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-,-

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----~~ r--:-;-o

ALONG THE RivER

LIVING

Gallia County Snack Pack
Reaching out to hungry kids, Cl

House of the Week
Handsome Facade, D1

....

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

-

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

OBITUARIES
Page AS

• Ruby M. Ferguson
• James C. Glassburn
• Dwight R. Bissell
• Edna M. Vermillion
• Lisa J. Surd

Boy wounde9
~ accidental
shooting .
STAFF REPORT

GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallia County Sheriff's
Office is investigating
the accidental shooting
of a 9-year old boy that
occurred Friday afternoon.
In a press release
issued Saturday morning.
Sheriff Joe Browning
said the incident reportedly happened at 5:40
p.m. Friday in the parking lot of the CVS
Pharmacy located at the
junction of Jackson Pike
and Ohio 160 in the
Spring Valley area.
Deputies who responded said the boy's father
A id them that his 9 mm
~andgun allegedly fell to
the floor of his vehicle
and discharged, striking
the child in the arm. The
man said he transported
the boy to Holzer
Medical Center where he
received treatment in the
emergency department.
The boy was later
transferred to a hospital
in Columbus. The extent
of his injures and his condition was unknown as of
Saturday afternoon.
Browning said once
deputies complete their
investigation, their findings will be submitted to
the
Gallia
County
Prosecutor's Office to
determine if charges will
be filed in the case.
The identities of those
a wolved in the shooting
~ve not been released.

WEATHER

High: 75

Low: 53

INDEX
4

SECTIONS-

?4 PAGES

Around Town

.

assifieds

A3
D2-4

Comics

Ds

Editorials

A4

Sports

B Section

© 2010 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

.lllllljI!IJIJIII! I!I!I! I~ 1111.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

$1.50 •

Vol. 44, No. 39

Tornado relief effort ·continues
LOS Church sends
semi load of supplies
to Reedsville
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints is the latest to send supplies to the
Eden Ridge community, where families were left
homeless by a Sept. 16 tornado system.
Food, hygiene items and other provisions are coming into the community "hand over fist.'' Emergency
Management Agency Director Robert Byer said
Thursday.
''In 20 years of disasters. I have never seen the outpouring of help from the community and other communities like we have here," Byer said. "I am really
proud, too, of the people on the ground who coordinated everything."
The LDS church sent. a semi trailer filled with food
and supplies to the area, joining the Salvation Army
and churches from Meigs County and others in meeting the needs of those who lost their homes and personal effects.
Byer reported a damage of estimate of $2 million to
homes located mainly on Eden Ridge Road and Ohio
124. Thirty-one families lost their homes. Others lost
belongings and suffered damages to their homes. Six
were injured.
Byer said storage space is becoming an issue, but
the need for supplies remains. An emergency center
operates from the Eden United Brethren in Christ

Please see Relief, A2

Brian J. Reed/photo

A boot in the middle of Ohio 124, closed on Eden Ridge to through traffic, collects
cash donations for families affected by the tornado of Sept. 16.

Churc raises $ 0,670 for
Meigs Co. tornado relief
.BY ANDREW CARTER
MDiNEWS~MYDAILYTRIBUNE' COM

GALLIPOLIS A
fundraising event held
Thursday in Gallipolis
generated nearly $11.000
that will be donated to
the tornado relief effort
in Meigs County.
The block-party style
fundraiser was hosted by
Elizabeth Chapel Church
at its new campus located
at the corner of Locust
St. and Third Ave. in
Gallipolis. Organizers
put together the event
this week on short notice
and \Vere extremely
pleased with the results.
According to one of the
organizers, who asked
not to be named. between
donations and the proceeds of an auction, a
total of $10.670 was
raised. He said about
$6,000 was generated
through cash donations
alone. Local auctioneer
Josh Bodimer donated
his services for the event.
which saw the sale of
everything from Ohio
State
and
Ohio
University football tickets to barbecue
grilling
1
tools.
·
An estimated 300-400
area residents attended
The
the
fundraiser.
Gallipolis Volunteer Fire
Department also participated, providing lighting
along Locust St. for a
dunk tank and other
activities.
The storm system that
spav. ned the F-3 tornado
swept through the MidOhio Valley on the
evening of Thursday,
Sept. 16, leaving a trail of
destruction and one fatality in its wake. Meigs Co.
Emergency Management
Agency officials reported
that 31 homes in the
Reeds vi lie area along
Ohio 124 were destroyed
and damage estimates

Please see Funds, A2

Gallia Co. commission
approves extension of
emergency serv1ces
to townships, villages
I

BY AMBER GILLENWATER
MOTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUflE COM

Andrew Carter/photos

Organizers of the fundraiser to benefit the victims of
the tornado that swept through Meigs County on
Sept. 16 keep track of the donations that rolled in
Thursday during the event at Elizabeth Chapel
Church in Gallipolis. Officials said local residents
donated $10,670 to the relief effort.

Josh Bodimer auctions off a pair of Ohio State football
tickets during the Meigs County tornado relief
fund raiser.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Board of
Commissioners received an update from two area
agency directors during their regular meeting on
Thursday at the Gallia County Com1house.
Gallia County Emergency Management Director
Mic:hael Null was present to provide the commission with a resolution that will allow the commission to enter into contracts with townships and villages in the county for emergency management
services.
According to Null, each of the 22 political subdivisions in the county must soon decide whethei
they will continue to contract with the county for
emergency services in the event of natural, techno-·
logical or civil emergencies as the current contract
·
will expire on Dec. 31 of this year.
Null informed th~ commission that if any of the
townships or villages in the county !&gt;hou1d decide
not to contract with the county for emergency services. then those political subdivisions must then
provide their own emergency services.
"It is up to them to provide their own duplicat~
service, which you guys are already doing with me
and my operation;· Null said.
According to Null. county commissions in the
past have traditionally provided emergency ~an­
agement services to the townships and villages in
the county at no cost for those political subdivisions.
.
''I know several times we have looked at other
ways of funding. The drawbacks outweigh the ben.:
efits," Null said. "Your predecessors have chosen
to just charge the townships and the villages no
charge."
·
Based upon Null's recommendations. the commission agreed to extend two-year contracts with
the townships and villages. if said townships and
villages accept the contracts. The commission also
agreed to provide these services at no charge to the
townships and villages in the county.
"This is a service we ought to be providing to our
townships," Commission Vice President Justin
Fallon stated.
Null also discussed the denial of Federal
Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) assistance for victims of the recent tornado in Athens,
Meigs and Perry counties.
According to Null, he. as well as his counterparts
in counties throughout the state, are facing frustration and disappointment due to federal and state
response to recent natural emergencies.
''They've been turning down disaster after disaster, both nt the federal and at the state level, all year
long:· Null said. "Ourselves included, in this county. during the spring tloods."

Please see Services, A2

~

�Sunday, September 26, 2010

Bridge of Honor still
Buckeye property
Transfer of
ownership
pending
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - At the
end of December, the
Bridge of Honor will
have been opened to traffic for nearly two years
yet the transfer of ownership from Ohio to West
Virginia has yet to happen.
Ceremoniously transferred to West Virginia in
a March 2009 dedication
ceremony attended by
Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland
and West Virginia Gov.
Joe Manchin, III, apparently the paperwork has
been slow to catch up
with public perception
that the deed has been
done, so to speak. It hasn't.
Dave Rose, spokesperson with the Ohio
Department
of
Transportation District
10, said on Friday the
agency is waiting for the
final estimate to be paid
before ODOT finalizes
and closes the project,
likely next month. This
spring, Rose estimated
this process would wrap
up in September or

~unbap

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

m:imeii -~entinel • Page A2

Marra to speak at fall
landscape workshop
BIDWELL - Home and garden expert John Marra
will present a free fall landscape workshop from 6-8
p.m. on Monday, Oct. 4 at River Valley High School.
In addition to Marra's fall landscape workshop, the
River Valley FFA will assist with a perennial plant
exchange for those who wish to participate. Th.
perennial exchange is an opportunity for the public t
collect extra plants from their yards and bring them to
exchange at no cost.
Participants in the perennial plant exchange should
bring plants in a container that does not need to be
returned. Plants, roots, cuttings and bulbs can be put
in plastic bags. Everything should be labeled with the
plant's name.
Marra, WSAZ NewsChannel 3's home and garden
expert, is a retired West VIrginia University Cabell
County Extension Agent. Marra has worked in Cabell
County since 1986 after being transferred from the
extension agent's position in Lincoln County.
This free class is provided for parents and community members residing in the Gallia County Local
School District in collaboration with the GalliaVinton Educational Service Center.
Register before Oct. 1 by contacting Connie
Bradbury, 21st Century Community Learning Center
Consultant, at the Gallia-Vinton Educational Service
Center (740) 245-0593 or by e-mail at 90_cbradbury@seovec.org.

Gallia-Meigs Forecast
File photo

The State of Ohio retains ownership of the Bridge of Honor despite the ceremonial transfer of ownership to West Virginia that occurred in 2009.

October and at least for
now, that prediction
seems to be on track. The
bridge will then be turned
over to West Virginia
once the paperwork has
all the signatures.
The process of finalizing the project includes
counting every penny
before the contractor
signs off on the final
numbers. Rose said the
cost is expected to be
right around $64 million.

Before ODOT could
begin the process of
finalizing the project, it
had to work through a
punch list of minor
repairs and maintenance
items earlier this year.
After this took place, a
final inspection was
completed which was the
beginning of the end concerning wrapping ur the
financial aspect o the
project. · ·
.
As reported earlier this

year, West Virginia is at
least paying for half of
the electric bill on the
bridge while Ohio pays
for the other half. Again,
once ownership is transferred, West Virginia will
administer contracts and
inspections of the structure though Ohio will
continue to r.ay half of
the electric b1ll, ensuring
the states are connected
by not just the Ohio
River but a utility bill.

Mitchell-Bateman to speak at John Gee program
STAFF REPORT

GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Mildred
Mitchell-Bateman, a pioneer in the
mental health field, will be the
keynote speaker for the John Gee
Black Historical Center fall program. scheduled for 4 p.m ..
Saturday, Oct. 2. A reception will
be held following the program.
Mitchell-Bateman is the developer of the program "Breaking the
Disability Cycle" and is considered a trailblazer in the treatment
of mental health patients.
Mitchell-Bateman was inspired
to help people at the age of 12 in
the wake of a tornado that struck
her hometown of Cordele, Ga.
After completing her studies at
Johnson C. Smith University in
Charlotte, N.C., and the Women's
Medical College of Pennsylvania,

located in Philadelphia, she was
hired at Lakin Hospital in Mason
County, W.Va., where she served
from 1951-60. During her tenure
there, she held the titles of clinical
director and ~uperintendent.
After leaving Lakin in 1960,
Mitchell-Bateman was appointed
supervisor of the West Virginia
Dept. of Mental Health's Division
of Professional Services. In 1962,
Mitchell-Bateman became the first
African American woman to lead a
West Virginia state agency when
she was appointed director of the
state Dept. of Mental Health.
Mitchell-Bateman
reached
another milestone in American history in 1973 when she became the
first African American woman to
serve as vice president of the
American Psychiatric Association.
President Jimmy Carter named her

to the President's Commission on
Mental Health, which set the stage
for the passage of the Mental
Health Systems Act of 1980.
Mitchell-Bateman went on to
serve as professor and chair of the
Marshall University School of
Medicine's department of psychiatry from 1977-82, and served as
clinical director of the Huntington
State Hospital from 1985-2000.
The facility was renamed in her
honor in 1999.
\1itchell-Bateman received the
Lifetime Achievement Award from
the West Virginia District Branch
of the American Psychiatric
Association in 2000 and was the
2004 recipient of the Governor's
Award
for
Civil
Rights
Contribution to the State of West
Virginia.

Relief
fromPageAl
Church, which church members
and volunteers man. All donations
are processed and coordinated
there.
Byer also encouraged residents
to make cash contributio.ns.
Reedsville Tornado Victims relief
account has been established at
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
and donations may be made to that

Bethel Worship Center, Thppers
fund at any pan.k branch. A committee selected from the communi- Plains, has also established a relief
ty will be charged with determin- fund to benefit the families affecting how those funds are to be dis- ed by the disaster, and both
bursed.
accounts will be used for direct
Olive Township Fire Chief
support
to families who lost homes
Russell Carson said Friday the
·and
belongings.
The Bethel fund
committee will be appointed and
will
be
controlled
by the church's
an application process outlined
leadership.
soon.

fromPageAl
County jumped the Ohio River to
Wood County, W.Va., where a
Belleville man was killed.
Other churches and volunteer
groups in the area have banded
together to provide aid and relief to
those who lost their homes to the
stonn. Food, clothing and other

supplies have been donated to the
families and individuals touched
by this disaster.
The Reedsville Tornado VIctims
account has been established at
Farmers Bank and Savings Co. and
donations may be made at any of
the bank's branch offices.

Services
fromPageAl
However. Null told the commission that the victims of the recent
storms may be able to receive
assistance through the Small
Business Administration and they
will be receiving state assistance
as well.
"Just because they're denied
doesn't mean they are shut out,"
Null said. "What it does dd is limit
a lot of the benefits that they could
get."
.
Gallia County Job and Family .

Sunday

Night:

A

chance of showers, mainly after 1 a.m. Mostly
cloudy, with a low
around 53. East wind
between 5 and 7 mph.
Chance of precipitation
is 40 percent. New rainfall amounts of less than
a tenth of an inch possible.
Monday:
Showers
likely, mainly before 10
a.m. Cloudy, with a high
near 73. Chance of precipitation is 60 percent.
New rainfall amounts
between a quarter and
half of an inch possible.

Monday

Night:

A

chance of showers.
Cloudy, with a low
around 56. Chance of

precipitation is 50 per.
cent.
Thesday: A chance of
showers. Mostly cloudy,
with a high near 75.
Chance of precipitation
is 50 percent.

Thesday

Night:

A

chance of showers.
Mostly cloudy, with a
low around 53. Chance
of precipitation is 30 percent.
Wednesday: Partly
sunny, with a high near
78.

Wednesday

Night:

Partly cloudy, with a low
around 52.
Thursday:
Mostly
sunny, with a high near
78.

Thursday

Night:

Partly cloudy, with a low
around 53.
Friday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 74.

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 36.50
A.kzo (NASDAQ)
62.60
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) Big Lots (NYSE) 34.29
Bob Evans (NASDAQ)
BorgWarner (NYSE) 49.68
Century Alum (NASDAQ)- 12.65
Champion (NASDAQ)
- 1.14
Channing Shops (NASDAQ)- 3.58
City Holding (NASDAQ)
- 30.66
Collins (NYSE)- 57.68
DuPont (NYSE) - 45.58
US Bank (NYSE) 22.41
Gen Electric (NYSE) 16.66
Harley-Davidson
(NYSE)- 28.50
JP Morgan (NYSE) 39.75
Kroger (NYSE) - 22.09
Ltd Brands (NYSE)
27.18
Norlolk So (NYSE) 59.88

Services Director Dana Glassburn 'amount.
Glassburn was also present durwas also present during the meeting and presented the commission ing the meeting for a bid opening
with an amendment to a contract for an upcoming program that is
through
the
Gallia-Vinton being organized through his
Education Service Center (ESC) agency.
for a teen pregnancy prevention
Only one bid was presented for
and parenting program. According
this program, also related to famito Glassburn, ESC has requested
extra funding for this successful ly stability and teen pregnancy
program in the amount of $30,000 prevention, by Woodland Centers
and the commission approved an in Gallipolis in the amount of
amendment to the contract in that $93,290.

•

OVBC (NASDAQ) 19.00
BBT (NYSE) - 24.51
Peoples (NASDAQ) 13.38
Pepsico (NYSE) - 66.13
Premier (NASDAQ)
6.18
Rockwell (NYSE) 61.71
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ)
-7.63
Royal Dutch Shell 60.30
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)- 75.13
Wal-Mart (NYSE) 54.08
Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.40
WesBanco (NYSE)
16.59
Worthington (NYSE) 15.20
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for Septembe.
24, 2010, provided b
Edward Jones financial
advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441
and Lesley Marrero in Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

UNWANTED
FACIAL HAIR

Funds
topped $2 million. About 300 people have been left homeless by the
disaster. Fortunately, there was no
loss of life in Meigs County and
only a few injuries were reported.
The storm also caused significant damage in Athens County and
after passing through Meigs

Sunday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 75.
Northeast wind between
5 and 9 mph.

IS IT INTERFERING WITH YOUR
EVERYDAY LIFE?
Tweezing or waxing facial everyday just stimulates more hair
growth. When looking in the mirror your dark shadow appears
more physical. If you don't start dealing with the hair growth it
will begin to affect you mentally. lt won't go away by itself. Don't
let anyone tell you it's your age, it just happens. Male pattern hair
growth on women is called Hirsutism. It often results from a
disease that cause increased levels of the hormone androgen.
You will need the help of two specaalists: an Electrologist and a
Reproductive Endocrinologist. There are no magical pills or
machines for a quick fix.
I'm no different that you. I battled facial hair and went to many
doctors for years wath no answers until I found a specialist. 1 have
participated in hormonal research at John Hopkin's University,
Baltimore. MD since 1979. Hormones are unique when their
balanced you feel great But. when their off balance they can cause
a lot of problems.
Electrolysis is the ONLY PERMANENT PROVEN hair removal
treatment. l'm the only Electrologist in WV to have passed a state
license in Electrology. I'm the ONLY Certified Professional
Electrologist to have credentials by the American Electrology
Association.

CANDY'S ELECTROLYSIS
304-295-4533
506 25th St., Vienna, WV
FREE CONSULTATION

�PageA3

·~unbap \iimes -ientinel

Sunday, September 26,

SEE YOU AT THE POLE

2010:

Meigs County calendar
Ridge
Commumty;
Church, dinner at noon. •
Brian
&amp;
Family;
Sunday, Sept. 26
Connections,
Just
Us
RACINE
The
and
Others.
Thomas
and
Isabel.
LAUREL CLIFF
(Weaver) Stobart reunion
will be held
1 p.m. Community wiener roast,
Racine
Star
Mill 6 p.m., with food, fellowPark ..Take covered d1sh. ship, campfire songs,
Cliff
Free
Fam1ly and friends invit- Laurel
Methodist Church.
ed.
POMEROY
Monday, Sept. 27
Dayspring In concert,
RACINE - Southern
Local
Board
of 6:30 p.m., Mt. Union
Church,
Education, regular meet- Baptist
ing, 8 p.m ., Southern Carpenter Hill Road.
Sunday, Oct. 3
High School, media cenROCK SPRINGS
ter.
Hemlock
Grove
POMEROY
Veterans
Service Chnst1an Church, home-·
Commission, 9 a.m., 117 coming, 9:30 a.m. worship
service,
Skip
Memorial Dr.
Domigan,
Joseph
POMEROY - Meigs
12:30
p.m.
County Library Board, McCall,
regular meeting, 3 :30 potluck, 2 p.m. afternoon
worship with speaker
p.m., Pomeroy Branch.
Mike
Hazelton
and .
Saturday, Oct. 2
RACINE
- Star music.
Grange #778 and Star
Junior Grange #878,
potluck supper at 6:30
p.m. followed by meeting
at 7:30 p.m., final plans
for chicken barbecue
held on Sunday, Oct. 3
will be 'made.

Public meetings

Submitted photo

l

uth Gallia High School students participated in the 2010 See You at the Pole event last Wednesday. The ser' was sponsored by the South Gallia FCA group and featured Rev. Ray Witmer and songs by the South
allia Cboir and a duet by Colton Hensley and Ton Duncan.
·

Gallia County calendar
Sunday, Sept. 26
GALLIPOLIS - Ice
cream social, 6 p.m.,
First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave., Gallipolis. Public
invited.
Tuesday, Sept. 28
EWINGTON
American Legion Post
161 meeting, 7:30pm.,
Ewington Academy
Thursday, Sept. 30
GALLIP.OLIS
French 500 Free Clinic,
1-4 p.m., 258 Pinecrest
Drive, off Jackson Pike.
Saturday, Oct. 2
ERCERVILLE
1na n
Trace
ntary School fall
c arnival ,
4
p. m.
Cornhole tournament at
5 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS
Christ United Methodist
Church bean dinner, 5
p.m .. 9688 Ohio 7 S.
Tuesday, Oct. 5
GALLIPOLIS
Holzer
Clinic
and
Holzer Medical Center
luncheon,
Retirees
noon, Courtside Bar
and Grill.
Friday, Oct. 8
GALLIPOLI S
Gall1a Soil and Water
Conservation District
board meeting, 1 :30
p.m., C.H. Mckenzie Ag
Center, 111 Jackson
Pike,
Suite
1569,
Gallipolis.
Thursday, Oct. 14
ORTER
mgfield
Twp.
•
Trustees 2011 budget
hearing,
7
p.m.,
Sprmgfield Twp . Fire
Department, Porter.
RODNEY Gallia
Co. Retired Teachers
luncheon,
noon,
Rodney
United
Methodist
Church.
Speaker: Melvin Biars.
RSVP : Karen Cornell,
256-6846.
Monday, Oct. 18
GALLIPOLIS
Gallia
Co.
Twp.
Association meeting, 7
p.m., Gallia Co. Senior
Resource Center, 1167
Ohio 160, Gallipolis.
Friday, Nov. 12
GALLIPOLIS
'
Gallia Soil and Water
Conservation District
board meeting, 1:30
C.H. Mckenzie Ag
liter, 111 Jackson
ke,
Suite
1569,
Gallipolis.

.«,

Birthdays
Virginia
Kathleen
"Katie" Montgomery will
celebrate her 85th birth; day on Oct. 11 . Cards
may be sent to her at
Holzer Senior
Care

Center, 380 Colonial
Drive,
Room
111 B,
Bidwell, OH 45614.

Church Events
Sunday, Sept. 26
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 a.m., evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Pastor Rick Barcus
preaching.
Jamie
Rainey, special music.
BIDWELL
Homecoming, 10 a.m. ,
Garden of My Heart
Tabernacle, 4950 Ohio
850, Bidwell. Dorsel
Mess1ck
preaching .
Perry Family singing.
CHESHIRE - The
Gracemen in concert,·
10:30 a.m., Cheshire
Baptist Church.
GALLIPOLIS - The
church of Christ in
Gallipolis meets at 234
Chapel Drive. Sunday
meeting times are: 9:30
a.m., Bible class; 10:30
a.m., worship; 5 p.m.,
evening assembly. The
church meets at 7 p.m.
Wednesday for Bible
study.
Web
site :
www. ch ape lh illchurchofchrist.org.
GALLIPOLIS
Special service, 10
a.m.,
Faith
Valley
Community
Church,
Bulaville
Pike,
Gallipolis.
Brother
James Michael Rainy
ministering with song
and testimony. Pastor
JR Preston preaching.
Info: (740) 446-7851.
GALLIPOLIS - The
Gallipolis church of
Christ meets at 214
Upper River Road.
Sunday services include
10 a.m. Bible study, with
classes for all ages, and
11 a.m . worship. Bible
study is also held at 7
p.m . Wednesday. Web
site: www.gallipolischurchofchrist. net.
GALLIPOLIS - Ice
cream social, 6 p.m. ,
First Church of the
Nazarene, 1110 First
Ave ., Gallipolis. Public
invited.
MIDDLEPORT
Vo1ces of Faith Singers
in concert, 6 p.m., Old
Bethel Freewill Baptist
Church. Clyde Ferrell
preaching. Rev. Ralph
Butcher invites public.
Church located on Ohio
7 at Story's Run Road,
Middleport.
Wednesday, Sept. 29
ADDISON - Prayer
meeting,
7
o.m.,
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church . Rev. Jamie
Fortner preaching.

Church events
Sunday, Oct. 3
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 a.m ., evening
service ,
6
p.m.,
Addision
Freewill
Baptist Church. Rev.
Bob Thompson preaching.
JACKSON Rev.
Joshue Barrios from
Guatemala speaking,
11 a.m. , Ef1d Time
H.arvest Church, 1215
Dixon Run Road, off
Ohio 327 exit of U.S. 35,
Jackson.
Special
singing . Prayer for the
afflicted . Dinner after
service. Into: (740) 6453052.
GALLIPOLIS - Life
Chain Sunday, 2:303 :30 p.m., Ohio River
Plaza , Eastern Ave .,
Gallipolis.
GALLIPOLIS - Pet
blessing ceremony, 1
p.m.,
St.
Peter's
Episcopal Church, 541
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Info: 446-2483.
Wednesday, Oct. 6
ADDISON - Prayer
meeting,
7
p.m.,
Addison Freewil Baptist
Church.
Rev.
Mark
Dunlap preaching.
Saturday, Oct. 9
VINTON - Hog roast,
gospel
sing ,
noon,
Vinton
Full
Gospel
Church. All singers and
public welcome . Info:
446-4023.
GALLIPOLIS
Addison Freewill Baptist
Church Sunday school
picnic, 4 p.m., Raccoon
Creek County Park,
Wild Turkey Shelter.
Sunday, Oct. 10
ADDISON - Sunday
school, 10 a.m. ; evening
service, 6 p.m., Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Rev.
Rick
Barcu~
preaching .
Wednesday, Oct. 13
GALLIPOLIS -. Gallia
Area
Ministerial
Association
meeting,
noon,
St.
Peter's
· Episcopal Church, 541
Second Ave., Gall ipolis.
Info:
Rev.
Leslie
Flemming, 446-2483 or
e-mail
leslieflemming @columbus.rr.com
Tuesday, Oct. 19
GALLIPOLIS
Christian
Women's
Connection,
noon,
Courtside Grill, 308
Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Speaker:
Dianna
Sutherland.
Music:
Karen Polcyn . RSVP :
Nancy, 3'67-7443 , or
linda, 446-4319.

Revivals
Sept.

29-0ct.

2,

Sunday, Sept. 26
McDaniel
Crossroads
RACINE
Pentecostal
Church , Homecoming at Eagle
2600 Cadmus Road ,
Patriot Time: 7 p.m . .
Subscribe today
Speaker:
Dean
Meigs • 992-2155
Thompson.

Gallia • 446-23~2
Oct. 3-6, Church of
Christ, 14840 Oh1o 554,
Bidwell. Speaker· Bill
Mead. Sunday, 11 a.m.
and 6 p.m.; MondayWednesday, 6:30p.m.

~~
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Page.A4
Sunday,

~unbap ~tmes . ~enttnel
825 Third Avenue • Gallipolis, Ohio

(740) 446-2342 • FAX (740) 446-3008

.

www.mydailytribune.com

Septembe~ 26, 2010

U.S. Senate hopeful
Christine O'Don:tl.ell

.ad:tnits she dabbled
in witchcraft ...

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

Andrew Carter
Managing Editor

Pam Caldwell
Advertising Director
Congress shall make uo law respecting att
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, attd to petition the
Gor,ernment for a redress ofgrievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

YOUR OPINION

Kind lawman
Dear Editor:
We called the Gallia County Sheriff's Office over a seemingly small situation: a neighbor had taken our brand new
kitty and would not give it back. However, this was not a
small situation to bur little six and three year old children.
Deputy J. Ward came out promptly and listened to
our complaint, treated us with respect, and kindly
offered to talk to the neighbor. For him to carry his
authority so well, yet be so kind. highly impacted my
three year old son, who, in the last year had been a little scared of policemen.
We explained that Deputy Ward would get his kitty
back from the "bad" person who took him. And Deputy
Ward did exactly as he promised! Jude made friends with
Deputy Ward, too. which really blessed me as his mother.
Deputy Ward is· perhaps the kindest }X)liceman I have
ever met. How wonderful that you have a man who carries
his legal authority while doling out such kindness to people!
Barbara Farley
Gltllipolis

Keeper of historY only?
Dear Editor:
On Aug. 23, 20 lO. in a Gallipolis City Commission
meeting. it was stated by an uninformed person, ''The
Gallia County Historical Society is the keeper of history and they have a museum.'' It insinuated that we
do not do genealogy. This statement is not true.
J would like to correct this misinformation. Firstly,
let me say thai we are the Gallia County Historical
Society and we house the Gallia County Historical and
Genealogical Research Center, the Gallia County
Historical Museum. the Gallia County Military
Museum and the Gallia County Military Wall of Honor.
The Gallia County Historical and Genealogical
Research Center has been helping visitors anp locals
find their ancestors for many years. We have had thousands of grateful people pass through our doors from all
walks of life, all 50 states and many foreign countries.
Our main floor is filled with genealogical research
information and recently we expanded by opening a
land records section on our lower floor.
We are one of the largest genealogical research centers in the tri-state area. We are the only one in the
area which is open five days a week to serve the public. Did I mention. all of this is free of charge?
We do have museums and preserve history, but our
main function is to aid people in finding their ancestors. We have several professional genealogists and
many capable research helpers to help the public
search out their ancestors.
lt appears that everyone who comes to our society
leaves with more information than they came with
and gives raving compliments of our facility.
I truly hope this clears up the misinformation and
misunderstanding of the Gallia County Historical and
Genealogical Research Center's name. role. function
and what the center has to offer. We invite the public
to stop by and see for yourself that we are more than
a museum, we do genealogy!
Margaret Suzanne Wise
President, Gallia County Historical Society
Gallipolis

~unbap

mtmes -~enttnel

ReacEr
Correction Policy
Our main concern in all stories ts to
be accurat.e. If you know of an error
in a story, please call one of our
newsrooms.

Our main numb~rs a~;
l!:nbunr • Gallipolis, OH

(740) 446-2342

Sentinel • Pomeroy. OH
(740) 992:2155
i~r!JtStn

serv~
45631.
Periodical postage
paid at Gallipolis.
Member: The Associated
Press. the West Virginia
Press Association, and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.
Postmaster: Send address
corrections to the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH 45631.

