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"Shop Locally "

Sponsored by:
Sccuonl6 T2 Rl3 2.9223.' ~tOf SOID.\ 2.9213A
S«tionl6(6oi0).94AEJ. \629A .7niA
Brook.\ Sbarleoe Mae ID Troy Sect 27 l26lt Mld S Pan Of ~1A S Of 5112 EJ. IO.o\ IJ2A
Bruob Slmlne Mue !/Or Truy St l1 t262)T.2 R..l 3 F.3 WFJ'Jd .t0.68A S 1'1 10.08A
Brocis Sbarleoe M!IC W Troy Sl :n t262) MMH)f S 113 Of Rd F.A COil &amp; .88A I~A!A
Brooll Slwltnc Mat &amp;lOr ! roy S«t 2] [261) Mld Of S 1!3 Of Rd EA COil El i.!IOA 15 .4~A
Bllrl Lillian Etlll
Sect. IJ..l1[640J In SPlt1 01" Nt\14 2A
Coot.!. Maulk:¥. oliOr Amanda D Stet 9 t 100) Sw Pan Of 1-4 112A EOf R:d On S Li~~: 4.S2A
Dam Jo~ce .-\
Stet &amp;t640tln 15 Wli S F.nd lA
[)all' Joyce A &amp;JOr Oa11&gt;Helen M
SCct 8 \().101 W Pan Of lA Ne Part Of Sd /4 .46A
Da\t&gt; Joyce A &amp;JOr Oa1i1 Hckn M
Sect K(6101E Pm Of lA Nt Of Sel/-1 Of S" l/-1 .s.IA
[hroi, RKiwd Wil~am &amp;JOr K.Jm~rly Lynn
Srction 16 TI Rl 3 2.00.-\0ut Of IB.978A 2.00.\
Oi~.tm l tndaA
Stet &amp;\MCIIIWX218' S Of School Lot .7S A
SectJ6N'SideOfSA 140A
Ehlm Oenna
5«tJ6NSideOf5A .30A0utOfl .?OA ..llA
Ehlin Oenm1 1
t:blm Ronni~ W
S.:..·t J~ 11001 r-ku Sw Pan~\\' S1de Of !1 .4~ I ~. P.tl.&lt;\
Ebl1nRonmtW
lolSttl ·29l6AcLoi157Nw I/4SwPanOf i 1A~ 10.93A
Fnd~·~ Chls F.&amp; Gold!~ Mc/o Delbert Frtdky

1400J91001 Athey MMWw AID .ki!NG
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151.63
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12-1 1&amp;
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203.40
173U8
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Sl 151162\ Lot I(XJ"X116' Of .15 AOn Naylon Run Rd 214A

404.42

IJOI :M:\0:1 Hamh.&gt;OOA&amp;/llf Htather
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2J21.3 l
l.roll9!ro.l H) -.til RrtOOa \I
Sect. Fmc. H T.Z R.\4 J7A Of 3250A S Pl .37A
&amp;47.18
I-+00700Xll J oc1~ Chiford Et.d do WanW Eblin
Se_i-1 IS 12621Nw Pal1 Of l l9~A Nw Cor 1.61 ..\ U. 1.099A .Sll A 21 .26

I.WI6.'i i!XII

Kaull Wilhani

'"'~ltl22ttl(l

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140~~79000

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1401662000
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Fra:t~on I ~ TI R l~ 4'} ~g2 1 AOut Of 51J.27A &amp; 13.4347A
CAJrOfiU 7A

76_61

m. 1s

Let &amp;lOr Sharon

39~j4
St\.1. 3S \lOO tE F.nd Ex. 2AEnd WOf Ct W.HA
Ruy~hy lot Hcrdld Encl}',y Co Noel Hcrrm~n~
Kitcllen Sha~oo
5.61
LO. 1'12~ 34 , 31 \9, 311~
I 11).~8
S«t.1 8tl~2) NII'Part E Of ll.d. IY.50A
~brtbes WiJ.liam J ~ph /r
Sect. J6(3 19· 3 ~ l l l n 100." Lot Se l l~ , 7.47.A
71fl.l9
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Sed 36 ( 100.31 5~ &amp; 5.l?A Mid N II! W
Nccre Roy ~~ers
Of Stet 1.83A &amp; 3A .83A
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2ji
Norman Harold &amp;lOr Juanita
Sect.27 r262l.SOAOf 12A WEnd -ID.68A SPt JO'X IOO'X68' .SOA
76.97
Nunnan Hmll~ &amp;/Or 11Wlita
9iJ..\ Of II.SOANw Silk 50A Too li1 Nilrne Of C~rry .90A
?12.61
O~~in Hu~hl( W" Palsy
Se\.1. 3 ((1.1{) ) lniKJ Bradbury Surv.
Pe!lnmgtoo Charles &amp;lOr Fillth D Sec II t262 ) Near Mid InS l'rl Of S Of
RdE.t TlM. 0.9 107A{NrwSurl
&amp;~215
48.92
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59$7
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Qllllll s Bertie c/o lri&gt;Payne
Stl.'l .ID U~d 213 &amp; 1/3 or IWA Sw lf.l EI 20A
Reure1 Maedclta J
3298.54
Nw E1 .25A &amp; ~.lilA 5S.
S(:{IJ9
RiJ gv.~y JdTtry L
SectS Rt -7 OlfW Side NOf Highway l.J5A
4.60
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4.9H
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1100
Roush Thr•na! E&amp;JOt Connie L lnt 306 T IN R13W 0.6~7A {)Jt Of lMR.&lt;\ 0.637~
Rw&gt;h Tom E&amp;JOt Coonic l
lOOA LOI IDl &amp; 305 Tl RU .4.~6A.
29.11
Our Of l.oiJO.l &amp; .9&amp;3 OJt Of Lot 305
Secr24 Lol 1305 RIJW, TIN I.!lOAOu1 Of l.982A
933jJ
Roush Tom E&amp;!Or Corulit l
Runyon Jtrry &amp;:101 Vanrw:ssa
S«l 35 IMOl \\i Pan Of 43.56A EPar1 OfW IOOAOutOf14A 5A 148.1J5
Stet J5 (b44.HSw Part Of Wqt Rd 30.32A
1780.1
Runyo• Jt rry &amp;lOr Vanncssa
Stction 26 (640 ) ..1421 A &amp; .0255A
Stafle!i Howard &amp;Alr Mary
Cnmhi!led For A Toul Of .367M
IJI.62
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32.15
Sey·kr Mi ~ hlld M
Stctl3 !100.382) WOfRdSOfWillis .12A
3.45
Shoemlker Roge r D
Sl33r389J I52'N~72' WOn Rd .~bon Run
Shoemllkn Ruger D
h JAN &amp; .nA .25A
99.60
Stet B (3H9J Nw Pan Of lOOA Lot 2~9 JOA
125.Y5
Shocmillo;er Roger D
167.67
Shoemlktr Roger D
St:cr33tl~9t . l 5 .-'. Out Of 25ASe Part Our Of IOOA ISA
l.l-1
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S..·c B (100.389) C~lr Prt Of IOOA U. 38~ .OJA
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Set:t33TI Rl3l.ot3S9 1.559AO.n0f2.179A 1.~59A
Sttwan Judith Lyn~ c/o Jud~ Hall lOOA L01 JO~ Tl R13 Penll)' SL~rVey I.1739A
1040.82
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107.21
Ta~ l01 Mary ·
Sect. 8 (640) I ll Radford Surv. h . Coal HA '
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Tayl01 Mal]·
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7390
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74.30
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Wilson Ch risti~ a K &amp;lOr ROO:ru Jonathan Errol
-*2.50
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7.77
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MIDDLEPORT \IILLAGE ·MEIGS LSD

•

1Si.li58H)ll Baktr Susan
l.ct 2~ I' S Sirlt b I'X3T Off Rear
IS0\ 73 1000 Rater SuSJln l
L:t 25 10' S Side Ex . Strip ~"X!i(J NSidt
Lotl~hi ' S
15017.m xl Baker SuSlln L
1~16f!OOJ Cit Grou~ Consumer Finance
Lot t20J Sheme ld 20 18' NSide OfW lf2
1500167000 CitGroop Cunsumer Fin.IDL·( lr11.· Lut (191 Sl1effieiJ N1924'S SiUc or WIn
l50148600J Darst Jetfrey &amp;JOr Kill)'
Lot 110 1'. Jmt! JRd. Add.
1501485LW U3rsl Jeff~y &amp;iOJ Kit!)·
lol!OO P. JonesJRd. Add
~'fk)68(00) Darsr Jtff~y R&amp;!Or Kittic S
Loll-I) P. Jonc:d Rd. Add
150068200) flarstJeffreyR&amp;AlrKitt~S
Lot 143P. Jonts3RdAdd. Nwl l4
.150067m:l Darst Jeffrey R &amp;/Or Kinie S
Lol 142 P. Jones 3Rd Add. WIt1
150115400) Oa\'isJOOnM
Loi 49Coalflllt30'EEnd
· 1500367000 l&gt;d\isWod)'lleE(/Q[).'fUihyl.Davi&gt;
l.oi9 H&amp;RAdd
1500]6(ffl:l J);r;i ~ Wolyne Eclo Dcrothy J. Dal'is
lol. 8 H&amp;. RAdd
I~ I)Jnfrt Colleen
loi48J 1\im 460 51J'X IOO'
l~0202'XO'l Evcrcom Sy ~ rem ~ Inc
Publit Uriliry PeM11al
l5!XXJ8700J FinkWilli:l!Tl C &amp;JOt Paula S · lnt (43) Ml25 Fr Mid On Walnlll
15001l80000 H:Jynes Durio
Lot 59 Bellan 2Nd Add fu 18' N
150053~ H ~yne) Dorio
Lol1061k~an Add.Nlf.2
15!XUIXKXJ Hcrm ~n Rid C &amp;lOr VOnda S Lot 70 Coalport70 Sc Part h 50'X60' Sc
150003000 Holley Roonit &amp;iOr Elva
Lot (22) Behan 1St Add ·16' N
1500432001 Holley Roonit &amp;/OJ Elva
Lot (21) BehariiSI AddS 112
lilt 38'XM'X36' ~16' Ne PI El.16' N Behan'S ISrM:I.
IW!Ol(KI(] Holley Roonit &amp;fOr Eln
1~39!illl Jeffers C~rles D&lt;l'lid F.!al
Lot 103 Beh111 Add
J.D; 121khan 1St Add
Im21000 Kitd~en Charles &amp;JOr Sharon
1500822000 Kitchen Ow"les ID Sharon
Lot 131khan 1St Add fu 32' friJIII NSide Of Lot
l50196.'ifl00 Kitchen Owles lee &amp;!Or Sbaron Sect. 29 (640) Sw Cor. Of 141 .14A NOf LeadingCr 4.(J4?A
l~Sm l.ew'is J'tt!&amp;Y
W (47) S~ffield 47·S if2
ISCll)'(ffiJ l.ew'i&gt;Pt=~~~
Lot {33) Sheffttld H.S 112
1500879!WI MarsMII F.! len G
l.ol2 Palmer'SAdd 50' Off S Sidt:
15009i}t()00 Mcdaniel Thelma do Tlfllmy Ball &amp;.ItO}' McDaniel
l.ol69 CoaljXlfl .1St\ ESidt Prt Of 1 /~A
1S004S l!XXl t.l eadowollil'id lullv=r
lot (691 Behan 2Nd Add ·17' Off NSide
1)0045200J Meadow&gt; David Luilier
lol ~68~ Behan 2Nd Add l~' Off S Side
150.).191!00) Michael lknist
Lot 81 f'ltimer'S lSI Add W Elld 4H'XW
150.).1971))) Michael Iknise
Lot 81Palmer'S \Sr E End 4~X40'
IS00312!XXJ MidtllepmPenterosu1Chnrch Lor92BehanMd52 112' (111WEnd 50X5l.5!J:It
15009900Xl Mills Nichola!! D
Lor 373 Pomertl)'"S Add Wl/.2
15009tliOCKl Mills Nicholas D
Lot 372 Pomertl)·'S Add Wl/2
ISC0091000 Morrison Jimmy
Lot 66 Coalpon IOOA Lor 310 tli'X60' . 64'X75' SPan
15010S4000 PayncBOObyE&amp;JOrlrisA
Lut400Porncro:.·
I ~ I OW.l.Kl Pt.yneHOOb~fuscne&amp;lri&gt; A
W J98 Purncro}'
1501575())) Poll·tiiShelby M
loll16BoswoohAdd
15001 .\J(JM} Ren!al; lJnlimilf\J do Mikt Iones Lot 26 Elthan El6'X':Itl' E Pal1
1500532000 ¥yrMUr Lawrenct J~h
lol 309 Hortoo Add. Sl/2
1501266(00 Slack lenore S CJo Helen Slack . Lol 309 178.&lt;\ El J3AEt JSA I 21 A
1500386!XKJ Smith Kahleto M
Lo180 Bos11·orthAdd EJ. 20' Prt U.
I!IXJ5'XOOO Tipton William R
Lut 18
I~Y2!l1Ml Tyrto: Chlrleo AEtal
Lot 329 l.uwer Porn
I~!J40.Xl Tyr~ Charles A Bal
Lot m L:r.r.·er Porn
l~1 1 5tl~ United Pentecos1al Church Inc An OhiOCorp
Lot 72 Bthoo Add' b 18' Off S Side
1501554000 Whitle)' Gifford A
U~ .\ 38'X24' Front ins On Alley El ..001 AOur Of lDI 3. Jl20A
1 50 1 5~7!XMJ Whitl e~O i ffordA
lol 8 22' WEnd El 24' Ell ~' OtT E Side 7.0'XMJI'
150.1 55!XXIO Whit lC}' 01flord A
Lot 7 40'X40' Fmmins Off Mill St EA .OOIA .036.'\
lmJ541XN.l Wh1l le) t11!Jord .".
Lot PlA3.7.&amp;1 ShetfKid 40' Out Ux130708 J.W. Jores Al:kl.
1 ~.11mooo Wh11le)' &lt;.1tfford A
lol8 24' wEntl2-*'X60'
l 'iiJ1 ~71 !XN.l Ye ~u ger Oonn1 J
S«1 29 t6K\) 119.2 1A N Of ltadmg Cr Wor Mid .298A
POMEROY VIUAGE . MEIGS LSD
I«.002ml Arook! Grover &amp; Viole! L
Sob. 91 f2 .SOA .50A
INJ263JOOO Auli Kellda &amp; Braun Michatl clo Ken11Eth hn
Lo! 75' X 200' Fr2ST'2N RUW
lf001~7(XIO Auli Kelllla &amp; Braun Mi~hitd do ~1111elh Bmn
L111 7 lllrxns On w~ide Of (('( tl
l(f01 5(ffl() Aull Kcnda &amp; Braun Mi(h&lt;~el c/o Kenneth 8nun
· Lot g 200'X55' On WSide Of W M
l(ffl)32txKl BiiCI' Builders &amp; ·t~tve h~l'i Lid l:.bt m Suh. 1112·2 1!2
lfi:OOJ I(JIXJ Bill!r Builders &amp; Devei0].'( 1SLui Lot 432 Suh..11/2 40'X1 ~·
1001-WSOOO RiiCI' Builden; And Develllpel&gt; Lid Lot 252 ·18 IS' lAir Of Mid Lot 27 1/2
1001447(XXJ B ~~er Builders And Develllpm ltd Lui 27 Nii)IDrS Run An Strip 45' Of Lol27 1/2
1(0013700) Bill'llhart Wil ham &amp;lOr BrtnW S lol514 E~.l 0' Stnp Frontlgc &amp; Goin BilekTo Obrien Lol
IWJ707COO Bamhar1 Wil ham A&amp; Brtoda
Lot 18-262 70A b.. ~·S trip NSide l Smal l Tri. ?OA
IWI548COO BQI'lon loc~
lol426 S Side Of Lol42664'XlHX42.T .22A
· l.n!426 Strip 24'Xl&amp;J'X 2113' 01 NSide
lffi i47&amp;!XM"I B11r1on Joey 1
l ffi i ~790:Xl B11r1oo Joey 1
Lol426 Sub Lot t 3 Lol f.t 26 661'J Frontage X17S'
Lo! 426 '{16 U3X119' SwW 2
lffiH17ClXJ Banon Joe)' J
1(00)88('00 Ba\IIT Hrrnc:r &amp; Irene
LotH3
l(f)l92111l0 B~~rer Homer &amp;lOr Irene
W&lt;lll
I W17K4U ~ J lk!llrTimc4hy&amp;Pamela
Lollb720'X4() Sd :or.
ltil17[ 111JI Btn11 Timc4hy &amp; l'imla
Lol lllt&gt; w 25
l li.C)\7111 1~! Brolll'n Harold D.l'!J' Lynn S
U~ 189Suh. ll Nw0f 25M-211El. IO' E
lll'fll/5101 Hro11·n Harold [) &amp;lOr Lynn S LJ11 (ll9 Sub. D 11!2" X~54 " Nv. [rJr

n

6JO
/6.95
278.74
33.62

524.22
7&amp;.42
161.07
20.80
Jim
392.67
1 98.~&amp;
73.63
495.31
J4.1J
22.40
1104.64
294.81
107858

583.93
30.22
46.16
151.91
434.117 .

1Jl,76
1llli
24.26
365.34
40~7.00

396J5

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1600174all Browu Harold 0 IJOr l}llD S Lot 119 Sub. Ex. &lt;11X7'' Sw Ox. t !it Cot
1b0017600l Brown Hlrold D aJ0r lyan S Lot 119 Su~ 27-40' On Bullenllll Sl
lf001l100l BTtl1111'HamldDtlJOrlynnS Lot!B9Su~25·26-l&amp;LaodinJ .
l!'all710CXJ BrownHaroldDaJOrlyMS
lftl~91XXl
1~3171XXl

lf:ffl3 1600l 8f011111H&amp;rold0wll!Ut L)'ltllS l.oiii9Sub2~ 8l.u.ii fll!ISIIbC
Ictl262JClXl Burthamrr Cm.:l)· kKlr Rontt Euzenr
IOOA Lot .nl .IIA
lb002611XXl Cantr Pluhoe E&amp;/Or Caner John W
l.o 1" ' - HiU
16010lOIXXl Clc Wtd Michael AID Or anal ~ 2511 X CDr .22.-\
IWJI~ ?IXXI Crtnt Wilbam B ol MargmlJ
lot 100 ·](1MU5ASub31f2 IJ3A
16(]114400:1 Cr~r~t William BolMargartll Lot3076.llAE·PartEl.. 9n ~J13A
llrJII-Wrn Crane V.'l11iarn B.lMargmrJ Lot iOO ·lOil l.lSASubB/&lt;1 l.l5A
llrJII~ml Cr;meWilfiam l il MiiJiutrl
Lot308 1JOAE Pan 1.30A
Sm 20 Fr (7T2 R\3 SOfUmioo AI'C .u"X IOO' .0918A
1002215001 Crites l ind!
(),II Of 22A .091
1600lWOOJ Crite1 Lmd:t
Lot 262 ·17 75'X100' S OfUnioa Avt
16()XJI600J D••'idsoft Brenda
lot 300 Right Of \\iay S' Wtde Tbrougll Middle Of La: lOO
l(:ffi)I500J Davidslln Rrendll
Ull 1H S Par1 Of IJ3 b . ChlJit'h Parcel
Lot 262-~ lASe PI Of 1&lt;1.60A St 1'1 Of 46.54 !A
ltffil36IXII Dttlal'llle Mich.xl
16CKXHSOOJ Ol:lla1·aJJe Michael
l.o 4JO
160C()3900J Dl:ll~VJJ!e Midwd
lul431Suh 3-4-Hi &amp; Part Lot 7
l(ill)37(Kll Dtlla\"lik Michael
Lol 429
l(i(l"()4((U) Dtll•nJlt MJcb.ae l
lol431 Ex. Lou Sold
1001 28/0C(I Aora PaulL
lo4 407 112 Sc Col'.
llrJ246100J Hairy Vicki I ID Haley CMll'y L&amp;!Or Haley R Bt:njllffi
Lot (262·18JJ5APart Of 7.SOA JSA
1 ~181&lt;00 Hill Leonard&amp;: Con
Lot 12 .D3AlO'X113' Ber.SprinJ.l Fi'la St .03A
1(iK)I8200) Hill Leonanl &amp; Curd
lot 12 Nayloo Run S4'XII1XII4' NSi&lt;k,
l600J0.10Cll Hudson David W&amp;!OrCoo~er Opal Carol
lol50 Sllb 2.·25 Front
1600103(0) Hudltln David W&amp;!Or Conger Op.al Carol
lol SO SOO 50' WSide
16014950CXJ JOOnSOil Or.id Gary &amp;iOr Tammy fJiz.1Delh
Fr 2S T'2N R13W Loc 262 Ne&lt;A' S ~rw y l.06A
1601&amp;3400.1 Julm100 Terry L li &amp; Mtlissa clo Melis.sa Johnson
l.ol303 Ckat Of W 303 25' Wide X94' X IOJ'S" .M4A
16018331XJJ JOOnsoo Ttrry L11&amp; Melina do Melissa Johnson
lol 12
160156&amp;KII Klein WilliamL
PI Of lol t3CI7 40'XSO'
160126.500) Knopp Charles P
l.o l%
1601 \ISOXI Laatz Shirky
lot 72 1(1 E Side
1601 117000 Lanu Shirlc:y
Lul 74 20' WSide On Condor St
1601 \l{ill) Lantz Shirley
Lol73
1602 1lllXll Lt fflellilll')'let
Ft10 TINR13W 0.511AOuiOfi.OOA O.SIIA
1601 86200) Lthew Ottryl
loi~36SwCtT. Of l.lll 5J6 .lilA
16010.~t;ID) Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Andrea D lol86 Nay I~ Rnn
160106)(XXJ Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Amlrta D Lot ~5 Naylors R~n
16010600)) Lundy Jeffery H&amp;lOr Andrea D Lot U Naylor&gt;·Run
160105JltXX) Lu11dy Jell~ry H&amp;lOr Andrta D lor 10 274 C LoA Ne Part 9A Wf.Dd Ex CoalllOA
l6010731XXJ L}'ons Lind.ley L Eta\
lot 581TriNe PBfl Of Lol 581
l602 32W:U Meig! (kll(ral HMpilal loc do 'Lynn Brown
l.oiJ-ISIO'StripOfS,.·CIY.
16023230)) Mcigs Gentral Hospital I ~~: do Lyn~ Brown
lot 211 l 1!1 Off f.asl Side
1602J23(XXJ Meigs Gentral Hospital loc cia l ynn Brown
Lot 220 23112' OffS Si~
1602J220ll Mei g~ Genet a! Hospilaliil: do Ly1111 Brown

Lot220N28'0nUultMiutSt
160.2321(00 Mcig.o;Gc:neralHospitalloc clo LynnBrown
\.ill l&amp;4 S 1/2 &amp;. Tri
160232400J Meigs General Hospitalloc do lynn Brown
lot 221 50' Oa Buttemul
160232700) Ml!ig!i Gt!neral ~pitalloc clu lyfUI Bruwn
Lot 222
1602605001 Ntll'land Grant A Eta\
Part Of Lol2 WSidt Spring Avt. 2.29'X80' Out IX 1X81J
llillJnOCll Old Pamh U The
Lot 105 E In
160'l1-4YOOJ Purnty Michael
Loi 399 F.J 25'XSIJ WF.nd
1601 m(KJI) Quail ~ William0 Sr &amp;lOr Pa&gt;·ne Iris
Lot 100.257 S &amp;ld Of .II AN Pn OfS11b II lf2 .(ijA
160029J(KJI) Rental! Unlimited An Ohio Partni:11hip de Mib: Jooes
W. 199 NCor S Of Sub 17 8o.nap Add
l60WJ.'iOOJ Rtnlil s Unlimited An Ohio P'arlnenhipclo Mitt Jones
Part Of Lot 2 W. Side Sprin&amp; A\'tlluc 4.7 1' X*!'
160074200:! Rtnlals Unlimited An Ohio f"arttmhip do Mite Jooes
W. 42S Weht Add. 500. 16
\6002900ll Renlll s Unlimited An Ohio Parmeniip do Mike Jones
lot 17 Burnap Add Nr Cor
· l(iX)29!(XNJ Renlal~ Unlimited An OhiCI Pannc:rshipf;iu Mike lL11t5
Loll7 BumapAdd
16009~ Rhodes Robtrt Mid~ael &amp;lOr Shfll)fl Lynn do Anthony Wa
Loli60T.2R.13Und 1/80fSub&amp;Coal
16009R40Cll RhOOe~ Robert MicMrl &amp;lOr Sharon L)'llll doAntbooy Wa
Lol l61EJ:.Cotl
\60098500) Rhode~ Robert Michael &amp;lOr Shii!OO L)'llll c/o Anthony Wa
w.~•~

Ritchie Cltarles A &amp;JOr K.ltlly A Lol l224 .28A E Of Fti~r A Merrick: Ex. COil .28A
Roosh' Srepharut Pnce
Lol37 Naylors Run
Sboemlkt1Roger D
lot 325 MNhaiDc Sl
SismAnnM
Loi16NaylonRun
ltill6.~ Sttwart Carolyn A '
Lol 2S Unroln Ht:iglvs Add
160187900:1 Slim mel JllllltS R&amp;JOt Stimmel Jeffrey AdoJoyce Ward

160115300}
16018B100J .
16016830Cll
160091400)

1523.04
124.119
3787.75

""

151.47
7&amp;1.!19
6~54

74.47
109.32
169.13
123.82
401 .71
.~HI
s1 1 .n~

1537.59

VideWJrn 1JJC cJo l}'nn B1own
Videocorn Ill( do l)'DD B1o..n Loi i&amp;S 25'S Side
Videocom Inc do Lynn EiMll Lot IM ll' N Side
Videuom Inc c/o Lynn Br011'11
Lot 222 112 40' 2Nd Sr
Videocom Inc do Lynn Brown Lot3&lt;18 Ex. 10' S!ripCMOfSw Cor.
Wnltoo Scrnt &amp;JOr Geli
Llll498
l(iM)4()400) 'W'altoo Scott &amp;!'01 om
Lol 499 Tri. Lo!
1 ~800) Walton ~ott l &amp;/OrG:ri L
1.«496
ll'roS90lXl Waltoo Scott L &amp;lOr G:ri L
Lol491
IW I ~ Walton Scott L &amp;/OrG:ri L
lol l4l
1(:00138(0) Wall!lll Scott LID Gc:ri l
La: 4\0 8YX IOO' Sw Cor.
1(:002WOI WnnH~rrin A&amp;JOr Shtl ~· L La: 262 ·2S .2~A 011 S Une f.l Cotl .22A
IWI930COO Will Carl &amp;lwia &amp; MWI Jean Lot231 Suip M' W'llie ktOflotlS
1{(10(\9800) Wilson Josepil A &amp;lOr HeruJmy M~D Edo Maurt.en H
LoiSS6 Suh l
1~70.KXN.l Wilson J~pll AWr Hellfle§!YM~n Edo Maureen H
lfOO'i~

SCIPIO toWNSHIP • MEIGS IJIO
171XX&gt;75(MXI Beha Sle\!n E &amp;./Or Mary C
lol: Scct.24 2.432.-\
IJIXX&gt;74000 lkha S!e~~~:n E &amp;lOr Mary C
Lot Scct.-24 (6401WPar1 Of 50A SCtNw lf&lt;l 20A
170'R20001 Bishop lim A
5e(t 14-I S Frl RIIW TIN 1.114A [).(t Of IS.75A 1.114A
171XXJ81ro2 Carr Brian D
170'J75600l Carr BrianD

21).01

170026700]
1700269000
1700268(MX)
17002({:00)

29. 11

1700402{XNJ

l6.96

17004010Cll
170039IJOOJ
17lXI4fmlJ
170061ll!XKJ
17006tmXJ
1700648001
1700182®1

952.60

135.32
471.98
1011l.114
. )9.41

10.65

1?00~1160CU

58.~1

1700.14SOOI
17002S2002

8-13.57

1 7004 1 ~002

1#1.95
nfii.8Y

1700543!XXJ

16.40
411.68

17003-l.lOOI
"1700472(((1
1700473001
1700152001

8!6.07
m .'15
127.83
29.25

1700~1

17001 82002

1~ 1 .8&amp;

1673j7
\7).15
5l ll

17003400ll
170034\(J)j
17tl:t'WIIO

.14 ~Jl

1700~621100

~ 102JH

17006fl!nl

9.JO
12 .~5

l.o ll6
Wilson JMeph A&amp;lOr HenrKssy Mllllreen Edo Mauretn H

Llll262·1 7 S Side Nnt To Sub. 2 Of ~Sfl I. I~A
160163300) W{).X!AIIenC
l.ot439TriLot11
IW189(ID) Yonker ~dE ID RUS&gt;elllayme C Lot 3 Naylors R111
l601~931XXJ Yunl.t:rDrnd EID Rusoclllayme.C Lot 6 NayloiS R111 '
1001 ~81!IDJ Yooko- David EIDRussell !ayme C Lot I Naykn R111
l601881XXXJ YW!midEffiRuwllJaymtC l.ot2NaylonRt~~~
l(:4,)189(00J Yooi:O"l.laYidElliRuMCII!aymtC Lot4Nayi01SRoo
1Wf89200J Yonker Da\'id Elli ll.u!i!tll JaymtC Lor: SNaylors R11n

~ 9. 79

49.79

l.o!111llS ln'OffWffido
W&lt; l4l

160246300)
1602464!XX.I
16024661)))
16(]241\SllXl
161l18130CO
16IX»&gt;S(XX)

4Q43
46.81

Lot 119SuhD. &lt;I2'X75"SwC«.

BruwnHwldDJr
U.\19SubDXCor
Bruwn HwHJ Ow &amp;/0! Lynn S Lot 119 Sub 31111 FMl.

17((165500)

Sect .!3 l iN R14W .4221A t:Nt Of 140.00A .422JA
Sect 33 S&amp;W PartOfNwl/4 &amp; SOfWpOfNe l/4 lA
Out i42A lA
W (6J

Erwin Pili lip &amp;lOr Brtnda
Erwin Philip &amp;lOr Brenda
l.ot (8)
Erwin Pliilip &amp;/Or Bn:nda
lot (7)
J., I ' ) )
Erwin FMip &amp;lOr Brenda
F.rwin Philip L&amp;JOr llrenda F I "I r;
&amp;win lliilip L&amp;/Or Brenda F loll&lt;
Fswin Pl1ilip l &amp;1() Brenda .F W&lt; 12
&amp;win Pl1ilip L&amp;lOr B~end'a F Llll33
Fole)' Rel:«ca l!Or Bill
1640) 2.M2A Out Of 42.27A S Side Of 143 .46A
Foil!)· Rkca &amp;lOr Bill
St (640) SOf f'otnero)' l Harri50f1\o·ille 2.192A Of 2.M2A'' 2.192A
Fulayler Sherry
Sect 8TI Rl4 SrC~Y l.OOA Ou! Ofli.S23A I.OOA
Hall loftne
Fration 31 nN KJ~W Ulil A01.11 Of IB.!XIA I.(IJIA
llalf lo!t~~e
Sect 20-21 X Plt1 Ncan Forts Of Rd 1.08A
H anin~ l.ylc Bruce
Sect](ITIRI 4 t1165A, O!lt0f31 .42A ~. SMA
Hoff Jamu Uoyd ,tJ()I Barbara M
Fr36T7NRI4W 28.289A0ut 0f54.SIA 28.289A
H o~DavidAI Ien
Sed~ TINR I 4H9AOIAOfi2.&amp;15A l49A
HuwWCcr4ld \\' &amp;. BlrbaroA F.ul Stt l2nN R14W E End Of Nl/2 ~4.876A
bi.24AbiJ3A 62.!14M
llowud (J(rtJd W&amp;10' llarbata A Sttt12 TI R14 1.24A Oot Cf93.32A U~A
Kcn~~edyPe11JE
"l..o1Scct· l 4· 1~Nd'an0f31.50A 5.50A
KenntdyPmy E
lillStd· I4 ·15(262)NtPart .50A
KingJoon l
Fr lnR\ 4 1.9S6At&gt;.J.Of20.89A 1.9S6A
KykRobert W&amp;!OrTtrtsa l
Sec8TINRI4 .f.OOAOu!Of 27.014A 4.(X}A
CA!nne IGm!x:rly l ynu du Milrla Hall
Fooioo 31 TIN RI4W2.118.4. O.t Of IUXlA 2.\I&amp;A
f'rm1 We§ley 0 lQr Christina lot ~t·J E End Of sin Of NEin 1/4 Ell4 413 A IUiOA
Prra~I W!$\ey OIDChmti na .SC.:IHJ R.I4 3.-40A
363.61
Pntt Todd &amp; Shtlly
Sttil nN RI 4W H 20A Out Of 37.?64.-\ 5.120A
Qlllvey lrl§l' ph C lt Flal
fu:\ 2TIN RI 4WNOfRd F.d.80A F.dJII6A l6.496A
Retve&gt; EtMI N Era\ cJo Alice Ru~ ll
Lot Sect.-32 16401Mid. or Nw 114 8.14A
Recm'Eugene W&amp;lOr luam ll Mlot Seer. -10 Mid. On S Line lOA

1&amp;40
l6.ll
M.'lO
30126
l'9.1l
9!0.n
Jj3
116l U

ALONG THE RIVER

IJ!Xlll l(li) San-E WI WawrCarol)l
l.oS.. -I HA.OutOIIJ4,41.\ScCa M
lliXlll'llll -""'"'RW.Slon!R
S«IT7NR1~W U78AOIOf 3U'JA 1.178A

IJ0061J002 1lnoloolpi-W.C)oillioW
5«30T7114l.WACb:Of'6.651A 11MA
IJ001f&gt;ml WwdMoipm
l.o(II1701!NSido
IJOOloll(li) WwdMopoo
l.oii.Bcll.oflOANU.. 1.7!A. LO'l!OA .6li0A
IJ0076J(IX) WwdMoipm
l.o(l91

· 2.67

17002620C0 Ward ~aret

loi(:!O) 120 b Slrip Sold To lamn WU4

11.97

,..,

t10082((ll l WnerlerryJT

Set2T7NR1&lt;1 JOJXIAt)J10fWUllA IO.OOA

&lt;17.35

SimON 11lllMIIIP · IIOOIIIEIN LSD
lllll'll lOOl AnM Rd&gt;ot KliOr II 4oft
Se,ll'!TI R121JJ8A Out Oil. lOlA. ~IJA LlliA
I!Ill 29HDJ A1100 Romt EI:JOr Detn K Sect. 2&lt;1 S Part Of .llA Nt Pl Of 107 AN 3A

124.03
29122
,l,J&lt;i

EloiiC Maye~ ~110'

Diles
Hearing Center ()ttit;
Diane McV•y - M.A., CCC·A, Owner Audiologist

. 'Keep Your Fork':
SK race turns loss into
awareness, scholarships, Cl

l06.1'
I.S6J1:1
171.11

&amp;

•oo
7.10
1&amp;.19

2JJ2
11.'1
4&amp;12
81.14
281U7
11&lt;1.61

1ll71
11.97
56191

!IIXI62HXKI BeanM&amp;rYta!JOrRhea
l*X!n~ Bun Mamt 4JOr Rbel I
10172)00) Bean Marvi1 4JOr Rhetl
I!KXW!UlXI BWICt Dollald P
1mmn:l BIIIICt Dooald P

SS.&amp;8

!IDSS100l
1!11!084002
llll083002
I!IJI OI!8lXI

I!lXl((OlXl
l!DU3&lt;t!DI
111:0337(XKI

19.07
134.51

1100119000
110011ml
lllXJ516(J)l
I!1Xl70SIJXI

W\1.00
l!lll342!XKI
1.)4

924,1l
2...,
9ll00
11 .11

lllXlii2&lt;1(JXJ
1 !001~8llXl

Lot21SubA

141.12
932.79

1Al174 18'X14~' Sw Par1
1Al17&lt;1 Sub. F32'X I45'
B~~tmlaiD doLai Ritdlie
Sei.116T2Nki2W2AOuiOfiOJOA 1A
CamDoJamcsAW'Suh R Lot2112TIN R\2W U 31A ()tt0f 28.56A 4.4J lA
CamWo James AID Such R \.GI293 T2N Rl2W18.1!12A ()II Of 27.'~4A \S.S820A
Cwahan Jamt~ A~ Sum R lot 29411N RI2W Se Of 44A New SUI'Yty 9.4JA
Coltill! Thu.M
Sed 23 Ncrth N AOf 3A IA
Scet. )() Nw Comer El. COli 6A
DJ~ Jobn C
D.lrst John c
S... JON Eod Ex Coal IIA
Sm.IOOW &amp;d • . 61. A • . ~ l4A
lni.!JolmC
Sect. Xl SOf N&lt;fOA COlli 29A
1&gt;Jn1 Jolm C
Hlines N111blnJ1
T2 RI3100A Lot '"!1} 1.95.4. Out Of l5J!A 1.95A
JOOIIDI )eflJ Michlr:l Jr ID [)oo:jhy A
Sett. 22E PI Of 6.30A Nw Part l.25A
lawson Robenl.ce Jr &amp;lOr Detmh K
Sen J EEol.£cal • .liA • .lA El1JiA E&lt;l.i7JA Ul1A
sUti6Abw16'X49Rd&gt;. W&amp;d 2.\
I.Gt 61 Sub. B. bb'Xj()'.
Mmley Pw:la Jllltclo f'amel1 HyseU
Sect. a 111 Hect s.n. 1"

Sea 2UDd 1/2 Of 10.91A Nw l/4 Of 132 lied S!trv 5.47A

2l.S2

JmiSIJ(XKI Mutinezltlymond&amp;iorKimberlyS

~18.78

l!mSSOOll Malrit~M111JL
1ll'028&amp;0CO Mmril~ Many L!lOr Debbit
lllXJ956IlXJ Pickt:nsEberi&amp;AlrOelorl
llm98ml PowelllcrryF&amp;KlrMarp~et

304.61
347.13

1161.19
5.7~

6..S9

S..2(1J21112Hc&lt;IS"' lA

llltCMWOOI Rodenu lOICJ* P &amp;:lOr Alit.~' D
IIJXI48(ll)2 RoushllclnJ

S«t. 4AilE1. 20AEEod&amp;El.3.17A U60fl39.S1A l.~A
Lot J6().J223100'X100' .25A
St.ct 12UJOJtOf2l.50A UlA
Sttt3Wif.20fEifl .[)A
Sec! 16T2NRI2W .ll7A0ur0f29.7&amp;7A .01A
Scctiooi6T2NRI2W 1.466AOutOf29.787A J.466A
Sct.:tillll l ~ T2N R12W 1.98A Out Of 29.717A 1.98A
Seal6T2RI2 11.1 5A&lt;:N10f26.27 1A 11.15A
IOOA l.ol291 TIN RI2W H.2f»A
OJ!Ofl !.76AEl i.023A7.186A
IOOA Lol291 TlN R1 2W 9.719A Olll Of28..'i6A 9Jl 9A
Sect!OT2 RI2JJXIAOutOfUlA I.OOA

110042IIIXI Sa!"ClydoE I
1100-l ShoouT.,
111))38-f(XKI Shm5Terry

l.ol8Ein .~A
5«18TlNR1217j71AOut01&lt;6.597JA 17.l71A
5«18 TIN Rl2W NOfNJn OfNell.f

11l'4l\18fi/.XXl Smith Doolld E oliO! VicUe J
1111161JIJXI Sntilh 1m) L
l!m3411lXl Smilh Ten)' L

Sect 3WOfW\/2 El Call 40A
City Dump
Sect. 12 ·19 Sw Put OfSe 1/U. St Pin a Sw 1/4 34.811\

l!lllnilll Sptrur John H

Scet8Nw l/20fSwll4 40A

l!lll33S004 PylesRand~Kdostwon.HMWY
1!111335005 PyltsRandyKdoSharonHanty
!llli33S006 pYle~ Randy KcfuSharon HIIMy
1!11133S007 PylnRandyKdoSbaronHi!Oey
lll\100001 Rodctw IOICJ* P.tiOr Amber D

7.67
7140

ill!

&amp;.:.I S37A F.Jr:I7.571A 28.7~A

13ltl!

