20. founder of Potter.
meanwhile.
the
Marauders
at stren1!thens team tics ofT
. Bowling Green Stale the pitch.
University. "It's a rough
Ohio State players
sport."
gather regularly for
Participants
often movie nights and in
accessorize with scmvcs January will again stag~
and capes but don· t wear a Yule Ball fundraiser
padding. Some do. how- inside the college's casever. opt for protective tle-like Purnet ene Hall lacrosse goggles.
a bash modeled after that •
''This past weekend. I 111 Harry Potter and the
almost broke my nnsc.'' Goblet of Fire, the fourth .
said Dan Miller, 19. hook. Thcy'\e also tinpresident of the OSU kered with t~c i pes for· 1
team and a soccer player homemade butteJbeer, a
from Newark. "We've favored
libation
or '
had someone break their llogwarts wizatds.
" ll 's a great way to
pinkie finger. Somebody
broke their ankle. You hme fun with other peohave to be wary."
ple who ate the exact.
Enthusiasm has grown sam~ way as you," Miller ·
so fervent that a few said. "You get to li ve out
schools arc petitioning' to your childhood 1~ultaS) ." .'
secure NCAA status (50
111

Rabbi from Florida repairs torah ·scrolls in Ohio
Bv COLETTE M.
JENKINS

hired Bialo to restore dred to tens of thousands
three of . the scrolls so of dollars, depending on
AKRON BEACON JOURNAL
that they can be used the amount of work that
once again at the syna- has to be done.
Bialo spent an average
AKRON - Doodling gogue.
"The torah is our most of 12 hours a day at Beth
in class can be a good
thing. Just ask Rabbi precious possession. and El. using a turkey feather
we treat it with the deep- dipped in kosher ink to
Mcnachem Bialo.
"One summer, when I est sense of holiness," restore the faded. flakwas 18 years old and in said Rabbi Stephen ing. chipped and cracked
rabbinical school in Grundfast of Beth El. letters on the pan.:hment
South Beach (fla.)~ I "It's the ·centerpiece of made of cow skin.
was doodling Hebrew the synagogue. but if one
Every four or Jive letletters and one of my letter is missing, if there ters. he dipped the quill
classmates walked by is one little defect. it's into the ink. Every 30
and said 'oh. so you're a not kosher and it can·t be · minutes. he looked up
scnbe?' I said 'no.' He used."
from his task and out the
said that I should be and
Grundfast said torah window to limit the
that he wanted to intro- scrolls are checked peri- . strain on his eyes.
duce me to a torah scribe odically to make sure the
As a scribe. his task. b
\Vho lived around the wear and tear of regular to replicate the exact.
block from him," said use hasn't rendered them distinct writing of the
Bialo, 26.
unusable. Jf a defect is original writer of the
And so began the detected while a torah is torah. l:3ialo can tell the
Beachwood
native's being read, the service origin of' the scrolls he
Journey on the road to must be stopped. the repairs by the style of
becoming a sofer. a torah rolled up. put away script. He · said that
Jewish scnbe who can and replaced with a new torahs
written
in
transcribe torah s~o:rolls one. he said.
Czechoslovakia
have
and other religious writTorah scrolls. which rounder letters than
ings.
contain the live books of those from Germany or
Bialo. who \\ orh for Moses. are kept in a cah- Poland. Although each
North Miami Beach- inel 'called an ark. They nation had its own style.
based Sofer On Site, arc always handwritten each scribe had his own
spent last week at Bellh in Hebrew calligraphy handwriting.
El Congregation. restor- with "crowns" on many
Two of the three
ing three torah sGrolls. of the letters. The scrolls that he worked on
His work at the west crowns are crows-foot- last week at Beth El
Akron synagogue began like marks coming from v-. ere written in Poland.
more than six months the uppt!r points of the The third was written in
ago. when he evaluated lel!ers.
Germany. Bi&lt;llo also
I 0 scrolls. carefully
The scrolls can cost conducted educational
inspecting the 304.805 $20.000 to $60.000 and classes at the lo~:al synahandwritten Hebrew let- more. depending on the gogue and plans to
ters in each of them.
yuality. Repair costs can return in the future to
The local congregation. range !rom a few hun- work on the other sev~n

scrolls that he evaluated.
" It is Ill) responsibility
to make sure each letter
is perfect It's &lt;tn av-.csome
responsib'ility
because the Torah is the
holiest book,'' Bialo
said. "This work is a
spiritual work. I'm doing
it for God and helping
this community at the
same lime When I' m
working. I ha\e incn:di
ble peace ..
The
family nw'n~d
business thai
Rialo
works for i~ headed by
the scribe who trained
Rabbi
tvlo-.;hc
him.
Druin. anJ his father.
Rabbi Gedaliah Druin.
In addition to traveling
to comnll}J.1ilics lo repair
torahs. Soler On Site
offers cducal ional programs, including a Torah
Project.
.
The project provides
an opportunity for the
entire community to gl'l
involved in the prot.:t''s
of \Vriting or repairing a
torah. Memhet s of the
comm unilv t'an oh,cn·c
the workii1g scribe ami
participate in hands-on
educatiOnal classes.
The Tmah Projet·t ic.:
also a way for the Jcwi'-h
faithful t() fullill the l;hl
of the 613 commandments in the holy book.
That commandment is
for every Jew to write a
torah. T he project allows
community members to

touch the feather ao; the
scribe inks in a leltei.
'ymbolically fulfilling
the rcyuircment.
"If you write one letter. it is as if you write
the whole torah. God
wants us to care. He
wants action. He wants
us lo try." Bialo said.
"People arc compared to
the leiters in the Torah.
At firo;t. the) arc shiny
and new ;lnd tlVet time.
they fade. Ymt fix it and
try to do betlet."
The ce rt i ried sc ri he
has trained for eight

years
under
Rabbi
Moshe Druin, who ic.:
also hi-. fathet-in-law of
mor.c than two vears. }k
also has a "graduate
degrt!e in rabbinkal
sttl&lt;.lies and was ordained
a rabbi in 2006.
" I' m an artist," Bialo
said. ''The first time I
knew that I wanted to be
a snibe was when I was
13 years old and became
har mitHahed. I looked
al the 'J(.)rOih and was fasd naled hy the pcrfectiou
of every letter.''

Special Care
·u ·:A:\IN&lt;; SER\'IC
44() - 95~5

l - SOH-300- 95 85

Furnace
Duct Work
Cleaning
Upholstery &amp;
Carpal Cleaning

�••
''

PageCs
Sunday, November 28, 2010

Real simple: Scarf as a quick wardrobe pick-me-up
BY SAMANTHA
CRITCHELL
ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK- A scarf
be a wanlrobe 's
•
-khorse. It adds color.
style. and. especially as
the weather turns wintery.
warmth.
Now, if you only knew
how to tie the thing.
Don't go for 'a complicated knot, says Talbots'
fashion director Tammy
Vipperman. Aair largely
comes from confidence,
so any hesitation about
tying the scarf will l&gt;how.
she adds, but there are
plenty of easy knots that
still kick up your outfit.
"If &gt;'ou can fold laundry
and tie a basic knot, you
can wear a scarf," she
says.
Her tips:

• SILK SQUARE
Lay the scarf tlat on a
table. taking two opposite-end corners and folding them into the center.
giving you two straight
edges. Keep folding those
r straight edges into
center
until you have,
•
essentially, a scarf ~ash.
Wrap it around your neck.
setting up the knot slightly toward one side.
Pull the two ends into
an X to tie. The key to the
flattest. most flattering
knot will be to cross the
ends so the out~ide piece
b on the bottom. closest
to the body. and then
pulling that over the top
and then down through

)

Ray Kugler/AP pHoto
This image made from video on Tuesday, Nov. 23,
2010, shows Talbots' fashion director Tammy
Vipperman demonstrating how to tie a half bow from a
wrap scarf at a Talbots retail store in New York. This is
the scarf you want with you all the time. It goes under a
coat, over a coat, with a low neckline or a high one, and
it's the perfect thing to keep at the office where the temperature can go up and'down, Vipperman says.

the knot so it will stay in
place and not flap around,
Vipperman says.
"Most people think. this
is the most intimidating
scaii'," she says. "But you
can wear it with a cardigan. denim. a little heel
-with a necklace. Let's
bust the myth right now
that you can't wear a scarf
and a necklace.''
•THE~OODLE

Vippennan's word for
the knit scarf with built-in
ruffles is the "noodle:·
because it stretches. bends
and bounces. "You can
~ort of do \\ hatever vou
want with it. It's a temfic
base," she says.
You get an Elizabethancollar effect if you keep

triangle, put it over the
shoulders on a slightly
uneven bent. tie it with the
outside piece now coming
out from under the knot
and then create a onesided bow. That gives it
"flourish," she explains.
Other than the delicate
silk scarves, most are tied
underhanded with the end
coming out the top to create volume. Scarves are a
:-.ign of personal style,
and, for the most part. you
want to draw attention to
them. she says.