AP-GJK Poll.· GOP more
fired up as elections near
Americans fed up.with both Democrats' and Republicans•
BY ALAN FRAM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

A political enthusiasm gap is
helping Republicans in their
effort to roll up big gains in the
congressional elections. GOP
supporters are a lot more interested in getting their party's c~ndi­
dates elected than Democrats are
in electing theirs, a new AP-GfK
poll shows.
Democrats struggling to defend
their control of Congress have
lucked out in one way:
Republicans are at least as unpopular as they are, the poll shows.
·Yet GOP voters are more fired up,
leaving the Democrats little more
than a month to energize their
supporters.
How? They're using President
Barack Obama and his Cabinet.
AI Gore. too. And until Election
Day dawns on Nov. 2, the
Democrats will try to refocus voters from their anger over the stubbornly limp economy to the risks
of putting Republicans in charge
on Capitol Hill.
It's a common theme: A TV ad
by Senate Majority Leader Harry
Reid, D-Nev., accuses his GOP
opponent of a proposal that is
"not just extreme, that's dangerous," while one by Rep. Larry
KisselL D-N.C., says his challenger would shield tax breaks for
companies that ship American
jobs overseas.
"There's a level of frustration
the American people have that we
understand and that obviously
Democrats are trying to address,''
said party spokesman Brad
Woodhouse. "But I haven't nm
into anybody who says they want
to go back to the fall of 2008,''
when Republicans held the White
House.
Also helping Democrats round
up votes will be their traditional
labor pnion allies, who plan to
spend nearly $100 million helping
the party's candidates.· This
includes plans by the AFL-CIO,
the nation's largest labor federation, to mobilize members in 26
states and target 70 House races
and 18 Senate contests with television ads, phone banks and
leaflets.
Republicans, energized by tea
party fervor and capitalizing on
frustration over the sluggisb. economy, are tailoring their caxhpaign
strategy to reflect concerns about
job losses and government growth

under Obama as he fought a
recession and won a battle ·to
revamp the country's health care
system. In a fundraising appeal emailed Friday, the head of the
House RepubHcan campaign arm.
Rep. Pete Sessions of Texas.
warned that the Democratic agenda means ··America gets less fewer jobs. Lower incomes. Less
freedom.''
Says Rob Jesmer. executive
director of Senate Republicans·
campaign committee: "We need
to continue to tell people that the
more Republicans who get elected, the less chance the president
will have to enact his agenda.''
The Associated Press-GfK Poll
this month shows that the public
is fed up with both parties. Only
38 percent approve of how congressional Democrats are handling their jobs. and just 31 percent like how Republicans are
doing theirs. Fifty-nine percent
are unhappy with how Democrats
are nursing the economy. 64 percent are upset by the GOP's work
on the country's top issue.
More than half have negative
views of each party. Most say
Obama isn't cooperating enough
on the economy, but even more accuse Republicans of the same
thing. And former President
George W. Bush and former
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin - the
only two Republicans the APGfK Poll tested - are significantly less popular than Ol:iama.
Even so, Republicans have the
upper hand because their supporters seem significantly likelier to
show up Election Day and vote.
Political scientists say people are
likeliest to vote' based on present
conditions - which today means
a wounded economy . - rather
than choosing between competing
philosophies for the future.
In the AP-Gfl( Poll. 54 percent
who strongly dislike Democrats
express intense interest in the
election. compared with just 40
percent of those with very negative views of Republicans. Nearly
six in 10 who say their November
vote will signal opposition to
Obama also say they are extremely interested in the campaign.
compared with only about four in
10 who say their vote will show
support for him.
Overall. 49 percent of those
supporting their Republican congressional candidate are very

inter~sted in the election, compared with 39 percent of those
backing the Democrat in their
local race.
The bottom line: Registered
voters in the AP-GfK Poll are
divided evenly over which party's
congressional candidate they will
support. but Republicans have a
slight edge among voters considered likeliest to show up.
Having even a scant edge in
motivated suppotters can make a
big difference - especially in
midtenn elections. only about 40
percent of voters nationally have
been bothering to cast ballots. a
figure than can dip to 30 percent
in some states.
Aware of that. Obama will be
hitting the road in coming days.
headlining at least four major rallies in Wisconsin. Pennsylvania,
Ohio and Nevada. During next
week's rally in Madison. Wi.
Vice President Joe Biden a
members of the Cabinet will fan
out to college campuses across
the country in hopes of activating
students who heavily supported
Obama in his 2008 election victory.
On Friday. former Vice
President AI Gore joined the
Democratic campaign to drum up
party voters. He signed a
fundraising e-mail for House
Democrats~ saying Republicans'
goal is "to restore the very same
policies followed for eight years
by th.~ Bush-Cheney White
House.
Democrats have also used their
control of Congress to try changing the campaign's subject to
social issues that might prompt
their supporters to vote.
This week Reid forced a Senate
vote on a bill with provisions
appealing to two Democratic constituencies: one repealing the
"don't ask. don't tell" law barring
gays from openly serving in the
military. the other helping hu.
dreds of thousands of your
immigrants become legal U.S.
residents. Republicans blocked
the measure.
The AP-GfK Poll was conducted from Sept. 8-13 by GfK Roper
Public Affairs &amp; Corporate
Communications and involved
landline and cell phone intervie\VS
with l ,000 randomly chosen
adults. The margin of sampling
error was plus or minus 4.2 percentage points

• Pt. Pleasant. WV

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www.mydallyreglster.com
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mdtnews@mydallytribune.com

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mdrnews@mydallyregister.com

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�Sunday, September 26,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Page As

Deaths

Obituaries
Ruby Mae Ferguson
Ruby Mae Morris
Ferguson,
89,
of
Gallipolis, went home to
be with the Lord on
September 23,
at Overbrook
Middleport,
Ohio.
She was born June 9.
1921, at Gay, West
Virginia, daughter of the
late Virgil and Orlie
Rhodes Morris. She was
a homemaker and a
member of the First
Church of the Nazarene in Gallipolis.
She is survived by her daughters, Beverly Gomez of
Fort Smith, Arkansas, and Brenda (Joseph) Anderson
of Washington, West Virginia; sons, Morris (Peggy)
Ferguson of Midway City, California; Ronald
(Connie) Ferguson of Coolville, Ohio and Rodney
(P~tricia) Ferguson of New ~lbany, Ohio; 10 grandchildren, Rod Fowler of Spnngdale, Arkansas; Tim
Fowler of Carson City, Nevada; Kristin Ridenour of
Greenwood, Arkansas; Joseph Anderson, III of
Mineral Wells, West Virginia; Angela Dee Sakach of
Flee~wood, Pennsylvania; Seth Ferguson of
Gallipolis, Ohio; Sean Ferguson of Gallipolis, Otiio;
Tad Ferguson of Midway City, California; Adam
Ferguson of Midway City, California and Heidi
Takagi of Columbus, Ohio; fourteen great grandchild~en and eight step grandchildren. She is also surVIved by her brothers, Edsel (Bernadene) Morris of
Ripley, West Virginia; Edgar Morris of Dunbar, West
ginia and Kenneth (Lulabelle) Morris of
• ntington, West Virginia; sisters, Eleanor Myers of
Dunbar, West Virginia and Janet (Cliff) Lones of
Muskeegon, Michigan; several nieces and nephews
and many dear friends.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded in
death by her husband of 50 years, Ralph Ferguson in
1990; a son, Michael Ferguson in 1990; her sisters,
Glenva Randolph, Dorothy Johns and Ruth Skinner
and her brothers, Ayward Morris and Keith Morris.
Funeral services will at 1L a.m., .Monday.
September 27, 2010, at the Willis Funeral Home with
Rev. Gene Harmon officiating. Burial will follow in
the Parsons Cemetery at Gay, West Virginia. Friends
may call from 6-8 p.m. on Sunday, September 26,
2010, at the funeral home.
Please visit www. willisfuneralhome.com to send email condolences.

assistant baseball coach for the River Valley Raiders
Jr. Pony League and a member of Vinton Baptist
Church.
In addition to his parents, J.C. is survived by his
wife, Xanthe Bennett Glassburn, whom he married
September 27, 2002, in Addison. Also surviving are
sons, James R. (Ashly) Glassburn, Jackson, Ohio, and
Joshua L. Glassburn, Gallipolis, Ohio; step-daughter,
Tia Hemsley, Gallipolis, Ohio; sisters, Jane A.
Brandeberry and Aimee E. Glassburn, both of
Bidwell, Ohio, and Erica (John) Harless, Gallipolis,
Ohio; brothers, Tony (Michelle) Switzer, Newp01t
News, Va.; Tim (Aimee) Switzer, Hurricane,
W.Va.; Tom Switzer, Vinton, Ohio, and Steven (Amy)
Truesdell, Patriot, Ohio; paternal grandfather, Carson
Carter, Lancaster, Ohio; father-in-law and mother-inlaw, Roger and Joyce Bennett; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Wayne and Christen Bennett; nieces and
nephews, Shelby Smittle, Chelsea Brown, Levi
Brandeberry, Cobi Brandeberry, Ty Smittle, Chloe
Bennett, "Woota" and special niece, Addison
Glassburn, aU of Gallipolis, Ohio.
J.C. was preceded in death by paternal grandparents, Vaughn C. and Thena J. Moore Glassburn and
maternal grandmother, Anna F. Carter.
'
Funeral services will be 11 a.m., Tuesday,
September 28, 2010, at the Vinton Baptist Church,
11818 Ohio 160, Vinton, with Rev. Marvin Sallee and
Rev. Chester Hess officiating. Burial will follow at
Fairview Cemetery, Bidwell. Friends may call at the
Vinton Baptist Church from 3-8 p.m., Monday with
Masonic Services at 7:45 p.m., conducted by the
Vinton Masonic Lodge 131. Arrangements by
McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vinton Chapel.
Condolences may be sent to www.mccoymoore.com.

Dwight Bissell

Dwight Ray Bissell,
went to be with the Lord
on September 24, 2010.
Born Dec. 27, 1944, he
was the son of Margaret
Singer Bissell and the
late Charles L. Bissell.
He was a retired, selfemployed contractor. He
loved singing and playing gospel music, attending church and being
with his family and
friends.
l:le is survived bv his
mother; his wife of 45 years, Carolyn Bass Bissell;
one son, Jeffery (Ruth) Bissell; two daughters, Sherri
(Allen) Warth and Angela (Scott) Sloan; three grandchildren, Latham Bissell, Mikenzie and Allison
Warth; two step-grandchildren, Samantha and Kavika
James
C. "J.C."
Sloan; five sisters, Helen (Sheldon) Garverick, Frona
Glassburn, 43 , Gallipolis,
Riffle, Ada (Curtis) Randolph, Karen (Larry) Bowcott
passed away unexpectedand Naomi Hawes; five brothers, Delbert (Donna)
ly on September 22,
Bissell, Douglas (Carolyn) Bissell, Glen (Melissa)
2010, as a result of a
Bissell, David (Nancy) Bissell and Robert (Sally)
farming accident. He was
Bissell; three sisters-in-law, Eleanor Lawson, Jean
born December 15, 1966,
Young and Barbara Bissell; an aunt, Opal Hollon and
. Gallipolis, the son of
many nieces and nephews.
1es
V.
(Joanne)
He was preceded in death by his father; two brothass burn of Bidwell and
ers, Roger Bissell and Dannie Bissell; three brothers.Pam Carter (Gerald)
in-law, Roy Frank Riffle, Glen Lawson and David
Truesdell of Gallipolis.
Young; his father-in-law, Stanley Bass and mother-in' He was a 1985 graduate
law, Ge1tmde Bass.
of North Gallia High
Services will be held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, Sept. 28,
School, a heavy equip2010, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville,
ment operator and avid farmer on his family fann. His with Rev. Curtis Randolph officiating. Burial will be
memberships include: International Union of in the Heiney Cemetery.
Operating Engineers Local 132, Charleston, W.Va.;
Friends may call at the funeral home Monday, from
Vinton F&amp;AM Lodge 131; Aladdin Temple; 4-8 P.M.
Gallipolis Shrine Club, Hillbilly Clan 7; Advisor to
You can sign the online guestbook at www,.whitethe Barnyard Buckaroos 4-H Club. He was also an schwarzelfuneralhome.com.

James C. Glassbum

E L EC T ION 2010

AEP leaves chamber over Kasich endorsement
Democrats may have .contributed
to the decision on whom to
endorse. The party has touted a
COLUMBUS
American Main Street-versus-Wall Street
Electric Power's Ohio division is message all year, aiming particular
resigning its seat on the Ohio criticism in Ohio at Kasich, a forAamber of Commerce board mer managing director at Lehman
. buse the organization decided Brothers. The investment bank's
to get involved in the governor's collapse two years ago helped set
race, another sign of tension in the off the national financial meltbusiness community over the cam- down.
Doehrel said the chamber's 66paign's rhetoric.
The political ann of Ohio's member board of directors voted
largest business advocacy group in a blind ballot earlier this month
broke a 117-year silence in the on whether to free its PAC to make
contest on Thursday and endorsed an endorsement and the vote was
Republican
challenger John overwhelmingly positive.
"Had we had opinions 51 perKasich over Democratic Gov. Ted
cent one way and 49 percent the
Strickland.
AEP spokeswoman Melissa other, we wouldn't have done it.
McHenry said Friday the endorse- We got the sense that was by and
ment prompted AEP Ohio large the way the business commuPresident Joe Hamrock to leave nity wanted us to go," he said. "Do
the chamber's board. McHenry I think all 4,000-plus of our memsays the utility does not believe it bers think we did either the right
was appropriate for the business thing or think we should have done
something at all? Absolutely not."
group to endorse a candidate.
Another
AEP
executive,
"It creates division in the chamber
membership and it pits businesses Chairman and CEO Michael
against one another," McHenry Morris, co-signed an open letter to
said. ''We will continue to remain both political parties on Thursday
involved in those business organiza- pleading fot an end to escalating
anti-business rhethoric that has
tions that are nonpartisan."
In making Thursday's endorse- marked the race.
"Our business climate is chalent announcement, Chamber
lenging
enough in this state to give
~ident Andrew Doehrel concedW ihat it had been a difficult deci- any of our companies a reason,
sion for the group to make an other than a legitimate economic
reason, to leave this state and go
endorsement.
He said the decision, which was elsewhere,'' wrote Morris and
left in the hands of 14 members of Western &amp; Southern Financial
the chamber's politic:al . action Group CEO John Barrett, cocommittee. was not an md1ctment chairs of the nonpartisan Ohio
of Strickland's track record but a Business Roundtable.
The pair said denigrating good
vote of confidence that K~si~h 's
policy stanc.es coul~ lead OhiO rnto Ohio business is ''unnecessary,
unwanted and unwise."
a better busmess climate.
The letter followed a volley of
Doehrel said anti-business
attacks
by
Strickland
and business-related TV ads and attacks.
By Julie Carr Smyth
Associated Press

~unbap m:trnes -~entinel •

A Strickland ad that began airing
in August criticized Kasich for
supporting outsourcing policies
while serving on the board of a
northeast Ohio medical equipment
manufacturer,
Elyria-based
Invacare.
Nilda Ramos, whose husband lost
his job at the company, said in the
ad: "I believe they sent those jobs
overseas so they can make more
profit. I don't think John Kasich values hard working people."
Critics descended on the ad as an
attack not on Kasich but Invacare
- the largest public employer in
Lorain County.
Local papers chastised the governor. County leaders wrote a Jetter
to Strickland, saying: "Any
responsible business .owner or
chief executive would have deep
reservations about investing in a
community where even large,
long-established and successful
employers- are not immune from
being criticized by the state's most
powerful public official for political purposes."
But using businesses for campaign purposes didn't stop there.
A Strickland ad aired featuring
Scotts Miracle-Oro Co. CEO Jim
Hagedorn, a Republican who is supporting the Democrat's candidacy.
The Republican Govemors
Ohio
Association
and
the
Republican Party sent out dueling emails noting that Hagedorn lives on
Long Island, not in Ohio. and that
his company has a state tax lien.
One Republican consultant sent
out an e-mail equating Hagedorn
to "a Nazi boss." He later said his
phrasing was "over the top."
The
escalating
exchanges
prompted Morris and Barrett to
call for a return to "healthy and
respectful debate."

Edna May VermJiion
Edna May Vermilion, 90, Gallipolis, formerly of
Newark, Ohio, died Friday, Sept. 24, 2010, at Holzer
Medical Center. Funeral services will be held at 11
a.m., Wednesday, Sept. 29, 2010, at Brucker-Kishler
Funeral Home, 935 N. 21st. St., Newark. Burial will
follow at Newark Memorial Gardens. Friends may
call from 6-8 p.m., Tuesday. Sept, 28. 2010, at
Brucker-Kishler Funeral Home. Local arrangements
by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Gallipolis.

Lisa J. Burd
Lisa J. Burd, 40, Crown City, died Friday, Sept. 24,
2010, at the Hospice House of Huntington. The funeral service will be held at 2 p.m., Sunday, Sept. 26,
2010, at Hall Funeral Home, ProctorvilJe. Burial will
follow at Langdon Cemetery in Chesapeake.
Visitation will be held from 1-2 p.m., Sunday, Sept.
26, 2010, at the funeral home. Condolences may be
sent to the family at www.timeformemory.com/haU.

Local briefs
TB clinic evening hours
POMEROY - The Meigs County TB Clinic will
be open until 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 28.

Addison Pike closed Monday
GALLIPOLIS - Addison Pike, at the junction with
Ohio 7, will be closed Monday, Sept. 27 from 7 a.m.5:30 p.m. for a manhole installation, according to
Gallia County Engineer Brett A. Boothe. Local traffic
will need to use other County roads as a detour.

Addison Township meeting
ADDISON - The Addison Township Trustees will
hold a special meeting at 11 a.m. on Monday, Sept. 27
at the Addison Townhouse. The purpose of the meeting is to adopt a resolution approving an Issue I
Cooperation Agreement with Springfield.Township.

Free clinic Sept. 30
GALLIPOLIS - The French 500 Free Clinic will
be open from 1-4 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 30. The clinic
is located at 258 Pinecrest Drive, off Jackson Pike.
The clinic serves the underinsured citizens of Gallia
County.

Lineage banquet Oct. 9
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia County Genealogical
Society, OGS Chapter, Lineage Society Banquet will
be held at 6 p.m., Saturday, Oct. 9 at the Holiday Inn.
The topic for this year is the Deardorff Family by
Barbara Cadot Keating and her talk will be delivered
by Marianne Campbell. RSVP by Sept. 30. Call 4464242 or stop by to sign up at 57 Court Street, from 10
a.m.-4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday.

Chicken barbecue at Racine
RACINE - Star Grange #778 will host a chicken
barbecue and Meet the Candidates event on Sunday,
Oct. 3. Serving is from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Meet the
Candidates is at 12:30 p.m.

Shrinettes basket games
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Lady Shrinettes
will host a basket games fundraiser at 6 p.m.,
Saturday, Oct. 2 at the Gallia Co. Senior Resource
Center, 1167 Ohio 160. Doors open at 5 p.m. Contact
any Shrinette for info.

American Legion fundraiser
GALLIPOLIS - American Legion Post 27 will
host a bake sale and auction on Saturday, ·Oct. 2
beginning at 7 a.m. The post is located on McCormick
Road, Gallipolis.

Life Chain set for Oct. 3
GALLIPOLIS - Life Chain Sunday will be
observed on Oct. 3 in Gallia County. The annual prolife event is scheduled from 2:30-3:30 p.m.
Organizers plan to meet at Ohio River Plaza and line
up along Eastern Avenue in Gallipolis.

Rio Village Council to meet
RIO GRANDE - The Rio Grande Village Council
and Board of Public Affairs will hold their October
meeting on Oct. 4 instead of Oct. 11, as originally
scheduled. The Board of Public Affairs will meet at 6
p.m. and the Village Cow1cil will meet at 6:30p.m. on
Oct. 11. The public is welcome to attend.

HC, HMC Retirees lunch
GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer Clinic and Holzer
Medical Center Retirees luncheon is scheduled at
noon on Tuesday, Oct. 5 at the Courtside Bar and
Grill.

McCoy-'Moore
Punera( IJfomes
Serruing Our Communities for Over 100 Years
Herb. }rem..!tmd. 1\ lrli.ua c.~.: ]ol' Moo1r - DimtorJ
420 l!!t Avenue, Gallipoli!t, 011 • (740) 446-0852
:ZO!! M.tin Strcd, Vinton, Oil •(740) 388-!Ull

�~·

Sunday, September 26,

-- _..

2010

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·----.,_,_-~--- ---

~unba~' ~nne~ -$&gt;entinel

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

• Page A6

Annual Battle Days Festival slated for Oct. 1-3
for Sight. ~;Jated to begin
at 9 a.m. with registration
set for 7-8:45 a.m. The
POIN I PLEASANT. race will begin behind
W.Va. - Now that the Food land and wi II run
fall season is here. it is through
town.
once again time for the Partidpants may ~hoose
annual Battle Days· to either rac&lt;t the I OK or
Festival.
SK course. Race winners
The festival. which cel- will receive awards.
ebrates the first battle of Following the run, the
the
American Battle Days Parade- will
Revolution, is sc.:heduled take place on Main St. at
for Oct. l-3 in downtown II a.m. The parade will
Point Pleasant. This feature festival royalty as
year ·s event will feature well as a variety of t1oats
a variety of demonstra- from area clubs and orgations and activities.
nizations. .
Prior to the festival. the
Other Battle Days
20 I 0 Battle Days royalty activities set for Saturday
will be selected with the are: crafts. activities and
Miss
Battle
Days entertainment, I 0 a.m.-4
Pageant, slated for 3 p.m. p.m.; Battle Days Art
Sunday (see related Show, Fort Randolph
story). Festival action Terrace, lO a.m.-8 p.m.:
will officially start on John Marshall Fife and
Friday. Oct. 1 with a vari- Drum Corps, noon: Anne
ety of activities. In addi- Bailey.
12:30 p.m.;
tion, Oct. l will cater Kanawha Valley Pipes
toward children as sever- and Drums, 12:30 p.m.;
al schools will visit the Thunder tones Chorus, 1
festival. Events set for p.m.; Chief Cornstalk. l
the festival's opening day p.m.; Essay Contest
include: crafts on Main Banquet, Point Pleasant
St., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; River Museum. I p.m.;
encampments and craft children's
colonial
demonstrations, l 0 a.m.- games,
1:30
p.m.;
5 p.m.: Battle Days Art Andrew Lewis. l :30
Show, Fort Randolph p.m.; Irene Brand, local
Terrace. noon-8 p.m.; author, meet and greet, 2and Lantern Tour. 7 p.m. 4 p.m.; Anne Bailey, 2
The Mansion House p.m.; musket firing
Museum a·lso will be demonstration, 2 p.m.;
open Friday from 10 Chief Cornstalk, 2:30
a.m.-4:30 p.m.
p.m.: Militia Drilling and
Festival activities will recruitment of volunget off to an early start on teers, 2:30 p.m.: chilSaturday. Oct. 2 with the dren's colonia.! games, 3
annual Lions Club Run p.m.: Andrew Lewis. 3

,

BY HOPE ROUSH

HROUSHr~MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Fileph. A

Children participate in a demonstration during the 2009 Battle Days Fest1val. Th1s year's annual festival is siP
ed for Oct. 1-3 in downtown Point Pleasant.

p.m.;
Martha
Washmgton. 3:30 p.m.:
Ladies· Colonial Tea, 4
p.m.;
and
Colonial
Governor's Reception.
American Legion, 6-8
p.m.
Saturday's festival fun
will wrap up with the

FUN IN THE FALL

Colonial Ball slated for
8-10 p.m.
at the
American Legion. The
ball is both free and
open to the public.
Colonial costumes are
encouraged for the ball.
but are not required. The·
Mansion
House

Museum also will be
open on Saturday from
I 0 a.m.~4:30 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 3 will
close out the annual festival with a variety of·
events starting with the
Colonial Church Service
at lO a.m. The Battle

Days Art Show will take
place from 1-4 p.m .. and
the Mansion House
Museum vJiU be open
from l-4:30 p.m. The
annual Battle Da)S
Memorial Service also
is scheduled for 2 p.m.
Sunday.

Gallia BOE releases voter info
STAFF REPORT

GALLIPOLIS
The Gallia
County Board of Elections has
released the list of voter registration
sites around the county. The general
election is scheduled for Tuesday.
Nov. 2.

The last day to register for the general election is Monday. Oct. 4. The
Boar'd of Elections Office will be open
until 9 p.m. Oct. 4.
'Early voting is scheduled to begin
on Tuesday. Sept. 28.
Following is the list of locations
with days and times registration is
being conducted:
Board of Elections Office
• Monday-Friday. 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
(Location: Gallia Co. Courthouse)
Bureau of Motor Vehicles
• Monday. 8 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
• Tuesday-Friday. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
• Saturday. 8 a.m.-noon
(Location: Gallia Co. Service
Center, 499 Jackson Pike. Phone: 446-

8510)
Dept. of Job and Family Services
• Monday-Thursday, 7 a.m.-5 p.m.
(Location: 848 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis. Phone: 446-3222)
Gallia County Treasurer's Office
• Monday-Friday. 7:30 a.m.-4 p.m.
(Luc.:atiun: Gallia Co. Courthouse)
Gallia County WIC Program
Health Depart11_1ent Service Center •
• Monoay-Fnday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m.
(Location. Gallia Co. Service
Center. 499 Jackson Pike. Phone: 4412018)
Bossard Memorial Library
• Monday/Wednesday/Friday. I 0
a:m.-6 p.m.
• Tuesday-Thursday. noon-8 p.m.
• Saturday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
(Location: 7 Spruce St. Phone: 4467323)
Residents can also register to vote at
any publi~ high school or vocational
school, or by mail.

Ji..

(Online: gallianet.ner/BOE.htm)

File photo

The annual Country Fall Festival held at the West Virginia State Farm Museum has
a little of something for everyone in the family to enjoy. From tractors to fo.od, entertainment to royalty, this year the schedule of events have grown including special
singing on Saturday and the much anticipated Harvest of Quilts Show.

Country Fall Festival Oct. 2-3
at W.Va. State Farm Museum
vice will take place at 9 a.m. with special
guest speaker Bobby Patterson and special
guest singer Charles Bowlers. The Gun
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - ln Stingers will be perfonning three tunes.
Mason County, the first weekend _in beginning at noon. If you don't catch the
October is a busy one with several events excitement during their first perfonnance,
and festivals going on in the tri-state area. they also will be ente1taining crov.·ds with
And the West Virginia State Farm their gun-slinging madness at 2 and 4 p.m.
Museum is sure to draw in much of the
If you are looking for the best place
crowd Oct. 2-3.
for entertainment on Sunday afternoon.
From apple butter to gospel singing, be sure to bring a lawn chair and gather
and tractor pulls to queens, the annual around the main stage at the farm museCountry Fall Festival continues to grow um. A much a'ntic1pated gospel sing
in size and popularity each year.
will hit the stage at I :30 p.m. and feaThe two-day event now has royalty, a ture four groups including the
huge Harvest of Quilts Show, gas engine Gloryland Believers, New Salvation,
show and even a gun stingers presentation. New Song and Delivered.
•
TI1e good-harvest celebration also features
And the Country Fall Festival wouldn't
the farm museum with its 30 plus buildings be the same without the Country Kitchen
and displays, located right in the center of and Country Store being open both days.
all,the action during the weekend event.
Homemade vegetable soup will be served
The ali-day festival will kick-off on alongside
everyone's favorite. hot
Saturday at 9 a.m. with apple cider, apple apple cider.with
which
will be made and sold
butter, and sorghum being made. At noon.
on
the
spot.
And
a
Gravely Swap Meet
the main stage will feature entertainment
also
will
be
held
both Saturday and
provided by Dewey Taylor. The Antique
Sunday
on
the
fann
grounck
Tractor Pull will be sure to pull the crowd
Be sure to stop in and see the display of
in at I p.m., and throughout the rest of the
handmade
quilts and vote for your favmite.
day, the Antique Gas Engine Show,
The
24th
annual
Harvest of Quilts Show will
Antique Bottle Show and the CEOS Quilt
Show, will provide a little something dif- also be a special event during the weekend.
On Saturday. the d(X)r.-; are open from 10
ferent for everyone to see and enjoy.
Be sure to attend this year's festival to a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sunday from ll a.m.
get the royal treatment and meet the very to 4 p.m. Voting for quilts will end at 3:15 on
first Miss Country Fall Festival Queens. Sunday. with the division &lt;md People's
Jessie Wamsley, Miss Queen and Shelby Choice winners rumoum:ed at 4 p.m.
The festival ends at 5 p.m. each day.
Rodgers, Teen Miss Queen, will be on
hand for pictures, autographs and to steer Admission is free. The fam~ museum is
located four miles north of Point Pleasant.
all festival goers in the right direction.
On Sunday. the fall festival continues with and seven miles South of Mason, just off
more countly fi.m &lt;U1d tradition. A church ser- Route 62 on Fairgrounds Road.
BY DELYSSA HUFFMAN

DHUFFMAN@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

Fi11d this seal of app1'oval
and you've found the best.
Our oncology progr~m has been recognized by the
Commission on Cancer of the Amencan College of Surgeons
as offering the very best in cancer care It is a recogmtion of
the quality of our comprehensive, multidisciplinary patient
care. We're dedicated to offering the best cancer care, and
are proud to have brought the very best in today's cancer
treatment closer to home.

CO~~U~!ON Cl\ CM\W
For moro lnformnt•on or
phys•cian rclerra, call 1.600.821..3860

fl.

..... ~~NGf R CARl&lt;

HOLUR ~

t!

... "' ""''' ..........
,,,

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•

, ••

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unbap Qttmes -~entfnel

PORTS
~CAL

GALLIPOLIS - A edltldulo of up&lt;:omong
COllege nnd high school varsl!y r;porlonu
911en1S lfflolv•ng teams from OnJUa. M,,!IQI'I

and Me.gs count-

l'!orui!IY.. S~ptember 27
Volleyball
Galha Academy at Eastern. 6 p.m
Belpre at Southern, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Mrllcr. 6 p.m.
South Galha. Symmes Valloy at
Farrland. 5:30 p m
Porn! Pleasant at OVCS, 5 30 p m.
Lmcoln at Hannan. 6 p m
Iu~CIIlY..~~

Volleyball
Jackson at Ga ha Academy 5 15

Pl!l
Southern at E11stern. 6 p m
Vmton County at Morgs 6 p m
Chesapeake at River Valley, 5 30
p.m.
South Galha at Wahama, 6 p m
Pornt Pleasant at Hunt•ngton St.
Joe. 6 p.m
Hannan at Elk Valley (TrQ. 5 30 p m
Soccer
Gallia Academy at OVCS. 6 p m
Lincoln at Pornt Pleasant (G) 6:30
p.m.

We&lt;.1ouchty, September 22

Volleyball
Southern. Mergs at Rrver Valley
5:30pm.
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.

•

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Eagles roll past
South Gallia, 42-0
B Y B RYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBIJNE COM

TUPPERS PLAli'iS.
Ohio - Eastern held visiting South Gallta ,without a first dO\\ n through
three quarters while racking up 354 yards of total
offense en route to a 42-0
gridiron victory in a
Week
5
Tri- Valley
Hockin!!
Conference
Division matchup at East
Shade River Stadium.
The host Eagles (3-2.
3-1 'TVC Hocking) took
over sole possession of
second place in the
league standings while
posting their second consecutive shutout victory
at the friendly confines of
home. The Rebels " ho fell to 2-3 overall
and 2-2 in the Hocking
Dh ision
amassed
on!) 67 )ards of total

offense in the l&gt;db,tck.
Eastem - whi:;h has
now won thret.: straight in
the head-to-head series
\Vhile claiming a 4-3 alltime
ad' ant age
stormed out to a 13-0
lead les-. than four minutes into the contest
before taking a comfortable 35-0 cushion into
the intermission. •
The hosts added a
score in the third period
for a 42-0 edge. then both
teums went to their second units·in the fourth.
The Rebels finally
moved the chains for the
first time in the contest
with 5:2R remaining in
regulation, as an Eastern
personal foul penalty
gave SGHS possession at
its own 30-yard line.
South Gallia would go

Please see Eagles, Bl

Sarah Hawley/photo

Eastern's Brayden Pratt, right, throws a two-point conversion during Friday's game
against the South Gallia Rebels at East Shade River Stadium. The Eastern line
finds off a group of South Gallia defenders to allow Pratt time to pass.

Spartans
conquer
Raiders

White Falcons
stay unbeaten,
double up
Waterford 42-21

B Y S ARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

ALBANY, Ohio - It
did not take long for
River Valley to lind the
end :~one on Frida)
evening . against the
Alexander Spartans.
The Raiders - who
A 1d not scored since the
~rst half of week one jumped out to a 7-0 lead
just 41 seconds into the
game in Albany. Ohio.
Junior Patrick \Villiams
took the ball R4 ) ards for
the opening score.
Alexander s
Cody
Lawson took over from
there, scoring tivc touchdowns in the gam~.
Lawson s first score
came at 3:45 in the first
quarter on a 21 yard run.
Lawson added his second
touchdown with 3: 16
remaining in the first half
on a 33 yard run.
River Valley tied the
game at 14 on a t\\O yard
run by Kyle Brown with
19 ~econds remaining in
the first half.
Puri
Apipan added his second
extra point kick of the
2ame.
~ Rh er Valley was again
dri\ ing in the third quar-~
r. before Alexander s
• re} Bennett recmered a
River Valley fumble.
Bennett took the ball 37
yards for &lt;I score. Josiah
Yazdani made his third
extra point kkk of the
game to give the Spartans
a 21-14lead.
gave
Lawson
Alexander the 2R-\4~Jcad
on a 42 yard touchdown
run at the 5:39 mark of
the third .quarter, with
Yandani making the extm
point.
River Valle) s Trev
Noble cut into the
Alexander lead. scoring
on a 90 ) ard touchdown
run. 1 he extra point kick
was blocked.
Ale.\ander scored three
times in the fourth quarter to push the game out
of reach for the visitors.
Lawson scored a 35 ) ard
receiving
touchdown
with the pass coming
m Mike Chapman at
e 11 :45 mark. Lawson
•
threw a 33 yard touchdown to Bennett for
Lawson s 11fth score of
the contest. Eric Davis
added the final score of
the game for the Spartans
on an eight yard run.
Chase ~lct.:ks added the
extra point kick.
River Valley tallied

Please see Raiders, Bl

•

Bv GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPQNOENT

WATERFORD, Ohio
Anthony Grimm
scored four touchdowns
while rushing for 203
yards in 22 carries to lead
the
Wahama White
Falcons to a 42-21 TVC
Hocking Di' ision win
over host Waterford
Friday evening.
Grimm· was~ joined b)
Ryan Lee in the limelight
with Lee adding Ill
) ards on the ground and
two touchdo,'Vns as the
White
fifth
ranked
Fak&lt;ms extended its
unbeaten string to four
straight on the ~2010 grid
Sarah Hawley/photo season.
The win wasn t as easy
A group of Southern defenders led by Eric Buzzard (34) attempt to bring down Meigs' running back Jeffrey
as the tina! score might
Roush (26) during the third quarter of Friday's game at Roger Lee Adams Memorial Field in Racine, Ohio.
indicate however as
Waterford riddled the
Bend Area secondary to
the tune of 233 yards
Southern took the plays and driving 61 down. and stretch all out through the air. The
BY DAVE HARRIS
SPORTS CORRESPONOEN'"
opemng kickoff. but yards to the Meigs one to catch a 20 ) ard pass Wildc:·lts staged a final
Meigs forced them to a vard line. But Blake from Cameron Bolin. period comeback after
RACii'iE. Ohio
four and out. The Crow led a Marauder Mugrage added the extra scoring a pair of touchMeigs scored in every Marauders put together a defensh·e charge that points for a
14-0 downs earh in the final
quarter in defeating a nine pia) 54 yard drive to dropped Southe.rn quar- ~tarauder lead.
quarter to dose what was
~punky. ~ oung Southern
Four pia) s later. Bolin a comfortable 28-6 lead
take the lead ''hen Zach terback Daniel Ramthum
team 35-0 in a non-con- S~n re ran in from 30 for a one yard loss on picked off a Ramthum to within seven at 28-21
ference game Frida) yards out. Christian fourth and goal from the pass at the Southern 37. before Grimm negated
night at Roger Lee ~lugrage added the extra one. ·
On first down he hooked the Waterford scores with
Adams Memorial Field.
points and Meigs held the
Meigs then put togeth- up '' ith Stewart once a seven yard run and a 34
The ~1arauder defense early 7-0 lead \Vith 5:26 er an impressive drive of again for 22 yards. Three yard scamper to put the
held Southern to 38 total remaining in the first their own, driving 98 plays
later
Charlie game away for Wahama.
yards. while rolling up period. ~
Quarterback Trevor
yards in 13 plays and Barrett scored from a
430 of their won in pickThe Tornadoes put scored when Colton yard out. Mugragc added Lang connected on 12 of
ing up their third win of together an impressive Stewart made a beautiful
Please see Wahama, B:S
Please see Meigs. B4
the season.
drive, running otT 17 catch getting both feet

I

Marauders end Does winning streak, 35-0

Fighting Tigers maul
Gallia Academy, 48-7
BY STEVE E BERT
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

JRO~TOi'i.

Ohio

fullback Brian Warner
put !he finishing touches
on Ironton s first fi\e drives of the game. scoring
on runs of 1. I. I. I. and
32 yards as the Fightin!!
'ligers built a 35-d ha1ftirne lead enroute to a
dominating 48-7 non
league conquest of the
Gallia Academy Blue
Devils Friday evening on
Bob Lutz Field at the
;ranks
Memorial
Stadium. It was homecoming in Ironton.
'I he game was a
match up of the #I team
in D-4, Region 15
(Ironton) taking~on the #2
team in D-3. Re!!ion 12.
lronlon , under head

•

coach Bob Lutz, has built
a tradition and reputation
for playing hard nose,
smash mouth football.
They say thb 1s ''hat
we re going to do and
\\ e rc going to continue
doin!! it until you stop it.
Tl1e Blue Devils (4-1)
won the toss and deferred
until the second half.
hoping for a three and out
by the Tigers followed by
ideal field position for
their first possession.
Instead Ironton (5-0)
staged one of their
patented long. time consuming drives of 79
yards on I 0 plays with
Warner bulling 0\er from
the one: the Jonnthan
\\'illiams kick making 'it
7-0.