Jl7.6l
IH3S.SI

4.59
1027.95
649.10

3).)4
lS3

lJI
8Ll9
132.11

441.10
)4,.,

l LJI

• High school basketball
action. See Page 81

BY MICHELLE MILLER
MMILLER@M YOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - Felipe
Beach is behind bars.
Beach, the 36-year-old
Bidwell man accused of the
attempted murder of his
gi rlfriend, is now in custody
after almost two months on
the run thanks to the cooperative efforts of local, state

m.Zti
&lt;12.17

312.78

237.22

Yoong~IP.ti(XAmyL

ccrnen C\arles wIii

·1'10047001

1900142000 lliddlca..JRW.Iq,!A
1900291001 EYIIll l"'Jlll AC- L

199J9
3S1.7 1

l!lOXI!IIIm ~Toot

l!iWIIKmJ JohnsootemaL

PanOfFra125TIR121.00AOutOfi~JXIA

1.64
11.50
42.37

111.16
179.19
1!6.89
751.63

J06,8l
1611.07

289.~9

74.11

100,08
18l.4l
937.82

1111.40
427.88

1983.01
12li.64
),7')

44.16

194.63
UXIA

Sect. 16 !Mil) In~ W•J/2 Oflteyloldl Let On S line J8A
l.o 8 HMl
5«1 9-ll TlN, R12W, 1.06A 0.. 01 4,«!.\
50&lt;1.16 16401WSi&lt;loOfiMl.olll.\
Secl.\2·16(640} In~ Win OfReyookls Lot On S L.llle J IA

INSIDE

87t47

97732
l.IIO
!84.2&amp;
13~125

l02111
1662,42
440,4)

.• Search warrant
:yields drug charges.
:SeePageA2
• Local Briefs.
.SeePage AS
:• Cyclone kills at least
·1,723 in Bangladesh.
SeePage AS
• Hocking College
trustee named in
Pharmacy Board
complaint. See Page A6
• State fair's at-the-gate
ticket prices to increase.
See PageA6

493.40

Wolf Add .3431A New Survey

2l'XX»&gt;IOOJ B.-nllart Thomas l.tJOr Debora 93A Lol299 TIN R13W WEnd II Buff EstEl .73A

464,64
Ml92
lll.64

N"' Ex.2'11A &amp;CI.04A .6
Lot 3HiJhllwn Slbdivi!ioo
20011 lllOOO B~&lt;tlcy Chooleo
lOOO iliiJXI Budl&lt;yCiwlo&lt;
Lot 2Hi&amp;hiM Sllbdivisioll
2{XIJJ2!100J Courts VanS IJOJ l'a•l• J do VICiorCooou

325.44
3~3,81

4S.2 l
74.93
Sl.S9
81.S9
81.511

81.59

13&lt;1.93

11 l!J4
284.19
8!&lt;1
91.01

l6Jl
l6.7l
llll
70062
5.61
lOJO
51.&amp;9

ll89
9,l6
17&amp;. 72
12lS6
105.00
103.82
221 .5~

316.18
12&amp;.96
10454

m.7B
1~7.16

3&amp;170
247.M
67-M

IS8.49
163JIJ
1284.&lt;15
&lt;17 1.39

-t:J

from the Ohio area. The joint
fugitive investigation was
comprised of the U.S.
Murshals Service's Southern
District of Ohio. Southern
District of West Virginia and
District of Arizona. and the
Gallia County Sheriff's
Office and Gallipolis Police
Depanment.

Please see Beach. A1

WEATHER

J.

Development will determine the fate
of Middleport's application and rhose
of six. other communities on Dec 13.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport
This is Middleport's second attempt
Development Group expec ts· a deci - to secure funding for its downtown
sion on its application for downtown revitalization projec.:t. Approximately
revitalization funds sometime next 25 building owners have made comweek, but in the meantime , other mitments to participate in the project,
beautification efrorts. continue in the which will provide a one-to-one match
shopping district.
toward fa~ade improvements and
Downtown
Revitalization . other cosmetic work.
Coordinator and Mayor-elect Michael
In the meantime, Gerlach said , other
Gerlach said the Ohio Department of downtown beautification efforts are
BY BRIAN

REED

BREED®MYDAIL\ISENTI NEL. COM

Please see Decision. A1

711.37

lll6 1l
78.3\

Sl9.li

l.oii2Croot'S lSI Alii.
14&amp;.24
ll Crtds 1St Add. ,
331.&amp;4
21ll'11Wffi Coloo 'Jirginja K
20ll l mE Dlll11 J~n C
Pllrt Of \OOA La: 29J TIN R12W 2.2779A
Out Of US21A 2.2779A
l761l
Lot8Buffingtoo&gt;AOditiooEX6.48'X 100' 43.~2'XIOO'
~1.12
2(00)11000 fields Mr:li'il
2(00)71&lt;00 rtel4s Mc:tina
Ull8 BuflingtoosAilditilll &amp; 6.48' X100 43.~2'XIOO'
61.12
21IDY1300J Ftclds Melin1
5 B•ffinBtoo'S Add .
69.64
2(0Xl7410J Ftclds Melina
6 Btdfrnston'SAdd.
69.64
21m7920CrJ Ftelds Meij1n
100,, Let 1!!f Alley Between Lou 6 &amp; 1SO' X 100' lo: Carlcfoo 1St69.64
2j)D)i'!m) FicldJ Metiw
7 B•ffin&amp;too'S Add.
94 1.27
21XXl747lXKJ Fourfed lnc
Partorl.otm&amp;..'.4sA .~BM
592.to
200JI030ll Home NlllCIIil Bank
297 Nt: 01. Of 15.42A ~Cor. f.I.I!ASt.Ry. El .. 631A .1991\
2Cl2.34
lll;OIOliXXJ Home NllionaiBri
l.o4CIIkloo&gt;IS!Add
3l9.1 1
2\IXTJllOOI Hupp Rld.y R&amp;.'Or Carol
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Parents
charged
in death
of toddler
'

STAFF REPORT
NEWS® MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BIDWELL - Two parents i1re being charged with
felonies in the death of their
two-year-old son. ·
Jason C. Jones, 26 and
M.
Jones,
24.
Tina
Apartment
16,
381
Buckridge Road, Bidwell
were arrested by the Gallia
County Sheriffs Office
around 4:30 p.m. Friday on
felony
warrants · stemming
Brian J. Roed/photo
from grand jury indictments.
Jason Jones was arrested
for aggravated murder, murder and child endangerment.
Tina Jones was arrested for
child endangerment.
Their two-year-old son,
Trenton Jones. was transcontinuing as the holiday seaso n ported to Holzer Medical
approaches. On Friday, the public saw Center on October 4. where
the second in a series of postcard- he was then transferred by
style murals go up on the center air to Children 's Hospital.
He was pronounced dead
downtown block .
The series of murals was conceived on October 5.
Both parents were taken
by a comminee made up of Gerlach,
to
the Gallia County Jail to
Donna Hanson, Brenda Phalin and
Brian Reed, who secured $3,000 in await arraignment.
funding through the Appalachian
· Regional Commission's Appalachian

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knowledge, U.S. Marshals
tracked her which ended in
Beach's apprehension .
Beach is currently being
detained in Arizona while
awaiting extradition proceedings.
The Gallia County Sheriff's
Office requested the U.S.
Marshals Service's assistance
on Nov. I due to the belief
that Beach · had absconded

Brenda Phalin ,
Susan Well of
AEP, Donna
Hartson and
Middleport
Mayor-elect
Michael Gerlach
take a look at
the second in a
series of historical murals
installed in
downtown
Middleport. AEP
sponsored this
mural, which
depicts Mill
Street and
South Third
Avenue near the
turn of the 20th
century.

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Marshal s Service's Arizona
Fugitive Task Force, Beach
was arrested
by the
Mexican Federal Police in
Nogales, Mexico, at 10 p.m.
Thursday and turned over to
U.S. Marshals at the border.
The arrest reportedly
came about after authori ti es
received word that victim.
Heidi Peiller, was traveling
to Arizona. Without her

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Jame s Wahlrab, U.S.
Marshal for the So.uthern
District of Ohio, Gallia
·County Sheriff David L
Martin and Gallipolis Police
Chief Clinton Patterson
jointly announced Beach's
arrest on Friday.
Accordin g to the U.S.
Marshal's Service, in coop·
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Beach awaits extradition from Mexico

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Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

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GALLIPOLIS
43.5 '/, Sttond Awnue

AMP-Ohio
lines up
customers
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL COM

Detallo on Poco A8

okay. Make a difference. I
challenge each one of you
to do that."
Evans cited the work of
all students and staff for
placing well on the state's
"report card" of school per-

COLUMBUS - "Of our
75 Ohio member-co mmunties, the vast majority
have approved legislation,"
Kent Carson, spokesperson
for American Municipal
Power-Ohio, said about
communities signing on to
purchase power from the
proposed coal-fired power
plant il) Letart Falls tentatively called the American
Power Generating Station.
AMP-Ohio provides electricity for municipalities
while a company such as
American Electric Power
sells to residential customers.
The legis lation Carson
referred to contains 50-year
purchase agreements with
AMP-Ohio which has slated
its AMPGS plans to provide
" power at cheaper than market rares" to municipaliries.
Environment groups such

Please see Awards, A1

Please see AMP·Ohlo, A1

INDEX
4

SEcnoNs- 24 PAGES

Around Town

A3

Celebrations

C4

Classifieds .

Comics

D3-5

insert

Editorials

A4

Movies

Cs

Regional

A2

Sports
Weather

B Section
A6

© a007 Ohlu Valley PubU.hlnx Co.

•

Kevin Kelly /photos

Tina Johnson. left. was named the high school teacher of the
year and Tracey Burnette won the elementary school teacher
of the year honor from the Galli a County Academic Excellence
Foundation at Its annual banquet. Johnson teac hes at South
Galija High School and Burnette at Hannan Trace Elementary.

Inducted into the Gallia County Academic Excellence
Foundation at its 23rd annual banquet were Dr. Denise
Shockley, left, superintendent of the Gallia-Vinton
Educational Service Center, and Steve Jagers, former mem·
ber of the Gallia County Local .Soard of Education.

Foundation awards local academic excellence
Superintendent Dr. Charla
KKELLY®MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Evans ur~ed students and
parents ·ahke to keep up the
RIO GRANDE - It was good work that has made
a time to not only recog- Gallia County Local an
ni ze classroom achieve- "effective" school district in
ment in the Gallia County ' the eyes of the state in
Local Schools, but to chal- remarks at the 23rd annual
lenge it as well.
Academic
Excellence
BY KEVIN KELLY

.

Foundation
banquet
Thursday at Buckeye Hills
Career Center.
"Challenge yourself and
challenge your children to
do the best you can do,"
Evans said. "Of course,
everyene 's best will be a little bil different and that's

�"

iunba~ m:tmts-6entinel

REGIONAL

Page;\2
Sunday, November 18,2007

Search warrant yields drug charges Awards
StAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLI S - Local
authorities raided another
suspected drug house on
Friday which ended in drugrelated fe lony charges
against two Galli polis me n.
Gall ipolis City Police,
with the ass istance of the
State Hi ghway Patrol,
. Galli a County Sheriff' s
office and Gallia County

Beach
from Page A1
"The international arrest of
Felipe Beach demonstrates
how pannering relationships
between federal , state and
loca~ law enforcement agencies benefits and serves the
rommunities through the
Southern District of Ohio,"
Wahlrab. "We are proud to
have had the opportunity to
assist the local law enforcement agencies in apprehending such a vi9lent and dangerous fugitive."
Beach was charged with
attempted murder after
allegedly severely · beating
and kicking . Peiffer in the
head and face area in January
outside of the Courtside Bar
&amp; Grill on Jan. II Federal.
Peiffer, according to her fam·

Prosecutor's Office, executed a search warrant at 34112 Smithers S1. , where
authorities allegedl y found
a quantity of crack cocaine
·and a handgun.
Antonio Maddox, 24, and
Gregory Jones, 31. were •
arrested and housed in the
Gall ia County Jail. Maddox
will be charged wi th felony
possess ion of drugs and .
Jones faces felony trafficking and possession charges.

Gallia c;ounty Prosec utor
Jeff Adkins' office is being
consulted
for
further
charges.
"Without the hard work of
the Gallipolis offi cers and
the outstanding cooperation
of the troopers and deputies
none of this would have
occurred," said Gallipoli s
Police
Chief
Clinton
Patterson. who commended
the work of all the personnel involved.

ily. is still recovering both
physically and mentally from
the alleged violent assault
that originally left her in crit,
ical condition.
Three days before he was
supposed to appear for trial,
Beach. who· had been on
house arrest as a condition
of hi s bond, fled custody.
Authorities were not aware
he had broken house arrest
until the day of the trial,
when he failed to appear in
the Galli a County Common
Pleas Court. A warrant was
issued for Beach's arrest for
failure to appear.
On Oct. 19, a hearing was
held in which Beach's parents asked the courts not to
forfeit the $294,890,02 in
real estate and $5,109.98
they had put up for Beach's
bond. Judge D. Dean Evans
ruled that forfeiture would
proceed . Beach's bond was

set at $ 1.5 million ten percent secured cash, but
because · Beac h's parent s
used real estate, it had to be
valued at $300,000.
According to the Gallia
County Clerk of Courts
office, the forfeiture of the
bond is still going forward.
Gallia County Sheriff's
Office Patrol Commander
Lt. Joe Browning said the
sheriff's office commends
all of the agencies and personnel who worked on the
Beach's capture.
"The community can rest
assured that even when
someone flees from the
area, 'we have the resources
to apprt:hend them," said
Browning.
How the Beach trial will
continue . will depend on
how long extradition takes
and the schedule set by
Judge Evans.

carbon-dioxide regula!ions
the power coming out of the
plant is going to be cheaper
ffom PageA1
than what power costs in the
open market."
largest
as the National Resource . · AMP-Ohio 's
me
mber
co
m·m
unity
,
Defense Council , Ohio
Cleveland
Puhlic
Power,
Citizen Action, G.reen
Environmental Coalition disagreed with the reasons
and Ohio Environmental given by opponents to
Council feel signing these decline the contract when
long term purchase agree- last month Cleveland City
ments would be a "financial Council signed a, 50-year
and environmental mi stake·· agreement with the compaaccording to the groups' lit" ny to purchase electricity
from the AMPGS . By
erature.
Reasons given by these approving the agreement
groups for the "financial before the Nov. I deadline,
and environmental mistake" Clevelan'd Public Power and
include what they call a other Ohio member-com"take or pay" contract that munities who met the dead"makes
communities line now have what AMPresponsible for all construc- Ohio calls an "off ramp."
Carson said this means
tion, operating and environthese
member communities
mental costs incurred" and
basically
have an "out"
"communities would be
ultimately re sponsible for from the agreement after
· purchasing power from the they receive an updated feaplant, even if they do not sibility study on the project
need it or there are better due in February. The
absolute deadline to sign a
alternatives."
contract
with AMP is March
Carson said it was true
I,
2008.
Those communithese agreements make
communities responsible ties, such as Yellow Springs
for the AMP plant in Meigs and St. Clairsville, which
County but with thi s delayed their decision can
responsibility comes owner- still sign an agreement with
ship during a time when the AMP but not without being
open market for electricity penalized to an extent.
Carson said communities
is "volati Ie."
"In this case'they are buy- which have delayed their
ing into a large , expensive decision do not have the
generating facility . but that option of the "off ramp."
risk is spread through 92 Also, once AMP-Ohio
communities and in essence reaches 750 · megawatts of
they own that power for 50 (Jarticipation there's _paryears," Carson said, "Our ltctpatwn
committee
feasibility study shows even formed. concerning the
when factoring the cost of AMPGS but only those

AMP-Ohio

a

Decision ·
from Page A1 ·
Community
Learning
Project.
The latest mural in the
"Walk into Middleport's
Past" series was purchased
by American Electric
Power. Susan Well of AEP
joined Gerlach, Hartson and
Phalin Friday in viewing the
new mural , which depicts a
scene !'rom the intersection
of Mill Street and South
Third Avenue. Gerlach
dates the photo back to the
late 19th century. It' includes
the old Stansbury drug store
and other businesses, and a
horse-draw n wagon.
The mural series is
designed not only to beauti-

fy the downtown 'shopping
district, but also to promote
a self-guided walking tour,
which includes a number of
historic sites, including an .
Underground
Railroad
.lookout site, the site of a
silent movie theater, Coe's
Opera House and the Hotel
Allen, once owned by a runaway slave.
Gerlach will lead a guided
tour of the site included in
the "Walk into Middleport's
Past" walking tour an hour
before
Middleport 's
Chri stmas Parade. at 3 p.m.
on Dec. I. The tour will
begin at the mural.
The
Middleport
Community Association has
mailed letters to members
asking them to participate in
a village-wide holiday decorating program, and vii-

communities which got in
before reaching that magic
number of 750 can make
decisions on the committee.
· "We' re very close to 750
now," Carson said.
The
community
of
Westerville passed on the
contract to purchase power
from AMPGS last month,
making it the first of the 92
member-communities to
-reject the long-term contract.
The
AMPGS
would've provided 40 percent of Westerville's nonpeak electricity. According
to the Columbus Dispatch,
in addition to concerns
about a 50-year contract,
Westerville Councilman
Craig Trenetf cited .his
resistance to 'coal as an
energy source for his vote
against the deal.
The use of coal as an energy source is also a major
sticking point with environ'
mental groups opposed to
the plant who have concerns
of global warming.
"The need for power is
not going to go away,"
Carson said. "Communities
have a legal responsibility
to provide their resident's
power. No one has alTered
alternative ideas (in regards
to this responsibility). other
than staying on the open
market, causing prices to go
up and up."
The revised cost of the
AMPGS is $2.9 billion, up
from an original cost of $1.5
billion in 2005. Carson said
the plant's projected online
date has not changed and
remains 2013 .
!age-owned Christmas decorations have gone up·in the
downtown shopping area in
preparation for the Dec. I
Christmas parade.
Phalin said a committee
of volunteers will continue
decorating the shopping district next week.
"We're very hopeful we 'll
receive funding this round,
but in the meantime, the
development group is doing
all we can to encourage
building owners and the
community as a whole to
continue our effons to make
Middleport a great place to
shop," Gerlach ~aid .

~ea cash tiff Payaay?
· Wisfiing... Ca[[ us

There will be no hunting on property belonging to Linda
Diddle, James Diddle or Maxine Sellers without written
permission from James Diddle. If permission is granted the
place of desired hunting specif~eally and when must he
designated and adhered to for your permit to be valid. If you
have permission to hunt in one place and you are found in
another area your permission will be withdrawn forever.
People without wriffen permission will be prosecuted.
James E. Diddle

216 Upper River Rd.
GaiRpolls,·Ohio
'f, Mile south of
the Silver Bridge

Public meetings
·

Monday, Nov•. l9
LETART FALL S
Letart Townshi p Trustees
meet at 5 p.m. at the office
building.

Church events

Kevin Kelly/ photos

David Moore, principal of River Vall ey Middle School, was
named the 2007 inte rmediate administrator of the year by
the Gallia County Academic Excedllence Foundation at its
annual banquet Thursday.

446-2404 .
Uc'"" CC711111171-0IIO oltlll101

•

I

•

u-M CC700077-IIOI
' u-M Cl7~l.otll

Sunday, Nov. 18
SYRACU SE Jerry
Frederick will be preaching
at the Syracuse Community
Church , 6:30 p.m.
POM EROY
- The
Meigs County Mini sterial
and God's NET ministries
ecumenical Thanksgiving
worship service, 7 p.m.,
gyt:n of the Mulberry·
Community Center, Pastor
Brent Watson.
MIDDLEPORT - Dr.
Terry Davis of Newness of
Life Ministries, Monessen ,
Pa. , to speak at Abundant
Grace Ministries, 10 a. m.
and 6 p.m. services .
Offering taken. PastoL
Teresa Davis.

EAST
LETA RT
Revival services will be
held at the East Letart
United Methodi st Church,
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday,
7 p.m. each eve ning.
Special singing.
Sunday, Nov. 25
ALBANY -Carpen ter
Baptist Church will host a
wild game dinner and con·
cert by "Dayspring," 6-8
p.m.
Public
in vited.
Questions to Pastor Whitt
Akers, 591-1 236.

School
and Youth
Monday, Nov. 19
POMEROY - Si gnups
for Meigs youth wrestling
team will be held 6-8 p.m.
Monday and Tuesday at
Meigs
High
School
Fieldhouse. For boys and
girls ages 3 through grade 6
in Mei gs, Eastern and
Southern districts, Cont~ct
Danny Davis at 742-2372.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Talk openly of
drinking shazards
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Kayla Payne of River Valley High School was recognized as
the 2007 Martin J. Essex Scholar by the Gallia County
Academic Excellence Foundation at its 23rd annual banquet.

Ben Bradshaw, left, a graduate of River Valley High School, and
Lacey Dobbins of RVHS were the winners of two-year scholarships to Rio Grande Community College at the annual banquet
of the Gallia County Academic Excellence Foundation.

Wh0 m~HU!IVf9
. ...4lr,e,cch.a,f.s:/
·~~w- . .9;.,/ 8/he-

·eo~~~~ ~a&amp;~~

Annual Open Hause
Suday, lot. •t2:0H:IIpm .
Parade Line·Up Ai The Football Stadium,
Slep OfT 2:00
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992-0461

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Gallia County calendar
------------------------~----------------~---

~!\~Jj$

}.D. Drilling Company

AROUND TOWN

Meigs County calendar

from PageA1
formance in 2006-07, which
saw Ri ver Valley High
School and Addaville
Elementary School win
"excellent" ratings for their
buildings.
Addaville is among 287
schools across the country
to be named a No Child Left
Ribbon
Behind
Blue
School, and Principal Silas
Johnson and Title I teacher
Leanna Martin were in
Washington earlier this
week to accept the honor :
from the U.S. Education
Department.
In addition to recognizing
students who earned grade
point averages of 3.5 or better in 2006-07 , numerous
special awards were presented by · Evans and Pat .
Stout, the district's director
of instruction . ·
Named the teachers of the
year by the AEF were
Tracey Burnette on the elementary level and Tina
Johnson for the high school
level. ·
Burnette, whose father
Mike Jenkins was a longtime Hannan Trace High
School educator and coach,
has worked at Hannan Trace
Elementary for the past
eight years. Johnson began
her career at Vinton
Elementary, but has been
special education teacher at
South. Gallia High School
since its opening in the old
Hannan Trace High building in 1996.
David Moore, a 27-year
veteran of the school system, was named the inter. mediate administrator of
the year. Moore was principal at Kyger Creek Middle
School for a number of
·years until this fall, when he
took on the same duties at
the new River Valley
Middle School in the former
Bidwell-Poner ·Elementary
building. As he did at
KCMS, Moore leads Gallia
County Local's only middle
school.
Inducted into the AEF's
Hall of Fame were Dr..
Denise Shackley and Steve
Jagers.
Shockley, a Hannan Trace
graduate who became an
administrator at Buckeye
Hills Career Center, has
been superintendent of the
Gallia-Vinton Educational
Service Center for the last
five years. Jagers, a retired
State Highway Patrol troop,
er and investigator, has been
a parent, coach .and board of
eduication . member in the
Gallia
County
Local
Schools.
In other· special awards,
Justin Saxton was honored
as the state FFA Degree
winner, while Kayla Payne
is the 2007 Martin J. Essex
Scholar. Lauren Farley
received the BJ. Hairston
Memorial
Nursing
Ben
Scholarship, and
Bradshaw
and
Lacey
Dobbins each won a 2-year
scholarship to Rio Grande
Community College.
Beta Club state winners
recognized included Laura
Klirie, Jessi lson , Kayla
Rose, Haley Waugh, Carissa
Gilmore, Kirsten Carter,
Amanda Hager, Lauren
Farley, Courtney Reuter,
Margo Fraley, Andrea
Russell, Brittany Hardway
and lan Lewis .
College
Level
Achievement Test honorees
i~cluded
Janie
Bess,
Thomas Ki sor, Elaine
Householder, Ashley pope,
Jonathan Crews and Kir,sten
Carter. Winners of the
· Excellence
Academic
Foundation
scholarship
were Kristen Halley, Bruce
Nibert, Kara Partain -and
Kacie Willey.
·

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Providing lnsurance Solutions
Home Auto Farm B11siness

Health

Dear Annie: I recently
came across an e-mail from
my 15-year-old daughter to
her 22-year-old cousin that
was rather revealing. (OK , I
was snooping .)
.
My daughter, "Carlie."
was attending a sleepover at
a senior girl's house. and it
turns out there was alcohol
there. She contided in her
cousin that a boy (an 18- ·
year-old) had kissed her, that
she drank a lot but was fine,
and that her friend drank too
much and got very sick,
I've told no one, not even
my wife, what I discovered.
Should I say something to
the mother of the girl who
hosted this sleepover about
the underage drinking? I
could really use your advice.
-Distressed Dad in N.Y.
Dear Dad: Tell Carlie you
saw the e-mail, apologize for
snooping and lovingly ·let
her know you are worried.
Talk orenly about the hazards o drinking, especially
at her age. and tl!e problems
of becoming involved with
upperclassmen who expect
more than she might be
ready to give. Tell her you
appreciate that she watched
her alcohol consumption and
that you want to trust her
judgment in the future. Make
sure she understands that
trust, once lost, lakes a long
time to regain. Then call the
parents of the party-giver .
and tell them you are aware
there was underage drinking
at their home and they would
be held liable if anything
happened to those teens.
Finally, why was your
daughter at that sleepover''
As flattering as it may have
been for Carlie to be invited
to a senior girl's party, it was
inappropriate. Sometimes
parents need to say no.
Dear Annie: Last summer, my husband's sister,
whom I haven't seen for 17
years, asked him for a
$2,000 loan to buy a condo.
She promised to pay the
money back from her tax
refund. My husband di&lt;;ln't
have the money and he
asked me to please send it
from my personal savings
account, one I keep for
emergencies. In good faith,
and against my better judgment, I did so.
Fast-forward .a year. My
sister-in-law now says she
doesn't have the · money to
repay me . Moreover, she's
indignant that I asked,
yelled at my husband, and
refuses to read my e-mails
because we "should know
better than to ask for money
she doesn't have and isn' t
sure she ever will."
· I'm irate. That $2,000 is a
huge amount of savings,
and we could desperately
.use it. What do I do? Depressed by a Deadbeat
Dear Depressed: It
depends on how much you
care if you estrange your
sister-in-law permanently.
Face it. She isn't going to
repay the money voluntari -

ly. You can take her to sniall
claim s court and force a
judgment, or you can chalk
it up to a very expensive lesson learned . Ask. your husband how he wi shes to han·
die it, since it's his sister,
and then try to ,make peace
with the decision.
Dear Annie: The fatophobe from Arizona who
complained about a "morbidly obese" neighbor needs
to sit her starving body down
and enjoy a piece of cake .
Morbid obesity is partially
defined as a person having
medical problems associated
with weight. This man is able
to work in his yard, which is
probably an important form
of exercise for him. ·
I am sick and tired of it
being OK to complain about,
discriminate against and
stare at people who weigh
more than the Nutrition
Police consider ideal. The
media need to take the focus
off dieting and put it on the
consequences of not eating·
enough. Emaciated women
can develop early osteoporoSIS. -So There
Dear So There: Actually,
the focus should be on eating properly and exercising
regularly, regardless of
weight. There is a multitude
of body types, and' many are
perfectly healthy, whether
very thin or quite chunky.
It 's time we stopped judging
other' on their stze.

Community
events

GALLIPOLIS
G allipolli ~ Rotary
Club
meets 7 a.m. each Tuesday
at Holzer Clinic doctor's
Monday, Nov. 19
dining room.
GALLIPOLIS - A meetGALLIPOLIS
ing to discuss strategies to Choose to Lose Diet Club
manage the effects of the meets 9 a.m., each Tuesday
2007 drought will be held at at Grace United Methodist
Buckeye Hills Career Church. Use Cedar Street
Center, 7 p.m. For informa- entrance.
ti on. contact
Richard
GALLIPOLIS - French
Stephens. Gallia Counmty City Barbershop Choru s
Extension Educator for practice, 7:30 p.m. every
agriculture and natural Tuesday at Grace United
resources, at 446-7007.
Methodist Church. Guests
Thesday, Nov. 20
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS - Regular
CHESHIRE Gallia
meeting of the Gallia County Board of Mental
County Di strict Library Retardation/Developmental
Boa.rd of Trustees, 5 p,m., Disabilities meets the third
Bossard Memorial Library. Tuesday of each month, 4
Wednesday, Nov. 21
p.m., at Guiding Hand
MERCERVILLE - Free School.
Thanksgiving dinner at
GALLIPOLIS
Hannan Trace Elementary American Legion Post 27
School. serving from 5 to 8 meets on the first and third
p.m., sponsored by Mount Mondays of each monih at
Zion, Good Hope ~tnd Kings 7:30 p.m. Dinner on. first
Chapel churches. Everyone Monday begins at 6:30p.m.
welcome.
GALLIPOLIS
- The
French City Treble Maker~ ,
Saturday, Nov. 24
GALLIPOLIS - Cadot- barbershop chorus, meets
Blessing Camp 126 of the every Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at
Sons of Union Veterans of . Grace United Methodist
the Ctvtl War wtll hold tis Church. Accepttng new
bimonthly meeting at 6:30 members. For info, call
p.m, The meeting will be Hugh Graham at (740) 446held at the Gallia County · 1304.
Vi~itors Bureau, corner of GAL.LIPOLIS - The
Thtrd Avenue and Co~rt Perenmal Cat, a shelter for
St_re.et. Any persons with homeless and abandoned
Ctvtl. War ancestors are cats, meets the fourth
encourage to attend.
Monday of each month,
· Thesday, Nov. 27
6:30 p.m., at Bossard
RIO
GRANDE
Memorial Library. Anyone
Southeast Ohio Safety interested
in
being
Council will meet for its involved with caring for
November meeting, noon , homeless cats in this area
Bob Evans Farms Hall , is invited. ·
University
of
Rio
GALLIPOLIS -· Gallia
Grande/Rio
Grande County Democrats meet on
Community College. Guest the first Monday of the
speaker ts WSAZ-TV month at 6 p.m. at the secmeteorologist .. Tony ond floor meeting room of
Cavalter on
Weather the · Gallia
County
Safety." Reservations for Counh01.1Se. For' informalunch are due by Nov. 21, tion,
call
367-7530.
an early deadline due to the Everyone invited.
Thanksgiving holiday. To
GALL·IPOLIS - Park
make reservations, contact Lane Crime Watch in the
Phyllis Mason at 245· 7228
or Paula McCloud at 2457170.

Spri ng Valley area meetings
are held on the third
Tuesday of each month al 7
p.m. at the Gall ia Count y 91-I·Center.
GALLIPOLIS The
Galli a Count y Veterans
Service Commi ssion wi ll
meet at 4 p.m. on the second
and fo urth Tuesdays of each
month until further notice.
GALLIPOLI S - Gall iu
County .
Veterans
Association meets the
fo urth Monday of the month
at 7 p.m. at American
Legion Post 27 .
GALLIPOLIS - Galha
County Senior Trave l Club
meets the third Tuesday of
the mon th at 3 p.m: at the
Gallia
County Senior
Resource Center.
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Chri sti an
Women's Connection meets
on the third Tuesday of each
month at noon at the
Holiday Inn . For more
. information contact Nancy
Hood at 367-7443.
GALLIPOLIS
Exercise free at New Li fe
- Lutheran Church, Su.nday,
Tuesday and Thursday at
5:30p.m. All ages. Walking,
palates and .dance .
CHESHIRE - TOPS OH
1383 , Cheshire meets on
Mondays at ' the DAV
Building, 28051 State Route
7, Cheshire. Weigh-in begins
at 8:30 a.m., with the meet-

ing slarting at 10 a, m. TOPS
(Take Otf Pounds Sensibly)
is a non-profi t, non-commercial weight loss organization. For more information
on TOPS, call Janet Thomas.
leader, at (7.40) 367-0274, or
e-mai l
her
at
JanctThom as590@hotmail .c

.om.

POINT
PLEASANT.
W.Va. - Marine Corps
League MGM (Meigs Gallia- Mason) Detachment
1180 meets the first
Tuesday of each month at 7
p.m. in the Mason County
Library. 508 Viand St. .
Point Pleasant. For information, call (304) 895-3062 or
(304) 8 12-0306.

Card shower
GALLIPOLIS - Marilyn
Barron is celebrating her
80th birthday oil Nov. 23.
Cards can be sent to her at
Bastiani
Drive .
122
Gallipoli s, Ohio 4563 1.

E·mail commu11ity calen·
dar items to kkelly@mydai·
lytribrme.com.
Fax
allllOU/ICemellts to 446·
3008. Mail items to 825
Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
45631. .. AniiOUIIcements
may also be dropped off at
the Tribu11e office.

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Regular
meetings

GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis Neighborhood
Watch
meeting
every
Mo.nday at 7 p.m. in the
Gallipolis
Municipal
Building.
GALLIPOLIS - Moms'
Club meets, noon, .third
Monday of each month at
Community · Nursery
School. For more information , call Tracy at (740)
441 -9790.
GALLIPOLIS - Practice
for the French Colony
Chorus, a four-part harmony style women's group, 7
Annie's Mailbox is writ· p.m. each Tuesday at the
ten by Kathy Mitchell and Gallia County Senior
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi- Resource Center, 1167 State
tors of tire Ann Landers . Route 160, Gallipolis. Enter
column. Please e-mail yo11r the side center door.. For
questions to anniesmail- more information, contact
box@comcast.net, or' write Suzy Parker at (740) 992to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O. 5555 or Bev Alberchinski at
Box 118190, Chicago, IL 446-2476.
60611. To find out more
GALLIPOLIS
abo11t An11ie 's Mailbox, Gallipolis TOPS (Take Off
and read features by other Pounds Sensibly) meets
Creators Sy11dica(e writers · each Monday at 6 p.m. at
and cartoonists, visit the the Sycamore Branch of
Creators Sy11dicate Web Holzer Clinic with weigh~ in
page at www.creators.com. starting at 5:30 p,m:

"Healthcare in Your
Own Backyard"

HEALTH SYSTEMS
Freedom From Sr0oking- $essjon 2- Wantjng-to Qyjt- jn ;Pomerov

Monday, November .19 at 6:00 pm at the new Tobacco Prevention Office in Pomeroy,
located at 115 W. 2nd Street. Session Two will cover coping witli urges and making a
plan. For more info about this seven-session series, call (740) 446-5940.
look Gppd. Feel BeHar - in GaUjpoljs

Monday, November 19 at 6:00pm at the Holzer Center for Cancer Care. Ioc&lt;,te\J at170
Jackson Pike. Join us at this American Cancer Society-sponsored group that teaches
female cancer patients beauty techniques to help restore their appearance and self-image
during chemotherapy and radiation treatments. THere is no charge for aHending. For
more info, call the American Cancer Soc1ety Cancer Resource Center at (740) 441·3909.
Freed9m From Smoking - Sessjon 2 - Wanting to Quit - in GalliPOlis
Tuesday, November 20 at 6:00 pm at the HMC Tobacco Prevention Center, located at
2881 Jackson Pike. Session Two will cover coping with urges and making a plan. For
more info about this seven-session series, call (7 40) 446-5940.
Erepd9m From Smoking -Session 2- Wanljng to Quit- in Jackson
Tuesday, November 20 at 6:00pm at Holzer Medical Center- Jackson's Davis Room.
500 Burlington Road. Session Two will cover coping urges and making a plan. For more
info about this seven-session series developed by the Amencan Lung Association. call
(740) 446-5940.
THANKSGIVING - Thursday, November 22 - Have a safe and healthy ·Holiday!
peck the Halla, Walls and Tables Sjlent Ayctjon - in Rio Grande

Saturday, November 24 at Bob Evans Farms in Rio Grande, Ohio. The Silent Auction
will be held at the Homestead Museum from 9:00 am - 5:00 pm . Place a bid on a variety
of holiday d~cor and crafts dor~ated by artisans from the Bob Evans Farm Craft Bam and
Farm Festival. All proceeds will benefit Holzer Hospice. For more information, call Bob
Evans Farms locally at (740) 245-5305 or toll-free at 1-800·994-3276. or Holzer Hospice
at (740) 446·5074, or toll-free at 1·800·500-4850.
Blngp Bph - In Jackson

Monday, November 26'1rom 2:00 pm- 4:00 pm at Holzer's Assisted Living Community,
located at 101 Markham Drive . The public is very welcome to attend . For more info. call
(740) 286-8785.
Fraedom Fmm
Smokjnq - Session 3 - Qyjl pay - jn Pomero'v
I

Monday, November 26 at 6:00 pm at the new Tobacco Prevention Office in Pomeroy,
located at 115 W. 2nd Street. For more information about this seven-sess1on series, call
(740) 992·2175 ortoll-free at1·866·855-8702.

�OPINION ·

6unbap limtf.-6tnttntl

Sunday, November 18,

PageA4

825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

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

.Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Diane Hill
Controller

Kevin Kelly
Managing Editor

Lerrers to the editor are 1re/rome. Th ev should be less
than 300 words. All/etters are subject /o ~diting and must
be signed and include address and 1elephone number. No
uns igned le!Jers will be published. Ll'lters Jhould be in
good taste, add ressi11g issues. not personalities.

READER'S

VIEW

.

No more
Time to cutforeign aid
Dear Editor:
Senators. congressmen and the president, it'$ time
America tied our national debt to foreign aid. If our country has a national debt we should not give foreign aid. We
do not have it to give.
Let's take care of number one, Americans, and America.
Don't pass them tax levies on the ballot. Tell our senators.
.and congressmen and president, send more tax money to
our towns, cities and counties, not overseas. Let them suppon themselves, not American taxpayers. So stand up,
America, no more taxes. Cut foreign aid and pay off our
national debt before we try to buy more frieods overseas.
Floyd Cleland
·
Pomeroy

Bill
O'Reilly

'Redacted' without seeing
it, is like saying you can't
condemn Crystal Meth
without taking it."
So· what's to be done
here? In a free society,
Mark Cuban is entitled to
make this despicable
movie. Our military people
have fought and dted to
give )lim that right. Isn 't
that ironic? Cuban uses his .
freedom and his money,
made in America. to put
our troops at funher risk.
How does the guy Jive with
himself?
Tit is isn't about the Iraq
war or the war on terror.
This is about fellow citizens. Even during the ultra- ·
contentious Vietnam conflict, Hollywood didn ' t

I SUPPORT

AFR~E
AND OPEN
ELECTION.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be
less than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing,
must be signed, and include address and telephone
number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will not be .accepted for publication.

~unbap mtme~ -~entinel
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Correction Polley
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a~rate ._ If you know of an error in a
story. please call one of our newsrooms.

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Rescuers struggling to reach the trapped survivors

GALLIPOLIS - A weekl y leaf pickup schedule continBv PARVEEN AHMED
ues in the city of Gallipolis.
ASSOCIATED PRE SS WRITER
The schedule is as fo llows:
·
• Monday - All cross streets and Fifth Avenue.
DHAKA, Bangladesh - ,
• Tuesday - First and Second avenues.
Hundreds of thousands of
• Wednesday- GarfieldAvenue. state routes 141 and588 . survivors
were
stuck
Due to the Thanksgiving holiday, leaves will not be Saturday behind roads
picked up Thursday and Friday of this week.
blocked by fallen trees, iron
Fo.r information or comments. call the city maintenance roofs and thick sludge as
garage at 446-0600.
rescue workers fought to
reach
towns
along
Bangladesh's coast that
were ravaged by a powerful
GALLIPOLIS - The trash pickup schedule in Gallipolis cyclone that killed at least
1.723 people.
for the Thanksgiving holiday this week is:
.
' Trash pickup normally scheduled for Wednesday will be
Tropical Cyclone Sidr, the
deadhest
storm to hit the
as usual; trash pickup scheduled for Thursday will be
picked up Friday; trash pickup for Friday will be picked up country in a decade,
Saturday, Nov. 24.
.
destroyed tens of thousands
. Residents should have their trash by the curbside by 6 a.m. of homes in southwest
Bangladesh on Thursday
and ruined much-needed
crops just before harvest
season in this impoverished,
GALLIPOLIS - Woodland Centers Inc. will close clin- low-lying South Asian
ic locations iA Gallia, Jackwn and Meigs counties on
More than a milThursday and Friday, Nov. 22-23, in observance of the country.
lion
coastal
villagers were
Thanksgiving holiday.
forced to evacuate to govClinics will resume normal operations on Monday, Nov. 26. ernment shelters.
Emergency services can be accessed by calling 446-5500
The official death toll rose
in Gallia County or (800) 252-5554 in Meigs and Jackson to 1,723 and authorities
counties.
·
feared the ·figure could rise
funher as the country works
to t:ecover.
l
The government scramGALLIPOLIS - . Rumpke waste removal and recycling bled Saturday to join interservice will not occur on Thanksgiving Oay, Thursday, miiional agencies and local
Nov. 22. delaying collection by one day for customers in officials in the rescue misGalli a, Meigs and surrounding counties.
sion, deploying military
Rumpke will provide regularly scheduled services helicopters, thousands of
Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. There is no troops and naval ships.
collection on Thursday. Customers regularly collected on
Rescuers trying· to get
Thursday will be servtced Friday, and those regularly ser- food and water to people
viced on Friday will be collected on Saturday.
stranded, by . flooding strugRumpke's schedule returns to normaJ:on Monday, Nov. 26. gled to clear roads that were
so bad they said they'll have
to return on bicycles.
"We will try again tomorGALLIPOLIS - In observance of the Thanksgiving hol- row on bicycles, and hire
local country boats," M.
iday. the following depanments in the Gallia County Shakil
Anwar of CARE said
. Courthouse will be closed on Friday, Nov. 23:
·from
the
city of Khulna.
Treasurer, auditor, park district, emergency management,
Along the coast, 150 mph
probate court, board of elections, Jaw library, recorder,
winds
flung small fe.rries
clerk of courts, common pleas court and the prosecutor.
like toy boats, cutashore
·Normal business hours resume Monda~. Nov. 26.
ting off migrant fishing
communities who live on
and around hundreds of tiny
islands across the area's
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County Board of Mental web of river channels.
Retardation/Developmental DisabilitieS will have its reguMany of the .evacuees
lar meeting on Tuesday at 4 p.m. at 77 Mill Creek Road, who managed to return
Gallipolis.
home Saturday found their
straw and bamboo huts had
been flattened by the storm.
"We survived, but what
we
need now is help to
· GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis City Commission ·will meet
rebuild
our homes,'' Chand
in special session at 6 p.m. Tuesday in the City Building. A
public hearing on the Spruce Street water and sewer exten- Miah, a resident of Maran
Char, a small island in
sion project will be held at 5:30p.m.
Khulna district, told The
Associated Press.