•CASHMERE

The classic winter scarf
with fringe at the edges is
nice because it's practica1ly flat when worn
under a coat, Vippennan
says. She prefers the
"gentleman's fold." which
really isn't a fold: The
looping it around to the scarf goes around the
bustline level, tying it neck and the sides are flat
loosely at the back of the against the body and posineck. Go a little tighter tioned like lapels of a
and you have a turtleneck. jacket.
You also can wear it •
An alternate is to fold
long and loose. not really the scarf in half - so its
tying it at all.
length is two layers - ·
•THE WRAP
make a loop at the fold .
This is the scarf you wrap the scarf around the
want with you all the neck. pulling the loose
time. It goes under a coat. end through the loop.
over a coat. with a lo\\ Vippennan likes to see
neckline or a high one, thts look in a bright.
and it's the perfect thing cheerful color against a
to keep at the office\\ here neutral-colored coat.
the temperature can go up
•THEBOHO
and down, Vipperman · This scarf is longer.
says.
thinner and usually with
She doesn't like it to be fringe on the end.
worn perfectly. though. Because of its length. it's
She prefers to fold it cor- really the only shape you
ner to corner to make a can successfully toss oh-

Talbots/AP photo
This product image courtesy of Talbots shows their
Crystal sprinkled scarf. A scarf can be a wardrobe's
workhorse. It adds color, it adds style, and, especially
as the weather turns increasingly wintery, it gives
warmth.

so-casually over the
shoulders. Start with the
end that's goin&amp; to hang
in front, positioning it
about mid-thigh. Wrap
the rest of the scarf
around the neck. crossing
in the front and then to
the back, letting the other
side hang down. It' II he·
hanging down the same
side as the piece in the

front.
Vipperman,
though,
want~ people to experiment on their own and do
whatever is comfortable
with their scarves - as
long as they're wearing
them: ''A scarf can be
'runway,' a head-to-toe
basic, whatever you want.
Play with them and ha\e
fun."

Gifts
for
travel:
From
2-in-1
bags·
to
3-oun'?e
kits
I
BY BETH

J.

HARPAZ

ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

NEW YORK - Like a
lot of travelers. Simon
DuHtll would Ion: nothing
better than for Santa to
g him an iPad this
strnas.
s portable, perfect for
· watching a movie on a
plane," said Duvall, global
marketing coordinator for
Online VacationCentcr.co
m. "And it's great forquick
work or Web browsing on
the go. with a bigger
screen than my iPhone."
Barbara Messing. general manager of TraveiTicker.com, would like to
find Bose's noise-canceling headphones in her
stocking. "I have knockoff
headphones now, but I
admit I do covet the real
thing.''
But with a $499 start
price for the iPad and $299
for the headphones, this
may not be the year that all
our tmvel gift dreams
come true.
Fortunately. there arc
less expensive ways to say
merry Christmas or happy
ukkah to the tmveler in
life.
•
or the travel pillow
junkie - the ones who
keep inflatable doughnuts
in the glove compartment
and a blowup body·hugging cylinder in their
carry-on - there's a new

l

Hampton Oirect/AP photo
This product image courtesy
of Hampton Direct shows the
Total Pillow. Fold it 1n half for a
neck rest, twist it for lumbar
support, sit on it to cushion an
uncomfortable seat, and carry
it by dropping the hole over
.
andle of wheeled lug-

I

goodie on the market this
year. Called Total Pillow, it
looks like a blue daisy with
a hole in the middle. Fold it
in half for a neck rest, twist
l for lumbar support. sit on
rt to cushion a hard seat,
and carry it by dropping
the hole over the handle of
wheeled luggage. Best of
all, at a price of$15 or $2()

Diane Bondareff/AP photo
This Sept. 12, 2004, file
photo shows a pink dress
and a floral sarong modeled
at the Lilly Pulitzer Spring
2005 show in New York. For
wonfen. a wrap can be a
skirt, a sarong, a baby carrier,
scarf or shawl.

(depending on where you
buy it). it won't break
Santa's bank. - available
from http://www.totalpillow.com or at CVS. Rite
Aid, Target, and other
retailers.
And
what
traveler
wouldn't like a little kit
filled with personal care
products in sizes that won't
lead to your getting in trouble with the Transportation
Security Administration?
(Surely you don't want to
provoke a pat-down for
breaking the rules!) The
website http://www.
3Fioz.com launched
earlier this year - offers
more than a dozen travel
kits priced from $17 to
$85. There's one for everyone on your list, including
a baby bath kit. a men's kit
with shaving cream and lip
balm, and many other
choices filled with skin and
hair-care products.
Diapers probably don't
make the most festive gift,
but for parents juggling
lots of space-hogging
baby-related items, here's
something that might
make trips with infants a
tad easier: DiaperBuds,
individually wrapped, vacuum-packed · disposable
baby diapers. The designer
says they are 70 percent
smaller than regular diapers and can even fit in a
pocket, but they open into
a full-size diaper; at
http://www.diaperbuds.co
m, eight for $6,24 for $18.
Another innovative con• cept - this one for travelers who never go any-

where without the1r laptops - is a two-in-one
bag. The Double Time has
wheels and splits into two
pieces: a bag for clothes
and other items that you
can stow overhead on
planes. plus a backpack
laptop-carrier that 1jp. off
the main bag and fits
under your seat. It's $120,
available at http://www.
ful.com and other retailers.
Ful.com also sells online
and in Apple stores an
item called the Joint
Venture. $70, which splits
into two messenger bags.
one for the MacBook and
one for the iPad. along
with the Brooklyn. $1 00.
which splits into a backpack for the Mac Book and
messenger bag for the
iPad.
Whether you v1s1t
http://www.tlightOO l.co
rnl or Flight 00 I stores in
New
York,
San
Franci~co, Berkeley or
Chicago, the company
always has colorful and
clever gift-worthy Items.
This season's selection
includes funny luggage
tags for $12, including
"Lucha Libre" and "Pez''
styles;
zippered

Spaccpak bags for packing
shoes,
clothes.
underwear and other
items as compactly as

possible, $30-$65; and a
nifty dare we say
sneaky undercover
laptop sleeve that hides

your expensive little
computer in a bag that
looh like an ordinary
padded envelope, $28.

'
Marclo Jose Sanchez/AP photo

In this Jan. 27, 201 o, file photo,
the iPad is shown after it was
unveiled at the Moscone
Center in San Francisco.
Although the iPad is at the top
of some wish lists this holiday
season, there are also many
other less expensive ....ays to
say mellY Christmas or happy
Chanukah to the traveler in
your Ute.

You have questions.
We have answers.
Holzer Hospice provides end of life care for adults,
children and their families. Our focus is to provide
comfort and quality oflife for d10se who have
life-limiting illnesses. Contact us today for
the answers you need.

H8LZER
3Fioz.com/AP photo
This product image courtesy
of 3Fioz.com shows the men's
"'n The Go" kit by 3Fioz.com.
The kit includes sha'Tlpoo,
facial cleanser, facial molstur·
izer and deodorant.

--HOSPICE ,- - 100 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis, OH 45631 • 740.446 5074

1.800.500.4850 • www.holzer hospice.org

�PageC6
Sunday, November 28, 2010

Just 1 to a pot? Combination planting comes inside
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Container gardening is
coming in from the cold,
replacing the one-plantto-a-pot displays that
have been indoor decorating staples since the
Victorian era.
Combination planting
blending different
plants in the same containers - is as pract1cal
as
it is attractive.
Arrangements can be
created that '~'.'ill thrh·e
through the winter in
sunny interiors as much
as they would outside in
summer on patios or balconies.
"Grouping
plants
tol!ether has se\eral
ad\'antages. including the
ability to create more
impact and to water less
often,"
said
Kathy
LaLiberte. director of
gardening at Gardener's
Supply
Co.
in
Burlington. Vt. Those are
the same reasons people
groups plants in containers outdoors. she said.
Choose your container
combinations carefully.
however. lt \\'Otlldn 't do
to mix plants having different light, temperature
and water requirements.
such as African violets
paired \Vith leaf lettuce.
or succulents gro\ving
alongside berries.

"Think as much about
the horticultural s1de of
the container garuen as
you would about its
looks,'' said LaLiberte.
\Vho
recommcnus
a
"thrillers, fillers and
spillcrs" style. "You can
create a cool pot with one
showca...e plant, another
that tucks under or fills
in, and something else
that's trailing.'' she '\aid.
"That makes~ an imaginative arrangement combining Jifferent heights,
colors and textures."
Light often determines
'l'.'hich plant varieties can
be used for mdoor gardening.
··t:nkss you have artificml light or access (o
sunlight. you may want
to veer toward getting
plants that don't crave it,''
LaLiberte said. ''Some of
the most beautifu] displays I've seen in recent
years haven't had any
blooms in them at all,
just foliage. There was all
this great leaf play:'
Thai translates into
grouping different kinds
of exotics - caladium,
cannas. coleus or ferns,
among others. Each is
considered a foliage
plant. yet each produces
.a different look: variegated leaves in some cases.
or brilliant colors.
Edibles also are Q:reat
indoor
landscaping

options, delivering freshnc::.s along With corwemcnce and fast maturity.
Choices
vary · from
micro-greens to dwnrf
bananas.
''You can take salad
fixings from seed to table
in le~s than a month,"
said Ellen Ecker Ogden,
an ornamental kitchen
garden designer from
Manchester Villal!e. Vt.
"Cut and water and they
just !!l'OW back &lt;H!ain."
· Herbs and ann~al flowers play well together in
containers. and their
bloor:ns do double duty.
''They'll give you a little taste of summer along
with some lovely colors,"
Ogden said. "And they're
easy to grow from seed.
Another bonus 1c; that
they're .low hugging
plants. Push some seeds
(impatiens. pan~ies or
viola, for instance) into
the base of foliage plants
to provide more interest."
Ogden
recommend~
starting from ~cratch,
using seed rather than
over-wintering mature
container plants.
"Some plants are sensitive and don't like being
moveri.
They suffer
transplant
shock
if
brought in," Ogden said.
"Better that you find
something fast-growing
so it can be sown Jirectly
indoors."