Please see Devils, B4

Mike Brace photo/courtesy of GAHSsports.com

Gallia Academy's Dalton Jarrell, left, hauls in a touchdown pass in front of a pair
of Ironton defenders during the third quarter of Friday night's non-conference fQotball contest at Tanks Memorial Stadium in Ironton. Ohio.

'

�..
Page B2 • ~unbtW 'O.timr5 -$entinrl

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 26,

2010

The Ohio Val lev Publishing Scoreboard- week 5 Football .
kick) 1:52

PREP FOOTBALL
Friday's Box Scores

Eastern 42, South Gallla 0

s Gallia

o o o o-

Eastern

13 22

7

0 -

o

42

Scoring summary
First Quarter
E-Brayden Pratt 5 run (Tyler Hendrix
kick) 9:51 •
E-Tyler Hendrix 20 INT return (kick
failed) 8:07
Second Quarter
E-Ryan Shook 2 run (Hendrix pass
from Pratt) 11 :55
E-Brad Stone 8 run (Hendrix kick)
3:36
E-Shook 17 pass from Pratt (Tyler
Hendrix kick) 0:05.8
Third Quarter
E-Shook 5 run (Hendrix kick) 3:20
SG
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

3
25-67
0
67
0·9-2
2·1
6-45

E
13
37-243
111
354
9·20.1
3-0
10-91

Individual Statistics
Rushing: SG-John Johnson 2-16,
Jacob White 6-11, Austin Phillips 7-9,
Danny Matney 3-9, Dalton Matney 3-9,
Ethan Spurlock 1·8, Brandon Campbell
1-6, John Baker 1-5, Cory Haner 1·(·6).
E-Kiint
Connery 11·108, Max
Carnahan 2·36, Brayden Pratt 3-33,
Ryan Shook 7·21 , Brad Stone 5-20,
Ethan Nottingham 7-14, Kyle Connery
1-8, Tyler Barber 1-3.
Passing: SG-Cory Haner 0-7-1 0,
Danny Matney 0-2-1 0.
E-Brayden Pratt 9-18·1 111 , Ethan
Nottingham 0-2-0 0 .
Receiving: SG-None.
E-Max Carnahan 3-54, Kyle Connery
1-31, Ryan Shook 1-17, Klint Connery
1-6, John Tegnolia 1-2, Tyler Hendrix 21.

Point Pleasant 48,
Vinton County 0
Vinton Co
Pt Pleasant

0 0 0 0 7 27 14 0 -

0
48

Scoring summary
First Quarter
PP-Michael Musgrave 2 run (Jerrod
Long kick) 1:19
Second Quarter
PP-JaWaan Williams 1 run (Long
kick) 10:20
PP-Chris Blankenship 35 run (pass
failed) 6:21
PP-Biankenship 22 run (Long kick)
3:27
PP-Toby Martin 26 pass from Eric
Roberts (Long kick) 2: 13
Third Quarter
PP-Tylun Campbell? run (Long kick)
9:09
PP-Musgrave 3 run (Long kick) 3:02

pp

vc
First Downs
7
. 37-122
Rushes-yards
34
Passing yards
156
Total yards
Comp-att·int
1-7·1
Fumbles lost
2
Penalties-yards 6-51

20
46-358
65
423
4-5-Q

1
8-55

Ironton 48, Gallia Academy 7
0 0
14 21

7 0 7 6 -

First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

M
19
47-347
83
430
4-7-o
0-0
8-75

s

7
36-39
·1
38
2-9-2
0-0
4-30

Individual Statistics
Rushing: M-Zach Sayre 12-161
Jeffrey Roush 24-160, Charlie Barrett
7-26, Cameron Bolin 1-11 Cole Turner
1-2. Dillon Parsley 1-2
S-Tyler
Barton
10-25,
DameI
Ramthun 15-20. Erric Buzzard 11·(·6).
Passing: M-Cameron Bolin 4-7-0 83.
S-Daniel Ramthun 2-9-2 -1.
Receiving: M-Colton Stewart 3-65,
Christian Mugrage 1-18.
S-Tyler Barton 1-1 Daniel Ramthun
1-(-11 ).

Wahama 42, Waterford 21
Wahama
Waterford

0 14 14 14 -: 42
6 0 0 15 - 21

Scoring summary
First Quarter
Wat-Levi Porter 1 run (kick failed)
8:35
Second Quarter
Wah-Anthony Grimm 19 run (kick
failed) 7:01
Wah- Ryan Lee 1 run (Grimm run)
0:00
Third Quarter ·
Wah-Ryan Lee 29 run (Zach
Wamsley kick) 4:38
Wah-Grimm 24 run (Wamsley kick)
:45
Fourth Quarter
Wat-Porter 8 run (Levi McCutcheon
pass from Trevor Lang) 11 :53
Wat-Porter 3 run (McCutcheon kick)
10:46
Wah-Grimm 7 run (Wamsley kick)
7:30
Wah-Grimm 34 run (Wamsley kick)
3:27
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-1nt
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

Wah
24
52-396
85
481
5-9-Q
1-1
5-35

Wat
15
28-88
233
321
12-22-Q
3-0
6-40

Individual Statistics
Rushing: Wah-Anthony Grimm 22203. Ryan Lee 12-111, Isaac Lee 1258, Trenton Gibbs 6-24.
Wat-Levi
Porter
12-45,
Levi
McCutcheon 6-29, Matt West 5-19,
Trevor Lang 5-( -5)
Passing: Wah-Trenton Gibbs 5-9-0
85.
Wat-Trevor Lang 12-21-0 233, Levi
McCutcheon 0-1-0 0.
Receiving: Wah-Ryan Lee 2-50,
Elijah Honaker 1-15, Isaac Lee 1-14,
Tyler Kitchen 1-6.
Wat-Chad Offenberger 5-142, Levi
McCutcheon 5-74, Hunter Munjas 1-14,
Colton Brown 1·3.

Alexander 49, River Valley 20

Individual Statistics
Rushing: VC-Adam Ward 15-62,
Joey Batey 15-52, Curtis Lindner 5·9,
Leif Sm1th 1·0, Chase Nesser 1·(·1).
PP-Chris
Blankenship
10-137,
JaWaan Williams 14-96, Michael
Musgrave 4-32, Tylun Cmapbell 6-32,
Anthony Darst 3-31, Jason Stouffer 318, Teran Barnitz 2-12, Brandon Toler
1-9, Eric Roberts 3-(-9).
Passing: VC-Adam Ward 1-7-1 34.
PP-Eric Roberts 4·5-0 65.
Receiving: VC-Per Smith 1-34.
PP-Chase Walton 1-37, Toby Martm
1·26, Chris Blankenship 1-6. JaWaan
Williams 1-(-4).
Gallipolis
Ironton

Third Quarter
M-Jeffrey Roush 10 run (Mugrage
kick) 3:33
Fourth Quarter
M-Roush 3 run (Mugr~ge kick) 5:52

7
48

Scoring summary
First Quarter
1-Brian Warner 1 run (Jonathan
Williams kick) 6:42
I-Warner 1 run (Williams kick) 0:52
Second Quarter
I-Warner 1 run (Williams kick) 6:33
I-Warner 1 run (kick failed) 3:09
I-Warner 1 run (Tres Wilks pass from
Tommy Waginger) 2:50
Third Quarter
G-Dalton Jarrell12 pass from Ethan
Moore (Tyler Hannon kick) 8:31
1-Tommy Waginger 39 run (Williams
kick) 4:49
Fourth Quarter
I- Robert Bishop 20 run (run failed)
0:30

River Valley
Alexander

7
7

7 6 0 7 14 21 -

20
49

Scoring summary
First Quarter
RV-Patrick Williams 84 run (Puri
Apipan kick) 11:19
A-Cody Lawson 21 run (Josiah
Yazdani kick) 3:45
Second Quarter
A-Lawson 33 run (Yazdani kick) 3:16
RV- Kyle Brown 2 run (Apipan kick)
:19
Third Quarter
A-Trey Bennett 37 yard fumble return
(Yazdani kick) 9:21
A-Lawson 42 rn (Yazdani kick) 5:39
RV- Trey Noble 90 run (kick blocked)
4:32
Fourth Quarter
A-Lawson 35 pass from Mike
Chapman (Yazdani kick) 11 :45
A- Bennett 33 pass from Lawson
(Yazdani kick) 7:23
A-Eric Davis 8 run (Chase Meeks
kick) 6:20
First Downs
Rushes-yards
Passing yards
Total yards
Comp-att-int
Fumbles-lost
Penalties-yards

RV

A

11
30-276
90
366
8-15-1
3-2
5-40

16
48-341
112
453
6-15-0

0•0
5-40

Individual Statistics
Rushing: RV-Trey Noble 3-126,
Patrick Williams 4-100. Jacob Hefner 950, Kyle Brown 10-12, Eli Kimble 2-(-2),
Austin Davies 2-(-10).
GA
I
A-Cody Lawson 24-229, Trey Bennett
7
23
First Downs
13-56, Nathan Stover 2-34, Eric Dav1s
28-94
54-413
Rushes-yards
5-27. Tyler Smith 1-1, Mike Chapman 288
93
Passing yards
(-2), Tyler Wilkenson 1-(-4).
501
187
Total yards
Passing: RV-Jacob Hefner 8-15-1 90.
6-11-1
3-3-0
Comp-att-int
A-Mike Chapman 5-14-0 79, Cody
4-2
2-1
Fumbles-lost
Lawson 1-1·0 33.
5-48
Penalties-yards H
Receiving: RV-Trey Noble 5-52,
Patrick Williams 1-25, Aust1n Spurlock
Individual Statistics
. 1·9, Kyle Brown 1·4.
Rushing: GA-Brandon Taylor 4-23, A-Trey Bennett 3-68, Cody Lawson 3Austin Wilson 11-45, Ethan Moore 3- 44.
12, Cody Russell 2-11, Luke Pullins 29, Drew Young 2-4, NICk Clagg 2-minus
3, Tyler Eastman 1-(-6). TJaye McCalla
1-(-3)
!-Brian Warner 22-148, Tres Wilks 10OHIO
96, Trevor White 2-8, Tommy Wag1nger
4-58, Laron Beach 4-31, Tyler Ada 42, Bluffton 6
Kratzenberg 1-17, Tanner Duley 3-2, Akr. Buchtel 33, Akr East 0
Matt Thomas 3-14, Robert Bishop 3-29, Akr. Ellet 41, Akr. Kenmore 12
Brandon Wilson 1-1, Patrick Lewis 1-1 . Akr Manchester 42, Gnadenhutten
Passing: GA-Ethan Moore 5-8-1 94, Indian Valley 0
TJaye McCalla 1-3-0 (-1).
Akr. Springfield 36, Norton 0
I -Tommy Waginger 3·3-0 88.
Albany Alexander 49. Bidwell River
Receiving: GA-Austin Wilson 2-68, Valley 20
Dalton Jarrell 1-12, Brandon Taylor 2· Alliance 23, Beloit W. Branch 12
14, Morgan McKinniss 1-(-1).
Alliance Marlington 48, Carrollton 14
!-Michael Lawless 2-53. P1erce Amanda-Ciearcreek 35, Circleville 0
Reeves 1-35.
Amherst Steele 28, Westlake 7
Ansonia 47, Arcanum 7
Meigs 35, Southern 0
Archbold 56, Swanton 12
Meigs
7 14 7 7 - 35
Arlington 20, Pandora-Gilboa 13
Southern
0 0 0 0 0
Ashland 53, Mi~ W. Holmes 14
Ashland Blazer, Ky. 36, Waverly 18
Scoring summary
Ashville Teays Valley 24, Bloom-Carroll
First Quarter
13
M-Zach Sayre 30 run (Chrisl1an
Athens 13, Parkersburg South, WVa. 0
Mugrage kiCk) 5:25
Attica Seneca E. 35, N. Baltimore 8
Second Quarter
Atwater Waterloo 41, Windham 0
M-Colton Stewart 20 pass from
Aurora 42, Orange 7
·
Cameron Bolin (Mugrage kick) 3:42
Avon 34, N. Ridgeville 8
M-Charlie Barrett 1 run (Mugrage

Prep Scores

I

Avon Lake 13, N. Olmsted 7
Baltimore Liberty Union 48, Millersport

0

Hamilton New Miami 49, Cin. Christian
18
Hamilton Ross 35, Morrow Little Miami

Barnesville
48,
Sarahsville 0
Hamler Patrick Henry 22, Metamora
Shenandoah 18
Batavia Amelia 21, Goshen 14
Evergreen 19, OT
Harrison 17, Trenton Edgewood 7
Bay Village Bay 10, Grafton Mldview 0
Bellbrook 16, Franklin 13, 20T
Haviland Wayne Trace 28, Edgerton 20
Bellefontaine 17, Lewistown Indian Hicksville 23, Antwerp 16
Hilliard Bradley 42, Cols. Franklin Hts.
Lake 6
Bellevue 22, Willard 21, OT
18
Hilliard Darby 75, Grove City Cent.
Bellville Clear Fork 42, Lexington 13
Berlin Center Western Reserve 28, Crossing 7
Hilliard
Davidson
52,
Sebring McKinley 12
Thomas
Bloomdale Elmwood 35, Gibsonburg Worthington 0
13
Howard E. Knox 26, Centerburg 20, OT
Brecksville-Broadview Hts. 35, Berei:l Huber Hts. Wayne 44, Xenia 3
14
Hudson WRA 55, Burton Berkshire 21
Brookfield 30, Newton Fails 9
Ironton 48, Gallipolis Gailia 7
Bryan 68, Montpelier 14
Jackson 42, Vincent Warren 7
Bucyrus Wynford 46, Crestline 20
Jeromesville Hillsdale 23, Dalton 6
Caldwell 39, Hannibal River 16
Johnstown-Monroe 27, Loudonville 6
Caledonia R1ver Valley 45, Galion Kent Roosevelt 55, Akr. Coventry 0
Kenton 70, Elida 21
Northmor 0
Campbell Memorial 20, Leavittsburg Kettering Alter 10, Hamilton Badin 7
Lafayette Allen E. 20, Convoy Crestview
LaBrae 0
Can. Cent. Cath. 27, Bedford Chanel 7 6
Can. McKinley 42, Massillon Jackson Lancaster 30, Gahanna Lincoln 28
Lees Creek E. Clinton 32, Batavia 7
12
Canal Winchester 41, Lancaster Leipsic 48, Van Buren 7
Liberty Center 14, Wauseon 7
Fairfield Union 0
Liberty Twp. Lakota E. 20, Fairfield 14
Canfield 18, Youngs. Chaney i
Carey 41, Tiffin Calvert 14
.Lima Bath 31, Lima Shawnee 22
Lisbon Beaver 19, Oak Glen, W.Va. 14
Carlisle 55, Day. Northridge 0
Celina 50, Van Wert 30
Lockland 25, Cin. Clark Montessori 15
Logan 13, Marietta 0
Centerville 28, Springboro 13
Chagrin Falls 27, Chagrin Falls Kenston Lorain Clearview 21, Medina Buckeye
13
26, OT
Lore City Buckeye Trail 30, Bellaire St.
Chardon 43, Cle. John Adams 0
Chesterland W. Geauga 28, Perry 21
John 7
Chillicothe 41 , Portsmouth 7
Louisville 39, Canal Fulton Northwest
Chillicothe Unioto 27, Chillicothe 14
Lucasville Valley 48, S. Point 14
Huntington 0
Macedonia Nordonia 40, Parma Hts.
Cin. Anderson 45, Cin. NW 7
Gin. Colerain 56, W. Chester Lakota W. Valley Forge 2
Madison 48, Ashtabula Edgewood 0
14
Maple Hts. 35, Shaker Hts. 0
Cin. La Salle 21, Lima Sr. '0
Cin. Madeira 41, Cin. Indian Hill 31
Maria Stein Marion Local27, Anna 18
Cin. McNicholas 14, Day. Chaminade- Marion Harding 47, Lorain Admiral King
41
Julienne 7
Martins Ferry 49, Belmont Union Local
Cin. Moeller 17, Cin. St. Xavier 7
7
Gin. MI. Healthy 38, Loveland 17
Cin. N. College Hill 28, Cin. Hills Marysville 21, Lewis Center Olentangy
Christian Academy 17
7
Cin. Shroder 55, Day. Belmont 14
Mason 26, Cin. Princeton 21
Cin. Summit Country Day 34, Cin. Massillon Washington
42,
Akr.
Country Day 7
Firestone 10
Maumee 29, Whitehouse Anthony
Cin. Sycamore 28, Cin. Oak Hills 14
Gin. Taft 20, Gin. Aiken 6
Wayne 19
Mayfield 34, Lyndhurst Brush 0
Cin. Turpin 55, Milford 34
Cin. Winton Woods 42, Cin. Walnut Hills McComb 53, Dola Hardin Northern 7
McDonald 35, Lowellville 6
7
Cin. Withrow 47, Cin. Hughes 12
Mechanicsburg
57,
Jamestown
· Cin. Wyoming 37, Cin. Mariemont 21
Greeneview 34
Clarksville
Clinton-Massie
49, Medina 38, Parma Normandy 7
Washington C.H. Miami Trace 17
Mentor 48, Willoughby S. 47
Clayton Northmont 41, Lebanon 38, OT Middletown 42, Hamilton 9
Cle. Glenville 61, Cle. Collinwood 0
Middletown Fenwick 49, Cin Purcell
Cle. Hay 41, Cle. Lincoln W. 0
Marian 14
Cle. Hts. 26, Bedford 19
Milford Center Fairbanks 41, Lima
Cle. JFK 41, Cle. John Marshall 6
Perry 12
Cle. Rhodes 24, Cle. E. Tech 6
Millbury Lake 13, Tontogany Otsego 10,
20T
Clyde 15, Huron 0
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 20, Milton-Union 38, Middletown Madison 7
Greenup Co., Ky. 7
Minerva 48, Can. South 27
Coldwater 24, Versa1lles 7
Minford 13, Oak Hill 0
Collins
Western
Reserve
49, Minster 27, New Bremen 20 •
Greenwich S. Cent 0
Mogadore 23, Garrettsville Garfield 20
Cols. Beechcroft 63, Cols. Linden Mogadore Field 35, Mantua Crestwood
McKinley 0
20
Cols. Brookhaven 37, Cols. Whetstone Monroeville 28, Ashland Crestview 20
32
Morral Ridgedale 60, Marion Pleasant
Cols. Centennial18, Cols. Mifflin 12
22
Cols. Crusaders 44, Cin. College Prep. Mt. Vernon 39, Delaware Hayes 9
21
N. Bend Taylor 28, Cin. Deer Park 21
Cols. Eastmoor 43, Cols. Briggs 12
N. Can. Hoover 24, Uniontown Lake 10
Cols. Hamilton Twp. 41, Circleville N. Jackson Jackson-Milton 13, Leetonia
Logan Elm 13
6
Cols. Hartley 37, Cle. VASJ 8
N. Lima S. Range 38, Mineral Ridge 28
Cols. Independence 45, Cols. South 10 N. Robinson Col. Crawford 28, Mt.
Cols. Marion-Franklin 35, Cols. Walnut Blanchard Riverdale 22
Ridge 6
N. Royalton 31 , Cuyahoga Falls 14
Cols. Northland 35, Cols. East o
Napoleon 34, Parma Hts. Holy Name
27
Cols. St. Charles 24, Sandusky 21
Cols. Upper Arlington 21, Worthington Navarre Fairless 20, Can. Timken 0
Kilbourne 18
New Albany 35, Pataskala Watkins
Cols. West 47, Cols. Africentric 28
MemorialS
Columbia Station Columbia 21, New Carlisle Tecumseh 49, St. Paris
LaGrange Keystone 7
Graham 12
Columbiana 39, E. Palestine 13
New Concord John Glenn 41,
Columbiana Crestview 30, Hanoverton McConnelsville Morgan 7
United 19
New Lebanon Dixie 30, Brookville 7
New Matamoras Frontier 48, Beallsville
Columbus Grove 62, Spencerville 22
42, OT
Copley 28, Barberton 7
New Middletown Spring. 42, Lisbon
Cortland Lakeview 21, Hubbard 18
Coshocton 57, Byesville Meadowbrook David Anderson 0
8
New Philadelphia 45, Uhrichsville
Covington 40, Casstown Miami E. 34, Claymont 8
OT
New Richmond 40, Batavia Clermont
Creston Norwayne 35, Rittman 14
NE 7
Zanesville
W. New Washington Buckeye Cent. 19,
Crooksville
27,
Bucyrus 13
Muskingum 0
Cuyahoga Fails Walsh Jesuit 42, Newark Licking Valley 42, WhitehallYearling 0
Parma Padua 6
Newcomerstown
48,
Bowerston
Day. Christian 35, Day. Jefferson 20
Day. Dunbar 13, Findlay 7
Conotton Valley 21
Norwalk 35, Fostoria 6
Defiance 13, St. Marys Memorial 7
Oak Harbor 35, Castalia Margaretta 7
Defiance Ayersv1lle 15, Holgate 7
Defiance Tinora 49, Sherwood Fairview Olmsted Falls 40, Middleburg Hts.
Midpark 6
0
DeGraff Riverside 24, Waynesfield- Ontario 14, Lucas 7
Orchard Lake St. Mary , Mich. 24, Cols.
Goshen 3
Valley
9, DeSales 0
Delaware
Buckeye
Oregon Clay 29, Tol. Start 19
Cardington-Lincoln 7
Oregon Stritch 41, Lakeside Danbury
Delphos St. John's 31, St. Henry 7
Delta 15, Northwood 7
21
Orrville 28. Mansfield Sr. 14
Dover 59, Warsaw River View 7
Dresden Tri-Valley 24, New Lexington 6 Orwell Grand Valley 45, Southington
Dublin Coffman 52, Galloway Westland Chalker 7
Painesville Riverside 28, Painesville
6
Harvey 27, OT
E. Liverpool 28, Struthers 21, 20T
Parma 20, Elyria 17
Eaton 31, Day. OakWood 6
Pataskala Licking Hts. 32, Canal
Edon 34, Tol. Ottawa Hills 22
Winchester Harvest Prep 17
Elyria Cath. 29, Louisville Aquinas 10
Pemberville Eastwood 49, Elmore
Fairborn 7, Sidney 6
Woodmere 6
Fairview 13, Vermilion 0
Perrysburg 49, Bow11ng Green 25
Findlay Liberty-Benton 54, Vanlue 0
Fostoria St Wendelin 12, Ridgeway Philo 12, Zanesville Maysville 7
Pickerington Cent. 42, Pickerington N. 0
Ridgemont 7
Piketon 36, Chillicothe Zane Trace 19
Frankfort Adena 46,. Southeastern 0
Piqua 24, Kettering Fairmont 22
Fredericktown 63, Danville 0
Fremont St. Joseph 37, Kansas Lakota Plain City Jonathan Alder 56, London
12
0
Plymouth 42, New London 40
Ft. Loramie 34, Bronson, Mich. 0
Gahanna Cols. Academy 61, Hebron Point Pleasant, W.Va. 48, McArthur
Vinton County 0
Lakewood 28
Poland Sem1nary 47, Niles McKinley 7
Garfield Hts. 31, Stow-Munroe Falls 8
Gates Mills Hawken 28, Fairport Harbor Pomeroy Meigs 35, Racine Southern 0
Port Clinton 24, Milan Edison 21
Hard1ng 7
Portsmouth W. 34, Chesapeake 6
Geneva 35, Ashtabula Lakeside 14
Genoa Area 50, McGuffey Upper Ravenna 41, Ravenna SE 7
Reading 42, Cin. Finneytown 23
Sc1oto Valley 10
Germantown Valley View 44. Monroe Reedsville Eastern 42, Crown City S.
GalliaO
32
Reynoldsburg 17, Newark 14
Girard 42, Warren Champion 14
Richmond Edison 40, Cadiz Harrison
Gfouater 1Wf1'M 44, Corning Miller 6
Cent. 28
Granville 35, Eols. Bexley 22
Richwood N. Union 49, Mt. Gilead 6
Green 36, Lodi Cloverleaf 29
Greenfield McClain 53, • London Rockford Parkway 21, Ft. Recovery 15
Rocky River 54, Oberlin Firelands 20
Madison Plains 20
Rootstown 14, E. Can. 10
Greenville 10, Paulding 6
Salem 33, Youngs. Liberty 20
Grove City 40, Groveport-Mad1son 34
Grove City Christian 73, Cols. Horizon Salineville Southern 52, Wellsville 13
Sandusky Perkins 29, Sandusky St.
Science 0

Mary 6
Shadyside 35, Zanesville Rosecrans 7
Sheffield Brookside 27, Brooklyn 21 ,
20T
Shelby 63, Upper Sandusky 13
Sidney Lehman 69, Troy Christian 12
Smithville 21, Apple Creek Waynedale
10
Solon 34, Hudson 6
Sparta Highland 20, Marion Elgin 14
Spring. Cath. Cent. 42, N. Lewisburg
Triad 12
Spring. Kenton Ridge 23, Spring. NW 0
Spring. NE 28, Cedarville 21
Spring. Shawnee 49, Spring. Greenan
21
Springfield 36, Trotwood-Madison 6
St. Bernard Roger Bacon 23, Day.
CarrollS
St. Clairsville 38, Nelsonville-York 7
Stewart Federal Hocking 24, Belpre 7
Strasburg-Franklin 42, Magnolia Sandy
Valley 13
Streetsboro 29, Peninsula Woodridge
23
Strongsville 42, Lakewood 3
Sullivan Black River 62, Oberlin 8
Sunbury Big Walnut 23, Lewis Center
Olentangy Orange 21
Sycamore Mohawk 30, Bascom
Hopewell-Loudon 0
Sylvania Northview 54, Rossford 6
Sylvania Southview 17, Holland
Springfield 14
Tallmadge 13, Medina Highland 10
Thompson Ledgemont 35, Andover
Pymatuning Valley 0
Thornville Sheridan 42, Cambridge 6
Tiffin Columbian 34, Galion 7
Tipp City Bethel 41, W. Alexandria Twin
ValleyS. 6
Tipp City Tippecanoe 20, Bellefontaine
Benjamin Logan 7
Tol. Cent. Cath. 48, Tol. Bowsher 0
Tol. Christian 42, W. Unity Hilltop 20 •
Tal. St. Francis 62, Tol. Woodward 0
Tol. Waite 29, Tol. Scott 6
Tol. Whitmer 49, Tol. St. John's 24
Toronto 25, Valley Wetzel, W.Va. 3
Troy 29, Beavercreek 0
Twinsburg 42, Brunswick 7
Union City Mississinawa Valley 36, New
Paris National Trail 12
Urbana 34, Riverside Stebbins 14
Utica 48, Johnstown Northridge 0
Vandalia Butler 39, Miamisburg 21
w. Carrollton 24, Oxford Talawanda 14
W. Jefferson 21, Cols. Grandview Hts. 7
W. Lafayette Ridgewood 55, Malvern 14
W. Liberty-Salem 13, S. Charleston SE
7
W. Salem NW 54, Doylestown
Chippj3wa 0
Wadsworth 9, Richfield Revere 7
Wahama, W.Va. 42, Waterford 21
Wapakoneta 42, Ottawa-Glandorf 21
Warren Harding 50, Bishop Tonnos,
Ontario 0
Warren Howland 48, Carrick, Pa 0
Waynesville 55, Camden Preble
Shawnee 7
Wellington 28, Rocky River Lutheran W.
21
Wellston 18, Proctorville Fairland 6
Westerville Cent. 33, Westerville N. 7
Westerville S. 31, Dublin Scioto 0
Wickliffe 55, Richmond Hts. 12
Williamsburg 22, Blanchester 19
Williamsport Westfall 33, Bainbridg.
Paint Valley 18
Willow Wood Symmes Valley 41 ,
McDermott Scioto NW 6
Wilming1on 46, Norwood 13
Wintersville Indian Creek 41, Rayland
Buckeye 12
Woodsfield Monroe Cent. 35, Beverly
Ft. Frye 14
Wooster 42, Mansfield Madison 24
Wooster Triway 48, Cuyahoga Falls
CVCA 28
Youngs. Austintown-Fitch 43, Can.
Glenoak 21
Youngs. Boardman 19, Mass1llon Perry
13
Youngs. East 34, Warrensville Hts. 14
Youngs. Ursuline 53, Chardon NDCL 14
Zctnesville 42, John Marshall, WVa. 12
Zoarville Tuscarawas Valley 20,
Massillon Tuslaw 14
WEST VIRGINIA
Allegany, Md. 25, Keyser 20
Athens, Oh1o 13, Parkersburg South 0
Berkeley Springs 32, Petersburg 7
Bishop Donahue 58, Burch 0
Bluefield 64, Oak Hi1114
Bridgeport 41, East Fairmont 0
Brooke 40, Wheeling Park 14
Buckhannon-Upshur 23, Grafton 20
Buffalo del. Hannan, forfeit
Cabell Midland 17, Lincoln County 6
Chapmanville 35, Logan 20
Clear Spring, Md. 41, Clay-Battelle 24
Doddridge County 35, Gilmer Coun
16
East Hardy 47, Tygarts Valley 16
Fayetteville 42, Valley Fayette 6
Frankfort 54, Northern - G, Md. 38
George Washington 41, Princeton 0
Greenbrier West 49, Summers County
12
Herbert Hoover 34, Clay County 8
Hunting1on 21, Riverside 20
Hurley, Va. 37, Montcalm o
Hurricane 34, Greenbrier East 14
James Monroe 55, Scott 19
Liberty Harrison 28, Notre Dame 6
Liberty Raleigh 36, Sherman 17
Lincoln 42, Webster County 6
Lisbon Beaver, Ohio 19, Oak Glen 14
Madonna 47, Cameron 7
Martinsburg 42, Fort Hill, Md. 10
Meadow Bridge 44, Pendleton County
30
Mount Hope 36, Midland Trail 0
Mountain Ridge, Md. 35, Hampshire 21
Nicholas County 28, Lewis County 20
Nitro 17. Ripley 3
North Marion 27, Preston 7
Parkersburg 28, Woodrow Wilson 14
PikeView 13, Shady Spring 7
Pocahontas County 39, Richwood 6
Point Pleasant 48, McArthur Vinton
County, Ohio 0
Ravenswood 55, Tyler Consolidated 14
Roane County 30, Braxton County
Robert C. Byrd 41 , Elkins 16
Sherando, Va. 59, Jefferson 20
South Charleston 35, Capital 14
Spring Valley 34, St. Albans 14
St. Marys 34, Moorefield 19
Toronto, Ohio 25, Valley Wetzel 3
Tug Valley 57, Jenkins, Ky. 0
University 35, HedgesviHe 28
Van 45, Williamson 12
Wahama 42, Waterford, Ohio 21
Wayne 66, Sissonville 21
Westside 50, Independence 44
Williamstown 78, Calhoun County 8
Winfield 41 , Tolsia 6
Wyoming East 43, Mount View 24
Zanesville, Ohio 42, John Marshall 12

•

�Sunday, September 26,

,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

•

Jan Haddoxlphoto

Pornt Pleasants Chlrs Blankenshrp (35) runs around a Vinton County defender
dunng Friday evening's game in Point Pleasant. W.Va.

int Pleasant cruises I
past Vikings, 48~0
BY RICK SIMPKINS
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

POINT PLEASANT.
.
Va. The Poult
~asant
Big Blacks
continued their assault
on the scoreboard last
night. dropping a 48
spot on the visiting
Vinton County Vikings.
while
p1tching
&lt;l
shutout against the
Ohio eleven.
Point has averaged
JUSt over 48 points per
r,ame during this three
game home :-tand, :;coring
49
against
Sic;son\ ille. while posting back to back 48
point efforts against
South Point and Vinton
County. The domination doesn t stop at the
scoreboard. howe'ver.
Point rolled up some
358
) ards on the
ground against the outmanned Vikings. bringinr. their average over
· last three game:, to a
)PJHng 372 yards
.;-r game.
I mt says a lot about
c talent in the bevy of
mnning backs on the
roster. but speaks voltunes about the .boy!'&gt; up
front - the offensive
line "ho have been
dominant these past
three
weeks. That
group includes Jay
Burdette,
Gabe
Starcher,
Matt
Weddington,
Trey
Lh ingston.
Cody
Stover, Tyler Austin.
Dustin Spencer. Casey
Hogg. Toby Martin. and
Dakota
Toth. ''Our
offen&lt;~i\e line blocked
very ''ell tonight, .. said
PPHS
Head Coach
Dave Darst. in what
could be the understate,.,
ment of the year. ''It
sure makes it easier on
coaching ~taff and
•
backs . when ) ou
have a group playinu0
thut well."
I'he 8 ig Blacks used
nine different backs on
the evening. with Chris
Blankenship
leadino
the parade with a 137
yard. two-touchdown
effort.
Blankenship
~tccomplished the feat
on just ten carries.
JaWaan Williams nearly topped the I 00 yard
plateau, gaining 96
yardc; on 14 carries and
a
score.
Senior
Michael Musgrave also
enjoyed a big night.
with 32 yards on only
four carries, but he
made the most of his

aiders
•

fi·om Page B1

1

36() ynrds of'total offense
in the gmne. with 276
on the ground .
rhe Raiders had JO carries in the game. River
Valle) had 90 yards in
the air. complctmg X of
15 passes.
Noble had 126 yards
on the ground and 52
~oming

POINT
chances by tall) ing a
pair of touchdowns~ on
the
night. Tylun
Campbell also had 32
yard:- rushin~ and also
added a touchdown.
Point s other score on
the night came via the
air. when quarterback
Eric Roberts hooked up
with · tight end Toby
Martin on a 26 yard
scoring pass.
As good as the
offense was, though,
the defensive unit may
have been the stars of
the
show. Point s
defensive
eleven
allowed the VISitors
only 156 total vards
and just 7 first downs
on the . night. Six of
those first downs came
on the game s final
drive. when the Vikings
took the ball from their
own one yard line all
the way to the Point 18
where they ran out of
downs . ''We
'played
great team defense
tonight," said Darst.
"This was our first test
a~ainst an o~tion team
and we played good
assignment football. I
liked the fact that we
were aggressive and
swarmed to the ball.
111at s the kind of
defense we expect to
pia)." added the fourth
) ear mentor.
The game started
slowly for the locals.
Their first two possesiom ended in a punt
and a lost fumble. But.
on their third drive of
the game. the Big
Blacks finally took
advantage of opportunity. Starting on the
Vinton County 44 yard
line. the red and black
needed just fou r plays
to reach paydirt. The
big play in the drive
was a 28 yard gallop by
Blankenship
before
Musgrave bulled his
wa) over from the two
yard line for the game s
first
~core. Jerrod
Long added the extra
point and from there. it
was all Point.
The
Big
Blacks
would score on their
next four possessions to
leave no doubt about
receiving yards in· the
game. Williams had I 00
rushing yards on four
carries, Jacob Hefner car
ried nine times for 50
yards. Kyle Brown had
I 0 carries for 12 yards,
with Eli K imble and
Austin Davies each carrying t\vice for negative
vards.
· Jacob Hefner had 90
yards ~assing in eight
complet•ons.
Alexander had 453
yards of offense in the

•

the
outcome. Tylun
Campbell set up the
next touchdown with u
nice punt return that
took the ball to the
Viking 25 yard line.
T\\'O Blankenship runs
put the ball at the one.
and Williams took care
of the rest with a one
yard TO plunge.
After forcing another
Vinton County punt
th a·
Bl k
•
e
1g
ac s went
back on the at~ack ..It
took the locals JUSt stx
pl.ays to cover 6~ yards,
\\:•th Blanke_nshq&gt;. cappmg th~ dn ve wJth a
nift) 35 yard touchdown run.
Brandon Toler played
the role of set up man
for the next Point score,
when he intercepted a
Viking pass and took
the ball back to the \'isitors
25 yard line.
Three
plays
later.
Blankenship found the
end zone from 22 yards
out and it was 27 _0
'' ith the subsequent
PAT from Lon . The
Bio Blacks wm~d add
eo

.