Trash pickup schedule

Holiday closing

Rumpke schedule

WHICH ONE WOULD
YOU ·VOTE FOR ?

.Courthouse closings

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Sunday, Nov. 18, the 322nd day of 2007. There
are 43 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: On Nov. 18, 1928, Walt
Disney's first · sound-synchronized animated cartoon,
"Steamboat Willie" starring Mickey Mouse, premiered in
New York.
.
On this date: In 1820, U.S. Navy Capt. Nathaniel B. Palmer
and his crew discovered the frozen continent of Antarctica.
In 1883, the United States and Canada adopted a system
of Standard Time zones.
In 1886, the 21st president of the United States, Chester
A. Anhur, died in New York.
In 1903, the United States gained the rights to build the
Panama Canal in a treaty with Panama.
In 1966, U,S. Roman Catholic bishops did away with the
rule against eating meat on Fridays outside of Lent.
· In 1978, California Congressman Leo J. Ryan ·and four
other people were killed in Jonestown, Guyana, by members
of the Peoples Temple; the killings were followed by a night
of mass murder and suicide by more than 900 cult members.
In 1987, the congressional Iran-Contra committees
issued their final repon, saying President Reagan bore
"ultimate responsibility" for wrongdoing by his aides.
· In 1987, 31 people died in a fire at King's Cross,
London's busiest subway station.
. In 1999, 12 people were killed when a bonfire under construction at Texas A&amp;M University collapsed.
Today's Binhdays: Actress Brenda Vaccaro is 68. Actress
Linda Evans is 65. Country singer J~cky Ward is 61. Singer
Graham Parker is 57. Comedian Kevin Nealon is 54. Rock
musician Kirk Hammett (Metatlica) is 45. Actor Owen
Wilson is 39. Actress Chloe Sevigny is 33. Rapper
Fabulous is 28. Rapper Mike Jones is 27,
Thought for Today: "' It can't happen here' is number one
on the list of famous lust words." - David Crosby, rock
singer-musician.
· '

at least1,123 in

Leaf pickup schedule

There is no· excuse for
make films that aided the
enemy. Jane Fonda made a "Redacted." The incident
personal appearance in is based on a true story, but
North Vietnam that did those who committed the
that, and she is still paying ·crimes aie in prison for
for-it to this day .
life. You don't celebrate
Mark Cuban owns the this kind of aberration
Dallas Mavericks basket- with a movie. You don't
ball team and has been seen · brand the U.S. military
gyrating on TV's "Dancing with this stigma.
With the Stars." While
Charles Manson is an
Cuban is doing the cha- American, too, but does he
cha, almost 200,000 brave represent this country in
Americans are on far-away any way? Of course . not.
battlegrounds. Picture the And I believe .even the odiimage . of Cuban dancing ous Manson would not
around juxtaposed with make a · movie like
scenes of the hardships our "Redacted."
troops · face every day.
(Veteran 1V news anchor
Sounds like it would make . Bill O'Reilly is host of the
an
interesting movie Fox News show "The
sequence, don't you think? 0 'Reilly Factor" and
There comes a time when autl:wr of the book "Who's
good people must take a Looking Out For You?" To
stand, and this is one of find out more about Bill
those times. Cuban and De O'Reilly; and read features
Palma have done a bad by
other
Creators
thing- they have made life Syndicate writers and careven harder for our troops. toonists; visit the Creators
So Americans should stand Syndicate web page at
in front of any theater show- www.creator-s.com. This
ing "Redacted" and hold a column originates on the
simple silln: "Suppon the Web
site
Troops:"
www.bil/oreilly.eom.) .

MRDD Board will meet

.Commission to meet

Holiday closing .

GALLIPOLIS - The Offices of the Gallipolis Municipal
Building will be closed on Thursday, i"Jov. 22 and Friday,
Nov. 23 for the Th~nksgiving holiday.

Forensic expert says former
Til. officer's 3rd wife was killed;
search for 4th wife goes on

Mr. Fixit strikes again
approximately one valve
for every water molecule.
We could start a roadside
tourist attraction ("Turn
here for the amazing valve
forest").
· The fasCinating thing is,
not one of these valves
controls the flow of water
to our particular house. I
shut a number of them off,
and nothing happened. So
if, on a recent Sunday, the .
water · stopped flowing in
your home or store or
nuclear power plant, that
was probably my fault.
Since I could not tum off
our water, our ceiling continued to leak all Sunday
night, so that by morning
our bedroom carpet was a
federally protected wetland habitat teeming with
frogs, turtles, Mafia·hit
victims; etc. So we were
very happy when the
plumber arrived. And if
you are a student of literary
foreshadowing, you know
exactly what he did: He
looked at the ceiling, went
outside, got a ladder,
climbed up on the roof and
found some water sitting
up there. It couldn't drain,
because there was a little
place clogged by leaves.
The plumber fixed it in
maybe I 0 seconds. I could
have easily fixed it myself
at any time in the previous
24 hours if I had not been
so busy repairing our
plumbing. I wrote the
· check in a manly manner.
So far, my wife, sh~;&gt;wing
great self-restraint, has
said, "I told you so" only
about 450,000 times. Fine.
She's entitled. But don't
you start on me, OK? Not if
you want me to tum your
water back on .

Bv CARLA K. JOHNSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

...

\
l
•

CHICAGO - Amid the
search for a former police
officer's fourth wife . a
renowned pathologist said
Saturday he has examined a
previous wife 's exhumed
remains and determined she
was killed.
Form er New York City
chief medical examiner Dr.
Michael Baden said he analyzed Kathleen Savio's
remains at the request of her
relatives, who disagree with
an earlier ruling that her
death was ari accident. He
concluded she died after a
struggle, and her body was
placed in the bathtub where
she was found.
"I'm convinced she was
the victim of a murder. 'Who
done it' is up to the police to
resolve," Bad~n said in a
telephone interview.
.
· Results of a separate, official autopsy will not be
available for several days,
authorities said.
A coroner's jury initially
ruled that Savio 's 2004
death was an accidental
drowning. But now, with
Drew Peterson's founh wife

missing for more than two
weeks, authorities are reexamJnmg the circumstances of Savio's death.
Peterson, 53, viho resigned
this week as a Elolingbrook
police sergeant, has not been
named a suspect in Savio's
death. But he is a suspect in
the disappearance Of his
fourth and current wife,
Stacy, who was last seen
Oct. 28 and whose case
authorities have called a possible homicide. ·
Peterson has an unlisted
· numbet. He has denied any
involvement in either case
and said he believes his 23year-old wife left him for
another man and ts ahve.
body
was
Savio's
exhumed this week at the
request of Will County
State 's Attorney James
Glasgow, who has said after
examining evidence he
believes her death was a
homicide staged to look like
an accident.
The state 's attorney 's
office allowed Baden to use
the county morgue for his
work and a state's attorney's
inve stigator attended the
autopsy. spokesman Charles
Pelkie said.

Dear S.upporters, .
Thank you all for being part of a great campaign. Even
though tire results'are not what we are hoping for we have
energized a huge b~se of.•upport. All your help has meant
so much to me and my family. And it has given me the
opportunity to see how many civic minded people are in our
community. With us all,working together to making our city
better I am sure we will cross paths again.
' Thank you again for your.support!
Jeff O'Dell

"AP photo

Cyclone affected villagers c·arry corrugated iron sheeting to repair their damaged house in
Potuakhali, 152 kilometers (95 miles) south of Bangladesh's capital Saturday. The official
death toll from a savage cyclone in Bangladesh reached 1, 723 on Saturday as military heli·
copters and ships joined rescue efforts in the wake of the deadliest storm to hit the coun·
try in a decade.
Bodies were found among ·
muddy paddy fields and.
along river channels, said
Bishnu
Prashad
Chakravony, a local journalist who visited the hardhit coastal area of Bagerhat.
· "Advance warnings from
the weather office helped us
take shelter, but still, the
damage is colossal," said
Abu Hanif, 60, a Bagerhat·
resident.
The government has alloCated $5.2 million in emergency aid for rebuilding
houses in the cycloneaffected areas, a government statement said.
The German government
offered $731 ,345 while the
European Union released
$2.2 million in relief aid.
The World Food Program
was rushing food to the
country.
Bangladesh's
interim
government
head,
Fakhrilddin Ahmed, .visited
some of . the affected areas
Friday and Saturday and
assured cyclone victims of
government assistance.
Bangladesh
President
Iajuddin Ahmed, meanwhile, was expected to visit
some of the worst-hit areas
in coming days.
Aid organizations feared

that food shonages and con- poultry perished, and crops
!aminated water could lead . were destroyed on nearly
to widespread problems if 77,450 acres of land.
people remain stranded.
But the full picture of the,
Television
images devastation
remained
showed crowds of people unclear as the storm wreaked
scrambling beneath military havoc on the country's elechelicopters
as
troops tricity and telephone lines,
dropped food packages affecting even areas that
were spared a direct hit. ·
through open hatches.
At least 1.,5 million
Sidr spawned a 4-foot
coastal villagers had fled to storm surge that swept
shelters where they were through low-lying areas and
given emergency rations, some offshore islands, leavsaid senior government offi- ing them under water, said
cia! Ali Imam Majumder in Nahid Sultana, an official of
Dhaka.
the Ministry of ·Food and
Many parts of Dhaka, the Disaster Managemeot. .
CARE's Anwar said
biggest city in this poor,
desperately crowded nation many surviving families
of 150 million people, were living under makeshift
remained without power or tents or sheds made out of
water Saturday. The stor!ll ·the remnants of their siraw
killed at least four people m and bamboo homes, wht:le
Dhaka.
many ·others had to go back
More than 4,000 people to the official shelters.
were injured, military
Bangladesh is prone to
spokesman
.Lt.
Col. cyclones and floods that
Moyeenullah Chowdhury cause huge losses of life and
said. Army medical teams propeny. The most recen~
were working in the affect- deadly storm was a tornado
ed area.
that leveled 80 villages in
An estimated 2.7 million northern Bangladesh in
people were affected and 19%, killing 621 people.
Associated Pre&gt;S writers
773,000 houses were damaged, according to the Julhas A/am in Dhaka and
Ministry
of
Disaster Sheikh Didarul A/am in
Management.
Roughly Khulna contributed to this·
250,000 head of cattle and report.

Bush demands Congress send.him legislation to fix alternative minimum tax
Bv DEB RIECHMANN
ASSOC IATED PRES S WRITER

I was walking through
So I got my flashlight
my bedroom on a recent
and climbed up a ladder
Sunday morning when I
into the attic, where I was
suddenly had a feeling that
able, thanks to my experisomething was wrong. I'm
ence as a homeowner and
not sure how I knew; permy natural mechanical
Dave
haps it wa.s a "sixth sense"
sense, to get pieces of insuBarry
I've developed after years
lation deep into my nose. I
of home ownership . .Or
was not, however, able to
perhaps it was the ·fact that
locate the source of the
there was water coming out
leak, because my attic
S dde
of the ceiling.
turned out to be a cramped,
But whatever tipped me
u nly, instead of being dark, dirty, mystertous
off, 1 knew that 1 had . a ruthless, all-conquering .
·
warriors, they became a place with pipes and wires
potentially serious prob- bunch of guys scurrying running all over the place,
lem, so I did not waste around trying to repair and off in the distance time. Moving swiftly but leaking
viaducts. just out of flashlight reach,
without panic, I went into (Tragically, the Romans did but I could definitely sense
the living room and read nOt have "WD-40.")
&lt;its presence - a tarantula
the entire sports section of
so 1 knew that our the size of Mt. Everest.
the newspaper, thus giving . plumbing had broken, and I
So .l came briskly back
the problem a chance to go also knew why it had cho- down tbe ladder and told
away by itself. This is one sen that particular morning: my wife that, to stop the
of the four recommended Wt; had a houseguest. plumbing from leaking, I
methods for dealing with a Plumbing can sense the was going to tum off all the
household problem, the arrival of a houseguest, and water to the house until the
other three being l) wrap- it often responds by leaking plumber came. Speaking in
ping the problem with ducr or causing toilets to erupt clipped, efficient, manly
tape; 2) spraying the prob- like porcelain volcanoes. sentences, I instructed ·her
letn with a product called And, of course, our plumb- to fill containers with water
"WD-40"; and 3) selling ing had waited . until and write a note for the
the home, and then telling Sunday, which meant that houseguest telling him how
the new owners, "Hey, it the plumber would not to flush his toilet with a
never did that when we come for at least a day, bucket.
owned it."
"Before we do all that,"
which meant that it was up
Unfortunately, when I to me, as a male, to climb she said, "Maybe you
went back to the bedroom, up into ihe attic and do the should check the .... "
the ceiling was still drip- manly thing that men have
"Don't tell me to check
ping. My wife suggested had to do as long as men the roof!" I explained.
that maybe there was water have been men: shine a "Stop talkinll about the
sitting on the roof and leak- flashlight around.
roof! The problet11 is the
ing into the house, but I
"Maybe you should check plumbing!" Sometimes a
knew, as an experienced the roof first," my wife sug- man has to put his manly
guy of the male gender, that gested . "Maybe there's foot down.
she was wrong. I knew that water sitting .up there." She
So while my wife wrote
the problem was the plumb- was fixated on this roof the- toilet-flushing instructions
ing. It's time that we home- ory. Women can be like that. for our houseguest and pre·owners accepted the fact I had to explain to her, being pared a ·small apologetic
that plumbing is a bad idea. as patient. as possible con- basket of fruit and cookies,
Many historians believe sideling that .I had urgent I tried to locate the valve
that the primary reason the guy tasks to perform, that that would shut off all the
Roman Empire collapsed is she was being an idiot, . water. This was very diffithat the Romans attempted because the problem was cult, because our plumbing
to install plumbing in it. the plumbing.
system turns out to have

ilunbap m:imtli -~entind • Page As

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Local Br.iefs

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Betraying the troops .
Just
in
time
for
Thanksgiving , the vile
movie "Redacted" is opening in a few theaters this
week. The film, financed
by billionaire Mark Cuban
and directed by far-left
bomb thrower Brian De
Palma, features drunken
American soldiers in Iraq
raping and murdering a 14year-old · girl and then
slaughtering her family.
As stated in this space
two months ago, a depiction like this will be displayed pn?minently on
jihad websites, and will be
used as a recruiting tool by
terrorists. No doubt.
Both De Palma and
Cuban are unrepentant and
apparently could not .care
less about putting U.S.
troops in even more danger. Cuban opines that it is'
wrong to condemn the film
without seeing it, but that's
incredible nonsense. No
one denies the movie puts
American soldiers in the
1 worst light possible. As one
reader e-mailed.: "Saying
you
can't
condemn

2007

WASHINGTON
President Bush demanded
Saturday that Congress
send ·him legislation that
keeps
middle-class
Americans from being hit
at tax iime next year by the
dreaded alternative minimum tax.
That's not likely to happen anytime soon. Congress
has adjourned for the
Thanksgiving holiday. The
legislation is muddled in the
House and Senate. And
Bush has threatened to veto
any bill that raises taxes as a
way of fixing the tax,
known in shorthand as
AMT.
'"I will veto any bill that
niises taxes as a condition
of fixing the AMT," Bush
said. in his weekly radio
address. "Members of
Congress must put political
theater behind them, fix the
AMT and protect America's
middle class from an unfair
tax hike."
The AMT was created in
"1969 to ensure that a small
number of wealthy people
could not use tax breaks or
deductions to avoid paying
any taxes. It was never

MAIN

indexed for inflation, and
every year .the AMT net
falls on more middleincome taxpayers. This year
some 4 million people were
subject to the tax.
If Congress and the White
House. do not reach a compromise by the end of the
year, anywhere from 21
million to 25 million middle-income taxpayers will
be subject to it, costing
them as much as $2,000 in
extra taxes.
Earlier this month, House
Democrats pushed through
an $80 billion bill that
would extend AMT relief
for one year, at a cost of
about $50 billion. It also
includes another $30 billion
in popular tax relief measures. To cover the $80 billion price tag, the bill would
bring in revenue by changing tax rules affecting corporate transactions.
The White House said this
amounts to a tax increase
that would undermine the
competitiveness of U.S.
businesses in the global
economy and could have
adverse effects Qn the U.S.
economy. Some pro-bu siness Democrats joined
Republicans in expressing
concern that the carried

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interest provision could hun
venture capital and real
estate investors as well as
hedge fund managers making hundreds of millions of
dollars.
"Congress should not use
legislation that millions of
Americans are counting on
to protect them from higher
taxes in one area as . an
excuse to raise taxes in
other areas," Bush said.
During the House debate
on the bill, House Majority
Leader Steny Hoyer, DMd., said that "while virtually all of us want to mitigate the reach of the AMT,
Republicans are complaining that Democrats have the
audacity to close .tax loopholes and to insist on fiscal
responsibility."
. Rep~blicans claim that

closing loopholes constitutes a tax increase, he said.'
"I reject their premise. All
we are doing is insisting
that people pay their fair
share."
The Senate, meanwhile, i~
working on separate legisra-:
tion.
Bush said Congress ' inac-·
tion is actually costing taxpayers in other ways.
' ··
Because tax forms for
2007 had to be sent to the
government printer, the
Internal Revenue Service is
being forced to send out
tens of millions of tax forms
that Bush ~aid will almost
certainty. end up being.
wrong - "wasting your
money, delaying refunds
and making it even more.
complicated to figure out
your taxes."
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iunba~ lime• -ientinel

Hocking College trustee named
in Pharmacy Board complaint
NELSONVILLE (AP) - ·
The chairman of the
Hocking College Board of
Trustees, a school und er
fire for its spending on trips
by college officials. has
been accused of illegally
filling hundreds of orders
for prescription drugs over
the Internet.
The State Board of
Pharmacy filed a complaint
Thursday alleging that
Steven Holte! supplied
d(Ugs to people across the
· nation who never saw the
physicians who wrote their
prescriptions.
Holte!, 50, is a pharmacist
and owner of Stoltz Drugs
in Nelso nville . A message
seeking comment was left at
Holtel's home on Friday.
Ohio law requires pharmacists to ensure that a
patient-physician relationship has been established
through in-person visits
before filling prescriptions.
Holte! · has been a
Hocking College trustee
since 2004 and is serving
his second year as chairman. The pharmacy board
has notified Holte! that it is
moving to revoke his pharmacist's license.
Holte! has operated Stoltz
Drugs since 1982. He was
convicted in Athens County
in 1989 of theft by deception, Medicaid. fraud and
sale of exempted drUgs in
what prosecutors called an
over-billing scheme, The
Columbus Dispatch reported Friday.
He was sentenced to 15
days in jail and fined
$7,500, the paper said, and
the pharmacy board fined
Holte! $25,000 and revoked
his license for five years,
with three years of the revocation suspended.

The state attorney general 's office has said it is
looking into trips by
Hocking Co llege officials,
includi ng Holte!.
One report showed that
the John Light, the president of the two- year technical qJIIege, listed expenses
of $15,000 for a trip last
Central
year to
the

American cou ntry of Belize
fo r up to 17 menibers of an
advisory board. that oversees the sc hmil's hospitality
traini ng program.

Hock ing College offers
courses in such things as
computer programming, the
hospitality indu stry and
health
care
fields.
Enrollment is about 5,000.

Southern Fall SportS Banquet, Page 82

Local Stocks

Bl

Local basketball schedules, Pages 83-4
Earnhardt preps for DEl finale, Page BS

AEP (NYSE} - 46.41
Akzo (NASDAQ}- 76
Ashland In c. (NYSE)- 50.93
Big Lots (NYSE}-19.87
Bob Evans (NASDAQ} - 30.90
Borgwarner (NYSE}.- 99.15
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ} 52.39
Champion (NASDAQ} - 5.57
Charming Shops (NASDAQ}8 .83
City Holding (NASDAQ} - 35 .78
C,olllns (NYSE} - 72.10
DuPont (NYSE} - 45.31
US !lank (NYSE} - 31.43
GanMII (NYSE} - 39.54

General Electric (NY5E} - 38.65
Harley-Davidson (NYSE} - 47 .88
JP Morgan (NYSE} - 43.09 .
Kroger ( NYSE} - 28.65
Limited Brands (NYSE)- 18.37
Norfolk Southern ( NYSE) 50.44
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ} 28.81
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS·
DAQ) - 25
BBT (NYSE} - 33.71
Peoples (NASDAQ}- 23.83
Pepsico (NYSE} - 74.15
Premier (NASDAQ} - 13.98
Rockwell (NYSE}- 67.20

Rocky Boots (NASDAQ}- 7.12
Royal Dutch Sholl - 80.65
Sears Holding (NASDAQ} 120.97
Wai-Mart (NYiE}- 48.34
Wendy 's (NYSE} - 29.~8
Worthington (NYSE}- 20.90

Dally stock reports are the 4
p.m. ET closing quotes of transactions for Nov. 16, 2007, provided by Edward Jones financial

Sunday, November 18, 2007

I'
''

advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740} 441·9441

and Lesley Marrero In Point

f

Pleasant at ( 3041 6 7 4 ·017 4.
Member SIPC.

'

!
I

I'

~

'

I .

7.'\5 2nd .\,anuc • Callipolis, OH
·Uh-2h0 I

LocAL ScuEm:a :
GALUPous- Aschedule of upcOming collAge
and h~h school va~ sporti"'g events involving
teams from Gallla and Metgs counlies
Mond,v. Noyemb" 19
Gl~s

Baakstbail
. Chesapeake at Gallia Academy, 6 p.m.
Symmes Valley at South Galtia, 6 p.m.
Netson11ille-York at Southern,. 6 p.m.

Tournament run ends early for Rio Grande soccer·
REdmen CJ)
Soccer · G
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO TH E SENTINEL

so n for Fresno Paci fie .
FPU edged Ri o 1-0 on
September 8 in :he final
ga me of the D. Wayne
Evans Memorial Classic.
The loss for the Redmen
(13-5-1) was the fir st loss
in the last II matches.
Fresno scored two early
goals from Pablo Campos
and a third from Amaury
Nunes to take a 3-1 lead
over the Redmen at halftime. Campos scored in the
6th and II th minutes and
put pressure Rio Grande.
Fresno avenged the 2003

took a 3-1 halftime lead.
Campos picked up the
assist on the goal.
Fresno Pacific added two
in surance goals in the 63rd
and 74th minutes. Junior
Nehemtas Blanco scored
ht s f1rst goal of the season
and freshman Valentin
Gonzalez added his second
of the year. Sophomores
Andres Blanco and Javier
Ceballos ·both picked up
ass1sts respectively.
Junior Callum Morris
scored the second Rio
Grande's goal in· the 81 st

minute on a pass from
sophomore Jaso n Massie.
The Sun bi rds goa lie
Brandon Cave made five
saves in the net for the win
while Ray Nicaise also
· stopped five shots for Rio
G
·
rande 10 the lo_s~.
.
. Fresno. Pac1f1c
w1ll
tmprove _
us record to 19-2I and w1ll advance to the
quarterfinals to ·face the
top seed m the tournament,
No. 1 Azusa Pacific on
. Saturday, Nov. 17th at 7
p.m.

----'-------·
OLATHE, Kan. - The
tournament stay was a short
Jy11dav. Noyambar 20
National
Championship
one for the University of
Girls Basketball
game
loss
to
Rio Grande.
Rio Grande. men ' s soccer
Eastern at Ai11er Valle~. 6 p.m.
Rio Grande cut the deficit
team at the 2007 NAJA
in half in the 14th minute
National Tournament. Rio,
the No. 9 seed was ousted
when freshman Steven
in the second round by No.
O'Hara took a pass from
"8 Fresno Pacific by a . 5-2
senior Ryan Baxter and
score on Friday afternoon
found the back of the net.
CINCINNATI (AP) at the College Boulevard
The Sunbirds answered in
Joe Nuxhall, the youngest Activites Center.
38th minute on a blast from
major leaguer at age 15 and
It was the second win
Nunes from I 0 yards out to
later a beloved broadcaster over Rio Grande this seago back up two goals and
as "the ol ' left-hander" ·in
Cincinnati , has died. He
was 79.
Girls Basketball.~ 2007-08 season opener
Nuxhall died Thursday
night while hospitalized for
treatment
of pneumonia,
the
STAFF REPORT
team said.
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
He
was
8Y BRYAN WALTERS
awaiting
WELLSTON - Kasey
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
surgery to Turley had 20 of her team's
insert
a 28 points, but those numCOAL GROVE-A 16•2
pacemaker, bers fell far short of a domsecond quarter run ultimateand
had inating Wellston attack that
ly proved to be the differb e e n put up 31 by the half on its
ence for South Gallia during
NuKhall
slowed by. a way to a 60-28 victory on
a 57-39 setback to host Coal .
recurrence the opening night of girls
Grove
in the 2007-08 girls
. of cancer since September.
high school
basketball season opener
Brought .up by Cincinnati
basketball
Friday night.
·
to pitch during World War II
action
m
The Lady Rebels (0-1)
- just out of junior high
Ohio.
by one point (13' 12)
·
trailed
classes, he unraveled at the
The Lady
after
·eight
minutes of play,
'sight of Stan Musial'in the
Rockets (1 but a second quarter drought
on-deck circle - Nuxhall
0) jumped
left
the visitors looking up at
worked more ·than six
out to an
a
29-14
halftime deficit. The
decades for the Reds. He
11-2 lead
Lady
Hornets
(1-0)
continued to pitch batting
·after one
increased their lead to 48-25
practice into the 1980s and
quarter of
at
the end of third stanza,
was a member of the team's
play . and
then
cruised on to the ISHall ofFame.
pushed that
point
margin of victory.
· While he won 135 games,
lead to 31 Jordyn Cox , who made·
12 at the
it was on the radio where he
five of Coal Grove's eight 3became best known. On a
half thanks .
pointers in the triumph, led
to strong
franchise filled with Hall of
all scorers with 17 points.
play
by
Fame players and big perChelsea
Delorig followed
Taylor
sonalities, Nuxhall m1ght
with a dozen points for
Mullins
have been the most popular
CGHS, while Danielle
with a team
of all.
Carpenter also added douhigh
15
"This is a sad day for
ble-digits.with 10.
points and
Chelsea Stowers paced
, Please see NuxhaiL 85
B e .a n n a
Taylor
SGHS
with 14 points, folHall who
.
'
.
lowed by Jennifer Sheridan
added II points for her
with II and Jasmine Waugh
team.
with
seven markers. Niki
Wellston kept up its early
Fulks
added three points for
WEWTON 60, SovntERN 28
intensity in the second half
the Red and Gold, while the
Southern 2
10 7 9 - 2$'
with a 13-7 advantage in
duo of Taylor Duncan and
Wall$1on 11 · 20 13 16- eo
the third quarter - taking
· SOUTHERN (0.1)- Kasey Turley 7
Hailee Swain rounded out
4-4 20, Breanna Taylor 1 o.O 2,
a 25-point lead - and finthe
scoring with two points
Chey•nne Dunn 1 3-4 5 Lindsay
ished
things
off
with
a
16.
ToalordO 1·2 1, Lyr)Zoe Tucker 0 D-0
each.
0, Chel~ Ritchie 0 o-o 0, Gabby
9 advantage in the final
South Gallia outscored the
Johnson 0 D-0 0: TOTAL$ 8 8-10 28;
eight
minutes
to
claim
the
Lady
Hornets 14-9 in the
Throe-point goats: 2 (Kasey Turtey 2).
WELLSTON (1.0)- Tiylor,.MuWno 7
60-28 victory.
final quarter, but were blast1·4 15, Kendra DePue 3i,.O..o· 6.
Mullins
added
four
steals
ed 35-13 in the second and
Broenna Rail 5 o-o 11, Msiial .a
to her 15 point performance,
Writesel o o-o o, Tara Oliver 2 o-o 4,
third frames.
S!ephenie Trainer 2 1·2 5, Whitney
while Hall added seven
The Lady Rebels return to
Patrldt 3 D-0 6; Erin Sturgill 2-2-2 8.
rebounds
to
go
along
with
action Monday when they
11flany Wiras 11.-1 3, Ambel King oo0 o, Hannah Wheatley 1 O·O 2:
her II points. Overall the
SubmiHed photo open the 2007-08 home seaTOTALS 26 5.'9 60; · Thrae-polm
Lady Rockets shot 35 per- Southern sophomore Kasey Turley, right, goes up for the jump t&gt;all at the start of Friday son against Symmes Valley.
11901~: 3 (En.n ~!11!!! ~. !!.IJI~Pill H~l
1).
.
nlght"s girls basKetl:lall game against Wellston at WHS. The 2007-08 girls season started Tip-off is scheduled for 6
Please see Southem, 83 Friday
Tumah!lla~dual . . . . .
night, but not too well for the Lady Tornadoes during a 60·28 setback. ·
p.m.
Field goals - Sou1hem 9-38 (.237).

Reds legend Joe
Nuxhall dies at 79

Lady Rebels
Lady Rockets .handle Southern in season opener struggle with
Coal Grove

Surefresh

Basted
TUrkeys
Limit 1 w/$10.00

Add. Purchase

Whole Superior

Boneless
Tavern Ham·

,Prep Boxseores ·

Limit I

79

$

•

Sunday,Novembert8,2007

1

Broughton
Cottage

4-6pk mix or match
Dr. Pepper, Crush,

Cheese

Pe.psi

00

2/$

2/$

Cumpbells Cream of
Mushroom, Chiken or

Celery
10 3/4oz

98

Local
Weather
Sunday••. Partly sunny.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Sunday
night ..• Partly
cloudy. Cold with lows in
the upper 20s. Northeas t
winds around 5 mph.
Monday••• Sunny. Highs
in the upper 40's.
Monday night ... Partly
cloudy. Cold with lpws
around 30.
Tuesday and Tuesday
night ••. Mostly
cloudy.
Highs in the lower 60s .
Lows in the upper 30s.
Wednesday•••Cloudy with
a 50 percent chance of showers. Highs in the lower 60s.
Wednesday night and
Thanksgiving
Day.••
Showers
likely. Lows
around 40. Highs in the mid
50s. Chance of rai n 60 perce nt.
Thursday night. •• Mostly
cloudy. A chance of rain
showers in the evening.
Lows in the .lower 30s.
Chan~e of rai n 30 percent.

Iilside

l

State fair's
at-the-gate
ticket prices
to increase
. COLUMBUS (AP) Visiting the midway, the butter cow and the rest of the
Ohio State Fair could cost a
little more next summer.
The Ohio Expositions
Commission has voted to
raise the price for adults who
pay at the fair's gates by $2,
to $10. Gate tickets for senior
citizens and children will cost
$8, $1 more than this year.
But fairgoers will still pay
$6 for advance-sale tickets
made available at Kroger
supermarkets and other
locations.
The
price
changes
approved Thursday are the
first since 200 I. They also
include shght increases in
camping fees and multi-day
admtssion passe·s.
Exfo commission finance
chie Doug Smalley · says
the higher charges should
boost fair revenue by
$155,000 in 2008.

PageA6

3/$

00

·A!ISorted"
.

.

Monte

2-polnt goals 7-32 (.219), $-pOl~!
goats 2·6 (.333): Wellston 28.73
(.3561, 2'PQint goals 23-60 (.383}, ~
'point goalS 3·13 (.2311: F- thro\Na
-.,- Sou1hem 8-.10 (:80()}. Wetlalon 5'9
(•558); Rebounds - Southern 23'
Kasey- Turley 10), Williston ~7
· Kell!fra DePu, 9, Whitney Patriblc .8,
o reanna Hail 7): Steals-.SouUtem 1
(llndBBy Toalord 1), Wellston 15
(Taylor Mullins and Enrt StUrjji• 4
·apiece): Bloclai -Southam a (KaseY
Turtpy 4}, Wellston 3; Assists Southern 5 (Brtranna Taylor 2},
Wellston 18 (Erin Sturgill 4}:
TU!I10vort - Southern 2&amp;, WeRston
. 9: Fouls - Southam 5, Wellston 14.

C

CoAL GROVE

57, S ~ $9

South Galli• :12
Cool Oro&lt;J!. 13

2' 11 14 - . 39
18 19 •.9· - 57

. SOUTH OALLIA (0,11-'1'11~ FIJI!(t·1
1-&lt;131 Taylor Duncan 1Ml'll 3i,Q
. ; hl
hllliaooa,
.StOVNJU-2.14, .~.nnn.rs~ 5

o-o·n; F. 8obaatlan.O.Oo0 0; .Hallea
·Swain 1 o;o 2, Jaerill~ Wluah 31&gt;1
·r, Undiiy JOhnton 0 Q;O.o, Natuhl
Adkine 0 0.2·O, 1.8(:1 ~r; O.!O'Q o.
'lWIIt' 10 3-ll. ~· 'Fii~lnt 110111:
S1o"!''ll a,.8111!• • ~gil, Foull;
0

$
'l ',1'

·.2·. 29

.. ' .• '

, .· ., ..

J

.

1$. FOUitd OUI: N~na. ..
COAL QFIOVE' (1.0} - Abby Nance
1 3, KoiU rove 0 0, Tort Smith
·0 o-o 0, Koiii' McMacklrt 0, 0.0 0;
;Keoaha Wyan P
ll~tlltnY
Hatnton 2 5·8 9; Qanltlle .Oal'plnllir
.4 2,710, JOr&lt;!yn·(lox,6 ();() 1't,1avlo.

a

o-o

o-o e,

o-o
o-o o,

StK1cln 3
Chellea Deic(IQ 5·D·o 12, Doni Winters 0 o. folafe 21.

'

o-o

,He 57. ThraaiX&gt;Jnt

Sib. ,

Cox 0,

goli1: 1

O«o(IQ 2, Nance. Fo~ls: 12. Fouled
·Ou1oNqna.
.

CoNTAcrUs
·ovP Scorellne (5 p.m.-1 a.m.}
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33

F.ax- 1-740·446-3008
t;~mell- sports,@mydailysentinet.com

Sl!o.r!tllltff

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 23
bwatters@ mydailytribune.com

Prin·s (;uml Through Satunla~ "'""' · 2-t

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
Ierum@ mydaityregistEn.com

..

Harris named Hocking MVP
A total of five golf~rs from Meigs
County earn spots on 2007squad
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

A total of five golfers
from Meigs County were
selected to' the All-TriValley Conference Hocking
Division team for the 2007
fall season.
And one of them was the
Most Valuable Player.
Southern junior Bryan
Harris was medalist in 9-of10 matches this season,
making him the unanimous
selection
for
MVP.
Classmate Alex Hawley was
the other Tornado honoree.
SHS finished tied for · third
with Trimble at 6-4 in the
division.
Eastern, which finished as
runner-up (7-3) in 2007, had
three selections on the AIITVC Hocking team. Seniors
Kyle Edwards and Nathan
Carroll were honored, as
was sophomore Craig Jones,
on the all-league squad from
this fall.
Waterford, which won the
league with a 9-1 rriark ,
landed four players on the
All-TVC Hocking tea m.
They were juniors Brad
Miller and Stevie Wetz,
sophomore Kyle Allen and
freshman Aaron Miller.
Wildcats' coach Aaron
Powers was also named the
I

TVC Hocking Coach of the
Year.
Junior Joel Barrett and
sophomore Taylor Russell
were also selected from 6-4
Trimble, while Miller (1-8).
junior Matt Weiner and
Federal Hocking (0-9)
senior Summer Hatfield
were also all-league selections. '·
, Harris was also the
Division - Ill Southeast
District Player of the Year
this fall.
,.....,...-------..,

.................
...................

. ........
.....,.,"*'
•• "·-

Jtul•••~·

. 2007 AII·TVC
· Hocking Golf
Kvt• e~~wardo

Nill)an Corron

Craig Jpnos
S!-'"mer Ha~ield
Matt W8ilter
l!ryao Harria
Alii&gt; H~wley .
Taylor R&lt;laaeil
Joat ·Boriett,
Brad Miller
Kyle Allen

Aaron Miller
Stevie Wetz

Eaetern

Sr

Eastern
Eaetem
FOil Hock
Miller
Southem
Sou1ham
Trimble
Trimble

Sr
So
Sr
Jr
Jr
Jr
So
Jr
Jr
So
Fr
Jr

Watortord
,Waterford
Wate~ord

Waterford

Moat Velulble Player

Bryan Harris. Southern

of

Cooch the Ytar
Aaron Powers, Waterford
Final ~lllndlngo
' Waterford

9-1

Eastern

7-3"'

Sou1hem
Trimble

6-4
8-4

Miller
Fed Hoek

1-8
ll-9

,

Ofllcta
2$01 ltftonon Avenue
Potftt.Piullht, WV 25550

_,.,......
,

304.675.4500

Acctptln&amp; MW fJGIIIIIII

�Page B2 • ~unbar m:inl£5 -imttinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Huggins Wins West Virginia debut

Sub.mltted photos

Pictured are the Southern athletes that earned 2007 ~11-TVC Academic hOQOrs. Kneeling in
the front row, from left, are Breanna Taylor, Katie Woods, Dustin Salser, Emma Hunter and
Jamie Warner. Standing in the middle are Whitney Wolfe-Riffle. Stephanie Cundiff, Krystel
Marler, Heather Cundiff, Courtney Ginther, Morgan Brown. Standing in back are Eric Buzzard,
Michael Manuel, Kyle Goode, Bryan Harris, Ryan Chapman, Teddy Brown and Brad Coppick.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(A P) - The Bob Huggins
era is off to a successful start.
Alex Ruoff scored 17
points and Da' Sean Butler
added 14 as West Virginia
beat Arkansas-Monticello
in · the
81-53
Friday
Mountaineers' first game
under Huggi ns.
The excitement, lacking at
times on the floor, was palpable in the stands. Long a football school, West Virginia has
sold 6,600 season tickets, its
most ever. Fans cheered
Huggins louder than any
player during introductions,
and gave the 1977 WVU
grad an ovation every time he
visibly gave instruction.
'The state of West Virginia
and West Virginia University
have alwa~s been very close
to my family," Huggins said.
"My dad was here. My two
sisters were here. I've got a
brother here. So many people
throu,gh the years that I have
remamed very close wi_th are
here and it s great to be
around friends and family

and to work at a university
you love."
Huggi ns left Kansas State
after one season and returned
to hi s alma mater in April
when John Beilein left for
Mich1gan after leading the
Mountaineers to consecutive
NCAA Sweet 16 appearances and the NIT championship last year.
Kansas State later said it
would not have hired
Huggins just one year earlier
if' 11 knew how important
coaching West Virginia was
to him. But in the Mountain
State, Huggins' 59.1 wins.
which are sixth-best .among
active coaches, and blue-collar persona have been
embraced. He is seen as a
vehicle for the re-emergence
of a program which hasn' t
been to the Final Four since
Jerry West took it there in
1959.
Fans are still jamming Web
sites and radio shows with
welcome messages, and have
begun
to
refer
to
Morgantown, known during

football
season
as
Toi1chdo wn
Ci ty.
as
Huggstown. Hugg ins· image
adorns the medm guide and
pm·ket scheliules and he was
che~rcd

when he came out in

a blue suit with golLI pinstripe' given to him by his
daughter . .
"We haven ' t won a Big

East champion ship. We
haven't won a nation&lt;JI chamP.ionship." Huggins said.
"People in West Virginia
de,erve to win one. That's
what we ' re working toward."
West V_irginia forced 27
turnovers. but committed 18
against 17 a&gt;Sists: It led the
B1s E&lt;lst in assist-to-turnover
rat1o last year. Outrebounded
in the vast majority of games
last year, the Mounta111eers.
had a 41-30 edge in
rebounds.
The game was part of the
Lege nlis
ClassiC . West
Virginia will play Prairie
View A&amp;M in the second
round on Sunday. The final
two rounds will be held next
week in Newark, N.J.