Effective indoor landscaping also includes
selecting the right containers. she said.
"There arc so many
different kinds of pots,
with different sizes. different colors and materials. Try some architectural pots. They're big. wonderful things that add
greatly to indoor displays.''
(Online: For more
about combination planting in containers, see this
West Virginia Unil·ersity
Extension Service fact
sheet:
http://anr.ext.
wvu.edu/lawn__garden/he
rhs/container gardening. You can contact
Dean Fosdick at deanfosdick@netscape.net.)

Pamela Crawford/AP photo
This undated photo courtesy of Pamela Crawford shows
a container including a variegated cast iron plant, center,
surrounded by string bean peperomia, neoregelia carolinae bromefiad and giant black heart sweet potato trailing
plant. Combination planting, or blending different plants
in the same containers, is as practical as it is attractive.

Pamela Crawford/AP
photo
This undated photo courtesy of Pamela Crawford
shows a decorative pot
containing violas, left,
spinach, center, and yellow mums from
Crawford's book "Easy
Container Combos:
Vegetables &amp; Flowers."
Combination planting, or
blending different plants
in the same containers,
is as practicaltas it is
attractive.

Got a hobby? Dedicate a room to it
BY FRANCINE PARNES
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

vice president.
Why would homeowners knock down walls
when there's a bowling
alley a mere car ride away'?
"Because they like to go
bowling but don't want to
deal with the ha'isles of
going out in public," says
Claxton.

When Kim and Jim
Howatt. "big 'St;;u· Wars'
geeks." began planning an
entertainment room in their
Libertyville. TIL basement.
they sought state-of-the-rut
home-theater amenities:· a
high-definition
large• Retro Diner
o;creen TV. a DVD player. a
On their farm in Gmndy
VCR and a surround-sound County. III., Emie Lindsay.
stereo ~;peak.er system.
a retired automotive comBut that was just part of ponents engineer, and his
the galactic extravaganza. wife Nancy. a homemaker.
With the help of Orren enjoy collecting vintage
Ken Hayden/AP photo
Barrett's Technology Solutions/AP photo
Designers
&amp; diner and gas station memPickell
This
photo
shows
a
meditation
room
by
Los
Angeles
This
photo
courtesy of Barrett's Technology Solutions
Builders. of Lake Blufl'. Ill., orabilia - so much that
the Howatts created a one- they spmced up an unused interior des1gner Lori Dennis in a Hollywood Hills shows a room in the home of Ernie and Nancy
of-a-kind room modeled area over their garage and home in Calif. These days, some homeowners are Lindsay of Grundy County, Ill. The Lindsays spruced
after Darth Vader's Star turned it into a 1950s diner. altering their homes and installing themed specialty up an unused area over their garage into a 1950s
Destroyer vessel, with
The• diner also functions rooms like this meditation room.
diner complete with vintage jukebox, transistor radio
angled walls. spaceship- as a "lobby" where guests
and neon signs.
like details on the ceiling. can conl!reaate
at a mini- bar &lt;md watch on a f1at- screen monitor the same
b
boat,"
says
stadium seating for 12. and
mo\ ie playing in the Naperville, Ill.. fairly glass
hand-painted murals of
Lindsays' adjacent home recalls the set of "Happy Lindsay.
Days" or "Grease." Pull
Let the good times
ships and planets.
theater.
It's the ideal space for the
With its 1954 Seeburg up to the dinette table, roll.
(On
the
Web:
couple\ "Star Wars" parjukebox. transistor radio, and you're back in 11the
ties. which stru1 with breakneon signs and old-time day of the drugstore www.pickel /builders. co
m; unitedbowling.com;
by a
fast followed
black-and-white
tiled soda fountain.
"There is no better www. loridennis. com;
marathon of all six movies.
floor. the diner. complet'There is nothing quite
ed
by
Barrett's experience than a banana www. barrettshomethelike being able to stay
Technology Solutions in split served in a '50s-era atef:com.)
home and have a movie
experience that is far better
than going to the theater:·
I
says Kim Howatt. a comI
puter programmer like her
husband. ''You can show
up late, you can hit 'pause.'
you can serve adult beverages. The only thing that
United Bowling Worldwide/AP photo
would get us out to a public This photo courtesy of United Bowling Worldwide
movie theater now would shows a two lane bowling alley in Yulee, Fla., residence.
be a seventh 'Stw· Wars' These days, some homeowners are altering their
movie."
homes and installing themed specialty rooms like this
• The Howatts aren't the bowling alley room
only ones cocooning in a
specialty room at home.
Such personalized spaces
5:45pm
go beyond the typical private gym. home office,
Holzer Medical Center
indoor pooL wine cellar or
Front Lobby
billiard room. There's a
· laundry area tumed into a
Honor or remember a special loved one. faend or co-worker with a
dedicated puzzle room, for
instance. a wall rejiggered
persona/1zed ornament. Your contribution of $5.00 or more will help prevent cancer
inlo a climbing wall, and
and save lives through research. education, advocacy and service.
ta'iting rooms for sush1 or
tequila.
FROM: (Please print)
~ro.,..ises
~oNses 'tept.
Here are a few more "igName_____________________________________
nature rooms that raise the
1bank you, policyholders, for rating
bar for personal space:
Auto- OWners Insurance "Highest In Customer
• Bowling, anyone?
Address_ _.___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Satisfaction with the Auto Insurance Claims
There's no waiting for
~erienee, Three Years in a Row,, according to
lanes if you can spare
J.D. Power and Associates!
City__________State_ _ _Zip_ __
around $1 00.000 - the
average p1ice for two lanes
Phone Number
of a regulation-length
bowling alley. including
United
setup,
from
In Honor ___ In Memory
Bowling- Worldwiue in
Yulee, Fla. Por $30.000,
Honoree's Name
you'll get all used equip------------------------------~--Please SP.JKI this form and check made payable to the American Cancer Soctety to
ment; for $175.000 or more
1-........re lanruee
Bonme McFarland. do HolTer Medtcal Center 100 Jackson Ptke Galltpolis, OhiO 45631.
you'll get the most lavish.
Galllpolla 740-441-llll
Setup can include evciyFor more lnformafion, contact McFarland at 446-5679
thing "light down to the
Forms will be acccpiod unltl December 14 2010.
bowling shoes, just like a
Love Lights B Tree ts sponsored by the Ameflcan Cancer Society. Hofler Center for C8ncer Cere.
regular bowling alley
and Holzer Modtcel Center.
would have," says Matthew·
Claxton, the company's
~

r------------------------------------,

•

•Thursday, Decem.ber 16

r.."'de.

•

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

---

L----------------------------------~~J
.,

�Dl

~unbap ~imes -~entinel

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Pholo 00&lt;111esy of Getty Images

THE LOGISTICS OF A

FAMILY FEATURES

ass .e-Fr e

he holidays are supposed to be filled with love and good cheer, but the logistics of shopping for gifts,
sending out cards, taking family trips and shipping packages can leave even the jolliest of people in a
Scrooge-like mood.
·
.
Fortunately, there are some ways you can take the hassle out of the holidays and make them a little brighter for
yourself and those around you.

T

•

• Monday is the busiest shipping day of the week.
• The busiest shipping week of the 20 I0 season is expected to
be December 13 to 17.
• If you are shipping mternational or to military personnel overseas. contact The UPS Store location nearest you to determine
the best date to ensure on-time delivery.
• Most ground packages require five days or less to reach their
destination. but if you're shipping coast-to-coast, it may take
longer.

Shop Smart

Don't Lug Your Luggage

Avoid long lines. crowded parking lots and out-of-stock items with these
helpful hints:
Get Read) - Before you head out to the mall, make a list of the gifts you
want to buy and do some online price comparison. Use sites like BizRate,
DeaiTime or Shopzilla. as well as check local ads to find the best price.
You may want to call your local store to see if they have your item in stock,
saving yourself a trip if they don't have it.
Shop Early- Plan to shop early in the day. and early in the season.
Morning crowds tend to be lighter and sales assistants tend to be more
attentive first thing. And the earlier in the season you shop. the less you
have to deal with long lines and frustrated shoppers. Plus, this year, while
there are 29 &gt;hopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas, there
are only 20 shipping days.
Wrap It Up Pay a little extra and let a charity group at the store wrap
your gifts for you. This saves you tunc later and frees you up to get other
things done and you help a good cause.
Jf you do any online or catalogue shopping. avoid having packages left
on your doorstep by getting a mailbox at The UPS Store. You get a mailbox
with a real street address, which accepts packages from all carriers. And,
you can choose to receive an e-mail or text when you have a package waiting. avoiding unnecessary tnps.

Navigating airport.security, crowded terminals and
long check-in lines can be stressful enough. Add
luggage and gifts into the holiday travel mix and
things can get really unpleasant. One solution
Last-Minute Shipping Dates:
travelers are turning to ts shipping luggage to their
destinations.
• Tuesday, December 21 Ship UPS 3 Day Select for delivery
'Traveling without a suitcase is a tremendous
Friday, December 24.
convemence. espec1ally during the hectic holiday
• Wednesday. December 22- Sh1p UPS 2nd Day Air for
travel season. Having your luggage awaiting your
delivery Friday, December 24
arrival and tracking it along the way ts even
•
Thursday,
December 23 - Ship UPS Next Day Air for
better," said Bryan Vial, The UPS Store franchisee
delivery Friday, December 24.
from Phoenix, Ariz. '"Ship your luggage as is or
place it in a box for shipment. Or, at select locations, you can purchase a luggage box and avoid
a suitcase altogether."
Some major airline baggage fees can add up to
over $100. Vial says that a luggage box of comparable stze shipped via UPS
Ground service is competitively priced and saves you time and hassle
at the airport. If you are a member of the Automobile Association of
America, you can receive a 15 percent discount off the full retail price
of eligible products and services, and 5 percent off domestic U.S.
shipping costs. Visit www.theupsstore.com for more information.
L,uggage Shipping Tips
• Because of the duties and taxes associated with international
shipments, The UPS Store does not recommend shippmg
luggage internationally.
• Federal Avtahon Administration restrictions prohibit shipping hazardous materials, including colognes and perfumes,
aerosol sprays, nail polish and cigarette lighters via air.
• Include packagmg tape and a return shipping label in the
luggage box for use when returning home.