) et a not 11e,r ~core m the
quarter. \\hen Roberts
found t1ght end ~IaTtin
at the ten )ard line and
the big junior raced into
the end zone for the
score.
Point ·would also
score on their first two
possessions of the second half - u 7 yard
Campbell
run,
and
Musgrave s second TD
of the game. Those
two scores gave the Big
Blacks sc\ en touchdowns on seven consecutive posses!'&gt;ions.
Quite a feat, and one
that \\a!'&gt; not lo&lt;;t on the
head coach. "We pretty
much did what we
wanted. once we got
out of the bl{1cks." said
Darst.
With the win. the Big
Blacks run their record
to 3-1. with a big 0oame
1oom111g next week.
"This game is over,''
said Darst. "We now
have to get ready for
Wayne and I think we
all know that will be a
challeng~ do\vn there
next week. But. I like
this team and I like our
chances. We are clicking on all cylinders
right now and I think
we can play with anybody on our schedule
when we pia) the way
we have for the past
three weeks. It should
be a dand),'' added
Darst.
win. Lawson complied
306 ot' the 453 yards for
the Spartans. Lawson
had 24 carries for 229
yards on the ground,
three receptions for 44
yards, and one completion for 13 yards.
River Vallev had five
fewer first downs than
Alexander (11-16). and
had 18 less plays fmm
scrimmage (45·63) in the
game.
Ri\er Valley will host
Fairland on Frida).

·

Sarah Hawley/photo • ,

Sout~ Galha quarterback Cory Haner, holding football.
ru~~rng back Dalton Matney, left, during the first half of

looks to hand the ball off to
Fnday night's TVC Hocking · •
grrdrron contest at East Shade River Stadium rn Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

I

Eagles
from Page Bl
on to gain another 28

I

yards and two fir~t
downs over the rl!mainder of that drive. but an
severe injury to an
Eastern player w~th 1:55
remaining
_ultJmatel)
stopped the dnve and the
game at the EHS 42-yard
line.
The Rebels _ who
went O-for-9 passin~
with t\\O interceptions ..:::
had just 67 rushjng yards
on 25 carries in the setback. SGHS . also managed only 24 yards in the
tirst half on 18 plays:
The Eagles, on the
other hand. accumulated
243 rushing yards on 37
totes and added another
1.11 yards through the a~r.
1,hc footb~ll ':vas m
bastern ~erntory JUSt one
play dunng the first half.
B~ayd_en ~~att started
the scorm¥ \\ 1th a 5-yard
run at 9:.) I_ of the first
9uarter, wh1ch cal?ped a
-'-play. 41-yard dnve for
a 7-0 lead.
}) ler Hendrix picked
off a pass on the ensuing
~

South Gallm posscsston
and returned it 20 yards
to paydirt. making it ~~
13-0 game with X:07 left
on the first quarter dock.
Ryan Shook capped a
5-play. 3fi-yard scoring
dnve at the 11 :55 mark
of the second with a 2yard run, making it n 210 contest. Brad Stone
added an 8-yard TD run
at the 3:36 mark. ending
an 11-play. 53-yard scoring drive for a·28-0 edge.
Eastern, facint? a 4thand-16, added 1ts final
score of the half w1th 5.8
seconds remaining when
Pratt hooked up w1th
Shook on a 17-vanl o;coring pass - giving the
hosts a 35-0 edge at the
intermission.
Shook added the final
score of the night on a 5yard jaunt \\ ith 3:20
remaining in the third
quarter, cappin~ a 7-play,
59-)ard drive lor the 4:20 tinale.
Klint Connery led the
Eagles with I 08 rushing
yari:ls on 1I carries. followed b) Max Carnahan
'' ith 36 ) ardo; on two carries and Pratt with 33
) ards on three totes.
Shook and Stone also
added rushing totals of

21 yards and 20 yards ..
respccti\cly.
Pratt '' ent 9-of-18
passing fur 11·1 yards,
throwing bnth a touch~own and an interception. Carnahan led the.
wideouts with 54 yards ·
on three catches. while
Kyle Connery added one
catch for 31 yards.
John Johnson led the
Rebels with 16 yards on
t\\ o carries. followed by
Jacob White with 11
yards on six totes. Corv
Haner was 0-for-7 passmg with an interception.
while Danny Matney
was 0-for-2 passing with
one pick.
The Eagles had 13 first
downs compared to the •
Rebels three and also '
finished thl! night plus-2. ·
in turnover differential.
EHS was flagged I 0
times for 91 yafds. while
South Gallia was penalized six times for 45
yards.
Both teams return to
TVC Hocking action on
the road next Fridav. The
Ectgles will travel to
Belpre. \\ hile the Rebels
head
to
Federal
Hocking. Both contests
will kickoff at 7:30p.m. • · ·

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

'XJ:
ahama
fl

) ards in II pht) s, culmi- b) directing the Wildcats
nated in a Rvan Lei! one on a 46 ) ards. three play.
vard touchdown run as drive. After a four yard
iime expired in the open- lo.;s on a running play
from Page Bl
ing half. A 40 yard pass Lnng found Offenberger
21 aerials for 233 yards from Gibbs to Isaac Ll'\! over the middle for a 4 7
for the hosts as the highlighted the series vard !!ain to the W HS
Wildcats
quickly with Ryan Lee scoring on (me.· Porter bulled his
exposed what rapidly the final play of the half. wa) 111 for the TO with
became the Achilles heel Grimm went the distancl' ~kCutchenn kickino the
of the WHS defense. for the two-point convcr- extra point with l0:46
to
pull'
lronically though Lang sion to gi\'e the Falcons a remaining
Waterford
to
within
a
would not toss a touch-· I 4-6 halftime edge.
down pa~s in the outin!!
The third stanza \\as touchdown at :28-21.
Grimm
and
the
althouoh
all
three all Wahama as the Bend
\Vaterft}rd touchdowns Area teams offensive \\ahama offensive line .•
~vere !'&gt;et up by the throw- line really began to then took O\er with the
mg arm of Lang. Chad assert itself. R) an Lee junior nmning back !&gt;COrOffenberger caught five scored for the second mg on a seven vard run
of Lang
to~ses ~for 142 time of the night \\ ith a \\ ith 7:30 left and a 34
yards
"hi le
Le\ i 29 ) ard nm nt the 4:38 ) ard jaunt at the 3:27
McCutcheon
grabbed mark
"'ith
Zach JUncture. Wamsle) added
five receptions for anoth- \V&lt;~msl~y booting the the pomt after kick foler 74 ) an.ls.
pomt after to extend the IO\\ mg each score to
The Wildcats !Wined an locals lead to 2 1-6. On make the final tall) 42early 6-0 lead ...~·ith a 72 it~ next possession the 14.
Wahama picked up 24
yard se".en play drive on ~la~.on • Count) team
lis openmg possession of thn.: ate ned to put the first dO\\ n" while rush- the game as Lang con- ' ~am.e away by expal.ld- i ng for 396 ) ards and
nect~d on all three of his Ill~ 1ts edge to 28-6 after adding another H5 yards
tosses in the drive for 65 9nmm rambled 24 &gt;m:ds through the airways to
yards. ~cvi ~orter capped to~· tl~~ ~~~&gt;r~ Will~ ••i,·e the White Falcons··
the scnes wtth the first of W.~ 1! 1 slc) ta~.: kmg on the ft~ third straight game
\\ 1th over 400 yards of •
three touchdowns on the PAl.
.
total
offense. Waterford
evening with a one ) ard
. \\ aterford wouldn t
plunge with 8:35 remain- gr~e .~'P thot~gh a~ t.l~~ had 88 ) ards on the
ing in the first canto. The Wddc.tts ,took to tl.e au ground to 20 with 233
PAT kick sailed \\ide to one~ agam. Lang found pa~&lt;;ing yards for 321
Le\ • 1cCutcheon open total ) ards and 15 first
the left.
Wnhama would e\ en for a 42 yard pass pia) do\\n .
Wahama will return
the
count
midway and another tos t~ Chad
home
next Friday for
through the !'&gt;econd peri- Offen berger CO\ enng 1. 3
another
TVC Hocking
od when the Falcons ) ard~.
Pon~r ~gam
embarked on 10 play 86 c~pped the senes. \\lth an contest \\hen the White
yard drive. Staving main- e•ght .Yard run With I nng l·alcons put its unbeaten·
lyon the grolllid Wahama teammg
,
'' tth 4-0 record on the line ·
marched down the field M~Cutcheon !or the two- again:,t 'isitin2 Southern
wi!h Grimm and Lee pomt ~on,ers!c~~ ~~ ma_ke (2-3. 1-2 leaglte mark) in:
Fnlcons
annual
do111g mo:-t of the dam- It .~ ... _8 14 ,t_tf.u• WJth the
tilt.
age. Trenton Gibbs con- II .. -' to play m the con- homecoming
Waterford
drops
to
2-3
nected on u crucial third test.
.
.
dO\VIl pass 10 Elijah
./~. s~•.cc~ssl ul ~Hhtd.es m ern II and 2-:?. in conHonaker for a 10 vard k.rck g.tv~.: the: footb.tll ferenCt' play follow ing
gHin to keep the Jrive nght . back .. In
the the loss and will \is it
alive with Grimm ooill!~ Waterford ottense a•!d J'rimblc for its next grid~
the final 19 yards t~ pull Lang went to work agatn iron encounter.
Wahama e\en with 7:01
left in the half. The point
after kick abo missed left
and the cored was deadSub5cribe todav.
locked nt 6-t1.
Another long d!i-ve.
446-2342
992:2155
th1~ one covering S9
~

s

MORE LOCAL NEWS. MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
or

�Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Sunday, September 26,

2010

RedStorm volleyt?all stays
Prep Volleyball Roundup
unbeaten in conference play Lady Eagles soar past Miller
Bv SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE COM

BY MARK WILLIAMS
$PECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTIN£,L

RIO GRANDE. Ohio
- The University of Rio
Grande RcdStorm \ ol
lcyball squad returned
home for the first of a
three-match home stand
on Friday night und
scored a three-set victory
over \'isiting UVA-Wisc.
25- 15. 25 - fl and 25- 14
at the Newt Oliver Arena.
In
so
doing,
the
RedStorm
remained
unblemished in MidSouth Conference play at
4-0.
Rio Grande (h-8. 4 -0
MSC) had two players in
double figures in kills
with sophomore outside
hitters Whitne~ Smith
&lt;Albany. OH) and Tresa
Swatzel (Shade, OH) collecting
10
each.
Sophomore middle hitter
Erin Sherman (South
Webster. OH) added nine
kills while sophomore
outside hitter Erin Moore
(South Webster. OH)
produced
six
kills.

Smith also delivered tive
aces for the evening. ·
. Smith and soP,homore
hbero Lauren Raines
(Albany. OH) paced the
defensive effort with five
digs and junior outside
hitter
Kati
Moore
(Lancaster, OH) registered two solo blocks.
Senior setter Ashley
Bloom
(Worthington.
OH) handed out 17
assists to lead the way
while freshman Kayla
Landaker (Coshocton.
OH) posted 14 assists
and . freshman Kelsey
Martin (Jackson. OH)
produced seven assists.
UVA-Wise (6-10, 2-1
MSC) had difficulty with
serve/receive and serving
in !;llffering it« first MSC
loss of the season.
Rio was never in danger as they grabbed sizeable leads in each game

Golf Roundup

TIMES-SENTINEL STAFF

MASON. W.Va. - In
a quad high school golf
match played on a warm
and sunny afternoon at
the
Riverside
Golf
Course. Point Pleasant
finished first in the play
6. count 4 format contest.
The Wahama White
Falcons finished second
defeating TVC Hocking
Di\ision foe Federal
Hocking
and
South
Gallia.
Point's final score of
161 was the best score by
the large margin of 34
strokes over Wahama and
4 7 strokes over South
Gallia and 52 strokes better than Federal Hocking.
Point's Travis Grimm
\vas medalist for the .day
with a score of '38. Opie
Lucas
and
Justin
Cavender both added 40
strokes each for the winners while Erik Allbright
and Alex Potter shot
identical 43's for the
match with only one of
those scores counting in
the final tally. Denver
Thomas was the sixth
player for Point Pleasant.
bit his score was not
counted.
Wahama who played
without 3 of their normal
starters were led by
Moggan Nottingham's
44. Samuel Gordon was
next with a 46 while
Michael
Hendricks
added a 47. Au stin
Ohlinger score of S8 was
the 4th score that counted. Ben Foreman and
Michael MacKnight also
played for the White
Falcons. The win over
rederal Hocking gives
Wahama a final conference record of 9-5.
South Gallia best score
for the match was a 47
from David Michael He
v,;as followed by Casin
Roush with a 50. Gus

Meigs
from Page Bl
the kick with I :52 left in
the
half
and
the
Marauders held a 21-0
lead at Intermission.
The Marauders made it
a 28-0 lead when Jeffrey
Roush scored from I 0
yards out. cappiug off a
nine play 37 yard drive.
Meigs closed out the
scoring in the fourth
when ._Roush scored his
second touchdown off
the night from three
yards out. Mugrage made
it five for live on extra
points with 5:52 left and
give Meigs the 35-0 ..vin.
"We played hard." first
year Southern coach
Kyle
Wickline said.

Slone contributed a 54
while Seth .Jarreil completed the team scoring
with a 57. Ethan Swain
also played with his score
not added in the final
total.
Stephen Coen shot
Federal Hocking's best
score for the match with
a 49. Austin Russell shot
a 52 while Shane Russell
added a 55. Tyler
Clements score of 57 was
the 4th score that counted. Brandon Russell and
Zack Kidder also played
in this contest for Federal
Hocking.
Point
Pleasant,
Wahama
and
South
Gallia will end thier regular season Saturday
along with 13 other
teams by playing in the
Riverside Golf Course
High School Invitational
golf tournament.
TORNADOES FALL TO
BELPRE, WATERFORD

The Southern golf team
dropped
matches at
Belpre
and
against
Waterford this week.
The Tornadoes fell by a
score of 165-211 at
Belpre
on
Tuesday
evening.
Andrew Roseberry and
Adam Pape shot matching rounds of 48. followed
by
Brandon
Marcinko with a 57 and
Cole Graham with a 58.
Trenton Cook had a 66
and Dyllan Roush shot a
67.
Belpre was led by comedalists Todd Griffith
and Hayden Plummer
with rounds of 40. Blake
McDaniel shot a 41. Seth
Daniel and Devin Daniel
each shot a 44. and
Brennan Ferrell had a 46.
In the home match
against Waterford, the
visiting Wildcats won by
a score of 159-185.
Southern was led by
"'Coach Chancey does a
great job. They are bigger and more physical
then we are. I thought the
big play was the goal line
stand, if we score we
might have been able to
play with them. I was
impressed with Meigs,
they did a good job. ·•
Freshman Tyler Barton
led the Southern ground
game with 25 yards in 10
carries; Ramthum added
20 in 15 tries. Ramthum
was two of nine in the air
with a pair of interceptions for minus one yard.
Barton caught one pass
for
a
yard.
while
Ramthum
caught
a
deflected pass for minus
10.
Meigs was led by Zach
Sayre with 161 yards in
just 12 carries; Jeffrey

IMPROVES TO

6-0,

SWEEPS

TRI·MATCH AT HANNAN

ASHTON. W.Va. - The Ohio Valley
Christian volleyball team improved to
6-0 on the season with wins over Burch
and Hannan on Thursday evening.
The Lad~ Defenders .defeated Burc
to cruise to the victory. '
by scores of25-13 and 25- 17.
•
Rio Grande has now
Allie Hamilton had 15 poinb (eight :
won back-to-back matchaces) in the win. Maggie Westfall •
es after four straight
added nine points (one ace). Sarah ;
defeats Jast weekend.
Schoonmer had eight points. Bryanne ~
"We were really hopHamilton had six points (three aces). :
ing for a win and to do it
Amy Ours had fi\'e points. Samantha ·
in three was even better."
Westfall had fivt: points (two aces), and ·
said Rio Grande assistant
Madison Crank had two points.
coach Holly Motheral.
Crank led. the team in kills with six.
"We re just looking at
followed by Maggie Westfall with four. .
this win as leading us up
Samantha Westfall with two. and Allie
to our Shawnee game.
Hamilton and Schoonover "vith one
which is our biggest
each.
game of the season, so
Samantha Westfall had six assist-.
this one really helped
and Maggie Westfall added four.
with our momentum for
Schoonover had three digs. Crank.
that game.
Allie Hamilton. and Maggie Westfall
Rio
Grande
and
each had one. and Samantha Westfall
Shawnee
State will
added one.
square off on Tuesday
In the second match. the Lady
night at the Newt in a
Defenders defeated Hannan by scores
battle of the predicted top
of 25-20 and ~5 - 13.
two teams in the MSC s
SOUTHERN FALLS TO FEDERAL
Maggie Westfall led the Lady
East Division.
The
HOCKING IN 5
Defenders
with 12 points (six aces).
match is set to begin at 7
followed
by
Allie Hamilton with II
p.m.
RACINE. Ohio - The Southern vol- points (six aces). Crank had eig.
leyball team fell to Federal Hocking in points (three aces), Schoonover h&lt;
five sets on Thursday evening in seven points (one ace). Bryanne
Racine. Ohio.
Hamilton. Ours, and Samantha ·
The Lady Tornadoes and Federal Westfall each had four points. Ours
Hocking alternated wins in the five had one ace and Samantha Westfall had ~
sets. with Federal Hocking winning in two.
sets one. three, and five. and Southern
Crank and Samantha Westfall each
Brandon Marcinko with winning the second and fourth sets.
had fo.u r kills. followed by Allie ·
a 43, followed by
Scoring for the match was 25-22 Hamilton and Maggie Westfall with
Andrew Roseberry and (FHHS), 25-19 (SHS). 25-18 (FHHS). two kills. and Beth Martin with one.
Adam Pape each with a 25-17 (SHS), and 15-11 (FHHS).
Maggie Westfall had nine assists, ·
45, and Cole Graham
Courtney Thomas Jed the Lady Samantha Westfall added six. and
with a 52.
Tornadoes with 17 points (one ace). Crank had one. AIJie Hamilton led the
Brandon Offenberger Emily Ash had 11 points, Bobbi Han·i~ team in digs with five. followed by '
had a 35 to take medalist and Kelsey Strang each had seven Crank. Maggie Westfall. and Samantha
honors !or Waterford. points, and Maggie Cummins had six Westfall With two each. and Martin and :
Austin Hilverding had a points (one ace).
Schoonover \Vith one each.
39. Shane Kerns shot a
Strang had four kills. Katelyn Hill
Samantha Blain led the Lacy Cats
42. Corey Branahm had a had three kills, and Cummins had one
with
five points (one ace). followed by
43. Aaron Miller shot a kill. Cummins and Amber Hayman
Heather
Ellis with four. Katie Ellis
44, and Brandon Tillis had one block each.
with
three
(one ace). Tiffany Adkins
had a 54.
Southern returns to the court on with two. and Stephanie Dillon with
Monday as they host Belpre at 6 p.m.
two.
.
DEBALSKI KEEPS LEAD
Dillon had one block in the game and ·
IN RIVERSIDE SENIOR
RIVER VALLEY CRUISES PAST
Katie Ellis had one spike. Blain Jed the
LEAGUE GOING INTO
FAIRLAND
team in digs with six, follmved b~ Jazi
FINAL WEEK
Casto with four. Tiffany Adkins with
BIDWELL, Ohio - The River two. and Emily Holley. Jasmine Wei .•
·
MASON. W.Va.- Ed Valley volleybalJ team improved to 9-4 and Heather Ellis \.Vith one each.
Debalski
of Ripley. pverall (5-l OVC) this season with a
Hannan ( 1-11) picked up its first win
W.Va., has a narrow three three set win over Fairland on of the season in the match against ·
point lead over \1ick Thursda~ evening.
Burch. The Lady Cats won by scores
Ashley Randolph and Kaitlyn of 25-22 and 25-21.
Winebrenner of Racine,
Ohio, with one week Roberts each had 18 points to lead the
Dillon led the Lady Cats with seven
remaining in the 2010 Lady Raiders. Kelsey Sands added J 6 points. Heather Ellis added six points
regular season. In third points, Kelcie Carter had nine points. (one ace). Blain had five points (two
place is Carl Stone of Katelyn Birchfield added eight points. aces). Jasmine Campbell had five
Ripley. W.Va. with five and Beth Misner had six points. points (one ace). Weise had two points.
points to gain for the Randolph had eight aces and Sands had Katie Ellis had one point (one ace). and
five aces.
lead.
Carter led the team in kills with 15 .. Adkins had one point.
A total of 79 players
' Dillon had one kill and Blain added
were at Tuesday s play followed by Roberts with nine. Sands •
two spikes. Weise had six: digs. Katie
with
four,
Randolph
and
Birchfield
making up one three-man
Ellis had five. Adkins and Heater Ellis
team and 19 teams of with three each. and Misner and Denise
Madriz with two each. Sands had 43 had three each. Blain had t\\O, and
four players.
Casto and Campbell had one each.
assists
and Misner added 40.
The low score of the
Weise had four sets: Dillon and Katie ·
Roberts
had
two
blocks
and
Madriz
day was a 61 (nine under
Ellis had three. and Heather Ellis had
par) by the team of Ken had one.
The Lady Raiders won the JV match one.
Whited. Glenn Johnson.
Ohio Valle\ Christian hosts Point
by
scores of 25-8. 20-25, and ·26-24.
Rick Northup and Russ
Pleasant
one 1\.londay at 5:30 p.m. and
River
Valley
returns
to
the
court
on
Wood.
There was a three way Tuesday as they host Chesapeake at Hannan host I incoln on Monday at 6
p.m.
tie for second w1th a 5:30p.m.
score of 62 (eight under
par) between the teams of
the third Warner scorino benches and the \ oungMick
Winebrenner.
burst. but the final nail~ sters got a lot of valua.~
Chuck Yeager, Ray
in the Blue Devil come- playing time under t.
Oliver and Tom Fisher.
back attempt went a\\ ry lights in front of the big
from
Page
Bl
Carl
Stone,
Jimmy
as lost fumbles on their crowd.
Proffitt. Jim Mitchell and
The ke~ play in the
When Ironton held the next two offensive sets
Cuzz Laudermilt. and
Ironton score came on a
again
resulted
in
IHS
Bob Humphreys. Ed Devils without a first scores.
After Ironton fake punt on fourth and
Coon. Buford Brown and down on their first pos- \\ent up 27-0. their kick- one from th~ Ironton 38;
session,
the
Tiger
Phil Burton.
off was fumbled and Warner getting five yards
machine
once
again
The closest to the pin
recovered by the Tigers to keep the drive alive.
winners
were
Jack ground out the yardage in on the GAHS 32. and it
Ironton outgained the
Maloney on the ninth chunks; this time a 10 took Warner one play to Blue Devils \'v'ith 50 I
hole and Bub Stivers on play, 92 yard effort with bounce the run outside yan~s to 187: 413 of
Warner hitting pay dirt
the 14th hole.
and take it to the house them coming on the
from two yards out with
with
the
Tommy ground. GAHS rushed
the
Williams
kick
Waginger pass to I'res for only 94 yards with
Roush added 140 in 24 increasing the lead to 14- Wilkes for the two point Austin Wilson s 45 and
tires. Bolin was four of 0 after one period.
conversion making it J5- Br:tndon Ta) lor s 23
There are two things a 0 at the intem1ission.
seven in the air for 83
pacing the Blue &amp; White
yards, Stewart caught team must do to beat a
Warn..:r was
There was no let up in attack.
three for 66 yards, and successful ball control the Blue Devils follow- game high rusher for the
Mugrage caught one for opponent. You must get ing the break and Ethan Orange &amp; Black with
your defense off the field Moore and Co. engi- 148 yards on 2~ carries
18.
"Both teams played after third down. and you neered a si:x play R3 yard and Wilkes going for 96
hard the entire game .., cannot turn the ball over. drive to get on the board. on 10.
GAHS struggled to get
Mike Chancey said.
Moore was 6 of 11
The key play in thl'
"Southern really hung in' stops on the Tiger s pos- effort '"as a Moore to passing for 93 prds with
there. being as young as sessions in the first quar- Austin Wilson swing I touchdmvn and I interthey are. They are going ter. and in uncharacteris- pass do~vn the sidelin~ ception . Waginger was ~ ·
to get better. I m proud of tic fashion. turned the for 53 ·) ards giving thl' for 3 for 88 yards for
our kids they played well ball over on three succes- Blue &amp; White a first and Fighting Tigers.
Gallia
Academy
in all areas. but we sta11 a sive possessions in the goal at the seven. Pour
new season next week second setting the Tigers plays later. Moore found returns to SEOAl league
with conference play up in the short field from Dalton Jarrell in the back play next Frida) as they
against a good Athens which they turned each of the end zone. the Tyler travel to Logan to take
break into points on the Hannon kick making it on the 1-4 Chieftain~ .
team."
Logan got their first win
35-7.
Southern drops to 2-3 board.
When
· Ironton of the season friday. 13Michael
Ironton s
on the season. they will
interception answered right back in 0 over Marietta. Ironton
travel to Mason and play Lawless
and
run
back
to the the fom1 o(a Waginger sta~s home to entertain
Wahama next week.
Meigs is now 3-:2 and GAHS 48 early in the 39 yard scamper. both perennial pla~ off proquarter set the stage for teams emptied thl'ir gram Jonathon -\ltler.
they will host Athens.
CORN ING. Ohio - The Eastern
Lady Eagles (Il-l. 7-1 TVC Hocking)
defeated Miller in consecutive set on ·
Thursday night.
The Lady Eagles won by scores of
25-9.25-9. and 25-7.
Eastern was led by Britney Morrison
with 14 points. Ally Hendrix had 13
points. Brenna Holter added I0 points.
Beverly Maxson had nine points.
Jamie Swatzel added five points.
Baylee Collins had two points. and
Kelsey Myers had one point.
Maxson led the team in kills with
eight. followed by Swatzel with six.
Holter, Morrison. and Kiki Osborne
with two each, and Kelsey Myers and
Brooke Johnson with one each.
Swatzel and Hendrix each had one
block. Hendrix led the team in assists
with I 0. Swatzel added seven. and
Breanna Hayman had one.
The Lady Eagles also won the JV ·
match by scores of 25-6, and 25-11.
Eastern returns to action on Monday
as they host Gltllia Academy at 6 p.m.

Point wins quad, Wahama 2nd
MOTSPORTS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OVCS

Devils

�Sunday, September 26,

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

Paul Boggs photos/courtesy of Jackson County Times-Journal

Meigs' Cody Hanning, left, strides ahead of a Vinton County runner on the second
trip up lronman Hill during Thursday night's Jackson Cross Country Invitational at
Franklin Valley Golf Club in Jackson, Ohio.

~unbnv '(f;mtrs' -sentmrl

• Page Bs

The River Valley duo of Jared Hollingsworth, left, and Chriss Goodrich, second
from right, try to break away from the pack on the first trip up lronman Hill during
Thursday night's Jackson Cross Country lovitational at Franklin Valley Golf Club in
Jackson, Ohio.

Meigs, River Valley fare well at Jackson CC .Invitational
Bv BRYAN W ALTERS
BWALTEAS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

JACKSON, Ohio - A
total of 159 varsity competitors and 19 teams including both programs
River Valley and
i as - took part in the
•
20 I 0 Jackson Cross
Country Invitational held
Thursday
night
at
Franklin Valley Golf
Club in Jackson County.
There were 98 runners
and 12 teams in the boys
event, with Meigs finishing sixth overall as a
teatn with 184 points
while the Raiders were
ninth with a team score
of212.
Logan won the team
title with a score of 63.
bettering
runner-up
Athens (69) by six spots.
Ian Kilgour of Jackson
was the race winner with
a time of 18:19.
Cody Hanning led the
Marauders by finishing
second overall with a
time of 18:23, followed
by Steven Mahr in sixth
with a mark of 19:17.
Brandon Mahr (21 :45)
s 41st, Jeremiah
• ers (28:04) was 58th
and Jacob Pierce (29:48)
rounded out the team

· tally by placing 93rd.
Jared Hollingsworth
led the Raiders by finishing 23rd with a time of
20:43, followed by Chris
Goodrich (21 :40) in 38th.
Richie Jackson (22:37)
was 54th. Jamil Stepney
(23:24) was 62nd and
Aaron Harrison (25:09)
rounded out the team
tally by placing 78th.
There were 61 runners
and seven teams in the
girls event, with River
Valley placing fifth as a
team with 116 points
while Meigs came in
sixth with 125 points.
Zane Trace won the
girls team title with 25
points. well ahead of runner-up Chillicothe with
79
points.
Taylor
Hatfield of ZTHS won
the individual race by a
minute with a time of
19:57:
Katte Blodgett led the
Lady Raiders b) finishing fourth with a time of
21 :05. while Jessica
Hatrer was ninth overall
with a mark of 23:32.
Keyana Ward (26:54)
was 30th. Jessica Halley
(31 :00) was 50th and
Sonja Rankin (34:22)
rounded out the team

River Valley's Katie Blodgett attacks Iron man Hill during
Thursday night's Jackson Cross Country Invitational at
Franklin Valley ·Golf Club in Jackson Ohio
.
. .
'
·
tot~!. by fimshmg 58th.
Maggie Smith (26:58)
OllVIa Rucker (34:31) was 32nd, Shannon
was also 60th.
Walzer-Kuharic (28:09)
Shawnella Patterson was 38th and Tara
.Jed the Lady Marauders Walzer-Kuharic (28:58)
by finishing 15th with a completed. the team tally
time of 24:32. followed by placing 41st. Rachel
by Emma Perrin in 20th Bauer (34:16) was also
57th.
with a mark of 25:26.

Meigs' Shawnella Patterson, left, and Emma Perrin
attack lronman Hill during Thursday night's Jackson
tross Country Invitational at Franklin Valley Golf Club
in Jackson, Ohio.