Friday High School Basketball Scores
Beavercreek 41, Kettering Fairmont 38

Belletontaine
Marion Elgin 44

Benjamin

Logan

51 ,

.

Bristol 41, Middlefield Cerdtnal31
Burton Berkshire 52, Ashtabula
Edgewood 43
Cambridge 51 , New Concord John
Glem47
Car1isle 30, Camden Preble Shawnee 27
Casstown Miami E. 68, St. Paris Graham
38
Cin. Christian 49, Day. Christian 44
Cin. Hughes 54, Lebanon 25
Cle. Cent. Cath. 55, Cle. St. Mar1in De
Pones 19
Coal Grove 57 , Crown City S. Galli&amp; 39
Cols. Centennial 63, Cols. Briggs 34
Cornerstone Christian 37, N. Ridgeville

Lake Ridge 34
Creston Norwayn~ 59, Wooster Triway

29
Defiance Tinora 55, Miller City 43
Germantown Valley View 64, EatOn 46
Houston 51, Covington 27 •
Jamestown Greenevlew 36. Spring. NW

29
Lewisburg Tri -County N. 39. W.
Alexandria Twin ValleyS. 31
Lodi Cloverleaf 59, Cuyahoga Falls 36
Logan 45, Lancaster Fairfield Union 25
Madison 54, New Lebanon Dixie 46
Magnolia Sandy Valley 44, Massillon

Tuslaw 43
Manchester 63. Carrollton 52
Mentor 61 , Strongsville 50
Miamisbl.lrg 49, Vandalia Butler 43
Milan Edison 57. Monroeville 43
Milford 71 , Uberty T-lip . Lakota E. 55
N. Olmsted 44. Avon 35
N. Robinson Col. Crawford 53, New
Riegel 30
New Matamoras Frontier 56, Old
Washington Buckeye Trait 54
,Painesville Riverside 63. Perry 40
Rockford Parkway 66 , Ft. Jennin9s 51
Rocky River 59, Westlake SB
Spring. Kenton Ridge 68. S . Charleston

SE 38
St. Marys'Memori81 56, Piqua 27
Strasburg-Franklin 56. Beallsville 52
Tontogany Otsego 64, N. Baltimore 29
Upper Sandusky 54, Bucyrus Wyntord

42
Van Buren 78, Lima Shawnee 67

Blufffon 55, Cary-Rawson 36

Celina OVISCO Classic
Celina 77 . To!. Scott 52
Dayton Northridge Tournament
Spring. NE 38, Franklin Middleto:wn

Christian 32
Dayton Oakwood Tournament

Ociy. Oakwood 4 t. Spring. N. 35
Riverside Stebbins 39. Troy 37
Kewpee Tipoff Claaalc
Delphos St. John 's 53, Elida 3 1
Lorain County Tournament
Lorain Ad mi ral King 61, LaG range
Keystone 14
Vermilion 37, Elyria 34

M11rietta Tournament

Van Wert 48, Haviland Wayne Trace 46

Jefferson Area 72, Day. Meadowdale 43

W. Liber1y-Salem 51, Bellefontaine 43
Wapakoneta 52, Botkins 45

Marietta 65, Dover 59

Willoughby s. 54 , Auro ra 51
Zanesville Maysville 55. Warsaw River

McDonald's Tournament
Onoville 25. Convoy Crestv1ew 22

View 43
New Bremen Tournament
.
Bluffton Tournament
Arlington 40, Lafayette Allen E. 39

Anna 34. New Bremen 31
Sidney Lehman
New Knoxville 33

14.

Sunday, November 18, 2007
'

:%Junba~ m:unrs -~rntinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

'

Redwomen stay perfect, down Houghton, 70-52
BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEl

RIO G,RANDE - Th e
University of Rio Grande
women 's basketball team
moved to 3-0 on the 200708 season with a 70-52 win
over VISiting Houghton
College in the firs.t round
of the Bevo Francis
Tournament on Friday
evening at the Newt Oliver
Arena.
Rio Grande (3-0) started
slowly, falling behind 7-1
in the opening minutes of
the game. The Redwomen
gathen;d themselves nicely
and bolted out to a 32- 15
lead before cruising to the
18-point victory.
Junior forward Sarah
Drabinski delivered her
best game of the season,
scoring 15 points to lead

the Redwomen in that cate.
gory. Senior guard Britney
Walker added 14 points
and · collec ted · seve n
rebounds while freshman
guHrd/forward
Ja sm ine
Richardson chippeLI in with
12 points off the bench and
five boards. Junior center
Erin Kume tossed in nine
points and eight rebounds.
Freshman guard Kaylee
Helton was on th'e verge of
double figures with nine
points qff the bench.
Houghton (0- 1) was led
by Ashley Dupler, who
contributed a double-double in a losing effort with
16 points and II rebounds.
Cassie Merrill added I 0
points and five boards and
Leah French chipped in
five points off the bench
for the Hi ghlanders.
Rio Grande gained the

measure of Houghton on in our system I think
the glass 44-37 and was they'll be consistent scarbetter in the turnover ers throughout ."
department, committing 22 · Rio will advance to the
miscues to 25 for the Bevo Championship Game
Highlanders.
against American Mideast
Rio Grande shot 41.3 Conference South Division
percent (26-of-63) from the foe Walsh, who bested
floor, 38.1 percent (8-of- Milligan College 77-74 in
21) from three-point land the first game of the day.
and 62.5 percent (10-of- 16) Katie Berry led the
from
the
foul
line . Cavaliers (1 -2) with 20
Houghton ·cou111ered with points
while
Rikki
3 1.5 percent (17-of'-54) Baughman matched her
shooting from the field, with 20 points for Milligan.
22.2 percent (4-of-18) from
" I think Walsh and Rio
beyond the arc and 82.4 had about the two best
percent (14-of-17) from the recruiting classes in the
free throw line.
conference, they're a good
"We have weapons, ball club," said Smalley.
every night it could be dif- "It'll be nur best test of the
ferent," said Rio Grande year · so far in this young
head coach David Smalley. season.
"We have several people
"The good thing is it's
who are able to score and the Bevo and we're at
. once they ge t comfortable home," he added.

Redmen come up short to San . Francisco State, 78-74
Bv MARK WtWAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO
GRANDE
Despite · trailin g by 21
points at halftime and 23
points in the second half
the
neve r- say-die
University of Rio Grande
men 's basketball team
made a game of it and very
nearly pulled off a miraculous comeback, falling 7874 to NCAA Division H
San Francisco State in the
opening round of the 2007
Bevo Francis Tournament.
Rio Grande ( 1-2) turned
·up tlu! ·defensive pressure
and made things difficult
for the Gators ( 1-0) in the
secllnd half, bul in the end
the first half deficit was
too deep of :1 hole to dig
out of.
The Redmen were led !)y
junior forward Brandon
Ivery with 25 points ( 19 in

the second half). Junior
center Will Norwell had a
hu ge first half, scori ng 14
of his 2 1 points. He also
pulled down seven boards.
Junior point guard Aaron
Drakeford was a big part
of the comeback effort as
he scored all 13 of hi s
points in the second half.
. San Francisco State blistered the nets in the opening half, jumping out to a
49 -28 lead at halftim e. The
Gators shot 60.7 percent
( 17-of-28) from the field in
the opening 20 minutes,
including 7-of-11 . (63.6
perce nt ) from three-point
land .
Rio stru ggled with the
perim eter shot all game
long . nailing on ly 2-of-14
( 14.3 percent) for the
game.
Rio would ge t as close
76-74 in the final minute
but SFSU hit free throws

to salt the game away.
lost the game in the first
The Redmen had oppor- half. "I have to applaud
!unities in the second half our effort in tlie second
to narrow · the gap, but· half. Our guys really left it
missed several key free on the floor, but I just got
throws during the come - through talking to them in
back attempt that proved the locker room, we lost
very costly.
the game in the first half,"
San Francisco State he said. "The team you
ga ined th~ measure of the saw in the second half, at
Redmen on the glass, 42 - no point did we play like
33, while the turnovers that in the first half.
were dead even at 15 each . We've. got to eliminate
The Gators were led by those mistakes, I know it's
David Van Someren · with early, I know they 're an
16 points (14 in the first NCAA II school, but that's
half) and Alex Thomas no excuse.
Thomas and
"We let them in the first
with 13 .
Derek Fletcher were the . 20 minutes dictate to us the
top rebounders for · the tempo of the game and
Gators with seven each.
how physical we were
For the game, SFS U going to let them play."
ended up at 48.1 percent
Daniel Hayes and Joe
(25-of-52) from the field Scrutchen led the Cougars
while Rio Grande shot with 14 and 12 points
44.6 percent (25-of-56).
respectively and Brent
Rio Grande head coach Thorne pu lied down II
. Ken French felt his team rebounds.

Friday High School Football Scores
Pictured are the Southern senior athletes for the 2007 fall sports season . Kneeling In the
front row, from left, are Sarah Eddy, Hannah Miller, Courtney Ginther. Standing in the mid·
die are Ashley Robie. Whitney Wolfe-Riffle, Stephanie Cundiff, Krystel Marler, Heather
Cundiff. Morgan Brown. Standing in back are Tyler Circle, J.R. Grady, Anthony Shamblin,
Wes Riffle , Ryan Chapman, Teddy Brown, and Brett Beegle.

West Virginia
ClaiB AAA PlayoHs
Quanarflnel
East Falrmont14, George Washington 3
Saturday
No. "o Bridgeport (10-1) at No. 3
Parkersburg (10-1)
No. 7 Capital (9·2) vs. No. 2 University
(10-1 ), at Morgantown High
No. 13 Nitro (7-4) at No. 5 St. Albans
(10.1). 7:30p.m

Southern honors athletes at
2007 Fall Sports Banquet
BY

Scorr WoLFE

SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

,

RACINE - With the
weather changing and the
winter
sports
season
approaching. the fall season officiall y came to a
close for the Southern
High School fall sports
teams who were honored
with a nice awards assembly and potluck banquet
sponsored by the Southern
Athletic boo sters Thursday
night in Hayman gymnasium .
The . welcoming address
was given by high school
principal Daniel Otto. The
invocation followed as fa\1
sports teams, parents,
coaches , and community
members· prepared for the
eveningis meal.
High School athletic
director Jeff Caldwell gave
thanks to many of the communityis volunteers who
helped mak~ the fall sports
season
a
success.
Caldwell then presented
cheerleading awards to the
fall cheerleading squad.
The' v.eteran squad earned
praise. and six or its members
received
senior
awards - Morgan Brown ,
Heather Cundiff, Courtney
Ginther, Krystle Marler,
Hannah Miller, and Deidra
Sprouse .
Mick Winebrenner then
made presentations to
members of the golf team,
who finished third in the
Tri- Valley
Conference
Hocking Divi sion. Bryan
Harris was honored as the·
first team All-TVC for the
season..
.Tonja Hunter honored
members of the varsity and
reserve volleyball teams
with help' from assistant
Rachel Hupp, reserve
coach. Four senior.s were
honored for their efforts Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah
Eddy, Whitney Riffle, and

Ashley Robie.
Riffle
earned first-team AllDistrict honors .
Members of the football
team were honored by
Coach Dennis Teaford and
assistant Ryan Lemley.
The team finished 2-8 this
season.
Senior members honored
were Brett Beegle, Teddy
Brown , Ryan Chapman,
Tyler Circle, J.R. Grady,
Matt Lehew, Wes Riffle,
and Anthony Shamblin.
Special Awards went to
MVP - Ryan Chapman;
Best defensive back Wes Riffle; Best defensive
lineman - Brad Coppick;
Best defensive linebacker
- J.R . Grady; Best offensive lineman Teddy
Brown; Be st offensive
back -Taylor Lemley;
Special teams award Ryan Chapmmi; and Spirit
award - Charles Cook.
Shamblin was named to
the all -district ·team .
· Cross Country team
members were honored by
Coach Richard Cooksey.
Cooksey praised the team
for great improvement.
Senior members of the
ream
honored · ~ere
Chelsea Freeman and
Kreig Kleski. Kyle Goode
was recognized for several
top ten finishes this season.
Mr. Otto then awarded
the All-TVC All-Academic
team for students in grades
ten and up maintaining a
cumulative 3.5 grade point
average and having lettered in at least one previous sports season.
F&lt;)llowing ts a list of
those recognized:

CHEERLEADING Morgan Brown, Heather
Cundiff, Courtney Ginther,
Krystle Marler, Hannah
Miller, Deidra Sprouse,
Jaime
Warner,
Vada
C!)unts.
GOLF Zach Ash,
Bryan
Harris,
Alex
Hawley, Chris Holter,
Taylor Deem, Jon Powell
VOLLEYBALL
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah
Eddy, Whitney Riffle,
Ashley ~obie, Rashell
Boso, Emma
Hunter,
Chelsea Pape , Samantha
Patterson,
Brooke
Chadwell,
Stephanie
Shamblin, Breanna Taylor,
Lindsay Teaford, Katie
Woods , Vada Counts,
Bobbi
Harris,
Sarah
Matthews, Michelle Ours.
FOOTBALL Brett
Beegle , Teddy Brown ,
Ryan Chapman, Tyler
Circle, J.R.Orady, Matt
Lehew,
Wes
Riffle,
Anthony
Shamblin,
Charles Cook,
Kevin
Coppick, Luke Dillard,
Brody Flint, Jerry Justis,
Justin
Porter,
Zach
Sigman, Ronnie Wilson,
Brad
Coppick,
Sean
Coppick,
Logan
Huddleston , Greg Jenkins,
Justin
Kimes,
Taylor
Lemley, Michael Manuel,
Dustin Salser, Jordan
Taylor, Mike Tomlin son,
Eric
Buzzard,
Cody
Counts, Joey Forester,
Daniel Jenkins, Zachary
Manuel, Adam Warden.
CROSS COUNTRY Chelsea Freeman, Kreig
Kleski, Kyle Goode, Drew
Hoover,
Kris
Kleski,
Colby · Roseberry. Dylan
Roush, Tyler Goble, John
Holsinger, Michelle Ours.

Cla11 AA Pleyoffl
Quarterfinal
Wayne 35, Tyler Consolidated 15
Saturday
No. 9 Chapmanville (B-3) at No. 1
Bluefield ( 10-0)

YOUR CHOICE

No. 5 Scott· (8-3) vs . No. 4 Berkeley
Springs (9·2) , at Martinsburg
No. 6 Magnolia (9-2) at No. 3 James
Monroe ( 10-1)

Quarterfinal

Madonna 28. Fayetteville 21
St. Marys 36, Buffalo 12
Saturday
9 Moorefield (8-3 ) at No . 1

Wheeling Central ( 11-0) .

No. 7 Wahama (9-2)
Williamstown (9-2)

Ohio
DIVISION I

at No.

DIVISION II

Region 5 Final
Mayfield 12, Parma Normandy 7
Beglgn 6 Final
Ashland 21, Sylvania Southview 14
Begtgn 7 Fln11

C!aBB A Playoffs

No.

Raglan 4 Fine!
Cln. S~. Xavier 29, Cin. Colerain 14

2

Louisville 25, Colt.

DtS.Ioa 20

Region 8 Final
Cln. Anderson 24, Cin. Turpin 23

DIVISION Ill
Raqloo 9 Final
Mentor Lake Cath. 28, Cortland
Lakeview 13
Rtqlon 10 Fine I
Sunbury Big Walnut 21. Clyde 14

fttqlon 11 Final

Newark Licking Valley 21, Canal
Fuhon Nonhweat 17
lgn 1a Final
Lemon-Monroe 31, Cln. Indian Hill 28

e

DIVISION V
Btgton 17 fiDII
Vounga. Uraullna 31. N. Lima S.
Range 7
Raglan 18 Flnel
Hamler Patrick Henry 44, Findlay
Llberty-lljtnton 27
Region 19 Final

Colo. Reedy 35, Fredericktown 7
RMIDn 2Q Bnal
Marla Stein Merion Local 24, W.

JeHaraon 0

OILY

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Nov. 16
Nov. 19
Nov. 26
Nov. 29

at Wellstnn
vs Nelsonville-York
vs South Gallia
at Warerford

7:30
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.

Monday
· Thursday
Saturday
Monday
Thursday
Thursday
Thursday_
Friday

Dec. 3
Dec. 6
Dec . 8
Dec. 10
Dec . 13
Dec. 20
Dec. 27
Dec. 28

at Belpre
vs Federal Hocking
vs Mei gs
vs River Valley
at Eastern
at Trimble
at Wahama Tourney
at Wahama 'lllllrney

6 p.m.
6 p.m .
·6 p.m .
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
TBA
TBA

Thursday
Thursday
Tuesday
Thursday
Monday
Thursday
Monday
Thursday

Jan. 3
Jan . I0
Jan . 15
Jan . 17
Jan . 21
Jan. 24
Jan . 28
Jan. 31

vs Miller
vs Waterford
at Vinton County
at Federal Hocking
at Sou'h Galli a
vs Eastern
vs Trimble
at Miller

6 p.m.
6 p.m .
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
Southern
sbphomore
Breanna
Taylor, with
ball. looks
to make a
pass during
the girls
basketball
season
opener
Friday night
at Wellston
High
School.
Taylor and
the Lady
'Does fell
to the Lady
Rockets,
60-28.
Submitted
photo

spark for the Lady Tornadoes
(0-1 ) on opening night with a
double-double performance.
She had 20 points. 10
from Page Bl
rebounds and four blocks, but
her team as a whole turned
cent from the field and hit the ball over 25 times compared to nine by Wellston
8-of-10 free throws.
Kendra DePue added six leading to the lopsided loss.
Cheyenne Dunn added five
points and ' nine rebounds.
points
for Sout~ern, with
Erin Sturgill had eight points
Taylor posting two
Breanna
and. two assists, Whitney points and
two assists and
Patrick had six points, Lindsay Teaford had one
Stephanie Trainer had live point and a steal.
points, Tara Oliver had four
Southern will return to the
points, Tiffany }Vires had hardwood Monda)' when
three points and Hannah they host Nelsonville-York.
Wheatley had two points.
Game time is scheduled to
Turley provided the only begin at 6 p.m.

Southern

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• Page B3

.
..

·-

....

~. ~

---......_._______

__

..:,_

�. .. '

I

Pomeroy • MiddJeport • Gallipolis

BOYS
BASKETBALL
OPPONENT

TIME

Friday

Nov. 30

at Meigs

7 p.m.

Tuesday
Friday
Tuesday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday
Thursday

Dec.4
Dec. 7
Dec. II
Dec. 15.
Dec. 21
'n ee. 22
Dec. 27

vs Jackson
vs Chillicothe
vs Chesapeake
at Ironton
at Ponsmouth·
vs Rock Hill
vs River Valley (URG)

Friday
Tuesday
Friday .
Friday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Friday
Tuesday
Friday
Saturday
Tuesday
Saturday

DATE

OPPONENT

TIME

Saturday

Nov. 24

vs Eastern

6 p.m.

7 p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m .
,'6 p.m .
6p.m.
6p.m.
7 p.m .

Saturday
Friday
Friday
Saturday
Saturday
Thursday
Saturday

Dec. I
Dec. 7
Dec. 14
Dec. 15
Dec. 22
Dec. 27
Dec. 29

at Meigs
5 p.m.
vs Chesapeake
6 p.m.
at South Point
6 p.m.
vs Oak Hill (URG)
TBA
vs Belpre
6 p.m.
at Gallia Acad. (URG) 5 p.m.
at Southern
. 5 p.m.

Jan. 4
Jan. 8
Jan. II
Jan. 18
Jan.' 22
Jan. 23
Jan. 25
Jan. 29

6p.m.
vs Marietta
6p.m.
at Chillicothe
6p.m.
at Warren
6 p.m.
vs Zanesville ·
6 p.m.
vs Portsmouth
at River Valley (URG) 7p.m.
7p.m.
at Athens
6p.m.
vs Ironton

Friday
Tuesday
Friday
·ruesday
Friday
Saturday

Feb. I
Feb. 2
Feb. 5
Feb. 9

vs Logan
vs Wheelersburg
at Jackson
SEOAL Champipnships

Saturday
Tuesday

Jan. 4
Jan. 8
Jan. II
J ari. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 29

Friday
Tuesday
Friday

Feb. I
Feb. 5
Feb. 8

6 p.m .
6 p.in.
7 p.'m .
TBA

Wednes~ay

GALLIA ACADEMY

,.
I

OPPONENT

TIME
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Monday
Tuesday
Friday

Nov.19
Nov. 27
Nov. 30

vs Chesapeake . ·
vs Jackson
at Logan

Monday
Saturday
Monday
Monday
Saturday
Friday

Dec. 3
Dec. 8
Dec. 10
Dec. 17
Dec. 22
Dec. 28

at River Valley
at Chillicothe
vs Rock Hill
at Fairland
vs Ponsmouth
vs Ironton

6p.m.
•6p.m.

Wednesday
Saturday
Wednesday
Saturday
Saturday
VVednesday
Saturday
Monday
VVednesday

Jan. 2
Jan. 5
Jan. 9
Jan. 12
Jan. 19
Jan. 23
Jan. 26
Jan. 28
Jan. 30

at Jackson
at Marietta
vs Chillicothe
vs Warren
at Zanesville
at Ponsmouth
vs Athens
vs River Valley
at Ironton

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Saturday
Monday

Feb. 2
Feb.4

SEOALChampionships TBA
at Eastern
6 p.m.

5:30p.m.

6p.m.
I p.m .
6p.m. ·

!.:

OPPONENT

TIME

Friday

Nov. 30

vs Gallia Academy

6:30p.m.

Saturday
Friday
Friday
Saturday
Friday
. friday
· Saturday

Dec. I
Dec. 7
Dec. 14
Dec. 15
Dec. 21
Dec. 28
Dec. 29

vs River Valley
vs Belpre
vs Alexander .
vs Southern
at Wellston
vs Eastern
atWahama

6p.m.

Friday
Tuesday
Friday
Tuesday
. Friday
. Tuesday
: Friday
· Saturday
Tuesday

Jan. 4
Jan. 8
Jan. 11
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan.22
Jan. 25
Jan. 26
Jan. 29

Friday
Tuesday
: Friday

Feb. L
Feb.5
Feb. 8

. vs Vinton County
vs Federal Hocking
vs Nelsonville· York
at Miller
at Belpre
vs Wahama
at Alexander
at River Valley
at Eastern
vs Wellston
at Vinton County
at Nelsonville-York .

6:30p. m.
6:30p.m.

6p.m .
6:30p.m.

6p.m.
6p.m.

'

DATE

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
11 a.m.
5 p.m.
5 p.m.
6 p.m.

at Rock Hill
at Fairland
vs Coal Grove

DATE
Saturday Nov. 17
Tuesday 'Nov. 20
Thursday Nov. 29
Monday
Thursday
· Monday
Thursday
Monday
Thursday
Saturday

.Dec. 3
Dec.6
Dec. 10
Dec. 13
Dec. 17
Dec. 20
Dec. 29

Monday . ·Jan: 7
Thursday Jan. 10
Saturday Jan. 12
· Monday Jan. 14
Thursday Jan. 17
Monday Jan. 21
Thursday Jan. 24
Monday · Jan. 28
Thursday Jan. 31
Monday

Feb.4

MEIGS
BOYS
BASKETBALL
DATE

. vs Rock Hill
vs Fairland
at Coal Grove
at Eastern
at Chesapeake
at Wellston Tourney
vs Gallia Acad. (URG)
vs Meigs
·
vs South Point

TIME

vs Meigs
vs Eastern
vs ·South Point

6p.m. .
6 p.m.
6p.m.

vs Gallia Academy
at Rock Hill .
at Southern
vs Coal Grove
at Eastern
vs Fairland
at Trimble

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
I p.m.

at Chesapeake
at South Point
at Meigs
vs Rock Hill
at Coal Grove
at Belpre
lit Fairland
at Gallia Academy
vs Chesape3ke

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m.

vs Trimble

6p.m.

6:30p.m.

6p.m.
6:30p.m.

6p.m.
6:30p.m.

6p.m.
6p.m.
6JO p.m.

6p.m.
6JO p.in.

at New Boston
6 p.m.
at Cross Lanes Christian 7:30p.m.

Saturday
Tuesday
Tuesday
Friday
Saturday
Tuesday
Saturday
Friday

vs Eastern
vs Symmes Valley
vs Southern
at Hannan
vs S. Webster (URG)
atWahama
VS Oak Hill
vs Rock Hill

Dec. I
Dec. 4
Dec. II
Dec. 14
Dec. 15
Dec. 18
Dec. 22
Dec. 28

OPPONENT

TIME

Saturday
Friday ·

Nov. 24
Nov. 30

at River Valley
vs Nelsonville-York

6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.

Saturday
Friday
Tuesday
· Friday
Tuesday
Friday
Friday

Dec. I
Dec. 7
Dec. II
Dec. 14
Dec. 18
Dec. 21
Dec. 28

at South Gallia
at Trimble
vs Parkersburg Cath.
at Miller
at Alexander
vs Southern ·
at Meigs

6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.

Friday
Tuesday
Friday
Tliesday
Friday
Friday
Tuesday

Jan. 4
Jan. 8
Jan. 11
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 25
Jan. 29

at Wateiford
vs Waharna
at Federal Hocking
vs River Valley
vs Trimble
vs Miller
vs Meigs

Friday
Saturday
Tliesday
Friday

Feb. I
Feb. 2
Feb.5
Feb. S

at Southern
at Belpre
vs Waterford
vs Federal Hocking

6:30p.m.

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m:
5p.m.
6p.m.
6 p.m.
6 p.m:

at Ironton St. Joe
at Southern
' vs Cross Lanes Christian
· at Rock Hill
at Westfall
vs Hannan
vs New Boston

Feb. I
Feb. 5
Feb.8

6:30p.m.

6p.m.
7:30p.m.

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

vs Ironton St. Joe
6 p.m.
at Teays Valley Christian 7:30p.m.
at Buffalo
5:45 p.m.

SOUIH GALLIA
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
DATE

OPPONENT

TIME

Nov. 16
Nov. 19
Nov. 26
Nov. 30

at Coal Grove
vs Symmes Valley
at Southern
at Cross Lanes Christian

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Monday
Thursday
Monday
Saturday
Monday
Thursday
Thursday

Dec. 3
Dec. 6
Dec. 10
Dec. 15
Dec. 17
Dec. 20
Dec. 27

at Ironton St. Joe
vsOVCS
vs Hannan
at Sciotoville East
vs Ironton St. Joe
at Green
vs Eastern

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
II a.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Thursday
Saturday
Monday
·Thursday
Friday
Friday
· Monday
Monday
Thur&amp;day

Jan. 3
Jan. 5
Jan. 7
Jan. tO
Jan. II
Jan. 18
Jan. 21
Jan. 28
Jan.31

vs Coal Grove
6 p.m.
·at Meigs
6 p.m.
at Hannan
6 p.m.
at Teays Valley Christian 6 p.m.
vs Cross Lanes Christian 6 p.m.
at OVCS
6 p.m.
vs Southern
6 p.m.
at Symmes Valley
· 6 p.m.
vs Teays Valley Christian 6 p.m.

Friday
Monday
· Monday
Friday

EASTERN
BOYS
BASKETBALL
DATE

TIME

Tuesday Nov. 27
Friday · Nov. 30

Friday
Tuesday
Friday

SOUTHERN
BOYS
BASKETBALL

6 p.m.
6:30p.m.

6 p.m.
6:30p.m.
6JO p.m.

6:30p.m.

6p.m.

OPPONENT

Jan.4
Friday
Tuesday Jan. 8
Jan. II
Friday
· Tuesday Jan. 15
Tuesday Jan. 22
Friday
Jan. 25
Saturday Jan. 26

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

OPPQNENT

'

SOUIHGAWA
BOYS
BASKETBALL

RIVER VALLEY
GIRLS
BASKETBALL

GIRLS
BASKETBALL
· DAIE

-

RIVER VALLEY
BOYS
BASKETBALL

GAWA ACADEMY

DATE

Sunday, November 18, 2007

6.:30 p.m.

6 p.m.
6:30p.m.

6 p.m.
6:30p.m.
6:30p.m.

6 p.m.
6:3op.m.
6:30p.m.

6 p.m.
6:30p.m.

DATE

QPPON.llliT

TIME

Friday .
Saturday

Nov. 23
Nov. 24

vs Vinton Counly
vs Wellston

6p.m.
6 p.m.

Saturday
Friday .
Tuesday
Friday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday
Friday
Saturday

Dec. I
Dec. 7
Dec. II
Dec. 14
Dec. 15
Dec. 21
Dec. 22
Dec. 28
Dec. 29

at Grove City Christian
at Federal Hocking
at South Gallia
vs Waterford
at Meigs
at Eastern
atWahama
at Oak Hill
vs River Valley

11:30
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Friday.
Tuesday
Friday
Friday
Friday

Jan. 4
Jan. 8
Jan. U
Jan. 18
Jan. 25

at Trimble
vs South Gallia
at Miller
vs Federal Hocking
at Waterford
/

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Friday
Saturday
Tuesday
Friday

Feb. I
Feb. 2
Feb. 5
Feb. 8

vs Eastern
at Nelsonville-York
vs Trimbie
vs Miller

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
-6 p.m.

6:30p.m.

'

MEIGS
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
DATE
· Saturday Nov. 17
. Saturday Nov. 24
Thursday Nov. 29

OPPONENT

TIME

at River Valley
vs Eastern
at Belpre

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.

Thursday
Saturday
. Tuesday
·Thursday
Tuesday
.Thursday
Thursday

Dec. 6
Dec. 8
Dec. II
Dec. 13
Dec. 18
Dec. 20
Dec. 27

vs· Wellston
at Southern
at Federal Hocking
vs Vinton County
vs Wahama
at Nelsonville-York
vs Miller

6p.m.
6p.m. ·
6p.m .
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m .
6p.m.

Thursday
Satilrday
Thursday
, Saturday
Tqursday
Saturday
Monday
Thursday
Monday
Thursday

Jan. 3
Jan. 5 ·
Jan. 10
Jan. 12
Jan. 17
Jan . 19
Jan . 21
Jan . 24
Jan. 28
Jan. 31

at Alexander
vs South Gallia
vs Belpre
vs River Valley
at Wellston
at Eastern
gt Wahama
at Vinton Courtly
vs Nelsonville-York
vs Alexander

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m:·
6p.m.
6p.m.

- ·

5:45p.m.

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m .

EAmRN
GIRLS
BASKETBALL
DATE
Tliesday Nov. 20
Saturday Nov. 24
· Thursday . Nov. 29

OPPONENT

TIME

at River Valley
at Meigs
at Federal Hocking

6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
6p.m.
. 6p.m.
,6p.m.
6p.m.

Thursday
Monday
Thursday
Monday
Tliursday
Thursday

Dec. 6
Dec. 10
Dec. 13
Dec. 17
Dec. 20
Dec. 27

vs Trimble
at Nelsonville-York
vs Southern
vs River Valley
vs Miller
at South Gallia

Thursday
Saturday
Monday
Thursday
Monday
.Thursday
Saturday
Thursday
, Monday
Thursday

Jan. 3
Jan. 5
Jan. 7
Jan. 10
Jan. 14
Jan. 17
Jan. 19
Jan. 24
Jan. 28
Jan. 31

at Waterford
6 p.m.
at Wahama
6 p.m.
vs Belpre
6 p.'m.
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Sunday, November 18, 2007

Pomeroy • MiddJeport • Gallipolis .

Earnhardt prepares for final ride·at DEI
HOMESTEAD, Fla. (AP)
- Dale Earnhardt Jr. be~an
the day with an early mornmg
photo shoot wi th his new
Ht: ndrick teammates. then
qUickly turned his foctts to his
·
old team.
)'lASCAR's most popular
driver climbed mto his red
No. 8 Chevrolet on Friday for
the start of his final weekend
with Dale Earnhardt Inc.,
intent on a stron~ close to his
11-year run w1th his late
fathe r's company.
. 'T ve got a lot of great relallonshtps here and I just want
to make sure this weekend is
all about the No. 8 car, the
Budweiser car, this team and
trying to get a fini sh that they
deserve," he said. "It's just a
good group of guys and its
going to be difficult running
your last race wit~) thefT!. You
know you are gomg to m1ss

NFL draft may take a bite out •
of young Buckeyes ~lefense
Bv Rusn Mtu.ER
AP SPORTS WRITER •

COLUMBUS ·- After
losing three players early to
the NFL draft each of the
last two years, Ohio State
may be about to take another big hit.
Three juniors, all on
defense, are currently listed
by several draft experts as
being firsHound picks next
spring.
·
Only one of the three didn't waver this week during
preparations for Michigan
when asked if he were contemP.lating· making himself
ava1lable for the draft.
Cornerback
Malcolm
Jenkins said he was definitely staying.
"I love Obio State," he
said. ''I'll be here for · a
wHile."
But even that was said in
a dismissive way, batting
away the question like he
might a Chad Henne pass.
Neither of the other two
say they ' re even thinking
about the decision yet. They
say they are focusing all
their energies on the seventh-ranked
Buckeyes '
game on Saturday· against
the No. 23 Wolverines.
"It's up in the air, really,"
defensive end Vernon
Gholston said. "This is my
junior season. I have another season. I could come
back next year, I could not.
For the most part, it's just
focusing on this Michigan
game right here."
All-American linebacker
James Laurinaitis said earlier this season that there was
no question that he would
return for his final year of
eligibility. He stopped short
of saying that on Monday.
"I haven't thought about
that at all," he said. "That's
something that I'm not

it." '

going to think about during
the season. It's just nothing
but a 'distraction and all I
can do is focus on what I
can do against Michigan." ·
Should he come out,
Laurinaitis.is ranked among
the top defenders in the
draft, with most experts
pegging him as the top linebacker. Almost the same
thing could be said for
Jenkins and Gholston at
their positions.
A year ago, tai I back
Antomo Pittman said late in
the season that he wanted to
come back for his senior
season so he could win the
Heisman Trophy. Then he
surprised
many
in
December
when
he
announced that . . he was
exploring the possibility of
making the Jump to the
pros.
Wide receiver Anthony
Gonzalez also said several
times during the 2006 season that he enjoyed being a
student-athlete and that he
knew he could always go to
the NFL when he wanted.
But numerous draft prediclions listed him as going in
the first round and he eventually changed his mind.
Gonzalez and another
junior wide receiver, Ted
Ginn Jr., went in the first
round (Ginn with the ninth
pick, by Miami, Gonzalez
at No. 32, by Indianapolis).
Pittman was taken m the
fourth round by New
Orleans.
Safety Michael Doss and
wide
receiver
Joey
Galloway are· the only two
Ohio State juniors who
could have gone high in the
draft but elected to stay for
their final season in college.
· The current Buckeyes are
a relatively young team and
Will graduate only two
senior starters on offense

(right tackle Kirk Barton·
and
fullback
Dionte:
John son) and one on:
defense (linebacker Larry:
Grant).
Few
players
ever
announce their plans before
the end of the regular sea-.
son. Sometimes wins and
losses influence . their deci-;
sion .
Linebacker
MarcuS:
Freeman is not considered a:
possibility to go high in the
draft, should he elect to
make himse lf avai lable ..
That' s just as well, he said.;
"Right after that (last}
j:ame you start t.o consider:
11, but I picture myself play-:
ing another season here,"·
the junior said. " I remember,
talking to my dad and he,
said, 'That's one thing I·
don't want you to give any:
consideration, is taking care:
of your family, because·
that's why your father .is:
here.' My mother has a job'
and she'll be taken care of,
so that's definitely noi
going to be a consideration:
to go pro. Like I said, I plan:
on be1ng here next yef!r." ·
Twenty-four Oh10 State
players nave jumped to the
NFL draft before completing their eligibility since
1992. Of that total, 17 were.
first-round picks.
.
Many have gone on to·
long and profitable pro
~ areers, including Robert
Smith, Terry Glenn, Shawn
Springs, Orlando Pace and
David Boston.
Coach Jim Tressel sits
down with potential early
draftees in Deceml)er · and
discusses their prospects.
The NCAA permlls players
to file paperwork to get an
evaluation from NFL scouts
as to where a player might
be drafted, to help wllh
their decision on whether to
come out early.