No-Hassle Holiday Packing
Make sure your carefully chosen gifts get to their destinations mtact witll
these helpful tips:

DO

DON'T

• Check with experts before shipping fragile
1tems (or items that might be considered
ha7.a~dous or illegal to ship, such as perfume
or cologne).
• Use materials the professionals use- foam
packaging peanuts. bubble cushioning and
packaging tape to protect your gifts.
• Include a label on the inside of the package
with both the destination and return addresses.
• usc a shipping option which provides a
package-tracking number
• Take batteries out of toys. electronics, etc.,
before shipping.
• Ship wrapped presents ahead to your destination. especially if traveling by air.
for even less hassle, let the
certified packing experts at
The UPS Store handle the
logistics of getting your gifts
safel5' to your loved ones for
the holidays. Participating
locations offer the Pack &amp;
Ship Promise. which will
reimburse customers in the
event a center-packed item
shipped via UPS is lost or
damaged Details arc available
at www.theupsstorc.com.

•

Key Dates for Holiday Shipping

• Wrap boxes in
brown paper or tie
with string.
• Use materials like
newspaper or real
popcorn to cushion
items.
• Use old boxes or gift
boxes for shipping
items.
• Use duct tape, masking tape or cellophane
tape to seal your
boxes for shipping.

Dreaming of a
Green Christmas?
Participating The UPS Store
locations offer holiday shippers
the option to neutralize the
climate impact of their packages
for a small fee when shipping
with UPS. And. many locations
accept clean foam packaging
peanuts for reuse.

.

I

Pholo courtesy of Getty Images

Happy
Holiday Printing
Take the hassle out of print·
ing holiday newsletters,
programs and more. With
online printing from The
UPS Store, you can ea-;J!y
upload your documents.
customize your printing.and
finishing options, preview
the final proJect. and submit
your project from the comfort of your home or office.
Then, simply stop by to ptck
it up when you arc shipping
off holiday pack~ges.

v

�-------------·-·----~

Page 02 • &amp;unbap QI:im~·&amp;tntintl
-·
.;, ;

.

Sunday, November 28, 201 0

\lrribtttte - Sentinel - 3aegister
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4922
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1·866·541-0834

EMPLOYMENT
240 Health Care

CLASSIFIEDS!!
Other Services

400

Financial

DISH
AII::T1A1QIDV

ll.h-'

u· -nn

Money To Lend

It's Finally FREE!
Free HD for Life*

NOTICE Borrow Smart
contact
the
Ohio
Division of Financial
Institutions Office of
Consumer
Affarrs
BEFORE you refinance
your home or obtarn a
loan· BEWARE of
requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or ansurance Call
Lifelock
the Office of Consumer
Free Document
Alfiars toll tree at 1866-278·0003 to leam
Shredder for new if the mortgage broker
Llfelock members. or lender is properly
Call Today
licensed. (This IS a
1·888-758-3029 and public
service
use promo code
announcement from the
SHREDDER
OhiO Valley Publishing
and over 120
channels only
$24.99/month.*
'Conditions apply,
promo code MB45
Call Dish Network
Now
1-877-464-3619
-------

VONAGE

Company)

Get One Month
FREEl Unlimited
local and long
Livestock
distance calling for
only $25.99 per
month.
2 4·H steers for sale
Call todayl
740·441 • 1489 if no
answer
Leave
1·866·798-0692
Message
Professional Services
Pets
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY 4·4mth old female
SSI
No Fee Unless We Krttens to Grveaway
Wrn!
Call256-1468
1·888·582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Galha Co OH and
Mason Co WV Ron
Evans Jackson. OH
800-537-9528
Security

M2I
Free Home
Security System
with $99 installation
and purchase of
alarm monitoring
services from ADT
Securrty Services
Call1-888-367·2171

Stay Informed...

mJJC @a(hpohs £9ailp ~ribune
~IJe ~~omt

lOlcasant 3Regi~ter
The Daily Sentinel

v

Apartments/
Townhouses

Golden Ret., DOB
9122110
$350,
Doberman red m,
black
f,
9/13/10,
$450;, Dachshund,
mlf, 9/26/10, S300·
Poodle, 2- apricot, or
black males, 9/21/10,

Pets

Free Rent Special
!!!
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Aar, WfD
hookup. tenant pays
electric. Call between
the hours of 8A-8P
EHO
Miscellaneous
Ellm VIew Apts.
(304)882-3017
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebuilt In stock. Calf Twin Rivers Tower is
accepting applications
Ron Evans 1-800for waiting list for HUD
537·9528
subsidized,
1·BR
for
the
Absolute Top dollar- apartment
call
silver/gold corns any elderly/disabled.
1OK/14KI18K
gold 675-6679
jewerly, dental gold,
pre
1935
US
currency. proof/mint
sets, dramonds, MTS
Coin Shop. 151 2nd
lease:
1BA
Avenue, Gallrpolis. For
unfurnished
2nd
floor
446·2842
apt.
near
Gallra
Want To Buy
Academy, no pets,
ref &amp; dep. required,
Absolute Top dollar· maximum occupancy
srlver/gold cotns any 2. $350 mon. 74010KI14KI18K
gold 446·3936 or 740·
jewerly, dental gold, 446·4425
pre
1935
US - - - - - - currency. prooflmrnt 2nd floor 2 BR
sets, diamonds, MTS apartment,
Corn Shop. 151 2nd overlooking Gallipolis
Avenue, Gallipolis. City
Park,
LA.,
k't
· area, 1
446-2842
r ch en/d'rnrng
112
BA,
B ·
ld
uyrng- guns. 0
washer/dryer. $600.
military items, pocket mon + dep.
740.
·
k
knrves,
poe et 446·4425 or 740t h
ld
wac es,
o 446·2325
marbl es, old croc ks,
old
thermometers, 2 Bedroom Apt Rio
old
swords,
old Grande $400 Dep.·
glassware &amp; pottery, $400mth
740-245·
&amp; mrsc antrques. 9060 NO Pets

Toy Poodles· Buy a
Pet This Christmas
Season
thats
Special·
Why
Poodles are Special
thay rank at the top
in intelligence, thay
are
non-allergenic,
they don't shed. they
make great burglar
alarms &amp; they are
t h
b k
easy o ouse rea ·
For more Information 740-379·2160
740-446·2839
on our eKe Reg
Puppies
&amp;
our
Christmas Specials
call 740·992·7007
------- ~
Commercial

or

Aedeco. SAM, bath
&amp; laundry, rg &amp; ref
fum, in city $400

=;;;;;;;;;;;;; mon
+ dep &amp; utJ. No
pets 441.0596
-2-B..A_l...,BA-a..
ll-e-lec-.-in
Kanauga
$450
mon+dep 339·3224

Farm Equipment
John Deer Tractor m·
2950 4w drrve good
condition 86 H P.
1998 New Holand
45 H P. 3930·4w
Drive
Excellent
shape
new
tires.(304)576·2890

OFFICEM'AREHOU
Great
SEIRETAIL
Location 749 Thrrd 2BA apts. 6 mi. from
Ave Gallipolis.1800
sq.ft . For more info
Call 1·404-456-3802
For Sale By Owner

Holzer. some utilrtres
pd. or appliances
avail. $450/mo +
740 18 5288
dep·
-4 "
6130
9
88
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;:=;;;;;;;; or
•
6 apts $137.000
1 &amp; 2 br. apt &amp;
rent $2030 mo, 740· houses in Pomeroy &amp;
446-0390
Middleport, NO Pets,
~=====~
7
40·992·2218
STIHL Sales &amp; Service
land {Acreage)
Now
Avarlable
at
2
bedroom
Carmrchael Equipment
apartment available
740-446-2412
MEIGS Co. 22.. acres In Syracuse. 5200
$39,500
GALLIA Co. deposit, $375 per
Hay, Feed, Seed,
Kyger 16 plus acres month rent. Rent
Grain
$16,500 or SA 218 includes
water,
5
acres sewer &amp; trash. No
Good mixed hay, sq., Super
$2 50 4x5, round $22,9001 More @ pets
Suffrcrent
bales $20.00. Stored www brunerland.com tncome needed to
rnsrde 740-446-2075 or call740)441·1492, qualify 740-378-6111
Wef1nancer
Mixed
hay,
6x6
round, barn stored - - - - - - . . . . .
In Memory
never wet. $30/bale.
Real Estate - - - - - - 3500
740-416·1780
Rentals
-------

•

=

=======-

$300; Bichon·frishe,
1 m, 1 f. 9/02110,
$350;
Mini 900
Merchandise
Schnauzer mlf sip.
Apartments/
10/16/10, $350; All
Townhouses
AKC Puppies, 740·
Antiques
696-1 085
near
=:=;;:=;;;;;;;;;;:=;;:=;;;;;; 2BR
APTCiose to
Shade, Ohio
Holzer Hospital on SR
An~ques
and 160 CIA (740) 441Country
Things 0194
Gorng · out
of
Bursness afler 30
plus
years - - - -...........- Everythrng 20"o off CONVENIENTLY
LOCATED
&amp;
Lg Inventory-Lots of AFFORDABLE'
X-mas Fn &amp; Sat Townhouse
12pm -6pm Sun 1pm apartments
and/or
-6pm 157 Wayne small houses for rent
Lane 1 113 mne out Call 740-441-1111 for
of Rro Grande 740· ~ppllcatlon
&amp;
245·5348
InformatiOn

SELLVOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
VVITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

•

•

'[emory

Charles (Mike)
Wolfe
2.f )'t/US
r\o\. 29th, 2010

Sadb rrJSSld b) patrms f
Clara &amp; Atho Jl'olje ~~
Brother Cbff ll'olft

•

1.~

...