Rio newcomers ready to restore hoops program to prominence
tempo obviously. because from Salisbury. NC, which
we ve got a lot more depth is the same hometown as
at the one, two and three, senior
guard
Doug
RIO GRANDE. Ohio- but at least now we ve got Campbell. He played last
The 20 10-11 recruitin&amp; some options inside." season at Livingstone
class for the University or French added. "1 think the College. Kimber sa1d that
Rio Grande RedStorm biggest impact that those connection with Campbell
rrm s basketball program guys are going to make helped land him at Rio
is on a mission. The mis- will be defending and Grande. ··Basically I was
sion is to return the once rebounding and those are trying to get away from
storied program back to two areas that we ve got to home and basically Doug
national prominence.
put the word in for me and
improve the most in."
After last season s 5-26
Whiting. a 6 I " senior his former head coach,
campaign, Rio Grande transfer combo guard from Jason Cosby put in a great
head coach Ken French Ohio Valley University, word for me and the next
was detennined to upgrade will help the RedStorm in thing you know. I m here,''
the talent on the roster, but the backcourt and provide Kimber said.
also attract high character valuable experience. He
Kimber is another
players as well. He feels talked about how he land- exceptional athlete who
that he has succeeded in ed at Rio Grande. "Once I can shoot the ball and can
both aspects.
decided that I wasn t going sit down and defend. "I
"We re not going to kid back to Ohio Valley this love .to play defense,'·
elves about where we year, I contacted Rio Kimber srud. ··r just want
• shed last year.'' said Grande and just told them to win - I want to help
French. "We had to my situation and I came bring this program up.'' .
upgrade our talent, but down a few times for a
He plans to maJor m
more importantly I felt like visit and they embraced social work.
we had to upgrade our me with open rums from
Birchfield. a 6 10"
character. One of the the beginning,'' Whiting freshman post player from
things that I wanted to
"l t was like a family Gilbert. West Virginia,
address was to make sure said.
atmosphere,
so I wanted to played at Fork Union
that we won the locker be a part of it."
Military Academy, who
room. That we had high
played a couple games
He
plans
to
major
in
character kids who want to business management.
agrunst Rio s junior varsity
win, want to do things the
last
season.
Warmack, a freshman squad
right way and understand point
B1rchfield gives the
guard
from
New
why you do things the Jersey is a tremendous ath- RedStorm a b1g presence
right way. With this lete and will be another on the inside. ''The main
recruitin~ class I think we
key component in the reason that I chose Rio
did that.'
RedStonn
backcourt. He Grande was because of
The newcomers are:
Coach French and the
Kaleb Kimber, Shedrick is an outstanding shooter coaching
staff," Birchfield
of
and
a
great
distributor
Usand-Burton.
Sean
"l
really love how
said.
the
basketball,
who
prefers
Whiting, Robbie Jackson.
Coach
French
does everyto
pass
first
ru1d
shoot
secJermaine Warmack and
loyal
he is to his
thing.
how
ond.
·'I
like
to
get
everyJosh Birchfield.
players
and
just
)low
in
the
game,
body
involved
French believes that he
straightforward
he
is
in
the
ball
well.
I
can
shoot
has addressed all the areas
you
what
he
wants
telling
rather
~ass
tirst
and
but
I
d
of need from a season ago.
you to do."
''At times we were almost score second.' he said.
Birchfield is currently
Warmack explains how
a donut with our inside
on a major.
undecided
he
chose
Rio
Graftde.
"I
game, we were so perimeJoining Birchfield on the
. ted." French said. had other schools that were
with the addition recruiting me. but when I front line is senior transfer
o
bie Jackson and came on my visit. Coach Robbie Jackson. Jackson.
Josh Birchfield that we ve French and the other a7 0 center has played at
addressed that, plus we ve coaches, they brought me Marshall and Marylandalso got some additional 111. I liked the program, I Baltinlore County m his
size with 'Shedrick Usand- came here and tt s like I collegiate career and will
Burton. So those three have a family here," provide an inside presence
guys alone give us a lot Warmack said. "I feel I II that Rio has not had
more depth to go along be comfortable while l stay before.
The native of Aberdeen,
with the J?layers' we my four years."
Wannack is cunently MD, although a newcomalready have.
er. will be looked to for
"We re looking for a undecided on a m~~or.
change of pace so to speak. · Kimber is a 6 2' sopho- leadership on this club and
we re still going to be up- more guard/small forward he is exc1ted about getting
BY MARK WILLIAMS

SPECIAL TO THE TIMES·SENTINEL

,,

the season started. "Th.is
is my fifth year in college
and I ve been at the highest
level and played against
great competition. so I m
lookin&amp; forward to this
season,' Jackson said.
Jackson i~ majoring in
Communications.
Shedrick Usand-Bwton.
a 6 6" sophomore transfer
forward
from
New
Orleans. LA. played at
Southern University last
season. He said he is all
about working hard and
doing whatever the team
needs him to do. ·'Just
work hard, that s all I can
bling to the table," UsandBurton said. "I ll do
whatever coach needs me
to do, if he needs me to
cheer. if he needs to get on
the court and score, if he
needs me to get on the
court ru1d rebound, I II do
what he tells me to do. nm,
skip, hoP.· jump. l m going
to do it.'
Usand-Burton talked
about his route to Rio
Grande. "A lot of blessings. a lot of faith, a lot of
hope,'' he ~aid. ''I called a
couple of schools and this
was one of the schools that
called back and before r
knew it I was tlying up
here to see if I could come
and play for them and
found that I would be playin~ for Rio Grande basketbat!."
He plans to major in
Business Management.
The entire group feels
like they can do some great
things together on the basketball court. "Everyone
is focused on one common
~oal. that we just want to
be a family and be together:' Whitmg said. "We
have all the pieces to compete, we all just want to
come together and do it as
a terun."
"If everylxxl) plays their
role and their prut on and
off the cotnt. we will be a
team,"
pretty
good
Warmack said. ·'If we
plat together and not be
selfish we can have a good
season."

''Basically, we have
bonded kind of quickly
and I know as the year
goes on that we will have
great communication with
each other,'' Kimber
added. "I think we re
going to do well atld get
this thing on track and win
some gan1es."
"l think we can definitely have a well over .500
season,'' Birchfield said.
''Maybe, I don t really
know the competition. but
hopefully we can win our
conference. that s one of
my goals and hopefully
make it to the NAJA
Toumament."
"Definitely I feel like we
should be at the top:·
Jackson said. ''Right now.
we re just wonied about
getting better as a team.
working on our chemistry."
"Rioht
now
e
c I see hioh
e.
expectations tOr the team.'
said Usand-Burton. "But
as of right now, we just
want to keep growing
together and keep working
hard to do the best we can
to bring a championship
home."
French is interested to
see how this group develops. "We ve planted a
seed in the ground and
mw it ·s up to us to put the
dilt on top of it. water it,
watch it every day and nurture it and hopefully it will
grow in the right direction," he said.
"We
haven t had any adversity
yet, so it s hruu to tell, yau
an t really judge the class
until the end of the year,
sometimes the end of two

years. but I thought we
brought in. definitely highcharacter kids, now how
that relates to the basketball court. that s the
unknown."
"The big thing is. I
thought that they fit a need
for us and we fit a need for
them," French added.
·'They wanted a familytype atmosphere and we
definitely have that with
our program. I think it
will be a win-win situation.
both for us as a program
and for them as individuals.''
French knew going into
the Mid-South Conference
that the recruiting philosophy had to change and to
expand to other areas. He
wa" able to land players
from parts of the country
that Rio Grande was not
able to reach in the past
and he was able to land
some transfers t~ help
bring about a more immediate turnaround. "I think
the most important thing is
when you do take on a
transfer. it s 110t to be the
ri~ht tit.'' ?rench said.
"lr you re talking about
our (NCAA) D I transfer,
t s Robbie Jackson and
re s the ri~ht ftt."
'He s Jookincr for an
opportunity to finish off
I11S career m the ri~ht environment and I thinK we can
provide that for him."
French added. ·'From that
standpoint 1 wanted to
make sure that we brought
in the right type of person
because in our league you
have to take some transfers."

Thank you
Wiseman Agency
for purchasing my
2010 Market Steer.
Lawrence Wedemeyer
Gallipolis FFA

�r-- ......

0

Page B6 • sunbtlJ? 'GI:nnrs -~rntinrl

~--

-

..,.,. ... - ""'- - -...._

~·

-. :'1

- ·~

• . :]

_,

Sunday, September 26,

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

2010

Some playoff contenders Cribbs not begging for ball
have empty seats
CINCINNATI (AP) When the Reds called up
crowd-pleasing reliever
Aroldis Chapman at the
end of August. players
hoped his 103 mph fastball would finally .fill the
seats at Great American
Ball Park.
"We were
talking
about it a little bit in the
bullpen,"
Cincinnati·
reliever Sam LeCure
said. ''We were saying.
hope
when
Aroldis
comes, they can get more
people in the seats. "
Not even his blink-ofan-eye pitch could pack
'em in.
·
The Reds are on the
brink of securing their
fir&lt;&gt;t playoff appearance
in 15 years. but they re
having trouble drawing
much of a crowd to see it
happen. Attendance is up
roughly 4.000 per game
at Great American, but
the Reds sti II rank near
the bottt)m of the
National League.
They re not alone.
either.
Atlanta.
San
Diego and Tampa Bay
are struggling at the gate
whil~ they fight for a
spot m the postseason.
Heading into games on
Thursday, all four were
in position to make the
playoffs as either division champions or wildcard teams. None of the
four ranked higher than
ninth in attendance in
their leagues. according
to STATS LLC.
-San Diego is on
track for its first playoff
appearance in four years.
but ranks 11th in attendance at 26.038 per
game. Last year. the
Padres drew 23.735 per
game.
-The Reds rank 12th
at 25.379 per game an
increase from 21.579 last
year but still a disappointment. They sold
only 12.061 tickets their smallest crowd of
the season - when they
clinched their first winning season in l 0 years
on Sept. 13.
-The Rays have been
going
back-and-forth .
with the Yankees in the
AL East all season. but
their attendance has gone
backward. Tampa Bay is
selling 23.08 I tickets per
game. a decrease from
23,147 last year. That
ranks ninth in the AL.
-Atlanta was second
in the NL East and led
the wild-card race by a
half-game over San
Francisco. In Bobby

·r

ager Dusty Baker said
before a series with
Chicago. ''We nt.:ed the
· attcnu':l!lce so we can
sustain and get . ~orne
more - more players.
that is."
The Reels
payroll
. depends heavily upon
Cox s final season as
manager, the Braves
have experienced a slight
rise in ticket sales.
They re
averaging
30,042 per game. up
from 29.304 last year.
Each team has a different dynamic at work.
The Rays have a history
of struggling to sell tickets. The Retls just broke
a streak of nine consecutive rosing seasons.
which made them an
afterthought heading into
the season. San Diego
and Atlanta also are si.lrprising contenders. and
warm weather on the
West Coast and in the
South presents other
options besides going to
a ballpark.
There s one common
thread.
"I understand with the
economy the way it is.
some people can t afford
to come out to the
game." LeCure said.
Attendance overall is
down minimally in the
majors this season. from
30,215 per game last
year to 30.078. The
economy has cut into not
only baseball s crowds
but those for other professional sports as well.
Beyond that. it s any~ s guess.
The Reds long streak
of futility - no playoff
appearance since 1995.
no winning record since
2000 - cut deeply into
fan interest. They drew
only 1.7 million fans last
year. their smallest attendance since 1986 when
they were at Cinergy
Field. One game drew
only 9.878 fans. the.
smallest gate since Great
American Ball Park
opened in 2003. '
It \\as a measure of
hov.' much the losing has
hurt fan interest.
~
Their biggest crowds
this seasor1~came when
the rival Cubs and
Cardinals were in town.
bringing tens of thousands of fans with them.
At some games. the visiting fans drowned out the
home crowd.
··we welcome them
because we need the
attendance:' Reds man-

attendance.

Cinc~nnati

increased its opening day
payroll from $71 million
last year to $72.4 mil·
lion. which ranked 19th
in the majors. The Reds
arc hoping for a signiticant bump in attendance
next year to ·give them
more payroll flexibility.
Historically.
teams
usually see a jump in
attendance the year after
a great season. Tampa
Bay s
attendance
rncreased from 1.38 million in 2007 to 1.81 111 iIlion in 2008, when it
went to the World Series
and had those playoff
crowds. The improbable
postseason run resulted
in a bump in ticket sales
to 1.87 m_illion last year.
The Reds know what
tl1&lt;1t s like.
They drew 2.06 million fans in 1999. when
the) made an unexpected
push before losing a onegame playoff to the Mets
for the wild card. Season
ticket sales increased in
the offseason. and made
an · even ·bigger jump
when the club acquired
Ken Griffey Jr. at the
start of spring trainin2..
Cincinnati sold 2.58 miTlion tickets for 2000.
For I1ow, though. the
small crowds are disappointing.
The Bra\'eS won 14
straight division championships through 2005, an
unmatched run of titles.
They ve made an unexpected run toward the
playoffs in Cox s final
season before retirement.
The feel-good story has
resulted in an increase of
only 638 fans per game
The
most
famou~
Brave doesn t understand.
"These young ktds are
playing well." Hall of
Farner ijank Aaron said
recently.
·'Oh
man.
we ve got some goodlooking young kids out
there. The cit) should be
excited about what we
have here:·
In some cities. the
excitement is still smallscale.
"It s a shame,.. the
Reds LeCure said. "The
city s been waiting for so
long."

BEREA. Ohio CAP) Already one of the NFL s
elite return specialists,
Joshua Cribbs is developing into a bona fide wide
receiver for the Browns.
1-l! s got the size, the
strengtJ1. the speed.
All re s lacking is the
selfishness.
Struggling through two
games,
Cleveland s
t&gt;ffense could use a spark.
and the multitalented
Cribbs. a f01mer quarterback at Kent State. seems
to be the logical choice to
provide one. Trouble is. he
needs the ball in his hands
to make things happen.
and for whatever reason.
the Browns hardly gave it
to him Sunday in a 16-14
loss to Kansas Cit).
Cribbs refuses to beg
Cleveland s coaches for
the ball.
'"l can onl; bribe the
qual1erbacks: he joked.
However. the Browns
offensive ineptitude is no
laughing matter.
With~ backup qumterback Seneca Wallace
starting
pressed
into
because
of
Jake
Delhomme s ankle injury.
Cleveland gained just 55
yards in the second half
against the Chiefs. whose
defense finished 30th overall in the league last $cason. The Browns managed
a mere three tirst downs
after halftime. and one of
those came courtesy of a
penalty.
On Monday. coach Eric
Mangini lamented not
using the wildcat fonnation with Cribbs at QB and
Wallace split wide. Thl!
Browns ran it just once.
with Cribbs picking up a
yard on a nm late in the
second quarter.
Cribbs was pleased to
hem· Mangini s admission.
"I agree and whenever
they call my number. 1 ll
be ready," Cribbs said. "At
the same time. if we win
·that game. r'lobody is talking about Josh is not gettin$:1 the football enough.··
uibbs had three catches
for 74 yards, 65 coming on

a TO pass from Wallace,
who may have to start
again in Baltimore on
Sunday for. Dclhomme.
The Chiefs also neutralized Cdbbs on returns by
kicking the ball high and
short to Clevelaml :; up
backs. The stmtegy resulted in Cribbs gettmg one
kickoff rd(trn tOr 19 yards
and one punt retum for 5.
There wasn l much
Cribbs could do. He certainly wasn t going to
COI~1P.ound things by cornplauung.
"As a leader, I 111 not the
guy who be~s for the football:· he smd. "I will let
them coach. I m sure !hey
realize. ·Hey. we got to get
him the ball more. It will
happen. There are certain
situations in the game
where it s not the ~right
time for my number to be
called and that s just the
way it is."
Cleveland may need to
get creative against the
~averts fearsome defense.
the only unit not ~o give up
a touchdown th1s season.
Complicating matters for
the Browns ts that running
back Jerome Harrison
missed practice with a
thigh injury. and \Vide
receiver Brian Robiskie
injured his hamstring durin£ practice Wednesday.
'Cribbs can t do it all.
except that he may have to.
He does give the Bro\\ ns
multiple options. They can
put him at wide receiver.
quarterback. running back.
in the slot or on the edge.
The wildcat can be effec·tive. but Wallace cautioned
that it may not work
against a defense has
aggressive as Baltin:ore s.
"You have to p1ck and
choose when you want to
use "it and utllize it," he
said. ·'Cribbs is a great athlete. so he s going to make
it happen whatever defense
we r:e a2ainst.'"
Baltin1ore. though. is a
different beast.
. The Ravens have forced
their opponents to settle for
field goals on all six trips
inside the red zone. For

Cleveland, which has yet
to &lt;;Core in the second half
this sea;-,on, to &lt;;core a
touchdown. it may have to
come on a big, lung play.
Cribbs believes the
Browns have enough quality playmakers. and that
the Browns only need •
avoid the costly penalti
and turnovers that sabotaged scoring drives last
week - and in the opener
at 'Htmpa Bay.
"I think we re OK."
Cribbs said. ''If we just
limit our mistakes and
make just one or two mistakes m each game. we d
be 2-0. We turned the ball
over. We nave them I0
points on offense. for two
weeh in a row, we ve
~iven their team I0 points.
If we don t do that, we re
2-0 and no one is sayin!!
Cribbs needs the ball. We
need to sharpen it up on
offense and do our jobs.''
Mangini has warned that
those who make mistakes
will pay with playing time.
Violators will be prosecuted. and sentenced to
Mancini s bench.
·"That s a e:ood mes&lt;&gt;age:· Cribbs said. '"Your
livelihood is at stake. We
talk about a recession.
Guys will not have a j.
They will be out of he1
Coach is serious about
that. He has shown in the
past that he will activate
pmctice sqL~ad guys. ~uys
wh~. are gomg to be nun!.!IY.

'"' Right now. Cribbs is
starvmg t()r the football.
But he c~m t feed it to himself.
l s not in Cribbs nature
to be demanding. but now
may not be a bad time to
staJt.

Make no mistake, he
W&lt;U1ts the ball anyway he

can get it.
"I m sure the coaches
are workin~ on that now.''
he said. "Tnere are a lot of
different things that are in
the game plan. but you
d11 t know how much I 11
touch the football. I just
&lt;bl t know if it \viii be -a
lot."

BATTLE DAYS
Celebrating the first battle of the American Revolution

October 1-3, 2010 ·
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1
I O:OOam- 4:30pm • Mansion House Museum
I O:OOam- 5:00pm • Crafts- Main Street
Encampments &amp; Craft Demonstrations
12 Noon. 8:00pm • Art Show- Fort Randolph Terrace - Main Street
7:30pm • Lantern Tour

SATURDAY.OCTOBER2
9:00am - SK Run for Sight sponsored by Lions Club
I O:OOam· 4:30pm • Mansion House Museum
I O:OOam- 4:00pm • Crafts, Activities for all ages, Entcrta
(Sponsored by Main Street Merchants, Main Street)
I O:OOam· 8:00pm • Art Show- Fort Randolph
Main Street
ll:OOam •\Parade- Main Str-eet
12:00 noon- John Marshall Fife &amp; Drum Corps
12:30 pm- Anne Bailey • Kanawah Valley Pipes &amp;
1:00pm- Thunder Tones Chorus • Chief Cornstalk
• Essay Contest Banquet River Museum
1:30pm- Children s Colonial Games • Andrew Lewis
2:00pm-4:00pm- Meet Local Author- Irene Brand
2:00 pm- Anne Bailey • Musket Firing
2:30 pm- Chief Cornst(\lk • Militia Drilling &amp;
Recruitment of Volunteers
3:00pm- Children s Colonial Games •Andrew Lewis
3:30 pm- Martha Washington
4:00pm- Ladies Colonial Tea
5:00 - 8:00 pm- Colonial Governor s Reception.
American Legion (tickers required for Receptiml S.AR members onlvJ

8:00 tlm- 10:00 pm- Colonial Ball
'
American Legion (free &amp;

SAVE UPTO $25,000- OFFER ENDS 9/301

SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3
I O:OOam • Colonial Church Service-

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1:OOam • 4:00pm • Art Show -Fort Randolph Terrae~ •
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1:00pm-4:30pm- Mansion House Museum
2:00pm • Memorial Servtce -

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~unbap ~imes -~entinel

THE
•

IVER

Sunday, September 2 6 , 2010

Helping to feed
Gal~o Count~~ Hun~ry Chftdren
One hijd At Afime
Bv A NDREW CARTER
MDTNEWS®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - No child should ever have to. go
to bed hungry.
But that would only be true in a perfect world, and
goodness knows the world in which we live is light
years away from perfect, which means there are millions of children across this big blue marble we call
home who lay their heads down most nights with an
empty stomach.
Even in a nation as prosperous as the United States,
there are far too many kids who experience that sad
scenario on a regular basis. Unfortunately, some of
those kids live right here in the tri-county area.
One group of volunteers in Gallia County has
drawn a line in the sand, so to speak, in an effort to
reach out to children in our area who don't enjoy the
benefits that many of their classmates take for granted.
The Gallia County Snack Pack Organization was
founded in 2007 when Gallipolis resident Nancy
Smith, a former nurse, read an article in USA Today
that detailed the national back pack program originated by Second Harvest Food Banks. After doing some
research about the program, Smith caught a vision
that such an outreach could benefit many children in
Gallia County.
After a series of meetings and extensive planning,
Snack Pack began its outreach in February 2008 at
Rio Grande Elementary School by distributing 85
packs of food to school kids who were enrollad in the
free and reduced lunch program.
"We chose Rio Grande as our pilot program
because one· of our team members was involved with
(Gallia County) Children's Services and we looked at
the numbers of the schools and how many kids they
had on free and reduced lun ch, percentage-wise,
compared to their enrollment," Smith said. "So Rio
Grande was the highest at that point and it was a small
school and we thought it was a real do-able program."
Since that time, Snack Pack has grown to include
all seven elementary schools in Gallia County, serving more than 1,500 children enrolled in free and
reduced lunch programs. According to statistics from
November 2009, 61 percent of elementary school
children in Gallia County are enrolled in free and
reduced lunch programs. In the Gallia County Local
School District, the figure is 61 percent. In the
Gallipolis City School Dist1ict. the number is 58 percent.
"Most people don't even think about kids in Gallia
County going hungry," Smith said. ''And a lot of
those kids whose parents qualify for free and reduced
lunch aren't necessarily hungry kids, but some of
them are. So we know that in offering it to them all,
we're feeding those who are hungry."
Smith said Snack Pack delivers food packages to
students once a month. The packs include non-perishable items like macaroni and cheese, cereal packs or
bars, pop-top meals, peanut butter, crackers, pudding
and fruit cups. fresh fruit (when available), fruit juice
and shelf-stable milk.
"Peanut butter's probably our biggest expense and
our biggest resource," Smith said.
Snack Pack is an entirely volunteer-driven organization with no paid staff. It is a 501 C3 non-profit
group, which means any donations to the group are
tax deductible. Smith said area churches, civic
groups, businesses and good-hearted individuals have.
donated food, money and their time to help make the
program a success. She said there are about 100 or so
active members, 25 of which form the central com.
mittee that oversees Snack Pack.
Smith said all food donated to Snack Pack is stored
at the former CVS Pharmacy facility locatep next to
Foodland on Jackson Pike. The building is owned by
Holzer Clinic, which donates the space at no cost to
Snack Pack.
For information about the Gallia County Snack
Pack Organization, contact Nancy Smith at 446-3939.
Donations may be sent to the group at P.O. Box 169.
Gallipolis, OH 45631.

�.

~

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

Sunday, September 26,

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

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

but the book is now back
in ' the community where
it belongs. It has been
added to the museum collection. and will be displayed in the museum's
school room exhibit. In
appreciation for the book
which is considered a
community
treasure,
Goodman sent Olita four
free admission tickets to
the museum.
By the way for those
who remember Miles. he
now works at the Times
in
West
Virginia
Fairmont. His wife, also
an OU journalism grad. is
employed with The
Dominion Post. Miles
and his wife and two children live in Morgantown.

.

the burning of the U.S.
Capitol
in
1814.
Jefferson's organization
of his books by categories of "Memory.
Reason ,md Imagination''
will inform the organization of the exhibition.
''Gateway
to
Knowledge'' will also feature facsimiles of such treasures
as the
1507
Waldseemtiller Map (the
tirst document to use the
word "America"); the 1455
Gutenberg Bible: the rough
draft of the Declaration of
Independence. in Thomas
Jefferson's hand with edits
by Benjamin Franklin and
John Adruns: the original
1962 drawings for the
comic book that introduced
Spiderman to the world;
the handwritten manuscript
to jaz1. pioneer Jelly Roll
Morton ·s "Frog-i-More
Rag": and WaltWhitm&lt;m's
poem "Leaves of Gras~."
The
exhibit
will
include
programming
especially for teachers
und students and provide
relevant and engaging
learning experiences for
lifelong learners.
The truck. which will
be staffed and driven by
two docents well-versed
in the Library ' and its
collections, will be
at
various
parked
schools, libraries. community centers and other
public venues. The trailer expands to twice its
road width. and visitors
will enter from a central
staircase to lind several
areas of museum-style

URG student's poem published
RIO GRANDE - It's
not unusual for University
of Rio Grande and Rio
Grande
Community
College faculty member to
see the work of their former students published in
national ma~azines. but
Dr. Ralph Shtbley's recent
experience with this wa-;
parth.:ularly unique and
poignant.
Shibley, who lives in
Powell . Ohio, teaches in
Rio Grandt&gt;'s Bunce
School or Education and
h. an expert on autism.
Before teaching at Rlo
Grande. in fact, Shibley
taught in the first classroom in Ohio designed
for children with autism.
He was teaching at
Mohawk High School in

Columbus at the time,
an&lt;.l worked with the stu-dents with autism from
1976 through 1980.
The work that he did
stud~nts
with
those
fanned the basis of his
&lt;.loctoral research on hrain
functioning and autism in
the 1980s and left a lasting impression on him.
At Rio Grande. Shibley
;;erves as Professor of
Education, and teaches
students who will go on
to become teachers thems~lvcs. In his clas:;es. he
also discusses his experiences working with students with autism and
many different developmental disabilities. and

Please see Poem, C6

te unbap 'Q!:imes&gt; -fS&gt;entinel • Page C2

TUPPERS PLAINS The monthly donation
for the Meigs County
Council on Aging's
Meals on Wheels program was approved at a
recent meeting of the
United
Methodist
Women at the St. Paul
United Methodist Church
in Tuppers Plains.
Members were reminded that the World Thank
program and offering
collection
will
be
observed at the October
meeting and that the
UMW
Festival
of
Sharing will take place
on Oct. 9 at Otterbein
University in Westerville.
The annual pancake/
sausage breakfast was

rescheduled for Nov. 6,
with serving from 7 to II
a.m. Also announced wa')
the "Let's Get Together"
37th annual celebration of
the West Ohio Conference
to be held on Nov. 23 at
Wmthington.
Barbara Roush, presi·
dent. conducted the
meeting with Joanna
Weaver givmg the opening prayer. The group in
unison read the UMW
litany and purpose. Judy
Kennedy presented the
Response moment highlighting
the
article
"Answering the Call to
Music Ministry" by DeRanee Blaylock.
The program ''Missions
Comes Home: Gather to

Celebrate'' was presented
by Sharon Luks. The program focused on the
global nature of missions
highlighting fundamental
concepts of mission and
evangelism.
Cards were signed for
Els1e Culley and Edn.a
Warner. The prayer ca
endar birthday car
recipient was Susie
Canaflax of Atlanta. Ga.
Members present were
Barb
Roush,
Betty
Chevalier, Connie Rankin,
Teresa Lemons, Andrea
Brown, Judy Kennedy,
Joanna Weaver and Sharon
Louks. Weaver gave the
blessing before refresh
men~ were served. Next
meeting will be Oct. 4.

•• 0

The outpouring of assistance for the Reedsville
tomado victims has been
oven\'helming. Churches

across the region have
responded to the needs of
many families who lost
everything. many volunteers have come to help.
and local agencies. businesses and organizations
have provided tremendous SUJ?port.
Meigs EMA Director
Bob Byer co~;nmented
that in the 20 years he has
worked in disaster times.
he has never seen such an
outpouring of help from
the community and the
surrounding area.
It just goes to show that
we may be a poor county
with high unemployment. but we are a proud
people who know the
impmtance of sharing in
times of need. The tornado which struck the
Reedsville area a week
ago has made that clear.

Traveling exhibit coming to Marietta
MARIETTA - A special Library of Congress
traveling exhibition will
visit Marietta on Oct. 2
and 3.
Free and open to the
public,
the
exhibit.
parked at the .Marietta
College Library. 220
F1fth St.. will be available for viewing from I 0
a.m.-6 p.m. on Oct. 5-6.
The ··Gateway to
Knowledge" exhibition
- mounted in a customized 18-wheel truck
- will bring high-quality facsimiles of many of
the Library's top treasures and information
about the millions of
resources in the Library's
unparalleled collections
to small towns and rural
communities
across
America . The exhibit
will visit states across the
Midwest and South over
the next year.
Librarian of Congress
James H. Billington said.
"As both a storehouse of
world knowledge and the
primary resource for the
U.S.
Congress,
the
Library is energized by
th~ prospects of the traveling exhibition playing
. an important role in shru·ing the national collection with the people to
whom it belongs."
The exhibition will
outline the history of the
Library.
including
Thomas Jefferson'-; role
in re-establishing the
Library. when he provided his personal book collection to the nation after

_.......

UMW contributes to Meals on Wheels

COMMUNITY (ORNER
There is no ~reater love
than that wh1ch pm·ents
feel for their children and
for most of us nothing is
too much to give. not
even a kidney.
Michelle. daughter or
John Morris. a colonel in
the U.S. Air Force now
stationed in California.
was diagnosed with a
severe kidney disorder in
2004. Four years ago
Michelle had to begin
Charlene Hoeflich
dialysis sessions three
times a week. She was
placed on the waiting list
Miles Layton, a former
for a kidney donor. but as reporter on this newspaeveryone knows it takes a per. sent along a copy of
long time to find a suit- a story from The
able donor.
Dominion
Post
in
Not willing to wait. Arthurdale,
W.Va ..
family members began telling how Nathaniel
the testing process and it Hawthorne's book "The
was John who turned out Scarlet Letter" presented
to be a viable kidney to the Arthurdale School
donor for his daughter. In Library by Mrs. franklin
an article which appeared Roosevelt in 1936. turned
in an Air Force newspaper up recently at the
it describes John's reac- ' Pomeroy Library.
tion to the news a-; ··ecstaSeems the hard cover
tic. incredibly happy. and book was discovered at the
anxious to get it done."
local libni.ry by the assisThe transplant took place tant
director
Olita
on Sept. I at the Lorna Heighton. She found lt in
Linda University Medical the bottom of a box of
Center Transplantation paperback romance novels
Institute a11d both John and donated to the librarv. It
Michelle are doing fine. Ir1 was clearly stamped
fact she is back in college "Propetty of the Arthurdale
and John is back at his School Library'' and had a
desk. Full rl!cuperation for handwritten note explainboth will take time.
ing
its
origin
For John giving a kid- "Presented
by
Mrs.
ney to his &lt;.laughter so Franklin Roosevelt 1936."
that she can enjoy a full
After seeing that. Olita
life is. as he describes it. did some research. found
.. the most important Arthurdale Heritage, Jnc.
thing I've ever done in and mailed it to the execmy life.''
utive director Jeanne
John is the son of Carl Goodman
of
who.
and Janet Morris of course. was delighted to
Rutland.
receive it.
•••
The school library has
Now how strange is this. been closed for decades

.. _

~~-

exhibits including a welcoming multimedia display. computer terminals
displaying the Library of
Congress main website.
www.loc.gov. and other
websites ~including the
Center
for
the
Book/Literacy Programs
site. www.rcad.gov. and
sites pertaining to U.S .
collections. exhibitions
and a special site for use
by teachers.
The exhibition was the
idea of philanthropists
Abby
and
Emily
Rapoport, the granddaughters of Audre and
Bernie Rapoport. founding members of the
L'b
·
1 rary ·s pnvate-sector
support orgaf)ization the
James Madison Council.
The young Rapoports
have donated $1 million
to the Library to make
"Gateway
to
the
•
h· · ·
Knowledge . ex tbttton
possible and bring the
Library's riches to areas
of the nation - particularly mral areas - that
may not be aware of their
access to the wealth of
information in this publicly funded institution.
Founded in 1800, the
Library of Congress is
the nation's oldest Federal cultural institution.
The Li braty seeks to
spar~ . imaginatio~ and
creatl\'lty and to futt~er
huma~
understa~d~ng
and w1sdom by prov"hng
access to knowledge
through its magnificent
collections.
programs
and exhibitions.

HAPCAP has immediate CSFP openings
ATHENS
The
Hocking Athens Perry
Community
Action
Regional Food Center has
announced that it has
immediate openings in its
Commodity Supplemental
Food Program (CSFP) m
Meigs County.
According to Dick
Stevens, HAPCAP food
and nutrition division
director. CSFP is a federally- funded USDA food and
nutrition program for nutritionally at-tisk, incomeeligible participants 60 and
older administrated by
Ohio Department of Job
and Family Services.
Each month, more than
4.400 seniors 60 and older
in a 10-county region
recetve a food box of
USDA products. The

monthly food box includes·
canned fmits, vegetables,

juices, meats. dairy and
cereal. Boxes are prepackaged at the Regional Food
Center in Logan.
To qualify for the program. pruticipants must be:
• A resident of Meigs
County.
• Age 60 years or older.
o Meet federal income
eligibility guidelines.
Eligibility is based on
130 percent of the
Federal Poverty Income
Guidelines. All income
eligible households 60
and older must be able to
provide proof of age and
residence. The income
guidelines in annual.
monthly and weekly
instalJments follow:
• One-person house-

hold: $14,079 income per
year $1.174 income per
month, or $271 income
per week;
• Two-person household: $18,941 per year,
$1,579 per month, or
$365 per week;
• Three-person household: $23,803 per year,
$1,984 per month. or.
$458 per week;
• Four-person household: $28,665 per year,
$2,389 per month, or
$552 per week;
For each additional
family member over four
add
the
following:
$4,862 per year, $405 per
month, or $94 per week.
Applications are available by calling Carla
Saum at 800-385-6813.
ext. 2221.

Family Medicine: The problem of
constipation not to be ignored
Bv MARTHA A.
D.O., M.B.A.