It's mixed emotions for
Earnhardt, who officially
APphoto
joins Hendrick Motorspons NASCAR driver Dale Earnhardt Jr. waits by his car for his
after Sunday's season tmale turn to qualify Friday at Homestead-Miami Speedway in
at .
Homestead-Miami Homestead. Fla.
Speedway. He's excited
about his new job, where seven Cup seasons, but has win another race and move
he'lljoin a team that has won just one final chance to race on."
.,
18 races this season and is on his way into Victory Lane this
The test was widely considthe verge of its seventh Cup season. He takes a 61 -race ered a success, as Earnhardt
title.
winless streak into Sunday's. got to feel a Hendrick car and
It comes iii the expense of finale and wants to break it as his new team learned more
DEI, which was built from a parting gift to crew mem- about his driving style. With
the ground up by the late Dale bers who stood by him even crew chief Tony Eury Jr.
Earnhardt and molded into when they knew he was aban- already working at Hendrick
one of NASCAR's top teams doning them at the end of the to prepare for Earnhardt's
with Junior behind the wheel. year.
arrival, the transition could be
But the team hasn't been
He'll start 13th in Sunday's easy.
the same since Earnhardt's race.
"They've been super nice
2001 death, and Junior has
"The guys have been great and been really easy to get to
struggled with the direction and they've been really, real- know and I wa5n't as uncomof the compan~ under step- ly supponive," Earnhardt fonable as I thought I might
mother Teresa s leadership. said. "They've.got better atti- be," he said. "I thought they
He demanded majority con- tudes that I can say I have were happy with what I Wj!S
trol of the organization during had. If this weekend - goes doing at the test and that gave
tense talks on a .contract smooth and is a good one and me a lot of confidence that I
extension, then finally decid- everybody leaves here with a am going to be a good asset to
ed in May to simply walk good positive attitude, a lot the company."
away.
credit has· to go to how
But first he's got to get
Leaving DEl was certainly they' ve all acted and how through this final weekend,
not an easy decision, and they' ve handled it.
then he'll head into the offfinding a new job was just as
"I've tried to keep the ' season hoping to spend as
difficult. But he felt comfon" wheels on it. figuratively and ·much time as he can with
able with Rick Hendrick, and literally, and its been really new teammates Jimmie
knew the ultra-successful hard sometimes when you Johnson, Jeff Gordon and
team would give· him his best don't run the way you want Casey Mears. The foursome
shot at fmally winning.a Cup . to. But I want to finish good posed for piCtures early
title.
with these guys ... aside from Friday
morning,
and
"He's got some mixed us splitting up, I want to ,be Earnhardt wants the interacc
emotions, but he's also really proud of what we're doing." lion to continue.
CLEVELAND (AP) - fourth, either scored or walked slowly to the other
excited about being over · Hendrick knows the past
"The more time we can all
on
15
of end of the floor.
there with our organization," three months have been diffi- spend together before the sea- LeBron James scored 40 assisted
Cleveland's Devin Brown:
Hendrick said. "Things cult on his newest driver. son starts, the better we can points - 34 in the second Cleveland's 19 baskets in
change, and I think Dale Sr. He's got just two top-10 fin- jl:etanideaofwhateachother half - and made a crucial the second half. However, then split a · pair of free
would want him to do what's ishes m the past 1.0 mces to IS looking for in a teammate block on fonner teammate his bigf:est play was the throws and Utah pulled
best for him. And that's what go along with a pair of engine and what we're all like as dri- Carlos Boozer in the final block w1th 12.8 seconds left within 95-94 on a basket by
he's trying to do.':
failures and two crashes.
vers," he said. · "I've raced seconds Friday night to give on Boozer, who is still Andrei Kirilenko.
.
Despite the impending
But he noticed a lift in the with these guys a long time, the Cleveland Cavaliers a regarded as a villain by
James was fouled , and'
change, Earnhardt was deter- driver late last month when but I don't know the confi- 99-94 victory over Utah, Cleveland fans for reneging Cleveland's superstar, who:
mined' not to quit on his old he tested his new Hendrick dential infonnation that they ending a five-game winning on a promise and leaving as has struggled with his free-·
team. He made one last des- ride at Atlanta · Motor share and the more time we streak by the Jazz.
a free agent.
throw shooting, made both'
perate push to make , the Speedway.
can be around each other and
James; playing as he did
Cleveland, which Jed by attempts to put the Cavs up
Chase for the championship
"If you saw' him in Atlanta, understand how to utilize while leading the Cavs to seven with two tpinutes left, by three. Utah had a chance
during the summer, and when he's ready to go and get the each other's weaknesses and their first NBA finals last was only up 94-92 when to tie it, but Mehmet Okur
he came up shon he still r.ear started," Hendrick said. strengths, is imponant to me. season, did it all.
Boozer got the ball on the missed a 3-pqinter with two~
chased wins.
'He's had a miserable half of
"I just want to try to make
He just missed another low block. But as he began seconds to go, James: ..
Earnhardt has won at least the year with all the racing sure we're complementing triple-double, finishing with to spin in the lane and go up, grabbed h1s IOth rebound'
one race in each of his first luck, and I think he's ready to each other."
I 0 rebounds, nine assists James swooped in from and made two more four
and three blocks. He made behind and swatted the ball shots to make it 99-94.
13 of 15 free throws, includ- away with his left hand.
After the final horn.
Kim Nuxhall said.
ty to throw a strike and ing four straight in the final
Boozer jumped in the air James and Boozer stood
"We will l)e eternally failed to get another out. In 3.8 seconds as the Cavs and screamed to officials underneath the basket,:
grateful to the Cincinnati all, he walked five and sealed it.
about the no-call. Utah's hugged and spoke for sever-:
Reds organization and the threw a wild pitch in twofromPageBl
James, who had 16 points All-Star forward then had · al moments before leaving·
fans who provided us with thirds of an inning.
in the third and 18 m the words with James as they the court.
·
experiences
and
memories
.
"Those
people
that
were
everyone in the Reds organization," outfielder Ken . of a lifetime. Dad truly at Crosley Fiel.d that after.
l lllliN \ i(l I' I VOIIIMI 11\ l l l i l \l(l lt l \1111 ) 0\l i\H'•Il\INNI Nl ,
noon probably said, 'Well,
Griffey Jr. said in a state~ loved you all," he said.
'
Nuxhall's place in base- that's the last we'll see of
· ment. "He did so many
great things for so many ball lore was secured the that kid,"' Nuxhall said.
• •..., • • , . . . . . . . .d
The Reds sent him to the
people. You never heard moment he stepped onto a
anyone ever say a bad word big league field. With major minors, but eight years later
about him. We're all going league rosters depleted dur- he was back with the Reds.
ing World War II, he got a Nuxhall .spent 15 of his 16
to miss him."
chance
to pitch in relief for big league seasons with the
Avg. new car depreciates 28% the first week
·
Reds
owner
Bob
the
Reds
on
June
10,
1944.
Reds,
going
135-ll7
before
I • As low as 5.99 APR • No payments till November
Castellini said Friday that
At 15 years, 10 months, his retirement in 1966.
"Joe exemplified everything
PLUI 100 QALLONI QAI w/llurohltt ofvthtole. l'rw 1\ltkty .lull wllh1 pu~h111 ol vthlolt
A year later, Nuxhall
baseball's all about, from II days old, Nuxhall was
the mound to the broadcast big for his age. He was 6- started doing radio broadDoes not apply to previovs sales.
foot-3 and his parents let casts, describing games in a
CARFAM
booth."
Call ahead for pre-approval592-2497 or check us·out on the web
Great American Ball Park him join the Reds when slow-paced, down-home
manner that .caught on with
was to be dark Friday night school let out.
Nuxhall
spent
most
of
the
listeners.
Many Brennaman
in Nuxhall's honor, ·excei?t
117Chrysler~'lburingNI4J941110Xlmik:sBOFWATACtih""'PW pt COPJ'A rtooJZmpg. .
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time
watching
from
the
became
the play-by-play
for spotlights shining on his .
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statue outside the main gate. bench, assuming he'd never announcer in 1974, and the
117IloolgoMB,pnnfl41982700h~BOFW
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Sl9.995
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Also to be illuminated were get into a game. The Reds "Marty and Joe" tandem
06
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the big red words of his were trailing the St. Louis spent the next 28 seasons
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radio signoff, emblazoned Cardinals 13-0 after eight chatting about their golf . 06Chev CobaiiLTZN14!lSATAC tikasePW l'tpwrseaohhr-IIIOO)BOFWFPArnl00 29mpg . .. ... Sl5,495 $229
outside the stadium: " ... innings when manager Bill games, their gardens and
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rounding third and heading McKechnie decided to give some ()f the biggest
OSNisson
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Slll.195
152
the kid a chance.
moments in franchise histofor home."
117NissonAIIiiPUI4467CruioiePW pt C0211ffimilesBOFWATACiil!.................
.. ........................... $19.9t5 $291
Nuxhall was so rattled · ry.
"Summer nights
in
OOFont Ft.e HWldredN14473cruisePW Pl.p. leadlerseatS[II! wll'l Zllffimiles BOFW AT AC till .... .... .. .. . ..... Sl8.995 $215
Nuxhall retired as a fullCincinnati' will never be the when summoned to warm
117 Chev bnpabo IJ'#I4480PW l'tp,..psunroofspalwil'l liiOXJ 11i1e8 BOfW AT AC tilt cruise. . .... ........
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same again without the up that he tripped on the top time radio broadcaster after
00Buld&lt;Latto!ileCXLNI4491V6ATACtihcnliscP\V l'talloyw""b .................................................... ,................. Sl8.995 · $215
.voice of the ol' left-hander step of the dugout and fell the 2004 season, the 60th
117Font FBalpeXLTt143204x4 2mlmik&lt;BOI-W AT AC blaoePW Pi.pw&lt;..-S[II! ~ CDEPA-l.l mpg. Sl9,!95 $299
crackling over the air- on his face in front of 3,510 anniversary of his historic
06JeepGr&lt;lii!I'OkeU144474x4ATAC tihcnePW l'tpiOIIICOS[II!whls..............................................
.. ..... . Sl!l.495 $283
waves," U.S .. Rep. John fans at Crosley Field. He pitching debut. Since then,
06NissonXIerra4l!ABOFW Nt4391AT.AC tih"" PW l'tCDS[II!whls EPA"""' 19mpg............,............................ Sl9.995 $219
Boehner of Ohio said in a was terrified when it came he was heavily involved in
' OS Font ExplOrer 1111'1 lnr 414114&gt;76_,.. mxlm•I!OFW AT AC .,.,.. .. ,. PW PL CD"'""''"'""' lll""" $24,2t5 U Sl
statement. "To millions, time to walk to the mound. charity work, especially his
OSChevThallhl
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...... SlUtS $289
"Probably two weeks scholarship and character
even those who never met
05SubanaOudildiAWD#I4269AT ACtihcne alloy..to!JPW Pl.pwr1C81SCOBOFW EPA-23mPS ............ SIUtD $269
Joe in person, his voice was prior to that, I was pitching educatiml'programs.
04 Hondlll'lklt Ex 4rA V6 N14448 AC AC lilt one P l'tp. 10111 CD1Caos a11oya 3R! .......................................................... S21.m $3 I $
He had surgery for
the vou:;e of a good friend." against. seventh-, eighthIMGMCEuvoy AWDSLTt1114oWATAC ikcnallt.P:Hmltr•pwrtullft:d~ Nb-.oXMIIIIodwmt allaylniMII!I tid low lillie!, ... llt.4t5 . $289
Nuxhall's son, Kim, and ninth-graders, kids 13 prostate cancer in 1992, fol04HJuudll Semll FJ! 4rA*I4163 AC V61ilt awe pwrlllm&gt;Cifllhr- PW Pl. alloy ..to1J EPAI&gt;!ed 19 mpg
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released a statement thank- and 14 years old," he . lowed by a mild heart attack
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$259
ing the public for the many recalled. "All of a sudden, I in 200 l. The cancer
OS MeraJry MOiderey fl40QII:I ... - 1£ pwrtllltlnldoln AIIU • ¥otiii3GIJ rriiiiAT It£ llhCIVIIII'W Pl. pwr thr tell fJlA IUII!d 21 "'"lll.lt! $2 t J
cards and messages sent to look up and there's Stan returned last February,
06FardFI.!OSC414XLTfl+ll4lAV82600JmiloiBOPWATAC ~.... PW PI. ... JiibodfulcrEPA1111Cd18"""' S21.1SI ' Ull
Musial and the likes. It was when he was preparing for
his father.
04FardFl505C4ll4fi446ZV8UriaiFJC4t*ileo!herATCDtowJii............................._....
.
. .................. S22.ttl $359
spring training in Sarasota,
"Dad felt that he truly had a very scary situation."
04DodpRimQuiiiCib4rASLTfi4287VBA'fAC !lltOIO!OWJiialloywiiiii!PA""" 1 8~ '"' '
... SII.H5 S2U
Ntixhall walked one and Fla. .
·
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"
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SUI
three extended families dur·
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Nuxhall called some
inJ his career - the great retired two batters before
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Ctty of Hamilton, where he glancing at the on-deck cir- games last season ~ven
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grew up; Fairfield, where he cle and seeing Musial. though !,lis left leg was
06 Ford Freellyle LEA}Yihl4495 AT AC v6 SI!CDPW pt spa1 whodu:llmale""""" P .ta- AL... . ... ... S11.4t! $266
swollen by tumors. He was
raised his children; and Nuxhall unraveled
Bpteltl Rate 111'8 • 11/2o41or 03 • 01 model. 08-07-ot til mo. 5.18 CttiDnt. ot-07-Qe 12 mN 1.17 Mtrll. Paymtntl flgurtCI with dOWn payment 01
t1te&amp;e~th or lraO.· pjuttax and tlttt. ot-07.Qt T3-71mot 7.12 (Owr 15000), 01-07-oe 7t • IMmoa 7.12 (over 20000). 05 ee mot Mtrtt U3. OS
Cincinnati, where he was ,Musial hit a line·drive sin- hospitalized 11gain this
17•72mot Mtrll 7.13, oe '73·1'8 moe Ueril: 1.42 (Over 15000) 0! 7fol4 mot Mtrlt8.23 (Owr 20000) mtrlt, 04-(13 et1 mot Merit 8.72, 0·4-03 87·72
mot Mer11 7.23. 7! mot 5th· 3rd a.tc over 15,000, 0280 moe Uent 7.31. 02111~ m01 Merit 7.13, 02 72 mot WFF 9 . 1~, 01 48 mot WFF a.t&amp;, Ot
able to play and broadcast gle, and the Cardinals we~k.
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the great game of baseball scored five runs as the
There will be a private
approvaL
with !he Cincinnati Reds," young pitcher lost his abili- funeral Wednesday.

James scores 40, leads Cavs past Jazz
'

'

Nuxhall

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�Page 86 • illunlla!' 'ai:iltltS -illrntind

S~day,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

November 18,

Cl

6unbap Gthnt. -6eu«nel

2007

_Cavs' Hughes to miss at least a month
CLEVELAND (AP) Bruised but not broken this
time, Larry Hughes is again
t,oo hurt to play fur the
Cavaliers.
Cleveland's frag ile guard,
who has also endured personal -misfortune in the past, will
miss at least four weeks with a
deep bone bruise in his lett
leg, yet another setback for
Hughes and the defending
· Eastern Conference champiODS.

Hughes hurt his leg during a
game Nov. 4 at Phoenix when
he collided with Suns guard
Leandro Barbosa.
He missed three games and
was still experiencing discom-

fort on Tuesday night, when
he left an overtime loss against
Orlando in the fourth quaner
complaining of pain. Hughes
was 2-fur-12 from the field
when he limped to the bench.
· The tean1 said tests revealed
a deep bone bruise and
swelling. They estimated a
four-week treacment period
before Hughes could resume
basketball activities.
The 6-foot-5, 185-pound
Hughes, who signed a liveyear $60 million fre~ agent
comract wich Cleveland in
2005, has spem a large (hunk
of his career on the sideline
with an assortment of injuries.
Last season, Hu&amp;hes missed

I0 regular-season games with
a sprained ankle, and sal OUI
Games 3 and 4 of the NBA
final s against San Antonio
with a foot injury. During hi s
lirsc season with Cleveland,
Hughes missed 46 ~ames in
the regular season wtth a broken right linger that required
two surgeries.
While he was with
Washington, Hughes missed
20 gan1es during the 2004-05
season with a broken right
thumb. The previous year, he
was sidelined for 19 games
with a broken right wrist, and
in 2002-03, he sat 15 games
with a sprain-ed wrist, bruised
knee and sprained ankle.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

'
5K race turns loss into awareness, scholarships
BY BETH SERIIENT
BSERGENT&lt;I!&gt;MYDAI LYSENTINELCOM

P

'

,!

AP photo

Ohio State tailback Chris Wells (28) runs for a 62-yard touchdown as tackle Kirk BartoD
(7 4) begins to celebrate in the third quarter of a collf'lge football game against Michigan
Saturday in Ann Arbor. Mich.

Buckeyes beat Michigan, 14-3
BY lARRY LAIIE
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANN ARBOR, Mich. Jim Tressel goc the best of
Lloyd Carr again, maybe for
the last time.
Tressel became che firs!
Ohio State coach to beat
Michigan . six times in
seven years, and the seventh-ranked Buckeyes' 143 victory Saturday over
their archrival gave them
consecutive outright Big
· Ten titles for the first time ·
in a half-century.
Chris Wells ran for a
career-high 222 yards and
two
touchdowns
and
Vernon Gholston and the
Buckeyes' defense domi- .
nated Michigan's bangedup offense.
The Buckeyes (I'l-l, 7-1
Big Ten) are likely headed
to the Rose Bowl for the
first time since 1997. They
also hold unto slim hopes of
climbing I;Jack into the BCS
title game, but several teams
ahead of them would need
to go down.
A win would've put No.
23 Michigan (8-4, 6-2) in
Pasadena for the fourth time
in .five years, but the loss
might send il to a bowl game
prior to New Year's Day.
The game might' ve been
Carr's last regular-season ,
game at Michigan, where
lhe national championship
he led the school to in 1997
is a distant memory while

Top25Fared
Collep Balkttball
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
• ,t . ~

Coroll~ (I~)~ riot play:
lono, Sunday.
...
2. UCLA (3'0) did no1 play. Next: w.
,Maryland, O'Reilly Auto Parto CBE
-

V8.

ClasGic semifinals, Monday.
·, 3. Memphis (4-()) lieat Connecticut
81·70. Next: vs, Arkansas State,
:ruesaay.
4. Kansas (3-0) did not play. Next:
vo. Northern Arizona. Wednesday.
&gt; 5. Geo&lt;getown (2~) did not play.
Next: at Ball Stata. Wednesday.
. 6. t,.ouiovllle (0.0) did not play. Next:
.vo; ~-. Sotun:lay.
• 7. Tonno..eo (3-0) best Prairie
Vlow 89·75: Next: vs. Middle
!T,..,netaee~

TUI!tday.

his loss to Appalachian
Scate this year and 1-6
record against Tressel are
often mentioned.
Carr led many to believe
he would retire after this
season when he altered his
contract last winter and
made sure all of his assistants were given unprece'
dented, two-year deals . in
the spring. Speculation has
run rampant that the ti2year-old will announce his
plans within days.
For Michigan quarterback Chad Henne, tailback Mike Hart and cackle Jake
Long, their stellar careers
will end with an 0-4 record
against Ohio State and a
woeful offensive performance in their final game at
the Big House.
If Carr tried to fire up his
team before the game by saying it would be his last Ohio
Stale game, it didn't work.
Michigan led 3-0 after the
firs! quarter. but the
Buckeyes controlled the
game by stopping a onedimensional offense and
handing the ball off to Wells
early and often.
Wells put Ohio State
ahead with a 1-yard run
early in the second quarter
and a 62-yard score made it
14-3 on its first snap after
halftime. He had a careerhigh 39 carries, the most by
a
Buckeye
against
Michigan, and he ran for
more yards than anybody

had for them in the history
of the storied series.
The Wolverines struggled
on offense in part because
Henne was ineffective with
shoulder injury and Hart
was unable 10 find rpom to
run against a defense that ,
didn 't have to respect the
pass and could concentrate
on stopping the trash-talking running back.
Henne, whose throws
were usually high or wide,
left the field for one series in
the third quarter and
returned in the fourth. When
he made aC(."llfate passes, star
receiver Mario Manningham
and ceammates dropped
some of them.
Henne tinished II of 34
for 68 yards.
Hart had 18 carries for just
44 yards · rushing, his first
game this year under the
I00-yard mark. He seemed
to be relatively healthy after
being sidelined wilh a badly
sprained right ankle.
On a wet day, Ohio State
quarterback
Todd
Boeckman fumbled twice,
losing neilher, and threw an
interception in the first half.
After that. Tressel let
him throw only once in the
third quarter and once in
the fourth. Boeckman compieced seven of 13 passes
for 50 yards.
Ohio State has claimed
three Big Ten titles in a row,
earning che last two alone for
the first time si nce 1954-55.

o .. Ne~n~ 2007
Chevrolsts
SIIIIC

Chevy T,.ucks
Pontiac Bult::k
Fllllt~t:lllrllf'o/1, SMIIC

• 81/11 Enlll rt·BO·Ol

CHEVROLET • CADI

• Eat 111111•1(740).-8814.

IN: Ia · fii'L 8-7 • ffl., H • Sit., &amp;li •Ia, 12-4

OMEROY - Auchor Pat
Conroy once wrote, "loss
is a fiercer, more uncompromising teacher, coldhearted
but clear-eyed in its understanding that life is more dilemma
than game, and more trial than
free pass."
When 16-year old Brandi
Thomas died as a result of injuries
she sustained in a car crash in
2002, her family was left wich loss
and the dilemma of how co move
on with their lives while keeping
the girl's memory alive.
Though there are never really
solutions to these types of dilemma's there are chmces that can
bring somelhing {J?Silive out of
tragedy. For Brandt's family, those
choices were to honor her wishes
of being an organ donor and to
dedicate a 5K race in her honor
which raises money for college
scholarships.
· The Sixth Annual Keep Your
Fork 5 K Race takes place at ) I
_a.m. Saturday, Nov. 24 at Meigs
High School. Race day registration is from 9 to 10:30 a.m. and
the race is open to both runners
and walkers ages 6 and. up. For
early registration, entry ·forms
can also be obtained al any
Meigs Local school · buildin~,
Locker 219 in Middleport, Bob s
Market and Greenhouses, Main
Street Party Supplies and Valley
Lumber. The cost to enter is $16
and proceeds go to the Brandi
Thomas Memorial Scholarship
Fund, which benefits Meigs
Hi~il. ,School students . who particlpllte in Marauder cross coun·
try and track and field sports. Tshirts will be available to the
first 150 entrants.
This year, plaques for the top
three male and lOp three female
finishers will be awarded as well
as medals for first place and ribbons for second through fifth
places in each of the following
male/female age groups: 6-13; 1417; 18-22; 23-29; 30-3?; 40-49;
50-59; 60 and over. A special
· award will be given -co the winner
of the 14-17 age group.
.
Last year, the race had a record
181 entrants, up from !52 its first
year. In the last five years the race
has raised $8, I 00 in scholarship
funds. Despite its growth over the
last few years, people still wonder
where the race's strange name
came from.
· The saying "Keep Your Fork" is
derived from an inspirational
story sent to Brandi's uncle Mike
Kennedy, also the MHS cross
country coach, following her
passing. The story was about a
young woman who upon discovering she only has three months to
live decides to make her final
arrangements. One of these
arrangements was that she be
buried with a fork. The reasoning
behind the fork was chat at most

.

•••

Runners prepare to compete at the Keep Your Fork Race which begins In
the MeJia High School parking lot.

with a cross-country tea·mmate
a muddy dip in Lake Snowden fol·
'
.
Your Fork 5K Race Is in memory of Brandi Thomas, pic- lowing a lVC track meet in 2000.
;~~~~~~e running for 'Meigs High School's·cross country team.
ing runners of why the race was
socials and dinners after the dish- best is yet to come, which is the started. ,
·
es from the main course are re~son behind the race's unique
Another reminder of why the
cleared, someone invariably says, name. Brandi's family has even race was started is Brandi's
"keep your fork" because some- · started the tradition of wearing impact on the issue of organ
Ching better is coming, whether it forks around their necks during donation. When she received her
be dessert or an afterlife.
race day, which represents both · driver's license, she decided to be
The fork is a symbol that the comfort and inspiration, remind- an organ donor and after her

•

'

tO. Ma~ (2~) did not play.
Next: 11 Chomlnada, Monday.
; 11. Otwgon (3-0) did not play. 1Next:
at Portland, sawrclay
'
12. Michigan Steta (2.0) dkl not
play. N-.t: vo. Mluou~ O'Rallly Auic
Plitt CBE Cla10lc otmlflnall,

Monday.
.
• ta.Ouke (2·0) did not play. No&gt;&lt;t: vo.
l'tlnctlon' Monday.
· 14. Gonuga (2.0) did not play.
Next va. UC Rlvaralde. Stturday.
15. T"ao A&amp;M (3-0) did not ploy.
Next vs. Ouachlla. Stturday.
.18. Texaa (2~) beat UC Davia 73~- Next: va. Aric:anaaa·MontleeiiO,
SUnday.
17. Arizona (t-&lt;l) did not play. Next:
ys. VIrginia, Satul'(1ay.
18. Arkanats (2· 1) loS1 to
·Providence 67·51. Next: vs. Va.
·Commonwealth al ESPN Puerto Rico
Tip-off, Sunday.
• ;t9. Pittsburgh (4-0) did not play.
Next .va. Buffalo, Friday, Nov. 23.
' 20. Stantord (4~) did not play. Next:
II Sltna, Saturday.
.
21 . N.C. State (t-&lt;l) did not play.
Next: va. New Or1eana, Sunday.
· 22. Kansas State (2~) did not play.
Next vs. Western llliools, Saturday.
23. SOUthern IHlnoie (0.0) did not
.play. Next: at Northern Illinois,

Saturday.
(t~)

did not play.

Next vs. Bucl&lt;naH. Sunday.
25. But1er (2.01 did not play. Next: at
Ev-.nsville, Saturtliy.

•

death, several of her organs wen!
patien~s in nee4,·.•.The patienl
that rece1ved Brandl's heart has
been in contact with Brandi's
family. After the heart transplam,
the patient told Brandi's family
sbe suddenly had an overwhelming fear of the dark and oddly
enough, had a new, unconscious
habit of cracking her toes.
Both of these traits belonged to
· Brandi, according to mom Cheryl
and dad John, who feel al least ·
part of their daughter lives on in
th_e lives of others. For this reason,
!here are educational materials on
organ donation at the race, raising
more than just scholarship funds
but ultimately awareness about the
ultimate gift.
This year, the race on~e again
begins at MHS, !ravels to the old
Salisbury School, then to Crew
Road, past the Meigs County
Fairgrounds, , then on co Meigs
Middle School and ending ac
MHS. Motorists should note on
race day the following road areas
will be closed .for apP.roximately
one hour: Pomeroy Ptke between
Salisbury School and MHS;
Crew road form MHS to back
entrance of the fairgrounds;
Charles Chancey Drive from
MHS toMMS. .
For more information on the
race, call Kennedy at (740) 9923058, 992-7552. 357-2723.

· to

.

flldly.

-- -·!-

lubmttted pholoa

.8. 1nc111111 (1.0) did not (&gt;ay. Nt11t:
vo. Longwood, Sunday.
8. Walhlngton State (3~) beat
Idaho 74--43. Next: vo. Montana,

24. VIllanova

--

·
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·YoUR HOMETOWN

PageC2

.

- (OMMUNIT'Y (ORNERWe'll have to miss this years show

•

Motorists wi II m1 ss that
who will spend the day
wonderful
array
of
away from their families.
Chri stmas lights on the
So again this year, the
lawn of Howard Ca ldwe ll
Enduring Freedom Support
right along Route 7 j ust
Group of Racine is preparsouth of Tuppers Plains.
ing to mail out Christmas
Charlene ·c are packages to those
He's having to skip this
Hoeflich Meigs Countians and some
year becau se of' a shoulder ·
injury but says he' ll be back
others serving in Iraq and
next year with all th ose
Afghanistan.
beautiful holiday decora. The 10 or so active memtions. For the past H~ years
bers need a little help with
or so, he has put out more table or just before falling the project since it does take
than 40,000 I ights to create into a comfortable chair to money to buy remembrances
scenes which so many have watch football all afternoon. of home to go into the boxes
enjoyed when driving by.
For those who are alone, and· postage to mail them.
Plans many times have to the congregation of the They are also always happy
be altered when health Mount Hermon Church is · to add the names of area ser• problems arise. Take Ann inviting you to be their guest vicemen to the list. Just call
Boso from up Great Bend for Thanksgiving dinner. It Jan Cardone at 949-2449 or
way. For the past 56 years ,will be served at noon in the write Box 376, Racine, Ohio
she
has
cooked fellow ship hall at 36441 45771.
Thanksg iving dinner for her Wickham Road. Pomeroy.
•••
family and enjoyed every They would like to be called
What would Christmas be
minute of it. But that has to at 985-9837 if you will be without a decorated tree?
change this year. Her family joining them for dinner.
Some of those serving in
will be cooking for her.
the military won't have to
•••
Seem s Ann took a tumble
For many years in Meigs go through that this year
at her home a few weeks County, the Friday after because . of Operation
back and after some time at Thanksgivin~ has been tra- Evergreen. This program
the hospital is now at the ditionally a ume for staging organized by the Ohio
Ravenswood Village Care a variety show. From the Christmas Tree Association
Center for rehabilitation.
·early '50s to the mid-'90s, it in cooperation with the
•••
was the Big Bend Minstrel Reynoldsburg branch of the
Sometimes we just need Association. Now ii's the Ohio
Department
of ·
to focus on the best in life Riverbend Arts Council's Agriculture will be shipping
and forget all the rest. Talent Revue.
300 live Ohio trees to Iraq,
Thanksgiving is a good time
The show, featuring local Kuwait and Afghanistan.
to do that.
talent, will get underway l!t
Going along with the
It should be a time for 7:30 p.m. in the Art trees will be lots of decoraretlecting on and being thank- Council's spaciom auditori- tions gathered up by school
ful for all the good things in um in Middlepon's Masonic children, churches, and vetlife. Despite the high price of Temple. But before show- eran's groups in central
gas, which we all complain time, the Big · Bend Ohio.
While
nothing
about, we have it pretty good. Community Band will pre- replaces home for the holiWouldn't you agree'J
sent a short holiday concert. days the decorated trees are
It would be nice if all of
sure to lift the spirit of those
•••
us just set aside a little famWe need to do everything serving in far-away places.
ily time to share the things we can to make Christmas a
(Charlene Hoeflich is
for which we are thankful little brighter for those serv- general . manager of The
-maybe around the dinner ing overseas in the military Daily Sentinel in Pomeroy.)
•

Sputnik, Ike's illness were.holiday concerns
BY JAMES SANDS

Thanksgiving in Gallia
County in 1957 was observed
with some mixed emotions.
First of all, the country was
heading into a bad recession
that among other things, saw
farm - prices plummet. The
Russians had shocked the
world by launching Sputnik
II, which had on board a dog
named Laika and President
Eisenhower's health . was a
major concern.
The Nov. 27, 1957
Gallipolis
Tribune
announced "President May
Be In Crucial Stage of
Illness ." It was the third such
major health crisis for Ike.
He had a heart attack in 1\155
and then ileitis surgery in
1956. Eisenhower 's 1957
health episode began on
Mondav, Nov. 25, 1957, after
he had greeted King
Mohammed V of Morocco at
the National Airport in chilly
weather. Later that day, the
president was having trouble
pronouncing cenain words.
Doctors recommended several weeks of rest · and so
Eisenhower was taken to his
faiin at Gettysburg, Pa. The
president shocked some worshippers on Thanksgiving
Day when he showed up for
a Thank sg iving worship,
thus allaying some fears over
his ability to run the country.
Other events of 1957
included the publi, hing of
Cat In Til e fiat , Toyota
exporting their first cars to
the United St~ te s and Elvis
Pre,ley bought Graceland.
Turkeys were selling for
29 cents a pound, the cheapest turkey had been for
many years. Sirloin was 59
cents a pound and T-bones
were 69 cent s a pound. We
note that many Gallipolis
markets we re &gt;e ll ing ducks
and geese in 1957 as well.

One could even buy rabbits, Thaiiksgiving,
longtime
although at 69 cents a businessman Dan Thomas
pound, they were "more died. Thomas, at one time
dear" than chickens, which had been one of 4 men who
sold for 53 cents a pound,.
bought the Harry Frank Sons
Area news included the store that. later became
.early arrival of Saint Nick Haskins-Tanner. Mr. Thomas
(the traditional Santa parade then established a shoe store,
in Gallipolis came on Nov. Dan Thomas and Son which
22 ·instead of the Frida¥ afier continued on for many years
Thanksgiving) and the dedi- past his death. He was 87. ·
cation
of
the
new
Sen. John Bricker spoke to
Southwestern High Scjmol .the
Southeastern
Ohio
was announced with Opal Regional Council about the
Lloyd, Granville Martin, the Cold War. He also talked
· Rev. P.A. Casto, B., Lewis about how the dollar had been
Jones, the Rev. John D. devalued in recent months.
Davis and David Davis being Bricker was usually at odds
part of the planning group with President Eisenhower
. and the program. The s~hool even though !hey were both
was designed by Lagedrost Republicans. Brieker bristled
and Walters of Dayton, Ohio. . at the thought sugges~ by
Also appearin~ in the · Eisenhower that taxes lilight
paper Thank,sgivmg week have to be raised so that the
was the mention of a "craps" Cold War could be won.
ring being broken up by the
Gallia's new dogcatcher,
sheriff. Games were being Stan Evans, had announced
held at the Gallipolis Auto that in 1957 he .had sold
Auction. Two auto dealers '4,315 dog tags as compared
were arrested, along with a to only 2,670 in 1956. The
man who gave his occupa- job got better as the ye&lt;U" prolion as "gambler."
gressed, as his first week on
The annual community the job, Evans was bitten by
Thanksgiving service was a dog, his only bite for 1957.
held at Grace Methodist
Simpson Chapel Methodist
Church at I 0 a.m. on Church in Rio Grande was
Thanksgiving Day. The planning a whole series of
speaker was the Rev. Linson events that commemorated
Stebbins of First Presbyterian the 250th anniversary of the
Church. The offering was birth of Charles Wesley, the
designated for the Otrol Sue writer of some 6,500 hymns.
North fund. We also note that Mrs. Clyde Dale, Mrs.
on Thanksgiving day, the Vincent Jarrell, Mrs. Sydney
Senior Choir of Paint Creek Fadely, James Clark, J.oseph
Baptist Church had a break- Clark and the Rev. George
fast of buckwheat cakes, Holcombe were in charge of
eggs, sausage, fruit juice and the planning.
coffee from 7:30 to 9 a.m.
And 'Gallipolis attorney
Harry Hurn, writing in his John Halliday announced that
column " Your Hometown he was considering a run for
and Mine," suggested that governor of Ohio in 1958.
youngsters
begin
the
(James Sands is a special
process of .collecting nuts correspondent for
the
from the forest (walnut arid Sunday 1fnres-SentineL He
hickory) which they in turn canbeconlllctedbywriJingto
could sell to housewives.
him at 1040 Military Rood,
The
week
before Zanesville, Ohio 43701.)

Submitted photo

Local Reliv group attends conference
POINT
PLEASANT,
- On October 26th
and 27th several local ~eliv
Distributors attended the ·
Leadership Conference at
the
Renaissance
Schaumburg Convention
Center in Chicago.
Reliv, based out of St.
Louis,· Mo., is an international food-science company .with business in 13
countries and yearly sales
reaching $150 million.
Bob Montgomery, the
president and founder, gave

w. Va.

valuable words to inspire all
attending the confereqce to
reach for higher goals, to
care about people, be compassionate, be dedicated and
don't quit.
Sandy Montgomery, cofounder of the company,
spoke about the different
products produced by the
firm's top scientist, Dr. Carl
Hastings, five of which have
U.S. government patents.
A workshop from some of ·
the top distnbutors emphasized that this is a "WORK

SUND~AV
ACROSS
6 Aviates
11 lh the company of
16 Orchid part
21 Bay window
22 Cante farm
23 Stopwatcn
24 Rare instrument
25 Take as cine's own
26 Island group
28 Region in Canada
29 Harden ·

122 Bow

123 High card
125 Sphere
126 ·Detective
128 B&lt;mer serving
1\!0 Nottalking
132 Do in
133 Compass pt
134 Church officEr
135 Aipken of baseball
137 Too hasty
139 Consider

30 Grampt~s
32 Fall birthstone
33 Rants and 35 Conclude
36 Ensnare
38 Hawaiian island
41 Cut
43 Spread lo dry
44 Field
45 Surpass in retail
activity
48 Water birds

a court case again

g1 Tin!
143 Leather band
145 Travel business
147 Crealed
150 Make lace
152 Is indebled
154 British gun
155 Woodwmd ,
159 Kimono sash
160 Wooden shoe
162 Like a doily
164 Petrol
166 Un~ ol work
167 Gaffe 169 Domestic employee
173 Stogie
175 Moving aboU1
·176 Monsters
177 Artless
178 Sharp
179 RiVer in France
180 Descartes and Coty
181 Handle
·
182 Doctrine

~Moray .

52 Upward 11'0Vemen1
55 Surmounting
·
57 Knock
58 Treaties
62 Young woman
63 Aavorlng for pickles
65 Acqu~ed
67 Once around a track
69 Wile of Jacob
70 Ad. "'usin
71 Stop - - dime
7.2 Tiny
74 Coucll
76 Military cap
77 Pome fnil
79 Liquot
a1 Brute
B3 Prima donna
as Tear
as Mistake .
88 Hearsay
90 Kind of quiz or music
92 Bounties
94 Time period
96 London's Big 97 · -Town"
99 Like a snoop
100 Brood-brinvned hat
103 Hair goo
105 Aquatic mammal
107 Cotton thread

from home" business, not a
"stay at home" business. .
A favorite parts of this
conference was highlighting
the Kalogris Foundation,
which was begun in 1995 in
honor of' Dr. Ted Kalogris,
who produced the first
product. Through the donations of Reliv distributors
around the world, over
25,000 adults and children
are fed daily through distribution and feeding centers
in countries such as Haiti.
and the Philippines.

PUZZLER

110Time
111 Injure
113 E&gt;&lt;lend to
115 Earth (prefi&gt;)
117 Tiny particle
11 B Gives silenl assent
120 Manner of walking

1 Hooded snake

DOWN

·

1 Seashore
2 Command
3 Animal life
4 Certain party member
(abbr.)
5 Palo 6 Brawl
,
7 Household god
a Abbr. in bus.
9 Repeal
10 Seagoing vessels
11 Art studio
12 Wire measure
13 - Khayyam
14 Annul
15 Orchard
16 Gives money
17 Down under bird
1a Wager accepter
19 Make expiation
20 Singer - ~onsladt
27 Ache
31 Decomposing
34 Dutch commune
37 "The Raven" wnter
39 Recover
40 Final (abbr.)
42 Sound of laughter
44 "0!1 , woe!'
46 Nullify
47 Ship's record
49 Springs
51 Clean -a~rorg
52 Wide open
53 Thrifty one
54 Lucid, mentally
56 Strength
59 Kind of dam
60 Lukewarm
61 Missleps
64 Den
66 Oolong IS one ·
sa Seed vessel
69 Black bird
73 Psychic's gift (abbr.)
75 An evergreen
78 Cheer
ao Litlle lump
a1 Blunder
a2 - and nail
84 Like a missing Gl
a? Hurry
89 "Little Women" name
91 Place
.93 Vast region
95 Approximate

98' Rule (abbr I
100 Meamng
101 Creature of folk
102 Gun gp.
104 PaSiure
.1OS Teke place
106 Genu1ne
108 ·- Doone"
109 Glowing coal
112 Gratu1ty
114 Branch
116 Simple wind

instrument
119 Napped leather
121 Diplomacy
124. Sight organs
127 AHempt
129 Poi source
131 Gym pad
132 Close
136 Anarchic
136 Dislress signal
140 Group insuranc
abbr.
142 After zeta
t43 Yes·man
·· 144 Surrmt
146 Rue
147 Wisdom tooth
146 Disconcert
149 As aforesaid
151 Detest
153 Odor
156 Started
157 Deliver a speec
158 Wading bird
160 W~hered
161 Rotate
163 Twelvemonth
165 Go away!
168 Metallic elemer
170 Perceive
171 Bakery item
172 - Marie Saint
174 Frosl

·Le&lt;IVt!JII al!fOI.Il ~an -~ ~B
,ii

,-:

·Enilng Ctl8RA ·MIIdicarD suppremant
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. $8341"

AsLowAs

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RIO GRANDE - The Jazz Ensemble at the University of
Rio Grande will be in concert o,n Tuesday, Nov. 20 beginning
at 8 p.m. in the Berry Fine and Performing Arts Center on the
Rio Grande campus. The concert is free and open to the public.
The Jazz Ensemble is made up of Rio Gmnde students and
cwrently has 12 members. The ensemble's fall concert will feature a wide variety of jazz music that will be enjoyed by people
of all ages. Both people who love jazz and who never even heard
jazz music will be entertained by this excellent perfonnance ..
Director Chris Kenney leads the Rio Grande Ja,.:z
Ensemble, and in this concert he will join the students for
three of the songs and will be soloin~ on the tlugelhorn.
~~1flf1l 11Ht'
"I picked three songs that were very Important to me when I
was growing up and developing into a musician." Kenney said.
B. P. 0 . ELK S NO. 1017
One of the songs will be "It Never Entered My Mind," which
is a Rodgers and Hart ballad. The Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble
will be performing a Miles Davis arrangement of the song.
.~'I' r;. f141(~~J.x~til1~! l i, ·f'~r
"Miles Davis was a huge influence on me," Kenney said .
f...;[ 1~ jof. fHi;.h [.:l\w(
"He is known for his amazinjl ballad interpretations."
Kenney added that Davis made several signihcant
changes to the piece .in his arrangement.
"He goes beyond the written music and goes into someSubllllttod photoo
.
The Earl Neff Pediatric Fund at Holzer Medical Center continues to be supported enthusiastically by area businesses and thing quite special," Kenney said.
The
Jazz
Ensemble
will
also
perform
"Katrina
organizations. The pediatric fwid, in existence for nearly 30 years, has supplied needed· toys, equipment and entertain·
ment to the thousands of pediatric patients who hav~ received care on Holzer Medical Center's Pediatric Unit. October Ballerina," by Woody Shaw.
"Woody Shaw was sort of the second big trumpet influsponsors included Elks Lodge 107, represented in ttie photo at left by Tom Johnson, and Irvin's Glass Service, represented in the photo at right by Greg Brumfield, left, and M[ke Brumfield. The entire staff of Holzer Medical Center joins in ence on me," Kenney said. 'Tve loved this tune ever since
'
expressing their gratitude, along with the young children and their families ..for these generous.contributions to the Earl I started playing it."
The third song will be "Gregory is Here," by Horace Silver.
Neff Fund . Anyone who would like more information or is interested in making a donation may contact the., Holzer
"His music has always been intluential to me as a comFoundation at (7 40) 446-5217.
poser. He manages to capture so many ~ifferent styles with
all of his music," Kenney said. "He's probably the most
positi lot! of the jazz composers and jazz pianists."
The concert.will feature a great variety of jazz music, ranging from early bebop su~h at "Au Privave," by Charlie Parker,
to "TBC (Terminal Baggage Claim)," by Chick Corea.
"Everybody will be soloing during the evening," Kenney 5llid.
RIO GRANDE - The
. The Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble has several outstandmg
Ohio Association of Area
musicians, and they will all be able to show off their talents
Agencies·
on · Aging
during the concert. This year's Jazz Ensemble is very
· : (OAAAA). a . nonprofit
young, and features several tirst-year students. The mem.. organization, is a statewide
bers of the group are learning quickly, and Kenney is
· :· network of agencies that
expecting an excellent performance.
: : provide services for the
"They ' re doing pretty well so far in the
: elderly, as well as advocate
rehe&lt;~rsals," Kenney said.
· : on behalf of older Ohioans.
The Rio Grande Jazz Ensemble concert will be followed
·
The association addresses
by several other musical performances at Rio Grande. in
issues wnich have an impact
November and December.
·
on the aging network, proOn Tuesday, Nov. 27, the Rio Grande Rock Ensemble
vides services to members,
will perform, and this concert will also begin at 8 p.m.
and serves as a collective
On Sunday, Dec. 2, the Rio Grande Masterworks Chorale
voice for Ohio's Area
will be in concert beginning at 3 p.m. On Friday. Dec. 7, the
: Agencies on Aging (AAAs) .
Grande Chorale will perform beginning at 8 p.m.
· Each year, OAAAA recogFor more information, call Kermey at (800) 282-7201. ·
nizes an area agency staff
For additional information on upcoming events at Rio
member for their significant
Grande, as well as information on the wide variety of aca•
contributions to Ohio's
demic and professional programs offered by the institution,
Agin~ Network.
log onto www.rio.edu.
Th1s
year,
Suzanne
Shelpman, a resident . of
Scioto County, was recognized for assisting beyond
Submitted plloto
the call gf duty, and provid- From left are Area Agency on Aging District 7 Inc .. Executive Director Pamela K. Matura,
ing leadership that has had AAA 7 Board of Trvstees member Alice Ward, Ohio Area Agencies on Aging Association
impact beyond all the area President and Executive Director of the Central Ohio Agency on Aging Cindy Farson, state
agencies in Ohio.
award recipient and AAA7 Direector of External Affairs Suzanne Shelpman al)d AAA7 Board
Shelpman serves on of Trustees President Jane .Ann Burns.
numerous committees as a
Our Mattress Factory has cl&lt;?sed its doors and gone out of
representative of area agen"She
is
a
wonderful
repreCentral
Ohio
Area
Agency
has
had
great
impact
on
so
cies on aging, including the
business. We are now offering all mattress sets at only
many p~ciple. She has been
Assisted Living advisory sentative of the association on Aging, Cindy Farson.
20% above our Invoice Cost
committee and Money on committees because of · Area Agency on Aging a vigorous leader both
Follows the Person work her tireless work and win- District 7's executive direc- locally and statewide. I am
group.
She . recently ning personality," said Ohio tor, Pamela K. Matura said, pleased to have her as part
assumed the rules tracking Area Agencies on Aging . "Suzanne Shelpman is so . of the area agency and this
REG.
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process on he half of all area Association President and deserving of this award. She award represents the incred·
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Executive Director of the
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ARBORS AT GALLIPOUS
Skilled Nursing and Rellabilltadon Center
170 Pinecrest Dr. Gallipolis; Ohio 45631

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Craft Barn schedules holiday events

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APPlYIXlline now at -..a 111¢ fBbtllll 1

Rio Jazz Ensemble
perfonns Tuesday

Breast Health Services

ureal AlrtlliWBdAJ!nt

.