�"""'-------~----------------~-·~..,--~-- - -- - ~--- ~-~~- - ~- ~ -

&amp;unba!' .~imts -&amp;tntintl • Page 03

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

Sunday, November 28, 201 0
Auction

1

Auction

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

FORECLOSURE
Valuable Investment Property for Sale
Property to be sold at

Sheriffs Sale
Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, OH

'

December 3, 2010
10:00 AM

1

103-105 Peacock Ave, Pomeroy, OH
3 BR. 1 bath, approx 1,675 sq ft
33227 US 33, Pomeroy, Oil
2 BR. 1 bath, approx 980 sq ft
435 Rutland St, Middleport, OI-l
2 BR, 1 hath, approx 800 sq ft
18 'Yrst Cave St. Pomeroy, OH

2 BR, 1 bath) approx 825 sq ft
545 Park St, Middleport, 0 H
i 2 BR, 1bath. approx 1,360 sq ft

.

'..

842 Pearl St. Middleport, OH
2 BR, 1 bath. approx 1,217 sq ft
1053 Vine St, Middleport, OI-l
2 BR, 1 bath, approx 940 sq ft
TR 265 Number Nine Rd, Reeds\~lle, OH
Approx 4.\cres

-

Properties will be sold separately.
"As Is", "Where fs" sale.
Quesllons. call Dave
@ 888-376-3192 ext 5

MONDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Don't miss out on this opportunity!
lUiliJ 'News
+

tl1iEt News
~

fetch-,--

1\..YU&lt;:t\.II•Uo;;

Anne
Shirl~"/

Gables R~hl.-'.aded Anne
h an Jmaqm&lt;~llve orphan
y-(:35) Davi d --t

letterman
~Scru~

Auction

Auction

AUCTION
ABSOLUTE ESTATE
SATURDAY, DEC. 4TH@ 10 AM

.

Selling the estate and tool collection of the late James
Cavender lrom Charleston WV. He was a retired machinist from Kaiser Aluminum and was an avid tool collector
Due to limited Qarl&lt;ing, the sale has been moved to our
indoor facil~@ 9899 Old River Roa~~Glenwood. WV

20 MILES 0~~~8~t~~Ell~~tANT ON RT2

met~ G!Mtttmoclrrda!cNI. y,yu mr~t¢hreti!lmp:¢­

f!tM. GtmY 10/fm !QW 10/f®¢ 112/'tm:t.MilC!almil
i'tJIJMtte -nu;tg/Qma;jllr C!atirmcartm«»'t!~ta:tt
,wts, GmlnllantlldOOxlD!·taueyk
TOOLS AND ACCESSOI!JfS: Craftsman 2.5HP table saw w/
10' blade, Craftsman 3.5HP jig saw. Craftsman 2
1/2' circular saw. Craftsman 6' sander/polisher,
Craftsman 21/4HP drill press. Sears home central
table saw, 440 speedway electric hoist, 1/3HP
Craftsman bench grinder, Craftsman punch set.
variable speed scroll saw. Kohler 10HP engine, 2
cycle engine, Black &amp; Decker router guide, router
table, hoist puller, come along chain hoist. 2 ton
heavy duty engine loader level, 33001b. mechanical jack, 3 floor jacks (11/2 ton 2 1/4 ton), 20 ton
hydraulic bottle jack, Skil saw, Dewalt rechargeable 12, 14 and 18 volt drills, several Dewalt tools,
200Jib electric chain hoist. 1000tb electric chain
hoist, 20001b chain hoist. log chains, tow straps,
Craftsman 20 to 40 foot ratchet straps. chain
binders, Penske automotive analyzer. several
Craftsman socket sets-standard, metric and indusIna!, severai wood and metal chisels, drill brts carpentry tools, portable air tank, Williams 3/4' drive
socket set. several clevis 2" -12", Craftsman carbide tipped saw blade, Craftsman wrist ratchet set.
14 piece deep tmpact sockets. Actron battery/alter-

nator tester. Actron code scanner. several pipe
wrenches, vaccuum pump, Craftsman cord reel
work light, Craftsman halogen detail work light kit.
portable SOOwatt halogen light, chop saw, Craftsman 3/8' air hose, gravity feed spray gun kit, saw
chain filing gUide. several shop brushes, oil cans,
Craftsman blower vac/mulcher. jumper cables, battery charger, 18x18 5-8 tires, Craftsman whet stone
sharpening kit, Craftsman wrist ratchet set. 32cc
Craftsman blower, air angle die grinder. air tools,·
cut off tool, 60' adjustable tripod. 12 volt power inverter. Craftsman hand saw, Craftsman wire
brushes, Eager Beaver chain saw, Wagner power
stnpper, portable planer, several electrical supplies
Including condUit and receptacles. wood clclmps
and v1ces, wheel barrow, truck ramps, several sets
of Cra~sman ratchets, dolly, channel locks and
miscellanous tools, hole saw kit, end wrenches,
allen wrenches, several Craftsman Tools and accessories still in Qackages, plus much, much more.
MACrbNIST TOOlS: Craftsman metal lathe with sev-era . 1ts anaTatfie turning tools. lufkin Miti-M1te,
mach1mst level, 12 piece mounted w1re wheel/cap
brush set, several gears, dies (all shapes and
s1zes), refrigeration cables, miter gauges, several
torches_and gauges. Starrett mite set, dial indicators. m1crometers. 6outlet wall tap, carbide tips,
dnll bits and accessories.
LAW1Ull.UIPME"T AND ~CCESSORIES: Craftsman 22"
cut pusnmower, Cra sman [5RP push mower,
Aero 19' cut mower, several hedge trimmers,
weedeater, mowing sign,
pruners. lawn mower blades
skillets, old hand tools. Mason Jars,
bottles, miners dinner bucket, old
old manuals

Apartments/
Townhouses

Office space for rent
New renovated 1 br. in Pt Pleasant 593·
apt,
Middleport, 5169
$325+
Ho uses For Rent
reference/deposit,
7 40-416-6622
Downsizing?/live
alone? 2 BR near the
2 1BR in Pt Pleasant Cinema/Hospital
all utilities included 304-657-6378
593-5169
3BR
dble-wide
furnished, Sr 143Clean 1 bdr. !urn. Pomeroy. $625 mo.
apartment, • Dep &amp;
incl. most uti. &amp; lawn
Ref req. no smoking, care. 740-591-5174
call
304-593-5125
after 4 pm.
Jordan Landing, 2
bedroom apartments
Gallia
Manor available. No pets.
138 304-610-0776
Apartments,
Buhl Morton Rd. 304-67 4-0023
Gallipolis, is now deposit required,
accepting
applications
for 1&amp;3 BR houses in
waiting list for 1 Syracuse No pet's
Bedroom,
HUD- HUD app. 675-5332
Wk end 591-0265
Subsidized
apartment for elderly
and
handicapped.
4000
740-446-4652.

Manulactu~ed

Housmg

•

THE
• cLASSIFIED$
aren' t only for
buying or selling ·
items, you can use
this widely read
sedion to wish
someone a
Happy Birthday,
provide a Thank
You, and place an
ad "In Memory"
of a loved one.
For more information, contad your
tocal Ohio Valley
Publishing office.

MAKF
SOMFON~'S

DAY!

Renta ls

2BR-2 Bath Like new
Mobile Home water,
sewer, trash pd. No
Spring Valley Green pets, CA, Covered
Apartments 1 BR at Patio
Johnson's
$395+2 BR at $470 Mobile Home Park
Month. 446·1599.
740-446-3160

FIND
EVERYTHING
YOU WANT
OR NEED
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

3BR
2BA
$575
mon+dep+utl. 17228
Chatham Ave 740645-1646
3BR 1BA all elec. in
Pt. Pleasant $450
mon+dep 339-3226

~allipolis

11Baiip \!tribune

(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155
~oint ~Ieasant

3Register

(304)_675-1333

�Page 04 • &amp;unbap ~tme~ -j,enttnd
Auction

Auction

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

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Bulletin Board

EVENING AUCTION
•
Tuesday, December 7- 4:00
5

~.

p~m.