SIMPSON,

ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF
FAMILY MEDICINE

Question: This is an
problem. I
am constipated most of
the time. My mother says
I always have been. Now
that I am adult, it seems to
be getting worse. Is there
something•wrong with me
that makes it hard for me
to go to the bathroom'!
Answer: This is a great
question. because it is estimated that constipation
affects about two percent
of adults in the United
States. That's more than
four miJiion people. It is
more common is women
and it secnis. also. to be a
embarra&lt;~sing

common complaint of the
elderly. Constipation is
. usually not considered a
serious medical condition,
but it is something to be
dealt with and not ignored.
Constipation is defined
as difficult bowel movements. While everyone
has their own "rhythm''
with regard to bowel
"f
b
1
movements, 1 your owe
movements arc less than
every three days. you have
constipation. The longer
the interval between bowel
movements. the more difficult having a b wei
movement
becomes
because stools tend to be
hard and dry. There can be
, additional symptoms of
~ constipation aside ·from
not having a bowel movement. Abdominal pain ru1d
swelling, straining to have
a bowel movement and
'

~~~/

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increased gas also are
common symptoms of
constipation.
There are many reasons
this condition may occur,
most of them relating to
dietary habits and lifestyle,
The most common of these
causes are inadequate fluid
intake, especially water:
lack of fiber in the diet; lack
of exercise or activity, like
too much time in a chair or
on the couch: ignoring the
natural urge to have a bowel
movement. because the
more frequently you ignore
your bodily signals, the
fewer signals the body
sends; a change in routine,
like travel, early meetings at
work, or an abrupt change
m schedule~ and eating
large quantities of dairy
products. like cheese.
There also are some
medical causes of constipation which include pregnancy, hypothyroidism,
medication side effects,
and irritable bowel syndrome, a&lt;&gt; well as more
serious causes such as colorectal cancer and neurological conditions such as
multiple sclerosis or
Parkinson· s disease.
Most of the time, constipation occurs as a result of
the more benign causes,
and there are many things
· that you can do to treat and
prevent it. Be sure you are
drinking enough water
evety day. About one and a

half to two quarts a day is
recommended. Milk and
caffeinated beverages can
mcrease your constipation,
so try to avoid these. Get
more exercise. This doesn't
necessarily mean you need
to work out in a gym - A
just getting up and walkingW
around more will improve
bowel function. And yes.
it's true; prunes do work to
relieve or prevent constipation. Some people prefer to
drink about 4 ounces of
warm prune juice every
morning. And finally. be
sure you include lots of
fruits. vegetables and
whole grains in your diet to
increase the amount of
fiber
you
consume.
Laxatives should be used
with caution since it is possible to become dependent
on them over time.
While most people do
not need to go to the doctor for constipation, if it
is not relieved with simple measures. or if it
comes on for no apparent
reason, a medical checkup is indicated.
(Family Medicine® is a
~1:eeklv column. General
medical questiom can be.
sent to Martha A.
Simpson. D.O., M.B.A.,
Ohio University College
nf Osteopathic Medicine,
Communication Office,
Athens, Ohio 45701, or
familymedicine@oucom.
ohiou.edu.)

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w

•• •• a

oa awe e

Sunday, September 26,

¥4

-

2010

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

~unbap

m:tmes -$&gt;entinel • Page C3

Amy and Scott Shipe

FRECKER-SHIPE
H OLESKI-SETTLES
WEDDING
W .EDDI N G
Amy Marie Frecker and Scott Rush Shipe were unitErik and Liza Settles

Liza Holeski and Erik Settles were married on St;pt.
5, 2010, at Olin Park in Madison, Wise. Pastor Keith
Eilers, uncle of the groom, performed the ceremony.
Liza is the daughter of Paul and Sue Holeski of
Gambier, Ohio, formerly of Rio Grande. She is a 1997
graduate of Gallia Academy High School, a 2001 graduate of St. Olaf College and earned a Ph.D. in biology
the University of Kansas in 2007. She is employed
research associate at the University of Wisconsin.
rik is the son of Gorden and Martha Settles of
North Bend, Neb. He is a 1998 graduate of North Bend
High School in Nebraska, a 2002 graduate of Wayne
State College and earned a Ph.D. in virology from the
University of Wisconsin in 2008. He is employed as a
research associate at the University of Wisconsin.
The couple resides in Madison, Wise.

«

ed in marriage July 29, 2010, in Myrtle Beach, S.C.
The Rev. Denny Krumlauf, uncle of the groom, performed the ceremony on the beach in front of the
Spring Maid Beach Resort.
The bride was given in marriage by her parents and
escorted by her father. Amy is the daughter of Rodney
and Mona Frecker of Pomeroy. Scott is the son of
Robert and Penny Shipe of Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
Rachel Jones, friend of the bride, served as matron
of honor. Aaron Shipe, brother of the groom, served
as best man. Ushers were Austin and Wyatt King,
nephews of the bride. Nieces and nephews of the
groom adorned the bride's path with seashells.
The bride wore a v-neck gown by Sandals made of
nu-georgette with a multitiered skirt and slight train.
She carried a bouquet of coral calla lilies and ferns
with cascading coral flowers.
A reception was held at the Ripley's Aquarium Banquet
Room at Broadway on the Beach. A country-style buffet
dinner was served along with a three-tiered cake decorated with aqua and coral seashells and topped with coral
calla lilies. The couple honeymooned for a week before
returning to their home in Middleport. The bride is
employed by the Ohio University Medical Associates in
Athens, ~d the groom is employed by MPW, Hebron.

Beau and Erica Jividen

MULHOLANDJIVIDEN
WEDDING
Mr. and Mrs. Eric Mulholand and Ms. Joyce Jividen
and Dean Jividen would like to announce the marriage of their children, Erica Von Mulholand and Beau
Dean Jividen.
The wedding t.ook place oceanfront at Myrtle
Beach, S.C., on Aug. 21,2010. with a small group
of family and friends present. A reception was
held at the Shrine Club on Bulaville Pike the following week.
Erica is the granddaughter of Phyllis and the late
James Mulholand of Wilkesville, and Bill and
Mildred George of Bidwell.
·
Beau is the grandson of Mildred Jividen Jacobs and
the late Ray Jividen of Bidwell, and Evelyn and the
late Julius Preston of Gallipolis.
Beau and Erica are both graduates of River Valley
High School. Erica is employed at Holzer Clinic in
Gallipolis and is currently enrolled at Marshall
University. Beau is employed by the Gallipolis
Developmental Center.
Beau and Erica reside in Gallipolis.

University of Rio Grande welcomes new faculty
RIO GRANDE- The
University of Rio Grande
and
Rio
Grande
Community College welcomed several new faculty and staff members to
campus this fall, including Carla Shuler, Robert
Fish, William Capehart
and Richard Fisher
Shuler, who is a lecturer at the Rio Grande
Meigs Center, recently
retired from the Southern
Local School District.
Hailey Elizabeth Gruber
She has been a teacher
for 38 years, and also
taught part-time previously for in the evenings
Hailey Elizabeth Gruber was born Aug. 24, 2010, at Rio Grande at the Meigs
Center and on the main
Holzer Medical Center.
Hailey is the daughter of Chris and Danielle Gruber campus. She has a master's of education degree
of Bidwell, and little sister to Isaiah.
from
Ohio University
She is the granddaughter of Howard and Gerry Gruber
and lives near Racine.
of Cheshire and Mike and Judy Carter of Oak Hill.
She has enjoyed teaching for Rio Grande p(eviously and is proud to now
be a full-time lecturer.
"I like the community
college environment and I
really enjoy teaching mathematics," Shuler said.
Teaching at the Rio Grande
Meigs Center also gives
her the unique opportunity
to work with some of the
students she previously
taught at the Southern
Local School District.
"I just really enjoy
teaching for Rio Grande.
I always have," Shuler
added. "I like the people.
I like all of the staff
members I've met at Rio
Grande. I love teaching
and I just have fun."
In her new role at the
Rio
Grande
Meigs
Center, Shuler still teaches some evening classes,
but she also teaches daytime courses as well.
Jaxon Cale Martin
"If I can provide some
level of quality instruction to the people who
attend Rio Grandt:, I am
thrilled," Shuler said. " I
just feel privileged to be
Jaxon Cale, son of Joe and Samantha (Mooney) an instructor with Rio
Martin of Gallipolis, celebrated his first birthday on Grande. They've got
Sept. 9, 2010. He celebrated by playing and eating some top-notch people
there, particularly in the
pizza and cake with his family and friends.
His maternal grandparents are Lee and Jamie math department."
Mooney and Pam Dyer, all of Gallipolis .
His paternal grandparents are Paul and Mary Mrutin
Crown City.
•

GRUBER BIRTH

MARTIN 1ST
BIRTHDAY

MORGAN
ANNIVERSARY
Sharon and Mickey Morgan of Rio Grande will
celerbate their 46th wedding anniversary on Monday,
Sept. 27.
The Morgans have two children, Rodney and Scott,
who both residen in Rio Grande, and two grandchildren.

Another new member of W.Va.; assistant to the
the faculty is Robe1t Fish, superintendent for the
who is a lecturer in psy- Jefferson County Public
chology. Fish comes to Rio Schools in Louisville, Ky.;
Grande after serving in sev- and elementary teacher, seceral roles in the psychology ondary teacher, special edufield. He worked as a cation teacher, director of
Supervised Psychologist special education, associate
for the West Virginia superintendent and superinDivision of Corrections, tendent for the Mason
served as a Respite Care County Public Schools.
Capehart also served as
Provider for Braley &amp;
Thompson in St. Albans, the State Director of
W. Va, served as a Mental Special Education for the
Health Technician for the West Virginia Department
Ohio Valley Medical of Education.
Center in Wheeling, W.Va,
He also has experience
and worked as a Case teaching college students
Manager for Northwood as he served as an associate
Health
Systems
in professor for Marshall
University
Graduate
Moundville, W.Va.
Fish earned a Doctorate College and as an associate
in Industrial/Organizational professor for Franciscan
Psychology from Capella University of Steubenville.
He earned his doctorate
University, a Master's of
Arts
in
Clinical in
Public
School
Psychology from Marshall Administration/Curriculu
University and a Bachelor m &amp; Instruction/Special
of Arts in Psychology and a Education from West
Bachelor of Arts in Spanish V!rginia University, two
from Grove City College. master's degrees from
He also served as a Marshall University and a
Psychological Assistant b(lchelor's degree in eleand a Psychometrist as part mentary education/special
of his internship programs. education from West
He has been active in com- Virginia University. He
munity servic~ projects in also studied Education
the different areas he has Mediation/Conflict
lived, and Rio Grande is Resolution
with
the
proud to have him on serv- Atlanta Justice Center for
Education Mediation, and
ing on campus.
Rio Grande's Bunce has done post-doctoral
School of Education is see- reseru·ch on At-Risk
ing two new faculty mem- Teaching Strategies with
bers join the ranks this fall, West Virginia University.
Richard
Fisher.
as William Capehart and
Richard Fisher have joined D.V.M., who lives near
Gallipolis, comes to Rio
the school.
Capehart colnes to Rio Grande after a career m
Grande with a wealth of industry and education.
experience in education. He He earned his Doctor of
Medicine
is serving as an Assistant Veterinary
Professor of Education at degree from Ohio State
Rio Grande, and lives in University, and then
worked for several yem·s
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
His previous work has as a veterinarian. even
included serving as superin- owning the Rio Grande
lt:ndent of the Rockingham Veterinary Clinic from
County Schools in Eden. 1978-1983 in the village
N.C.; superintendent of the
Boyd County
Public
Schools in Ashland, Ky.;
assistant superintendent of
the Cabell County Public
Schools in Huntington,

of Rio Grande.
"It stood where there is a
campus parking lot now,"
Fisher said. He later went
on to work in industry, serving in positions such as •
Divisional Vice President
for 1 Research
and
Development for the Hartz.
Mountain
Corporation.
Director of Consumer
Relations and Technical ,
Services for the Hartz
Mountain Corporation, Vice
President of Research and
Development for CarterWallace, Inc., and Senior
Product
Development
Manager f01; the American
Cyanamid Company.
He also served as an
instructor in pre-veterinary technology for the
Miami Valley Career
Technology Center.
As an assistant professor of Career Technology
at Rio Grande, Fisher is
leading
the
Cru·eer
Technology . program.
This program invites in
professionals from industry to take classes in the
program in order to earn
their teaching licenses so
that they can also teach for
career technology centers.
"They have to take a
series of classes on.education parameters,'' Fisher·
explained. The classes are
held on Saturdays since
most of the students are
working. and students
come from all across
Ohio to take classes in
Rio Grande's progrru11.
"I enjoy the teaching.
and I reall) feel like I can
relate to students in the
career technology program because I have
experienced it," Fisher
said. He \vorkcd in industry for 21 years and practiced veterinary medicine
for seven years. and then
took classt:s so that he
could teach.

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• Page C4

Turning to Twitter to fix restaurant complaints
BY SERENA OAI
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CHICAGO When
Tony Bosco saw mostly
negative reviews about
the restaurant Wow Bao,
he Tweeted: "Going to
'business' dinner (at)Wow
Bao. Can any 1 tell me if
it's going to suck as much
reviews suggest."
And almost immediately he got a response
from an ur.expected
source - BaoMouth, the
official Twitter feed of
Wow Bao. an upscale fast
food place in Chicago.
The restaurant offered
him a coupon to find out
for himself, on the house.
Wow Bao sent Bosco
two $15 gift cards via an
iPhone app. and Bosco
went the next night, posting pictures of the food
on Twitter.
··1 would say it made it
a little more exciting."
said Bosco. 34. ''That
Immediate interaction.
Conversations
about
food that once only happened between friends are
now public thanks to the
Internet.
And
the
microblogging site Twitter
has only sped up the conversation. Whether it's
reviews before the meal or
the .service afterward,
opinions arc voiced freely
-and restaurdllts are raking notice.

Many eateries have across 50 cities. Their entire
been tweeting about spe- feed, ChipotleTweets, is a
cials or other events for a list of answers to consumer
while.
But
recently questions and responses to
restaurants - locals and problems.
chains - have started
Dennis Y slas' tweeted
Twitter
conversations in a Fort Worth, Texas.
with customers. Chains Chipotle about a lack of
like Chipotle and Pei Wei cprn tortillas. Less than 2
even have full-time social minutes later, the compa- ·
media employees.
ny replied to Yslas, a 47Previously corporate- year-old actor. The corsounding
restaurant porate office called the
Twitter feeds now are local manager about the
filled with streams of tortilla situation even
replies directly to diners, before Y slas had left the
in some cases performing restaurant, Y slas said.
nearly instantaneous cus"1 was kind of frustrattomer service.
ed that they didn't have
Geoff Alexander, man- them," said Y slas. ''But
aging partner of Wow Chipotle was totally,
Bao, explained his com- totally ready to cover me."
pany's Twitter commitChris Arnold, one of
ment like this: If some- the several people who
body has 1,000 followers Tweet for Chipotle, said
and writes a negative the volume of Tweets is
M. Spencer Green/AP Photo
Tweet about Wow Bao, the greatest challenge for This Tuesday, Sept. 14, 2010, photo shows chef Graham Elliot of Graham Elliot
then I .000 people could such a big chain. Not restaurant as he displays his Twitter account on his iPad at his restaurant in
think the restaurant is bad. only do they have an Chicago. Elliot frequently tweets his opinions about topics other than his restauBut if Wow Bao publicly employee dedicated to rant or cooking, from current events to fantasy football picks. He even uses Twitter
responds to that Tweet, social media, a slew of to let his followers make decisiohs about the music the restaurant plays.
1,000 people may see the customer service repreissue is being handled.
sentatives also Tweet and "MasterChef' and owner the restaurant again.
vidualistic approach to
"We created this entity use Facebook part-time.
. "It's great to have this cooking,'' he said.
of the Graham Elliot
to talk to people,"
"It's time and resources restaurant in Chicago. is wall torn down," Elliot
So he frequently tweets
Alexander
said. very well spent," Arnold known to - in his words said. "Most of the ttmc. his opinions about topics
"BaoMouth can do what- said. "You can either pre- - "publicly humiliate" people just want to be other than his restaurant or
ever it takes to enhance tend that (the conversation) customers who complain heard."
· cooking. from curre.
the guest's experience."
isn't happening or decide about the restaurant
Elliot wdtes all of the events ' to fantasy footb
Chipotle.
based
in not to be part of it To us, it online.
GrahamEiliot tweets him- picks. Elliot even uses
Denver, Colo., also has just ~ makes se..nse to
But if he thinks the self. Like other rest~m­ Twitter to let his followers
responded to customer
complaint is genuine, rants. Elliot wants his make decisions about the
problems through Twi~ • l
~I~!~ tjudge Elliot said he will send a Twitter voice to be in line music the restaurant plays.
even though the chain
od
!S' ~ televi- private message or call to with the brand. which in
"It's the democratization
about 1,000 locations sion
competition invite the customer to try his case means "an indi- of fine dining." he said.

,IIKuf(l)b.t'

ms

Time to introduce yourself to tomatillos
BY JIM ROMANOFF
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .

You've
probably
looked right at them
dozens of times. those
greenish. papery, lanternlike things in the bin next
to the tomatoes at the
market. And then you
probably moved on.
They"re called tomatillos and they are worth
stopping for.
. Tomatillos can be t!sed
raw or cooked much as
v·ou would a tomato. The
berry inside the husk can
range from marble- to
plum-size and has solid,
seedy flesh. Raw. they
taste a bit like green
apple with hints of lemon
or lime, but cooking mellows the flavor.
Nutritionally speaking.
tomatillos have ro.ughly
the same amount of vitamin C as a red tomato
and a bit more potassium.
When selecting tomatillos choose smooth, green
fruits (when they start to
turn yellow they lose
some of their tanginess),
free of bruises and blemishes. The husks should
be clean and dry.
To prepare tomatillos
you will need to peel
away the husk and wash
away the sticky resin on
the skin.
For a touch of tartness.
consider adding chopped
tomatillos
to
your
favorite greens. Or to
make a salad where
they're more prominently
featured.
combine
wedges of tomatillos and

tomatoes with slivered
1/8 teaspoon salt, or to
red onion, then toss in a taste
dressing
made with
Heat a·gas grill to high
extra-virgin olive oil and or light a charcoal fire.
lime juice spiked with
Grill the tomatillQs,
chopped cilantro and red oniqn slices and poblano,
pepper flakes.
..~
occasionally,
This rndlow salsa ~n
ft and~ed. I 0
verde is rna&amp; by puree~ 'to
minut~. Remove
ing char-grined tomatil- the vegetables as they are
los. sweet onion and ready. Set aside to cool
poblano chili peppers. ~ llbout 15 minutes.
The recipe can be made
Peel, seed and stem the
spicier or milder by vary- poblano. Coarsely chop
ing the type of chili pep- the onion.
per you use.
In the bowl of a food
Serve this green salsa processor, combine the
with chips for dipping, or tomatillos,
onion,
mash it up with avocado poblano, vinegar, lime
and additional lime juice juice, honey and salt.
for an easy guacamole.
Pulse until the mixture is
To make huevos verde, well blended but still a
melt some shredded Jack bit chunky. Serve warm
cheese on corn tortillas or cold.
and top with a couple
Nutrition· information
poached or fried eggs and per serving (values are
a liberal amount of the rounded to the nearest
salsa. Serve with black whole number): 87 calobeans and additional warm ries; 14 calories from fat
coin tortillas for scooping. ( 16 percent of total calories); 2 g fat (0 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 0 mg
Charred Tomatillo,
cholesterol; 18 g carboPoblano and Sweet
hydrate; 2 g protein; 4 g
Onion Salsa
fiber; 218 mg sodium.
Start to finish: 50 minLarry Crowe/AP photo
utes (10 minutes active)
Servings: 4 (l/2 cup This Aug. 30, 2010 photo
each)
shows tomatillo, poblano
1 pound tomatillos, and sweet onion salsa.
husks removed, rinsed
Tomatillos are an often
1 medium sweet onion, overlooked veggie that
cut into 1/2-inch-thick have traits similar to
slices
tomatoes and can be
. 1 small poblano chili used raw or cooked.
pepper
Grab some the next time
2 tablespoons rice you are at the market
vinegar
and try them in this salsa
1 tablespoon lime juice recipe.
1 to 2 teaspoons honey.
to taste

.

Larry Crowe/AP photo
This Aug. 30, 2010 photo shows tomatillos, light green, a poblano pepper and onion
slices ~s they are grilled to make charred tomatillo, poblano and sweet onion salsa.

Tailor-made treats: Web offers your food your way
BY MICHELLE LOCKE
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Log on and you can
design your own jeans.
shoes, even cars. So, it
shouldn't come as a surprise that you also can go
online for tailor-made
treats that let you put
your own twist on everything from jerky to gingerbread.
Take chocri, a chocolate bar company that lets
you pick out different
chocolate bases. then
choose toppings from
dozens of options.
Customers fall into
three
camps,
says
chocri's
U.S.
CEO
Carmen Magar. There are
people who want to go
crazy - chives? Really'!
People who like the idea
of personalizing a gift
without having to Clock
hours in the kitchen, and
people who just really

like the chocolate. which
is fair trade, organic and
from Belgium.
The busmess was started in Gennany by friends
Michael Bruck and Franz
Duge. The young entrepreneurs already were
running a chocolate fountain company and when
Dugc was casting around
for a birthday gift for his
girlfriend, he hit on the
idea of creating &amp; bar and
topping it with her
favorite snacks. Success
in Europe led them to
open a U.S. branch this
year and orders currently
are around 50,000 bars a
month, says Magar.
Popular
toppings
include things like .strawberries, raspberries and
· hazelnut brittle, though
sea salt also is in demand.
Tiffany Swords of
Hoboken, N.J., came
across
chocri
some
months ago when her

husband ordered a couple
of bars. He got dark
chocolate with orange
and fleur de sel and she
had a bar with dried blueberries and vanilla chips.
They have since ordered
more as gifts for family
and friends.
"I really like that you
can
choose,"
says
Swords, a teacher. "If
you have someone and
you know what they like,
it's totally custom. The
gift receivers are pleasantly surprised."
Want more bespoke
bonbons? M&amp;M's can be
ordered in various colors
and emblazoned with
everything from your
corporate loao to the
smiling fact ef your
sweet 16-year-old.
Other customized food
offerings include Slant
Shack Jerky. where you
pick the meat, marinade,
rub, glaze and size, and •

ecreamery. which lets
you pick the base, flavor.
mix-ins and packaging of
your ice cream.
Striking a more seasonal note. ~you can order
your own gingerbread
family at Gingerista.
selecting the mix of ages
and genders to fit your
clan. Dogs. cats and fish
also are available and
each cookie is hand-frosted in the color you pick.
But custom food isn "t
necessarily
cheap.
Chocolate from chocri
averages about $7 a bar,
while
ecrcamcry
charges $49.99 for four
!-pint containers.
But new dynamics in
the market "include the
Internet, the grO\vth in
-;mall companies that :-.ell
their products exclusi\ ely online, and consumers
who want "\\hat they
want the way ther, want
when they want it.·

4""-~~
L_r LJ.__

~ _.i\_"S

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�Sunday, September

2 6, 2010

Pomer oy • Middleport • Gallipolis

fa,unbap 'Otimes -fa,entinel • P age Cs

B Y HOLLY RAMER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

At a time when many
summer vacation photos
are snapped with cell
ones and posted on
ebook, the notion of
ting and framing pic•
tures seems downnght
quaint. But taking the
time to create a threedimensional work of art
Lhat literally pops off the
· paper is a rewarding way
to preserve those perfect
- and not so perfect vacation moments:
The beauty of this technique, which involves
p1inting multiple copies
of an image, cutting away
various
layers
and
reassembling them in a
shadow box frame. is that
you can switch around
subjects
and
backgrounds. Got a great picture of the Magic
Kingdom on your trip to
Disney World, but the
best picture of the kids
shows them in front of a
tacky tourist or trash can?
Just extract your little
ones from their picture
and layer them against the
A re scenic background.
~his technique also can
rescue a photograph
where the exposure
might be a bit off. For
example, if your foreground subject is a bit
dark but the.background
looks good, just print one

Holly Ramer/AP Photo
This Aug. 29, 2010, photo shows some supplies to make a 3-D framed photo in
Concord, N.H. Start by dividing a p1cture into its foreground subject, background
and several in-between layers. Print multiple copies, cut out each layer, and use
adhesive foam dots to stick them together.

copy slightly lighter Lhan
the rest and use that for
the top layer.
The result is an eyecatching display that
adds depth to the original
images. For a more artistic look. those who know
their
way
around
Photoshop or other editing software might consider applying a watercolor effect to an image
before printing.
MATERIALS:
• multiple copies of the
same photograph. or a

combination of foregrounds
and
backgrounds
• scissors
• adhesive foam dots or
strips
• shadow box frame ·
INSTRUCTIONS:
( 1) Choose an image
that features a person or
other strong subject in
the foreground and has
interesting elements in
the background that can
be easily divided. The
picture I chose features
my husband and son on a

street
corner
in
Washington, D.C., with a
pretty tree behind them
and the U.S. Capitol in
the far distance.
(2) Decide how many
different layers your fmal
picture will include and
print that many copies
onto photo paper, or have
multiple prints made. I
chose four layers: the
people, the street and
trees, the Capitol and the
sky. If you are combining
more than one image,
print one copy of your

This Aug. 29, 2010, photo shows a 3-D framed photo
in Concord, N.H. Make your vacation photos pop by
printing multiple copies and then layering various e lements to create a 3-D effect.
foreground subject and
(4) Use the adhesive
multiple copies of the foam dots or strips to
background image. Make stick each layer to the
sure your copies are sized one below it, carefully
to fit in your frame.
lining up the images.
(3) Carefully cut out Keeping the dots in
your subject from one roughly the same posicopy of the image. tion on each layer will
Continue cutting out the give the piece more staother layers, leaving one bility.
copy intact as the back(5) Insert the completground.
ed picture into the frame.

Workspace Art: Family photos get promoted .
BY JENNIFER FORKER
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Think outside the box
- the photo frame or the
bulletin board, that is in bringing personal photos into the workspace.
''People are kind of
looking for style everywhere
now,"
says
Samantha Thorpe, senior
home design editor for
Homes
and
tter
rdens
magazine.
hey want to make their
•
(work) place look more
personal and pretty."
Ideas include applying
images to surprising surfaces - a porcelain vase,
a lampshade or inside a
clear glass jar. Today's
digital photography makes
it possible.
"A lot of us spend so
much time in our offices.
We should try to incorporate the people we love into
otrr spaces," says Rachael
Liska, senior editor at
Fresh Home magazine,
The key is to decorate a
workspace for attractiveness without distractions.
''It's kind of this whole
de-cluttering feeling,"
Thorpe says. "De-clutter
your photos and de-clutter yotrr work space. It
makes your space feel
more organized, and this
y help you out."
etter Homes and
rdens' photo-displaying ideas for the home
often can translate to the
office. Thorpe suggests
painting or decoupaging
a simple desk organizer,
adding a few sentimental
words, such as "Worth a
thousand words," with
stencils or scrapbook letters, and grouping matted
photos on top of that.
If the photo mattes are
the same color, it lends
consistency - thus elegance - to the collection. Displaying only
black and white photos
helps, too, creating "that
classic feel people like,"
Thorpe says.
Another idea from
Thorpe: Ring a small can

Meredith Corporation, Bill Hopkins/AP photo
This image provided by Meredith Corporation which appears in the Summer 2006
issue of Creative Home magazine and was taken by Bill Hopkins shows various
photos displayed on a desk.

or jar with colorful paper
topped with
family
images; embellish with
scrapbook letters or
stickers. And jazz up
frames by tweaking
what's inside: Thorpe
suggests incorporating
scrapbooking skills and
ephemera with family
members' faces in perfect
circles cut with a largesized
hole
punch.
Alternate family images
with punched-out circles
of scrapbook paper and
embellishments in a grid
format for a 3-D effect.
''It works because it's
still really
simple."
Thorpe says. ''Doing a
grid like this one you give
yourself a good structure.
It's like a recipe."
Saving the easiest
Thorpe tip for last: She
suggests tucking computerprinted photos - again,
preferably in black and
white - inside clear glass
jars that then can be used
for pencils and other office
supplies. The photos can be
switched out at any time.
From a recent issue of
Fresh Home. Liska shares
several home-to-office
photo-keepsake ideas:

Print a simple black-andwhite image onto a clear or
white self-adhesive label,
available at office-supply
stores. and attach it to a
smooth surface, such as a
ceramic vase.
Or print a family photo
onto photo-transfer fabric
and wrap it around an
existing lampshade; attach
with decorative brads, or
spray with fabric adhesive
or liquid fabric glue.
Another use for a larger image printed onto
photo-transfer
fabric:
Stretch it across a stretcher frame or a pre-existing
canvas frame and staple
into place for that ''l ' m a
canvas painting" look.
For the traditionalist
who wants to showcase
framed images, here's
something new: Kodak
has created a "metallic"
paper for printing digital
images, which adds
brightness and sharpness
to photos.
Jeff Lawson, store
manager of Wolf Camera
at Colorado Mills in
Lakewood, Colo., says
the metallic printing
process works best for
pictures that have high

color &lt;;ontrasts, so blackand-white images are
ideal.
And
outdoor
scenes work best.
"It really does make
the image pop. In a way,
it reflects light just like
metal
would."
says
Lawson, noting there's
no metal -incorporated
into the prints.
'The only thing I've seen
it doesn't work with are
those inside-with-a-flash
photos of grandkids sitting
on the floor;' says Lawson.
Sharing family photos in
the workplace in an attractive, organized manner
helps co-workers become
and remain connected.
"It gives people something to talk about," says
Thorpe. "We all have
family. We can all connect on that level."
Meredith Corporation,
Helen Norman
/AP photo
This image provided by
Mere dith
Corporation
which a ppears in the May
201 0 issue of Better
Homes a nd Ga rdens a nd
was taken by Helen
Norman s hows photos
displayed inside clear jars.

Kitchen design mirrors a century of change
BY SUSAN ZEVON
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - The
kitchen, once tucked away
in the basement or a back
annex, became a laboratory of modem design in the
20th century. It became a
showcase for consumer
culture and a symbol of
changing gender roles.
The changing kitchen is
the focus of an exhibit

~I

that opened this month at
the Museum of Modem
Art called "Counter
Space: Design and the
Modern Kitchen."
It comprises almost 300
works, all from the museum's collection, including
design objects, architectural plans, posters, photographs. archival films,
prints and paintings.
The inspiration was the
acquisition last year of the

"Frankfurt Kitchen," on
view for the first time at
the Modem. Designed by
German modernist architect Margarete SchutteLihotzky from 19261927, it was one of about
10.000 kitchens built as
pru1 of an affordable housing initiative in Frankfurt
after World War I.
The Frankfurt Kitchen
exemplifies the early 20th
century belief in the trans-

formative power of design,
particularly as a way to
transform the lives of
working peol'le. Compact
and ergonorruc, it integrated appliances, work and
storage space in a new way.
"The design embodies
the concerns of the modern movement: efficiency, hygiene, standardization and social concerns,"
says the show's curator.
Juliet Kinchin.

Meredith Corporation, Adam AlbrighVAP photo
This image provided by Meredith Corporation which
appears in the winter 2009 issue of 100 Decorating
Ideas Under $100 and was taken by Adam Albright
shows photos displayed on an oversized letter N.
Think outside the box - the photo fram e or the bulletin board, that is - in bringing personal photos into
the workspace.

II

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Sunday, September 26,2010

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Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis

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$&gt;unbup 'arime!)-$&gt;entinel • Page C6

Atlantic City hopes 'Boardwalk Empire' brings the tourists
BY WAYNE PARRY
ASSOCIATED PRESS WAITER

AJLANTIC CITY, N.J.
-What ''The Sopranos''
did for a pork store in
northern New Jersey and
"Sex and the City" did for
a Manhattan cupcake
shop, Atlantic City is hoping "Boardwalk Empire"
does for the seaside gambling resort.
Nothing is too trivial to
become a tourist trap as
long as it appears in a hit
TV show. "Sopranos"
fans packed tour buses to
visit spots like the pork
store and a strip club, and
girls-night-out devotees
planned trips around
watering holes and shoe
stores featured in "Sex
and the City."
Now, with "Boardwalk
Empire," ·the HBO series
set in Prohibition-era
Atlantic City. the resort is
ready for its close-up.
And with critics hailing
the series as perhaps the
best of the fall TV season. the 12-episode series
could keep Atlantic City
in the nation's consciousness far longer and better
than any ad could.
''It's an hour-long
commercial for Atlantic
City, top-of-the mind

awareness,'' said DQn
Marrandino,
eastern
regional president of
Harrah's Entertainment
Inc., which owns four of
Atlantic City's 11 casinos. "People will want
to come here and see it
for themselves. and we
need to take full advantage of that.''
The attention comes
not a moment too soon
for the nation's secondlargest gambling resort.
Atlantic City is in the
fourth straight year of a
revenue decline brought
on by competition from'
casinos in neighboring
states, as well as a continuing poor economy
that has people less
willing to risk their
cash at the tables and
slot machines.
Its revenues, after hitting a high of $5.2 billion
in 2006, fell to $3.9 billion by the end of last
year and nearly 9,000
casino workers have lost
their jobs since then.
Two casinos were sold
this year for pennies on
the dollar, and a third is
widely believed to be in
danger of closing, having
stopped making mortgage payments more than
a year ago.

In this context, the free
publicity from a smash
hit TV show is a godsend. Jeff Vasser, president of the Atlantic City
Convention &amp; Visitors ·
Authority, says the resort
has a golden opportunity
to cash in.
"l don't think HBO can
do anything more than it
already has done to promote this show, so there
will be no excuse for us to
say, 'If only they had done
this or that.' " he said.
The show centers on
the exploits of Enoch
"Nucky" Thompson, the
Steve Buscemi character
based on the real-life
Enoch "Nucky" Johnson,
Atlantic City's political
and rackets boss during
Prohibition.
For 30 years, until he
was tinally sent to prison
in 1941 for tax evasion.
Johnson
dominated
Atlantic City - then one
of the nation's leading
resorts. He controlled not
only the Republican
political machine that
had a stranglehold on
government, but also
made sure illegal liquor,
prostitution and gambling operations flourIshed under the protection of paid-off officials.

.

The
show's ·first ful1 list of what's avail-'
episode, which aired last able
where
is
at
Sunday, introduces us to http://www. atlanticciN ucky and his network tynj.com under the headof vice as he cements ing "take the Empire
alliances with organized restaurant tour."
crime to make sure that
For that same $19.20.
Atlantic City stayed wet ResOits Atlantic City offers
while the rest of the hot lather straight-razor
nation was officially dry. shaves just like the one
But it also showed his Nucky enjoys in the show.
compassionate side. hanHarrah's and Canadian
dling out cash to down- Club whiskey (featured in
and-out families whose the show) are sending
political loyalties were marketing e-mails to their
then secured for years.
40-million-member marlist.
Even
In the spirit of Nucky keting
Johnson. Atlantic City is Bloomingdale's has a
trying to wring every last mock 115-foot boardwalk
dollar out of the show promoting the show at its
with a slew of 1920s- flagship Manhattan store.
themed
promotions.
The main problem with
Nearly 30 restaurants are getting fans of the show
offering are offering two to come to Atlantic City
that
"Boardwalk
or three-course meals is
priced at $19.20. Caesars Empire'' was actually
Atlantic City is offering shot on a fabricated set in
1,920 hotel rooms for New York City, with the
$19.20 a night. Bars are ocean added in via comwhipping up whiskey- puter graphics. And aside
laced
"Boardwalk from Boardwalk Hall and
Empire" cocktails like a tiny handful of old
"The Nucky" (whiskey, hotels, not much from
grapefruit juice, tonic Nucky's era has survived
water and grenadine over along
the
real-life
ice; topped by an orange Boardwalk.
wedge),
and
''The
The Fralinger's salt
Boardwalk
Boss" . water taffy sign, a local
(whiskey, wet vermouth landmark, was shown in
and apple brandy with a the first episode. Vasser
lemon peel garnish). A hopes other present-day

Atlantic City icons also
will be featured. so they
can be included into marketing efforts. One idea is
a Prohibition Tour of
· local sites in Atlantic
City that figured prominently in the ill al
liquor trade of
day.
Pinky Kravitz, a
radio show host and tireless promoter of Atlantic
City, suggests recreating
the show's set on the
actual Boardwalk.
"That will give people
something to visit, where
they can have their pictures taken and make
them feel connected not
only to the show but to
Atlantic City," he said.
But because Nucky is
no longer handing out
fistfuls of $100 bills,
someone would have to
pay for it.
''Pinky's idea is a good
one," Vasser said, "and he
wants HBO to pay for it,
which makes it a great
one."
Tobe Becker, an HBO
spokeswoman, said the
network "will consider
any and all ideas'' to promote the show, but said• .
is too early to s
whether Kravitz's suggestion is practical.
\

Ray Charles Memorial Library opens in L.A.
BY SANDY COHEN
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES -On
"'what would have been
his 80th birthday. Ray
Charles has joined the
likes of past presidents
Richard" Nixon
and
Ronald Reagan with his
own namesake library in
Southern California.
The
Ray
Charles
Memorial Library officially opened its doors
Thursday night. Housed
in the studio and office
building Charles built in
South Los Angeles in the
early 1960s. the library
features
interactive
exhibits about the musician's life and career.

Charles' fiiends and colleagues
including
Quincy Jones, B.B. King,
producer Jimmy Jam and
filmmaker
Taylor
Hackford- welcome visitors via video to each section of the library, which is
more like an interactive
museum. Touch screens
invite guests to explore
Charles' most memorable
recordings, while exhibits
feature some of his
Grammy awards, stage
costumes, old contracts and
ever-present sunglasses.
Charles' fans can see
his personal piano and
saxophone, his collection
of microphones and letters he received from Bill
Clinton. George W. Bush

and Johnny Cash. The
library also includes a
mixing station, where
visitors can compose
their own mixes of
Charles' classic rhythms
and melodies, and a
karaoke room, where
they can sing along with
Charles and the Raelettes.
''Ray spent more time in
this buildmg than any other
in the world," said Tony
Gumina, head of the Ray
Charles Marketing Group.
"In this building, Ray
Charles had 20-20 vision."
His recording studio
and a closet full of his
clothes remain on the second floor of the building,
which was declared a cultural and historic land-

mark by the city in 2004.
When Charles lost his
sight as a child, his ears
bec'ame his eyes, he said,
and he dedicated himself
to music. eventually
blending genres and
breaking down barriers
both social and musical.
Willie Nelson said
Charles "caused country
music to leap ahead maybe 50 years
because he'd done the
impossible: He'd crossed
over the other way."
A collection of previously unreleased Charles
recordings. including a
country
collaboration
with Cash. is due out
next month.
Hackford. who direct-

ed the 2004 biop1c
··Ray," called Charles
"one of the greatest
musicians this country
has ever produced."
Hackford and former
Raelette Mable John
were among those celebrating the library's
grand opening.
The facility is a product
of Charles' chru.itable
foundation. which he
established in 1986 to
serve the hearing impaired.
Though Charles was blind.
he felt that not being able
to hear music would be a
true handicap. When he
died in 2004 at age 73. he
left all of his intellectual
property and $50 million
in cash to continue the

foundation's efforts.
The
Ray
Charles
Foundation also provides
grants to support hearing
disorder and educational
causes. The library's main
aim is to educate and
inspire disenfranchised
children who have seen
arts education cut from
their school curricula, said
library and foundation
president Valerie Ervin.
The library will be
open exclusively .to
school children by invitation only. Officials plan
to extend access to the
general public sometime
nextyear.
•
(Online: www.thera
charlesfoundation.org!Fo
undation.html)

'50s pop singer Eddie Fisher dies at age 82
Bv RAaUEL

MARIA
DILLON

ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES- Pop
singer
Eddie
Fisher
gained frune crooning love
songs like ''I'm Yours"
and "Thinking of You" to
teenage girls in the early
1950s. But his life was
overshadowed by drug
use, gambling and failed
marriages to actresses
Debbie Reynolds ·and
Elizabeth Taylor.
Fisher passed away
Wednesday night at his
home in Berkeley of complications from hip surgery,
his daughter, Tricia Leigh
FisMr of Los Angeles, told
The Associated Press. He
was 82.
"Late last evening the
world lost a true America
icon,'' Fisher's family
said in a statement
released by publicist
British Reece. "One of
the greatest voices of the
century passed away. ~e
was an extraordinary talent and a true mensch.''
The death was first

reported hy Hollywood
website deadline.com.
In the early 50s, Fisher
sold millions of records
with 32 hit songs including
"Any Time," "Oh, My Papa,'' "Wish You Were
Here,'' "Lady of Spain" and
''Count Your Blessings."
His fame was enhanced
by his 1955 marriage to
movie darling Debbie
Reynolds - they were
touted as "America's
favorite couple'' - and
the birth of two children.
Their daughter Canie
Fisher became a film stru.·
herself in the first three
"Star Wars" films as
Princess Leia, and later
as a best-selling author of
"Postcards From the
Edge" and other books.
Carrie Fisher spent
most of 2008 on the road
with her autobiographical
show "Wishful Drinking.''
In an interview with The
Associated Press, she told
of singing with her father
on stage in San Jose.
Eddie Fisher was by then
in a wheelchair and living
in San Frru.1cisco.

Poem
fromPageC2
he prepares his students
to work with students of
all different backgrounds
who may be facing different chalJenges.
Shibley also works
with organizations in the
region that work with and
support children with
autism,
and teaches
workshops and seminars.
He is also working with
another author on a book
dealing with autism.
''When we are working
with
children
with
autism, we have to
become the learner,"
Shibley said.
While talking with one
of his many contacts

across the country earlier
this year, Shibley was
dtscussing the national
publication "Dyslexic
Reader," and recalled a
poem that one of his students from Mohawk
High School had written.
The goals of the magazine, according to information stated inside the publication. are "to increase
worldwide
awareness
abol.It the positive aspects
of dyslexia and related
learning styles' and to present methods for improving literacy. education and
academic success. We
believe that all people's
abilities and talents should

Edwin Jack Fisher was
born Aug. 10, 1928, in
Philadelphia, one of
seven children of a
Jewish grocer. At 15 he
was
singing
on
Philadelphia radio.
After moving to New
York, Fisher was adopted
as a protege by comedian
Eddie
Cantor,
who
helped the young singer
become a star in radio,
television and records.
Fisher's romru.1tic messages resonated with
young girls in the pre-Elvis
period. Publicist-manager
Milton Blackstone helped
the publicity by hiring girls
to scream at.1d swoon at
Fisher's appearances.
After getting out of the
Army in 1953 following a
two-year hitch, hit records,
his own TV show and the
headlined marriage to
Reynolds made Fisher a
top star. The couple
costarred in a 1956 romantic comedy, "Bundle of
Joy," that capitalized on
their own parenthood.
In 1960 he played a
role in "Butterfield 8,''

for which Taylor won an
Academy Award. But
that film marked the end
of his' movie career.
After being discarded
by Taylor. Fisher became
the butt of comedians'
jokes. He began relying
on drugs to get through
performances, and his
bookings dwindled. He
later said he had made
and spent $20 million
during his heyday, and
much of it went to gambling and drugs.
In 1983. Fisher attempted a full-scale comeback.
But his old fans had been
turned off by the scandals,
and the younger generation had been turned on
by rock. The tour was
unsuccessfuL
He had added to his
notoriety that year with
autobiography.
an
"Eddie: My Life, My
Loves." Of his tirst three
marriages, he wrote he
had been bullied into
man·iage with Reynolds.
whom he didn''t know
well; became nursemaid
as well a), husband to

Taylor. and was reluctant
to marry Connie Stevens
but she was pregnant and
he "did the proper thing."
Another autobiography,
"Been There, Done That,"
published in 1999, was
even more searing. He
called Reynolds ''self-centered, totally driven, insecme, untruthful. phony.''
He claimed he abandoned
his career during the
Taylor mruTiage because
he was too busy taking her
to emergency rooms and
cleaning up after her pets,
children and servants.
Both ex-wives were furious. and Carrie Fish.
threatened to change h
name to Reynolds.
At 47, Fisher married a
21-year-old beauty queen.
Terry Richard. The marriage ended after 10
months. His fifth marriage, to Betty Lin, a
Chinese-born businesswoman, lasted longer than
at.1y of the others. Fisher
had two children with
Reynolds: Carrie and
Todd; and two girls with
Stevens: Joely and Tricia.

be recognized and valued. clear?
I want to tight my loneand that learning problems
can be corrected."
ly day
Shibley thought the
To be happy that way.
poem by former student
I hate loneliness. I hate
Chris E. Clarkson would it a lot.
be perfect for the magaDo J like 'it? No! I do
zine, so he submitted it not.
for publication. The ediIt has got to go.
tors agreed with him. and
Because it's sadness.
recently published the .you know
poem in the magazine.
So
Here is the poem. "I
It's got to be history.
Hate Loneliness," by
It's got to end desperChris E. Clarkson
ately.
Loneliness is sad.
Loneliness is a disease
that must go.
It's not glad.
Because I don't' want
It's bad
to feel so low.
So
My lonely life has got
Loneliness is a di~ease
to go!
that must go
Shibley is very proud
So
I don't have to ·live a to see the work of his former student in print. and
lonely year.
Have I made myself he also wants to raise

awareness on campus. in
the
community
and
around the country about
autism. In America, 1 in

90 children have autism.
and it is important that
more people learn about
it. Shibley said.

''He was loved &amp; will
be missed by his four
children as well as his six
grandchildren," Carrie
Fischer said on her
Twitter account, which
the website says hat&gt; been
vedfied as belonging to
the actress.
When Eddie Fisher's
best friend, producer Mike
Todd, was killed in a 1958
plane crash, Fisher comforted the widow, Elizabeth
Taylor. Amid sensationalist
headlines. Fisher divorced
Reynolds and married
Taylor in 1959.
The Fisher-Taylor marriage lasted only five
years. She fell in love with
co-star Richru.·d Burton
during the Rome filming
of "Cleopatra," divorced
Fisher and married Bm1on
in one of the great entertainment world scat.1dals
of the 20th century.
Fisher's career pever
recovered from the notoriety. He married actress
Connie Stevens, and they
two
daughters.
had
Another divorce followed.
He married twice more.

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•

�---··

·---

- == ...... -

-----~-----

if

-

- ----- --~

Dl

~unbap mtme~ -~entinel

Sunday, September 26, 2010

•

ee

Hanley Wood Home Plans/AP photo

This computer generated image released by Hanley Wood Home Plans shows House of the Week HMAFAPW1548. This home's facade boasts a trio of dormers above
a handsome front porch, complete with enough room to enjoy a glass of lemonade with the neighbors.

•

omeFaca e
FoR THE AssociATED PRESS

The facade of this home, Plan
HMAFAPW1548 by Homeplans.com,
boasts a trio of dormers above a handsome front porch, complete with
columns and room enough to enjoy a
glass of lemonade with the neighbors.
The floor plan covers 2,506 square
feet of living space.
Inside, the entry leads to a versatile
study and expansive great room, which
features a corner fireplace, vaulted ceiling and three large windows overlooking a large covered patio.
The modern kitchen enjoys an island
work-station and a walk-in pantry.

These, along with a snack bar, help to
serve the formal dining room, great
room and morning room.
The master suite offers a pair of
walk-in closets and a private bath with
a garden spa tub, a separate shower and
dual sinks.
Two of the secondary bedrooms
enjoy private baths. The other features
a built-in desk and has close access to a
hall bath.
A workshop in the garage is great for
the family handyman.
HMAFAPW1548 DETAILS:
Bedrooms: 4+
Baths: 4
Main floor: 2,506 sq. ft.

order by phone, online, or by mail. By
phone: Call (866) 772-1013. Reference
the plan number. Online: Go to
www.houseoftheweek.com and select
"Study Plans" from the menu bar at the
top of the page. The downloadable
study plans are available at no charge.
By mail: Clip and complete t,his form.
Include a check or money order for $10
payable to House of the Week.
Residents of AZ, DC, GA, NC, SC or
TX, add sales tax.
Mail to: Hanley Wood 3275 W Ina
Rd Ste 260 Thcson, AZ 85741.

Total Living Area: 2,506 sq. ft.
Garage and workshop: 560 sq. ft.
Exterior Wall Framing: 2x4
Foundation Options:
Crawlspace
A downloadable study plan of this
house, including general information
on building costs and financing, is
available
at
www.houseoftheweek.com. To receive
a study plan by mail, please fill out the
following order form. Be sure to reference the plan number. To view hundreds of home designs, visit our Web
site at www.houseoftheweek.com.
ORDER THE HOUSE PLAN To
receive the Study Plan for this home,

~~·I~

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Hanley Wood Home Plans/AP photo

This floor plan released by Hanley Wood Home Plans shows the floor plan for House of the Week HMAfAPW1548. The bedrooms in this home will impress you just
as much as the shared living areas will. The exquisite master suite offers a pair of walk-in closets and a private bath with a garden spa tub, a separate shower and
dual sinks. Two of the secondary bedrooms feature private baths.

�·-·------Page 02 • &amp;unbap ~~m~ -&amp;entinel

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

Sunday, September 26, 2010
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guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740-446-0870,
Rogers Basement
Watereroof1ng.
Other Services
Pet Cremations. Call
740-446-3745
Will sit with elderly,
days, Gallipolis area.
call 645-9142
Professional Services
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSt
No Fee Unless We
W•n 1

Display Ads

Dally In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In-Column: 9:00a.m.
Friday For S und ays Paper

Grain

~000

Automotive

'

HAY SQ. BALES
Autos
$2.50 (4CUTIING)
03Neon
standard-air
CALL: 304-675-5086
SEPTIC
PUMPING
$3200 OBO 256OR
304-895-3470
Gallia Co. OH and
1539
87 Chrysler
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Lebaron
2
door
Want To Buy
Evans Jackson, OH
$1soo OBO 256800·537-9528
Elderberries,
spice
6002
bushberries.
Repairs
pawpaws.
black 1998 Olds New Tires
740-698· Alloy Whs. 6 cyl. AC,
Joe's Tv repair on walnuts,
most
makes
&amp; 6060
PW, PL. TS. CC, P/S
models. House calls
304-675-1724
Ginseng- want to buy
other
botanicals,
400
Financial Twin Oaks Service
Station
junction
RTI/33,
Money To lend
Wednesdays
12-1
22
NOTICE Borrow Smart start1ng
Contact
the
Ohio September, call 330Division of Financial 674-4195 for price
institutions Office of list.
Consumer
Affairs
. '·~~
'/".::.BEFORE you refinance
900 ·' MerchandiSe
your home or obtain a .
.:..
.,
loan.
BEWARE of
requests for any large
Miscellaneous
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Cali
Jet Aeration Motors
the Office of Consumer
repaired, new &amp;
Affiars toll free at 1866-278-0003 to team rebuilt in stock. Call
Ron Evans 1-800if the mortgage broker
537-9528
or lender is properly
licensed. (This is a
public
service - - - - - - announcement from the Sunquest
tanning
Ohio Valley Publishing bed, exc cond. new
Company)
bulbs $400 7 40-388·
9373

.

Education

any oss or •~penee lhal reaunelrom the puDI1catlon or omlnton 01111 advettt..ment Correction will be mecltln tht 11111 available edrtlon. • Box numbtr Ida •
.,. always confidential • CIXrent rift card applies. • All real estate lldvenlaementa are aubjeCito the Federal Fair Ho~lng AC1 o111168 • Thlt Mnll«l*
aeapts only help ,..rted ads IIINII~ EOE ltlndarda. We wtll not knowingly ta»ptllly eclvtnlelng In viOIIIIOn of the llw. WIN not be mporalble for any
erro•s In en ad taken over the phone.

Recreational
Apartments/
Veh1cles
Townhouses
STIHL Sales &amp; Servtce ~;;;~~~~ ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;=
Now
Available
at ~
Free Rent Special
CarmiChael Equ1pment
Campers f RVs &amp;
I! I
74D-446-2412
Trailers
2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
up, Central Air, WID
Garden &amp; Produce 94 Sunsport Motor hoo~up. tenant pays
Home
32'
long. electric. Call between
Richards
Brothers garage kept, exc. the 1ours of 8A-8P.
Fruit Farm 'res, ~ con. $17,000 serious
EHO
haY~el Mon thru calls only 740-388Ellm View Apts.
Sat 8·12 &amp; 1·5. Sun 9373
(304)882-3017
9-5: Many varieties ::::~~~~~= Twin Rivers Tower is
aailable jellies. 1ams,
Motorcycles
accepting applications
cider, apple butter. 2007 HD Heritage for waiting list for HUD
1-BR
Co Ad 46 2054 Softail. 4,695 miles- subsidized,
for
the
Orpheus
Rd Showroom
cond apartment
call
Thurman
Oh. $16.000 negotiable elderly/disabled.
675·6679
740286-4584
740-446-0121

Hay, Feed, Seed,

·-

Houses For Rent
House for sale ·or
rent. Pretty, clean,
3BR.
Downtown
Gallipolis, close to
Washington
Elem.
Rent $750, no utlilite.
Sale $99,000. KellyJo 645-9096 or 4464639
4000

Manufactu~ed

Housmg
'";;~~~~;;;;

~

Rentals