PEDIATRIC FUND DONORS

Sunday, November 18, 2007

RIO
GRANDE
which
serves
Gallia, about the open house, silent farm at (740) 245-5305 or
Holiday celebrations begin Jackson , Meigs, Lawrence auction or other. events at (800) 994-3276 or visit the
Nov. 23-25 at the Bob and Vinton counties.
rhe Bob Evans, Farm, those Web site at www. bobe·
For more informatioll i11terested should call the vans.com.
Evans Farm. The Craft Barn
'
and Gift Shop Holiday
Open House and a Silent
Auction are among the special
events scheduled
throughout · the weekend at
the farm in Rio Grande .
The Holiday Open House
wil.l be held Friday and
Saturday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and
Sunday 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
in the Cmff Bam and Gift
Shop. Craft and art demonstrations, door prizes and
Available to you within the O'Bleness
What every woman should know •••
refreshments are among the
festivities at the open house.
complement.of convenient, progressive
Many changes can happen in a woman's breasts during her
Demonstrations include
• Knowledgeable specialists and tec!Jno•logists
crocheting by Marie Rig~s.
lifetime, and it's impprtant to be awilre of what's nonnal for you.
cross stitching with Juamta
• Education about breast hei;llth and self-examination
Early detection is key to successfu I diagnosis and treatment of
Rainey,
knitting
by
• Accredited mammography and advanced ultrasound
Marjorie Pullin, painting by
abnormalities ofthe breast. Se!f-examinatlOti; regular check-ups
• Stereotactic and other biopsy options
Becky VVoodyard and penan,d mammograms are important for YPU and your healthcate
cil drawings by Danny
• Skilled oncologists offering radiation therapy and chemotherapy
professional in assessing your breast health.
Carter. Local author Justine ·
• Experienced surgeilns providing a variety of surgical options
Rutherford will also conOur experienced team can diagnose .a nd treat potentially aerious
• Breast cancer support group and patient navigator offering
duct a book-signing.
The "Deck the Halls, Walls
changes in yoirr breasts .
· personal guidance
and Tables Silent Auction," to
benefit Holzer Hospice, will
be held in the Homestead
Museum from 9 a.m. to 5
.A;s~ ~r Practitioner about
p.m. Saturday, Nov. 24.
·
Bret¥st Het¥1fh Servkes at O'Bieness, ·
The auction will offer aft
opportunity for vi sitors to
or call (740) 592.9300
place a bid on a variety of
to request a free information packet.
holiday decor items and
crafts donatM by artisans
froq~ the Bob Evans Farm
Craft Barn. and .the Bob
Evans Farm Festival, as
well as other local artisans.
All proceeds benefitl;lol~er
Hospice of Gallipolis,

AMANDA BRANNON
.

COMMUNU'Y

Sunday, November 18, 2007
Those seen here
attending the
Reliv Distributors
annual leadership conference
we re Wesley
Buck from
Hibbing, Minn ., .
Joyce Downing
from Point
,
Pleasant,W.Va.,
Esther Hershey
from Columbus,
Patrecia Gray
from Leon,W.Va.,
Teresa Birchfield
from Rutland ,
Rhonda Mollohan
from Gallipolis,
and Darlene and
Steve JQdon
from Mason,
W.Va.

PageC3

HEALTH SYSTEM

'

Ex'"'n;:;:ND
=,CARE~"". ·
111ctlny

www.extendicare.com
EqUdf OpfM'ttmity Provider of

5SHaiFflai""-MIN.0No -1-DIZ
www.OblenessHealthSystem.org
•

�PageC4

ON THE BOOKSHELF

·CELEBRATIONS
Keep viruses at bay by w~hing hands .
Sunday,Nove~r18,2007
8

kind of food can become
contaminated.
However,
ready -to-eat foods , such as
salads, cut fruit and deli
Whal are ··noreviruseS/' meats, are among the most
and how can they be pre- common..
Although
vented7
noroviruses are destroyed
· Noro viruses are very with thorough cooking, they
common viruses that can can survive freezing tempercause gastroe nteritis, or the atures. Some outbreaks have
stomach flu . Even though been associated with ice
the ill ness is called the made from contaminated
·'flu," these viruses are- dif- water.Noroviruses are also
ferent from the influenza. called "Norwalk-like" virusvirus, which causes a respi - es because they were first
ratory illness, not a diges- identified in an outbreak in
tive problem . Noroviruses Norwalk, Ohio, in 1972.
are often. spread through Symptoms usually appear
improper food handling as· suddenly and last about one
with
hepatitis . A-also to two days. Common sympcause-d be a . virus-they are toms are nausea, vomiting,
the most common type of diarrhea and some stomach
food-borne illness.
cramping. You might also
Unfortunately, just a smal.l experience fever, . chills,
number of these microorgan- headache, muscle aches and
. isms can make you ill. Any fatigue.The illness is usually
BY

NESBITT

JOHN

SANITARIAN
GALLIA COUNn' HEALTH O EPART~ENT

Sara Barringer and Eric Batey

BARRINGERBATEY
ENGAGEMENT
REEDSVILLE - Bobby and Joan Barringer announce
the engagement of thei'r daughter, Sara Lynn Barringer, to
Eric Shane Batey, son' of Tom and Judy Batey of Middleport.
The bride-elect is a 2005 graduate of Eastern High
School. She is the granddaughter of Fe.rra Lou· Barringer
and the late Ernest Barringer, the late Lou and George
·
Layne and the late Albert Roseberry.
Batey is a 2004 graduate of Eastern High School. His
grandparents are Andy Batey and the late Betty Batey, and
the late Charles Gilkey and Vi olet Riedeman.

re latively mild, but some
cases can be more serious.
Those most at risk. for
severe illness are the eldeP
ly, children and anyone with
a compromised immurie
system.Recently,
the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention identified
two · new
strains
of
norovirus that can be fatal.
A 90•year-old patient in a
nursing home died from
norovirus last year. The
CDC suspects the norovirus
to also be the cause in 18
other fatalities, as well as
thousands of illnesses.
Washing hands, and doing
so properly, is the best way
to prevent the spread of
norovirus. This is especially
important for anyone who
handles food for a large
number of people.
When washing your hands:

Run warm water over
your blinds - at least I 00
degrees. It should be as
warm as you can stand.
o Apply soap, and scrub
hands. wrists and forearms
for 10 to 15 seconds. Time
yourself - it's longer than
you·might think. (Be sure .to
get under your fingernails
and between your fingers).
o Rinse thoroughly in running water, allowmg any
microorganisms
to be
washed away.
o Use a fresh paper towel
or warm-air dryer to dry
your hands. Don't use a
cloth towel which may have
11een used before (and contaminated by someone else).
For more information
contacr rhe health departmemat441 -2018.
Source: USDA Food
Safety Website.

Bv JILL Cox, LSW

children because their neck elementary; however, there
muscles are weak and brain is often so much talk about
tissue is exceptionally frag- the joys of parenting that we
ile. When a baby is shaken, forget to tell parents that
the brain bounces back and they .c an expect their baby
forth within the skull caus- to cry a total of one to two
ing 'bruising, bleeding and hours or more. a day. If the
swelling inside the baby's parent or caretaker knows
brain. At this age, even ·what to expect then he or
minor shaking or "rough ' she will be better equipped
play" can be harmful:
to handle the challenges of
Educating . indiyiduals parenting. One of the
about SBS can be a matter biggest challenges is trying
of life and death. Statistics to figure out why the baby is
from Prevent Child Abuse crying.
Ohio (PC::AO) show that one
Some helpful questions
out of four babies who are to ask yourself include: Is
shaken dies as a result of the baby hungry or need to
being shaken. Other injuries be· burped? Does the baby
that occur as a result of need hts diaper change-d? Is
being shaken include: brain th e baby too hot or too
damage, speech and learn- cold? Does the baby have a
ing disabilities, spinal fever or seem to be in pain
injury and paralysis, cere- · from an earache, teething,
bral palsy, seizures, hearing etc? Does the baby need to
loss, partial or total blind- suck? Does the baby need
ness, and/or broken bones to feel close to or comforted by you ? Is the baby
and dislocations.
A presenter for a work- overtired or overstimulatshop that I attended once on ed? Does the baby just need
SBS gave us three basic to cry? Remember crying
points that every new mom, is a baby 's way of commuparent, caretaker, grandpar- ni catin~ .
o It 1s perfectly fine to
ent, etc. should know:
• Babies cry. This seems walk away and take a

'

When I talk with our prenatal clients about "Shaken
Baby -Syndrome," the overall feeling l .g et from them is
"I would never do that." I
do not believe that any parent or caregiver sets out to
hurt their baby or child, but
sadly enough, it happens.
Education . is a very
· important key to the prevention of this form of child
abuse.
Shaken
Baby
Syndrome occurs when an
infant or young child is
shaken vigor.ously. Infants
three to six months of age
are the most frequent victims; however, toddlers are
also at risk due to the fru stration that comes with
potty training, behavior and
Among
eating
issues.
infants and children that
experience abuse, head tr311. rna is the most frequent
cause of permanent damage
or death and shaking
accounts for a significant
number of these cases.
Shaking is especially dangerous to infants and young

break. Caring for a crying
infant can be very frustrating at times. If you have
tried everything and the
baby continues ·to cry, gently place the baby on his
back in a crib and walk into
another room for a few
minutes.
o It is NEVER okay to
shake a baby, It is okay to
let your baby cry when the
attempts to comfort him
have been exhausted; however, it is not okay to shake
your baby. Shaking a baby
can be deadly. We as family
members, friends, and a caring community need to
become advocates for atrisk children. Reach
and
offer support .to stressed-out
parents by lending a listening ear, helping with childcare for a few hours, or
becoming a mentor for
young or new parents.
For more information,
ideas 011 how you can help
or questio11s · regarding
Shaken Baby Syndrome,
contact the Gallia County
Health Department at 441 2950
or
go
In
www.pcao.org.

out

Danlelle Carroll and Christopher Curti!!

CARROLL-CURTIS
ENGAGEMENT

Tales from the trenches of holiday cooking hot lines

Becky Wahlund, ·director
BvTANYA
blunders,
people
like ("Help! I can' t get the sauce
out
·
Robyn
Sargent
have
great
of
the
can'")
to
weird
of
test kitchens at Land
BRICKING LEACH
REEDSVILLE -Christina Carroll and Ray (Shelly)
FOR THE Assoc:ATED PREss
stories to tell.
("Can I dy e my hair with O'Lakes, says the compaCarroll of Reedsville announce the engageme nt and . - - - - - - - - - Sargent is a baking your cranberry juice?") to ny 's former holiday baking
upcoming marriage of their dau ghter. Danielle Nicole, to
No matter how dreadful instructor at the King Arthur disturbing ("Can I give hot line used to get some
Christopher Todd Cunis.
your .holiday dinner disaster · Flour Co. in Norwich, Vt. cranberry juice to my cat for hilarious calls, including the
The bride-elect is the grandd aughter of Pat Carroll of story is, chances are Mary She helped launch the com- its bladder infection'").
- woman who aske-d whether
Reedsville, David and Jackie Lute of Logan, and David and Clingman can top it.
Speaking of ,cats, one she could substitute tartar
pany 's Baker's Hotline in
Ilene Carroll of Vanceburg, Ky.
After 27 years as one of 1993. Her favorite di saster caller to the Foster Farms sauce for crtam of tartar.
She is a 2007 graduate of Eastern High School and Meigs the reassuring voices on the story involves a woman Turkey , Helpline wanted to
Another caller who lived
Vocational, where she received her cosmetology license.
other end of the Butterball who called while trying to know how to fix a turkey that in a high-rise apartment
She is employed by Regis Hairstylists.
·
Turkey Talk-Line, she has bake bread .
the family Cllt had chewed requested high-altitude bakThe prospective bridegroom is the son of Juanita (Jeff)
heard
just
about
everything.
Sargent
says
the
woman
holes ~nto prior to roasting.. ing instructions . ·
Ginther of Racine and the late Tim Curtis. He is the grandIncluding
when
things
go
described how the dough Foster Farms spokeswoman
The company eventually
son of Jerry and Margaret Powell of Raci ne and George and
bail
in
a
big
way.
had
put
in
the
oven
to
she
Teresa
Lenz
says
the
woman
shut
down the hot line after
AJice Hashman of St. Marys, W.Va.
"One
of
the
first
calls
was
was
oozing
out
the
.
rise
was
urged
to
buy
a
new
bird.
realizing
most people just
He is a 2006 graduate of Southern High School and is
a lady who called and said sides of her oven and gush Then there 's . Clingman's wanted recipes, not help. But
employed by Wal-Mart.
.
her
kitchen
was
on
fire,"
ing
onto
the
floor
in
vol
kitty·
litter incident.
Wahlund says dealing with
An invitation-only wedding will take place on Feb. 16,
Clingman
recalls.
"ltold
her
cano-like
bursts.
A
caller
from
Georgia
all
those callers taught the
2008 at the Mount Moriah Church of God in Racine.
to hang up and call the fire
Turns out the woman took wanted advice from the company. it needed to reform
the recipe literally when it Butterball folks on cooking a the way it writes its recipes.
department."
November marks the start said add a packet of yeast. turkey inside her husband's
Which is why .you'll no
of prime time for the opera- Sargent says the woman new gas grill. The catch was longer find instructions to
tors who staff the cooking didn ' t realize the recipe that her husband didn't want "cream the butter and the
ho~ lines that help Americans meant a 2 1/4-teaspoon the griiUo get dirty, so he'd sugar." Too many callers
navigate the mishaps, blun- packet, not the 1-pound filled it with kitty litter to . made it apparent that peoabsorb the grease.
ders and outright silliness package she had bought.
ple didn't understand that
At the Ocean Spray
Would it be OK to giill the it meant "mix until
sometimes involved in
Consumer Helpline, call s turkey with the litter? No, creamy," not "add cream,"
preparing holiday feasts.
JACKSON - C hloe Kate Ma"ie and ·Kevin Kyle
And thanks to all those have ranged from odd Clingman didn ' t think so.
Wahlund says.
McKenzie are announcing their enQagement and upcoming wedding.
~
,
The bride-elect is the daughter of Milton "Mick"
Massie of Gallipolis and Janet Dianne Massie of Jackson.
She is a gmduate of Buckeye Hills Career Center and
Jackson High School.
The prospective brideg room is the so n of Danny and
Linda McKenzie of Oak Hill . He is a graduate of Buckeye
Hills Career Center and Oak Hill High School.
The wedding will be May . 3 1, 2008 at Lake Alma in
Wellston . The bride will be given in marriage by her father.
. Her maid of honor will be Amy Mercer of Jackson. Chloe
McKenzie will be the flower girl and Ashton McKenzie
will be the ring bearer.
The best man wi ll be Justin Horner of Oak Hill.
A recepiion will be held at the Exte nsion Center in
Jackson. The coupl e's address is 215'1 Four Mile Road,
Jackson, Ohio 45640.
We'"' proud to announte a 'partnenhip with HIMG to provide cardiology service• to the communities we serve. These highly
acdai~Red phy~icians • ., amongst thl! absolute best in the diagnosi~ and treatment ofyo~r cardiac health. We are accepting new
patients today!

MASSIEMCKENZIE
ENGAGEMENT

.

Birthday
celebration

Janice Layne

GALLIPOLIS The
famil y of Janice Layne will
be celehrmi ng her 80th binhd&lt;J y on Saturday, Nov. 24,
2007. " ith an open house
p&lt;!lly "' Fi r.st Bapti st Church.
I IIX J 1-ou nh Ave., G:: ll ipolis.
The commun ity' i ~ in vi ted.
Frie nds may come between
2 and 4 p.m. Card s optional ,
no gifts please.

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
Partners in Health

Sunday, November 18, 2007

o

Shaken Baby Syndrome: Avoid at all costs
GALLIA COUNTY HEAlTH DEPIIATMENT

PageCs

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio Grande has
named Jeanne Jindra as the
new director of the Madog
Center for Welsh Studies.
Jindra has served for the
assistant director of the
Center
since
Madog
Decembe r 2006, and . the
Madog Center Advisory
Board recently named her to
the dir~ctor position .
" I think she is an excellent
choice for the posi.tion."
said Dr. Greg Sojka, interim
president of the university.
Jindra has a strong professional and personal interest
in the Welsh culture, and
will do an excellent job in
the position, Sojka said.
"She's a very, very or~a­
nized professional," Sojka
added.
Mark Abe ll, chair of the
Madog Center Advisory
Board, said he is pleased to
have Jindra serving as the
director.
"We're really, really
happy that she was able to
be promoted into the position," Abell said. "She
understands the mission of
the Madog Center and will
be able to carry on the work
that has been started by previous directors."
.
Jindra is very enthusiastic
and knowledgeable about the
Welsh history and culture of
southern Ohio, Abell said. He
added that Jindra has done an
excellent job as assistant
director working on campus
and in the community.
Jindra said she enjoys her
job and is very happy to move
. into the director position.
·
"I really love working with
the students," Jindra added
She also is happy to be
working ·with the fac ulty
and staff at Rio Grande, as
well as everyone who works
with the. Madog Center.
" I couldn't do my job
with out them," Jindra said.
Jindra hopes to build on
the achievements of the pre. vious directors while also
working on new programs
and initiatives. The· Madog
Center Advisory Board has
examined · and revised the
mission statement and objectives for the Madog Center,
and Jindra is working to

Jeanne Jindra
ac hieve the revised goals.
One program Jindra hopes
to work on, as the director is
to bring a Welsh language
instructor to Rio Grande. The
·course could be taught online or in a tmditional classroom, and Jindra said she will
be' working on this project.
Jindra also hopes to continue working on the student
and faculty exchange programs with Trinity College
in Carmarthen, Wales, while
also assisting with community events. During the
spri ng semester, I 0 students
.from Wales who speak
Welsh as their first langua~e
will be studying at R1o
Grande, and Jmdra is excited about everything these
students will add to the campus and the community.
Jindra has worke-d for Rio
Grande in several different
positions since 1999 and
volunteered for the Madog
Center for several years
before she began serving as
the assistant director. Her
great-j:randparents came to
Amenca from Wales, and
the Welsh culture has always
been very important to her
family. She has a strong connection to the local. Welsh
population through her family and her work at the
Madog Center, and she will
work hard to promote the
Wdsh culture in the region.
Jindra and her husband,
Louis, live in Gallipolis and
are proud parents and
grandparents.
For more information on
I he Madog Cemer for Welsh
Studies, call Jindra at (800)
282-7201.

New and old 'classic'
recipes from Martha Stewart
Bv J.M. HIRSCH
M' RJOO WRITER

Martha
Stewart
has
release-d two massive collections of recipes .drawn
from the past 17 years of her
flagship magazine, Martha
Stewart Livin~.
The first , The Martha
Stewart Living Cookbook:
The Original Classics," is
an updated versiqn of a previously published book that
offers I, 100 recipes publishe'd in the magazine
between 1990 and 2000.
The second, "The Martha
Stewart Living Cookboolc
The New Classics," is new
and contains I ,200 recipes
published since 2000. Both
books are exhaustive, clearly written and break recipes
into 22 categories.
The books are meant to be
used together, as the 'The
New Classics" contains a
master index covering both
books. This is ..a nice touch.
Both also contain comprehensive equipment glossaries and guides to findmg
unusual ingredients.

Matzo ball soup
Start to finish : 2 hours 45
minures (45 minutes active)
Servings: 4 to 6
31arge eggs
3 tablespoons rendered
chicken fat (available at
butcher shops or large
grocers) or canula oil
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher
salt
.
3/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons matzo meal .
10 cups canned lowsodium chicken broth,
skimmed of fat
3 medium carrots, sliced
into l/2-inch-thick rounds
2 medium'' parsnips,
peeled and sliced into 1/2~
inch-thick rounds
Fresh dill, for garnish
In a medium bowl, whisk
together eggs and chicken

fat until combined. Whisk
in salt and 112 cup water.
Add the matzo meal and
whisk until combined.
Cover and refrigerate batter
until firrn, about 2 hours.
Line a baking pan with
. parchment paper. In a large,
wide saucepan, bring the
chicken broth to a boil, then
reduce heat to a simmer.
Slightly dampen your fingertips, then form 2 heaping
.tablespoons of batter into a I
112-inch ball; being careful
not to compress the mixture
too much. Place the ball on
the prepared sheet. Repeat
with remaining batter.
Using a large spoon, slide
the matzo balls into the simmering stock. Once all the
balls have been added, cover
and cook for 10 minutes.
Add the carrots · and
parsnips, cover, and continue
cooking for about 20 minutes, or until the vegetables
are tender and the matzo
balls are cooked through.
To test if the matzo balls
are done, remove a ball
from the water and slice in
half. The color should be
light throughout. If the center is darker, cook for another 5 to 10 minutes .
To serve, ladle broth, vegetables and I to 2 ,matzo
balls into each serving .
bowl. Garnish with fresh
dill and serve hot.
IRecipe from "The Marr/ia
Stewart Livi11g Cookbook:
The Original Classics,"
C/arkso11 Potter. 2007. $35)

NEW YORK - It started
with one question from
Ridley Pearson's daughter:
"How did Peter meet Captain
Hook in the first place?'
That question inspired
others about J.M Barrie's
"Peter Pan," the captivating
tale about a boy and his
adventures on the island of
Never Land : Why doesn't
Peter get older? How did he
learn to fl y? Where did
Tinker Bell come from?
Pearson, a best-selling suspense writer, set out to find
the answer~ . teaming up with
humor columnist Dave Barry
to write a prequel trilogy to
Peter Pan. The first book
"Peter and the Starcatchers"
was published in 2004. The
adventure concludes with
"Peter and The Secret of
Rundoon," out this month.
"When we started this, we
never expected that we
would end up with three
books," said Barry, 60, who
has two children, ages 27 and
7 and lives in Miami. "We
thought we would have one
little book, a kid's book."
But they needed many,
many pages to tell the tale
behind the tale of the boy who
never grows up, Pearson said.
"We wrote this 500-page
manuscript and we got as far
as the creation of 'Tinker
Bell, but we still didn't
answer a whole bunch of
stuff," said Pearson, 54, who
lives in St. Louis and has
two girls ages 9 and I 0. "So
in the second book, we dealt
with the shadOoWs, and in
this third book, we've really
tried to pull this all together
in an action forrnat?'
The books have developed

Authors Dave
Barry, center,
and Ridley
. Pea rson. right, :
sign their book;
-Peter and the :
·
Secret of
Rundoon: to
patient Jamal·
Fowle r, 16, at
Morgan Stanley
Chi ldren's
·
Hospital in New
York , Monday,
Oct. 29.
AP photo

a following - the first two pair for collaboration on a
spent a combined 18 months fantasy book, a genre they
on The New York Times say has ripened because of
Best Sellers list - and a the success of Harry Potter.
Broadway ver~ ion of "Peter The two met IS years ago as
and the Star Catchers" is members of The Rock
being developed.
Bottom Remainders, a band
While many U.S. children made up of famous authors.
know the Disney version of Neither one had written a.
Peter Pan - and Disney children 's book before.
"We. give a lot of thanks to
publishes these books -·
they are not familiar with J.K. Rowling," said Barry,
the Barrie story, which was · "The idea that kids will actufirst prese nted as a play in ally read long books - read
1904. And they definitely a book because the story is
don't know that Barry and fun , not because it teaches
Pearson are famous authors. them or has some lesson in
No matter - they like a it. We try to have the good
guys win, and the bad guys
good story.
"He (Peter Pan) can fly- lose but that's about as far as
kids would love to be able to we go with preaching."
tly," said Barry. "He doesn ' t
The two say they work
have any grown up teJiing together outlining their books
him what to do. He lives a and then divide up the charlife of pure adventure, acters, each writing chapters
there's all these magical based on who stars in them.
things going on around him,
Pirate ships sa'iled on the
and he neve,r really gets stage at Morgan Stanley
hurt, and he can't grow old." Children's Hospital of New
With their different writ- York-Presbyterian, where
ing backgrounds - crime the twq had a readin g
and humor - Pearson and - Monday and handed out
Barry seem like an unlikely " Keep the Secret" blacll

wristbands to patients an~
local school chi ldren.
: ·.
"It's
magical,"
sal:d
Danielle Bennett, 8. abctilt
her love for Peter Pan . Shi:
said she liked the "fai ri~s
and flying people."
, :.
"I like how he fights,"
said Samantha Leon, a
fourth -g rader at P.S. 4 Duke
Ellington School in New
York , "how brave he is; how
careful he is when it comes
. to problems."
Barry reca lled seeing a
kid reading his second book
last year when he was dropping his daughter off at elementary school.
"I go up to her, tapped her
on the shoul der, and said,
· 'You know I wrote that
book,'" he said . "S.he goes,
· 'Oh' and goes back to read-.
ing. She didn' t care at all
that the ·author of the book
was there. She wanted to go
bad; to the story .. In a way,
that's the best kind of reader. They live for your book.'!
"Perer and The Secret of
Rundoon ", Disnev Editions,
$18.99
·

Cop-turned-author tells story of notorious triple child murder.
'

Bv MIKE ROBINSON
Assoc:ATED PREss' WRITER

CHICAGO - The news
was shocking: A 14-yearold boy and two younger
friends were savagely beaten, strangled and dumped in
a lonely forest preserve at
the edge of the city.
As a 26-year-old rookie
detective, James A. Jack
searched Chicago's rainswept streets for the three
missing boys on the night of
Oct. 16, 1955. For years
afterward, he took part in the
agonizing hunt for their killer.
Now, at age 79, Jack is a
ftrst-time author. His book,
'Three Boys Missing," tells
the inside story of the ·case
and how it finally was solved
- a full 40 years later.
For years, the .m.urder of
Robert Peterson, 14, John
Schuessler, 13, and little
brother Anton ·Schuessler,
II , haunted the veteran
homicide detective.
"I thought of it every
year," says Jack. "I went to
the · graves on the anniversary. The last time was the
fiftieth anniversary. I place-d
a rose on each of the graves.
'These were wonderful
boys. John wanted to be a
priest and little Anton was
talking seriously at that time
about becoming a veterinarian. But they never got to
·grow up like any other chi!dreri . Th.ey never got to go
to high school or go to ·prom
night or graduate."
Jack was · just heading
home at the end of his shift
on the nightof0ct.l6when
Malcolm Peterson, Robert's
worried father, came into
Chicago's old Gale Street
stationhouse and asked for
help finding the three missing boys.
They had gone downtown
to see a movie, "The African
Lion," and never returned.
Jack and his partner, Frank
Czech, stayed to search.
"You worked overtime in
those days, you didn't GET
overtime," he recalls. But as
·midnight came and went,

Jack couldn't avoid a feeling that something terrible
had happened out there in
the rain and darkness.
''I didn' t sleep at all that
night, I was so worried," he
says.
The boys' bodies were
found two day s later, and
their murders became what
Chicago police now call "a
heater case" - one that is
making headlines everywhere and absolutely must.
be solved and solved fast.
But there was no evidence
and few witnesses.
The story of the massive
investigation is told in Jack's
389-page book. Written with
the sharp eye for detail of a
street-wise old cop, it paints
a deeply u.nderstanding pic. lure of the agony inflicted on
the Schuessler and Peterson
families as well as the frustration of the police.
Eventually the investigation died and the case
became a set of folders in a
ftling cabinet.
Jack went on to a colorful
career investigating other
major murders and tangling·
on more than one occ.asion
with Chicago mob bosses.
He revels in telling how
he herded mobster Frank
Calabrese Sr. into a waiting
police wagon after the nowconvicted hit man and Joan
shar~ allegedly slugged him
- giving him a spectacular
fat lip - in a barroom
encounter.
"He gave me the traditional Chicago hello," Jack
chortles.
After retiring from the
police department, Jack had
a second career as national
chief of security for Toys R
Us.
But the missi ng boys
remained on his mind - and
then, in 1994, a development
revived the cold case. That

year, evidence concerning
the Schuessler-Peterson case
turned up in the investigation of candy heiress and
horsewoman Helen Brach's
1977 disappearance. .
Horse · trainer Kenneth
Hanse n was accused of picking up the boys as they hitchhiked ·home from the movie,
taking them 10 the stable,
molesting them and finally
killing them. It was the same
stable from which Brach
bought borses years later.
Hanse n was convicted in
1995 and, after winning a
second trial from an appeals
court, convicted again in
2002 . Sentenced to 200 to
· 300 years, he d.1ed m
· pnson
· ·
thi £ year, still proclaiming
his innocence.
The convictions launched
Jack on a third-career, combined the expertise of a
homicide detective with the
buoyant enthusiasm of a
first-time crime writer.
"''ve
· read the book and I
believe he 's told the story in
a very professional and competent manner," says Cook
County Assistant State 's
Attorney Scott Cassidy, who

v

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,· : . ~9

'f..

,: '

/~

'.

6:30 PM FOR EVENING SHOWS &amp;
12:30 PM FOR SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES
TUES. IS BARGAIN-NIGHT

OPEN THANKSGIVING
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~I' NCl.f .
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prosecuted Hansen.
.
The book is published by
HPH .Publishing of Chicago,
with $ 1.1 5 for every book
sold donated to the Chicago
Children 's Advocacy Centet.
"Three Boys M issing'c
won three awards for mys;
tery or true crime books at
thi s
summer 's
Book
ExpuAmcrica convention in
Los Angeles.
Jack spent much of the
summer in fede'ral co urt
where hi s old nemesis, Frank
Calabrese Sr., was convicted
along with four other men of
taking part in a long-running
racketeering co nspiracy that
included illegal ga mblin g,
loan sharking. extortion and
18 unsolved murders.
C 1b
a a rese and two others
face a maximum of life in
prison after a jury found
them responsible fur some
of the murders.
And that, says J ac k, WI·11 be
the subject of his next book.

MR. MAGORIUM'S WONDER
EMPORIUM (G)

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ENTERTAINMENT

6unba~ ~imes -itntinel

.

PageC6
· Sunday, November 18, 2007

Not just for Grandma anymore:
Embroidery gets 'extreme' ·
trendy," says Diana. Rupp,
founder of the Make
Workshop. which offers
crafting classes at the museum during the exh1b1t,
which started Nov. 8 and
runs through March. "In the
past, maybe the fine art
commun ity shied away
from using things like knitting and sewing and
embroidery, and now I thmk
that it 's becoming more and
more mainstream, and being
accepted by the fine art and
gallery world." ·
.

In " Pricked: Extreme
Embroidery," there . are
doilies in the shape of virusNEW YORK . An es like HIV and herpes ,
emerging cadre of artists is embroidered tattoo.s on a
getting radical with needle stuffed arm mounted on the
and thread.
wall and a wide-open mouth
A new exh ibit at the stitched out of human hair.
Museum of Arts &amp; Design
Forty-eight artists from
showcases an edgy reitera- around the world come
tion of a craft form that has together, ·each representing
more often been associated a divergent interpretation of
with older women in their embroidery to make a
living romns than culture- uniquely provocative stateconfrontin g artists in the ment.
"It's become very, very
public sphere.

BY HILLARY RHODES
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP photo

NASHVILLE, Tenn .
When Trisha Yearwood
signed her first record deal
in 1991, there was one route
for a country singer who
wanted to make a big splash.
"You had to be on a big
label 11nd have major distribution," she recalled recently.
Not anymore.
Yearwood parted with
MCA Nashville this year and
signed wilh the much smaller independent Big Machine
Records. Her first album for
the
label,
'1Heaven,
Heartache and the Power of
Love," came out Tuesday.
"If.)ou would have told
me JS years ago that I
would' have gone to a label
like Big Machine, I would
have said it . was a death
wish," she said.
. With the new label and
· the new retord, Yearwood
feels a little like she did
when she released her
debut. She recorded it in a
month and said she had a
blast doing it.
·
The 43-year-old singer had
weathered a number of
changes at MCA, and it
began to wear on her. She
wanted the label to give her
more control over her catalog. She wanted it to put
more muscle behind her
2005 album "Jasper County."
When her contract came up;
she decided to leave.
"The only thing that made
me want to stay at MCA
was that my catalog was
there," she said. "I wanted a
partnership in say·ing what
the cuts are, for instance, on
a greatest hits ·album, or
how the artwork is done.
Those were the most important things for me rather
than more money. ·
"When it became clear that
·was not going to ·happen, I
decided to go soK!ewhere
else where there's new energy and new excitement."
Big Machine Records is
part of a wave of independents going toe-to-toe with
the major labels on Music
Row. It's only been around
for two years, but it's. made
inroads with Taylor Swift,
Jack Ingram and Danielle
Pt~ck.
The
I7-year-old
Swift, in particular, has
become one of Nashville's
hottest acts.
Besides the label 's success, Yearwood was com-

Sunday, November 18, 2007 _

Travel &amp; Destinations==========

Ski clubs offer trips to sno places,
especially or skiers who live far from the slopes
NEW YORK- Last summer, 27 people
from Northeast Ohio went skiing together
in Valle Nevado, , Chile, where the
Southern Hemisphere resort was in the
throes of winter.
"We're standing there in our ski boots,
jumping up and down, going, 'It's August!
This is too cool!"' recalled Anne Houdek,
who took the trip with other members of the
. Cleveland Metro Ski Council.
· The Cleveland group is part of the
National Ski Council Federation, which
represents 300,000 skiers and 28 regional
councils. But interestingly, some of the federation's most active· skiers are flatlanders,
city-dwellers and beachgoers who live far
from snow and slopes.
· "Because we don't have mountains, we
have to be organized in order to go and get
ihe best dollar and buying power for our
ski trips," said Michelle Moskowitz, president of the Florida Ski Council, which is
one of the federation's biggest regional
groups, with 16 member clubs from
Pensacola.to Miami.
: The Florida clubs' marketin~ includes an
ad that asks, ''Where do we ski in Florida?"
The answer is, "Anywhere you want," said
· Moskowitz.
.
: In January, the Florida council will head
to Heavenly, a ski resort in Lake Tahoe.
Trips planned for 2009 include Snowmass,
Colo., Cortina, Italy; Nagano, Japan, and
Whistler in British Columbia, Canada, a
year before the Winter Olympics are. held
there. In the past, Florida clubs have gone Skiers are shown on their way down the 3,000 meter peak of Piz Nair in St. Moritz, Switzerland in this Dec. 18, 2002 file photo.
everywhere from St. Moritz, Switzerland,
to Bariloche, Argentina, which, like Valle gone to South Mrica and Vietnam," he said.
Nevado, Chile, offers skiing in August.
"A number of our clubs from Chicago will
"There are skiers who in the summertime go skiing in New Zealand and then stop at a
have a pent' UJl demand," said Patrick warm-weather destination (such as a Pacific
Rothe, a sales - matia~er with Ski.com, island) on the way back."
which books group tnps for the Florida
Webber agreed, saying that clubs are
council and other ski clubs. "By August, becoming more like "year-round sports
they really want to go skiing before our clubs. Some dubs go up to Colorado in the
winter starts again."
summer for whitewater rafting, hiking,
Rothe said the interest in exotic ski desti- horseback riding and fishing."
nations is being driven in part by more
The Cleveland Metro Ski Council plans a
aggressive marketing by. resorts in places Thanksgiving .2008 croise out of New
You,re In Denial ...
like South America and New Zealand, and Orleans, and Florida clubs do everything
partly because there are more international from sailing to restaurant and theater nights
YouTeiiYourselfYou Don't Need lt...
flights available, so trips are easier to plan. to fundraising for charities like the Disabled ·
Popular domestic resorts include Aspen, Veterans Winter Sports Program.
You Feel Too Young For lt...
Vail and Steamboat in Colorado; Jackso11
But local ski trips are still the main focus
Hole, Wyo.; Big Sky, Mont.; Park City and for many clubs. In Ohio, for example, outYou're Not Ready F6r lt...
Deer Valley, Utah, according to Rothe.
· ings to small nearby slopes like Alpine
The Alps and Canadian resorts are also Valley in Chesterland, and Boston Mills•
(You'N RIJI!tWe UstdTo FteiTht Some WctyToo}
perennials, but with the U.S. dollar so weak, Brandywine, in the Cuyaho~a Valley
there is less interest among ski clubs than in National Park, allow ~ople to 'learn how
past years in European and Canadian desti- to ski and ~et their ski legs," Houdek said.
nations, according to Paul Webber, whose When they re ready for bigger ehallenges,
company, PRW Travel Shows, brings resort they might join a bus trip to Western New
tepresentatives together with ski clu~s in the York to a resort like Holiday Valley, and
Mid~Atlantic and Midwest.
then progress to bigger, better-known
But Webber notes an important trend tak- mountains like Vail or Aspen.
ing place. Ski clubs these days are doing
Not only do the group trips offer disless skiing.
counted rates, but there's a social aspect.
"It used to be on a seven-day trip, people "You're with a lot of people that you
would ski five or six days. Now I see more know," H,oudek said, "and that's what
o~ a trend of fo!Jr or fiv~ days .of skii.n$, , makes it more fun."
w1th other vacation and stghtseemg acllvi- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ties like dog-sle~. rides, snowshoe outin~s,
On the Net:
cross-country skimg, and snowmobile· trips
National Ski Council · Federation:
in Jackson Hole and Yellowstone," he said. http://l.ww.skifederation.org/ .
Keith Fanta, vice president of the
Cleveland
Metro
Ski
Council:
National Ski Council Federation and a http://www.skicleveland.com/
member of a Chicago-area club, said clubs
Florida Ski Council: http://www.jloridasare also doing more trips that have nothing kicouncil.com
to do with snow.
,
Paul
Webber
travel
shows:
"I know of clubs thl!t have gone to Costa http:(lwww.prwtravelsho~s.com/
Rica to the rainforest, and others that have
Sk~.eom: http://www.sk1. com

fortable with Big Machine out concerts in Kansas City.
"Our careers are very difpresident Scott Borchetta,
whom she's known since ferent," Yearwood reflected.
she answered phones for "My live shows are intimate
Mary Tyler Moore's MTM and really conversational
Records some 20 years ago. with the audience. Garth's
With
Yearwood, shows are events, these
Borchetta gets a 11ags,hip huge spectacles. When I go
artist, while Yearwood In out on stage and sing with
turn gets a level of personal him on his show there's an
attention that would be hard energy on stage that · you
for a major label to match.
have to rise to."
"She can pick up . the
Besides her singing. she's
phone at any time .and call also worked as an actress,
anyone on the staff," most notably a recurring
Borchetta said. "Each artist role on the TV series "JAG."
is their own unique brand, if
But music is what defines
you will, and they don't all her the most. She has five
react the same and they No. I hits, gold and plat- ·
don' t do all the same things. inurn albums and poignant
What works for Trisha ballads like "How · Do I
doesn't work for Danielle Live" and "Walkaway Joe."
Peck, and vice versa."
With the new record,
Tire new album, "Heaven,
Yearwood
has something
Heartache· and the Power of
else,
too.
Love," captures the exuber"Sometimes you just need
ance of her fresh start. It's
to
change the ground undermore uptempo than some of
neath
your feet to feel new
her other discs, and there's a
P.layfulness in songs like momentum. I think the
'Cowboys are My Weakness" bi¥gest difference I feel with
and the sassy '~Nothin' About this new music is energy."
You Is Good'for Me."
The first single, the
gospel-flavored title tr~ct~· ~
has cracked the Top 25.
"This batch of songs just
kind of showed up." .. she
said. ''I'm not a songwriter,
so it's hard for me to find
those 10 or 12 songs that
feel like me. But this time,
there they were."
Yearwood has come a
ways since her childhood in
Monticello, Ga .. where she
grew up admiring Linda
Ronstadt and Emmylou
Harris. After high school
she moved to Nashville,
where she majored in music
business
at
Belmont
University, sang demos and
worked as a receptionist.
She made two of the most
important contacts of . I,Jer
career in those eatly yel\[8,
both· of them named ·Garth.:
producer.(Jarth
. · ~~f)
went on to
lier
reci&gt;rds.
a
.
Brooks, who
help her any way he · .·
he ev(ir made it big. ·
Of · course, Bnl·(~ i~~·i~J
ma.ke it big and,
word, he invited
to open his first
tour and to sing ,
'
albums.
The two of theni , jjj~rried,. '
a couple of years·~ and .
live together in 0 .· oma.
This month, she perfm:med '
with him at a string of sold·.
'

'

IV' TRAVEL EDITOR

Label change gives·Trisha Yearwood
a shot of energy on new album
1&gt;P ENTERTAINMENT WRITER

.