Basket Games
Fundraiser

Shafer Street, Athens, OH

Din•ction~: I rom Rt 'i0/12 \\1.'stof,\thl'l1s, cx11 on Rt 6X2, at

round-about turn nght on R1chland i\H.•nuc to\\ards Coll\o, at
light tum left onto Shafer Street. folio\\ through light at Umon
Street. tum bcs1dc [ conom} Supply and go to back of Mistretta's Dch to fhc Brook Club Cothcnng, \\atch for s1gns
RESTA l RAN I EQUII'~IEI\T hame &amp; 4-glass door~ for
'"'lk-in cooler, Ch,unpiOn Industries dish\\Jsher sanillzer,
Mamtowoc ICC make1 machme, Bever.lgt··Air ( oolcr. Carlt:,;lt·
Salad BufTct, 2 food w:umcrs, 4-:;tainle~s Sled work l,thl.:s, "stainles!&gt; steel chating p.tns, clectnc -;oup kettle, Bunn cuflco.&gt;
maker, cater food \\Jrmer carrier. Berkelmc.1t sheer (needs repair). rolhng cJrt for bus tubs, cigarette v.:ndor d1~pla} \\.lll
unu. bakt'r's rack, assortment ofkuchcn supphcs (!5hakcro;,
baking pans. 011 'megar carafe,, etc ), h.md meat gnndcr, Connmsscur cork scrt•w, numerous dishes, gl&lt;~s~e~ tlal\\ arc, mugs,
\\inc &amp; champaglll''$1\:lll\\ arc. wm1d stem ware hold~r for ceiling, Royal I JOCX t:nsh register. 2-rt'Cl·ipt prinll'rs, cash r.:gistcr
for computer ')s tem, glass top corner har, 2 youth chairs, 2\\ood dmmg ch:urs. 8-squarc tables\\ llle top (ccnler tile can
pop out for pallo umbrella), 32-chalrs, 3-long foldmg tables, 6top octagon tables, rmsccllaneous decorator 1tems. b1rd houses.
candle holders. fr:mtcd prmts. etc
ANTIQ UES ~11.: COLLEC"IIBLES: Set of\\'edgcwood Chin,1
service tor I 2 w/sl:rving pieces. tea pot &amp; candle holders. Set
of China ser\'icc fill· 12 made in Dl·nmark, 8-Staflordshin.· dmner plat..:s, 6-Limoge chnner plates, 4-B:t\Jrta dmner plates, 6tea cups saucers, Ro)al Albert coffee server\\ creamer &amp; sugar
bmvl, large Ha\ iland platter. France pllchL·r, 2-hand painted
france camstcrs, LmH1gc dgarctte holder. 2-Copenhagen tigurtnes, Royal Doulton "Bridget'' &amp; "fhe Orange Lady" figunnes, Brass ''I· nd of the Trail" book ends, Borchcse dog book
ends, ornate pidun: frame. old scales, I Ox 50 binoculars, i\rtky
flute m case, cast iron tov !1rc wagon horses, /\1 co·microscope No 1364-B 111 box, 200 ~old Rock n Roll45 rel·ords,
\Cry nice Costume .IC\\elry including Jade &amp; sil\er pieces,
"Squash Blos~mn"turquorse :.iher necklace, Rolex wnst
'' atch. 3-old purses some foreign coms &amp; paper currenc}, set
of twm bed frameo;, and other rmscell.meous Jlems.
TERMS: Ca~h or ch.:ck w1posit1ve I I&gt; ;'\;o Credit Card'
Checks over $1000 must ha\ e bank author 11ation of funds
available i\ll sales arc final. l'ood will be a\'atlable.
ot responsible for loss or al:Cidents

0\\ i" ER: Jennifer Clanc~
SHAMROCK AUCTJO~ SERVICE
AUC110~EERIREALTOR: .John l'ntrick "Pat'' Sheridan
AUCT IO ~EERS: Kerry Shcrid;m-Bo)d• .\like Boyd,
Brent Kin~-:
F.mail: Shamrock,\uctionftt aol.com
\\ EB: W\\ \\,shamruck·llUl'tion~.com
I'll: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

fiND IT ALl
in the

Auction .

Auction

Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Are you made
for ALDI?

The lynch Agency
322 2nd. Ave
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
740·446·8235

Call 612-2946

Help feed hungry
Families In Gallia County

6000

Medical

Employment

100

100

Legals

Legals

I

RN Clinical Manager

For our Gallipolis Store
Wednesday, December 1st
7am-2pm
At ALDI Foods
176 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, OH 45631

New
Foreclosure
16x80 never been
titled Call for an
Incredible
deal
740)446-3093

20 games for $20
Special games $5.00 eacll

Adance Jickct draWing
Chnstrnas Basket Set

Hiring Event

92 or newer 3BR
2BA vinyl Siding,
shingle roof needs
work, must be moved
located in Gallipolis
Ferry. No lltle ask1ng
$2800 OBO. 540·
765-7786 ~r 740742-2737

Great Hates
Personal Service
Call tor a Quote
TodayI

New Signature Village Basket

+ $4.00/hr additional when performing
Shift Manager Duties

Sales

Living Water Food Pantry
Nov. 29 at Vinton Elementary
Doors open at 5 pm
Games start at 6 pm

12 pc D•nnerware,
Hostess Chnstmas Basket set,

Manager Trainee-S19:5!VHr
Full lime Cashier/
Shift Manager- S10.txVHr

94 Clayton 14x70
2BR as is must be
moved!
740·4461271

Medicare Supplement

Drivers &amp; Delivery

R &amp; J Truckmg in
Manetta, Oh is hiring
COL A Drivers for
local • &amp; Regional
Routes. Applicants
must be at least 23
yrs have mm of 1 yr
of commercial dnving
exp. Clean MVR,
Haz·mat Cert. We
feature
weekend
home time. Excellent
health
&amp; dental
401(K),
insurance
Vacation,
BOnus
Supplies
pays and safety
Green slag 10.00 a awards.
Contact
great
for Kenton at 1-800-462·
ton
driveways. At 62 9365 F.O.F
above New Haven
Medical
behind
American
Colloid Co. (304)882Oh1o Valley Home
3944
Health Inc acceptrng
Applications
for
A1des. Apply at 1480
on
Jackson
Pike
Gallipolis
or
on
SAVINGS
internet
cCli
www.ovhh.org.
&lt;http://www.ovhh.org
I&gt; or Phone 740)4411393
Competrttve
wages and Benef1ts
mcluding
health
insurance
and
mileage.

Get AJump

OH lWV Ucensllle
Malimum 2 years
rvisory I hOme
xperlence

pet•live

oe!''

We

oHer

salary

lut

p!lckago

Ol(k)