~~~~--~==

2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer. trash
pd.
No
pets,
Mobile
Johnson's
Home Park
740446-3160

Tara Townhouse Apt.
2BR 1· 5 BA, back
patio,
pool,
playground. No pets.
$ 450 rent. 740 "645•
85
_ _99
_____

Mobtle Home on
farm 3Br 2Ba all
appt., including .w/d,
&amp; all utlit. incl. $750.
540-729-1331

Nice
2BR
apt.
appliances.
w/d
hookup, water pd.,
good location on
Centenary close to
$1200 304-882-2796 hospital. No pets. call

Taking applications
for 2BR mobile. Very
good condition. No
pets. $395 mon &amp;
dep. 740-446-3617

02
Monte
Carlo,
Sharp, Garage Kept
$4500
304-675-1874

Nice 16x80, for rent
3 Bedroom, 2 bath
Country
setting.
740-339-3366 740-

after 5. 740-44644_2_____
-9Pleasant
Valley
Apartments is now

~~----:-~~

taking
applications ..,.
3...,.
67
...,.-...,.
o...,.
26
""'6""'.""""'""""'""""'""""
for 2, 3, &amp; 4 br HUD
;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;:i:;:;;;;:; Subsidized
VVant to buy Junk
Cars. call 740 _388 _ Apartments.
are
Applications
0884
taken Monday thru Drivers &amp; Delivery
9:00amOiler's Towing. Now Thrusday
Tractor trailer Driver
buying junk cars 1:OOpm. Office is needed. Must have
at
1151
w/motors or wtout. located
Send
Hazmat.
Drive,
740-388-0011
or Evergreen
Point
Pleasant.
WV
resume
to
Human
740-441-7870
No
Resources Po Box
(304) 675-5806
Sunday call
705 Pomeroy Oh
45769
Real Estate
3000
Sales
Food Service&amp;
Want To Buy

Dairy
Queen
of
Gallipolis is hiring
dependable
6 apts $137.000
Spring Valley Green
individuals who can
rent $2030 mo. 740- Apartments 1 BR at
work flexible shifts.
446-0390
$395+2 BR at $470
calls
No
phone
Month. 446-1599.
please.
land (Acreage)
For Sale By Owner

5 piece bedroom Gallia Co. SR218- 5
Commercial
Help Wanted·
large
suite,
Busineu &amp; Trade
acre
homesites Commercial building
General
refrigerator, tables &amp;
-;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;Sc;;;;h;;;;o;;;;o;;;;l;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:; other pieces, 740- !~~~;oo or :r:.~o~~ for rent 740-446· Exp. Person to assist
949-3601
Meigs
co.
22 6565
w/
milking
on
Gallipolis
Career
wooded
acres
Houses
For
Rent
moderate
dairy
farm,
College
(Career's
&amp; utilities
5 piece bedroom $39.900. More @ 2 BA house in housing
Close To Home)
can be apart of
CaiiTodayl 740·446- suite without bed, WY:LW brunerland com Vinton, nice area 'package fax resume
refrigerator. or call 740·441-1 492 • $400 mon. 2 BR w/ 3 ref. to 304·6754367
1-800-214- large
marble top tables &amp; wefinance!
0452
mobile home 4 mi 5074
Accred•ted
Member many other pieces,
from Hospital near.
Accrediting
CounCil for
1
1/16
acres
Happy
also 2 bedroom, 2
Independent Colleges and
160 $400 mon. 441- ~E~nj-oy-c-ar~in_g_f~o-r~the
Hollow
Road.
bath
moble
home
for
Scllools 12748
5150
or
379-2923
Elderly?
Careg1vers
Middleport.
740-992sale. 740-949-3601
0924
Downtown Gallipolis. needed Pt. Pleasant,
600
Animals
Leon &amp; Pliny areas.
2 Grave Lots Beal
lots
3 br 1 5 bath, central
Good pay benefits.
Chapel
(AT
2)
air, carpet/hardwood
Drivers
Licenses
Livestock
kitchen
Mason Co. Call for 2 Lots for sale w/s/e floors,
Flexible
required.
more info at 863- aval.1 02 &amp; 104 Depot 'applicances
' hours.
1-866-766·
Butcohering hroos7te4r0s. 357-1602
rd Bidwell 618-402· included,
$2.5
eac •
• ~~~~~~~ 9921
washer/dryer
hook 9832 or 1·304-766·
9830
992-3675
:- Want To Buy
up. No p ets. A mpIe
storage
available. --~--~~
Pets
Absolute Top dollar_ Dep &amp; Ref Required Application I Sales
CKC Rat Terriers silver/gold coins any ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; call 740 _446_7654 , Engineer Put your
gold ~
experience to use
12wks old Asking 1OKI14Kit8K
Apartments/
4BR ranch house for with ElectroCraft. a
$50 Ph 645-6857 or Jewerly, dental gold.
US
Townhouses
rent, 2 miles west of global
leader
in
pre
1935
379-9515
Holzer on Jackson motion
engineered
currency. proff/mint CONVENIENTLY
&amp; Pike. new ktichen solutions. In this key
700
Agriculture sets. diamonds, MTS LOCATED
w/granite, walk out position,
the
Coin Shop. 151 2nd AFFORDABLE•
Avenue
Gallipolis. Townhouse
basement,
2 car Application I Sales
446-2842
apartments,
and/or garage. $1100 mon + Engineer will serve
Farm Equipment
small houses for rent. dep. 740-446·1299 ·as the primary point
End of Sumer sale
Yard Sale
Call 740-441-1111 lor New home in city, 88 contact
lor
on 4'.5',&amp; 6' rotor
le application
&amp; pine
customers. outside
Estate
Sa
mformat1on.
sales Jepresentatives
tillers Special Round
st.2BR,1 BA.LR,OR,K
Longa...erger
Bale Feeders were
u
and
Regional Vice
1BR mcely furnished $550-mon+
dep.
$195 now $125 Jims 8 askeIs·
The
Antiques,Tools. 750 apt. No smoking, no Must have excellent Presidents.
h
Farm
Equtpment
erson
in
t is
II
for
P
f
$400
C
First Ave Oct 1st &amp; pets.
mon &amp; re erence.
a
446·9777
2nd 9am to 3pm
dep 740-446-4782
details. 446-2801
position
Will
be

.

Now you can have borders and graphics
addedtoyourclassifiedods
fa~
·'"'
Borders$3.00/perad
I!
,~
Graphics 50¢ for small
~
$1 .00 for large
~

POLClES: Olio Ylllley Publl$111~ r-vn 1118 right to edll. rejld, or amcel any eclat any Ume. Errora mutt be reported on the ftl'lll dat of plbllca11on and tht
T~blni-Sertlnei-Reglstet wtll be responsible lor no more than the cost olthe $p8Ce occupied by the error and only the ftrstlr.rtlon. We sheR not be liable lor

1000

1-888-!:&gt;82-3345

500

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays Paper

• All ads must be prepaid*

• Start Your Ads W•th A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Allold Abbreviation'
• Include Phone Number And Add rei's When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

Farm Equipment

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LJNE AD NOILCED

Help WantedGeneral

Help Wanted ·
General

Management /
Supervisory

responsible
for
satisfaction
of
customer needs by
providing ' technical
responses to 1nquires
to
product
tJtchnologies
including
stepper
motors and linear
motor applications.
This person will offer
insight into Value
Added configurations
within the capability
of
the
design
engineering
team
and manufacturing.
In this position you
will act as a liaison
and technical expert
to support design
innovation
through
collaborative efforts
with our customer's
engineering teams.
This
position
combines significant
elements of Sales
support,
and
Engineering.
In
addition
to
the
generation
of
quotations, site visits
to key customers
may be required.
Our ideal candidate
have
a
will
Bachelor's degree in
electrical
or
·mechanical
engineering.

Behavior
Support
Specialist· To work
with individuals with
developmental
disabilities assessing
behavior problems,
developing effective
interventions, training
staff and monitoring
implementation
of
interventions.
Position is open in
the Ripley area. Must
have BAIBS and 2
years
professional
experience working
with
MR/OD
individuals.
Experience
and
working knowledge
of
behavioral
principles
and
techniques preferred.
Salary
negotiable
based
on
experience. Reply to:
BSS-Ripley,
4834
MacCorkle
Ave.,
South
Charleston,
WV 25309 or email
cgarris@ paiswv.com

The Tuppers Plains
Chester
Water
District is accepting
applications/resumes
for
a
Water
Treatment
Plant
Operator. A valid
Class 1 Operators
Certification
is
desired but other
qualifications may be
acceptable such as
college for related
engineering fields of
experience. This is a
working supervisor's
position. Starting pqy
and benefit package
will
range
from
$15.00 to $19.50 per
hour commensurate
to
qualifications
100% paid Health
Care/
Vacation ••
OPERS Retirement,
and
many
other
benefits. Interested
parties should send
to
TPC
Water
District, 39561 Bar
30 Road, Reedsville,
Ohio
45772
and
Attention to Donald
C Poole, General
Manager. Must be

Equivalent
experience may be
considered.
A
minimum of three
years
experience
with
a
technical
based product with
direct
customer
interface is required.
General knowledge
of our products and
manufacturing
is
desired.
Effective
verbal and written
communication skins
are required as well
as
proficiency in
Microsoft
applications.
For
immediate
consideration, please
mail your resume
and cover letter to.
ElectroCraft
Human Resources,
250 McCormick Rd,
Gallipolis. OH 45631
or
fax
to
740.441.6305
An
Equal
Opportunity
Employer Supporting
Dtversity
in
the
Workplace

Happy Ad

Joseph
Morgan Jr.
has successfully
graduated basic
training at
Fort Sill,
Oklahoma.
He is in AIT for
more training in
Oklahoma then
he will go to
college at OU.
Congrahllations

Joseph
Morgan, Jr.

- -Care
- --Full
-- received
Direct
and
by
Part time direct care September 30 201 0 ·
position
for
Medical
Ravenswood,
WV
providing community
skill training with an
individual
with
MR/DD.
Seeking
Monday-Friday:
evening and midnight
shifts. Saturday and
Sunday.
day,
evening and midnight
shifts.For
all
positions:
High
school diploma or
GED
required.
Criminal background
check required. Must
have
reliable
transportation
and
valid auto insurance.
Hourly rate starting
at $8.00-$9.50 hour
based
on
experience.
Apply
online
at
http://www.paiswv.co
m or call (304) 3731011

~------~~=

Part-time LPN: to
prepare, administer,
and monitor patient
med1cation
twice
daily Sam &amp; 8pm for
individual
with
developmental
disabilities
in
Ravenswood,
WV
Sunday-Saturday.
$14·$17 per hour
based
on
experience.
Must
have valid WV LPN
license. High school
diploma
or GED
required.
Crimina.
background
chec
required. Must have
reliable
transportation
and
valid auto insurance.
Apply
online
at
httpl/www.paiswv.co
m or call (304) 3731011

ISH~P CLASSIFIEDSI
FOR RENT

Colonial Park
300 Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6183
Now taking applications for all
units. Rental Assistance is
available on select units also
taking Housing voucher. AU
electric heat and wall mount air
conditioning. Water, Sewer and
trash included.

Call Today-

740-992-6183

®

II

"This institution is 011 equal opportunity
prm•ider and employer"

l

l

~

.

�- --.------------Sunday, September 26, 2010
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

~unba!' Q:hnti·&amp;mtfntl·

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

---~

Page 03

SUNDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

Would You Like to Work
From Home?
Reeruit NRA members and take
donations for conservative political
organizations
• Paid Training
• Benefits Package
• Set Schedules - Full and Part time
• Weekly Pay and Bonus Incentives!

4
6

· our team and find out what makes
lnfoCision one of Oh1o 's best
employers!
Call Today for your appointment!
1-888-237-5647 EXT 2374
Apply online at
http://jobs.infocision.com

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Posting Date: September 8, 2010
SECRETARY FINANCIAL AID
The University of Rio Grande invites
applications for the position of secretary
for the Financial Aid Department. This
position is available immediately.
Under general supervision, performs
various receptionist's duties; answers the
phone, takes messages, and provides
information; provides general clerical
assistance, Financial Director and others
in the office and performs other duties as
required. Great emphasis will be placed
on customer service skills.
Must have high school diploma or
valent. Associate Degree preferred.
have knowledge of computers.
office experience as a secretary
required. Must be able to work with a
variety of age populations. Good oral
and v. ritten communication skills
required.
Resumes will be reviewed as received.
All applicants must submit a letter
interest and re~ume including the names
and addresses of three references to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason
SPHR, Vice President of Human
Resources
University of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH 45674
e-mail, pmason@rio.edu
fax 740-245-7972.
EEO/ AA Employer
7

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

8

10
11
12

you want to make a difference?
are compassionate and committed to
Quality Care come and be a
part of our Long Term Care/Home Care
Division.

Holzer Senior Care Center
has the following positions available:
• RN Supervisor- Full time Exempt
(2:00 pm - 12:00 am)
• LPN- Part Time (Days/Evenings)
• STNA- Part Time
• Dietary Aide- Part Time
• Housekeeping/Laundry- Part Time
Now accepting applications for the
Nurse Aide Training Class

Please Contact:
Barb Peterson- Manager of HR-HSCC
740-446-5001 or peterson@holzer.org.
Visit us on the web at www.holzer.org.
Equal Opportunity Employer

eo

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT
Posting Date: September 16, 2010
PART TIME INSTRUCTORS
ENGLISH -SPRING SEMESTER
The University of Rio Grande invites
applications for part-t1me non-tenure
track faculty positions in English for the
spring semester ?0 II.
Responsibilities of this teaching position
include teaching two part· time courses
on line for spring semester 2011. Those
classes will be Composition I and
Composition II.
A l'.(laster's degree or above in English is
required. Experience in teaching on-line
courses required with knowledge of
Blackboard/WebCT preferred.
Applications win be accepted until
positions are filled. All applicants mast
submit a letter of interest and resume
including the names of three references
to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason
SPHR Director of Human Resources
P.O. BoxSOO
University of Rio Grande
Rio Grande, OH 45674
Fax 740-245-7972
E-mail pmason@rto.edu
. EEO/ Affirmative Action Employer

I

ENVIRONMENTAL
SERVICES

Veolia ES Industrial
Services, Inc.
Separations Division
Will be taking applications

Wednesday, September 29
from 1:00pm. until 5:00 pm
Gallipolis Holiday Inn
577 State Rt. 7 North
Gallipolis, OH.

Auction

Auction

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE
Vinton, OH

First of the Month Sale
Saturday, Oct. 2, 2010
7:00pm
Assortment of Fenton, Depression, Slag,
Carnival, Fostoria, Heisey. Waterford.
hand blown glass. Westmoreland.
Amber, Hall, USA. Higbey compote,
Brush, Tiffany &amp; Co. award. #39 Watt
Pansy spaghetti bowl, Rosevlile 6"- 10"
bowl. Hull, McCoy, Wapak #8 lnd1an
head skillet, water can, copper broiler.
glass washboard, broad axe, sadd 1ron.
NY SC oil can, stone wine bottles, stone
jugs. stone crock, 6-draw¢r high boy
chest (nice), old buttons, costume
jewelry, tin-type picture. Bessie· Pease
Gutman #700 picture, wall pockets. tea
pots, paper weights, marbles, old hats.
Table space still available for this
auction. Call Ike at 740-388-8741.
See
auctionzip.com
for
more
info/pictures.
Terms: Cash or check with ID.
Everything sold as is- where is. Not
responsible for lost items or accidents.
Auctioneer: Finis "Ike" Isaac
Licensed and bonded in the state of Ohio

This is an entry level position for our Gallipolis
jobsite. High School diploma or equivalent, valid
drivers license and reliable transportation are
required.

Servic_e I Bus.
Directory

Roofing

John's Constuction
Remolding, Decks.
Roofing, Etc.
Certified. Free Est.
CaU 339-9593

FINDAJOB •.
OR ANEW
1.CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS ·.

Find all the

news that
matters
to you.
t}allipolis Dat!p mnbunr
~oint ~!rasan! l\rcri5trr
The Daily Sentinel
iunbap ~imrs ·~rntmc!

Veolia ES 1s an Equal Opportunity Employer. MIFIDN, committed
to promoting a diverse workplace. We are focused on providing our
employees w1th a safe and healthful work environment through
industry leading practices. Veolia offers world-class benefits and
industry competitive pay.

J}

9000

,

t.)