AP jlhotoo

Otlcon • Delta

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'

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Introducing..."Delta"
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6unba!' G;imtf -6tntintl

Down on the Farm, Page 02
Gardening, Page 06

Bv BETH J. HARPAZ ·.

Country singer Trisha Yearwood is photographed in' New York, Oct. 11.

BY. JOHN GEROME

INSIDE

• 1lny

• Sophisticated
• With Hi·Tech Altlftctallnteillgence

' '

• In 17 Attractive Colors
• Totally Unique
• Totally You

H&amp;LZBR
-·CLINIC

Be one o( the h to cllsccrm the all new Delta
with Artlldallntellcenct without risking one penny.

·IOOUatllfaction Gum~

· Diane McVey
M.A., CCC-A

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The prablalllllll ...rla&amp;.
The problem II uMintllldlna lllll'laln wonll.
s.pecially with bacl:pound noin p11110nt .. You know,
thole awkward mom8111a when you nod your hood ...
Now, you'll never hive In pm!eod you heard !he en!IM
COIIvtnatillll 10d nod your heed in response. Dolta
wlyw end adapts to tho ~unds !hat surround you,
maklna adjUJ!ments au!oma!lr.ally and inS!antlyso you
can boar be!!er In eny sound environ mont.

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A sculpture of a mountain goat is shown near the peak of Plz Nair In St. Moritz, Switzerland
as· people abo •.rd a cable .car arrive ~t the 3,000 meter high mountain station In thi.s Dec.
18, 2002 file photo.

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Ontr II AadlolaPt

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iunbap 3Eimel -ientinel

-DoWN oN THE FARM

Extension to offer_drought control tips
MARIETTA -. The
drought of 2007 was one of
the worst on record for local
farmers. but most sig niticanlly on livestock farmers
due to losing over . half of
the pasture and hay crops in
the Mid-Ohio Valley.
Starting with the April
free ze, -pa, tures and hay- .
fields were off to a bad start
and never r,eall y recovered.
The eve n more extreme
drought si tuations in the
south increased the demand
for area hay early in the
summer. which on ly added
to an alreadv high demand
tor an unusually low suppl y.

This has created hay prices
well above what farmers
can afford to pay in order to
feed their livestock:
Thus, feeding cattle and .
other livestock this winter is
~oing to be a daunting task
for area fanners. That's why
OSU Extension is sponsoring the "Managing Livestock
- Atier the Drought" meeting on Wednesday, Nov. 28.
The program will help
farmers look into every possib le option for keeping
livestock healthy and growing this winter.
Bill
Weiss.
OSU
Extens ion
Livestock

Nutritionist will be the featured presenter.Weiss will
cover the details of distillers
grains coming out of all of
the ethanol plants and how
it migbt be used to feed livestock in the area. He will
also cover otber options for
aliernative feeds.
Chris Penrose, from OSU
Extension
in
Morgan
County, will then pre ~ ent
information on post-drought
management including the
idea of feeding corn instead
of hay - because it's much
cheaper.Chriswillalso cover
reseeding and restoring
drought damaged pastures

come late winter and spring.
To finish the evening,
local representatives from
USDA and Soil &amp; Water
will present a round table on
everything from assistance
progr&amp;ms to tax issues dealing with the drought.
The evening will begin at
6 p.m. with refresbments
co-sponsored by Seaman's
General Mere handi se &amp;
Green Valley Cooperative.
The program will be held at
the OSU Extension office in
Marieua at 202 Davis Ave.,
near .Marietta High School
and the District 10 ODOT
building.

PageD2

-ExTENSioN. CoRNER-

CLASSIFIED·

Count agncultu vn 's
bountiful
blessz'ngs
l
I C ·

.

es. Federal law requires that
your individual answers be
Are you counting your . kept confidential. USDA
blessings this week as we publishes the data totals for
celebrate the bounty this statistical purposes only, and
land provides each and the informatiOJi cannot be
used for purposes of taxation,
everyone ·of us?
investigation,
or regulation.
Whether you are a vegetarUSDA
will
provide you
ian, organic food enthusiast,
or like rny baby brotber, like with access to the Censu s
food in any shape or form, results in summary report s
we are blessed to be living in that can help you as you
the United States. Food is make decisions about your
plentiful! Give special thanks operation. If you have questhis week to the farmer rais- tions give your Extension
ing our Thanksgiving feast, oftice a call, (740) 992-6696.
•••
the laborers who harvest it,
Are you interested in decothe truckers who transport it,
the produce managers who rating your home for the .hoi- ,
display it, the cooks who pre- idays? Are you looking for
pare It and the businesses both indoor and outdoors
that
employ us which per- decorating ideas? Take a ride
The River Valley High
to Syr;~cuse this afternoon to
mits
us
to pay for it.
School FFA chapter took
view the annual holiday pro•••
four members to the state
Farmers, help the United gram, "Let's Have A Cowboy
soil contest for rural soil
States
Department
of Christmas" being sponsored
judging. The contest was
bv the Meigs County Garden
Agriculture
collect
the
best
held on Oct. 13 at the ·
data available for its 2007 Ciub Association at Carleton
Licking County Fairgrounds. Census of Agriculture. The School. .
,
The team consisted of Ryan data collected helps reveal to
Their displays of wreaths,
Eggleton, David Holliday,
Americans the status of agri- swags, tlower arrangeEric Caldwell and Chris
culture in the United States. ments, table settings and
Diamond, The team was .
This information is · used to live plants are always a
awarded fourth place. In the assist businesses and govern- source of ideas for the seastate and is the alternate
ment in making decisions. son. Educational displays
team for the national conTrends in food production, have been developed to
test, which will be held In
technology, environmental · demonstrate how you preMarch in Oklahoma. ·
and conservation practices, serve ·!lowers, twigs and
Submitted photo
·production practices, trans- pods from the garden and
' portation .and marketing woodland by tbe Meig s
locations are just a few of the County Master Gardeners.
This is their final day of disitems looked at. Your .census
-report should be received in play. Hours are from noon to
early January and needs to be 4 p.m..The public is invited to
attend. Admission is free.
filled out by Feb. 4, 2008.
(Hal Kneen is the Meigs
Your response to the
Census of Agriculture is County Agriculture and
required by law, Title 7, U.S. Natural
Resources
Code. This law safeguards Educator, Ohio State
the privacy of your respons- · U11iversity Extension.)
.
Bv HAL KNEEN

4-H clubs open for
Baldwin earns·
membership next year national FFA Degree
4-H YOUTH DEVELOPMENT

Join 4-H in 2008!
4-H clubs are like people, ·
no two arc exactly alike!
Finding the right fit is important not only for the new
members but also for the parents. Gallia County currently
has over 65 4-H clubs to
choose from. Some are specialty dubs with all the
members re4uired to take the
same project: 4-H Horse
ylubs, Shooting Sports club,
Dog Clubs or the ATV Safety
Club. Others are community
· clubs with members taking a
large variety of projects.
Some clubs, th(1ugh not a
specialty club. may have one
particular project that most
of the members take, for
instance swine projects, or
cattle projects. Other clubs
may re4uire its members to
take a non-animal project as
well as the traditional animal
projects.. Others still may
take no animal projects at all.
When you start looking for
a 4-H club it can be quite confusing.
Some
offer
Cloverbuds (4-H programs
for children in grades K-2), ·
others do not. Some are quite
large; others may have as few
as five members. Some may
have members of all ages;
others may have members all
about the same age.
So where do you stan? Call
the OSU Extension office at
740-446-7007 . We can give
you contact numbers for dif-

ferent clubs in your area.
CHESHIRE _
Luke
Next talk tO the adVISOrs of
.
Baldwin
received
his
two or three different . clubs; American FFA Degree at
find out what proJects most of the 2007 National FFA
.their me.m.bers take. Ask Convention in Indianapolis,
about the a\erage age ofthetr Ind., on Oct. 27. It is the
member,s; find out how ofte.n highest degree awarded by
and where they meet .Ask tf the
National
FFA
you can attend th~tr next Organization and recogmeett~g . Then make the nizes Luke's demonstrated
selectron based o_n what IS the Jeadetship abilities and outbest ~t for your t~mtly. Just a standing achievements in
few Important thmgs to loo~ · agricultural business, proto~ when selectmg Y?ur cl~b. duction, processing and ser~ake sure they are char- vice programs.
tered. A, 0 ~ May. 2007, all
Less than one in 200 FFA
4-H clubs m OhiO. had to members advance through
Luke Baldwin
co~plete the OhiO .4-H their local chapter and state
chart~r.process. Thts all?ws FFA degree programs to Convention is the nation, s
the club. t? . ~e recogmzed earn thi~ national degree. largest annual youth gatherstate wtde as a 4-H club.
Luke, the son of Wayne and ing, welcoming students,
• Have at least five mem- Jeanie Baldwin, is currently parents and educators from
,
attending
Ohio
State all across the U.S.
bers.
'Be meeung ,on a regul~ University/AT! Branch in
This year 's convention
basts. holdmg at least SIX Wooster. He is a member of was the 80th annual
m:etmgs per year. .
. . the River Valley FFA National FFA ·gathering.
Be conductrng at leas'. Cbapter arid his agricultural
FFA is ·a national youth
?11e commumty servtce pro- education instructors are organization of 495,046 s• uJect per year.
. Jim Walker, Matthew Huck · dent members preparing IDI
• Have a! least one C~rtl- and Bill Holcomb.
· · leadership and careers in
fiedand tramed4-H advtsor, · . Luke received a gold science, business, and techSo. when should you? start . American FFA Degree key nology of agriculture, with
looking for a 4~!'1 club·
and a certificate to com- ·7 ,242 local chapters in all
Now
ts
the
lin)e· to stan
· h'tevement. 50 states, puerto R'teo an d
c1 b ~
memorate the ac
1ooking at d'fferefu
' .
u s or The
National
FFA the Virgin Islands.
2008. Some have · already
started reorganizing . for the
up coming season. Others
will begin after t)le frrst of
the year. Don't wait lintil '
March 30 to try ,and find a
club, by then it will be too ,
late! All 4-H membership
applications must be submitted to the OSU Extension
office by April I. Don't be
left out - contact us today! ·

In One Week .With Us ·
classified@~~~~:~ribuna.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
LINE
· Your Ad,

Call. Today...

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

*POLICIES*

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
tho right lo edit,
reject or cancel any
ad ·at any lime.
Errors -Must B

on the firs
yof publication a
he Tribuno·Santlnel
oglster will b
oaponslblo lor
eporlod

ore than the cost o

· he space occupl
the error and oni

fi10t Insertion. W
hall not be lteble lo

he

ny loss or expen's
hat results from th
ubllcatlon or omla

ton of on odvortl
ont. Corrections wl
made lh tho lira
vallable edition,

Current rate car

pplles.
All

968,

&gt;This nowapapo
ccopts only hat
anted ads meetl
OE llandards.

(Second Wednesday of the month)

Back to the Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs, $460-$750; Bred Cows, $300-$640;
Baby Calves, $1 0-$150; Goats, $75-$95; Hogs, $32$35 .

Upcoming specials:
No sale Nov. 21 or Dec. 26. Next sale is Nov. 28.
Direct sales and free on-farm visits.
For more' information, call DeWayne at (740) 3390241 or Stacy at (304) 634-0224. Visit the website at
www.uproducers.com.

ar

ubject to the Feder
air Housing Act o

Fed Cattle ·

$45-$50.
'I ,., lium/Lean, $36-$43.
l hi n.·Light, $1 0-$30.
Bulls, $45-$67.

Root Eotat

dvertlsements

275-415 lbs., Steers, $75-$118, Heifers. $70-$110;
425-525 lbs., Steers, $75-$110, Heifers, $70-$90; 550625 lbs., Steers, $75-$105, Heifers, $70-$90; 650-725
lbs., Steers, $75-$100, Heifers, $70-$88; 750-850 lbs.,
Steers, $75-$85, Heifers, $70-$85.

IVc II-Muscled/Fleshed,

\ \ \ I ll\( I \I I \ I .._,

r

ANNOUN(_'EMENI'S.

--

,

ARBOR$ AT GALLIPOLIS
Rehabtlttatlon (l!nter
70 Pinecrest Dr. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Skilled Nursing and

740-446-7112

~TENDI~'

Frld!IY• Saturday, and Sunday
Main Facility
·
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Fa~i/ity

9am~9pm

HEIJ'WANIFD

I r'o

&amp;_

~
SaldcHDII
~_:_"'?_ ...: _--~ ~-1..:?~~-~·i'-~ :_""'.~:
·' "'·'~ r · •: •'"
•-r" •"

Certified Occupational

Varsity
Assistant
Girls
Basketball Coa(;h open.
Applicant must have up to
date CPR certification, BCI
cktarance
and
State
Department of Education
Pupil Activity VS.IIdatlon
Certification.
Interested
applicants should contact
Bill
Wamsley,
Athletic
Director at 740·446-3212.

Therapy Assistant{COTA)
Riverside Auction Barn Sat
FuM lime Position
Home Heanh Care ot SEO is
1 year eXperience in LTC . currenUy · accepting appllca·
setting preferred

lions for LPN's. Full time part

Mossberg model soo A 12

We offer:

toll free.

2 Beauliful Fuzzy Kittens,
gauge Boll action Sears &amp;
approx . 6wks old, litter Rciebuc~ J.C Higgins, H&amp;A
trained . Need good home &amp; 9 shot22 pistol Modet929,

P ·d H 1·da

Top Pay
Ol ys

------Lunch room Vending etten-

mi:&lt; 304-675-2940

gauge w/2 barrels. 410

HEIJ'WAN11lll

I ro

SuperVisor
for
PassPort/Private Care Dept
Competitive Wages and
benefits including healtli
insurance. Apply at 1480
JackBOn Pike, Gallipolis,
Ohio or Rhone tOll free 866441-1393 for more lntormalion.

Vacation

l

r

7 iL..,;·-----··

patient medication prepara·
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
tlon for individuals with
$57K annually
developmental dlsabllltles ·ln Including Federal Benefits
Mason County and surand OT.Paid Training,
rounding areas. $13-$15 per
Vacations·FTIPT
hour based on experience.
I
Please
{;304} 373·1011
or toll . free at 1·877·373- - - - - - - 1011.
Sell Avon. make 50 %. can
446·3358

call

;~:·P~~~:nl~;,11 ::a; daytime hours off; sleep-over
vacation, 401k, Pr... mploy· required. Must have high school
mont drug lasting. EOE. Call diploma or GED, valid driver's
3()1·485·542t
license, three years good driVing
Machinist and Welders.
Less than 4 YIS experlon&lt;e experience and adequate
need not Apply. Ambrosia
ob'lI e ·Insurance. $7.50/h r.
Machine Inc. ~-875·1722 autom
S. en d' resume 10:
Mon·Fri 7:30-4:00
-------:--'-Manpower Ia now hiring tor Buckeye Community Services
the following posHions P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
Automobile
Produtlon
Workero in tho Buffalo, wv Deadline for applicants: 11/23/07
Anla Bonellts
avaHablo Call p re-emp1oymen1d rug 19S!'tng.
Tod
304-757-3338
_...:"'~______ Equal Opportunity Employer. .

!.:======~======::!

0

while lieagle wl freckled EaSiernSchootdiSinctWHh· view or stop by et 308 2nd Pleasant.Callmo{740)446· ;=:H:e:lp:W:a:n:t:ed::~;;.=H=el:p:W:a:nt:ed::::;

~

5_a_e_3·_
..7_40-·4_t_~_4~
__
s___

Driver-Co &amp; lnd Contractcws - - - - - - Want to buy Junk. Cars, call Ready to · Move? Come
Help Wanted

740·388-0864

CLASSIFIED INDEX

r;::;:=====i
Reeler-Flatbed -Tanker Employwnl

Over

4•4'&amp;For Sale .............................................. 725

to

$909·$1,524iwk

Recent Opportunity meter

Apartments lor Rent... ................................ 440
Auction and Flea Markat .............................oao
Auto Parts &amp; Accessorles ..........................-760
Auto Repair
·
no
"""'''710
Autos lor Sa.t·e·········""""'''""'''"'"""''''''"""
..............................................

Orientation Call All!e Ill Ext walersystem,90-day
•
'
·
6647
Probalonaryat
~
. . 800·248-7735 $8.110111
1
www.pnmemc.com
.tii/H

Building Supplles ........................................ SSO

Manufaelured Equlpmenl

HELPWANI'ID

· Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ...... .~ ..................... 750

Mig Welders and Painter for

Buslnes• and Buildings ............................. 340
Business OpportunHy.... ............................. 210
Business Tralnlng ..................... :''''"'""'"""'" 140

Apply in person at 2150
Eastern Avenue. Gallipolis,
OH. NO phOne calls please.

Campers &amp;Motor Homes ........................... 790
Cainplng Equlpment.. ................................. 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Etectrlcal/Relrlgeratlon ............................... B40
Equipment lor Rent ..................................... 480
Excavallng ................................................... 830

Farm Equlpment .......................................... 610

Farms for Rent................................ ............. 430

8

lawn '&amp;Garden Equlpmont ........................ 660
Llvestock ......................................................630
lost and Found ...........................,.. ;............ 060
lots &amp;Acreage ............................................ 350
Mlacellaneoul.............................................. 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse............ ,,;.,,, ....540
Mobile Home Repair ....... :............................860
Mobile Homes lor Ren1 ............................... 420
Mobile Homes lor Sale................................320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorcycteo &amp;4 Wheelers ........ ..................740
Musical tnstruments ................................... 570
Personals .....................................................005
·Pets lor Sata ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp;Heatlng ....................................820
Proleulonal Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr,.............................. 160
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360
Schoolslnatructlon ..................................... 150
Seed , Plant &amp;Ferttllrer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ....................................... 120
Space lor Ront ..................... ,................ ....... 460
Sporting Goo~s .....................:..................... 520
SUV'alor Sele ............................................... 720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ................................................... 870
Vans For Sale.. ,..................... ,...................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Supplles .................. &amp;20
Wanted.To Do ............................,.................. 180
wanted to Rent ..... ,...................................... 470
Yard Sale- Galtlpolla ....................................072
Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middte ......................... 074
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleaunt.. .............................. 076

after Probationary

BONUSES!!

WV.

r

Period with .

Health/Llle
lnsuranct,40 Hr.
Wor'k Wfek,8:00 am
to 4:00pm, nursday

Plus great pay~ home-time,
benefits: 100% PAID
healthll,ife ins. Regional
1

through Monday wltb
scbedutedOn.Calt
Duties and
Oeeaslonol OvertiJI!e,
High S&lt;bool Diploma
or Eqnlvalenl,

APARTMENT MANAGER

Resumes.must 1Je

Manager

needed lo work up to 30

November 20,2007 at
P:O Be 709
p~~ero;,oJdo.

be

10

·866·542·t531
USWA

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

.Holzer Senior Care Center

RN Position
· . &gt; ;v''i'~:_ &lt;:~:-:~
tire liitel'nted in jolaiac

If you
our
Resident Ceaitl'ed Nuniag Team we

bave

openitig for an RN for tbe
7:80PM: to' 7:00AM shift. Hd:er
Senior C'a.r t ()eater. b tbe only nuniag
home ill'the lt.rtl tO plaet Ia tbe top 3%
on the Qhio F..a!ly Satiafaetien SllrVey
eonductld by tbe ·o•io Depart~ent of
Aging.
We otrer CO!IItM*ilive wagell and
employment IMD.tlll including:
11

o [Jperienee PI)'

• Repl!li"Rate ..;m.m

Pleasant Vaile.y Hospital I!&gt; cur~nUy

• Uniform Allowance

aceeptlng resumes for a part-time
Pharmacy Technician. Successful
completion of WV Boanl of Pbar~y
approved technlclan training program
or equivalent . State•re&amp;lirtratlon or
Nutlonal·eertlfteatlon certlfk:ate as a
Pharmacy 1"echnlclan preferred.
At h~11st 2080 hours 11s a phal'macy
technician tralnff. Two years pharmacy
tecbnldan experience preferred.
Hospital axperlence preferred.
Submit Resume to :

Pleasant Valley Hospllal,
clo Human Resoun:es
2520 Valley Drive,
Point Pleasant, WV, l.5!5SO
fax to 304· 675·6975
or apply online at www.pvalley.ora

•
•
•
•
•

Health/Denllil!Life Ins.
Disability Insurance
PDO Pay (V~~&lt;~tion11Hotld•y!PT9J
41111!. (after 1year)
Tuitioa Rei•bunemenl

Please ttop by and see 111 at 380 Coloaial
Drive Bfdw~l, Ohio or pve Rhonda
""·1111g, ~N or Krist)' Ctmpbell,
H111llea R«souM Mai!A&amp;tr a eallat 740-

44&amp;-!'oOt.

;

.

Equtll Opportunil)' Employer

AAIEOE

Help Wanted

Help Wanted '

Help Wanted .

Help Wanted

"::=::===~

trustwo'llhy and oove good - - - - - - - _
people . skills. ·a back·
Wanted
dl d'l
h
k
.
i;;;;;;;;He;;;l;p;;;W;;;a;;;n;;;ted;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
..
grou.n dcr: '
c ec,
'"
reqUire .

321 -725-5818

PHARMACY TECHNICIAN

received before

hours per week.. Some
evenings or weekend hours
may be necessary. must
organ1zed,
dependable.

D)AGN_OSTIC

HYBRIDS

arrange or an

inlerview call the. business

office a1 304-232·4803.
Auto

Body

Repair

Virology Product Manager

Technician, full lime posi·
lion, pa id \18cations, very
campeliliv9 sal ary, opportu-

Oversee the current Virology produ(t line, involving frequent interaction
between end users and internally, requires some travel' as necessary. Will
assist in tbe development of new products in the Virology line . A minimum
of a Bachelor's degree in and appropriate health science field. Experience
in a clinical laboratory (essential), clinic virology (beneficial) and should
have moderate laboratory exp~rience. Excellent oral and written
communicati~n. Team oriented independent achievers are an excellent fit.

·we

nily for oVertime.
would
like someone eKperienced,
dependable, highly motival·
ed, and someone who wo rks
well in a teem environment.
Minimum 5 years experl·
ence required. Interested ·
candidales should drop oft a
resume @ Superior Auto
Bddy in Middleport, Ohio
Mon·Fri. , 8am·5pm

Technical Service Representative

AVON! All Areast To Buy or
Sell.

Shirley Spears , 304-

675·1429

~ ·- ·~ - · - -- - · ~--- --

f

r., 513

.---r~v~e~rs~:-..0.,

Runs, yr. Tractor Trl. Exp.
An Excellent· way to earn .,_.;,R;;;"e10.;;;866;;;·,;;29;;;;3;,-7.,;;435;;;.._.
;
money The NewAvon
Call Marilyn 304-882·2~5 .
Hartford ,

,

Prime!

:~~~~~;~~~~.'.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~ irrino;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ ~~:a&amp;eoss tnsurane Dayton ::~:-!!~work in
A locat manufacturer has
open1'
ngs lor Experienced

Teen/Genealogist to take
Digital Photo's Of Cemetery
&amp; Family Headstones in ,
Hartford . Neg by Pay Pal
donc4013@yahoo.com or