Send resume to
Medl Home Heallh

Person to fill a part
time position 1n a
professional medical
office
Medical
background helpful,
but wiU train the nght
person.
Send
resume
and
2
references to: Box
100
c/o
Point
Pleasant
Register
200 Main St , Pt
Pleasant, WV 25550
~~~~~~~

Sales
PT I F1 Seasonnl
Sales Person Stop 1n
with
resume
@
Acquisrlions
Fine
Jewerfy 151 2nd Ave
(Gallipolis)
NO
Phone
Calls
PLEASE.

Fla. home· 02 Merntt
32x70 4BR 2Ba OW
on 1 1/4 ac $60 000
080/trade 4 slide
out motor home.
352-286-0023

PUBLIC
NOTICEThe
eighteen
member
Gallia-JacksonMeigs
Board
of
Alcohol,
Drug
Addiction and Mental
Health Services IS
appointed by the
Otrector of tho Ohio
Department
of
Mental Health (4
appointees),
the
Director of the Ohro
Department
of
Alcohol and Drug
Addiction Services (4
appointees) and the
County
•
Comnnssioners
tn
Gallia, Jackson and
Meigs Counties ( 10
appointees).
Currently, there are
four vacancies to be
filled which Includes:
a
consum~r
of
health
mental
services
(ODMH
appointment),
one
County
Gallia
Commissioner
one
appointment,
Jackson
County
Commrssroner
appointment,
and
one Meigs County
Commissioner
appointment.lndividu
als interested
in
be1ng considered for
this appointment can
do so by requesting
an
apphcat1on
from·Ronald
A
Adkms
Execut1ve

DirectotGalliaJackson MetgSBoiJrd
of Alcohol, CJoug
Addictionand Mental
Healtt1
Servlccs53
Shawnee LaneP.O.
Box
514Gallipohs,
OH
45631Phorte.
740-446 3022The
Board stnvcs to
marntarn a balanced
representallon
of
commumty rnernbe~s
and
welcomes
minority or female
applicants.#
II
#Contact: Ronald A
Adk1ns (11) 28

Saturday, December 4- 10:00 a.m.

Attention Business Owners

4070 \Vashington Road, Albany, OH
Direction~:

From Rt 50 l2 we~t of Alban), exit on. Rt 50 JUSt
past the OU Airport, turn we~t on Wa:.hmgton Road. \\atch for
s1gns.
A~TIQt:ES &amp; COLLECTIBLES. Belding Brothers &amp; Co
oak spool cabmcl (I 0 dmwcrs), old store t·ountn cabinct,oak
comer cabinet (gla~s doors on top ~cellon). oak wash stand.
oak secrctary.llamilton pump organ (very ornate), organ stool,
marble top lamp t.tble \\ porcelam casters, lll{'ht stand table,
large dmmg table, i\mencan treadle se\\ mg machine frame. 2scwing rockers. hall scat, oak pres::. back rock.mg chair, padded
rocking chair, oak fern st&lt;md. painted brass bed, metal double
bed, walnut dresser w / marble ins.:tt &amp;. glove boxes. painted
lowboy dr.:sscr \\/large mirror. oak dn.!sst·r, steamer trunk, old
kitchen cabinet, Sieger &amp; Slms'• Ch1cago upright piano. Nav}
umfonn, Gennan Nazi Poltce helmet, Wnt.:rhury X-day :.hclf
clock, Sessions shelf clock. oak Clucago 1elephone wall crank
telephone. se\cml omatc p1cture frmnc~. old cook books, sad
irons, shoe lathe stand. kraut board, 2 \\ ood butter molds. No
1 rock butter chum w dasb.:r, DaiS) #.:10 butt.:r churn, A.ll.
Donaghho. Parh·rshurg, \VV 1 gallon crock. I lull bowl &amp; candle sticks, som~· old bottles, lots olold (ilasS\\are including
Jewel Tea pitche1. bowl &amp; platter. Ame11eJm1nut ha~kl·t,
cream/sugar set. Dcpr.:ssion, England &amp; &lt;..iermJn pice.:,, 2Canaamillc Ml~ ( hurch p'Iates, 6-"1776 J he Great Amcncan
Rc\ olution'' collector plates, cast 1ron skilleb kettles (Griswold &amp; Wagn~;r), Hanson fam1ly scales. \\ash board. \\Ood
\\ash.:r wringer, tin 2-door own, copper ho1lcr. cast iron X
hitch toy hors.:s &amp; wagon. Hamilton &amp; Waltham pocket
watches, some costunw Jewelry. Hummel Bowl. 2-ladies
heads. button hook:;, knl('k knacks &amp; tigullll&lt;!S, 50 t eolk·dion
of salt/pepper serts. 2 school b.: lis, str:ught razor, mal frame ''
bubble glass. chtld's \\ood doll high dtarr &amp; rockmg chatr, 1111
child's se\\ mg maclune &amp; Dial typcwnter \\ 1cker doll ..troller.
doll house fumrturc, 3-mmiature porccl.un dolls, Emmell
Clo\\ n Doll, lots of old board gJm.:s, trucks. I'P bam. Lwnel
'I rain m onginal box, Yard Ch1ef 027 ga I ledne train\\ track,
I lappy Tim.:s ckctric tram set. Books. 1lJIJ8 limn .1· I ftstrmcal
Collection of 0/uo Vol I &amp; ll, 1895-JlJ/1(1 II them Coull/\'
Camphc/1 ~ Econom1( School Re.g1~/cJ; /971 h'Henlan of /he
Plains, 1954 56 58162 Albany Annals. 1933 36 Rmlroad Stone:s. and other books, National de La\ cl cream ~;cparator complete, hay fork, icc tongs, 7-hand made qUilts, l'oational No.4
pot belly wood slllvc, Wlute Mountam crank icc cream lrcczcr.
dinner bell, neck yoke.
JIOlSEHOLD l•lJRNlSUINGS· cedar dll'st. sofa. recliner,
:;evcral chairs, end tallcs. sofa table. lamps, 3-tier corn.:r knick
knack shelf, \\Jll shelf. half table, desk, bookshclt ne\\er
dinette table'' 4 chau-s. 43-bar stools. Whirlpool upnght ·
freezer. 1'\orgc rcthgerator. miscellaneous k1tchcn dishes. poh,
pans and small kitchen ,1pphance&lt;&gt;, pressure cuokcr canner &amp;
Clmnmg jar~. l'omputcr de,k, student dc~k. &lt;llld other miscellaneous items

TER.\JS (ash 01 cht'lk \\ poslli\C J I) No &lt;'redit Curds.
Checks ov.:r $1000 must ha\ e bank authont.ution of funds
a~a1lable All sales are final. l'ood w1ll be a\ailablc
l'oot rcspot;~sible for loss or llCCidents.
Personnl Property of the lute Huh &amp; l'at Green
0\\ Nf. RS: .letT. Bryon &amp; Jcrr) Grct•n

SHAMROCK AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEEIUIU£Al;I'OR: John Patrick "l'at'' Shrridan
AUCTIO:\EERS: KerQ· S hl•ridan-Hu)d, !\like Boyd,
Brent King
F m:til: ShamroekAuctlonl(l aol.com
\\ E H: """·shamrock-nurtions.com
I'll: 740-592-43 10 or 800-419-9122

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The Daily Sentinel

[IJr ~ond ~lrasant i\tg1strr

825 Third Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679

200 Main Street
Pornt Pleasant, 'IN 25550

740-446-2342

740-992-2155

304·675-1333

•

�Sunday, November28, 2010

BLONDIE

Dean Young!Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

CROSSWORD

Mor t Walker

FUN KY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk
~FAR f6tM ~~~0,
115 A Bo?K: TOUR I AND l-IE

CAM HAVG Al...l -rJ.lE::

P£~Ak OR IMPERSoNAl-.
~ 1-tENE~D~.

HAGAR T HE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

•
H I &amp; LO IS

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Sonnets
and
sestinas
6 Like
Batman
11 Like some
beer
12 M artini
garnish
13 Make a
rug
14 Tendon
15 Sunrise
site
17 Attempt
18 Workmg
for a judge
22 Arizona
tribe
2 3 lnd1a's
Mother 27 "Love
Story"
writer
Segal
29 Foe
30 Guess
32 Fan publication
33 Stirs a
drink
35 TV alien
38 Skating
jump
39 1 040 user
41 Obama's
veep
45 Make
better
46 "Superman" star
47 Clarinet
parts
48 Useful
skill

JOSEPH
DOWN
1 Com1cs
punch
2 Ea rly hour
3 Greek
vowel
4 Dallas
cagers
5 Command
to Spot
6 "The
Bodyguard" star
7 Boxing
legend
8 Cream buy
9 At any
time
1 0 Like lawns
in the
momrng
16 Command
to Spot
18 "Moonstruck" star

19 Folk tales
20 Sweeping
story
2 1 Memphis
cagers
24 Wicked
25 Rational
2 6 Pub
o rders
2 8 Sec 40Down
3 1 Veto
34 Striped
g razer

35 Miles off
36 Gree n fruit
37 Run off
40 With 28Down,
Anthony
Hopk1ns
f1lm
42 - Moines
43 Genesis
woman
44 Tenniscourt
sight

N EW C ROSSWORD BOOK! Send S4 75 (chctklm.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1 PO Box 536475, Orlando, A 3?853-6475
3

2

7

B

9

10

11
13

2::0

27
30

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

l 'M FEeL. lNG t41NI7A
GARFt6L.c:&gt; - Y.

IF y'Oi.J COVLP 136 A
CARTOON CI-\ARACT"f1R,
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t;unbap ~tm~ -&amp;tnttnel • Page 05

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

wovt..o vou ee?

Willfam Hoest
1\

MUTTS

1. 'i

www !Mioci&lt;r&gt;Oms com

Patrick McDonnell
AND HO W WAS
'JOUR THAN KSGIVI N G

/

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•

'TM CONVINCED IT 'S BOTTOMLESS."

HAPPYBIRTI-IDAY for Mondav,
No\'. 29, 2010:
•
This year, just when you decide
your life is working, someone or some
situation pops up from out of nowhere.
The unpredictable occurs in your
domestic life, while opportunitie:. pour
in left and right. Choosing your b.1ttlcs
and honmine what i" a priority could
be important Your career or community image could become very important.
If you are single, steer away fn.m1
someone who appears to be cmutionally una,·ailable. Come "Pring, you will
have a series of choices. If you are
attached, the two of you will act like
new lovers. You might decide to finally
take that special trip. VIRGO pushes
you into the limeli~t.
The Stars Shou• ifl£ Kind of Day Yo11'll

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU

Bil Keane

6

•

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7 3

" ... Turkey sandwich f o r lunc h today?"

DENNIS T HE MENACE

Hank

Ketchum

HmJe: 5-Dyt~amrc; 4-P~itittt; 3-Average;

hy Dave Gree n

4

5

6 8
Dllficul!y Level *

2-So-so; 1-Difficult

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ARIES (March 21-April19)
*** You could be too raring to go,
and, as a re..ult,. someone misread~
vour enthuc;ia&lt;;m as .1 na&gt;d or ru-. compliance. Let others know that there are
always altematiws. Understand that a
friend means well but has distort...od
information. Tonight: Take a break.
Relax. Put your feet up.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