�- - --

Page 04 • &amp;unbap tlrimti-&amp;tntind
Auction

Auction

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

SURPLUS AUCTION
OHIO UNIVERSITY
OASIS RESTAURANT EQUIP~IE~T
70 Unhcrsit) Terrace, Athens. OH
'1\JCsda). St•ptcmher 28 - 6:00 r&gt;.m.
Oh1o L; ntH'Islt} surplus nems to be sold at pubhc auct1o1L
AI L I fl·MS ARE !101 D AS IS NO (,IJARANTEE &amp; NO
RE:.TURNS Pre\ 1ew the \\Cek hefure - call 740-593-0463
from 8 00 3 00 for further mfonnatum ben thing must be
removed h\ &lt;ktobcr I "th
•
DJR~CTIO S: AulltOn to he condtu.:tcd at the fom1cr Oasis
Rcswurant huildntg loc.l!ed at 70 llntvcrsit) 1\:rracc. From
Rt. 50/32 e\lt Rt Mi2, 1111 n ttght at round-about on Richland
Awnuc, at light (Coll\n on leftlh&gt;otball Stadtum on nght)
turn right on South Grel'n Dnn'. turn left on Unt\ersitv
li:rnll'c. w:uc:h lor stgns
•
J&lt;:QUIP:\IE~T:
X':-. 10' \\alk in cooler. 8'x 10' \\ak-in
frel·zer. ne'' l'Otnprcssor, l'kt!tu.:altransfurmer, electric meter,
gas space he.ttcr. 3 roof top liVAC units, 1-roof top A C
condensmg untt, I roof top c~haust fan. 2-largc gahar.ized
l'ookmg hoods, fire suppressiOn S) stem for cookmg hood'&gt;. 4humer ga~ rnnge. con,cctum men. gas griddle, 16' long
strunle~s ~tee! cmmter, large 3-ba) stamless qed smk,
''a her dr)cr combo umt, \\ashrng machme, 10-4 person
booths, 4 2 person booths.
TERMS. Cash or check ''/posltt\C I.D. Ma ter Cnnl &amp; Visa
Credit Cards .tccepted ~01 h Sales I a'\ \\Ill be charged on
all purchases
If Ia:-: Exempt
Mu~t Prmtde Tax lD#
Papcmurk ut Reg1stra11on Checks o\er $1000 must haYe
bank authonl.al!on of funds :1\ mlable

OWt';ER: Ohio Unhersih·
WEB: \\ \l \l.ohio.edulsurpl~s
Clkk on Surplus, Surplus Imenton: in
Stock Items for Publk
·
SIIA \tROCK AUCTIOS SERVICE
AVCTIONEERS: .John Patrick ..Pat" Sheridan,
Kerr) Sheridan-Boyd, t\likc Boy·d, Brent King
Email: ShumrockAu(·tion@aol.com
WEB: nW\\,shmnrol·k-auctions.com
PH: 740-592-4310 or 800-419-9122

Auction

Auction

- ·--- .

Auction

100

100

Legals

Legals

I

REQUEST
FOR
PROPOSAL Nottce
to
W•reless
Communtcallon
Vendors:
In
accordance
With
section 721 03 of the
Ohio Revtsed Code,
sealed btds wtll be
received
by
the
Racine
Vtllage
Council, PO Box
. 399, Ractne. Ohto
45771, until l2.00
NOON, on Monday,
October 25, 2010.
The bids will then be
opened and read
aloud at 6;10 P.M. on
Monday, October 25,
2010
for
the
following.FOR
LEASE OF REAL
ESTATE
BELONGING
TO
RACINE
VILLAGE
FOR
THE
PURPOSE
OF
PLACEMENT OF A
TELECOMUNICATI

ON TOWER The
Vtllage of Ractne, a
Municipal
CorporatiOn",
Will
accept proposals for
the lease of property.
owned by the Vtllage
of Ractne, near the
Vtllage's
"Water
Tower" located on
Greenwood
Cemetery Road, an
area
approx•mate
100' X 100' for
providing adequate
telecommunication
for the cittzens of the
Village of Racine.
NEGOTIATION OF
CONTRACT &amp; TIME
LINE The Vtllage
Council reserves the
nght to negotiate an
opt1on to lease for
$500 a year up to 2
(two) years and tf
option ts exercssed a
"Lease
Agreement
Contract" wtth the
h.ghest btdder Will be

Auction

Auction

10°

w

-

w

..
,..__ ,_ _ _
_..,
______ ..,

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

Sunday,

Septemb~r 26,

201 0

Legals 1

acceptable by the
VIllage
The lease
agreement Will be for
a fiVe (5) year term
and up to four (4)
renewals and thereafter a new lease
agreement w, I be
reqUired. The btd
proposals, provtded
by the btdder, will be
sent to the Vil.age of
Rac1ne,
Clerk
Treasurer's
Office
located
in
the
Municipal Building at
405 Main Street, P 0
Box 399, Racine,
Ohio
45771 Sept
26 Oct 310,17,24,.
2010The
Ractne
Vtllage Counctl may
accept the lowest
btd, or select the best
6 d for the tntended
purpose,
and
reserves the nght to
accept and/or reJect
any or all brds and/cr
any part thereof and
w111 award a contract
to the htghest btdder
whtch 1s tn the best

;:::::::::::_-_:::::::::::::..
- tnterest of the Village
of
Rac•ne.David
Spencer,
ClerkfTreasurerVitlag
of Racine

'~!
AUCTION .~

PUBLIC

e

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2
lO:OOA.M.
Acticn IJ::cata:l

01

1287 &lt;bJ..l.e:}:l R::a:l,

Rt
124, syra:use, CH. Ms.Al:ire
H:l.xB:relt has no.a:l into CGSista:i
liv.in;1 a'li tte fo1Ja..rirg itms will te
s:lld.
\~TIQ!llil:JLR:S!I_l'RF

REAL ESTATE &amp; I)ERSO~AL
PROPERTY AUCTIO~
Thursda), September 30- 4:00p.m.
640 Wind) Ridge Road. Vincent
(Washington County). OH
OIR.ECTIQl"S: from Manetta. Rt 550 to BariO\\. turn south
on Rt. 339, approxunatel} 5 nules to Veto Road (Co.Rd 3B),
tum east go 5 nulc~ to Wind} R1dge, turn north .6 mile, house
on right !-rom P,trkt·rshurg or Belpre: Rt. 7, turn north Oil Rt.
319 (llm.trds He,crl) ), go to Veto Road (Co. Rd. 3B). tum
east go 5 nules to Wmd~ R1dge. tum north .6 mile. house on
nght in Dcl'&lt;ltur 'h\ p . '' atch lor stgns.
REAL J·:STATE :-t1b.nt (!~I!.JM!l.: 135 acres MIL bcauuful
remodeled two stm) hum house wuh 2200 sq. ft. in excellent
.condition, rl'l'eilll) remodeled, large kttchen \\ith oak
cabinets, laundf) mom, large famil) room "!fireplace. dining
room, II\ mg mom, 3 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms, large front
porch, and attached doubk garage. Also mdudes a barr. and
outh111ldmg, 2 potlds, 60 1\1 L acre~ wooded (some read) to
be umbered). 40 ~1 L acre~ pn~ture. 35 MIL acres ha) field.
tremendous huntmg for deer &amp; turke). land 1s eligible for
gmernrnent fundmg for t·ouscnauon proJects.
Located
'' llhm Warren L&lt;x-al School Drstnct Ma~ offer propclt) m
mnh•-parr«&gt;l 1fn11 then comhmc .111 p:trccl~ to offer a' one
unit to be sold to \\htche,er IS the h•gher b1d CJther separate
orcombmed
Tt;Ri\IS: BU\ ERS J&gt;RMIIUM-10% • Donn pa)ment of
$5000 on auction da), balance m full at closmg and del 'ef)
of deed "llhm 30 da) s Po ess10n "uhm I0 da) s of closing
Sold "Jth ll\\ ncr's consent Sdhng ns 1s m present condition.
financang 1f needed must be made pnor to auction. as well as
nn) inspectiOn~. Propcrt) sells'' uh no contmgenctes.
Call for
intment to see this property.

Square Oak Chma Cnbmct, Deprcsston
DR Suite; Oak Dresser; Poster Bed.
fane) Oak Mmor; Muhogan) Chc\el
Dresser; Oak Rocker; 5 Leg Oak
Hane~t J'able, Oak Sewmg M.tchme,
frunk~: and more.

COI.UX,'TIBU:S
Crocks; Lanterns, Orl Lamps, Old
Cookie Jars. 0\\ I, Chicken, Pupp)' m a
Ba~ket; fenton Puc her and other p1eccs.
Set of Beautiful Chma: Old .:vtarble \\ l!h
Elephant in 11. Old Pnnts: lnspmttmnal.
Autumn. Mammoth J'rees of California.
Wooden Jointed hog and Monkc); J'wo
Daze) Churns: Iron Kettle; Old lools.
Military Untlorms: W\\ I Mannt•, W\'vll
Army, Korean Air force; Linens; Wrckcr
Baby Bugg); Aluminum Clu istmas
Hat\\are Set;
Tree; Old QUilts;
Gallipolis D:llf} Bottle. and more.

i

UOlJSJ&lt;;UOLD
18 CF G1bson Refngerator(N icc). .~o··
Hot Po tnt Range. Wh•rlpolll 1'11rtable
Washer and Kenmore Portable D•) er;
T''o Pc I.R S111te; and more

l\11 ·c.

11 HP Murrn) Ln" n I ractor; B.tltll· 3
Pc. Cone Spreader
Go to "W\\ auctiunz1p.com for ptctures
and listing
PO~: Dan Houda.\helt
TER\IS: Ctuh or Check '"ilh Jl),
f. \1~'1 thing Suld •· \S IS'"
AUCI'IO'Ii CO~.Ul C"' ED BY

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.
LICE~SEIJ

AND 80:-iDED 1-"i I
ST\TE OF 01110

m:

Bu leti
BOAT STORAGE

BASKET GAMES

Keep your boat safe and dry
this wtnter.
I will beat Competitors Pnces

Proceeds go to S~nners
Hospttal &amp; Ch dren ot Ga a
County
October 2 2010
Sentor Citizens Burldmg
• Galltpohs. OH
Doors open 5:00
Games begtn 6.00
20 games $20.00
3 Spectal games $5.00 each
50/50 draw1r.g
Advance trcket draw1ng !or
Oh1o State Basket
Sponsored by Lady Shnnettes
of Ga hPOI s For Tickets ca I
446·2706 or 446-0927

304-675-2424

30-'·773-5447 or 30-'-593-5118

Auction

Get your gun perm1t now'
Call for next conceal and
carry class

Auction

740-256-6514

Absolute Gallia Countv
Land Auction
·
\'EHICU.S,..,L\T\' &amp; RII&gt;JlS&lt;; MOWER 2005 Du:-ango
w X7.000 mtlcs, 2007 Clnnr) :X:L:J' "/122.000 miles,l998
Pontiac Gr.md Pnx G I ''/162.000 mrles. 2004 PJians
Magnum 3l0 ATV. Polans frail Bo~s 330 ATV, 2006 Cub
C'adet 22 hp Zero 1 urn R1dmg Mo"er. Kmg Kutter 6ft. blade.
l ~lOUt~ ITK\IS. r\1\ J'IOUt:S &amp; COLLECTIBLES 7
Afm:an stuffed mounts (Kuda, lmp.tla, Spnng Buck. Mt. Reed
Buck. Blue \\ tldebeast, Full Bush Pig). tnounted Fox. \\bite
fml &amp; Mule deer rack. orne "tid life framed prints. drop tront
secreta!) cabmet. lMk drop leaf table, painted hall seat.
Hamilton crock. crock butter chum, ~orne fenton glassware.
some old medu.:me bottles, 1 Jttle Wizard &amp; Dtetz lanterns.
\\ood chtcken crate, crosscut s.m s. old hand tools. RR Jack.
&lt;all'S. E rc. Rcnungton Side b) stdc double barrel 189-l
hammerless shlltgun, Rcmmgton ~ports Bnm ning 16 ga. Sem1
shotgun, Belguun Bro'\ mng A5 light 12 ga. Sem1 shotgun, 2Remington 870 Wmg M. Mag 12 ga Pump. Remmgton 870
Magnum, Sa,age (nc\\ 111 box) Model 98Rl7. Ste\en's
Hnm ning 620, l{ugcr 10122 Rille (blue bnrrchvalnut stock).
Luger l) MM kather lnd semi auto black tactical Rifle. Mauser
1944 dot Model 9X, Mau~cr HVI· 45 Model 98, Enfield 303
holt action Model S MKI. Sm1th &amp; Wesson M mag.
Singlc·'douhlc a~:uon rc\olver, Ruger Hlack Hawk: 30 caL
Single al'11on te,ol\l·r. \\alther PI'KS 380 :&lt;l!rlli auto handgun.
Jenning' 22 semi milo handgun. laru~ 9 mm Pam semt-auto
prstol, Ne\\ D1llon Xl 6)0 progrcssi' e reloader. reloading
equJpment, "Shooter's B1blc" maganne~. 150+ boxes of
ammo ( 12-20 Hi 410 nfle). tree st.md. camouflage clo·hing.
gun rock, f1shmg reds, rods. some lure,,
HQl SEIIW.D I· URi"ISIJHSGS newer oak dmmg table &amp; 5
, chairs, queen SIZe log fmmc bed complete. newer iron queen
' stze bed complet~:, dre set chest of dra" er/2-mght 'lands.
maple dresse~ chest of dra\\crs/oorncr desk umt. ltahan leather
~ofa, nucrof1bcr lm eseat. sectional sofa " queen hrde-a-bed.
h1de a bed sofa. lamp , Steelcase desk, 2-statlon Wetder
Pro900 exerCISe g) m eqUipment, \\eJght bench. Pulse snare
drum. Polar \\ ater cooler,
TOOLS .~ M!SCEI.I \NFOliS_ ITEMS: Campbell
Hausfeld du.1l stage 220 .ur compressor. C'rafhman table ~a\\,
cham fall. hmders, hod) gnnder. scroll saw. fluorescent lights.
cledrKal suppheslboxe~. post hole lhggers, shop HIC. CJI\ert
p1eces, plates of alununum and steel. scmp, and other
mis~:ellaneous u.:ms.

0\VNERS: Jonathan &amp; Holly McAtee
A UCTIONEERIRI&lt;:ALTOR:
John Putrick "Pat" Sheridan

Auc·rJo

·=

t'J1'Y Sbtrtdun..Wfd,
yd, Brenlt:KI•lJ.,
Enmil: SluunrockA uctlon@ aol.com
WEB: w n ".shamrul·k-auctions.com
PH: 740-592--'310 ur 800--'19-9122

~

Athens

20 Acres uith Stocked Pond!
Online Only

Auctions Ends 6ct. 12th
Location: 2-1730 County Road tWhite
HollO\\ Rd.) 1-'2 Patriot. OH -'5658
r""''"'"''' Frum Galhpoh~. 01-1 at SR 7
141 take SR 141 \\est 6 miles to
775 South go 11.3 mtlcs to \\lute
Jcm Rd. then "est I 5 mtles to
hom Huntmgton. \\ V take SR
North 34 nules to \\hue Hollo'\ Rd.
West 1.5 m1les to propcrt} 20+ Acres "'Stocked Pond "'lcmfic
Good Cabm Site "'1.5 ~1•les
State
Route"'&lt;lallia Count\*
Tm\ltship ~ Gallia Count) r.so·
a sportsman\ pia) ground in
ia Count) OH. !'his proper!) is
man I) "ooded and boasts excellent
hunting and even better hshing.
are 2 ponds on the proper!). the
pond (I+/ A&lt;.:re) is approximatd)
· deep at the dam and was stocked
th mature Bass. Crappie &amp; Hluc Gill~
2008. I he proper!) oilers multiple
for "alkmg or 4 \\heeling. l'he
offers good ) om\g Oak stand that
l nr••fi,,.~, acorn' mm and timber in the
ure. there arc multiple hlllldmg areas
th se\ era I o\ erlookmg the pond. l·ccl
free to '' nlk thts propert) at ) our
emencc and nsk. The propcrt}
I to the htglwst brdder 'm online
A ucuon ends on Oct 12th at
bnnrn.v.nv•••·" 6·00 P:\1. lo rcgtstcr and
on th1s fine offcnng go to
" kaufmanrealt).COIH
. · At the close ol the auction, the
bidder \\ill be cm:uled a
to be e'ccutcd und returned to
n Auctions. I he sut·l-cssful
"til depostt $2.000.00 111 the form
ter's check or "ire trans let \\ tth
Reali) Inc. I he entire!) of the
maimng 1s due at clostng in 30 da) s
&amp; Legal. G;1llta Count) Parl·el
I 00130000 J'axes arc ~X!l per Year.
Prcnuum

"•II

Auctions
888-852-4)) l
www.kaufmanrcalh.com
Jason L Miller CAl At;l'tioncer
740-5-'1-7475
jason@kaufmanrealty.com .

Certified Instructor
Seekmg Admtmstrator for
CHRISTIAN DAYCARE
Send resume to
Frst Church of God
1723 State R• 141
Gal polls Ollio 45631

Antique and
Old Bottle Sale

HANNAN TRACE
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
FALL CARNIVAL

Oct. 2

Saturday,
October 2

Farm Museum Pt Pleasant

wv 9 am- 3 pm
Free Admission &amp;

Appraisals Dealer space
available
Info: 740-992-5088

ANNUAL LIFE CHAIN
Astand of sol1danty agarns1
abortion wtll take place on
Sunday October 3rd
from 2 30 • 3·30
durmg the annual Life Cham
We,WIII meet at the Ohto Rver
Plaza and will peacefully hold
s gns a ong Eastern Avenue
as we pray for an end to
abortion.

Me1gs High School
Class of 1990
Reunion
10/2110
Bun's Party Barn
7-10 pm
$10 per person
Please contact Jay Humphreys
740·992-9101 1f you plan on
attendrng

Games and food start at
4·00 pm
Corn hole tournament at
5:00pm
($~0.00 entry fee per
team)
Auction at 7:00 pm
Donations appreciated

Jorn Holzer Center
for Cancer Care
and go

Passionately Pink for
the cure!

l

Friday, October 1
10 am- 2 pm )
Wear prnk and show your
support of
Breast Cancer
Awareness.
For more information call
(740) 441·3573

\

�~~~~~---

Sunday, September 26, 201 0

&amp;unbap 'Cttme~ -&amp;entind • Page 05

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

BLONDIE

Dean

~un~Denis Leb:r~u~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~~

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Berets
and
beanies
5 Bull-fighting needs
10 Nevada
neighbor
11 Actor's
reps
13 Bike part
14 Like caterpillars
15 "Don't test
me!"
17 Anger
18 Sundeck
19 Bullfight
cry
20 Sense of
self
21 Call it a
day
22 Surgery
reminders
25 Vigorous
26Scots'
toppers
27Color
28 Lincoln
nickname
29 Piano's
cousin
33 Distant
34 Filled with
ghosts
35 Very cold
37Small
nail

Tom Batiuk
1-tl M£ IIJ ...

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

HI &amp; LOIS

JOSEPH
38 Break
away
39Comfort
40Spud
41 Took in
DOWN

1 Be
effective
2 "Once
upon - "
3 Peeling
gadget
4 Wool
gatherers
5 Cotton
cloth
6 Quartz
variety
7 For each
8 Grudging

9 Like clear
. nights
12 Like winter
weather
16 Pesters
21 Hive VIP
22 Work
groups
23 Nightclub
24 Uncle
Sam's
home

25 Corker
27 Top-ofpage
title
29 Berate
30 Wander
off
31 Make fun
of
32 Tacked
on
36 Obtain

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (chccklm.o.} to
Thomas Joseph Book 1 PO Box 536475, Orlando. Fl 32853·6475

10
13

15
18

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

ve!?, eu-r Yov c:&gt;oN·-r

William Hoest

HAVE". 1"0 1,.001&lt; ~0

HAPPY 1"0 &lt;Se'T' ov'l
OF 1'1-\E 1-\0l)~e.

MUTTS

Patrick McDonnell

'TM WORRIED ABOUT MY JOB ... I'M STARTING
TO GET RECOGNITION AT WORK."

ZITS

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

THE FAMILY CIRCUS

by Dave Green

9 8

6
7
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4
9
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5
2
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1
8
5 6 9 :2
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1
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9 8
5
2
3 ui
~
4
2 1
"
..
01lhculty I eve! *
"
-

•

Ihe Stars Show lite Kind of Day You'll
Hm•e: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positit•e; 3-Arocrage;
2-So-5o; 1-D!IJicult

CONCEPTIS SODOKU

Bil Keane

ll

~

-

~:!~~,
w-tfl'l'•

...

"'II

• .-.

"Daddy 'knows where we've been by
lookin' in the review mirror."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

.1

0

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9 ~ G L v 8 6 9
~ 8 6 8 ~ G 9 9 v
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Monda\,
Sept. 27, 2010:
•
Your communication determine~
whether you are successful this year.
Review your priorities rather than act
automatically. Questioning yourself is
excellent, but wavering in front of an
audience breeds a lack of confidence.
Use your flexibility and high energy to
maximize possibilities. If you are single, be careful - you might get
involved with someone who cramps
your style too much. You might need
more freedom than you rec:llit.e, If you
are attc:lched, you discover the power
of strong communication but c:llso the
power of expressirig empathy. GEMINI points out snafus in your thinking.

ARIES (March 21-April19)
*** Be aware of the ramifications
of proceeding on a set path. As you
anc:llyze this part of the equation, vou
become more sure of yourself. Others
find you to be ::;urprisingly flexible
and fc:lst in "' discussion. Tonight: Stop
pushing so hard.
TAURUS (April20-May 20)
***** You seem to under.-;tand
fc:lr more than many people do. In a
sense, you are a role model, as you frequently make the proper decision and
head in the correct direction. A meeting demonstrates the optimism that
other.; associate with you. ((might:
Head out to meet a friend .
GEMlNl (May 21-June 20)
** Others might think you are
unusually quiet. You don't have to justify your mood. In reality, your plate is
full. You can barely handle wh,lt you
must Don't allow someone to add to
the confusion. Tonight: Head home
ASAP, then decide.
CANCER Oune 21-July 22)
****Your ability to smile and
tune in to the mind of others makes
you a natural-born leader- at the
moment. Meetings might be more
instrumental than you re,\lize. St&lt;~y on
top of discussions stemming from
your ~uggestions. A partner or a!'sociate could feel left out. lbnight: Say
"ye-5' to adventure and "no" to boredom.
LEO Quly 23-Aug. 22)
*** A must appearance is more
critical than you realize. You need to
make some important dedsions vis-,\vio; a boss or an older friend or relative. You might be taken aback by a
family member's stance. Tonight: 1\:ap,

thendedde.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept 22)
**** Revbe your thinking. You
are more grounded than you realv.e.
Others also seem to have unusually
sound opinions. Listen and add what
you feel is viable and supportive to a
discussion. Be part of the decisionmaking process. Tonight Let your
mind refa\. to music on the way home.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
*** A partner, friend and I or
associate suddenly becomes unusually
demanding and difficult. He or she
thinks you should espouse his or her
view or represent his or her ideas in a
certam manner. News that is forthcoming shakes up the status quo.
Tonight A discussion could become
animated!
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
****Your way of thinking doesn't seem to be appreciated. Center
yourself and worry less about appreciation and more' about what you
would like to do. Others will run off
after they cannot convince you of the
rightness of their ways. Let them find
out on their own "the rightness" of
their ways. Tonight: Spend time with a
f,worite person.
SAGlTIARlUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** Emphasize what is positive
in a work or daily situation. You could
have a problem getting clear communication. Confirm meetings. In a con\·ersation, echo what you are hearing.
Tonight: Wind down slowly.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
***** Your imagin.ttion could
create some strange situations in your
brain. if nothing else. Be aware of the
distortion or the slant you are putting
on certain issues. Use your ingenuity
tofroblem-soh-e. Tonight Act like a
kil again.
AQUAR1US (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
**** \\1thout intending to, you
add an element of confusion to ,, discussion. Real estate ,md domestic matters could be the issue. Try dropping
some of your idealism and look at
h,lfl'i facts. lbnight: The later it gets,
the more fun you ha,·e.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
**** Reach uul for others. '!'he
key to succes.&lt;&gt; b having a com·er.-;ation in which you don't drift and you
focus on key f.tcts. Ask questions if
you feel that there's a haze c:lround a
conversation. Tonight: Return calls.

*

Jacqueline Bigar i5 011 the lulemct
at hltp:/lurww.jat"qmlincbigtJr.com.

•.mv~aitvsentinel.com •.mv~ailvtribune.com
I

'

�-

•

•

Page.D6

0

~unbap ~ime~ ~~entinel

..

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Heritage rose fans cite beauty, aroma, hardiness
BY DEAN FOSDICK
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mike Shoup is a self-described "rose
rustler," but that doesn't make him an
·
outlaw.
He rides herd on the many old garden
roses growing wild in the countryside,
conalling stray and negkl:Ltd blooms
to display in new settings.
"Generally when you think of a rose
rustler, you conjure up an image of a
Texan wearing a black outfit, astride a
black horse and with a shovel on his
shoulder pillaging roses from out-ofthe-way places," said Shoup, owner of
the Antique Rose Emporium in
Brenham, Texas. "But it's just the
opposite. What 't'e try to do is find the
kinds of roses that make gardening
easy."
Shoup has built a thriving business
from the heritage roses he's discovered,
restored and then reintroduced to modern-day gardeners.
"We find them in neglected cemeteries, abandoned farmsteads, along fence
lines, roadsides and other spots where
they've survived for years without any
care," Shoup said. "Cemeteries are the
most fruitful hunting grounds. Families
would often plant a favorite rose to
honor their loved ones."
Old garden, heritage and antique
roses are interchangeable terms, but
generally describe varieties introduced
into commerce before 1867.
"People are collecting tbe heirlooms
again because they have classic
shapes," said Greg Stack, an extension
horticulturist with the University of
lllinois. "They have a loose, open forn1
that blends well with other perennials
or in mixed borders. Grandifloras or
hybrid tea roses tend to grow taller and
don't seem to fit m."
Shoup calls heirloom roses "beautiful, long-blooming and resihent, making them the perfect modern-day garden plant." ''There's a great diversity,"
he said. "Every (old) rose has its own
personality in the way it grows or
blooms. They've been able to tolerate
blizzards, drought and the toughest

conditions Texas has to offer. They're
the best of the best. and trouble-free for
homeowners to grow."
And then there's their pe1fume.
"Unlike modern varieties, most old
roses come with a fragrance that's as
important as their appearance," Shoup
said. "Once you smell that rose, you'll
always have its scent in your memory.''
Rose rustlers from around the country operate under a gatherer's code of
ethics.
"There's a protocol," said Faith
Bickley, chairwoman of the Texas Rose
Rustlers, a volunteer search and rescue
group specializing in old roses. "We
always ask first. We try to find out
where they originally came from. If
they're in an abandoned site or cemetery, we only take cuttings. so we don't
hurt the original plants. We clean them
up, weed and prune. We try to leave
them better than they were when we
found them."
Cuttings may take longer to develop
than, say, placing bare-root bushes into
the ground, but that practice leaves the
parent plants intact while producing
progeny.
There are many ways to take plant
cuttings, but here is Shoup's favorite
method:
"With the leaves still on, roll them
(clipped stems) up in wet paper towels.
Tuck them into zip-lock bags and store
in a cool place until you can get them
home. Fill a gallon-size zip-lock bag
with moist potting soil, stick three or
four cuttings into that material and
close it up. Set it on an east-facing windowsilL and you should see new
growth ·within a week or so."
Many antique roses are so old - in
many cases dating to the 1850s - that
their original names have been forgotten. If Shoup can't trace their lineage
through historical accounts or information gathered from property owners,
then he might classify them according
to where they were found, such as
"Highway 290 Pink Buttons," or
''Martha Gonzalez" for the person who
shared the cutting.
I

J. Griffiths Smith!AP Photo

This file photo provided by J Griffiths Smith shows Mike Shoup cutting an Old
Blush rose (intro 1752) surviving in a cemetery in Texas. Shoup is a self-described
"rose rustler" but that doesn't make him an outlaw. He rides herd on the many old
garden roses growing wild in the countryside, corralling stray and neglected
blooms to display in new settings.

Germplasm that's good for yotl'
Bv Lee ReiCH
FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Despite its sinister sound, a "germplasm collection"
spells good things for farmers and gardeners alike.
Think. beyond the flu season and the word "germ"
takes on a broader meaning: a small mass of living
substance that can give rise to. a whole organism or
one of its parts. Think of wheat gern1, that nutritious
part of a wheat seed that contains the cells ~ the
genn - that develop into a whole new wheat plant.
To us gardeners, a germplasm collection is a collection of plants or seeds. Many years ago, I had a collection of about 50 different varieties of gooseberries.
It was one of the largest getmplasm collections of
gooseberries in the country. No, the fruits didn't all
taste good, but I was reluctant to part with any variety
that might not be available elsewhere. After all, some
desirable gene - for disease resistance or pretty color
- might be hidden in an otherwise insipid-tasting
variety.
CORN BLIGHT WAS AN EYE OPENER
In 1970, southern leaf blight disease swept through
Midwest corn fields, reducing the crop by 700 million
bushels. Disease spread was possible because of the
heavy dependence at the time on just a few corn
genes. That blight helped prompt the formation of the

U.S. National Plant Germplasm System, which
acquires, maintains. characterizes and distributes
germplasm of crop plants.
One part of the system is the National Clonal
Germplasm Repositories, home to clones. Here,
plants such as Mcintosh apples, Hass avocados and
Thompson Seedless grapes, which do not come true
from seeds, are maintained as living plants.
Mulching, pruning and keeping the labeling in
order on 50 gooseberry bushes was a big job for me
- just think of the care needed to maintain the 2.500
varieties of apples at the apple repository in Geneva,
N.Y.
Twenty-five other such repositories are scattered
across the country. You'll find the papaya collection
in Hawaii, the avocado collection in Florida. the
blackberry collection in Ore~on,, the asparagus collection in Iowa, and so on for scores of other ornamental
and crop species that must be maintained as living
plants.
SEEDS ALSO GET A HOME
The National Seed Storage Laboratory and four
Regional Plant Introduction Stations are another part
of our Germplasm System. At these sites, alfalfa, barley, rice, wheat and other plants that are normally
grown from seed are preserved as such in cold, dry
rooms conducive to long-term storage.

Extension Corner
Fall is here and so are be accomplished by
the bugs looking for a applying a spray of one
place to overwinter. This half cup detergent to one
week, boxelder bugs gallon of water. Other
seem to be "bugging" our insecticides that may be
local
homeowners. used include carbaryl
permethrins,
Boxelder bugs and their (Sevin),
offspring have spent the diatomaceous earth or
summer on the boxelder boric acid. The boxelder
trees (Acer negundo), but bug does need the female
are now migrating to the or pistilJate boxelder tree
our buildings to overwin- to feed on in the early
ter. Boxelders adults look spring. Boxelders belong
like lightening bugs, one to the maple family. They
half inch long and narrow have a trifoliate leaf
but have distinctive red (three leaflets), on new
stripes along their back. bright green stem growth
Immatures look similar that is tipped in a bluish
but are bright red in color white waxy covering.
and lack wings. They can The female plant has
of samaras
be seen congregating on masses
the sides of houses as (seeds). We find the tree
they find crevices in the along creeks and on
cement walls or siding. stream banks. It is fast
They will overwinter in growing but hard to
the crevices until early develop into a useless
next spring when they re- shade tree due to its poor
emerge to seek their way growth habit. Cutting
back onto the nearby down the female boxboxelder trees. Control of elder tree does dramatiadults and immatures can cally reduce the local

population of adult boxelder bugs. Male trees
can be left standing. For
more information and a
black and white pic:ture
of the bug and boxelder
plant check out our OSU
factsheet
#21 06,
at
"Boxelder Bug"
www.ohioline.osu.edu.
Next week, look for
information on controlling Multicolored Asian
beetles.

•••

Gardene~;s,

remember
to attend the Fall Plant
Exchange on Oct. 1 at l
p.m. at Dave Diles Park
(old train station) in
Middleport
next
to
Family Dollar. Share
your excess plants, seeds
and bulps with the comMaster
munity. OSU
Gardeners, Ohio State
University Extension and
Middleport Community
Association have joined
together this year to
sponsor this free event.

________. _

The
Middleport
Community will be having their luncheon fund
raising event (donation
$5) starting at 11:00 a.m.
until l p.m. Gardening
tips on "Planting Bulbs
For
Spring"
and
"Growing Perennials"
will be discussed while
people are enjoying
lunch. If you are not able
to bring plants to
exchange you are still
welcome to participate as
there has always been
ample plants for all.
Whether it is raining or
the sun is shining this
event we be held. There
is plenty of shelter. The
public is welcome!
(Hal Kneen is the
Meigs &amp; Scioto County
Agriculture &amp; Narural
Resources
Educator.
Buckeve Hills EERA.
Ohio ·State University
1:-xtension.)

You think your boxes of seeds are overflowing? The
lab, at Fort Collins, Colo., keeps seeds of a quarter of
a million types of plants in good condition.
AJtogether, our germplasm system plays nursemaid
to about a half a million varieties of plants. This
germplasm might be used by plant breeders and other
researchers to develop new varieties. Curators can
also lend help to researchers, as well as to you and
me. in obtaining obscure varieties not offered by nurseries.
All holdings are entered into GRIN, the Germplasm
Resources Information Network, a computerized
database.
GERMPLASM GIVE AND TAKE
The National Plant Germplasm System is a twoway street, and about 10,000 new varieties are added
to collectiGms each year. As they started putting
together the gooseberry collection at the Corvallis,
Ore., repository, I was happy enough to donate some
cuttings and plants. I do still grow a couple of dozen
varieties - but no longer any that do not meet
gustatory standards.
(On the Net: Germplasm Resources lnjormatio
Network, ~tww.ars-grin.gov.)

nit

LIVESTOCK REPORT
GALLIPOLIS - United Producers Irtc. market
report from Gallipolis for sales conducted on
Wednesday, Sept. 22,2010.

Feeder Cattle
275-415# St. $90-$130, Hf. $85-$115: 425-525#
St. $90-$115. Hf. $85-$108; 550-625# St. $90$114. Hf. $85-$95: 650-725# St. $88-$108, Hf.
$83-$92: 750-850# St. $85-$95, Hf. $80-$86.

Cows
Well Muscled/Fleshed $50-$56.50: Medium/Lean
$43-$49: Thin/Light $22-$42: Bulls $46-$72

Back To The Farm:
Cow/Calf Pairs $650-$1050: Bred Cows
$850: Goats $30-$145: Lambs $95-$117:
$49-57.
Manure to give away. Will load for you.

Upcoming specials:
Sept. 29 sale at 10 a.m.
For more information, call Dewayne at (740)
339-024 I. Stacy at (304) 634-0224, Luke at (740)
645-3697, or Donny at t740) 534-2533. Visit the
Web site at www.uproducers.com

.

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