Help Wanted
Help Wanted
-==:::::::===;_;======;r
---...,---- - - - - - - -

Need someone to take care
valed and herd working. Call of your loved·one In thelr _
LOST: Very small F red &amp; Like to buy 5·10 acres in 441·9371 to set up an Inter- homEI In Gallipolis I Pt,

~~~~~~~~v1e:4':Yo~sh7y=po~L~C7a-II-74_0·~«-,t·

POSTOFFICE NOW
HIRING

with mental retardation in
dan!, par! lime, M·F. 8am. Middleport: Sat 3p-8a rues;

.,

401K
22 boll action Model 80, .4 Direct resumas/inquirles IO:
new bath-tubs by Kohler, 3
Amanda Hill,
For scrap. 40 gallon water holpoinl fridges, Kenmore
Rei'ab Managel
heater &amp; 27" range and
l k
311 Buckridge Rd.,
after 4·. 30,, Phone
dryer, gas
slove,
Li11fe
Ye
8i
0
0
hood' 44'·4883
256-6989.
·
'dwell, hio
first come first served
ahiiiCscenlchillanursing.com
WANIDJ
Ph: 740-446-7150
Flee killens . Fluffy QIBY
m BUY
www.vra blehealthcare.com
tiger striped. wks old, litter
trained.
Call 740-379·9392 ~Absolute Top Oollcir; U.S. Chnstlan
· · Com
kl
pany see ng
Losr AND
Silver and Gold Coins, Manager to work from home
FOUND
P otsefs Gold Rings Pre· $2,0QO.$S,OOO per month.
__
exc., Benefits FTIPT call
1 ~~ 5 US C '
Solllaire
oia,;,nds"'~.
~
'l:
888·434·6256
Lost- near PageviMe, male
. S
s
·
.
dog, about 80#, wearina col· Co1n. hop.. 151 econd Courlside Bar &amp; Grill now
lar, white w/ig . brown spots, Avenue. Gallipolis, 740·446· see~ng line cook and dish·
{740)742·2727
2842.
washer. Must be highly moti·

Homes lor Sata ............................................ 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Housaslor Rent .......................................... 4t0
In Memorlam ................................................ 020

11am-~pm

·

"Every life we touch
lime per diem. Competitive WANTED: Part-time position
Lab &amp; 1 Geiman Shepherd . 12 Gauge, new in. box Must be in a positive way!' . wages
t.·866·368·1100 available tO aSSiSt an indiVidual

Home lmprovements ................................... B10

11am-9pm

~bllcatlon

Sund•y Dl~pl•y: 1:00 p .m .
Thur-.d•y for Sund•v•

GaiDa Academy High School Ohio Valley Home Health, PAIS is seeking ...
currently has the posilion ot Inc. hiring FT LPN Aide LPN: PT administer/monitor

Aucno...- AND
FI:..EA MARKEr

t' Golden Reteive1/Choc. new Winchesfe 1Mode11200

Happy Adi...........................................;........ OSO
Hay &amp;Graln ..................................................640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110

1pm-9pm

Now you can have borders and graphics
lL-'
added to your classified ads
(.~
~
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00forlarge

All Dlepl•v: 13' Noon 3
Bualne•• Day• Prior To

• All ada I)IU&amp;t be prepaid*

. Night @6pm on At 7 sOuth,
5 miles below the Dam. Like

lnaur8nce ..................................................... 130

The puzzle answer Is sponsored by

, Clr

GIVEAWAY

Giveaway........ ..............................................040

Jackson, Athens, ·Meigs Facilities
·12pm-6pm

.

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD N01r1CI:D

Dlsplav Ads

I ~.,t;~Y:A:Ril=S:A:I..I=:~I ~.,r'.o_Hrl_J'_W_AN11lll
__.l riQ

OH.HEAP Vende1949·2038

For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp;Vegetabtes ..................................... sao
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Haullng .... ................. :.....................BSO

Mairi Facility
·1pm-6pm

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oeo.rl~irM

Dally In-Column_: 1:00 p . m.
Monday-Frld•y for In-rtlon
In Next Day"• P•per
Sund•y In- Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sund•y• P•per

Cross Creek Auction BuHalo
Auction Saturday6pm This
weeks Dealer O&amp;N hom
Virginia . Building is full.
Starting to sell high quality
Firewood.2yrs.alr-·dried, cui knives such as Case, Buck
and split,98%oak,2% hicko· &amp; Mossy Oak.
Visa and
ry, you haul ,or I haul Master Card {304) 55d·
161 6 Stephen Reedy 1639

r

992-2157

legs. Lost in Bidwell area. or without house.740·992· Ave to fill out an appllcal!on. 7165

For lsea

Thanksgiving .Day

or Fax To

44&amp;-3008

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Includa complet:e
· Description • Induda A Prtce • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addreu When Needed
• Ad• Should Run 7 Days

. Conceal &amp; Carry Class,
NAA Ce rtified Instructor.
One day 12 hr CCW Class,
$100. Call for next class.
Gallipolis. 740·256·6514
Emabtarkey @irtbOx.com

Farms for Sale .............. ......................: ........ 330
ae ..................................................... :9 ~
For a 1e........................................................

.. ,

or Fax To

Love. 304-675-2634

Feeder Cattle-Steady .

Cows-Steady

6fi 6Q

'SuCc::esSIUfids

l\egt~ter

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304)' 675-1333

Monday thru Friday
7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
,..,. ... HOW I0 WRm

Websi)es:
www.mydailytribune.com
www.niydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

Sentinel

Wgrd Ads

GALUPOLIS - United Producers Inc .. market
report from Gallipolis for sales . conducted on
Wednesday, Nov. 14.

Choice - Steers, $83-$85; Heifers, $81-$84:
Select- Ste~rs, $75-$78; Heifers, $75-$77 .

ijtrfbune

To Place

LIVESTOCK REPORT

··Urgent Care Hours
T:hanksgiving Wee.kend

HOLZER
CLINIC

OH • Pl. Pleasant, WV

Sunday, November 18, 2007

' PLACES FOURTH·

. BY TRACY WtNTERS
GALLIA COUNTY EXTENSIONEDUCATOR

•

Pom1erov •

nursing
Kristy Cam1p1H

Resource MAlia
446-SOO1 or
us at:
·380 coloitiaH)rwe'
Bidwell, Oli 45614

.,

•

_____.___ : . ,

Assists in the moniioring and recording of techni(al service issues related
to in vitro diagnostic devices in the clinical laboratory. Develop and
maintain positive, proactive relationships with all DHI customers.
Excellent oral and written communication. Must have Associates degree or
higher in life sciences and/or equivalent clinical laboratory experienc~. At
least 6 months of relevant technical experience preferred. Laboratory
knowledge , preferably in Microbiology and Virology. Team oriented
independent achievers are an excelleljt fit.
Interested qualified cal\didates should email a cu"""t resume and
completed job applications to: Jobs@dhisusa .com '
.

_____ ___ __
.;___

,...

Deadline: Friday, November 23,2007
Equal Opportunity Employer

~

�..

I

Hea~h.

Hru&gt;WANJm
v.uey Homo

Ohio
Inc. hiring STNA, CNA,
Home Health Ai des and
Personal Care A.ides. Full,
Part Time and Per Diem
positions available. Apply
at 1480 Jackson Pike.
Gallipolis, phOne 441-1393
lor Skilled Office or apply at
1456 JaCkson Pike, phone
441 -9263
tor
Passport/Pr ivate
Care
Office.Competitive Wages
and Benefits including
insurance
and
health
mileag~ .

Trainer Position
Are you interestEd 1n a
rewarding position? PAIS IS
currently seeking a part time
staff lor Mason, WV prov1ding residential/community
sklll training with indilliduals
with MRIOD. Seeking staff
for Monday-Fridtau 3:30pm~,
8:80pm. High school diplorTai or GED required. No
experience
necessary.
Criminal background check
required. Must have reliable
transportation and valid auto
Insurance. Paid training
·
Hourly rate S1arting at 57$8.00/hour. Please call 1

mio;;..;;;H:;:OI\=IR'l=~ e ..!~

r

1,1 \I 1 ..., 1\11

FOR SALE

I

o down

payment 4 bedrooms . Large yard. Covered
deck. Atta ched garage. 740 367 -7 t 29.

38R , 2BA . 1800 sq.lt
remodeled Ranch on t acre
mil in city. New kit wJ pantry
a laundry rm. Huge master
swte wl FP &amp; pri\la te
entrance. DR. LR w/ gas FP/
Attached carport. 2 car
garage &amp; privacy fence. Nat.
gas. Heat pump &amp; CIA. Exc.
Cond. Ready to move in.
598,500 neg 740 -645·8751

I

House lor ssle In Ra,lne
area. Approx. 4 acres, all
profestionafly landscaped.
Ranch style house with 4
bedrooms, living roc:M-n, dining room, kilche~, large tarnilyroom. centralair,gasheat
and t fireplace. Addition of a
large Fionda room completely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area Healed 1n
ground pool endOsed by privacy fenci ng and landscaped. Finished 2 car
ga1age attached to house
and finished &amp; heated 3 car
garage
unattached.
El(cellent condition ready to
move in. $255,000.00; Gall:
(740)~9-2217

36Ft 2BA WOSA 03 .
Doublewide
$576/mo ' - - -- - - -$575/dep.
1722
1/2
Chatham A\18. Ready Nov.
_t.:.5....4....
46.:.·.:.25.:.1.:.5_ _ __
4 Bd. Home Apple Grove.
Ohio. $400 with dep. No •2&amp;3 bedro9m apartments
pets. After 6:00 ca ll 740- • Central heat &amp; AJC
698-6002
•Washer/dryer hookup
=:..:::.:=-- - - - • All electric- averaging
4 rooms and bath, stove and
$50-$60/month
fridge, 52 Olive . Gallipolis.
•
Owner
pays water, sewer,
No Pets. $395/mo. 446-3945
trash
A
1 ,
nent on.
(304)882-3017
Local company offerinn "NO
"'
DOWN PAYMENT" pro:
1
bu
grams
or you to Y your
·
home instead of renting.
" .
.
• 100"1C) 1lf'lanclng
l
h
rt
• ass I an pe ect credit - - - - - - d
·
Furnished upstairs 3 rooms
accepte
• P
t
ld b th and bath. Clean. no pets,
aymen cou
e
e
same as·rent.
deposit req. 740-446-151 9 ·
Mortgage
Locators.
Graclou1 Living 1 and 2
(740)367-0000
Bedroom Apts. at ViiJage
Off SA 141 , 3BR, 2BA, Ma:norandRiversideApts.in
a pplianc~s . basement, 1 car Middleport, from $327 to
garage, $500imo plus $592. 740·992-5064. Equal
deposit. (614)226-0859
• Housing Opportunity.

Ellm View
· Apartments

Racine/ranch home 1500
sq. ft ., 312, seller assisted
financing, (740)416-3977 ,

_7:0:40~·2~2~2·~55·7·0~~--,
MOBILEco..
HoMEN
...
lOR

.:tAIL

e

Spltl l811el hOuse wl3brfbath,
furnished kitchen, large covered pordl. big level yard,
nice house. no inside pets,
flO smoking, $625 month,
$300 deposit, Racine area,
{740)949·3019

.,SchOOl

r ..

i

sot·up. (7401385·2434

Seasoned firewoOd - Qak &amp;
Ash. Call 446·9204 alter

George's Porta ble Sawmill,
don't haul your Logs to the
. Mill just cell304·675· t 957.

Would like to care for elderly. 740-44t·03tt
11\\\i l \1

All real 01tate advertl1lng
In this newtpt~per Is
subject to the Fldtrll
Fair Housing Act ot 1tll
whtcn makel It Illegal to
advertln "any
preference, limitation or
discrimination bllecl on
race, color, religion, Hit ·
famlllalltlltus CM" national
Ofigln, or anY lntenllon to
make any such'
preference, limitation or •
discrimination,"
This newspaper will not

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends
that you do. business with
people you know, and
NOT to send money
th rough the mail until you
have investigated the
offering.

r

MONEY

roloAN

HNOTICilH
Borrow Smart. Conlact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution'S
Office of Consumer
Affalrs BEFORE you refi·
nence your home or
obtain a toan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. c;all the
Office of Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1-866278-0003 to learn if the
mortgage broker
or
lender
1s
properly
licensed. (This is a public

ser~Jice announcement
from the Ohio Valley

a;,;Pu:;;b;;lls;;,h;;,in;:g,;;C;om~p:;;a;;;n~y)-.1

knowingly accept
adverttnments for real
estate which Is In
violation ot the taw. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that 1111
dwellings adYel'ltleclln
this newspaper are
IVIIIIble on In equal
opportunity basea.

M~~·~ u~-

I

2 baby strollers, IIOfY good
cond. $35, 1 portacrib used
twice $35, new baby gati
$10, Bounce chair $14, Bath
tub $5, Car seat $25, boost·
er seat $7. Antique china
cabinet
(small) . s:ioo.
antique twin bed wt high
hea(f:)oard $300. Fuel oil
furnace. good cond St50.
Onty serb!s otters please.
Call 741J.245-9549

r ··~

Meigs Co. 5 acres on Cook
Ad. $20500 or Lendaker Rd.
$18900. Salem Ctr. 19 acres
$46900! Red Hill Ad. 8 acres
$500 down + $239 monlhiy.
Reedsville 7, wooded ac res
$14500. Gallla Co. Kyger.
wooded 8 or 10 acres
$12500! Call 740-44t-1492
lor
maps
or
visit
b
I
d
~r:_~~:!u ner en .com. We
-------MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Georges Creek
Rd, 441-1ttt

r

.u.n•

STEEL

BUILDINGS! . , - - , - - - - - Cocker Spaniels $300. Giant
Repos,
Canceled Schnauzers $500, Sconish
Orders, No Reasonable Terrier Male $400. All AKC.
Offer Refused! · 3 Left 740·76H87A
25X36, 35x44.
Call
Today!
Save Collie .pups ml1, $350;
Thousands!
886· 352· Golden Ret. pups, m $300;
Toy Poodle pups. m. $300;
0469
AKC Reg. (740)696· t 085

Immaculate 2 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
JET
cabinets. freshly painted &amp;
AERATION MOTORS
decorated, WID hookup. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In
eeautlluf country seHing. StOCk. Call Ron Evans, 1·
Only. 10 Minutes from town. 800·537·9528.
Must see to appreciate.

$4t·80000/mo
-79•~6686t4)5.95-7773 or

·I

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, fumlshed and unturnished , .and houses 10
Pomeroy and Middleport,
security deposit required, no
pets, 740·992-2218.
...._...._______
tbr Apartment furnished,
$475 all utilities paid, quiet
neighborhood. References.
Deposit 304·593-8 187
1BR Apt, WI D hookups,
internetfsateilite TV incl.
wlrent, close to hospijal. Call
'74.::0c:
·33:.:.:..9·.03::.:
:. 6.:.2_ _~2 Bdrm, downtown, renovat·
ed; laminate 11oors, $525·mo
includes water &amp; trash Np
Pels. (740)709·t 690

with all now 3BR,
appliances
&amp;
cupboards.
laundry
area, 2 112 baths. $900 per
month. Cell 446 _4425 , or
446 .2325
.:.....:.:::______
Tara
Townhouse
Apartments. Very Spacious.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, SJart $425/Mo.
No Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required,
,(7.....
4;::01~44.::6....
-34:.:.::.81...._~-Twin Ai\lers Tower is accept·
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subslzed, 1- br,
aparlment,for
the
elderly/disabled call 675·
6679
Equal
Housing
Opportunity .

C;=:::;;;;;:=~

ences &amp; deposit, make offer
for sate, (740)992 -5502
-------Nice 38R, newly remodeled.

New home in Gallipolis.
2BA , 2BA. 3 acres MIL.
REDUCED! $80.000. Call
740·446·7029
· ·

r·o

i

SPACE

r~~~

car garage, city school dis· (740)44 t-D110.
trlct,
water
included.
$650.00 a mth ref. + dep, Beautiful Apts. at Jackson
{740)446-0969
Eetates. 52 Westwood Vinyl Records 304·882·2668
3 Bedroom House in Drive, from $365 to $560.
Syracuse. $SOO/month + 740-446-2568.
Equal
Real Estate
deposit No Pets. (304).675 . Housing Opportunity. This
5332 weekertds 740 _591 • lnstitulion is Bn Equal
o265
Opportunity Pfovider and
Employer.
3BR. 1 bath in Bidwell,
Close to college, 2BA WID
$575/mo + sec. dep. 446·
hookun. stove. fr idge fur- ·
3644
~
nished. 740-441 -3702 or
740·286·5789
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (7401441 -tttt
for application &amp; Information.
Immaculate 1 bedroom
apartment New carpet &amp;
cabinets, freshly painted &amp;
decorated, WID hookup.
Beautiful country se"ing.
Only 10 minutes from town.
Must see to aPpreciate.
$325/mo. (6 t4)595-7773 or
t -801).796-4686.
.
Modorn t Bedroom apl. Call
44 6·0390

Large 2-story home
on Locust St.,
Gallipolis.
4 Bedrooms, 2 Bath,
KIT, FM, DR , LA ,
Laundry, out
building, fenced
yard, close lo '
schools.
Excellent Condition!

74()..441-1202

304-675-6363

Beautiful Bichon Frise puppies 1or sale. Please call
740-247-4700 e11enings.

Full size pool table, beer puppies. 9 wkS old. Wormed
neons &amp; full size air hockey.· &amp; shots. Dew claws
re moved, Red male $200.00
Call 339-3528
Red female $225.00 740.
GET A STEAL ON 388·9824

Have 131arge block emblem
griswold cast iron skillets,
only 2 missing from having a
complete sat, Includes iron
display rack for tha set,
these are 11ery nice, If sold
now I would take $1 ,925:
Call After 7:00 p.m. 740533-3870

-N-EW
-A-ND_U_&amp;'"E-D-STE_E_L

I

~

It

2 male Yorkie puppies. 1 Club Caves- Heal wave,
weeks old, very small . Call bleed in purple, direct hit,
740·446·3398
Sin City &amp; Broadband: Reg.
Angus Bulls- Prime cut , 878
3 mate. tOng haired chi· lead on, foresight, In focus,
huanua·s ready to go. No new HI &amp; band 0699.;
papers.
S200
each Australian Shepherd Pups.
(740)245·5964, (740)645·
(304)773·5t80
4833

Arch
Steel
Buildings- ~ CKC Reg. Boston Terrier
Canceled Orders &amp; Repos. puppies 3 males shots &amp;
Only 3· Buildings Left! . wormed' 7 weeks 'old $200
25"K34" &amp; 30"•32". Pay only each. (740)367·0262 •
the balance. Call Now 866v
352-0469
-C-KC-r-eg-.-M-i-n.-D-a-c-hs-h-un-d

I

9!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

I

Min Pin pups. 1 blkltan F 14
wks.1 blkltan M&amp;F, 1 red F
ready 1 1124· $3001each. Call
740-388-8124.No relay calls

r

a

1987 Oldsmobile- 98 for
more
Information
call
(740)4t6·6967
- - -- - - - 2000 Chevy Cawaller, 4
Door.
Automatic,
AC.
AMIFM Cassehe. Now tires.
ctoan,
50k,
$3950.
(740)379·27&lt;48

Real Estate

00 Chevy Sil\lerado 4x4, 01
Harley Fat Boy, 97 Jeep
Grand Cherokee LTD. 740245-5747
- - - - - - -01
Hyundai
Accent
HatchbacK. 5 speed trans,
65,310 miles, good condition. needs catalytic converter. Asking $3200. Call 740·
709-6339.

Mini Dachshund, Chinese
crested mix, 8 weeks old,
lomalos. 740·388·98t3

Reg. Chihuahua pups. Black
&amp; white. Have shots and
wormed. $200. Call 304674·5857
She is vet checked, 100 %
liealthy, AKC reg, all there
shots are up to date and
dewormed, ready for there
new home. All there papers
will accompany them. email
egan yyonu Chahoo com
grab them for $400 each

r

MUSICAL

9-7 Sat. Hl-6

-::-~..,...---=~~­

t984 Honda Gold \v,ng
1200, well maintained. lots
ol chrome, award winner.
$3500. (7401949·2446

iiiP,;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;

,,,,.

::-:,.-: : - - : : - - - - 98 Polarig· Spor tsman 500 4
wheeler. warn winch, 803
miles. St900. 740-645·6857
or 379·-9515

lob lOIII?

SMART
BUYS
FROM

Shop

29 Serious People to Work
from home using a computer.
Up to SSOO.OO to
$t .500.00
PT/FT
www. Homelncome4-U.com

t'lle

05 Chrysler 300 limited
36000 mi, N C.leather heated seats, 1 owner. garage
kept, load8d. 92 Lumina,
AJC, Cruise, ti ll, all power,
125 ,000 mi. 245 _5017
-------1982 Ford Granada, good
work car. $500.-388-0436

no pay! Singles
and Doubles. We
can get it done!
Call 866-564-8679

#1 DEALER

In Memory

In Loving Memory of

Mildred Adkins
If you thought of us, saki a prayer, vtslled ,
sent Rowers, cards, food or made a phone
call in our time of sorrow. The family would
like to thank you from the bottom of
our h&lt;;arts. Your thoughtfulness wiD never
be forptteo. Speclallbanks to Holzer E.R.,
the C.C.U. staff, McCoy Moore Funeral
Home , Pastors Bob Hersman, Ted Russell.
Thank You-Husband Charles Adkins,

Marcy Ramey, Sonny, Randy

card of Thanki

ZERO DOWN!
Announcements

If so, you qualify for a

Senior Discount*
when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered subscription!

'

••• Howard &amp; Mary Robinson
.
•••
In Memory ,

Here's ·an you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

•allipoli' JBatlp atrtbune

J)oint Jlea•ant 1\egi,ttr
The Daily Sentinel

6unbap flUme• -6tntintl
P•••••••••••••••••••••• .•••••••••

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __

In Memory

he best and most beautiful things in the
world cannot be seen nor touched
but feh the heart

AHidden Treasure.,.

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ __
Phone_ _-'-----------,-

BeautifuUy Renovated Apartments
New Management
Remodeled spacious rental apartments for you and
your fami~!
New Kitclien/ bath/ 11'indo1•s/ doors/
carpet/ appliance!! throughout!
!~kution

"Centrally located in Ra1'e11S11ood
.Within walking distance from schools/
shopping/ mtaurants/ churches/ stoleli

Marth 11, 1924-0ctober 14,2007
You ~ill never be gime but carried
forever in our hearts.
The family of Lara B. Smith would Uke
to express our deepest appreciation to the
friends and relations who paid their
respects or sentfood,jlowers, cards or
any sympathy items to our family.
Sincerely
Thank You
In Memory

In Memory

CALL TODAY FOR MOREINFORMA TION

In MeiiUiry of

304-273-3344

Rachel D. Pullins

1 Bedroom apartments, Eligibility
based on income,
•
62 years of age or older,
handicpped/disabled,
Regardless of age.
Handicapped accessible
This institution is an equal ~
lr oppo&gt;rtl
provider, and employer.
un-sriiA manager &amp; maintenance.
Please call 740·992-3055
TDD #800-855-2880

The world lo.t an Angel
She walked btsUie you
and you neJ•er knew
She lived nert to you
Gnd you never knew
But when she touched your lift
il was unmistaWlt
Tht loV~, the warmth, tht caring
artd the endt.ss giving whkh overflowed
from her hean artd soul
could only come from that of an Angel
Our Angtl was a Mother tmd a Grandmother
Our Angtl was 41 sister and a Wife
Our Angel wM 4 Friend and a Mentor
Ou~ heiJI'ts aelre with Mdness and emptiness
Our Angel hils moved onto a lttW world
A 1110rld wherr souls fly fne
A world whhout pain
A world when Our Angel has wings
. We mour~~forour lou, but let us no/forget
Life is ro bt Celebrated
'
and the Remembrance Cherished
If Our Angel could speok to us now, sh• would leU
you "Please don't cry, ttkbrptt my lift, enjoy
' being together 011this day.
Htmembtr my smile, mj good deeds, my UJtJtjBr
'my F_amily and Friends, an!l keep mt alirt
in your ileaf'!s."
Dtepfy Missed by Family and Friends

Mall or drop off this coupon along
with a copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
······ · ··········-~----~---·····

ADVERTISEMENT
507 Richland Avenue,
Sullo 301
·
FOR BIQS
THIS PROJECT IS
Athena, Ohio 45701
ONLY OPEN TO ALL
Coplee of the CON·
BIDDERS WHO MEET
TRACT DOCUMENTS
THE
BIDDING
may be obtained at
REQUIREMENTS.
the office of the
Dr. Samuel L . Boasard
Architect upon payMemorial Ubrary •
ment of a refundable
Gallla County District
dapoelt of $75 for
Library
each 181.
HVAC Replacement
Panlch,
Noel
&amp;
Project
·
.A a • o c 1 a t e S· ,
7 Spruce Street
Architects
and
Gatllpolla,
Ohio
Engineera
45631
Address;
Separate Haled BIDS
Richland · Ave~.
for the renovations to
301,
Athena,
the HVAC ayatema
45701
and electrical . ay'iPhone
number:
tema at 7 Spruce
740-592-2420
Street In Gallipolis,
Facsimile number:
Ohio, will be received
740..592-3824
by The Gallla County
Contact name: Phil
District Library at
Griffith
their officea on 7
Contact
email:
Spruce Street until
pgriHith@pnan:h.com
12:00 p.m. local time
Internet address:
on
Tueeday,
www.pnarch.com
November 20, 2007
Any BIDDER, upon
lmd kept H8ted untn
raturntng the CONthe board meellng.
TRACT DOCUMENTS
Then at aald office
within ten claya of the
publicly opened and
bid opanlng and In
read aloud at !hit • good condition, will
board meeting on
be ratundad the lull
Tuesday
evening
amount olthe depolil
November 20, 2007.
minus any shipping
A non mandatory precharges, and any nona
bid meeting hao been
bidder upon returning
eet lor November 13,
the CONTRACT DOC2007 at the alta at
UMENTS
will
be
11:00am
In
the
ratunded
$50.00
mourning.
mlnua any shipping
Sealed bide will be
charges.
received lor;..
DOMESTIC
1STEEL
Eetlmate
USE REQUIREMENTS
Mechanical
with
AS SPECIFIED IN
General
as
SubSECTION
153.011,
Contract
ORC APPLIES TO
$1 11,500.00
THIS
PROJECT.
Mechanical Alternate
COPIES OF SE&lt;mON
H-1:
153.011, ORC CAN BE
OBTAINED
FROM
Electrical Contract
ANY OF THE OFFICES
THE
OHIO
OF
Awarded from 1Q-5DEPARTMENT
OF
IT7 bid
ADMINISTRATIVE
The CONTRACT liOc- . SERVICES.
UMENTS
may
be The Gallla County
examined at the lol·
Dletrlcl
Library
towing locations;
rBHrvee the right to
The
Builders
reject any/Qr all bids
Exchange of Central
and to waive Informal·
Ohio
ltiH or to aceept any
FW Dodge
bid which Is deemed
1175 DubHn Road
moat favorable to
Columbua,
Ohio
them.
43216
November 4. 7, 11, 18.
.
Panlch,
Nqel
+ 2007
Aaeoclatee
Architects
and
Engineers

BULLETIN BOARD

.

'

Announcement•

,,.. Oil Changes
and Tires for Life

SOUTHEAST
OHIO'S

In Memory •

rc:r------ I

Middleport, OH
AcceRting ARRlications ·

.Outh of Logan

71 Class C Ford Motor
Home, 28', Runs Good,
everything works, great
hunt1ntllfishlng
wehicle.
$2500 or 1rade lor bOat of

VMS

02 Camaro Z28 LT1 V8 ,
auto, 611&lt; miles, $14,000
(740)379·938t

·-tiiiNrn!iiiiiiii.JMFNTSiiiiiiiiitorl
'
-l~=====an~d:RI:;:char==d=====~
Wurfltzer piano $300. Call
Card Of Tharika

11 00 Powell St.

M-F

SALE

02 HO Electra Qlide Classic
Stage 3 motor, $25,000
invested . sacrifice
lor
$t4 ,500. (740)446·7527

:-::--:-::~~--:-::~­

CROSS POINTE
APTS

Ju•t

TRUCKS
FOR

r

••• Thank you for helping us to ·:
move into our new home, son,
Carl &amp; Carolyn Robi~son, Bill
••
Ward, Bob Hill, Sonny Harris,
Jim Stout, Gary Walker, Clyde
Sayre, Eddie Ball, Mick
Seasoned Firewood, Picked Angus Bulls, bred -haifa rs.
up or deliwred. OH HEAP EKcellent Bre eding, Top
Winebrenner, Todd Wolfe, Kerry
Pric od
&amp;LAA. WV LEAP accepted. Pertormance,
Call Melvin Clagg. 740-441- Re aso n ab ly
Woods, All of God's Hands ·
www. slaterun angus.co m.
0941 or 740·645-5946
&amp; others.
:-----:--:-::~- (740)266·5395
Shot guns: 870 Express
God bless you and cause his face
mag. wflwo barrels $350.
Announcements
Mossburg 500 mag, red-dot ·
to shine upon you and give
scope $300. Mossburg 9200
auto wf two barrels $450 .
you peace.
740-446-4419
GOT LAND?
-----~.-It was very much appreciated.
Swim Spas Arriwedl Save
zero ·Zilch ·Nada
$$$Tiki'ru bs Hot •.ubOut1et.
Ci oseouts
Keep your cash II
We love our home
awaila ble.
Ashland. KY 606·9~9-5655
you own land. We
&amp; Thank GodForlt!
finance! 90 days

Announcement•

1999 Dodge Durango, runs
and looks Greall 4p: 4, auto·
matic, power se ats, power
windows, cruise control, 3rd
.row seating, reBr air, towing
package
NADA
value
$7025.00 make an offer.
(740)992·2335

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
2006 Honda Gold Wing
Unconditional liletime guar$4.000~ in accessories. Paid
antee. Local references fur$24,000 new --$19,600. Call
nished . Established 1975.
740-367·7 t29.
Call 24 Hrs. 1740) 446·
· 0870, Rog ers Basement
Waterproofing.
FORSAU:
9S Honda 400 Foreman
4WD e~~:c . cond. 1985 250
01 Dodge Caravan, auto, air.
Honda
FourtraK, $50Q/OBO
good clean van. 64.000
o04·593·
miles. $3000 OBO. 740·256· 304·576·2843
0685
- - - -- - 1233 or 256· 1652
Wanted:

FORili i SAu:ii li --.,.1

6ttnba!' ftttntt~ -6mttntl • Page 05

&amp;

94 Chevy Si lverado PU
LWB PW. Loct&lt;s. AC. Auto
10,000 miles. on eng. overhaul. $4500 neg. 740·446·
93t5 ·
.

November 18,1944- February 1, 2006
Real Estate

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

.AUIOi

...._ ...
..,

Sunday, Novemb~r 18, 2007

FOR SALE

AUIO'i

Steel Beams. "Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Ang le.
_
740446 7029
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
I \1{\ 1 .., I 1'1'1 II...,
Grating
For
Drains.
,\ I I \ I ..., It u t.._
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am-4":30pm. Closed
Thursday,
SS:turday
&amp; ~~------·
Sunday. (740)446-7300
21 Black Australorps Hen
brown egg layers, $4 ea ch
30x50x~o
Pole
Barns
must take all 304-937 ·3'192
Free
$6.495
Delivery
(
) 8304-937-2705
937 71 1471

2 bedroom apartment in We will take boarders. For
Centenary, all utilities paid rilore information call 740•
HoUSES
eJtcept electric $325. Call 245-9549, ask for Linda.
.,
FOR RENT
(740)256-1 t35.
3 Br. $ 395 M.,pfus util
1BR $475/mo, $475 dep. &amp;dep,no
pets,
mR RENT
3 rd
343 4th Ave. Gas heat. no ST. ,Raclne.?40 _247 _4292 _ ~~-------rl
petS. furnished kitchen. 740·
OfticeiWarehouse!Storage
446-4859
6 rooms &amp; bath. range &amp;
..
Great
location in Gallipolis!
fridge furnished. Very Clean.
Spece
starting
at
.
2 br. 1 bath, new carpet, new in town. Cai1441 -EI596
$150.00/month for 700 sqft.
kitchen appliances, lg. basemenl, 1638 Chatham Ave 6 rooms, 116 State Street. ca 11 404-456-3802 .
N
ts 44 1-Q596
\II l\1 ll\ \ll l \ 1
Ward 's 3 Wheel Bicycle
zone) Great view of open .{740)446-4234
or 740-· 0 pe ·
S801cesl1
304-682·2436
field and deer. Aski ng 208-7861
Apartment for rent, 1-2
69,500. Call 742- 1011
28 R in town (Gallipolis). Bdrm .. remodel ed, new carWould the lady that ca lled
$ 550/mon, No pe ts. Call pet, stove &amp; !rig .. water,
me concerning the ball
For sale by owner. 3BR 441 ·0110 or 992-5174
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
Ranch , 1 bath . Family
$425 ·00 · No pots. · Rol · 112 size BIS &amp; Mat . $t5o.oo. green 1/2 pint jars, please
call me "bacf&lt;. I didn't clearly
Room , Stove/Fridge , WID 3 bd house, close ro required_ 740-843·5264.
New .sofa &amp; love seat
get your message; Call after
included. Asking $70,000. Ordinance elem. $495 plus
$400.00 Recliner
sale
Call 740-709-6339
deposit and refe rences. Apt. tor Rent. No Pets. 740· St99.95. 202 Clark Chapel 7:00p.m. 740·533·3870
992-5858.
Available Dec. 1. 304-755- ' - ' - " - -- - -Rd. Bklwell, . Oh. 740·366· - - - - - -- , . For sale or rent. nice 2 bed- 6744 or 304 · 675 ·6757
Apts ·tn Me,IQS
·
c ounty, In 0173. M ·F 9a · 4p. Sat 9a •
Announcements
room· house; Pomeroy. $450
·
N p
0
1
town,
o
ers,
epos t
3b
1 b h L D 10
plus utilities, no pets, referdrm., I .. r., r., ·u 2 Required, (740)992-5174 or

New WH &amp; Furn . CIA
Appliance included. Across
from Vinton ,Eiem. $65,000.
iiiiio-rl _74_D_·2_45_·-55_5_5_o_r4_4_t_·5_1o_5_
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITVISSI?
No F•• Unless W. W·1nt·
••a 562 3"'·
t -oo
•
• .J&lt;t5

r== ~t--FOR·hiS·S•ALE;·._.I t

-------vn ....:.
Ul"u:.::t
o-t
Meytag gas dryer, entertain!!B~
FOR IbM'
.:...::.:..c.:.:...;..:.:::.___ ment center, liwingroom fur-~,., vu.&amp;~~.~"JU."J ,
Moclern 1 SA Apt. Call 446- nlture, TV, pink depression37:.:3:::
6 _______ ware. 46975 E. Letart Rd..
Trailer lor rent. 38R. 2 BA. ~
Two story Appartment can 367·7762 or 446-4060 Spacious second-floor apt. Racine, Oh
Building For Sale, in New
AP.FOR~.:S
opvokrlookind"ng . GalllpLoRIIs dCity Medium size Chest Deep
Haven. v-N $27.000 304·
ar a
nver. . . en,
882-2793 304·882·2326
large kitchen-dining area Freezer $100 304·675-6787

f{l\1 \/\
Cozy home close to new
Meigs Elementary! '3 BR, 1
bath. utility room, large
kitchen/dining
room .
Covered
patio
with
Anderson atri um door out to
patio off of dining room. 2
out buildin gs plu s extra out·
side storage anached to
home. All on a level lot on
Hap"'J Hollow Ad. near New
,..,
Lima Ad In Hutchinson
Subd'·,1·8 ·10 n. (Not ,·n tlood

·-E·II·m·V-Ie·w-_.1

e

SoiouLs

r

- .....

~~ It ~ I
Apartments

'--------

Ashton Area . Mini Farm. 14 r:;
acres of rolling fenced larid.
2 barns, pofld. near Hannan

ro

"3· B
·Rhou
- se- ln_ G.all.lp.olrli
s,
W/0 connection, $450/mo,
$250Jdep.You pay all utNities
404·456-3802
- - - -- - - - • 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
3BR; 1BA, laundry room, 65 • Central hailt lAIC
Mill Creek. No pets. 740- •Washer/dryer hookup .
~44.::6:..:·9::5.:.23::..______ •Tenant pays electric
3BR, 2.5ba, CIA, w/ aVgar
(304)882·3017
on Raccoon
Crk.$800
+t st+last+dtp. Serious only.
Must see! 245-5808
•

HS. 3br. 2 bath, Bnck
Rancher; Family Room. 12x65 Kirkwood. Expando,
·
wlfireplace 'and 2 ca r Porch updated with e:dras.
Gara ge can be used for $3000; . Full size truck
horses or cattle or your . camper. $650. (740) 388·
Place in the country! Call 9906
Paul Tri County' Realty 304- - - - - -- - - ,
1994
Oakwood 14K70·.
633-1622 Of 304-733-9000
- - - - - - - - 2BR, new carpet through·
304-373·10t t or toll free at
·Anentton!
out, all appliances, Well kept,
1 77 373 1 11
-8 •
• 0 ·
Local co mpany offering "NO under pinning &amp; porches.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· $10.000 060. 740· 388,
_
INSTIU.C nON
grams for you to buy your 0436
·-o!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit_.l home instead ot renting.
2000 14K70. 3BR. 2BA. Lots
1OO% financing
•
of
up grades , on rented lot.
GllllpoNa Career COllege
Kraus-Back
Rd.
(Careers Close To Home) • Less than perfect qredit 34
accepted
,
Gallipolis.
miles
lrom
.
3
Call Today! 74().446·4367.
• Payment cou ld be the Gallipolis off SA see. 446•
t.eoo-2t4.Q452
8935 Price reduced.
..:-.~lipolllcareeroollgge.com same as rent.
Locators. ...:_:.:....=--~--'--Accredited Member Accrediting Mortgage
New 3 Bedroom homes !rom
ec,..ncil lor lfldapendanl College&amp; (740)367-0000
12748.
$214.36 per month, lrlcludes
many· upgrades, delivery &amp;

ii

~

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

Page 04 • 6mibap ftilntt -6mttnd

r•

- ·- --

_,

" -II

.

Haffelts Mill Outlet
New Hours
M-F 8-5 Sat. 9-3
Evenings by appt. only
Beginning Monday, Nov. 19

HARVEST FEST
With LIVE BAND
at
Riverside Golf Club

Wednesday,
Nov. 21st
Brad Layne &amp;
The Gypsy Hillbillies

Large Selection
Bulk Candy
Nowln

DON WOOD
AUTOMOT/Vf!Nc.

,,...,,....,,.,kl.,._

O•ntw and Blut Rl~n CtrtlJiftl

lustlo ,..r f«t«yrecom.,..R4
Mnltnona htrr..

Price

Hcmclo Accord Hybrid • Great Ga s Mileoga. Auto.
Hctnda Civic

Hybrid • Great Gos Mileage, Auto.

Uncoln Town Car· #f6lt69A
2006 Toyota Camry • • Got611EB
•
2007 Chry1ler Sebring • WF6129JMR . ~ttmoindor of foci_ Warranly
2007 Ponllac G6 V6 - OG6 120AK
2006 Pontiac Grand Prix· tG61207K R_4 Dr., Sliver
2007 H)'undai Sonata .. #H6 10039J. Green
2003 .Honda Civic- 0272241 C.
2007 Tl!)rata Varia - oG61 JJ5J

2002 Jaguar X·'fype AWD "1871A91M. Shorp . Blacl on Bloc~
2007 Chevy Cobah .. IF6 1213MR. SolonC@ o f rac:!Ofy IM:Jrrooty
2007 Chryller PT crui...... IIIF6121 1MR. Blac.~ . Sharp!!
2006 Kia Optimo • tH60876E. ~"'
2002 Volkawagen Paaaat Wall"n • •m2a 1c. '""'"
2004 Chevy Malibu • I G612JJ 1J
2005 Chryaler PT Cruiaer · Rod . •H610JBJ
2002 Hyundai XG350 • 1272261C.
2005 Kia Spect10 • •f613.51 M. Auto., \1\14;11 Equipped, Gas Sovt~r
2002 Hyundai Sante Fe • •Ho l ton
2002 Chevy Co¥Giier .· tH609&lt; 2C. Rod.
2092 Niaaan Altima - t7l2&lt;92E
2004 Dacige Strotus - tH60959J Bl~
2005 Hyundai ~cent- #H60B5 1z. Rod .
2003 Ford Taurua SES • #0609771 . Too
Voyager • Green. •H6094JC.

s,_, ·
s,_,

$27,995
$16,999
$15,995
$16,999
$16,999
$16,999
$14,999
$14,999
$t2,999
$12,999
$12,999
$13,999
$11,999
$10,999
$11,999
$10,999
$9,999
$9,999
$8,999
$8,500
$8,999
$8,999
$6,999
$6,999

Sienna· ~ 1 3I OEII:
Grand Caravan .. N77349 1E
Venture LS • " 774051E. GrOen

30% off
Zippo Lighters
While they last
Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave. Gallipolis
K &amp;

'

A Christmas Story
"The play"
Coming Dec. 21 &amp; 22
to URG
More info call 709-9903

L Catering

Wit~ Thanksgiving drawing neiu
and cleaning left to do. Let us
prepare the dinner and deliver it to

USED FURNITURE &amp;
VARIETY STORE

you .

130 Bula ville Pike

t 0·12 SeNings $99 .60

Lots of everything

20..24 SeNings $199 .20

Mon·Sat 1 t ·3 446-4782

Ohio Valley Warehouse

your Thanksgiving Dinner no later

Across from GCFG

than Monday, November 19th.

446-6174

Your dinner will be .delivered on

Vinton Elementary
School would like to
thank all of its sponsors,
· volunteers, bidders, and
staff for making our
carnival a success.
Happy Holidays
The PTC

$19,999
$17,999

$19,995
$19,999 .
$19,999
$20,999
$14,995
$14.495
$14,999
$14,999

Call us at 740·446·9319 to order

9 am- 2 pm

P~ent

$16,999
$15,999
$10,999
$10,999

Wholesale, Retail
Merckens Baking Chocolates ,
·
Sugar Free

Open Mon-Thurs

FREE
OHChangesForLi}e
FREE
Tires For Life ·

Wednesday, November 21 belore
5 ;00 pm

Serenity House
serves victims of domestic
violence call 446-6752 or
1-800-942-9577

$359
•359
4357
•339
*258
*249
•232
•232

�:6unba~ limn-ienttnel.

GARDENING

BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

'

Art is enjoying a coming
out party across America as
gardeners add personality to
their yards.
Di scarded farm implements are being restored for
use as planters. PI ywood
cutouts of Disney-like
ducklings are staked out
alongside driveways and
sidewalks. Statuary mingles
with rose bushes. Fountains
become the focal points of
residential ponds. Colorful .
bottles replace fall foliage
on tree branches.
Personal statements, all.
But does this visual outpouring represent a creative
direction in landsca~ing or
is it just so much neighborhood kitsch?
"Garden is art and art is a
AP photo
part of the 'garden. We realIZe these two things belong This undated photo provided by the University of Texas Press shows sculptures made from
to~ether,"
said Holly old farm equipment and au~o parts In Waxahachie, Texas, made by Waxahachle.folk artist
Shtmizu, executive director David Strickland from the book "Yard .Art ana Handmade Places: Extraordinary
of the United States Botanic Expressions of Home."
Garden in Washington, D.C.
"It's a strong new trend ground and even religious
Some of her themes:
to my Garden of Eden.' '!feel
with American designers, beliefs," writes Nokes in
• Local landmarks: "Both I was called to do this.' 'This
manr of whom are artists "Yard Art and Handmade as the gardener saw him- or is sacfect space.'
who ve turned to gardening." Places:
Extraordinary herself, sending a message
One factQr that differentishe said. 'T d never choose a Expr~ssions of Home." or as the viewer," Nokes ates most of these three~azing ball, but then, that's (University of Texas Press).
said: "Turn right at that yard dimensional garden galJUSt a matter of attitude."
Her book offers up a dif- that has the statue of the leries ·(rom other types of
Shimizu's husband is a ferent kind of garden tour. Sphinx in front."
land_scape expresslbn is
Japanese garden designer, It's a series of vignettes
• Monuments: " Displays their fragile, fleeting qualiwhich is an exacting form about the unique environ- -or tableaus that showcased a ty, Nokes said.
of landscaping.
ments people have created life's work."
"These
places
are
"You do have some on their properties.
• Hobbyists, connoisseurs ephemeral art forms. Three
restraints in that kind of gar- · "For several decades, we and obsessive collectors: of my sites were damaged
den," Shimizu said. "I kept have seen increased atten- "Day lily fanciers, cactus by Hurricane Rita. One
wanting to junk ours up. He . tion given to place-making collectors, who become burned down altogether and
kept saying, 'No. ' I finally and sense of place as impor- mentors to others new in the a 45-year-old windbreak in
found a beautiful stone tant indicators ·of cultural game."
the Panhandle was seriously
Buddha. He said, 'ok.' It and social vitality," Nokes
• Transformers: "Folks damaged in ~Nildfires in 'Ot\
looks nice and appropriate. writes. " The yard and gar- who moved into a ruined
"Some of these sites are on
Some gardens are meant den remain as one of the landscape and made it into the decline due to the age of
for yard art and there are few common realms where their own version of par- the maker. I'm not even talkcertain kinds of yards where people with ordinary means adise."
ing about drought, floods and .
it really wmks. But it's not and skill can shape with
• Holdouts: "Folks who gmsshoppers, Lite is fragile."
for every garden. You have · their own harids to create a remained, almost on an
to have a respect for place." personal expression that is island, in landscapes that
Jill Nokes is a homcultur- visible to all."
were being exploited and
ist and landscape designer
A chain of design themes destroyed all around them,
from Austin, Texas, who began to form as Nokes because their family had
became fascinated with yard drove around the state, gath- been there five generations
art or "vernacular land- ering material for her book. and to them, land is identiscapes" durinl;l family travels
"I began to see how the ty," she said. "You see this
across t.he regton as a child.
intent of one gardener was in urban ghetto settings."
It's a way for people to linked to the other, though
• Sacred Gardens: "Almost
"use their yard or gard_en to· the outcome may have everyone I profiled used the
create particularly exuber- been very .different and same language when describant statements about them- their background or loca- ing some aspects of their
selves, their history or back- tion far-flung."
yard. Things like 'welcome

·Sunday, November 18, 2007

IJIFFFREN!. E

Caringfor oth"s who are often unable to care /or themselves is an important job; one that requires
skiUs of a different nature... individuals who are knowledgeable and compassionate can tum ordi11ary
situations into renuJrkable achievements.

CHESHIRE River
Valley FFA member Ryan
Eggleton earned the highest
placing on the rural · soil
judging team at the State
Soil Judging contest.
The contest was held
Oct. 13 · at the, Licking
County Fairgrounds. Ryan
was ranked sixth overall at
the state level. Ryan is the
highest placing team
member that the River
Valley FFA chapter has
ever had.
.
Ryan is a senior at River
Valley and a four-year FFA
member. He has competed
on the • rural soil judging
team for the past three
years. Ryan currently
serves as the chapter's
treasurer as well .

:;o ( 1.:\ IS • \ ol. :;-. "\o . :O:::

SPORTS
Ryan Egleton

He .... the son · of Rick
and Judy Eggleton of
Bidwell.

..

BY

BSERGENT@MYDA.ILYSENTINELCOM

COLUMBUS
.
Attorneys for American
Municipal Power-Ohio have
filed motions with the Ohio
Power Siting Board to deny a
petition filed by the Natural
Resources Defense Council,
Ohio Environmental Council
and Sierra Club to intervene
during OPSB's adjudicatory

mentioned memorandum on
Nov. 9, it was served with
the intervenor group's first
set of interrogatories and
request for production of
documents. Attorneys for
AMP state these discovery
requests "clearly demonstrate the prejudice to AMPOhio if the intervenor
groups' late-filed motion to
intervene is granted."
The supplemental memo-

STAFF REPORT

Gampoih 1. )t ~
446-1998

KU 'l'l\i ·\Nil .1~'1\l \ihll~

111lt'!IAJi41l' 11111\A~\ ~~ \ll\~1\

OBITUARIES
Page AS
1 Mary Fields, 63

Holiday flower ·
show ·presents
creativity galore

Students collect food .
items. See Page A2
• Gas card winner.
:See Page A2
• Law You Can Use.
See Page A2
1

·~

Oetalto on P8Jie A3

t ttll,/tJt 1ftltf' l'f~ffHI ~hHw/ltf,

Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

aged to submit claims to
their respective companies
for possible reimbursement.
POMEROY
The
This year the . MCHD
Meigs County Health ordered 900 units of
Department will be admin- · influenza vaccine and so far
istering flu shots to Mei~s has distributed around 500
County residents ages s1x doses. Around 300 doses
months and up from 9-11 were administered during
a.m. and 1•3 p.m. tomorrow. "senior day" and 200 during
This clinic isn't just for an earlier clinic for the genthose who are 65 and older . era! public.
·
but for the general public.
'flte Ohio Department. of
There is a $15 fee for those Health provides the MCHD
who do not have Medicare with influenza vaccines to
B, Railroad Medicare or be administered to those resMedicaid
coverage. idents ages 65 or older and
Commercial
healthcare to those with chronic medial
insurance cannot be accept- conditions. The MCHD pried but residents are encour- . vately purchased flu shots ·
BY BETH SERIENT

BSERGENTIJMYDAILYSENriNEL.COM

12 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Galendars
A3
Qlassifieds
B3-4

Qornics

SYRACUSE- The array of cr~ative Christmas flower
armngements, wreaths and swags, wrapped packages, and
holiday table settings displayed at the Meigs County
Garden Clubs annual Christmas show provided a lift to the
holiday spirits of those attending.
Baubles and bells, glitter and ribbons along with colored lights and accessories used to enhance-the creative
work of the gardeners carried out the theme "Let's Have a
Cowboy Christmas."
The show was held Saturday and Sunday in the Carleton
School auditorium. ~ntries were judged by an accredited
judge of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs and awards
were given in four places.
The best of show award in artistic arrange)llents went to
Shelia
Curtis for her modern design using rope in the
Garden club members displayed an abundance of creativity
"Christmas
Lasso" class with dried artichoke surrounded
in arrangements carrying out the shdw theme "Let's Have
a Cowboy Christmas." Melanie Stethem use lighted rope by magnolia leaves in a weathered wood container. Reserve
and spurs with dried magnolia and greenery in container of best of show wenno Joy Bentley for her arrangement in
barnside to depict a rodeo. It won the creativity award.
Please see Creativity, AS

POMEROY - The Ohio
Division of Wildlife expects
up to 120,000 white-!ail deer
will be harvested during next
week's deer-gun season.
The popular season
begins Nov. 26 and continues through Dec. 2, with an
extra weekend of hunting
the weekend of Dec. 15 and
16. Legal hunting hours are
from one half-hour before
sunrise to sunset.
With a pre-hunting season
population estimate of
675,000 white-tailed deer,
the Ohio Division of .
Wildlife anticipates 115,000.
to 120,000 deer will be
killed during the nine days
of season. Approximately
400,000 hunters are expected to participate in this
year's season, including
many out-of-state hunters.
The white-tailed deer is
the most popular gani.e ani, mal in Ohio, frequently pursued by generations of
hunters. Deer hunting contributes an estimated $266
million to the state's economy each year and helps to
suppmt thousands of jobs. .
Venison is nutritious meat.
low in fat and cholesterol. It
is the number one wild game
served by hunters in Ohio.
Deer hunters also contribute
thousands of pounds of venison to organizations that help
feed less-fortunate Ohioans
through special programs.
Ohio is known for its outstanding deer and trophy
racks. The Ohio Buckeye
Big Buck Club, buckeyebig·buckclub.org, has recorded
more than Ol)e-half of its top
10 entries for both typical
and non-typical deer racks
during the last decade. Of
the 144 entries scoring higher than 200, 92 (63 percent)
have been .killed since 1990.
The club has kept records of
trophy deer since 1958:
. Ohio's trophy bucks have
also gained national attention. The famous 39-point
Beatty Buck was taken in
Greene County in the fall of
2000. With a rack score of
304 6/8, it stands as the
Please see Season. AS

Au shot clinic set for tomorrow

INDEX
2 SI!CI10NS -

CHARLENE HOEFliCH

HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

WEAmER

304-67 4-8022

BY

4-H News.

See Page A2.
• EHS announces hollOI'
roll. See Page AS
1 For the Record.
·See Page A5

Poi1tt Pit~~~~~~~. WV

Cha~ene Hoentch/photos

.

Tom and Linda Hamm look over the beautiful display of wreaths and wall hangings made by Meigs County garden club
members on display at the annual flower show held over the weekend at Carleton School.

INSIDE

AB Contracting Inc.

Please see AMP, AS

.NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

300 Sen&gt;1ld A"'~" ··

?/;f.#tut 1hmt

randum also claims that "by
delaying their motion to
intervene, and thus their discovery request, the intervenor groups have . intentionally sought to create a
situation where AMPOhio's attention is diverted
from preparing for the adjudicatory hearing and is
instead pre-occupied with

'

The Purple Turtle

MIHIHiar Rolftt DiviNion
$6JJ Oltlo RINr Rd.

· Bs

A4
As
As
B Section

A3

@ 2007 Ohio Valley PubU.hJnK Co.

'·

.
failed to demonstrate good
cause as required by law for
persons seeking to intervene
in OPSB proceedings.
Thi s past Thursday,
AMP's attorneys filed a
supplemental memorandum
with the OPSB in opposition of the group's motion
to intervene.
The supplemental memorandum claims "minutes
before" AMP filed its afore-

One week .
'til- deergun season

Stud~nts

lntetviews are conducted Monday through Friday betWeen 9 am and 4 pm or call and
ask for Debbie Wayland Staffing Coordinator 740-992-6606. Rocksprings is an equal
opportunity employer that enrourages workplace diversity.

.
hearing set for next month.
On Nov. . 9 AMP-Ohio
filed a memorandum to
deny the intervenor groups
motion to intervene based
on the following contentions: The groups did not
file their petition in a timely
manner; no "extraordinary
circumstances" were articulated by the groups to satisfy
mandates to allow the late
·intervenors; groups have

Of
Vera Bradley

NA's
We 'just recently installed a state of the art on-line documentation system for the
nursing assistants which reduce paper work time considerably. We are a low lift facility
which ITas reduced our back injuries to almost 0. Our company offers a tuition
reimbursement program for NAto LPN with no waiting period.for initiation. We have 1
position opened on all 3 shifts.

Rocksprings Nursing and Rehab
3~759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

BETH SERGENT

~

And you are looking for the chance to make a difference in the following areas:
• Registered Nursing
·
• licensed Practical Nursing
· • Nurses Assistant
• Or would like to become a J':Iursing Assistant~--read on!
1
RN's and LPN's
We currently have day shift and night shift positions available. Our company offers a
tuition reimbursement program for LPN to RN with no waiting period for initiation.
Opportunities for advancl!!ment for RN's into management positions are encouraged.

Stop by and fill out an application at

\\"\\\\.lll)dail)sclltim·l.mm

I&lt;J, :.!0117

AMP asks OPSB to deny intervenor groups

• River Valley beats
Meigs in opener.
SeePageB1

1

We offer competitive rates, health, dental and vision insurance as well as a 401 Kplan.

'I( 1"\ II\\ , 1\0\ 1.:\1 HER

· Free Gift

'

for the NA Program
We currently are seeking individuals interested in attending our 75 hour Nursing
Assistant Program. This class is free of charge and begins with 2 volunteer days that
will allow you to see what the job coflsists of first hand. We allow 12 students per class
. so they fill up quickly. We will only have 1 more class this year.
'

lJolzer Hospice tree
of love dedicated, A3

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

:As a leading provider of short-term, subacute .and reh"abilitative services, as well as
: long term health care, Extendicare Health Services is seeking healthcare professionals
·who want to make a difference caring for others. We currently have opportunities
·available for caring individuals at Rocksprings Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
: Rocksprings is a 100- bed skilled nursing facility located 5 miles from Pomeroy and is a .
:short 20 minute commute from Athens and Albany. We are looking for professionals
. committed to providing excellent post acute rehabilitation and post surgel)l services to
. residents transitioning back home after being discharged from the hospital as well as
residents requiring long term care.
If you possess the following qualifications:
. • Excellent clinical skills
·• Compassion and customer service
• The ability and desire to perform in a fast-paced environment

Girl Scouts make
.a difference, Aa

FFA member earns
highe~t spot on team .

MAIIAmlkan .

HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS
EXCITI~G OPPORTl NITIES A'Oil A CHANCE TO MAKE\

PageD6

for the general public.
Those at higher risk of flu
complications, like ppeumoma, are all children aged
six to 59 months; all adults
aged 65 years or older; all
women who are or will be
pregnant durit1g flu season;
residents in nursing homes
.
/,
'
and long-term facilitie s;
individuals who have long·~ -~
term health problems; children aged six months to 18
years who are on chro nic
aspirin therapy; heath care
workers who have direct
Submitted photo
contact with patients; caregivers and household con- Connie Little, RN , BSN (left) of the Meigs County Health
tacts of children less than Department gives Brenda Cunningham of Pomeroy an
six months of age.
influenza vaccination to protect her health during flu season.

,,

;·

.,

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