***** So much could be h,lppening- and so quickly at th.lt -you
might not want to follow through on
your initial plans. Make that OK.
Someone who cares a lot start-; ~how­
ing his or her feeling~. Jugghng frimds,
plans and different m.'C\is a,,,Ucnges
you. Tonight Let go of worries. Be
more childlike.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
***Anchor in and worry less
about pre-.sure. More than likely, community commitments will work themselves out. Allow spont.mcity and intellect to merge. You feel tu~ed m many
different directions. Tonight: Happy at
home.
CANCER Ount.&gt; 21-July 22)
* * * Keep ~rcssing your various
Jdea-.. Others mi t not SL'Cill to be listening_ but ~m ow your words sink
in. A child or loved one could be
extremely difficult. Try to avoid a battle, if possible. Tonight: C..1tm up on a
pal's news.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
*** Sensitivity and a wilhngm.'SS
to move through a ~ituation can nnd
will make all tfic difference. Others
won't be a&lt;&gt; supportive as you mi01t
like. They all seem Ill have &lt;l lot stuff
going on. Tonight: Treat yoursclf to a

or

favl'ritt.&gt; meal.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
* * *** Listen to your instinruwith .motlwr person. 1his a&lt;;sociate,·
friend or l!'Ved one could be offering
you something you don't want to say
"no" to. Side vour time and see what
develops. Alx;ve all, be gracious.
'Ji.mighr· Vi"it with a p&lt;~l over the
phone.
LI BRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** Watch a tendency to go to
cxtn•mes, whether it is spending, overeating or t."'king unncre;sary risk:;. The
results could be hard to deal with in
the long run. Curb a tendency to be
careless or distracted. Tonight Take
some personal time.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-NO\~ 21)
* **** Empha.,ize what i~ important to you. A meeting could prove to
be instrumental. Approach thls matter
with gentlenes." and sensitivity. Your
awarcne$ of what to do and your priorities might be tough to communicate.
Honor your bottom line:-. Tonight
Where your friends are.
SAGITTARtUS (Nm:. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Tilke charge of a situation
r,lther than let it get too far out of contml. Your feelings could be hurt easily;
,md pt•rhaps the trigger was not directl'&lt;.l .1t you. A boss could be difficult as •
well. Ionight: Count on it being !at~.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
* * * * Explore you r options rather
than negate them, which could happen
rf you don't think about your respons(.'S. Conversations are lively; ~omrone
has unexpected new-.. The question is
whether it b gossip or fact. Tonight:
Detach from the day. Later; you will
gain another perspective.
AQUARIUS Oan. 20-Feb. 18)
****Relate with others on a oneon-one le\'el It might mean more time,
but it will be more worthwhile ultimatcly. A boss, parent or higher-up
could push you. Anger could ea.,ily
bubble up from out of nowhere.
Tonight: Make bme for a ~pecial friend
or loved one.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
*** The unexpected occurs way
IflO easil)~ adding an unnccdl'd ~l:re:';s
to vour already complicated day. Reach
out for sonwonc at a distance-who you
rnre about. Anothl•r perspective will
help you rel,IX. 'li.might: At a certain
point, you might nl'f..'d to ~parate what
you do from who you are.

]aC4JIU'lmc Bigar IS 011 the Intcnu-1
atllftp://ll'lVlt&gt;.f'1CrJIIelmebigar.com.

www.mv~ailvsentinel.com •.mv~ailvtribune.com
--

�111"'-1"111-------------:-'!'111!"'1 ,_.,. . . ,_.__.. . . .. . . . . .
~

Sunday, November 28,

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S5&gt;unbap mimes -S5&gt;entinel • Page C6

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

The Paw-feet
Seasonal tips
for pet parents
~\l.l

f (\fl k'

.........

h1~

holiua)

~cason.

slmre scaso1; I celebrations

Put Up Pet-Friend!) Decor

Help Pets Get Camera-Ready,

Keep )lll.f pet's ~Jt'et) in 11iml .md help furry fnc•Jds steer clear of
dar ~erous tkcorJtiors.
• llol !lay l·.,nb .11~an c.\tra electncal cords and plugs. h1r pets.
these tl.:'lls ar~. te"lpting ..chew l&lt;'y-.:· Taking extra tim.: to tape
dohnnr 1.01 cr cords 11 ill help pre1 cnt shocks. burns or more
serious inJ~ncs
·
• Chn-,tn&lt;h tr~cs arc sure :l' attr:llt a pet\ attc'ltion Secure
Chnslt'1as trees Ill keep them frow topphng urcr tf a pet should
I~ :o cl•11b th~.m. Us\! then• as a S\.rat~hlllg ro~t or simp!) bump

Just hke the rest of the tiunily. pet&gt; •Jced to look their best tor the
holiday photo or the tradlllonal .;hot on Santa\ lap. TiJ these tips to
prcpJre ) our pet.
1 llclp your pcb look their best \\ 1th a pre-photo bath
• ~or pch that enjoy dressing up. l1oliday outfits 'uch as a
n:inJceror Santa costume. cable knit S\\eater elf hat or jmgle
bell C\1llar ardest11 1!.
• Having treats or special toys on-hand can keep pets from g.enmg
anxious 1\hile inlmc and aho help them beha1c dunng the photo.
To tind out when and where you .:an haYc your pet's photo taken
\\ ith '-)ant, Claws. \tsit In\ 11.pt:tsman.Cillll.

i-J.o l!CI'l.

:llld traditions'' itl· the entire family. including

• fMgo small ornar..d ~. c'pectall) balls. belb and t nsd 1'1at t~re
attrJLtl\e to peh bt.t deadly •fcorsumcd.

four legged family members. \ccord ng to 11
tMilonal PetS'lJ,Irt sw cy. 72 percent ef pc:

parcnh includ~ thw pd 111 holida~ fcsh\ .t.l''i.
'The holida) s ,trc ~bout being '' ith our lo1 cd on.:s and
that inclt~oc' our pch. too:· ~aid Pl·tS'lJal1 \ctcnnan,n ,t·HI Pet
Care bpert Dr. Rvbyn laynes. "\\ hcthcr 1t's i•JcluGing )OU
pet in a tamil&gt; photo, lakin~ them on a famtl) tnp or gn ing
that perfect holiday gtfi or trea!. it\ impottant for Jll't parent$
to conside the urtquc bcha1 tors ol caLh and C\Cr) pet."
A~ tarl'ilie~ c1 cry\\ here kick off the \CNm. PctS!llart has a
IC\\ simple ttp~ to help pet parent) make it a ~afe and en~oy­
ablc tunc for tbeir pds.

TrareJinob With Furn• Friends
\~. 1)

tumiltes tra1el .t :hJs tll'lC llf )Car \\ h~:tl1cr p~t parc!Jts arl' takmg the p~ts alo1'g or ,{'a\~~ ... them at home, ·t\ important to 'llakc
sure :h~1r p..·ts Me' fc, -d ,urnfortablc
• \I parcnh who ~·oard thctr pets ~hou'd look for tanlittcs that
are clean and l·a,, tiicndl). rcspon~" c ~tall and 'tricl polictes
rr health Jlld sati.·ty is~ues.
• 'f pets nr~. included in &lt;1 fam• \\ traH·I ~I· 15. man~ resources
c.. help) ou lind hotels that a-:I.Of'lnt{ldate pets. \ isit
''" wpe's\h wmc.C1l!ll lor moro.: , JII.ITination
1 \IJny produ~.:s Jn: a\,tdr.blc I\' keep pets ,afc n the car.
• K ,tding harnesses :...1d b,,mcrs l'lat sCCL_.C peh In the ba('k
of hi:'' t"Jcte

Keep Pets Calm and Comfortable
rhc hohda) sC;bOn Cal' bt• h~Cl!C for pcb with the hu~tlc ru1d bustle
of partie\. tra\ el and famq dinners. To case pet stress. pet parents
should be mmdful of thr following:
• Pet' may not unders.z·1d \1 hy their usually qutet home ts filled
\\llh people and noi.;c. Pro\tdc p.:ts with a quiet place to retreat.
• Pet parents otkn think they're ..treating" thw pets with table
scmps 'rom the1r hoi iday meab. The danga. say PctSmart
1eterinari~n'· ts that dogs car bewmc ~eriousl) ill from human
foous bccau&gt;c t'1c~ do not ha1 c the satilc dig~sl!w sy~tcm or
nutntionalnecJs as pcopk.
'
• for the most part. p~h ,hou1d sta) indoor.. dunng the cold wmter
111onths. Some oog., ma) not adju,t as \\ell to the cold weather.
'''pet parenb ma) ClllbiJer s\\CJtt:r~ to keep their pets \\ann.

The Best Gifts for Four-Legged Family Members
\Jartha Sh'\\art
fcstiH :\ordk
Fair 1\lc ~\\cater

Wll~ a~ c~timat~d 71.4 t'lllhor petfi led IHH'lc' in the l ) .. mny pN
parc~ts w!il be searc~ ng forth~
perfect pel gi'tl~is hohda' \ca-;tlll.
Pl"tSm 1 oiTcrs spt'ciul IOh treats
,md other great g'lh t~al \\ill r.1alo.:
)OUT p~· ll&amp;t; t~eir taib \\i'h Jl&gt;)
rn,, yea \ 'Jlll~t·ha\ ~ gtfh art
• Chancr and Luck1
he Jdorablc lwli,ia)
Clll .:ctieP Jl'cludc~ ~tuffcd
anit'lals, ornan'CI'b. ~hppers~
bu.\ed cares or gift cards
11 lliL L are perfect In cdchratc
tl-~ holida) ~ea-,on dll~ support
a good cause. too re ;1~rcent
of all purl'mes 111ll hL
do atc!l to PetSmart Charit,t's
to '&lt;1\C !he i1c~ ufhonl\~s
pets. I~c collect :Jn ranges
'rmr. )5 It' \20

ri~hcr-Pricc
ln5plrcd h) classic
hshet-Pril:e icons. the \\hilll\tcal !1M
tiJr du;;:. featun: Items 'uch its the '
X)lobo:Je. Chatter Pup Tdcbone and
Rutl:a Stack. \\ailablc in t\\0 stw
small ($7 991 .tnd large($ 11.99).
• \lartha Sic\\ art Holida\ Collection
Thl hulida\ \'ordtc Fair ·lsk sweater
from the c~dusi\e Martha Sh!\\art Pets
collection keeps your tour-legged family
mcmbas coz\ during the cold 11 inter
month A\aiiable ti.'~ just SI&lt;J.99
• Stod.ings tor Dogs and Cats
PetSmart\ classic holiday 1alue pack
stockings ax filkd with an assortment
of to) s tor cats and dogs. Pet parents
can (liCk a theme that matches thetr pet\
personality. such a~ the merrv pink
gmgerbrcad-man or the da-,sic red and
green rem deer. Pri.:c ranges from $4.99
to Sl9 Q9,

•

ren prrccnt of :111 Challl'l' and l.uck~ \ales j!O tu SU\"C
homeless pets through JlctSmarl Charitie~.

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